* 0 The Weather ONE COLOR Ui. Weather Bureau Forecast Colder ... 4VC4-C4 Tax Series . ‘ - C-tt 1 Theaters'. .-...B-l TV-Radio Programs C-ll Wilson, Earl . . . Oil Women’s Pages B-l—B-3« 1963 SLAYING the Dallas Police owner Jack Ruby nedy’s assassin, Lee This is the scene at on Nov. 24 as nightclub down President Ken-Os wald, as he was being transferred to the Dallas County Jail.' After a stormy trial, Ruby was convicted and sentenced to be executed. However, a Texas appeals court this, year overturned the conviction. (AP)—The nation’s first highway safety boss and the ahto industry face a major this month in reconciling' in their views bn cars could be made safer. * * * ★ U.S. auto makers, together with foreign car companies, appeared unanimous in their belief that they could not meet immediately the first 23 safety standards proposed by the federal government. General Motors, giant of the industry with more ton 50 per cent to U.S. car production and sales, was toe latest to raise questions about some of toe standards. Dr. William Haddon Jr., administrator of the National Safe- Related Page Story, A-2 ty- Agency and the National Traffic Safety Act, first outlined his 23 point program last Nov. 29 and gave auto companies until Jan. 3 to comment on it. * on Holiday Toll By toe Associated Press Safety officials congratulated the nation’s motorists today for a sharp decrease in. traffic deaths during the long New Year weekend. The tally to traffic totalities from 6 p.m. local tone Friday to midnight yesterday stood at-460, down sharply from last New Year’s record,toll to 564 deaths. The National Safety Council, which had estimated that motor vehicle accidents would result in between 460 and 540 deaths, said motorists were driving -more safely and the toil “proves that improvement is possible.” ■e ♦ ★ ‘‘Drivers appear to be doing a better agd safe job than would be expected bn the basis of past performance,” a council spokesman said. tie said that although there lis some snow and rain in scattered areas, weather conditions had little to do with the final toll. the council had expressed hope that the death toll would be only slightly above that of a three-day, nonholiday weekend. Traffic Deaths Take Holiday Oakland County motorists have chalked up a second straight major holiday weekend without a traffic death, according to unofficial reports from local police agencies. v No totalities were reported in the three-day New Year’s weekend which ended last night. The Christmas holiday a week ear-lier was similarly .unmarked by death. . # ’ ,'j - HI ONES iuwi “There! We’re all done. Now Dad won’t have to buy any of those tires with the spikes in them.” % His suggested program included almost every part to the car, from windshields to tires, as he took aim on his goal of cutting the nation's traffic death toll of nearly 50,000 a, year. Auto companies took him at his' word and deluged him with voluminous reports and technical data supporting their belief that some of his suggestions were inadvisable or premature. The thinking of toe auto makers differed somewhat, but in general, they suggested to Dr. Haddon that three of . toe big Obstacles were time, money and lack of sufficient test data. a AU four U.S. firms, for example, reportedly took issue with the suggestion that the front parking lights of future autos should be 20 inches above the ground, instead of 17 as most to them have it now. ★ ★ ★ Will A. Scott, director of automotive safety for Ford Motor Co., said in an interview that such a change would mean scrapping much of the^work that has been done already on 1968 Ford bumper areas, quarter panels and grilles. Other firms agreed. Oswald Killing Brought Ruby World Infamy Days After Shooting Spent Behind Bars or at Hospital in Dallas DALLAS, Tex. Mck Ruby, the slayer of accused presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, died today in Parkland Hospital, where he had been suffering from cancer since Dec. 9.” Ruby was moved, to the hospital after complaining of an illness which jail doctors had been treating as a bad cold for three weeks. At toe hospital, his illness was first diagnosed as pneumonia and tora as cancer which had spread into the lymph glands, lungs and pancreas. X ray and surgery would dp no good, doctors said. Ruby’s death came at 10:30 am. A LITTLE LATE Sheriff’s deputies had been issuing twice-daily bulletins on Ruby’s condition but this morn- See Story, Page B-5 » ing said the bulletin would be a “little late.” A product of toe Chicago slums, Ruby was little known even in Dallas until he stepped in front of television cameras with a snub-nosed f revolver and shot Oswald. That was on Nov. 24, 196?, an the onetime Chicago tough kid had gained the world recognition friends said he always had wanted. ★ ★ ★ He spent the rest of . his life behind bars. MAN OF 80 In Chicago today, Eimer Gertz, one of his lawyers, said Ruby “looked like a man of 80 years” when Gertz saw him just before Christmas. Ruby was 55. In Ruby’s room when he . died were his brother, Earl ‘ Ruby of Detroit; his sister, Eva Grant of Dallas, and Eileen Kaminsky, another sis-, ter from Chicago. •Visitors were rare after Ruby vrjas jailed. He was inaccessible except to his family, lawyers . and investigators. PmNM FlWI Phot* Jack Ruby N. Vietnam Rejects British Pjeace Plan TOKYO US)—North Vietnam today rejected the British proposal for peace talks with the United States and South Vietnam, declaring the British purpose was to force the Vietnamese people to “accept the insolent terms put by the U.S. imperialists.” Both the United States and South Vietnam gave a favorable response to British Foreign Secretary George Brown’s proposal last week that they join North Vietnam in peace talks on British soil. North Vietnam’s official newspaper Nhan Dan reiterated Communist terms for peace today and rapped Britain for sug-. gesting a conference. ★ ★ ★ “Hypocritical words cannot cover up the foul contents of the proposal by the British Labor government," it said. “This proposal is only rehashing of toe deceitful, shopworn clamor of toe U.S, Imperialists about ‘unconditional discussions,’ ‘cessation of hostilities,’ ‘deescalation by both sides,’ etc. “It js the U.S. imperialist aggressors who have started the war in Vietnam. If this war is to be ended at all, the United .States must stop its aggression and withdraw' its troops from Vietnam. This glaring truth has been known to the whole world people, but has never been mentioned by the British Labor government. * ★ * “Such a foul act on the part of the British government completely runs counter to the responsibility to Britain as a co-chairman of the 1954 Geneva Conference on Vietnam,” it said. U.S. Downs? MIGsinN. Viet . Phantoms Win Big Against Reds' Elite CRUEL MOTHER? - Mrs. Charles Toby, 2384 St. Joseph, West Bloomfield Township, is hot burn-# ing her daughters’ favorite dolls, but highly inflammable toys which coukl do them harm. The. dolls, made in Poland and imported from Britain, were sold ht several stores in tile metropolitan ai$a. The fire hazards should be destroyed or re-turned to- the place they wore purchased. Flurries Predicted to End by Tonight Snow flurries predicted for today are expected to end late this afternoon with skies clear, ing tonight. , ★ ★ Temperatures will slide to a low of 17 to 22 during the night and rise into the high 20s t<£ morrow. - Thursday’s outlook is. increasing cloudiness .and cold. Morning west to northwesterly winds at 8 to 18 miles per hour will continue late thik afternoon and tonight. ★ ★ ★ »■ v ■ Twenty-six was the low readings in downtown Pontiac prior to A a.m. The mercury had moved to 36 by 2 p.m. SAIGON (AP) — “We out-flew, outshot and outfought them,” a U.S. Air Force wing commander said today after he and his men brought down seven Communist MIGs in the biggest air battle of the Vietnamese war. ★ ★ ★ The supersonic dogfights yesterday over .the Red River delta northwest of Hanoi pitted Picture, Page A-2 America’s F4C Phantoms against the best planes in the Communist aintoorce, and the Phantoms were decisive victors. The Air Force said not one of its plane» was lost. The wing commander is Col. Robin Olds, 44, of Washington, D.C., a star West Point tackle in 1941-42, a World War n ace with 24% kills, the husband to former movie star Ella Raines and toe father of two daughters. It was his first aerial combat in Vietnam and he scored one of toe day’s first kills. His flight accounted for three MIGs, aqd a flight led by Capt. John B. Stone, 29, of CoffeeviUe, Miss., knocked down three morl. The seventh Communist jet was shot down by a third flight in Olds’wing. I t t 4 Lt. Gen. William W. Momyer, commander to the 7th Air Force, said toe spectacular , showing by his airmen was “the first pure fighter sweep of toe ’ waf.” - He told a news conference at Saigon's Tan Sim Nhiit air base that” toe MIGs have been severely harassing U,S. ftgbter-bombers “and we wtte intent to engage and destroy the enemy fighters.” .. / f > V,’ ' A A—2 ? % | J THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 SAIGON,, South Vietnam t^P) U.S. officials- announced today that a record 20,242 Viet* cong defected in 1966 with the biggest surge coming in the final two months of the year. A U.S. spokesman said the 1966 total was nearly double the 11,124 who left the Communist ranks during 4965 and was the highest number in file four years since South Vietnam began the Chieu Hoi — Open Arms — program to win over Viefc-cong adherents. In combat developments, only minor ground skirmishes were repotted. In the dir there were more bombing strikes against North Vietnam, two raids by Vietnam and a third in the demilitarized zone. In aniiouhcing the Vietcong defections, the U.S. spokesman said December was a record month with 2,516 Communist adherents rallying to the South Vietnamese side, topping the previous monthly high of 2,505 in November. 4-YEAR TOTAL The total for the four years of the Chiteu Hoi program is more than 48,000, the spokesman said. Despite the claim of 20,242 defections in 1966, the strength of Communist forces in South Vietnam has remained throughout the year at about 230,000 The Communists have filled their ranks through recruitment and infiltration from North Viet- B52 heavy bombers in South Imen by U.S. official estimates. GOP Readies Viet 'Assault' on Johnson WASHINGTON (AP) = Congressional Republicans are preparing a broadside of ques tions and recommendations on Vietnam to be fired at President Johnson soon after Congress reconvenes. . * ■ • - The House Republicans are putting their ammunition into a “position paper1' now being drafted with a target date of Jan. 16. Rep. Melvin A. Laird, chairman of the Honse Republican Conference, said its purpose is to dispel what Laird sees as dangerous confusion over U.S. goals. “Not only the goals in Vietnam, but in Southeast’ Asia,” said Laird in an interview. “We are moving into a similar situation in Thailand.” The fallout from the position paper will provide more tinder for an expected crackling congressional debate — on bombing, troops and peace efforts — as soon* as Congress reopens its doors Jan. 10. But Laird argued that neither Congress nor the public can intelligently argue the issues without knowing U.S. objec fives.. And these, he said, had been left muddied by changing administration pronouncements. Houghton Fire Razes Building Wife of Powell Loses Her Job Ordered off Payroll V by House Committee HOUGHTON (AP) - A three-story building in the 200 block of downtown Houghton’s Sheldon Avenue was destroyed by fire today. Except for a first. floor bakery and a second | floor apartment, the .building was unoccupied. No”one was injured in the blaze, discovered about 2:15 a.m. Firemen from Houghton!Congress, which ended at noon and four neighboring municipal today, a few minutes after the fire departments fought the committee made its recom-blaze in freezing temperatures.' mendations public. WASHINGTON^ (AP) - The House Administration Committee today ordered Rep.. Adam Clayton Powell’s wife removed from her $20,500 job oh his pay roll. The- committee also issued findings of widespread irregularities in official travel. The findings, made by a subcommittee which held hearings on practices of the House Education and Labor Committee, of which Powell is chairman, were made part of an official House document which goes to the Jus fice Department as well as other government agencies. Chairman Omar Burleson, D-Tex., of the Administration Committee said there was no specific vote to send the subcommittee findings to the Justice Department. But he said that “when it is made a House document, it automatically un der the rules goes to all government departments including Justice. RECOVERY OF FUNDS , “Anyone can take it from there if there should be matter for a civil suit for recovery of fynds or even possible criminal action." The committee action in ordering the firing of a person on a member’s, staff was described as unprecedented by Rep. Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio, chairman of the subcommittee that conducted the' hearings and made recommendations to the Administration Committee. ★ ★ ★ Technically, the action applies only during the life of the 89th The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy with some light snow or snow flurries today. High 29 to 34. Clearing ^hd turning colder later tonight. Low 17 to 22. Wednesday, mostly fair but cold. Thursday’s outlook: Increasing cloudiness and cold. West to northwest winds 8 to 18 miles this afternoon and tonight. Desertions from the South Vietnamese armed forces during 1965 totaled 113,000 and for the .first half of 1966 reached at 67,000. But allied officials contend the desertions in the last half of 1966 will show a decline because of new stiff penalties and improvement in pay and conditions of service. A South Vietnamese spokes: man reported that a Vietcong force of about 35 men crossed into South Vietnam from Cambodia today and abducted 15 Vietnamese civilians from a border hamlet. BEFORE DAYBREAK The spokesman said the Vietcong entered the community of Go Dau Ha, in Tay Ninn Province, just before daybreak, kidnaped the Vietnamese from an open-air market and withdrew across the Cambodian border. Over the. weekend, the Cam bodian government charged that -U.S. and South Vietnamese helicopters and light planes carrying ground troops attacked the village of Ba Thu just inside Cambodia, killed three or four persons and abducted 12. Hie U.S. command denied any knowledge of such an incident Vietnamese headquarters also reported a Vietcong attack on an outpost 48 miles south-south-west of Saigon in which a squad of militiamen took heavy casualties. H......k.. ★ ★ 1 In the air war, the long-range B52 bombers struck Monday night at a Communist headquarters area in Quang Tin, one of the northern coastal provinces of South Vietnam. Woman Held in A Detroit woman arrested at her home late yesterday was scheduled to he arraiped in Pontiac today in connection with the pistol slaying of a city bar owner. .. Mrs. Marpret Overton, 39, a divorcee and former Pontiac resident, was apprehended by Detroit police after local investigators had broadcast a description of the woman and her car. She was sought following the shooting early Sunday of David B. Foster, 38, owner of Foster’s Bar at 335 Wessen. v . Foster was dead on arrival about 3:30 a.m. at Pontiac General Hospital. Police said he had been, shot once in the chest with a 22-caliber handgun. Detective Dallas J. Flesher said tests would be run on a slug removed from the victim’s, body to determine if the bullet was fired from a gun found by police in the suspect’s home. , Witnesses said they saw Mrs. Overton flee Foster’s apartment residence at 379 S. Paddock after an argument between the tw£ Foster’s body, slumped at the bottom of a stairway, was found by another tenant. FAMED PAINTING GUARDED — Two special guards flank “The Nativity,” famous painting by Flemish artist Paul Rubens which is on loan to the London auction house ^of Christie’s and is on exhibit today as part of their bicentenary celebration. Special pards were provided in the wake of what may have been the greatest art theft of all time last Friday. Police May Be on Trai LONDON (AP) Scotland Yard made a series of night swoops on London homes, and today police said they may be on the trail'of those who stole the eight old masters worth 17-million from the Dulwich College Gallery. The authorities admitted, British to Sell Plant to Cuba; UiS. Unhappy LONDON (AP) — The British government is reported ready to parantee the sale of a $28-mil-lion fertilizer plant to Cuba despite pressure from Washington. Official sources said U. S. authorities had asked London to stop the sale by refusing Fidel Castro’s government the five-year credit it needs for the deal. But the sale is expected to. go through despite hints that it might lessen American support for economic sanctions against Britain’s rebellious colony, Rhodesia. A Foreip Office spokesman said: “The government’s policy on trade with Cuba is to allow it to proceed normally, free of government interference, except as concerns the export of strategic goods.” ★ * V * Asked about the^ attitude of the U. S. government to the deal, the spokesman said: “The Americans have from time to time reminded us of their attitude toward trade by Western countries with Cuba — and specifically .toward the granting of government-insured credits for such trade.” The United States made & similar, unsuccessful attempt to stop the sale of British buses to Cuba three years ago. Much bad feeling was generated by that deal. however, they had received no information on where the paintings are now. , - * - ★ -k Three Rembrandts, three Rubens and two other works by Gerard Dou and Adam Elsheim-er were stolen Friday night. Thirty persons have volunteered information which police say may help them. The night visits were made by Detective Supt. Charles Hewett and Detective Chief Inspector Kenneth Oxford after they had been given information by a woman and seyeral men. NO INSURANCE Dulwich College, which did not Carry any insurance on its Valuable collection, said a reward’ would be offered today. But a spokesman for the college said it was “in a very tight position financially.” The college is forbidden to sell any of its paintings, which are worth millions ★ ♦ ★ The gallery may reopen to the public in a day or two, but stricter security arrangements are to be made. A spokesman said: “This was our first theft and we want to make sure that it is the last.” * * ★ The police have been ham pered by a large number of hoax ransom calls and letters, The general belief seems to be that the thief or thieves hoped obtain ransom for the paintings. However, the fact that the. paintings were not insured lessens the chance of ransom. • pirminghdm Area News Normal School Sessions Due BIRMINGHAM - Covington and Berkshire junior high school pupils are scheduled to return to a, normal school schedule when the second semester starts Jan. 30. - The major academic portion of the new Covington School is expected to be ready for occupancy on that date. Pupils from both schools have been on double sessions at Berkshire since the beginning of school last September. 1 The administration area, classrooms, science robms, multi-instructional areas and library, the amphitheater, art rooms and homemaking section are to be ready by Jan. 30. ■» ■ ★ * *f Music rooms and industrial arts sections are to be ready about Feb. 15 with the remain- Ford Tells U.S. 5 Standards Can't Be Met Today In Pontiac 'Lowest temperature preceding p a.m.; 26 AS I a.m.: Wind Velocity I m.p.tv Direction: Northwest Sun sets Tuesday at 5:U p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 1:03 a.m. Moon sets Tuesday, at 13:25 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 1:30 a.m. Downtown Temperatures t a.m.,....... 26 It *>m. 7 a.m..........26 12 m. .... t a.m......... 26 I p.m. ... e a.m. ....... 26 2 p.m. . . . 10 a.m. ^...... 21 Monday In Pontiac |— Us recorded downtown! Hlghost temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature- ............. Weather; Partly sunny One Year Ago In Pontiac •Highest temperature ...... ........36 Lowest temperature ................ 26 Mean temperature .................. 31 Weather: Mostly sunny Highest and Lowest \emfcerttures This Data in 94 Years 59 In 1950 Monday's Temperature Chart Alpena Escanaba Gr. Rapids Houghton 35'Lansing Marquette Muskegon Pellston Traverse C. Albuquerque Judge Eyes Jurisdiction for Teen in Triple Slaying 33 26 Duluth 25 -1 32 25 Fort Worth 58 31 37 32 JacKsonvillt 68 55 33 loi *Angeies 5 ?2 ORANGE, Tex. (AP) - A Miami Beach 79 73 judge may decide today if 14- 32 27 New Orleans 55 4i year-old Ronnie Lee Ozio, ac- 35 27» omWahaorK 33 prosed of three New Year’s Day 2 f.h0?n'*, ‘2 “ killings, should be declared a 42 2i salt Lake c. 33 u juvenile delinquent. 37 so s. Francisco 6i 4» | witnesses told authorities the 5-foot, 100-pound youth riddled his father, grandmother and stepmother-to-be with bullets from a 22-caliber rifle. One of the witneses was stabbed in the back with a’ butcher knife. * * * Under Texas law, young Ozio could not be tried son a murder charge until hi»4fth birthday. Dist. Atty. Roy S. Wingate said he would file a motion asking that young Ozio be adjudged delinquent. He then could be confined in a state reformatory,1 the usual procedure iii such a case. -s \V\ \. j VICTIMS . ; Victims were John A. Ozio, 39, Ozio unit of an apartment house. Investigators would not discuss a possible motive. Relatives told them Ozio and Mrs. 2 Big Events to Be Marked by OU Tonight Oakland University tonight will mark two important events one historical and the other brand new. Causing the double celebration is the coincidence that the university was, founded exactly 10 years before the premiere of the John Fernald Company of the Meadow Brook Theatre. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson announced on Jan. 3, 1956 that they wonld give their 1,-400-acre estate and a 12-million endowment to found a university. The anniversary of the announcement will be celebrated at a pretheater dinner party given by Chancellor Dur-ward B. Varner and Mrs. Varner at Vandenberg Hall on campus. ★ ★ ★ Hie premiere performance of Bertolt Brecht’s “Hie Caucasian Chalk Circle” will be followed by a gala reception in Meadow Brook Hall. Invited to the dinner were members of the Michigan State University Board of Trustees, the Oakland University Foundation, the Chancellor's Club and the. policy committee of the Meadow Brook Theatre and a few special guests. der of the building, including the cafeteria, gymnasium and swimming pool‘scheduled for completion about April 1. \ TO AUTHORIZE CONSTRUCTION The board tonight is scheduled to authorize construction of a central .administration building on a portion of the Baldwin School property and to provide for the demolition of the present Hill Building. Charge Due AP Wirtplwts CRASH AREA? - A remote Baja California beaclf near La Paz, Mexico,, is the area where six bodies were spotted by air searchers yesterday. The victims are believed, to have been aboard a twin-engine jet which disappeared Dec. 20 with 10 Californians aboard. Air Search Narrows as 6 Bodies Seen HAMILTON AIR FORCfe |BASE, Calif. (AP)—The widespread search for a missing plane with 10 Californians aboard narrowed today as a Mexican Coast Guard cutter set out for a remote Baja California beach where six bodies were spotted by air searchers. ■ ★ ★ ★ Aboard the cutter leaving La Paz, Mexico, were a U.S. Air Force pararescue team and George Millbom, a friend of San Francisco businessman Richard Y. >Dakin. k k k Dakin, seven members of his family and a crew of two were aboard a twin-engine plane which disappeared Dec. 20 after taking off from San Diego. k k k The Western Aerospace Reserve and Recovery Center at Pontiac police said today they will seek a charge of attempted murder against a man jailed Saturday after the shooting of a city woman. Randolph Hammond, 58, of 430 Irwin was identified by Mrs. Luther Henderson, 39, of 55 Cottage as the man who shot her in the stomach, according Ulajamjiton Air Force Base said DETROIT (UPI)—Ford Mbtor Co. told the federal government today its 1968 model cars could not meet five- of the government’s proposed safety standards. * Ford was the second big auto maker to complain that some of the standards were impossible to meet. General Motors Corp., the industry leader, told the government Saturday it could not meet five of the standards. But the two big firms agreed on only three standards as allegedly impossible to meet, including one specifying bow a car should protect its- occupants from injury in case of a wreck. “We believe that some of the investigators. Detective Dallas J. Flesher said police are still undecided as to the role played in the shooting by a companion of Hammond’s, Gerald D. Williams, 27, of 26314 Franklin Road. v, Williams is also in custody. Mrs. Henderson is listed in serious condition in the intensive care unit at Pontiac General Hospital. ' ★ ★ ★ She was found shortly before midnight Friday, lying near the front door of her ljpme. Police said Hammond was a former suitor of Mrs. Henderson. six bodies and pieces of plane wreckage were sighted Monday by a civilian aircraft and two U.S. Air Force planes. IDENTITY NOT CERTAIN A spokesman at» Hamilton said a plane may have crashed at sea and then been washed ashore, but it still was hot known whether the wreckage and bodies were from the Dakin plane, s ★ 'k k The Mexican cutter was scheduled to go to an almost inaccessible beach about 25 miles north of La Paz. A ground party failed to reach the rugged area Monday. The City Commission tonight will take up the matter of a safer school crossing for children at Pembroke School. It was delayed last week pending a report from the American Automobile Association. ★ ★ V In response to a request frbm a resident two weeks ago, that the Eton Park skating rink be closed to nonresidents, Darrell C. Middlewood, superintendent Of thd""Forestry and Parks Department is recommertding that the present arrangement not be Changed. He said use of the rink normally drops after the Christmas holidays and “that restrictions or rate increases would not be in the best interests of the city.” Crisis Entraps British Queen Cousin's Divorce Plans Reveal Royal Scandal LONDON (AP) - Queen Elizabeth II was caught up in a crisis of conscience today over her first cousin’s desire to marry “the mother of his illegitimate son after his wife divorces him. An announcement yesterday by attorneys for the Earl of Hare-wood, 43, and 18th in line of succession to the throne, came as a bombshell to the British public and uncovered one of the best-kept royal secrets. The statement said Hare-wood’s Anstrian-born countess is siting him for divorce on grounds of adultery with Patricia Tuckwell, a dark-haired Australian divorcee who once worked as his secretary. The attorneys said the earl would not defend his wife’s suit, that “he and Miss Tuckwell would wjsh to marry if and when they are legally free to do so';” and that Miss Tuckwell had a son by him in July 1964. ★ ★ * That put the queen in a predicament, NEED PERMISSION Under the Royal Marriages Act of 1772, all members of the royal. family descended from King George n must have the monarch's permission to marry. k k k And the Church of England — of which the queen is temporal head and “Defender of the Faith” — is opposed to the remarriage of anyone whose partner is still living, the key factor in Princess Margaret’s decision in 1955 not to marry Group Gapt. Peter Townsend. Sources close to the court believe church leaders may advise the queen against consenting to her cousin’s remarriage. * Mayberry fb^ planned to wed provisions of these proposed k^ti6! Put the standards are arbitrary, unreal nuptials off. iS sopableor impracticable," Will ’”7 ' .Scott, Ford automotive safety These sources expressed directori m in a letter to ^ expressed doubt, however, that the impending marriage had inspired resentment. Ronnie had returned Saturday from a two-week visit with the Mayberrys at Foreman. 1‘ t * Two children of Mrs. Mayberry survived the killings. HIT BY KNIFE -One is Craig MaybeiTy,16, in serious condition at a Beaumont hospital. He said Ronnie plunged a 10-inch knife blade into his back when he tried to stop, the slaughter. Debi Mayberry, 14, was nn- NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain is predicted for the East Coast tonight from Pennsylvania to north. Florida with showers along the•Central Gulf Coast. There will be snow flurries in the Northwest and over the upper Great Lakes. William Haddon Jr.,, administrator of the National Traffic Safety Agency which Congress established to administer the new law giving the government power to establish mandating safe-] ty standards for cars. * * ■*. Ford said “the great majority” of its 1968 models coqld conform to 10 of the 23 standards Haddon proposed. • ★ a . '.I It said Ford cars could nteet seven other proposed standards if tiie government w o u I d ac- j cept changes in “detailed specifications or the test procedures It wifi be warmer alongthe East Coast and colder elsewhere. jrieJ/ Hiey ^were killed in Hie father of Ronnie; Victoria Ozio, harmed. She said she was-Sleep-77, the grandmother, and Bobby l ing with her mother when Mrs. Mayberry. 35, of Foreman, Ark. Mayberry awakened and got oqtjtbat we believe wifi in no sub-Mrs, Mayberry, a divorcee, and of tied. Debi said young Ozio stantiai way diminish the safe-Ozio were engaged to be mar-[shot Mrs. Mayberry twice andjty contribution? of the pro- n shot bis grandmother. m K Iposals.’ H I WHERE YANKS SCORED - A U.S. spokesrrfon claimed seven Communist MIGs were toot down yesterday by American \ *• «AP WirtpHttu planes in the biggest air battle tout far in the war. The battle took place in the Red River urea.• ’’’ ■. ’ • 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1987 A—3 SIFT PLANE WRECKAGE - Divers search in- murky waters yesterday for the wreckage of a light aircraft with four persons aboard that crashed Sunday in a farm pond near Mayetta, Kan. The single-engine plane was en route from Lincoln, Neb., to New Orleans. Debris can be seen scattered across the pond. Trouble in Jordah, Saudi Arabia ~rrr Arab Terrorism Is Stepped Up Fight Foreseen on Six Senators Launcl Move to Change Rule WASHINGTON (AP) -j Six senators — three Democrats and three Republicans j- have launched a move to facilitate ending Senate filibusters. In a letter to their Colleagues seeking support, ttys senators said a change in Sedate Rule 22 “must be secured that, while protecting the right of full debate, will enable a majority of senators ultimately to resolve an issue by voting.” ★ /★ k Senate Rule 22 requires a two-thirds majority of senators voting to, cut off debate. The six/ senators said “the large body of senators favoring modificaoon of the cloture rule “is divided among those favoring a change from two-thirds to three-fifths of those present and voting; those favoring cloture by constitutional majority, or 51 members; and those favor big a simple majority of the members present and voting.” NOT DIVIDED But they added that the groups are not divided on the principle that after a reasonable time for debate “a majority of the Senate has the constitutional right to change its rules free of obstruction from past Senates.” Senators opposing any change in Rule 22 contend that the Senate, with only one-third of its members elected every two years; is a continuing body and its rules automatically carry over. The letter, saying a fight for a change will be launched soon as the 90th Congress convenes Jan. 10, was sent by Democrats Joseph S. Clark of Pennsylvania, Philip A. Hart of Michigan and William PnQxmire of Wisconsin and Republicans Clifford P. Case of New Jersey, Jacob K. Javits of New York and Thomas H. Kuchel Of California. N. Y. Teen's* First Trip to Sea Proves Nightmare NEW YORK (AP) — Teen-,from a plane at Kennedy Xir- ager Mary Shapiro’s first trip to sea turned out to be a nightmare. “I think it will be my last,” she said Monday as she stepped Police Seek Pair in Double Slaying LANSING (AP) - Police; throughout Michigan today were seeking today two gunmen who calmly waited on customers while they robbed a gas station on the outskirts of Lansing and killed a deputy sheriff and the station attendant. # ' ★ ★ Victims were Eaton County Deputy Dean Foster, 24, of Charlotte and Harold Peterson, 27, of Lansing, who were found shot to death Sunday in the service station garage. State police, meanwhile, were questioning three teen-age boys arrested in Detroit in connection with a Brighton jewelry store burglary to determine if they had anything to do with the Lansing shooting. port Mary, 17, of Yonkers, N.Y., was One of five persons rescind from the stricken yawl Petfiel after the 70-foot ocean-goirtg yacht fought mountainous Atlantic seas and hammering winds for two days and nights last week. The five were brought to Norfolk, Va., Monday on the British freighter Cotswold, which picked them up from the Petrel last Friday. LIFE PRESERVERS From Norfolk, Mary, her friend, Hejdi Van Nes, 17, also of Yonkers, and Mrs. Barry Conway, wife of the Petrel’s skipper, flew to New York. When they disembarked from the plane, they were, carrying the orange life preservers they had worn when they leaped from the deck of the Petrel into the Cotswold’s lifeboat Along with her iife jacket, Heidi also clutched a big teddy bear that was given to her by a seaman aboard the rescue ship. Her father, Hans Van Nes, who owns the Petrel, her mother and an older sister, Bretta Kornmacher,'greeted her at the airport. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Armed troops stood guard outside government buildings ^Organization Jordan today after 10 new bomb , incidents in the capital of Amman; and reports reaching Beirut said a terrorist ring had been arrested in Saudi Arabia; Bomb explosions in the two countries signaled increased terrorist activity against the regimes of Jordan’s King Hussein and Saudi Arabia’s King i Faisal, the two moderate mon-j archs of the Arab world. ! k k k Reliable reports said a bomb rocked the government radio station in Amman last' FridayJ damaging a studio and cutting off transmissions for about five minutes. Two other explosions damaged the radio station Wednesday, and definolition experts discovered seven more bombs planted inside the building on the outskirts of the capital, the reports said. ! NO CASUALTIES There were no casualties from any of the explosives, the reports added. Jordanian soldiers were posted at government buildings. Witnesses said everyone entering them,was searched so thoroughly that even women’s hairdos were combed out for explosives. There was no confirmation of reports from the Israeli side of Jerusaleta that two explosions went off in the Jordanian sector of the city Sunday night. Earlier reports from Jordan said the bomb blasts last Tuesday damaged the wall of the Soviet Embassy in Amman and West Tier many’s Goethe Cultural Institute, and another bomb went off near the Ministry of Information. J 3 EXPLOSIONS In Saudi Arabia, according to unconfirmed reports, 33 mem-| bers of a Yemeni terrorist ring were arrested after three bomb explosions in Riyadh, the capital. The ring presumably was working against Saudi support1 for the royalist forces in Yemen’s suspended civil war, in which Egyptian troops support i the republican regime. The Socialist regime in Syria and the Palestine Liberation based in Cairo have called for the overthrow of King Hussein; They charge his regime has not fulfilled Its com-. mitments to a unified Arab military defense plan against Israel, and tiie Palestine Liberation | Organization demands that itsi troops* be*stationed in Jordan, Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Si. He»r %/ Fbblic Notice Sate 501-1.75* "SIMMS Basement Rummas'e ••• &*f.r t All Prices As Marfei XAli *oa\es Final ... sill prices ooo4 ^h'fl^SBocK on 6-tables rermiv7 M North I kS.(in.w| bStreet SIMMS.?* Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS Open Tonite ’til Wednesday Hours: 9 a Bargains for Today and Wednesday ! Electronics-TRANSISTOR Dept. % Fresh Stock of 9-Volt Transistor Radio Batteries no. nor -9V~ OENUINE REALTONE Srk.li botUri.l for'most all transistor radios, lim-. it 6. 1 to 3-Block Range Walkie-Talkies Per Unit Up to Vz Mile 6-TR. Walkie-Talkie $15.95 Value—Per Unit... Alaron 009 unit is ideal for scouting and other games which the youngsters play. 3 transistor walkie-talkie with case and batteries. Range 9 98 'REALTONE JADE'1 6-TRANSISTOR Pocket Radio Case, Battery-Good Tone • Model J162 radio is a regular $6.98 Valup — picks up all local AM broadcasts. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Shop SIMMS TUES. and WED/ For These Big Values Main Floor CLOTHING DEPT. First Quality Seamless Textured Nylon NU-SASH REPLACEMENT WINDOWS Free Estimates Call 338-4036 REALTONE JADE Modell 14-Transistor Pocket Radio $9.95 Value As shown — newest model 143 i radio has the fine sound for all local AM stations. Complete with case, battery and { earphone. Legislators Take Oath in Hospital FARMINGTON, N.M. (AP) -Four New Mexico state legislators took their oaths of office'in a hospital room. State-Sen. Don Hargrove, a Republican, was hospitalized last month. Three other legislators went to his room Monday for a joint swearing-in ceremony. ... r SIMMS Once-A-Year Only Sale Famous Brands Cosmetics NATIONALLY, pn^MFTIft^ ON ADVERTISED UUdmCIlUO SALE NEW SERVICE HOURS Wednesday-II AM. to 1 P.M. REMINGTON Electric Shaver TUNE-UP SIMMS SavtCE - Remington factory . impKMniatM will b* in our .tore every IWedneiday of every ymeV.; Dectrie Shiver* -Main iUnr Your Choice of ‘Dana’ Spray Colognes ISO 2-oil size, your choice of Tabu, AmbuSh, or 20 Carats. * Fragrant and delightful. Chantilly Liquid Skin Sachet $2.75 value, |kln sachet plus u generous size of toilet water ^ -••••• ^ RevJen ‘intimate’ Toilet Water 2-oz. size Intimote, spray ' mist toilet water, delight- fully light nriist. Rj f >5-• BIGGER SAVINGS NOW AT YOUR FORD DEALER’S 4th ANNUAL WHITE SALE! A i ~7^ II THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 Sharon pride of UDoi tuM The Revolution in Your Bedroojtt Living in the post is delightful . * with this .Bates bed-spread. Price of Sharon is right out of the Revolutionary periocfe Machine washable and dryable. Antique or Snow White. Charge Yours. Reg. 14.99 twin Size Reg. J6.99 full Size $12.99/ $14.99 By Bates . Nottingham Spread Reg. 32.50 Full Size Reg. 19.99 Matching Tablecloth Rich English country look woven textured fringe bedspread by Bates. Intricate textured fringe rounded corners. Machine washable and dryable. by Fieldcrest SAMPLER 1 TOWELS Reg: 2.00 - . Reg.'. 1.40 Reg; 60c Bath Size Hand1 Size W. Cloth , A] 6? $109 49c MATCHING SHEETS: Reg, 3.50, 72x108 or fitted .. . $2.99 * Reg. 4.50, 81x108 or fitted . .. $3.99 Reg. 2.65 Cases . .• .$2.39 Lovely Early American design in one color combination of beige background with red and"blue. Reg.4.99 Twin Flat Belleair Dacron Mattress Pads Reg. 5.99 Full Flat Reg. 5.99 Twin Fitted 99 Reg. 6.99 Full Fitted Pads are filled with 100% Dacron polyester. Machi bands and fitted have elastic shift. vashabie and dryable. Fiat have anchor SAVE $2 "BLUE-HEAVEN" FOAM RUBBER PILLOWS Royal QCTeen Reg. 6.99 Cooling air vents create the ultimate in sleeping comfort. Restful foam rubber pillows from B. F. Goodrich . . . adjusts to your sleep. Completely non-a!!ergenic. “Royal Queen, Reg. 6.99 ...... $4.99 Royal King, Reg. 8.99 ....... $6.99 Imperial Deluxe, Reg. 9T99 .... $7.99 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 3^1967 JANUARY WHITE SALE Shop Mon., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. Nites Til 9 P.M. PHONE FE 4-2511 Ext. 55 Spring maid Muslin Sheets' Wake Up To FfjyjL Springmatd if'A, Reg. 2.49 72x108 or • Fitted Reg. 2.99 81x 108 or Fitted Reg. 1.20 PrCases > Fitle.1 Sheets With Famoufe S|.ring-On Elastic Corners: [ 4 4 Cot, 30x72, Reg. 3.JJ0 Youth. 33x66, Reg. 3.30........ Day, 33x75, Reg. 3.30 ..... .§9| Single, 36x75, Reg. 3.30.....|... Twin, 39x76, Reg. 3.00--------- Foam Twin, 39x76, Reg. 3.001..., Three Quarter, 48x76, Reg. 3|A0 . Double, 54x76, Reg. 3.40.....!* ’ *1 Fo-.in DoubH.,‘54x76, Reg. 3.40 . 72x108 or Fitted, Re b* 3.00 3 *2i 8Lxl08 or Fitted, Reg. 3.40 79 $2.49 $2.49 $2.49 $2.49 $2.49 $2.49 $2.79 $2.79 $2.79 Extra Long Double, 54x80, Reg. 4.00 ...., Long Queen, 60x80, Reg. 5.00........j King, 72x84, Reg. 6.30 ..........7... Hollywood, 78x76, Reg. 6.99.......... Extra-Large Hollywood, 78x80, Reg. 8,00 . Flat Sheets: Double, 81x108, Reg. 3.40............ Extra Long Twin, 72x120, Reg. 3.80... $3.49 . $4.29 $5.49 $6.29 $7.49 $2.79 $3,19 Extra Long Double, 81x120, Reg. 4.20.,, Extra Wide Double, 90x108, Reg. 4.00 v . Queen, 90x120, Reg. 5.00............ . King, 108x120, Reg. $00 w. M Pillowcases: A . 42x38, Reg. 1.58 ...... <....._....... 45x38, Reg. 1.78 ...................... *2 ..$3.59 ..$3.59 a $4.19 1 $6?99 $i.38: $1.58 Springmaid Combed Percale fashion sheets and pillowcases at amazing savings. Floral Lace ...Delicate Schiffli embroidered lace on enchanting nosegay print hems in a choice o|f blue, yellow and pink. Matching pillow cases. Echotone Stripes . .. Hibiscus; Delft' Blue, Desert Sand, Pink, .Blue, Yellow,, Fern Green, Lilac, Peacock,Green. Matching pillow cases. Princess Rdse.. Lovely rosebud print on deep 5” hem piped in matching color. Yellow, Pink, Blue, Lilac. Matching pillow cases,. Solid Colors...rich and glowing solid colors that coordinate with Floral Lace and Echotone Stripes. Or use them alone as striking color accents. Hibiscus, Delft Blue, Desert Sand, Pink, Blue,Yellow, FernGreen, Lilac, Peacock, Green. M'* ■' Lively solid colors coordinate with stripes and patterns - or as rich color accents. 72x108 Reg. 3.50 $0*9 72xl08„Reg. 3.50 81x108, Reg. 4.50... t. A* ... $2.99 ....$3.99 * .72x108 Reg. 3.50 $299 72xl08-br Fitted, Reg. 3.50 81x108 or Fitted, Reg. 4.50 Pillowcases, Reg. 2.50 .... . 81x108 $099 Pillowcases, Reg. 2.50 .... ....$2.39 81x108 or Fitted $299 90x120, Reg. 7.00 Reg. 4.50 90xJ 20, Reg. 8~.00 Queen Fitted, Reg. 8.00 . . . .,..$7.49 .... $7.49 Reg. 4.50 Queen Fitted, Reg. 7.00 .... 108x120, Reg. 11.00 Pillowcases $23*9 108x120, Reg. 11.00 .... $9.99 Pillowcases $230 Extra Long Hollywood Reg. 2.50 Ex. Long Hollywood, Reg. 1 .00, $9.99 Reg. 2.60 Fitted^ Reg. 11.00 ...'. \. . . $2.99 $3.49 . $1.99 $5.99 $5.99 $9.49 $9.49 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 TOUR SEASONS" JACQUARD TOWEL by J.' P. Stevens Reg. 2.99 Bath Reg. 1.79 Hand Reg. 69c W. Cloth "Four Seasons" heavy weight 100% cotton terry. Reversible jacquard towel in a Near East Floral design. .Choose from pink, blue, gold, red, antique white and Senna green. Charge Yours at Waite's. * fin lints PILLOW TICKS and PROTECTORS Reg. 1.09 Ticks Reg. 89c Protectors The protectors are made of snow white cotton with zippered ’ end. The ticks ore of 100% cottin in several prints. 'ROMANESQUE MEDALLION'' TOWEL by J. P. Stevens $]69 Reg. 1.39 $’|09 Reg. 59c ^ Ql w. aoth “ 7 Reg. 1.99 I Oy Reg. 1.39 Bath I Hand Another J. P. Stevens 100% cotton terry towel in a classic jacquard done in a contemporary styling. Choose from pink, Versailes gold, antique white, or moss green. Just say Charge It at Waite's. BELLE AIR VALMOR A blend of 85% Rayon and 15% Acrylic in practical size of 72x90 inch. Nap-loc and extra loft for pill resistance and soft thick pil^. Several colors to choose front. Fully guaranteed^ Reg. 6.99 $499 BELLE AIR 100% ACRYLIC Re9 899 9 Soft and warm 100% Acrylic fiber for: years of service. Has Nap-lioc and extra loft finjsh. Large 72x90-inch size. Choose from several lovely colors. Unconditionally guaranteed. $599 BELLEAIR 100% ACRiLAN ^ .0.99 Luxury 100% Acrilcm. Non-allergenic. Guaranteed against moth damage. Machine washable and large 72x90-irich size. Charge yours at Waite's. COMFORT NAP THERMAL BLANKET Reg. 6.99 $499 94% rayon, 6% acrylic with nylon bindiing. Keeps you warm in winter and cool in summer.\arge 72x90 inch size. Choose from a wide assortment of lovely colors. Charge Yours. 100% COYTON FILLED MATTRESS PADS 1 Twin Flat Reg. 3.99 Full/to .Twin Fitted Full Fitted $049 $349 $099 $399 Bleached white cotton filled. FJat has anchor bands and fitted has elastic skirt Protect your mattress. Fresh, New Scatter Rugs Everywhere in Yc Fourth Floor Phone FE 4-2511 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 'BELLEAIR REGENCY" Kodel Rugs 50% Kodel polyester and 50% 7.00 24x36" 7.00 27" Rd. DuPont Nylon, with knotted $C QO $ A 99 fringe. Non - skid backing. ■ Stays fluffy after machine 10.00 27x48" 10.00 35" Rd. washing. Charge Yours ot $Q OO *8.99 Waite s. * ' Lid *1.99 *3 ***** Our own Belleair fluffy blend of 50% Kodel® 50% Virgin-Nylon. Washable and Dryable. Belleair ST^RUTE" 4.99 21x36" 4)99 Contour^ 4.99 27" Rd. *3.99 ' *3.99 *3.99 6.99 24x42" 5.99 27x48" Lid Covers *5.99 *7.99 *1.99 'ARISTOCRAT" Bathroom Carpet Kit Wall-to-wall carpeting of 100% DuPont Nylon. Mdchine washable and dry-able. Pile stays fluffy. Assorted ciSors 14.99 5x6-ft. *11.99 100% DuPont Virgin nylon that is machine washable and dryable. Long lasting skid resistant back. Unconditionally guaranteed. 24" Rd. Contour 21x36" *2.99 ' *2.99 *2.99 24x42" 27x48" lid Covers *4.99 *5.99, *1.99 / \ Beauty, for Your Bedroom^ Rose Enchantment 72x108" Flat Sheet or Twin Fitted Bottom Regularly 3.50 Reg. 4.50 81x108" or Full Fitted Bottom Reg. 2.70 pair 42x38" Cases.....• • • • by Belleair $209 ..............«.$3.99 .........$2.49 FLOOR . . i CHARGE YOURS Add a new dimension of beauty and charm to your:'bedroom with our exclusive "Rose Enchantment" print percale sheets and pillowcases. And our lovely coordinates ore so budget-pleasingly priced you can enjoy these fresh lovely blooms all year long. Choose all-over print fitted sheets or double border oil-over print flat sheets and matching cases with cool blue, deep pink or regal gold roses - . . all on a snowy | bleached percale background. WAITE'S WHITE SALE ... ENTIRE FOURTH I . I • THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 196? PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 Your skin can tell SOLD IN FINE STORES, COAST TO COAST EXCLUSIVE AT WAITE'S Jj | , Reg. 1.40 Cases . . . . ...... . Reg. 3.09 Sr'xlOS" |. ..... ,y $1 Reg. 2.89 Twin Fitted $1. V Reg. 309 Double Fitted -. . ... $1. Reg. 1.40 Cases........ ! Sflky smooth cotton percale sheets that are snow white and stay white wash after wash. Bottom fitted have elastic corners for easier bed making. Invitation Martex Fabulous Martex Terri-Down® Two textures, one side deep looped pile and the other is sheared. White, Pink, Gold or Green. Made to pamper you dry . . . cuddle you in softness, . . . Charge Yours at Waite's. Big, Thick—Deeply Piled LUXOR by MARTEX BELLE AIR ' * Sold in Fine Stores Coast to Coast Rose Arbor Towels Bath. Hand * Washcloth teg. 1.9*K Reg. 1.39 Reg- 59c Reg. 1.99 Hand Towel Reg. 3.99 Bath Towel Reg. 79c Washcloth Bath Towel, Reg. 2.99 Hand Towel, Reg. 1.79 Washdoth, Reg, 69c . COLOR BELLEAIR SOLID TERRY TOWELS BELLEAIR TheEma-Loft Blanket *\Qoo $1400 Choice of blue mist, lemon ice, misty mink, white, rosebud, or antique gold. Charge Yours as Waite's. From tender to torrid in this quality terry you love.‘Choose from a wide range of eyecatching colors. Charge yours at Waite's. wit’s Martex Reg. 1.99 Reg. 1.29 Reg. 49c Both Towel Hand Towel Washcloth ■Your skin can tell 80x90 Inch -Sire Our own Belleair jactyrard 1st quality in pink, blue, gold, and green. I00%xcotton terry reverses for a different-look. \ 66x90 Inch Size MONTICELLO" ... Rose Print on Terri-Down® by Martex 108x90 Inch 72x90 Inch Size 100% virgin acrylic. Brushed nap thprmat weave, warmth and comfort. Machine5washable. Comes in fi colors. . - Reg. I-.79 Hand Towel . . $1.49 ^Reg. 69c W. Cloth 59c Touch the one and only towel with two sides to it's glory. Petal soft on the print, blue or gold. Charge yours. Fourth Floor Domestic Needlepoint CUSTOM MADE TABLE BELLLAIkx ELECTRIC BLANKETS *Vt«WtT|C EUXTOC REGULARLY 9.95 to .24.95, C Imported Belgian linen. 10 lovely colors. One of the sturdiest fabrics ever , loomed. Now, save 10% on these handsome table pads by Artex. We'll be delighted to measure your table at your convenience and in your home. Choose decorator, .colors from a wide selection of simulated leathers, woodgrains and florals. Tops are alcohol and stain resistant Vinyls. Backings.are fine, soft cotton flannels. Any size up to 48-inch by 48-inch. Use your Credit at Waite's. -u- Table Pads ... Fourth Floor P Bath towel, Reg. 1.99 P •• Hand Towel, Reg. 1.39 gg * Washcloth, Reg. 59c . . ■ ith Martex wmmmzs. A blend of 80% rayon, 10% nylon and 10% cotton. Electric blanket has contour snap corners. Full 2 year replacement guarantee. Nylon binding. Several colors. Avn*yu kcx : .«*• ® % 5 GREAT PILLOW STYLES FOR YEARS OF SLEEPING COMFORT wX' YOUR CHOICE of Down, Dacron or Foam Rubber | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 , 'PRINCESS ROSE" 100% DACRON PILLOW & Large 21x27-inch size t. , 100% DuPont Dacron® 88 Polyester. Ideal for many years of sleeping comfort. Print Pink or Blue. Reg. 4.99 2,.*6” "FLORENTINE" 100% DACRON Jumbo 22x28-inch size Jumbo pillow is filled with fluffy snow white DuPont Dacron® 88 Polyester. Completely washable. Choose from Blue or Pink Tick. Charge Yours’at Waite's. , Reg. 10.99, 12x39................................2 for $17.99 PILLOW Reg. 6.99 o: $799 'SNOWHITE" FOAM RUBBER PILLOWS 1^ Extra Plump Lovely white print on colored background. Wonderful fpr many years of sleeping -eorrffort. Charge Yours at Waite's. „ Reg. 5.99 UT’’ 100% DOWN PILLOWS “Your Choke of 100% Dow or 50% Down, 50% feath- Re9 14-99 to 16.99 ers in medium soft or Soft Down pillows. a _ ^ ?I0 Approximately 1-rnch Thick . . . FOAM RUBBER TOPPERS Twin Size $Z9Q Full Size “It is all the more essential,” it added, “for the older comrades to retain their proletarian revolutionary integrity in their later years, so as to-make still j greater contributions to the rev- j olutionary cause.” U. S. Industry Growth Is Seen WASHINGTON (AP) - The Commerce Department has I forecast continued expansion by ] much of American industry dur-1 ing 1967. At the same time, it said thej volume of construction win drop moderately this year. The annual “outlook” pub-J lished by the department’s Busi-i ness and Defense Services Ad-| ministration says 14 of the 78 industries accounting for 60 perj cent of all manufacturing will' grow by more than 10 per centj •duringT967. It says 37 other industries anticipate increases between 5 and j 10 per cent and 24 expect to ex%| pand by less than 5 per cent. It! made no comparable estimates1 for the other 3. DOLLAR VOLUME ( The report also forecasts a] slight increase in construction! dollar volumfe to $76.1 billion. It! says the increase will be offset] byrising prices. It predicts the volume of j mortgage funds will be at a relatively low level during 1967! despite Some expected easing of | tight home loan money. | The report says , housing starts, winch dropped last fall to] tjieir lowest level since World War II, would rise, but not to what the industry considers normal. /' m:\ OPEN TUES., THURS., FRI. AND SAT. NITES TIL 9 Charge Account WEDNESDAY ONLY 9=30 till 5:30 P.M. Corner Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511 fur-trimmed un- Reg. 49.99 to 59.99 Reg. 69.99 to 79.99 29.99 PHONE r FE 4-2511 TOMORROW * SALE Reg. 85.99 SAVE *8.00 'Reg. 130.00 to 175.00 Famous maker coats in a wide assortment of styles, colors and sizes. Fur trims, un-trimmed, tweeds, curls and many more. Sizes 6 to 20. Suedes also available. Coats... Third Floor MEN'S OUTERWEAR SALE Reg. 11.99 to 55.00 Vi OFF Men's famous brand winter outerwear. Choose from reversible ski parkas, sherpa lined suedes, wool melton plaids,tcar coats, bomber styles and stadium cogts. ? Men's ^Wear ... Street Floor Boys* Sherpa Lined Corduroy JACKET Boys' Wool ' Melton Reg. 15.00 $Q99 Value / BENCH- WARMERS Special purchase „of boys' rugged corduroy western style, jackets. Comp|ete with warnf sherpd lirfirtg.l Brown drily in sizes 8 *o 20. vv Boys' Wear.. * Second Floor 100% wool .nfieJtonHsftell with hood. Topsty'warm orton pile, zip,-edt lining. Size^8 20. Boys' Wear .., Second ftoor PANEL END FULL SIZE CRIB • Choice of natural finishes • Large, colorful decal# on foot of bed • 3-Position steel link fabric springs > • 3 Twirl balls for baby to play with Reg! 32.00 FULL SIZE INNERSPRING $10.99 CRIB MATTRESS ................... Value DOUBLE DROP Reg. SIDE CRIB :..... 7. ____......;... . $35.00 $6 ?2600 $9400 Infants' Assorted Pram-Suits Reg. 12.99 Choose from several styles in fine quality pram suits. Wash* able twills, nylon, poplin shells, with warm interlinings. Sizes to 24 months. Charge It. Infant's Conform Seat *267 Reg. 4.99 Infant's Unbreakable Dressing Table $1388 Infant's’ High Chair Reg. 22.00 Unbreakable plastic, odor pFoof, and moisture proof. Folds ebmpactly to chest of drawers for convenient storage. Charge it. 3-wby folding «chair converts to junior choir ond utility chair. Brow* and white Infant's Thermal Crib BLANKETS Infants' Receiving BLANKETS Infants' GOWNS it Perfect 3.99 If Perfect 89c ea. 2 97‘ If Perfect 1.00 Full size cotton thermal knit thermal blanket bound in rayon satin. ■Slight irregular, but will not impair the wear. Infants' receiving blankets. Slight irregulars, Choose from white and assoMted colors. Charge Y<$yr£ fine .quality cotton knits will keep baby warm and comfortable. White and pastel colors. Slight irregulars. Charge Yours. Infant's CRIB SHEETS 3for*225 Infant's GAUZE DIAPERS If Perfect 1.19 ‘ If Perfect 2.99 Doz. or 79c ea. Baby Crib Bumper Guards $j88 Reg. 2.99 Slight Irregulars "ojUfoll size cotton -crib sheets in white and prints. ' Soft, absorbent, 100% cotton gauze diapers in 20x40-irtch size. A 3-s*ded vinyl bumper guard. 2** perma-foam padding. Printed vinyl, wet-proof cover. Boxed edge top and bottom. - Infant's Baskenettes *6“ Non-toxic encunel. Reg. 7.99 ff Perfect 1.99 Terry Sets • 1)47 Want*'" Tr0inln9. ■ • • Pants ' £5-99c Infant's Vinyl PANTS Sight irr*gulpa of 100% cotton tarry. 6ripp#r front. 1 Infant*' cotton; training pants with double crotch. ChargeIt. 4/t.oo4 for 76C Cushioned and tana with, tori thread, for durability. ^ \* . £ 48 West Huron Street PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48056 TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 johh w. rmmot Executive Vice President end Editor John A. Hair Secret try end Advert! cloy Director Axlo ifccowr Circulation Manager Ha*«v J. Rii# Managing Editor Hicham M. Titruant Treasurer and finance Officer Area Population Zoom Spells Boom People Make News—and a Wayne State University study sees them producing a lot of it for Pontiac and Oakland County ip the years ahead. Prepared for the guidance of the County Planning Commission, the survey indicates that Pontiac’s estimated 1965 population of 84,000 will grow to 96,000 by 1970. But there-,after it will remain relatively unchanged until 1990, the termination || the survey, mainly because of lack of growth area within the municipality’s confines. ★ ★ ★ Waterford Township, with much more room for population expansion, shows a projected population of a whopping 140,-000 by that date. In between, its 1965 calculated head count of 53,700 figures to rise to 61,000 f in 1970 and reach 105,000 by 1980. ★ ★ ★ The County’s population, needless to say, reflects parallel growth of the two neighboring municipalities. Its population of 690,259 shown by* the11960 census and now estimated at 850,000 is pegged at 1.2 million by 1980 and 1.5 million by 1990. ★ ★ ★ Purpose of the population study is to enable the County to keep abreast or a jump ahead of the pyramiding need for governmental facilities and services. The growth pattern pro2 jected, while posing manifold problems for area municipalities, holds promise of incalculable economic and social advancement for the .community. Congress Gives ‘Food for Peace’ New Life The Food for Peace program, designed originally to dispose of the Country’s surplus agricultural products entered a new phase Sunday. In extending the program for two more years, Congress last October provided $7.4 billion to finance expansion of American food production. More food must be grown if the United States is to have enough fbr domestic and foreign commercial sales as well as for shipment to hungry nations. Food for Peace has been the subject of a behind-the-scenes power struggle involving the State Department and Agriculture Department. The new Food for Peace legislation, however," gives the President power to decide how much food should go to which countries, whether it should be sold for cash or on credit, and whether recipient countries are meeting the self-help requirements of the program. ★ ★ ★ American Food assistance may eventually be merged with that * , of other developed countries in a vast international program siitii-lar to the one operated since 1962 by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. Agriculture Secretary Orville L. Freeman has indicated that the Administration favors such an approach in dealing with India’s food crisis. At a news conference, Freeman urged the rest of the world to match American wheat shipments to India with either grain or money, adding that “the United States alone can’t feed all hungry nations.” The Secretary’s quote is both portentous and about the most realistic to come out of Washington in many a day. No Solid Ground for Burying Power Lines Another example of futility of seeking to alter our environment by the simple process of writing a law may be seen in the sftate of New Hampshire where the legislature is considering a bill requiring all future power lines to be installed Underground and all present lines to be so installed within 20 years. Assuming such a program is technically feasible, the cost estimate fpr two companies is staggering. Combined, they have 1,330 miles of high voltage transmission lines and 6,975 miles of low voltage distribution lines. The high, voltage lines represent an initial investment of under $13 million. The estimated cost of put- ting them underground is $386 million. The low voltage system was developed at.a cost of under $48 «million. To bury it would cost an estimated $446,500,000. Therefore, the ultimate increase of investment to place present lines underground is $832.5 million — thirteen times as much as the total capital invested in the two companies at the present time. ® It does, not take any imagination to predict what would happen to power rates if the companies Were conv pelled to expend over three-quarters of a billion dollars. Power lines will go underground when technology makes it possible. Laws alone cannot put them there. Fighting for a Temple of Peace By RUTH MONTGOMERY -WASHINGTON - The dove of peace is being threatened with hawkish condemnation procedures by the Smithsonian^ soon-to-be-constructed National Armed forces M u-| seum. At issue is] an idyllic 20-1 acre" bluff) o v e rlooking f the Potomac, which was recently dedicat- Ruth ed as the sije Monf|omery for a $5-million Temple pf Understanding “to advance the hope of peace through worldwide education in inter-religious understanding.” The temple, d e s i g n e d by famed architects’ Edward D u r r e 11 Stone and Lathrop Douglass, is to have sixf wings, one each fop Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Hinduism, Judaism and Islam . The inspired brainchild of Mrs. D*ckerman Hollister of Greenwich, Conn., it tias become an international undertaking, having won the enthusiastic endorsement of many world leaders and 14,000 well-, wishers in 66 countries, amassed to 'purchase the land, the nonprofit organization recently launched a drive to raise some $5 million for the unique building, its exhibits and endowment, so that visitors from every part of the World can become better acquainted with all major religions. The wooded bluff on the Maryland side of the Potomac, seven miles downstream from Washington, seems ideally suitecLfor such a center devoted to meditation and study. The area similarly appeals, however, to Sipithsonian officials who have-been authorized by Congress to select a 610-acre site for a milseum to commemorate the Revolutionary’ War, the Civil War, the •• War of 1812, the Span is h-American war, and the great conflagrations of this century. RIVER SITE ' Since naval engagements sometimes played a decisive role in those wars, a Ho-, tomac River site was required to dispiay hiStoric ships, and the 20 acres bought by the temple for peaceful pursuits lies in the heart of the coveted tract. , Voice of the People: Reader Supports of Sheriff’s Department In regards to the recent article alleging discrimination in the Oakland County Sheriff’s department, it appears that pressure ^groups are once again trying to w e^k e rij our .law enforcement agency. ★ ★ ★ ;: Sheriff Irons was elected by the people. He was elected because he and his men have done and are doing a. good job. The majority of the people are behind him. £ H. C. WILSON UNION LAKE 'We Can Reach Every City .In The U.S. With This One!' David Lawrence Says: Spellman Right to Defend War WASHINGTON g Many clergymen in America have said things about the Vietnam war rka t amount to aid and comfort to the enemy. But the moment a prominent church-m a n defends and supports his own coun-t r y, he is jumped on not merely by the LAWRENCE The matter is now before the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, which has rec-om minded that an accom; modation be found for the Temple, of Understanding adjacent to the museum. Finley P. Dunne Jr., executive director of the temple and namesake son of the late, author of the, “Mr. Dooley” columns, sees no real incongruity in a shared area for the temple and the war museum, if Smithsonian officials will refrain from condemning the 20 aerfe. . A A A He points out-that most of ,our wars have been waged to restore peace, “and faith,is sometimes highest on the battlefield.:’ A- miracle may be required to.settle the conflict and complete the temple by .the. 1970 target-date, but Mrs. Hollister has become familiar with, miracles in the seven years siiice she first took her idea to Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, whom she did not know W h e n doors c 1 o s e d she prayed, and they reopened. The latest barrier, too.'will doubtless pass away. . , - He wasn’t the one who wjint- as one man s retordof John F. Kennedy’s assassination. It. is political' because, by .all accounts of those who have BIOSSAT seen the work in advance, it lays important stress upon the painful estrangement between two great power - centers in the ruling Democratic party— the one focused upon President Johnson, the other upon the Kennedys. * If we are to take at face value Mrs. John F. Kennedy’s statement issued after settlement of negotiations which led to the excising of certain passages from the Manchester work, lie changes do not affect I the political content. -Deliberately, and consciously, however, Mrs. Kennedy sought to reflect adversely upon that content, saying, “I have been told there are historical inaccuracies and unfair references in ibis book ,. Ip time, history will depl fairly and justly with this '■ period” ] ' V_y'_ The fact is, that even before publication and solely oh the basis of leaked hints as to content, a corrective process has already set in against Manchester’s judgments with respect to the Kennedy-John-son relationships. If the advance word is accurate and Lyndon Johnson suffers acutely in the author’s portrayal of the events surrounding the assassination, then a sense of fairness will impel historians, political observers, book critics and others to join quickly the effort to balance the record. The leaked Manchester postassassination portrait of Johnson is of a crude, insensitive man, seen by the Kennedys as too eager to seize power, trying to “use” the Kennedys to aggrandize himself in his new role, shoving them aside. A A A' Several things need to be borne ir. mind by Americans who will find some such picture laid before them in the weeks attend. Mrs. Kennedy wanted Jo get quickly away from the assassination locale. The< new President wanted to wait to be sworn in. The Kennedys thought it unseemly for Johnson to 1 “take over.” He thought it important to the nation and the world that continuity of authority be Swiftly established. We Americans who were mere onlookers in late 1963 and thereafter can hardly say we would have behaved better. No one really knows how he will act in a crisis until he is in it, no matter what nobility of performance he claims in advance. AU Hie Kennedy-Johnson * principals in the postassassination drama, particularly in the early stages, aboard -Air Force One in Dallas and en rente4 to Washington, were in varying degrees of shock. ■. p : ’, . Being human, they made mistakes. Normally controlled anifhosities flared openly under stress. People with differing biit .quite understandable purposes crossed wilfL Most of us live lives of masterly imperfection Which suggest that we, too, would have made mistakes — though not the same ones. A A ,A When John Kennedy’s death was a certified fact, then Lyndon Johnson WAS President. He had a duty to “take ^jver," to keep power flowing smoothly, to reassure the country it was being firmly governed at a grave turn in its history. The MsecleM Press to entitled exclusively to the use lor repubit-cation of ell local news printed to this newspaper as welt as all AP newt dispatches. te Pontiac Pres® Is delivered by sr tor SO cento a week; where mailed In Oakland. Genesaa.PLivingston. Macomb, Lapeer ; and Washtenaw counties it to tu.oo • year; elsewhere in Michigan and •If other places in the Untied States *26.00 a year. All mail subscriptions payable ki . - advance. Postage has been paid at the 2nd class rate at Pontiac. Michigan. Member of ABC ' -V ■I. ' !. THE PONTIAC 1‘UKSS. TUESDAY. JANUARY 8, 1967 Faint Voice Cried for Help Over Phone A—11 By the Associated Pres* HOLLAND — Jane M&pwsen P '** , uauc mccuwiseu, 65* recently underwent surgery \Jor throat cancer. Still recovering, she could barely talk. But as smoke filled the trim little house in this Western Michigan town where she and her husband lived, Mrs. Meeuw sen picked up the telephone and tried to calKfor help. The telephone operator on duty when tjie call came at 7:15 a.m. Monday was Mrs. John Van Dam, 22 of Holland. “Her voice was muffled and I had a lot of trouble understanding her," said Mrs. Van Dam. “I kept asking her to repeat what she said. But even then I couldn’t understand her because someone was coughing in the background." ONE WORD "Police” was the word Mrs. Van Dam Ad understand. "I called the Holland police and they listened in on the cell,” she said, "But we couldn’t make out the address." ★ ★ ★ Five policemen fanned out through die West Side. But they didn’t know it was a fire they were looking for and bad to wake the residents of each house. It was a slow process. "I stayed on the line,” said Mrs. Van Dam. “I didn’t know what was wrong. Then the phone sort of clicked and I kept saying ‘hello, ma’am, hello, ma’am.’ Finally she must have dropped the phone in the cradle because we were cut off.” CALL TRACED While police checked some 20 houses, Mys. Van Dam started to trace the call. By 8:05 a.m. it was complete and she gave officers the correct address. Then she started to call the house. “I kept calling every half minute or so, but no one answered,” said Mrs. Van Dam. ★ ★ • ★ "The officers said they heard the phone ringing inside the house when they arrived,” said Jim Fairbanks, a police dispatcher. Smoke kept police from entering the house although the fire, which apparently started in a living room chair, had pretty much extinguished itself from lack of air. PAIR FOUND When Holland firemen arrived with gas masks they found Mrs. Meeuwsen in a rear bedroom and her husband Dennis, 56, in a front bedroom. They were still conscious, officers said, but both were dead on arrival at a hospital. ★ ★ ★ "I just feel bad that we couldn’t understand' the number,” said Mrs. Van Dam. "Maybe if we could have understood it they might still be alive.” Marcos Orders MANILA (AP) — President , Ferdinand Marcos has ordered the arrest of the Philippines’ army of honorary secret agents. Marcos, in a wide-ranging shake-up of the nation’s police forces, ordered all unpaid agents arrested, their weapons seized, and criminal action started against themJor ‘‘usurpation of authority, illegal possession of firearms' and violations.”. ★ ★ * His directive was aimed at a vast army of so-called secret agents, appointed by mayors and other politicians, who act as armed bodyguards and investigators for various power groups. A recent congressional inquiry suggested there may be as many as 10,000 of the agents. Almost ail of them carry guns and badges * and many have been accused of murder, extortion jukI other crimes. (Adv*r«(wmmt) Off TNI GENUINE ura mnsKR 'Thrust-Bock Collar' TOILET TANK BALL , 4«nriw*> jfyiB J>B#r Hu #4iti#itt Wot#r Maitlt instantly stops dH Ivw of wot* oft#r #och Awshing. 79f ATM AtDWAtC STORES - V*. V -Junior Editors Quiz on- GUNS QUESTION: What makes guns shoot? ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ consumers Power 25-PIECE SET off gleaming STAINLESS TABLEWARE When you purchase af FRIGIDAIRE WASHER FRIGIDAIRE 1 1967 Jet Action Washer keeps the press in Durable Press! ■scAsr* a £2 1 % xa az <§ ■ BMb T~L WCDAL, 5 C6l*(l Md wfclt* Now there's even more action in Jet Action! • Durable Press Cara helps new, no-iron fabrics, stay "sharp!”, • Patented Deep Action Agitator for jj| new deep cleaning! e Jet-Away Rinse "jets” away lint, scum—no lint trap! • Jet-simple mechanism—no belts, pulleys, gearsl . ... VFr | Phoner333-7812 i».io74.a|i Vief Teen Girl, in U.S., Tells of Brushes With Cong HOUSTON (UPD-The young French schoolteacher slowed the car on the empty Vietnamese highway, a» two ,men in black pajamas stepped from the jungle with carbines cradled in their arms. , j The auto halted beside them. One of the men—a Vieteong tape collector — stepped forward.0 ANSWER: When gunpowder is set off inside a gun barrel, the explosion forces out the metal bullet in front of it with tremendous speed. In old days, the powder was put down the muzzle of the gun and a lead bullet rammed down on top. In die flintlock gun (top) a flash was made by a flint striking steel inHhe lock. This set off powder placed in the flash pan. The flash went through a hole, igniting the main charge. In 1805, percussion caps began to be used to make the first flash, .being set off by the falling of the hammer. . Later, cartridges were invented, in which the ball and powder charge were combined in a metal case. The case was slipped into tile barrel at the breach end, toward the shooter. The head of the cartridge contained a special explosive compound set off by the falling hammer. In small rifles, such as the one Sam is firing, this compound is in the rim of the cartridge. With larger guns, like the M14 U.S. Army rifle (below), the gun pushes a firing pin into , a primer in the center of the cartridge, which contains the explosive compound. "How many batteries did yon bring?” he demanded of the teen-age Vietnamese girl sitting beside the driver. She pulled two from bar parse. “No more?” Hie girl shook her head. “Okay, but bring more next time.” '} it ★ ' ★ The girl looked at him nervously as he wrote out a safe conduct pass covering their trip from the mountain resort of Dalat to Saigon. DROVE AWAY The man gave the pass to the driver, the girl’s brother-in-law, Pierre. He shifted the car into gear and drove away. The rest of the trip to the capital was uneventful. That is how Thu Nhi Do Quang, 19, described one of her many brushes with the Vieteong in an interview here with United Press International. “The VC always wanted batteries,” she said. “We told them we could not carry more than two or three. It is the law because they are in demand to make plastics.” ★ ★ * “Plastics,” is the layman’s word for a high explosive used by the Vieteong. in their terrorist bombings. The batteries are necessary for,the electric timing device. ALLOWED TO TRAVEL As long as the French and Vietnamese brought batteries and paid a cash road tax, Thu Nhi said, they were1 allowed to travel the highway freely. But with the Americans, it was different. “They kill Americans. They would shoot Manford,” she said, glancing at Manford Foster, 31, sitting beside her. Foster, who spent six months in Saigon as a construction engineer, is responsible for her coming to tills country. She plans to study sociology at Sam Houston State College in Huntsville, Tex. > Thu Nhi, who made straight A’s at the best French girls’ school In Saigon, wants at least a master’s degree in sociology before returning home to work with the children orphaned by two decades of war. “Th$y have nobody to care for them,” Thu Nhi said. “They don’t have a family. They don’t know what is love.” When he returned from Vietnam, Foster organized a campaign to raise funds to pay her fare and finance her education. He has enough to pay the first year, but is still seeking help for the other three. ★ * • ★ He is also seeking funds to buy her an artificial limb to replace a foot she lost after she was hit by a truck last fall. She said these children have turned to criihe to survive and built a systems of value where the greatest virtue is to be tougher than the rest. “They go around stealing and hitting people,” she said. “They^ want to be like people in American films. They want to be tough, not to be sentimental.” UPS AND DOWNS Although not orphaned, Thu Nhi has! also known the topsy-turvy ups and downs of war and oriental politics. Within tiie past 10 years, her father has drifted from a top-flight job as minister of information to the publisher of a newspaper to a translator and novelist earning $150 a month. * At his zenith, tite girl’s father, Do Quang, shrved in President Ngo Dinh Diem’s Cabinet. * As the regime grew more repressive, however, he resigned in protest in 1957.,' POWER FURNACE, j HUMIDIFIER Thh winter protect your family from colds, ■ dry skin, sore throats and other discomforts. ------------------ --------------------WMI The scientifically-designed NU-AIR HU Mil) I. FIER will provide you with controlled humidity for just pennies a day in operating cost*. I'e. New See-Thr6ugh Design Clear plexiglass gives visual prOof of its efficient opera* lion. Installed on any horizontal warm aP'duct of a forced air furnace, or with a plenum adapter, a NU-AIR HUMIDIFIER is automatically controlled with furnaca operation. Your home will continually maintain a comfortable and healthful level of 35% to 45% humidity. Save 15% On Fuel Bills . . With a NU-AIR HUMIDIFIER your home will feel comfortably warm at lower temperature! thereby reducing your winter fuel bill up to 15%. INTRODUCTORY CASH AND CARRY PRICE NIK4 ir HUMIDIFIER... $0Q9S O’BRIEN HEATING i SUPPLY 3T1 Voorheis PONTIAC 8 BRYAN F. FRENCH 35! North Paddock PONTIAC NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. FOR YOU TO DO: All guns are deadly weapons. Don’t use them unless you have your parents’ permission and thoroughly understand them. I ft smneuf ALWAYS FIR8T QUALITY m SAVE $1 Bra of cotton-Dacron* polyaster-nylon, cotton lined nylon lace cups. 32-36A, 32-40B, C. Reg. 2.50 each. NOW 2 for $4 SAVE $1 Cotton-cup bra with nylon-lycra* spandex cup, back inserts. 32-38A, B; 32-40C. Reg. $2 each. NOW 2 for $3 SAVE $1 Cotton bra has foam rubber cup lining. Fills out in-botwoen sizes. 32-38A, 32* 36B, 32-34C. Hog. $2 each. • NOW 2 for $3 SAVE $1 Stretch strap SAVE $1 Embroidered ny* bra of Dacron* polyester-nylon- Ion cups, acetate-rubbor-Da* cotton. Dacron* fiberflll cups, cron* polyester.' 32-36A, 32* 32-38A, C. Reg. 2.50 each. 42B, C, 32-44D. Reg. $3 each. NOW 2 for $4 NOW 2 for $5 LIMITED TIME ONLY! save 15% to 25% on our exclusive Adonna foundations! SAVE $1 Waistline girdle of nylon-rayon-rubber-Votton. Inner-control bands. Short, average, long. S, M, L, XL-Reg. 5.95. NOW 4.95 SAVE Si Sport-brief Of SAVE $1 Panty girdle of nylon-lycra* spandex. Panel is lycra* spandex-nylon. Nylon acetate-cotton-lycra*. S, M, L, lace panel trims tummy, self back XL. Reg. 3.98. > panel. S, M, l, XL Reg. 6.95. NOW 2.98 NOW 5.95 SAVE $1 Stretch strap bra of nylon-and-lycra* spandex; cotton-rayon cups. 3 2-34A, 32-40$, Cl Reg. $3 each. NOW 2 for $5 Panty girdle af nylon-lycra* spandex, with self panels; Tall, average, short. $«. M, L XL Rag. 8.95. NOW 6.95, SAVE 1.50 Panty-girdle of nylon-rayon-rubber-cotton, Helanca* nylon bands. Average, tall. S, M. L, XL Reg. 7.W. ' NOW 6.45 SAVE $1 ’Action - back’ girdle of nylon-lycra* spandex. Acetate-rayon-spandex panels. S, M, L XL Reg: 5.95. NOW 4.95 SAVE $2 Firm-control panty girdle of nylon-rayon* lycra* spandex. Average, ltd. 26 to 40. Reg. 9.95. NOW 7.95 v v PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE i« STORE HOURS: *' 9:30 A.M. to 9 P M. CHARGE IT! . > ;f I A • m my THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 196T A— WARD some Quantities limited • some items take with items « sale ends Saturday, January ,7 $I3 Regularly 19.99 to 24.99 • Unusual variety of new warm rugged styles e Every one a terrific value at this price e Acrylic pile linings/ misses' sizes 8 to 18. Better hurry for best selection of these great-looking carcoats. Styles indudesmart cotton sudde with wool knit sleeves end collar; toggle closing. Also all wool plaids with wool knit trim and classic wool melton in the group. i¥fi\ itiLLt (Hi 9 Buy now, save $30 on 3-way rediner! Read in the upright position, lean back to watch TV, recline to take a nap! Naugahyde® vinyl coated fabric; foam* cushion. ‘Worrfl lob-f«it#d urtlhon* foam. $99 REG. 129.99 $20 off! Colonial 5-pc. dinette set 99>8 42" round table extends to 54" with leaf. Solid maple construction with- table top of high pressure plastic... chair fabric in vihyl plastic. REG. 119.99 Charming Colonial decorator steel! 1 99 It's an appealing accent item-.. and a big value at this price! Solid hardwood with a warm maple finish. ki.-erl iunioks, msm^As^hxisi ShopWards Signature one-dial automatic washer fiber glass furnace filters NOW IS THE TIME TO RE-STOCK your WARDROBE AND SAVE! Easy to use; 1-dial controls complete operation Large non-clog drain pump; rugged'/s HPmotor Servicing from front m Clean, new filters keep furnace dust out of air, off furniture and drapes. Available in 1-in. sizes from 16x20 to 20x25 in. 29* each WOMEN'S FASHIONS 1 LINEN/YARD GOODS 1 FURNITURE Reg. 12.00—Colorful and Comfortable JUNIOR ROBES ....... Buy Now and Save * JUNIOR SWEATERS--------- Reg. 8.99—Junior Misses and WOMEN’S UNIFORMS.... Reg. 5.99 and 6.99 Misses COTTON DRESSES ......... Choose from a Wide Assortment CAO/ MATERNITY CLEARANCE .90/o OFF IMPORT CAR COATS ... .33/0 OFF PLAID BLANKET Reg. 79c Comfortable Elastic Leg C 41 fi NYLON PANTY.......... 54° *8 Wide Assortment—Buy now and Save 1 REMNANTS ! 50° OFF Reg. 4.99 —Neat and Handy SEWING BASKETS .. 588 Save on Odds and Ends of WINTER FABRICS .. *4 Reg. 2.49 —Convenient and Attractive KNITTING STAND ...... 144 t 99 Save on Discontinued Numbers of BEDSPREADS AND DRAPES Reg. 7.99- 100#/f Acrilan 50% to OFF 6 Reg. 59c—Attractive Assortment of PLACE MATS......................4 for 4 for *1 Reg. 59c Cotton and Rayon AA* EIDERLON PANTY............ 34° 429 333 I27 69° Reg. 2.99 Lovely Butterfly Style NYLON HALF SLIP................ Reg. 6.00 Sizes S-M-L NYLON GOWN ... ^............... Reg. 1.99 Great Buy TAILORED NYLON SLIP . . Reg. 89c PP Wool and Nylon—Hosiery Dept. CREW SOCKS ■•■■••••••■■» HOUSEWARES Values to 17.99-Wide Assortment AWA%£ A}QQ SHOWER CURTAINS.... .99 to 0 Reg. 66c—long Lasting #| OOC CORN BROOMS........ 2 far 00 Reg. 66c—Long Lasting , JiJIe SPONGE MOP.... ............ 44 Reg. 39c—Easy Ironing A OOfi SPRAY STARCH ....... 0 for 00. Reg. 1.29—6-cup Muffin Tin or OCIe V’ TEFLON CAKE PAN....... DO Reg. 3.99—20 Gallon Plastic 088 GARBAGE CAN................ 2 Reg. 1.49—Woven WASTE BASKETS.............. Reg. 6.99 — 5 Quart Size TEFLON DUTCH OVEN....... Reg. 6.99—30 Gallon Plastic GARBAGE CAH .......... Reg. 2.44—Sanitary 10 Gallon $ GARBAGE CAN ■«• ■ ■ Reg. 2.19—Easy to Clean TEFLON PIZZA PAH............ Reg. 1.29—Handy 1 Quart fg RUG SHAMPOO. Reg. 8.99—Twin or Full —Wedding Ring CHENILLE BEDSPREAD .... Choose from a Wide Assortment of VARIED MOTIONS.............. Reg. 1.49—Thick and Luxurious BATH TOWELS ............... GARDEN SHOP Reg. 89.99—5x6 foot—Steel UTILITY BUILDIH6............. Reg. 74.99—Adjustable Cutting Height 20” ROTARY MOWER .......... . Reg. 1.99 —Ideal for Shoveling Snow STEEL SNOW SHOVEL..... % j Reg. 7.99 —8x100*4 mil v CLEAR PLASTIC......... Reg. 13.99—Care With Ease 20" LAWN SPREADER....... Reg. 11.99-4-cu. ft. GARDEN WHEELBARROW........... BUILDING MATERIALS $| i *7 4CEa. 70° ■ ’69 *59 127 488 988 Reg.4.49—Odd Colors—4x7* PREFINISHED PANELS , Reg. 7.68 -12x12"-$4 Sq. Ft. WHITE CEILING TILE.. Taka With ■ 1 Taka With Reg. 21.99—Handy and Spacesaving 577 DISAPPEARING STAIRWAYS With 1488 799 aka With I 15*o 25% Reg. 9.99—Attractive, Plastic FOLDING DOORS .... Beautiful Kitchen Wall and BASE CABINETS Take With Reg. 3.85—Odd Sizes in Exterior WINDOW SHUTTERS. • TakIWith Save on Odd Sizes in Wood BI-FOLD DOORS... Reg. 149.99—Naugahyde Covered RECLINER ............................ *99 Reg. 84.99—Colonial Wing Style gtfWWW PATCH ROCKER ................. *66 Reg. 179.99 —Tweed Covered MUD 1 COLONIAL SOFA .......................*148 Reg. 189.00—Nylon Covered *4 EA 2- PC. LVIING ROOM..........*159 Reg. 159.99 —Wood Trim—Tweed Cover js OA88 MODERN SOFA_________.....129 Reg. 229.99—Famous Simmons $4 AA HIDE-A-BED.......................*199 Reg. 59.99 —Twin Size—Complete . m AOQ HOLLYWOOD BED.................49" Reg. 39.99 Full or Twin AAfifi MAnRESS OR BOX SPRING... 29 Reg. 14.99—Sanded Pine 4 4 00 UNFINISHED CHEST.............11° Reg. 209.99—Triple Dresser, Chest and Bed 3- PC. MODERN WALNUT BEDROOM *148 Reg. 294.99 —Double Dresser, Chest and Betd&gu^ ft 3-PC. SOLID MAPLE BEDROOM 219 Reg. 119.99-Padded Top AA88 CEDAR CHEST......................99"” Reg. 6.99—Adjustable to Full or Twin M po BED FRAME •■■■•■■■■■■* 4 Reg. 34.99-Cocktail, Step, Lamp AAftft OIL WALNUT TABLES ....... 29”” i i ‘ - Regj 27.99—Foam Cushion AJISft DANISH TYPE CHAIR........ 24*“ Reg. 24.99—Tension Poles, Filigree Screen d| j|pQ ROOM DIVIDER................... 14”” HARDWARE GOODS R«g. 11.99-72x36x12",5Sh,t««. HEAVY Dimr SHELVING . . Reg. 46.99—Belt Size, 4^21 %" UTILITY BELT SANDER............. Reg. 49.99—Variable) Speed Control HEAVY DUTY SABRE SAW.... Reg. 69.99—Industrial Rated HEAVY DUTY T” POLISHER.... Reg. 49.99 —industrial Rated, Reversible HEAVY DUTY Vi” DRILL...... Reg. 83.97—With stand and extension, no motor 8” BENCH SAW .,.. 8 • 8.8 8 Reg. 8.88—90 Day Warranty '/«” UTILITY DRILL. Reg.- 29.99 Heavy Duty ORBITAL SANDER...... ,««• *38 *29 *38 *38 *65 ROB 5. M. TO 9:00 P M, H) P.M. 682-4940 i 41 #|y J| i wtifr nm THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 • •, IN THE STORE WAR ggn III SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED • SOME ITEMS TAKE WITH ITEMS • SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JANUARY 7 Shallow well 1/3-hp |et pump with tank Signature* 20 cu. ft. upright freezer Save 75* on Wards 7-inch roller kit Save 30‘ now on modern mosaic tile A compact water system for any well to 25 feet. Delivers upto 530 GPH. Self-priming after, first prime. With 17-gallon galvanized tank. *69 REG. 85.99 WITH JIT e Five refrigerated shelves e Deep glide-out .basket e "Bonus" storage on door e Safety signal light; lock 805-lb. chest freezer $199 *199 REG.269 Make painting fast, easy! 7" roller has Dynel® nylon cover for easiest painting with all latex paints. REG. 219 |44 Set in'144 tile sheets — makes decorating easier! Use wherever you want carefree beauty, durability. Moisture, scratch resistant. 59* •%f»« REG 89c 033 02 Reg. 69.00—Attractive 12-Inch PORTABLE TELEVISION . Reg. 1 T9.00—Portable 16-INCH TELEVISION. Reg. 159.00 — 19-Inch Portable | DELUXE TELEVISION .. Reg. 19.95—4-Speed RECORD PLAYER . .. Reg. 269.00—4-Speaker STEREO CONSOLE.... Reg. 179.00-23-Inch, Walnut CONSOLE TELEVISION. Reg. 449,00—19-Inch Console COLOR TELEVISION ... Reg. 209.00—4-Speaker STEREO.................. .... *59 .. *99 *138 . 16M *188 *159 . *388 L *119 LIANCES Reg. 219.00-Deluxe 525-lb. Capacity $; Classes'slait Feb. 7 ¥: CLEO’S “SST 8 366 Oakland Ava. | n 6-3161 Styles for ’67 PERMANENTS $1050 Up SCISSOR NAIRCUTTINQ Biker Bldg.; FE 3-7186 Fite Ferfcfnt on Deertheiitt Lo* ^ Ruth Hoffman Feted Ruth Ann Hoffman, daughter of the Olin Hoffmans 'of Miller Street was honored at a kitchen shower, Saturday, in Bdd Axe. Her aunt, Mrs. Lee Ross was hostess. Mrs. Glen Bedford and Mrs. Suds Save Your Shoes Along with winter, come thoughts of salt-streaked sidewalks and splashed footwear. J. J. Gerard, owner of a shoe store in Indiana, advises that these spots should be washed from shoes and overshoes before the calcium chloride has t chance to* dry and set into permanent stains. The best way to do this is with warm soap or detergent suds. Good leather shoes can be veritably ’ruined unless thid sudsy precaution is taken. Austin Cornell, both of Elkti attended their granddaughter! party, also Mrs. Tage Guld brandsen of Plymouth. Her son, Dale Richard, is Miss Hoffman’s fiance. Mrs. Robert Dais and Mrs. John Manes gave a recent surprise shower in the Davis home on Mark Street. Susan Putnam came from Madison, Wis, and Mrs. Robert Pomeroy from Bay City. ★ ★ ★ St. John’s Student Parish, East Lansing, will be the setting for the Friday evening ceremony. Cool Before Use Canned meats can be sliced easier if chilled inf refrigerator and both ends of can are re moved before pushing meat out. Pair Takes ' Recent Vows sp at Ceremony An evening ceremony, Friday, in die Sacred Heart Catholic, Church marked the vows of Diane Marie Meger and Pvt. Robert Hester of Fort Campbell, Ky. Their parents are the Chester C. Megers, Oakmont Street, Pontiac Township, and the Carl Hesters, Pompano Beach, Fla. * f- ★ ★ ★ With her A-line gown and court train of white satin and Chantilly lace, the bride wore a silk illusion veil caught pearl and crystal tiara. She darned white carnations and red Sweetheart roses. Susan Meger and Mrs. Roger Houck attended their sister as maid of honor and bridesmaid respectively, along with Anita McLaughlin and Mary Pruente, flower girl. Larry Meger was best man. Jack Bishop and James McLaughlin were ushers. ★ ★ it After greeting guests in the American Legion Hall, the couple left for a brief honeymoon. He will return to his base. T MRS. R. C. HESTER "A Carter for You” / LEARN A PROFESSIONAL SERVICE eautv School MODERN NEW FACILITIES 26'% HURON Phono: EE 4-2352: ^ S Tape Away Your Frown you’re an habitual frown-er, hppiy three stris of first aid o% household tape vertically to\your brow. Extend the ribboi your eyi line. Be is as si that Left mi tape from above to your 'hair-e that your brow as possible so applied snugly, night the tape will give yoik many of the benifits of a facial. It also serves as a reminder not to frown. Divided Slips Offer Freedom For coeds who wear the short or swing skirts there is a great short-ee Panti-slip that works under short skirts, regular skirt lengths and culottes, too. It gives you freedom to move for bowling, biking, rid- ing and dancing. This lis divided skirt also does away with slip twisting and bunching, and will give you a smooth waiste-to-knee look. Don't Lose Rings When washing your hands, put rings and watches in your pocket or purse. Putting diem on the sink is one way to lose them. 9 SALE Smiley Bros. Free Parking DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 119 North Saginaw FE 4-47J11 Open Monday and Friday Evenings 'til 9 P.M. DETROIT , 5510 Woodward Avanua TR 3-6800 BIRMINGHAM Tl 5 S. Woodward - Ml 7-1177 9:30 A.M. to S P.M' Daily Open Friday Evening* Connecticut was the first state to have a written constitution. 4926 21W-23* Face-flattering cloche — wear it with down or up-turned brim! Sew it in jewelbright velveteen, shantung, surah to spark winter, spring outfits. Clever gift idea, too. Printed-* Pattern 4926; Misses’ Head Sizes 21%, 22, 23. Yardages in pattern. Fifty cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print name, address with zip, size and style number,. Fall’s 130 best designs — lively school, sport, career, glamor styles, all sizes, extra features in new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. Clip coupon in Catalog — choose one free pattern. Send 50 cents. BRICK TRI-LEVEL Ottawa Hills 2-bedroam home built in 1959. Living room with ledgerock fireplace, dining room) kitchen with .GE electric range and refrigerator, ceramic tile bath. Basement has gas heat, bath with stall shower, automata washer. Attached plastered garage. Reduced to .$21,000 terms. WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 | HURON ST., PONTIAC, 338-0466 Office Closed Sunday and Monday are your diamonds hiding in jn\ old-fashioned aettii LET LQU-M0R RE-M0U MT M-ll RING SITTING 921-30 j ■ M-1 RING SETTING 919.13 MW-1 WEDDING RING SETTING 13.73 V Use Security Charge « I f or Michigan Bankard . Bloomfield Miracle Mile Near Cunningham’* 1)1-9381 /z OFF ALL CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS Substantial Savings on Gift Pottery - Permanent Flower Arrangements FLOWERS dtowntown Pontiac 101, N. Saginaw St. FE 3-7165 Florist Shop and Greenhouses in Lake Orion. -MY 2-2681 All CARPET Now in Stock!' SAVINGS UP TO 50% Blue-Green WOOL TWEED reg. $Sk95 Blue and Green WOOL TWEED $695 Carpet Roll Ends SAVINGS to 50% AreaRugs EVERYTHING IN STOCK Protect Your Carpet From Winter Sail and Slain, TENEX Heavy Plastic Runners Any Length - 27 Inches Wide Quality Carpet* And Draperies Since 1941 1666 Sobth Telegraph FE 4-0516 JUST SOUTH OF ORCHARD LAKE ROAD STORE HOURS! IlM A.Mi to 9(00 P.M. I>€ HOUR NOW THERE’S LOCfllMS fflwmm SHIRT SERVICE in DRY CLEANING REPAIR MB ALTERATION SERVICE Dry Cleaning Special. TUES., WED., and THURS., JAN. 2nd-3rd-4th These Specials Good at Miracle Mile Store Only SLACKS, TROUSERS SWEATERS, PLAIN SKIRTS 2,w 98^ IPENINS SPECIAL Good at New Waterford Location Only 3397 Elizabeth Lake Road HAVE ONE GARMENT CLEANED AT REGULAR PRICE, LIKE GARMENT CLEANED FOR le! 3 DAYS 0NLY-TUES., WED., and THURS, JANUARY 2nd-3rd-4th New Location RIAL 332-0884 AND RIAL 332-1822 3397 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD in ‘Liz Uka Shopping Center BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE Tolagriph at Square Lk. Rd. mi ..... v. B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1987 Moon Triggers Quakes, Soviet Scientist Asserts SMOKE-TELLS STORY — Black smoke rises over the underbrush of the Boi Loi woods northwest of Saigon as a 55-gallon drum with powderized riot control gas is exploded in a former Vietcong bunker complex. The nauseating gas fumes will remain in the area for at least two weeks. MAKING IT UNCOMFORTABLE!—U.S. demolition men set a charge on a 55-gallon barrel of riot gas in the crater of a bomb that earlier smashed a Vietcong bunker complex AP Wirephoto in the Boi Loi, woods northeast of Saigon. Smashed tin roofing lying around was used by the Vietcong to make the bunker waterproof; VC Cling Stubbornly to Boi Loi Woods By HORST FAAS BOI LOI WOODS, South Vietnam (AP) — There’s a deadly stillness in the Boi Loi Woods. No birds sing as the sun rises. Trees that once blanketed the forest with green are charred. They stick up black and stark, like splintered spires. The usual jungle night sounds of scurrying animals are missing. Even the trill of the cicada Is gone. ★ ★ ★ “Everything in its right mind has gotten out of here.. .except the Vietcong," a GI said. His outfit of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division was making another attempt to crack open this battered but unyielding bastion of the Vietcong. Steel-shod troop carriers of the division’s 1st Battalion, 5th Cavalry, were rolling in. Infan- forces bombed the woods. On one occasion' they lathered it witti defoliants, gasoline and napalm. The resulting fire blazed so fiercely that an officer in Saigon told a news confer-ende “the Boi Loi Woods are no more!” He didn’t know that a late- there wasn’t a similarly high casualty rate. The tankmen keep their arms at their sides and their feet tucked up with them as they sit outside the carriers. “When we"hit one of those Alpha Tangoes (antitank mines, it usually blasts the tur- breaking torrential rainstorm ret clean off,” a soldier said. was at that moment drenching the fire. •k ★ ★ From that time on, the woods were a free-bomb zone. Planes returning to Saigon and Bien Hoa airbases unloaded their unexpended ordnance there. The U.S- 25th Infantry Division moved in last spring. To the Americans the Boi Loi Woods were hot the terrible place the Vietnamese had come to think it was. The GIs pushed through, and fte Vietcong tried ymen stayed on the outskirts to stand and fight. The Commu-cause of the thousands of ene- nists took the worst of it against y mines and booby traps that'the mobile armor and modern iked the area,. weapons. STOP STANDING The Viet Cong stopped standing and resorted to hit-and-run swipes, antitank mines, pellet* spewing Claymore-type mines and ingenious booby traps. This was costly to foot sol diers, and the casualty figures rose. Armored units took over the attacks. This was the situation as the 1st Battalion of the 5th Cavalry headed toward the woods re cently. , * * ★ The men could see the columns of black smoke from napalm and the white smoke from phosphorous billowing from the woods. The armored personnel can-riers, bristling with machine guns, rumbled past deep bomb craters ripped in the undergrowth and past great brown swaths of torn earth. Unburnt napalm was strung like icicles from the leafless trees. VAST MINEFIELD The floor of the forest was like one vast minefield. ______ JP “We usually figure on losing inch, who gave'up'in 1954.1 about 10 APCS (armored per-ltrol of the rich farmlands Jsonnel carriers) on an operarounding die woods stayed tion," one young officer said on h the -Communists after a j the third day of a five-day oper-aeva conference had divided ation. ttoam “We’ve had seven knocked “Guys with their arms hanging over the edge of the armor plating will be carried off right with it. If they keep their arms at their sides the turret probably will just fly off and leave them okay except for a few bruises and scratches.” ' SIGNS OF REBUILDING As their vehicles clattered ahead, the men saw sips that the bunkers and tunnels they had destroyed on their last visit had been rebuilt. “There, you see that,” one man shouted. “What is Charley doing? He knows he can’t win TAY AROUND The Communists had stayed round despite more than a ear of smashing by jets and 52 Stratoforts with 1,000-pound ombs; by artillery shells; by ery napalm and white phos-horous. They only burrowed eeper. The woods* covering 10 square dies, are on the southern bank F the Saigon River about 30 dies northwest of Saigon. * ★ ★ The position is valuable to the ietcong. It has excellent ac-ess to War Zone C to the north-est and War Zone D to the ast. And here the perrillas an receive supplies both overdid and from the river. It has ecome. a showplace of their distance. In the late 1930s the French armarked this area for a ruber plantation. Before it could e established, Red guerrillas loved in and took oyer. INTI-FRENCH BASE From 1946 on they used the toi Loi Woods as. a base.from rhich to unleash attacks in Ho Minh’s' war against the We beat him and beat him and he just keeps fixing these damned things again. “How many times do we have to destroy this stuff.” ★ ★ ★ The battalion rumbled into an expansive empty base camp with bunkers, deep tunnels and fortifications. It was so large the vehicles pulled back, and a strike by B52s was ordered. The big bombs screeched down jn a tight pattern that covered the camp. Next morning the armor rolled back in. Wherever the men spotted a still-useable position they called Skyraider fight er-bombers to zero in with special 1,000-pound deep-pene-tration bombs. RIOT CONTROL GAS To cap the process, they placed 55-gallon barrels of pow By JOSEPH L. MYLER WASHINGTON (UPI) - The moon, as well-known folklore bears out, makes men mad from time to time. (See Lunacy in ahy encyclopedia.) It also creates tides on the world’s sea-coasts. Can it trigger earthquakes? • In special .instances, at least, it can and does, according to Soviet scientist V. V. Lamakin. Lamakin has made a study of earthquakes in the Baikal region of Russia and compared their frequency with the moon’s periodic excursions above and below the equator. ★ ★ ★ Hie moon orbits die earth at angles to the equator varying from 18 degrees 10 minutes to 28 degrees 40 minutes. HIGH DECLINATION The periods of so-called high declination are separated from periods of low declination by intervals of 9.3 years. There are times when the moon’s gravitational poll on the earth reinforces the sun’s types and the periodic changes in lunar declination. But under normal conditions the stresses created in the earth’s crust by lunar-solar tides couldn’t possibly cause quakes - they are 100 times too feeble. ★ ★ ★ Under thp special geeological and latitudinal circumstances which exist in the Baikal region, however, tidal strains might well have “a triggering effect," Lamakin said. IN A GENERAL WAY Given such conditions, and knowing as astronomers do the moon’s changing angle to the equator, it should be possible to predict the occurrence of earthquakes in at least a general way. So i-amalrin went out on a limb. “Strong earthquakes should occur in 1967-68,’’ be said, “along the northwest, faulted side of the Baikal depression, and about 1976 in its axial zone and along the southeastern coast.” ★ ★ ★ dered riot-oontrol gas in the large craters. Demolition men set time fuses on the barrels that exploded them after the carriers moved away. Some of the GIs who had not put on their gas masks got a taste of the nauseating gas, which would say in the area for as long as 14 days. As the battalion moved away, one man muttered through his mask: “Well, we’ve given them everything the U.S. government will allow — riot gas, foe napalm, the biggest bombs they’ll let us drop, and the best damned troopers you’ll find anywhere. “But, you know, I’ve got a pretty good hunch somebody could come back here in three weeks, and old Charley will have this place in shape again. “Have to do it all over again." and times when it has a counteracting effect. Lamakin made an historic analysis of two different kinds of Baikal earthquakes — those that occur along faults (frac tures in the earth’s crust) and those known as “displacement’ quakes (perhaps resulting from subterranean rock slides.) Earthquake scientists all ovfer the world Would like very much to find a sure way of predicting these frightening’and horrible events which kill so many people and destroy so much property. MAY HAVE SOMETHING Has Lamakin got hold of something? He may have, but the catch is that it appears to have only limited application. The records of the past 150 years, he found, show “a complete agreement between Baikal earthquakes of the two The world’s earthquake scientists Undoubtedly will be watching to see whether Lamakin’s predictions come true. A new port recently was constructed in Cambodia at Sihan-oukville with French aid. 1 CHANGES ARE. ■ ■ Your home contents are greater today than when you planned your home coverage. It costs nothing to review your present policy. AUSTIN N0RVELL AGENCY, Inc. 70 W. Lawrence St. at Wide Track Drive West (Advertlsamant) Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Mora Comfort FASTBETB, A pleaaant alkaline powder, hold, tAlaa teeth firmer To eat and talk In more oomfurt, lust sprinkle a little FASTUTE on your plates. No gummy, gooey taste or Feeling. Check, denture breath. Den-tures that fit are eeeentlal to health. See your dentut regularly. Oet FASTEETH at all drug counter.. BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! A Professional School of Business Since 1896 if Associate in Accounting if Associate in Commerce if Associate in Secretarial Science Pontiac Business Institute | 18 W. Lawrence FEderal 3-7028 Hiter years of avoiding the iods, the Saigon government it in a Ranger battalion on !W Year’s Eve, 1963. The Ran-rs penetrated the inner sanc-ary. Then the Vietcong closed spider’s web and strangled the ittalion into submission. * * ★ Several months later a Viet-mese airborne brigade tried ] dead out the dreaded Boi. ti. The troops walked into an] nazing network of tunnels and inkers. Again the Vietcong rang their trap. The defeat of the airborne so tinned the government that no rther campaigns were tried ire .until the Americans ar-ved. Vietnamese and American air out so far,” he said, “so 10 should be about right this time, too.” * * ★ * The men had adapted their riding habits to the mines and, despite the loss of vehicles, Gtiai Food ‘ • BUDttfT PRICED • NEW-MODERN • FAST SERVICE Cornett B**f $nndwUhe* 1719 S. SAGINAW ST. OUR ANNUAL JANUARY OPEN 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Mon., Thurs., Fri., ’til 9:00 P.M. JN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS Elevator Service to All Floors Provincial - Colonial - Traditional - Modern All By America's Leading Manufacturers AT MORE REASONABLE PRICES HurryFor Best Selection! FREE DELIVERY Convenient Credit Terms Arranged SALE Starts TODAY! SAVE On Many Items Throughout the Store MANY ITEMS ARE ONE-OF-A-KIND " 1. ■MwX Xvi* * * JIm. and (M. ** £&* 9*m**»***i fi • 1 ( The Birch Room KILLERS OF CHILDREN Diphtheria . . . mastoiditis . . . scarlet fever . . . pneumonia! These were some ot the bis diseases — the big killers of y. -children, — a quarter-century ago. But today, we rarely hear of anyone dying from one of . theslfc diseases. The explanation? These diseases have been conquered by new. drugs drug, that were unknown 25 years . ago — but art now found in every drug store. TODAY'S.PRESCRIPTION IS TIfE BIOCEST BARGAIN IN |pTORV Plaza Pharmacy A Joanne Duns more, R PH , 3554 Pontiac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Phonff 6TJ-I26T 24 Hourt A Day Srrru r _ FREE DELIVERY Meaty Srders Usee. Her. fa. May Fay Wl Utility litis »tw«. Pharmacy Our Greatest furniture Sale Of The -I Sofas Chairs Dining and Bedrooms Mattresses Lamps Accessories NO MONEY DOWN • 90 ||| m pi II \ "i 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 B—5 Alter Holiday Shutdown f)ETROIT (AP) — The U. S, auto industry rolled up .its. sleeves today and got back to the business of building cars after a long New Year’s! holiday shutdown. Preliminary figures showed 1966’s auto production totaled 8,607,278 cars, second highest figure in automptive history. It was topped only by 1965’s record 9,335,208 cars. ★ ★ * Auto makers set a goal of about 720,000 cars for January, as all four major firms trimmed their original production goal of about 790,000 cars. In January last year, about 816,000 cars were built. General Motors planned to have plants at Pontiac, Lansing, Flint, Wilmington, Del., Linden, N. J., and Kansas City on reduced schedules by 'Jan. 9 and output cut about 4.4 per cent over original plans. Several thousand workers will be involved. Ruby Denies Kennedy Plot in Recording NEW-YORK (AP) - Jack Ruby insists in a recorded statement that there was no conspiracy involved in Jus killing of Lee Harvey Oswald, hanged by the Warren Commission as the assassin of President John F. Kennedy. ★ ■ ★ ★ Ruby made the recording secretly in Dallas’ Parkland Memorial Hospital where he lies gravely ill of cancer, according to Elmer Gertz, a member of Ruby’s legal team. In a telephone interview from Chicago Monday night, Gertz said Ruby’s denial takes up three minutes of a-46-minute Capitol recwd called “The As-sassination.” : TO BE PLAYED IN PUBLIC The recording, which also features the voices of other persons central to the drama,.was to be played in public for the first time at a news conference here today. 4 PLANTS TO CLOSE Chrysler said that four of its seven U. S. plants will be closed for a week this month, while Ford accomplished its cutback by cutting out planned . overtime at some plants and putting some others on three-day operations this week. American Motors also announced earlier that its assembly lines will be idled for 10 working days between Jan. 9 and 23. ★ ★ . ★ U. S. truck production finished strong in 1966, as the final unofficial tally of 1,765,700 was the second best on record and less than 2 per cent behind the record of 1,785,100 built in i965. AP Wirephoto DOG SAVES FAMILY-The Schultz family’s dog was true to her name — Lassie — yesterday as she helped save the family of eight after smoke from the attic awoke ha\ Lassie bit the feet of sleeping Len Schultz (above), 12, who aroused his parents and five brothers and sisters. 1st Division Raises Over $50,000 hr War Dead Kin DI AN, South Vietnam (AP) True to the motto “The Big Red One takes care of its own,” men of the U.S. 1st Division have raised more than $50,000 from poker, dice and beer blasts to help send sons of fallen comrades to college. ★ ★ e A dozen scholarships already have been awarded with money collected in the past four months and 80 more are being processed. ★ ★ ★ The scholarship fund was inspired by the heroism of Sgt. Ralp Nunez of San Pedro, Calif., whose reconnaissance patrol was ambushed by the Vietcong in the jungles of War Zone C. ★ ♦ it Before he died, Nunez saved the lives of his comrades by radioing the forward air controller to call in an air strike. VERY PROUD “My husband was very proud of his outfit, he loved the Big Red One,” his widow wrote Maj. Gen. William E. DePuy, the division commander: '‘Like your men and many others in Vietnam, he did not die in vain. My heart aches for my three young sons. Eric,- the oldest, who is fotir, one day will be told why his father did not return to us.” , DePuy and his aides decided to do something for survivors of the more titan 900 1st Division infantrymen who have been killed since the outfit arrived in Vietnam a year and. a half ago. “For onc6'in the 196-year his-! tory of the Army, we’re doing something for the people who feally count,” said DePuy, i “those ~whom the war leaves behind, alone, for the rest of their lives. That’j why this thing has caught on so. We never push it. We don’t have to.” ★ ★" * Units compete seeing who can collect the most money. A cut of every poker pot, dice game and mess hall party goes to the fund. AMONG THE FIRST Among the first to receive a college scholarship was 4-year-pld Eric Nunez. ’ it ★ ★ . A holiday party for whidh an Australian stripper was imported from.ijaigon netted $2,233 for the fund. The entertainer, Julia BellareS, contributed her $200 fee. ★ ★ ★ The Mays Boys, .a- cowboy band made up of division helicopter mechanics, raised more than $4,500 playing in mess halls and beer tents when off duty. An enterprising artillery officer auctioned off the ear plugs worn by blonde disc jockey Chris Noel when she pulled the lanyard on a 105mm howitzer. They brought $50. Ohio Crash Kills Roseville Couple NORWALK, Ohio (AP) - Ivan tfessler, 50, and his wife, Aliee, 46, of Roseville, Mich., were killed Sunday in a one-car accident about five miles south of Norwalk on U.S. 250. Police said the couple’s car went out of control and struck a tree. (Advertisement) Three Perish in Hotel Blaze Man Faces Exam in Hotel Murder LOS ANGELES (APA -Three persons died and 10 others were injured in a fire which swept through a five-story hotel catering mainly to older persons, authorities report. City firemen said the blaze apparently started on the sec: ond floor. Monday night and quickly swept upward. ★ W h Ten persons were hospitalized and nearly 90 residents were left homeless. DETROIT (AP)'- David Leej Gauthier, 26. faces examination | Jan. 9 on first-degree murder charges in the slaying of the1 night clerk at the plush St. Regis Hotel. ★ ★ Gauthier stood mute'at his, arraignment over the weekend! in the death of Gottfried Engelhard, 35, who was shot to death j during a holdup at the hotel Dec. 27. \ ★ ★ w Gauthier had been night clerk at the St. Regis until the past Oct. 3 when he was fired. 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Ask ypur druggist for NEW FROM (SMMO LABORATORIES NILES, ILLINOIS 0 ne of those days when your phone means so much 8 Nylon Rite f Loop Avocado I Sculpture A Bluo/Greon I Tweed 1 Beige Loop Nylon Rosa Flush Wool Red/Black Tweed Beigetone Briartex . . . .$ 6.98 3.98 Gold Barbizon Wool Pile .. 9.98 6.98 Chocolate Carlton ..... 5.98 3.49 Orange Cameo Nylon Pilo.. 8.98 5.98 Rosewood Carlton 5.98 3.49 Russet Saxon Wool Pile... 14.98 6.98 Moss Ivy Ridge Wool Pile 11.98 6.98 Green Wool Pile DaVinel 12.98 7.98 Boigo Wool Pile Texbond.. 10.98 5.98 Gold Wool Pile Balwyp .. 10.98 6.98 Green Barbizon Wool Pile • ■ 9.98 6.98 Green Wool Pile Balwyn .. 10.98 5.98 [all BECKWITH-EVAHS fOR fRIE HOME SIRVICI CALL 334-9544 ACRYLIC PILE SURF POINT 5 COLORS, HEAVYWEIGHT TWEED ACRYLIC PILE TIP SHEAR 6 CHOICE DECORATOR COLORS P Whoops! ^ The folks. And earlier thapr expected. So, you call the neighbor for the roll-away bed you borrowed fast.time. The butcher for a bigger roast. The girl next door to pick up the children. * Five calls to cancel the Neighborhood Mothers' meeting. And finally, you call your sister-in-law t | MORE/ J ■ / THAT *Gf RL\. ( IS PRIVIUG ME ] V. CRAZY/ J % itfi a C3 Ofb"’ 0WF by NIA, Inc. TJH !•#. U«\ K». Off. NANCY By Ernie Bushmilier Bids Are Sought MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) -Mackinac State Park Commis-ion is seeking bids for operation of the island’s only restaurant during the 1967 season. The! commission said Monday that! the Fo/t Mackinac Tea Room, | ' which grassed more than $35,000 in 1966, will be leased for oflte1 year not later' than May .1. 1 / THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 B-9 WASHINGTON (UPI) - The armed forces .performed something of a manpower miracle in going, to war in Vietnam without calling up the military reserves. As a result, a new view of die Reservist’s role is emerging in high Pentagon quarters. Despite the strains and weaknesses that occurred in some areas, the armed forces have expanded by 650,000 men in less than 18 months and increased the number of U. S. troops in Vietnam by 290,000. Top military strength now is S.3 million men with about 100,008 more to be a d d e d. There are 870,000 mas to Vietnam now with 400,000 level to be readied soon. Having achieved all this without getting into manpower troubles elsewhere in the world, officials are developing new ideas about the future role of the Reserves, particularly the Army National Guard and the Army Reserve. « ★ ★ ★ “Before Vietnam,” says Major Gen. Thomas A. Kenan, “the active Army depended to a considerable extent on the Reserves for units to provide sustaining combat support for some of its divisions." SUPPORT NEEDS > Kenan, the Army’s d e p u t y chief for Reserve forces, says the Army in the future will more likely provide within its active strength ail the units it needs for supporting and deploying its' combat forces. That would mean less dependence on the reserves to flesh-out active Army units to limited wars. Wednesday Only Special: All FISH DINNER T5 • Fiwieh Frit, • CoImI— • Soil, . and BaNnr Instead, the. reserves would constitute a self-contained force, like the new 150,000-man selected Reserve, force, ready to be called up in strength to expand the nation’s total military power if contingencies require. rj- ★ ★ ★ This approach has consider able support from high civilian officials. Chicago Gangland Days Austria covers an area of 32,369 squares miles and is about the size of West Virginia. to Be Revived in Rome By JAMES M. LONG ROME (AP) — Italian movie makers are going to revive the gangland days of Chicago’s Little Caesar right here to the hometown of ancient Rome’s big Caesar. for their corrals, ranch houses and saloon sets. oFr Chicago it can all be studio filmed. i ★ ★ ★ For the Westerns Italian movie makers had to shop around for at least a few American DISRUPTIVE EFFECT Mobilizing Reserves has a disruptive, unsettling effect on family and community life and as Army Chief of Staff Gen Harold K. Johnson told Congress, can send shivers through toe world whoa a power like America does it. Despite all this, toe Joint Chiefs of Staff, faced to mid-1965 with a mighty buildup halfway around the earth, wanted to mobilize some Reserves. AP WlropMN POVERTY WITH ENGLISH ACCENT -Mrs. T. and her five children live in this one room in toe Netting Hill section of London. She pays $14 a week for the room, which is a kitchen, living room, bedroom and toilet, combined. The Rev. Bruce Kenrick, a Scottish Presbyterian minister, has organized a nationwide campaign called “Shelter” to improve living conditions for the poor of England. And it should shock some of the prohibition-day old-timers who thought they were tough. . ★ ★ ★ The movie makers say their Italian-style American gangster films will exaggerate Chicago just as their Italian-style American cowboy movies exaggerated Yuma and Dodge City by making things rougher and bloodier than they ever really were. The idea came from Luciano Vtocenzoni, whose scripts for some qf the made-tal-ftaly Western which made American six-gun classics seem like nursery tales. cowboy-looking actors for starring roles. There are 750 varieties of orchids to Thailand. Britain s Hidden Homeless: New National Emergency RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYI DAIRY Featuring Our Famour Kosher Corned Beef SPCCIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY Breakfast — Dinne, Complete Carry-Out Service 583 ‘Oakland Free Parking FE 5*4061 PIZZA Deliver and Carry Out JOE'S FAMOUS SPAGHETTI HOUSE 1030 W. Huron, Pontiec FI 2-0434-Open THII AN. Pontiao’s POPULAR THEATER Wtak Oayti Contlnuou, II am. to II ,.«k SunVayu Continuoui II >.n. la II p.aw HE! NOW SHOWING ■ WILLIAM WYLER'S the collector stirring TERENOf STAMP SAMANTHA EQGAR TECHNICOLOR* The'Uibridk Immortal Adventure! i$ • .,,%/ . D R I V E I I DR I V E I N_ Defense Secretary Robert S McNamara possibly felt toe same way, although this remains unclarified. w ★ ★ But President Johnson decided toe buildup would be accomplished through toe regular forces, with expanded draft calls, corresponding increases in voluntary enlistments and a broadened training establishment. TURBULENT PERIOD This meant toe military forces i-atoer than the civilian economy would go through a turbulent period as they simultaneously expanded and fought. It meant most particularly that several Army divisions to toe United States would have to do training, vastly reducing their combat readiness. The risk and the capabilities of all potential e n e m 1 e s for making trouble were carefully assessed. It was decided to go ahead. ★ ★ ★ The military forces are now well over the hump to their expansion and the Army has been able to cut' the draft and expand the training of young Reservists who have not yet completed their required minimum of four months on active duty. DOMESTIC FACTORS The administration has balanced such domestic factors as the effect of further military buildup on toe national economy with the military situation in Vietnam and has concluded a leveling off is now to order. In a nutshell, this means there is almost no prospect that Vietnam will require Reservists. The Reserves remain a ready asset, however, if other emergencies develop. • k Ar ★ The President’s way of handling toe buildup was a source of friction with Congress throughout the last session. 2 LINES OF ATTACK There were two .main lines of attack. Failure to call Reserves to duty-weakened active that bad to turn to training new men. TheReservists became a draft-exempt haven because young men chose to enlist to programs Congress itself had authorized and financed. LONDON (AP) - By the standards of Charles Dickens’ day,'Britain today is an affluent society where the combination of private enterprise and the welfare state provide for most needs. Yet three million families live in slums, near-slums or grossly overcrowded conditions. Social workers call them the hidden homeless — families crowded into stogie rooms, in damp basements, often sharing a toilet and cold-water faucet with up to 20 Other people, threatened by imminent family breakup because of the tensions under which they live, but still paying high rents. > ★ ★ ★ These families have a roof, however leaky. Their children are not barefoot or in rags as the poor were a few decades ago. They are not underfed, though dieticians say they are often undernourished. A dedicated group, headed by a Scottish Presbyterian minister and his Boston-born wife, has decided the plight of toe hidden homeless adds up to a national emergency. Three million families, they point out, mean at least 10 million people. All political parties agree It will take at least 10 years to meet their needs if existing slurb clearance programs are fulfilled. By that time, with normal population increase, there will be more seeking aid. WORKED IN HARLEM The Rev. Bruce Kenrick, at 46, knows what living in slum conditions is like. A wartime paratroop officer, he is a graduate of Edinburgh University and Princeton Theological Seminary. While in America he married Isabel Howland Witty of Cambridge, Mass., and together they worked weekends in an East Harlem, N.Y., Protestant parish to what he calls “toe muck and dirt of God’s world.” The result was a book, “Come Out of toe Wilderness,” After returning to be ordained in the Church of Scotland, he went to work in India but was brought home with typhoid. Wien he recovered, toe Ken-ricks cast around for a place where they could be useful. They picked the drab West London section of Notting Hill, tften notorious for race riots. There the Kenricks made a home. |», ★ a ★ “I didn’t ask permission from toe church to go there,” the Rev. Mr. Kenrick says. “If I had, it might have token five years to get it. So we just went.” He says he wants to find new ways of making Christianity visible. DON’T CARE' “There are millions of people who don’t give two hoots for the organized church and I can well understand that,” he says. “But nevertheless they want a way to express their Christian convictions.” k He started his Notting Hill housing trust on a shoestring but within a year it had $140,000 gifts and raised five times that in loans and grants from authorities. Today it owns 54 houses and has rehoused 800 people. The minister and his growing family — they now have four children — live on a grant from the Gulbenkian Foundation, supplemented by his earnings from writing and teaching. But Notting KiU was too small to contain people like the Kenricks for long. NATIONAL CAMPAIGN This month he announced national • campaign for the homeless to be called Shelter. “We have to publicize the human heed behind toe statistics, By pouring large sums of money into a few carefully chosen black spots, we intend to show that dramatic results in terms of relieving human need can be achieved if everybody unites to deal with the emergency,” he said. ★ ★ ★ We are trying to express toe faith in terms of bricks and mortar — in terms of decent homes for people who at this moment are living in appalling conditions. “In a national emergency, none of us expects toe government to meet the crisis on its own. We recognize our responsi- bility to pitch in and work with the state to-help meet the emergency. That’s why Shelter is here.” DRIVE-IN 1 IN CUR HEATERS » msoo II IN-CAR HEATERS *00 mm\M I BLUE SKY 1 BLOCK N: TELEGRAPH CHILDREN UNDER 12 TAKE 175 TO MT. CLEMENS RD. OPOYKE RO. AT WALTON BLVD. CHILDREN OMUIR 12 ml DEAN ^ [MARTINI ANN* LRGRET LAST DAY iUftDKPEKEKSL I us"0* H luiusww JAMB MW | “* “,,e Tony CartfaS Debbfc Reynolds S s worlds most = beautiful # bank-rubber!jMmm Inalalte^^ coUmPfDtwic mii nun mu nit iBOX OFFICE FOCAL POINTS The organization will concentrate in chosen black spots London, Glasgow, Birmingham and Liverpool. It has toe cooperation of five national housing associations Christian Action, the Catholic Housing Aid Society, Housing the Homeless Central Fund, the Brritish Churches Housing Trust and the Housing Societies Charitable Trust. Seven local housing associations are also helping. .★ ★ ★ Shelter claims that each dollar it receives will do the work of six when multiplied by local government loans and improvement grants. Its target of $2.8 million could mean nearly $17 million worth of housing each year. Asked how he found English slum conditions after those in America, the Rev. Mr. Kenpick said: “Housing conditions in Harlem are worse on the surface, but behind the front doors it’s just about the same in Notting Hill. But there is the same wonderful gaiety among the people, which so often covers the tragedy lying underneath. ★ ★ ★ “There is very much the same jpoverty and prejudice. There is not yet the same narcotics problem here, but I’m afraid it’s cm the way in. “There is a very big prostitution problem, which stems in part from the bad housing situation. mere you have whole families herded in a single room, some girls want a room of their own more than anything else in the world.” LOVED BY AUDIENCES The Italian hits had the bloodiest' fist fights and the :, most wholesale shootings ever shown on an Italian screen, and audiences loved it. Vincenzoni said producers were eager about his plan to apply the same treatment to speakeasy Chicago and he had the first three gang glorifiers under way: ★ ★ ★ Vincenzoni pointed out that filming should be easier thanj for the Italian cowboy movies. Film companies had to hunt all over Italy for the right kind of deserts and wild prairie country iafftSTWII Etvi* Presley "SPINOUT" ONE SPY TOO MANY Alt Color Starts WEDNESDAY James Coburn “DEAD HEAT ON A MERRY-GO-ROUND” “There one* was a bank robbar Kotch; Whoia gome was a pleasure to watch; He heistad for kicks; And he kidded the chicks; Mora fun than a barrel of Scotch. (All in beautiful color) SHIRLEY MacLAINE MICHAEL CAINE GAMBIT’ TECHNICOLOR. 1st RUN SHOWING! Glass Fiber Used for Ships' Hulls By Science Service SOUTHHAMPTON, England-Glass-fiber hulls, hitherto confined to small boats, can now1 be extended to ships of 1,000 tons and more than 200 feet long. 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James Toald, Detrait $100 WINNER Beatrice Dunnigon, Draytea Pis. $50 WINNER lari Kayos, Lincoln Port $100 WINNER THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 R*—11 Enjoy The Guaranteed laste of buper-Kight Meats IQ— Wffli AftP« Famous "Super-Right' Sale SIRUHH 95 IK "SUPER-RIGHT" Fresh Mushrooms Ooti Groat with "Supur-Right" Steak |j 49 c Super-Right" Boneleu Rotisserie or Rump Roust *95* Sliced Beef Liver . . . « 49c "SUPER-RIGHT" LEAN STRIPS OR GROUND Stewing Beef ..... u 79c OOV. INIPICTID (Cut-U, Lk. tic) "lUFIR-RlkHT" NtW YORK CUT Fresh Fryers... whol. lb. 29c Strip Steaks... u. 1” PRYIR List OR "tUPRR-RIOMT" SMOKRD Fryer BrMih£?«> jpagneniANo meat balu cam COLLEGE INN ‘ Chicken Fricasee COLLEGE INN v a a a Chicken Broth 2™ 29* Chicken Ala King “af 49* A&P Cares... About You! S PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., JAN. 7TH. ) "SUPER-RIGHT" All-Beef Hamburger 3-LB. PKG. or MORE 49 .^Lessor Quantities ......... lb. 53c^> * Frozen Foods! 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Stereo Hi-Fj with 8 speakers. 295 sq. in. pix area.. FREE DELIVERY FREE 90-DAY SERVICE CONTRACT AlseSvailabls in other furniture styles and finishes. philco-ford 12> 2-00QR jgass' ^.tf.pw. D*y — i d*wnf. *•*•• $179 HOTPoitrrz-;;. all frost free^ CwnpWdy M>*oo to *** da*""1 8* of>»oto. pra».yra.*fd^ $1 mmXLgS BOTTOM FREEZER Urfilgwraw•^^wTbdd. Poww *art»‘ SALE MONDAY, JAN. 2 - 11 AJMU to 5 PJL wrnhHD NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 C—1 'Victory Satisfying'—Boilermaker Coach PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -j Purdue and Southern California, undistinguished throughout the season, remained consistent to the end, p 1 a y i n g an undistinguished 60 minutes before 101,-455 in the Rose Bowl. Purdue won, 14-13 but USC provided the dramatics Monday, scoring with 2:28 remaining and going for a two-point conversion; only to miss and lose the gamble. Purdue Coach Jack’ Mollen- kopf, whose Boilermakers were making their first start in the Rose Bowl, said! “This'was my most satisfying victory.” But at the same time, Mol-lenkopf conceded: “We have moved the ball better.*’ Purdue, with star quarterback Bob Griese failing to baffle the rugged USC defense, compiled only 244 yards in total offense. Griese hit for 10 of 18 passes and 139 yards, but four completions came on a first-quarter drive stopped on the USC five-yard line. i j TWO MARCHES ' Griese later directed Purdue touchdown marches of 57 and 37 yards, and fullback Perry Williams plunged across from the one and two yard lines. Said Griese: “It was a great win, a great thing for the team but I don’t think I played a particularly good game.” Purdue c a m e to Pasadena with an 8-2 record, Including losses to the two outstanding' teams it faced — Notre ;, Dame and Michigah State. * * * * Michigan State dominated an abnormally weak.Big Ten, but the Spartans were here a year ago and Big Ten teams are ineligible to repeat in the Rose Bowl. Southern California lost three of its last four regular'season games, climaxing the year with a 51-0 humiliation by Notre Dame. The Trojans’ 14-7 loss to UCLA cast a shadow on t h e i r bid, granted because USC had one more Pacific-8 Conference win than the Bruins. TWO FAILURES The Trojan defense contained Griese and the Purdue running game for the most part, but the offense, despite 323 total yards, failed on two critical occasions within sight of the goal line. USC scored on halfback Don McCall’s one-yard run and quarterback Troy Winslow's 19-yard pass to flanker Rod Sherman in the final minutes. SSaid USC Coach John McKay: “I told my team I was proud of them. I tlunk we played about as well as we can play." But McKay conceded: “I can’t say I’m satisfied. We were playing to win.” With Purdue’s margin 14-13 McKay called a pass for the de- Rips Nebraska in Sugar Bowl Cornhuskers, Again, Unable to Contain End Ray Perkins NEW ORLEANS fAPI - Nebraska is going to have nightmares for a long time about Alabama’s All-American end Ray Perkins. The superb Alabama athlete — Bear Bryant calls him a “superstar” — spoiled not one but two bowl trips for coach Bob Devaney and his Cornhuskers. k k k Perkifts’ last game as an amateur came Monday in the 33rd Sugar Bowl Classic. Bryant’s tiny Crimson Tide, outweighed 25-35 pounds per man, uncorked an 'awesome offense and a devastating defense to crush Nebraska 34-7. 1 Only twice in his 10 years as a college coach did teams ever score more points on a Devaney club. A year ago, in Miami’s Orange Bowl, the 6-1, 188-pound Perkins snared nine passes for 195 yards as Alabama whipped Nebraska 39-28. Devaney and his Pig Red wanted revenge in the Sugar Bowl match this year. “Perkins hurt us more than anyone else,” said Devaney after the crushing defeat. LONG PASS RUNNING ON AIR — Alabama’s Frank Centerbury (28) appears to be running in midair as he dives over the Nebraska line for an early lead in the Sugar Bowl game yesterday in New Orleans. Alabama’s Byrd Williams (81) is in toe foreground. Alabama led 24-0 at halftime and won 34-7. . , League Play Begins eiding two-point attempt. Winslow rolled to his right and threw toward halfback Jim Lawrence in the end zone. But Purdue back George Catavolosi cut in front of the receiver and picked off the crucial throw. McKay has*no second thoughts: “I talked to the kids for three or* four weeks about beating Purdiie. I couldn’t make a decision not to try when the time came.” Mollenkopf added a final note of agreement: “Johnny McKay had to go for it. I’lfehava done the same thing. There’s no choice.” First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized Purdue USC *» 14» Purdue .... Southern Calif. Pur—Williams 1 run (Griese kick) USC—McCall 1 run (Rooeovich kick) Pur—Williams 2 run (Griese kick) USC—Sherman '* Pass ,rom Winslow (pass failed) ■ Attendance 101,455. Gator Wins Big at Miami CHIAGO UP) — In a reassess ment of the Big Ten basketball title struggle, which opens in full force Saturday, coach Ralph Miller’s well-balanced Iowa Hawkeyes must ranlchigh On ’Bama’s first play after j0n the list of contenders, receiving the kickoff, Parkins with victories over a pair of hauled in an aerial from Kenny | strong Missouri Valley Confer-(Snake) Stabler that covered 45 ence foes—Wichita and Cincin-yards. It put the third ranked |n^ _ ^ week, Iowa has Red Elephants on the Nebraska emerge(i from the tune-up 27 and seven plays later Ala- schedule with a 7-2 record, tups bama had its first touchdown. | jn the Big Ten. 'We felt like we wanted to * * * test them deep right -away,” Big 10 Tuneups End • \ ....... in the Quaker City tobrney, and Northwestern in the New York Festival. The Wildcats defeated St. John’s 62-60 then lost, to Providence and Rhode Island. The conference title chase officially started two weeks ago with Illinois downing Wisconsin 87-74. It hits full stride ^Saturday. In afternoon games, Michigan State (5-2 over-all^ is at said Stabler, a left handed junior quarterback. “So I sent Ray down the left side on what we call a go route. “He just ran under control for about 10 yards, faked inside and took off. I just laid the hall up there.’'’ * * * Devaney said it was no surprise because he had warned his players to expect the bomb on the first play and had 6-foot-l Kay Carstens, a 190-pounder, Marks of 6-2 are held by Illinois, Purdue and Ohio State. Two heavy pre-season choices, Michigan State and Northwestern, slipped to 5-3 .and 4-4, respectively. In all, Big Ten teams have compiled a 52-30 record against outside opposition. They had a 10-12 showing in tournaments last week that involved eight conference clubs. THIRD PLACE MPUML Illinois, winner of three of covering Perkins man-for-man.j four, starts since three key men “Castens is our fastest defen- Were suspended in the universi-sive back,’’ said Devaney. “He ty’s athletic aid scandal, cap-let Perkins gel a step' on him|tured third place in the UCLA-and Stabler happened to throw a (dominated Los Angeles meet, nerfert nass.” * Indiana took third at Portland. At the awards dinner several) These were the best tourney shall and Bemie Geoff non. hours later, Carl Selmer, a De- showings for the Big Ten. are among the top ten poiiit- vaney assistant, had this to say * * * (makers. Among those tricing the biggest lumps were MSU, dumped by Villanova and Bowling Green Illinois (6-2), Northwestern (4-4) at Michigan (6-4), Wisconsin ($-5) at Purdue (6-2) and Ohio State (6-2) at Minnesota (4-5) on television. Indiana (6-3) invades Iowa (7-2) Saturday night. In a pair of non-league contests, Loyola is at Minnesota tonight and Marquette at Wis consin Wednesday. . MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Coach Ray Graves says Florida’s football learn finally has proven it belongs in the big time, and the Gators have a young halfback who should be able to keep them there for the next couple of years. The Gators have had only one j losing season in seven years under Graves, but they never have won a Southeastern Conference title and until Monday night never had won in a big bowl except at the Gator Bowl. ★ ★ ★ “A lot of people wondered if Florida was a big enough team for this kind of a bowl game, and I think we showed we are,” Graves said after the Gators whipped Georgia Tech 27-12 in the Orange Bowl. * The victory gave Florida an 9 2 record for the season, and al though the Gators lose Heisman Trophy winner Steve Spurrier they have a youngster who may be able to take his place. SOPH STAR Halfback Larry Smith led the Gators’ past Tech when Spurrier’s passing arm faltered, and the 215-pound speedster is only a sophomore. Smith rushed for a record 187 DRIVES FOR TD — Southern Cal’s Don McCall (36) digs in to take handoff from quarterback Troy Winslow for a second quarter touchdown in the Rose Bowl against AP Wlrtpftrts Purdue. The score tied the game at 7-7 but Purdue came back in the second half to lead 14-7 and then win 14-13. Princeton on Top-Rated '5s' Hold Positions in AP Poll Black Hawks Continue NHL 1-2 Scoring Pace By the Associated Press The top two teams in college yards and raced 94 yards for th basketball — UCLA and Louis-winning touchdown on the long- (ville — held onto their positions est run from scrimmage in by winning tournaments while Orange Bowl history. (three other teams — Provi- * * * dence, Kansas and Bradley — “Smith has been a good run- climbed into the Top Ten by ner for us all year,” Graves doing the same thing, said after the victory. “About 151 The latest Associated Press times he has been within one poll — based on games tnfough shoe of going all the way, and Saturday night and announced this time he finally did it. today — shows Providence in “That run couldn’t have come seventh place, Kansas in ninth at a better time,” added I and Bradley tied for 10th. with NEW YORK (AP) cago Black Hawks and New York Rangers, who share first place in the National' Hockey League, also dominate the individual scoring race as the NRL season near its midway mark. Linemates Stan Mikita and Ken Wharram of Chicago continue to run 1-2 in the scoring derby, according to weekly NHL figures released today, while a quartet of Rangers — Rod Gilbert, Phil Goyette, Don Mar- The Chi-1 Norm Ullmah and Gordie Howe of Detroit are sixth and seventh in scoring while Marshall and Geoffrion are tied for eighth. Boston’s Pit Martin completes the top ten. The leading scorers: Graves, who said that Spurrier had* a sore arm and had missed practice because of distractions brought on by his Heisman award. “Steve is still a great ball player, and he put that ball in the end zone for us just before the half when we really needed to get on that scoreboard,” Graves said. SCORING PLUNGE Trailing 6-0, Spurrier sent the Gators on a 66-yard drive capped by Graham McKeel’s one-yard scoring plunge which 3. Gilbert, New York 4. Rosseau* Montreal . 5. Goyette, New York 6. U liman, Detroit ...... 7. Howe, Detroit 8. Marshall, New York . f.* Geoffrion, New York 10. Martin, Boston ........ another addition to the select group Mississippi State. ★ ★ ★ They'replace St. John’s, N Y., and Vanderbilt, which each lost once test week, and Michigan State, which lost twice. UCLA received 38 of the 39 first-place votes cast by a national panel of sports writers and broadcasters. The Bruins extended their record to 8-9 with three victories in the Los Angeles Classic. THREE WINS Louisville won three games in tied the score, and Wayne Bar-jthe Quaker City tournament for field kicked the pdint to put the (an 11-0 mark while North Caro-Gators in front.to stay. jlina, which received the other Smith contributed his record vote for first* remained third toucjjdown dash in the third [with two non-tournament (ContitNied on Page C-2, Col. 2)jtriumphs for a 9-0 record. when offered condolences on the it - wa? * a - tough game to lose theme: “Tough hell. It was easy to lose that one. They beat us on the first play and there was nothing we could do. I don’t like to say it, but we were whipped from toe very start.” SIGNED PACT After toe Sugar Bowl Perkins — told once by doctors he would never play again after .a head injury as a freshman —signed a contract to^play with toe Baltimore Colts'’ of the National FootbaU League. Perkins, redshirted bis sophomore year because of the head injjJty, was drafted by the Colts and the American League Bos-(Continued on Page C-2, Col. 1) AtobMM .niwtart* Coaching Aide Is Selected, at Vanderbilt Flrtt down. Rushing ytrdig* Pissing yardage ■ Passes MinstoiM by Punts i : Fumbles lost Yards penalized ... . 12 m 15-24 5 4-35 I u IT 1 ni- 22-38 AWHtM N Anj^aHey t run (Oav(^ l5d5 » Ala—Stabler ♦ ton (Oauls k«*) ' Ala—FS Oavls 3# • - 1 Ala—Trimble < run (OaUis kick) Ala—FG Oavls 40 -. .. . — Neb—Davis 15 pass . 1 "■ 'a,; * ★ ★ A. Mikita, who centers the Hawks’ explosive Scooter Line, leads the pack with 49 points in 30 games — a pace that could wipe out toe record of 97 points set last season by teammate Bobby Hull. . The Czech-born playmaker h& 16 goals and a league-leading 33 assists. He seethe assist mark of Ml in 1964-65 and appears certain to break it in his remaining 40 games. * a * Wharram, Mikita’s right whig on the Scooter combination, has scored 18 goals and set up 15 for a total of 33 points, two more than Gilbert, Goyette and Montreal’s Bobby Rosseau, who NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UP1) Bobby Proctor, defensive back-field coach at Mississippi State for the past-three seasons, was named to the Vanderbilt University football coaching staf f Monday. Bill Pace, who! recently came here from Arkansas as head Uuni place coach, said Proctor, 35, a,native of Wynne, Ark., is joining his 'staff. • it ■ * a . \ y Pace said he hopes to complete his coaching staff in a few ChiCJ days, | New York Other aides named arejj^*, George Bernhardt, whp camejojwt here from toe University of Kansas where he was an assistant, and Vandy holdovers Bob Pat-terson. Boh Cope god Don Riley. W L T Rt». GF 6A .. M 8 " 4 40 Ml 74 17 Ml 4 40 10! 80 ....... 14 M 7 35 05 IT 14 13 3 2) 77 73 . ..... 10 If 3 33 00 107 T It 7 21 01 110 MMdoy‘8 ROtulti No games scheduled. , Today's da mss No'games scheduled. • WodMsdty's da mss Montreal, at Chicago Providence, 8-2, vaulted from nowhere to seventh on the strength of its second consecu tive Holiday Festival champion ship in New York, and Bradley, 9-2, moved into a tie for 10th by capturing the Sugar'|)owl title. ★ A A Kansas, which was in the Top Ten two weeks ago, climbed back in by increasing its record to 9-2 with three victories in the Big Eight tournament. Mississippi State extended its unbeaten streak to eight with a victory over Georgia Saturday. ★ A A Two other members of the Top Ten won tournaments and advanced one spot each. New Mexico, 9-1, moved into fourth place after winning its own Lobo Invitational, and Houston, 11-1, won the Arkansas State tourney and stepped up into fifth. AAA Texas Western, 8-2, suffered a 59-54 loss to little Southern Illinois in the Sun Carnival and dropped from fourth to sixth while Cincinnati slid from seventh to eighth after losing its first game, after eight victories to Iowa 78-69... The Top Ten; with first place votes In parentheses, season records and total points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4*3-2-1 basis; 1. UCLA (38) 84......... * 389 2. Louisville 11-0 339 3. North Carolina (1) 9-0 ...... 309 4. New Mexico ♦ 1 ...........' 215 5. Houston 11-1 ................ 168 6. Texas Western 8-2 _J...... 108 7. Providence 1-2 .............. 93 8. Cincinnati 8*1 ............ *2 f. Kansas 9*2 ................... 51 0. Bradley 9-2 .................. *4 Mississippi State 84............44 Others receiving votes* listed elphabeti-:aiiy; Boston College* Creighton* Dayton, Florida* Georgia Tach* Harvard* Illinois* Iowa* Michigan State* Montana State* New Orleans Loyola* Princeton* Rhode Island. St. John's* N.Y.* Seattle* Southern Methodist* Syracuse. Utah* Utah State, Vanderbilt, Western Kentucky* West Virginia. 3rd Rated 5 Ivy League Quintet Wins, 91-81 Harada Keeps Ring Crown nnomrewi «» vnn.«vu N*w York at Taranto FIRST SCORE — Georgia Tech scored first in the Orange Bowl when wingback Craig Baynham (25) took a 10-yard pass from Kim King. Florida defender is Harry AP Wlrqriwte McCall (38). The Gators however led 7-6 at halftime and won the game in Miami last night, 27-12.' , " 1 NAGOYA, Japan, (AP) -Masahiko (Fighting) Harada of Japan made his third successful defense of his world bantamweight boxing championship Tuesday, pounding out-a close but unanimous decision over Jose Model of Mexico in a 15-round fight. * a A' A There were no knockdowns but Harade pressed the action most of tlje way, opening cuts over both toe challenger’s eyes. Medel cut Harada over the left j eye in the fourth round and then I was penalized one point for thumbing ..the cut , in the 10th (round,7. I " i- *; ’ By the Associated Press The fastest guns in the East belong to Princeton and Coach Bill Van Breda Kolff has them firing on target. The Tigers shot an amazinlg 65.5 per cent Monday night and knocked off third-ranked North Carolina 91-81 at Chapel Hill. “This is a better team than the one Bill Bradley led to the NCAA finals two years ago,” said Van Breda Kolff. “We have better balance than that team. Our kids like to shoot. They can shoot with anybody.” Princeton showed it Could , do that against the Tar Heels, who had won nine straight without a loss. The Tigers canned 35 of 55 shots from the floor and even North Carolina’s 50 per cent average wasn’t enough to keep Upjohn Haarlow led the amazing accuracy show, hitting on 11 of 13 shots and finishing with 24 pdhits. Joe Heiser added 19 and Chris Thomforde had 17. ★ A A Two other members of the Associated Press Top Ten won impressively while another was beaten. A k k Houston, ranked fifth, walloped Tennessee Tech 95-69 and New Mexico, fourth in toe ratings, drubbed Denver 65-43.. Mississippi State, which made its debut in the poll by tying Bradley for No. 10, was beaten by Florida 63-54. Larry Miller led North Carolina with 31 points but toe Tar Heels missed the rebounding. strength of 6-foot-ll sophomore Rusty Clark, who played only nine minutes because of intestinal flu. Elvin Hayes poured in. 26 points and grabbed a dozen rebounds, leading Houston to ns romp over, Tennessee Tech. The Cougars, who won their 10th straight and 12th in 13 starts, led by as many as 33 points and breezed to the victory. STINGY LOROS New Mexico’s', aggressive defense limited Denver to 17 points in the second half and the Lobos ran their record to 10-1-Ben Monroe led the winners with 18, points and Mel Daniels added 16. * - Previously unbeaten Mississippi State, which had won eigtit (Continued on Page C4, CoL •) A C-- <2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY Si 1967 MEET TO SHAKE — Nebraska's coach Bob Devaney ()eft) with back to the camera and Alabama coach Paul (Bear) Bryant reach out to shake hands after Monday’s AP Wiraphot* Sugar Bowl game in New Orleans which was won by Alabama, 34-7. Rules Sugar Bowl, 34-7 Crimson Tide Buries Cornhuskers (Continued from Page C-l) ton Patriots a year ago as a future. He collected seven passes—all from Stabler — in the Sugar Bowl and accounted for 178 yards. The slender Stabler nosed out Perkins for the most valuable player award. Stabler accounted for 218 yards passing, completing 12 of 18 tosses, and was also the game’s top rusher with 38 yards. ★ Bryant let sehior Wayne Trimble, his reserve signal-caller, play much of the game. “I though it was my best game,” said Stabler. “I think we could have beaten Notre Dame today.” Alabama wound up the regular season as toe nation’s only major college eleven with an unbeaten, untied records But toe Tide was denied its third consecutive national championship In The Associated Press poll. Alabama finished third behind Notre Dame No. 1, and Michi gan State, No. 2, toe teams that played a 10*10 tie. TOP PRAISE Bryant calls his 1966 team “the greatest college football team I’ve ever seen or ever been associated with.” That means toe Bear thinks they’re better than his 1961,1964 or 1965 squads that won national championships. * A * The Bryant legend was given another bookt when his team came on toe field for the kickoff. After three days of rain, it stopped minutes before game time and the sun actually Goalie $top| Flag Barrage By the Associated Press The Des Moines Oak Leafs had a share of second place in the International Hockey League today and Russ Gillow was the man of toe hour. The Port Suron Flags, with six men up in the final minute, loosed-a 17-shot barrage at Gillow Monday night. But the goalie-withstood it to give toe Leafs a 4-3 victory over Port Huron. The triumph gave Des Moines 37 points and a tie with Port Huron and Toledo for second place. Idle Dayton leads toe league with 43 points. The Columbus Checkers won their second straight after a six-game losing streak, defeating Muskegon 4- 2in the only other IHL action. At Columbus, sixteen penalties were called as toe last place Checkers edged to within four points of toe sixth place Mohawks. Fighter on 'Leave Is Arrested Again peeked through the overcast for a few minutes. . “We -prayed for rain,’’ said Devaney. “We should have prayed for a driving rain.” Not to be overlooked was the defensive play of Bobby Johns, a 6-1 175-pound junior defensive back. He intercepted three' passes to equal the record by -Mississippi’s Raymond Brown in the 1958 Sugar Bowl. Georgia Tech Beaten in Orange Bowl Rout Spacemen Recipients of Plaques (Continued from Page C-l) quarter, and the Gators wrapped it up in the last period with McKeel scoring a^ain on a plunge and Hannon Wages passing five yards for a touchdown to Jack Coons. AAA Georgia Tech, which scored in the first quarter on a surge capped by Kim King’s 10-yard scoring toss to Craig Baynham cut the gap in the fourth quarter when reserve quarterback Larry Good scooted 25 yards for toe last Tech touchdown. Graves and Tech Coach Bobby Dodd both praised toe Gators’ defenses, which picked off four passes. “Our defense played a great game,” Graves said. “The pass rush was tremendous, and toe secondary play was toe best we have had in a long time.” Na One Collects on Funeral Offer BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) For the siito year in a row, no one has collected on an dffer by the Burlington Free Press to pay funeral expenses of those who said they would drink and drive during the holidays. The newspaper said 15 persons signed up for toe period from 10 p.m. Christmas Eve to 6 a.m. New Year’s Day, bringing the six-year total for toe offer to 141. Dodd, whose team completed only four of 22 passes for a total of 128 yards, said, “Florida’s defense hurt us. It’s a lot better than people thought. BEST PART “But I’ve said all along Florida’s defense was the best part of their game.” Dodd, who was Graves’ former teacher when the Florida coach worked at Tech, said toe running of Smith was what beat toe Yellow Jackets “Smith hurt us more than Spurrier didf Smith was terri fic,” Dodd said, “and he will be great later on.” Gravdk, whose teams wer blanked the last three timi they played Tech, said thought the Gators’ rugged game workouts paid off. “I think we were in better condition,” he said. “Wer got stronger as the game wont on, and we came back to wii The Gators had double work outs several days last/week in secret drills. Hie defeat left the eighth-ranked. Yellow Jackets with a 9 mark feu- toe season. KANSAS CITY (AP) Twelve astronauts, including Navy Capt. Alan B. Shepard Jr. the nation’s first spaceman, wii receive special commemorate plaques from the NCAA Jan at Houston at the NCAA’s convention. The plaques will be presented at toe NCAA’s convention/luncheon, at which former President and General of toe/ *Army Dwight D. Eisenhower will receive the fiift annual/Theodore Roosevelt award, toe NCAA’s highest individual hi The plaques recognize toe college athletic achievements of the awardees, in line with NCAA policy to/honor special groups of individuals. Eight of toe 12 astronauts are graduates of toe service academies. Others to be honored in addition to Sherard, a crew athlete at Navy, are Maj. Edwin E. Al-drin Jr., Army, track; Capt. William A. Anders, Navy, soccer; Dr, Edward G. Gibson, Rochester, N.Y., football and track. LCDB Joseph P. Kerwin, Holy Cross/ swimming; Dr. Harrison H. Schmitt, California Tech, golfT Maj. David R. Scott Army, swimming; Lt. Col. Ed-i G. White II, Army, soccer track. Maj. Edvlrard G. Givens Jr., avy, lacrosse; Capt Jack R. Lousma, Michigan, football; John L. Swigert Jr., Colorado, football, arid Capt. Alfred M. Worden, Army, gymnastics. KANSAS CITY (AP) - The Kansas City Chiefs were beginning to come down out of toe clouds today, but still were savoring the way they grab! toe American Football Lea championship. “We’ll meet this afternoori to look over the Buffalo kame film,” said Coach Hank Stram, A A A A study of that 31-7 victory for the title is necessare because the Chiefs must shape up for toe Super Bowl againsy Green Bay Jan. 15. There were sotoe mistakes in toe Buffalo game, and Strain said at toe lime toe errors would wait a while with toe score 31-7. The waiting period is over. The Chiefs can’t afford mistakes against the Packers. wont/delay Packers plan to start workotits Thursday and wait until'/Monday to go to toe West 1 Chiefs won’t dally that First downs Rushing yardaga Passing yardage Passes . Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles »st Yards penalised Florida Georgia Tech • ?2 a* 1 Georgia Tech ........... t 0 0 *—12 Florida ...............077 13—27 Tech—Baynham 10 pass from King Fla—McKeel i run (Barfield kick) Fla—L. Smith 94 run (Barfield kick) Fla—McKeel 1 run (Barfield kick) Tech—Good 25 run (pass failed) Fla—Coons 5 pass from Wages (pass failed) Attendance 72,426. Brazil's Net Team Defeats Filipinos MANILA0 (tfl — Brazil’s Davis Cup tennis team split the last Two matches Monday for a 4-1 victory over the Philippines in a Davis Cup-style competition. Eddie Cruz, 19-year-old Filipino, scored his country’s only victory by upsetting Brazil’s ace, Thoifias Koch, 5-7, 8-6, 7-5 Jose Mandarino of Brazil beat Raymundo Deyro, 6-1, 7-5,6-0. All matches were for three complete sets regardless of the outcome of toe first two sets. >ta and the championship tie against Dallas. He said had a special reason to1 toe elections, but wouldn’t reveal it V\* \ Lombardi picked films of toe Chiefs’ games with New York, San Diego and the championship tilt in Buffalo. The Chiefs are all ip good Shape except Fred Arbanas, allleague tight end, and Denny BiodrowsW, relid guard. X rays Monday showed Arbanas suffered a slight separation of the left shoulder, but Stram said he will be able to take pari in toe workouts and will be ready for toe game. “I’ll play if Lamar Hunt We’ll leave for Long Beach ednesday morning and work out Wednesday afternoon at Veterans Field,” Stram said “I’ve talked to George Allen (Los Angeles Rams” coach) and he says toe facilities there are fine.” The Chiefs will live at toe Edgewater Inn. ♦ ♦ 4 When told that oddsmakers had established toe Chiefs as eight-pointed underdogs in toe big money game, Stram brushed it off. “I have no particular interest in such things,” he said. He said he had talked to Coach Vince Lombardi of toe Packers. “We agreed to exchange three films,” Stram said. “We had our choice of toe ones we wanted." SPECIAL REASON Stram chose Green Bay’s games against Cleveland, Min Dallas Kicker Changes Mind (Chiefs’ owner) has to buy me a new shoulder,” Arbanas declared. Biodrowski has lamb ankles, just as he did two weeks before the Buffalo game. But he was ready for toe title contest and is expected to be set for the packer game. A * A A While Green Bay had to fight off toe determined Dallas Cowboys for a 34-17 victory and toe NFL title Sunday, the Chiefs made a surprising rout of their battle at Buffalo. The Buffalo Bills gained only 40 net yards rushing and were not inside toe Chiefs’ 48 in the second half. Savor Payoffs Green Bay Planning to Statt Workouts in Snowy Setting END ZONE ACTION — With Southern Cal’s Bill Jaron-cyk on his back, Purdue’s Jim Beirne drops a pass in toe end zone in toe early minutes of yesterday’s Rose Bowl game in Pasadena, Calif. It ended a long Purdue drive, but toe Boilermakers won toe game, 14-11 when .USC failed to make a two-point try in toe final minutes. COLOMBO, Ceylon W) - V, P. Piyadasa, a featherweight boxer who was paroled from prison so he could represent Ceylon in toe recent Asian, Games on Bangkok, is in trouble , again.#-. " i •' Piyadasa was arrested with two* others Monday on a charge’ of holding up taxis ami assaulting the drivers arid passengers in a robbery spree Sunday. Police Sai d the boxer had taken over one of Colombo’s busiest intersections. They said a policeman who tried to stop his activities was assualted. ■ ■ MONDAY'S FIGHTS TOKYO - KlfmM Tanebe, 111, Japan, outpointed Kang Ht-eoo. lit. Soulfl Korea. m. WALPOLE. Maa*. - The Durango KM. Ui, Puarlo-Rico, ovtgplnted Johnny Kin, Its, Now York, (0)7 DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Kicker Danny Villanueva of the Dallas Cowboys talked today like he wouldn’t be retiring from pro football anytime soon. Villanueva, reported to have said he was quitting, declared he would confer with his faritily in Los Angeles Wednesday on whether he should retire or try another- year of professional football. AAA “I think Dallas is going to win toe National Football League championship next season and I’d like to be there,” he said. “I don’t think another year would interfere with my running for Congress from California because the election isn’t until 1968.” A ,A A He has a job as sports director of a television station iri Hollywood. Villanueva said it him more than he gets football but he still o extend his career. He said he was going to leave up to his family, however, to help him decide. SHORT GAINER—Honda s Larry smitn (33) rips pff yardage in the Orange Bowl game as.Georgia Tech’s safety Sammy Burke rotis over but holds en Smith AP WinphMo down. Florida end Paul Ewaldsen is in toe background. Florida defeated Georgia Tech, 27-12.-----———-------------------------_ Unknown Net Player Wins in Australia PERTH, Australia (AP) - A virtually unknown Australia Gray Penderthy, upset Jim Osborne of Salt Lake City, Utah 6-4, 64 in the second round of toe State Tennis Championships today. *i • -■ % American Davis Cup player Richey oMtallas also was pressed in defeating the West Australian , champion Richard Coultbard, 64, 7-5. A A A Earlier, the top4eeded American, Arthur Ashe of Richmond, Va.y was forced to withdraw from the championships because of a strained hip muscle Top-seeded American Nancy Richey defeated West Australian champion Lesley Hunt 6-0, 64 in a second-round,women’s rinplwt match. I • * Hawks' Coach Gets Final Second Basket By toe Associated Press Most basketball coaches must limit to practice sessions their demonstrations on the correct way to do things. But Richie Guerin carries his examples over into toe game. Guerin’s St. Louis Hawks, and toe Detroit Pistons, should have learned the idea Monday night. With 13 seconds remaining and the score tied 126-120, Play er-Coach Guerin demonstrated for his. boys: "This is how it’s done.” .A A A He dribbled away 12 seconds and then went up for a jump shot from the comer and toe basket that gave toe Hawks a 122-120 victory over the Pistons in the night’s only National Basketball Association contest, in Memphis, Tenn. The Pistons had tied the score with ,13 seconds left on Joe Strawder’s two free throws after Guerin had spent toe night demonstrating with 39 other points. His total of 41 led both clubs. Bill Bridges caught on best for toe Hawks as he followed Guerin with 32 markers. Player-Coach Dave DeBus-schere did his best to give his Detroit club a winning example by scoring 22 points, same as teammate Eddie Miles, but it wasn’t enough to keep toe Pistons from falling three games behind the second-place Hawks in the Western Division, AAA P The victory was the second in two nights for St. Louis, which beat New York 128-105 Sunday Los Angeles nipped Boston 111-110 in Sunday’s other game. Yonkers Gets Started YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) =3 Yonkers raceway opens its earliest and longest harness racing season tonight, 154 dates. Three dashes in the Snowball Stakes features the opening night program. GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -The Green Bay Packers, apparently sound of wind and limb after winning their fourth National Football League championship in six years, relaxed to-day amid toe whiteness of Wisconsin’s winter wonderland. But toe thoughts of some members were green: —The green of the turf in Los Angeles Coliseum where they will meet the Kansas City Chiefs, champions of the American Football League, in the Super Bowl Jan. 15, mid —The green of $15,000 guaranteed each maa on toe winning team in that grime while each loser gets $7,500. jA A A Each Packer earned an estimated $8,500 for defeating toe Dallas Cowboys 34-27 in a thriller at Dallas Sunday for the NFL crown. Packer- Coach Vince Lombardi has called a meeting of toe team for Wednesday. A club spokesman said workouts for the Super Bowl game will start Thursday. The Packers plan to leave next Monday for the West Coast for practice sessions at a site which has not been announced. FINAL PUSH The title game at Dallas, as exciting a contest as any in NFL annals, began with the Packers apparently headed for a rout and ended with Cowboys storming the goal line in an effort to push toe game into sudden death overtime. It was fourth down, 28 seconds and still two yards to go after Green Bay’s defense held firm. Meredith rolled out to pass but Dave Robinson broke through and got a hand on Meredith, who managed to pull away and get rid of toe balL AAA Tom Brown, a former major league baseball player, leaped high and intercepted for the Packers in toe end tone. That was the money play of the game, and Green Bay ran out toe clock. A A« A “It Was the biggest play I eve* made,” Brown said. “Don had to throw toe ball. It was fourth down . .. when I saw that ball coming on that pass, it looked, oh, so nice . . .” The Kansas City Coach Hank Stram was quoted as saying his team will “tear apart” the Packers on Jan. 15. Told of this, Lombardi said, “Good for Stram. If he said anything else, I wouldn’t have any respect for him.” A A A Guard Jerry Kramer summed things up in this fashion: “Every year you think winning this game can’t get any bigger. Yet it does. “With the Super Bowl ahead of us, winning this game was more important than ever. The money is Unquestionably a big thing. But it’s really more than that. “We wanted to be in it. We like to think that we’ve been the symbol of toe NFL over toe last few years. And we want to win it for the NFL." DETROIT DeB'c'e Bing Scott Stra'd'r V'ArTe Miles Herding Reed T resvent Vaughn Total* OAT 7 3-5 17 Guerin 6 2-2 14 Hudson 2 9-1113T'rrriTn 7 2-3 47 Wllk'nt -9 44 12 Snyder 2 GO 4 Thorn 2 GO 4 Silas 1 3-3 5COMMT 1 O-O 2 Hoover 44 20-37 120 T«Mt • 12 GO 32 TO 5-9 41 S 49 24-34 122 Detroit ..... SI. Levis .............. 34 24 34 31-131 Fouled out — St. Louie. Tormohlen. Detroit. DeBusechere, Scott, Strawder. Totel touts — St. Louis 34, Detroit 24. Attendonce 7,507. NBA Standings* Philadelphia .... 35 - 3 .921 V 9 .750 7 New Yurie * 20 .500 14 Cincinnati . 22 .371 20Vi Baltimore ...... * Western 31 Dlvltlen JOS 27M Sen Frencteco .Etr.a IfflUHT" 449 .472 J95 toy's Results St. touts 122, Detroit 120 Ted Today's Games Baltimore vs. Detroit at New York phledelphle at New York Boston at San Frenttsco Clnclnnetl atl at Chicago Wednesday's - at Phlledelph Detroit at Baltimore PROPER BILLIARDS by Jim Iidey , NO. 12 - I A DIFFICULT TRICK One of toe most difficult shots to make in pocket billiards is to sink the object ball which is frozen to a cushion. The iriargin for error is less than l/16to of an inch . , ..A A A_ To execute this shot the cue ball-must hit the object ball and the ctohion at the same time. H this is done, the pbject ball will roll directly into toe pocket. A- ' A ■ A However, if the cue ball contacts either the object ball or the cushion todepraxteritty you probably Will miss toe pocket. A ,. A A This is the type of shot you should practice to familiarize yourself withthe exact spot you must hit to successfully make it THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1967 USSR Triumphs, 7-1, in Centennial Hockey WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — “The way the Russians were Shooting at me you’d think We were at. war,” sighed a perspiring Carl Wetzel. The 28-year-old ex-profession al, who tried out with Detroit in tiie National Hockey League in 1964, turned aside 43 shots by the precision-passing Russians in their first game of the centennial world hockey tournament Monday. iirl ★ ★ But seven got by and the defending champion Soviets had an easy 7-1 victory over the United States and a tie for first place with Canada in the four team, round-robin tournament. Canada beat Czechoslovakia 5-3 Sunday and is the next opponent of the United States today. “The Russians opened up strongly and they showed a good control of the puck,” said Wetzel, who stopped 21 of 24 first period shbts and 37 of 44 in the first two stanzas. Princeton Gains Big, Win Cage (Continued from Page C-l) I straight, couldn’t handle Flori- Paul Rodriguez tumed/tn one of the season’s outstanding series last Thursday to/conclude the year right in thy West Side Lanes’ St. Michael/League. ★ ★ / ★ His sharpshooting bagged 255-258-226 games for a 739 series, among/the north Oakland County’s bdst actual totals in several seasons. The league’s next high last week/was a 236-211—612 by Bill /Bookie. Jerry Perna hit ^14—611 and Elias Vela 5-215-603. Sports Slate TODAY • Pr»p Basketball L'Anse Creuse at Cllbtortdala Oxford »f Flint St. Michael Romulus at Livonia Franklin Marina City at NB Anchor Bay Imlay City at Flint Holy Rosary St. Frederick at St. Michael (Kennedy JHS) St. Rose at Marine City Holy Cross Waterford Our Lady of the Lakes at Richmond St. Augustine Ferndale St. James at Detroit St. Rita Highland Park St. Benedict at Royal Oak , St. Mary Benedictine at Royal Oak Shrine Birmingham Brother Rice at Salesian Emmanuel Christian at Utica Stevenson Utica St. Lawrence at St. Marlin, Prep Wratllng Birmingham Groves at Lake Orion Madison Lamphere at Troy WEDNESDAY Prep Swimming Pontiac Northern at Flint Northwestern Birmingham Groves et Ferndale Utica at Hazel Park THURSDAY Prep Wrestling -Madison at Avondale Clarkston at Kettering Lake Orion at Warren Fitzgerald Utica et Mount Clemens L'Anse Creuse Pontiac Central at Bay City Handy Clawson at 'Rochester Troy at Warren Cousino Walled Lake at Roseville Prep Basketball St. Michael at Anchor Bay Catholic College Basketball Schoolcraft CC at Oakland University CAUGHT BEHIND LINE — Nebraska's quarterback Bob Churchich (15) is sent sprawling and clamped down by Alabama’s Louis Thompson (78) in their Sugar Bowl game yesterday in New Orleans. Alabama 34-7, in the Sugar Bowl. whipped AP Wlrephote Nebraska, da's height and the taller Gators I beat the 10th ranked Bulldogs off the boards. ★ ★ ★ Florida snared 56 rebounds to 30 for the losers and David Miller’s 19 points led the Gators’ attack. I Dayton got 58 points from Glinder Torain and Don May in 100-78 romp over Harvard. Torain scored 30 and May had 28 and 19 rebounds for thi Flyers, who ran their recony to 10-1. Marquette shot a hot 58 per cent from the Floor and/out-re bounded taller Brigham Young an 81-70 victory. Bop Wolf led Marquette with points while, I 6-foot-ll Craig Raymond had 2<)!and the Fontana Vendin8 team for the^osers. , Super Bowl Showdown Next Chiefs Play in Packer Style /Bill Willson paced the ”300 Bowl Classic men the; same night with 233-208—635. Al Schupbach rolled 211-225—625, Jerry Gohl 228-221-620, Carl Behrick 212-220-619 and Chuck Messer 212-213^-615. HIGH SERIES $ Gonzalt* SjirtP Cm. 2J4-227—453. HIGH ©AMI — Ctrl •bCk-ner, 244. Thursday Evtnlng Mixtd HIGH GAME* AND SERIES - Jmv Williams, 222-215-422; Jot TurcBPk, 2If; Jerry Larsen, 112; Eleanor Turgppk, 533. Wednesday St. Perpehm women split CONVERSION - vi Murray. 4-7rl«. •: i i 1 ) IN BOWL Thursday Twlllglifari HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — Doris ■ Boucard, 214—554; Amy Rufsako. Wl Virginia Denomme, 500. SPIT CONVERSIONS — Pat Hanal, 4-10; Jo Murpby. 3-7. Wedntsday Pontiac Meier Infer-OtHee HIGH GAMES AND 'SERIES — Larry Fisher, 232-223—429; Ralph Armstrong Jr., 224-202—411); James Elliott, 222; Jerry Smiddy, 224; Bill Medlen, 213-201; Ralph Tack, 212; Max Hancock, 219. Tuesday Haute Man HIGH GAMES ANO SERIES — Vtrn King, 223-221—429; Larry Crake, 223-2S2; Ed Jones, 219; Ray Pact, 214; 'Mo' Moore, 211-205. Walt Conta’s 236 took game | honors. Ed Reed posted a 226! U. S. Quintet Arrives for Italy Tourney BYU BOARDED I never expect any tdam to 2911 series. HOWE'S LANES Thursday Morning Men HIGH GAMES AND SERIES -/ , ... .Easton, 234-200—643; Don Rexford beat US ofy the boards like Chuck Kunkle, 224; Bill Bevans, 213; Bob FRIDAY Prtp Basketball Pontiac Central at Midland Flint Central at Bay City Central Bay City Handy at Alpena Flint Southwestern at Saginaw Arthur Hill Saginaw at Flint Northern Farmington at Livonia Stevenson Pontiac Northern at Waterford Port Huron Northern at Walled Lake Oxford et Waterford Kettering Romeo et Mt. Clemens L'Anse Creuse Bloomfield Hijls et Northville Clarencevllle at West Bloomfield Clarkston et Holly Brighton et Milford Rochester et Avondale Clawson at Warren Cousino Troy at Lake Orion Fitzgerald at Madison Southfield at Berkley Blrm. Seaholm et Royal Oak Kimball Ferndale at Hazel Park North Farmington At Wayne John Glenn Thurston at. Birmingham Gorves Oak Park at Livonia Franklin New Haven et Armada Almont at New Baltimore Anchor Bay Brown City at Dryden Capac at Memphis Imlay City at Deckdryillt Birch Run at Millington East Detroit at Roseville Port Huron et Mount Clemens St. Rose et St. Frederick St. Augustine at Marine City Holy Cross Royal Oak St.'Mary at Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows Orchard Lake St. Mery at St. Francis de Sales Detroit St. Rita at Highland Park St. Benedict Royal Oak Dondero a* Wyandotte Royal Oak Shrine et Holy Redeemer Catholic Central at Birmingham Brother Rice Madison Lamphere at Cllntondale Genesee at Ortonville Brandon Utica at Southlake St. Gertrude at Utica St. Lawrence Ferndale St. James at Utica Stevenson Prep Wrestling Berkley at Southfield Royal Oak Kimball at Blrm. Seaholm Hazel Park at Ferndale Kettering at Pohtlec Northern Warren Mott et Oak Perk -Blrm. Groves et Royal Oak Dondero Prop Swimming Grasse Polnte dt Seaholm RO Kimball at Hazel Perk RO Dondero at Wyandotte Midland at Pontiac Central Warren dt Utica Ann Arbor at Warren Fitzgerald Callage Basketball Muskegon CC at OCC Highland Lakes By MILTON RICHMAN NEW YORK (UPI) - No.-2 isn’t proud. It’ll borrow from No. 1 anytime if there’s a chance of winding up in the driver’s seat. That’s what happened last Sunday in Buffalo and if those prqud old Green Bay Packers don’t check their optional equipment, the underdog Kansas City Chiefs could cause it to happen again in the Super Bowl at Los Angeles on Jan. 15. ★ * ★ Tb e Chiefs weren’t proud at all about borrowing one of those handy accessories frorii the packers. What they borrowed was an air-tight defense, which has long been considered an exclusive piece of Packer property. The Chiefs found fit worked just fine, particularly in cold, icy weather, and the result was a heart-warming 31-7 AFL title victory over the Buffalo Bills. The Packers, on the other hand, tried doing it the hard way in the Cotton Bowl, at Dallas. They tried it without much of a defense and if the Packers use the same patched up inner tube for the showdown two week? from now, the Chiefs are liable to ride off happily into the sunset with the gold, the glory and the game ball. Ever since they first were granted a franchise in 1922, the Packers always have been synonymous with one phase of football—defense. NFL LEADER Traditionally stingy about giving up either points or yardage, the Packers played it much the same way this season by leading the NFL in defense. But something went radically wrong in Dallas., First they blew 14-point lead. That rarely happens to the Packers. Then they allowed the Cowboys to gain a total of 420 yards against them. The NEVER happens to the Packers. True, they dug in and held on their own two in the final minute and hung on for a 34-27 triumph, but t h a t certainly wasn’t the old (keen Bay bear-trap defense in action all day long. Under far more difficult conditions, Kansas City’s defense looked twice as strong as Green Bay’s. The Chiefs’ defensive unit had it much rougher because it was operating on a field in Buffalo that was half frozen and had visible! patches of ice. Yet, the Chiefs confined the .Bills to a mere 40 yards on the ground and 255 yards over-all. There’s something of a tend- quarterback Lennie Dawson ip the upcoming Super Bowl. He’s supposed to be teed off at the NFL from the last pictures because it sent him,packing once in the belief hw. didn’t have it. Actually, Dawson ain’t mad at anybody. How could he possibly be with a chance to pick up an extra $20,000 for only two games? By this time, the whole NFL knows Dawson has it. That includes the S t e e 1 e r s and the that," sai(/ BYU. Coach Stan Watts. Marquette grabbed 34 rebounds'to 25 for the losers. / ★ ★ ★ Wa/ne Huckle, a sophomore, scored 30 points as Dqvidson topped Virginia 75-71. Chip Chase led the losers with 20. / ★ 1 ★ ★ In other games, Rhode Island whacked Brown 81-59, Vander bilt squeezed past Alabama 84-81, Georgia topped Mississippi 85-78 and Oklahoma City topped Texas Christian 92-83. ency now to make a case of Browns, the two clubs which let “revenge” for Kansas City him go, and the Packers. Featherweights Train (UPI) ■ MEXICO CITY Mitsunori Seki was to begin training today for his feather weight title fight with world champion Vicente Saldivar of Mexico Jan. 29, after arriving in Mexico City Monday. Art Brown, 211; Darwii WONDERLAND LANES Tuesday Multi-Lakers HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — Paul Donovan, 242—617; Milan Lott, 213-204; Earl Harris, 220; George Mayne, 236; Dave Martens, 233; Larry Burgin and Hebe Aubry, 215s. VARESE, Italy Wl. - Hie Goodyear basketball team of Akron, Ohio, arrived here Monday to meet Brazil’s- Corinthians in a Thursday game counting for the intercontinental basketball cup. ★ ★ ★ HURON BOWL Tuesday Night Ladies ^ HIGH GAMES AND SERIES - Eleanor Reene, 203— 538; Francine Gidcumb, 203 Lorraine Bonfiglio, 520i Smith, 202-503. AIRWAY LANES , Friday Pontiac Motor Tempest Swim Record The 12 players and Coach Hank Vaughn flew to Milan from Helsinki, where they played several exhibition games. The winner of the Jan. 5 game will enter the tournament finals Henn l. J starting in Rome Saturday. ★ ★ * Other teams in the tournament are European champion Simmenthal of Milan, Slavia of Prague, and Ignis of vares, which won the cup last year. BELFAST (AP) - Don Schoolander of Santa Clara, Calif., competing in an international meet, set an Irish 400-meter freestyle swimming record Monday in 4:29.7. The Olympic champion bettered the old mark by 16.1 seconds to beat Alan Kimber of England by two yards. Jim Nance Wins Honolr NEW YORK (UPI) — Boston Patriots’ fullback Jim Nandi has been named'the American Football League’s player of till year by United Press Interne; tionai. BASKETBALL SCOKES COLLEGE Monday's Results Princeton 91# North Carolina 81 Georgia 85, Mississippi 78 Davidson 75, Virginia 71 Florida 63, Mississippi St. 54 Wofford 67, Newberry 59 Carson-Newman 77, Western Carolina Hofstra 77, Fairtigh Dickinson 72, two overtimes Houston 95, Tennessee Tech 69 New Mexico 65, Denver 43 Soviet Skater 1st OCC Auburn 4-tiits it Henry Ford CC OSLO, Norway (AP) — Valery Kaplan of Russia won an international speed skating meet Monday despite a fifth-lace finikh in the 10,000, meter race, the last event on a two-day program. Kaplan had 179.227 points. Teammate Edouard Matusevich was second with 179.962. Oklahoma City 93, Texas Christian 83 Northern, S.D. 74 Wayne, Neb. 54 Marquette SI, Brigham Young 70 Trinity 99, Kenyon Ohio S3 Wheaton 95, Hope 49 Dayton 100, Harvard 78 Rhode Island 80, Brown 59 San Diego 71, Montana 47 Eastern Illinois 83, Lewis 81 Austin Coll. 78, Texas Wesleyan 74 Creighton 79, Santa Clara 78 Gonzaga 79, Portland 47 New Orleans Loyola 71, Pepptrdlne 70 ■ Holiday expenses piling up? 9. Melt them down with a loan from Community National (You'll like out warm welcome) TOURNAMENTS tadhtrol Loyola Centennial Tournament Firsl Round Plattsburgh St. 65, Vermont 60 Western Ontario 88, Montreal Loyola 52 Hope Quintet Routed, $5-69 WHEATON, III. (AP)-Whea-Iton broke fro ma 36-36 halftime tie behind the shooting of Arlyn Westergren and John Jauchen to defeat Hope’s basketball team 95-69 Monday night. a ★ ★ ★ Westergren scored 15 of his total 23 points in the last half while Jauchen added 9 of his 15 total at the same time. ★ * ./* Floyd Brady, with 16 points, and Carl Walters, with 12, topped Hope. Alaska 5 Returns Home AUBOUE, France (AP) -The University of Alaska finished its nine-game European tour with six victories after losing to Auboue 79j78 Monday night. Auboue is'the four-ranking club in the top French amateur league._____ Ron Clarke in Meet PLAYER OF GAME — Purdue’s defensive halfback John Charles holds the trophy received as the Player-of-the Game in yesterday’s Rose Bowl contest with Southern Cal, Quarterback Rob Griese (right) quarterbacked the Boilermakers to a 14-13 victory/. MILAN, Italy (AP) - Ron Clarke of Australia, holder of world records in the 5,000 and 10,000-meter runs, has entered tite Cinquie Mulini (five miles) international cross-county race at nearby San Vittore' OJona Jan.’ 22. * imm One more personal service from the bank that cares. NATIONAL 1 BANK 20 offices in Oakland and Macomb Counties ■uni nuuv Ptranr taauiuaci BonmAfW - * ' - .. V \ \ C-—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 m U mm Pontiic Prill Photo SPARKS ATTACK - One of the big reasons for St, Michael’s 6-0 record this season is 6-5 center Bill French, who has averaged 20.1 points a game along with giving the Mikemen good control of the backboards. SN0-0APS mdm A FULL PLY 2* $17JK * Tukili The Mikemen of St. Miohael had 9 ball in the old year, and now they’re hoping to keep it rolling in the New Year. ★ ★ ★ Before time caught up with 1966, the Mikemen reeled off six straight victories on the basketball court, bringing the activities to a halt just before Christmas with a nip-and-tuck nod over Waterford Our Lady that left the Shamrocks alone in first place in the Macomb Parochial League. The Mikemen, who shared the Macomb tit|e with WOLL and St. Frederick last year, have shown a lot of poise under pressure, the kind of pressure that comes when a team wins twice in double overtime. St. Michael opened the season with a double overtime victory over St. Frederick, and the Rams will be trying to gain a measure of revenge when the two square off this evening on the Pontiac Northern High School floor. The reserve teams open the action at 6:30 p.m. ★ ★ * Unless they meet in tournament play, this is expecfrdtto be the final basketball meeting between the Shamrocks and Rams since the two schools will merge as Catholic Central next fall. GOOD COMEBACK Coach Jim Niebauer and the Shamrocks came from behind to win the first meeting of the season between the two, 57-56. ★ ★ -A The Shamrocks other overtime decision was a 59-57 defeat they pinned on WOLL. A key performer in the Shamrocks’ 6-0 campaign has been Bill French, a 6-5 center who is scoring at a 20.1 pace. With guards Butch Finnegan (5-9) and Greg Glynn (5-8) di recting the attack and shooting well from the outside, the defenses have had to piill out to stop-that twosome and it has given French a little breathing room near the bucket. Along with his playmaking, Glynn is scoring at a 14.1 pace MUST’ WIN Center Gary Roediger (6-2), forward Sam Brady (6-2) and guard J. C. Bard (5-11) supply ^ the punch for the Rams. Bard’s the playmaker and he’s averaging 15.5 points a game. ★ - A ★ Brady, along with Roediger, gives the Rams a good rebounds ing effort and he is currently moving along at a .13.7 scoring pace. ★ ★ ★ In a couple other Macomb games this evening, WOLL (4-1), holding, down second place, is expected to take its fifth loop Victory at Richmond St. Augustine, while Marine City Holy Cross (3-2) will entertain Detroit St. Rose (1-5). Dm* NatarS luiriMn FREE MOUNTING OW I 2J1900 •Inhiift - Whittwilli 91.tt Mir* Ritrii9ri9.Tu.il la .11 OPEN DAILY S-9, SAT. 8-6 UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1001 Baldwin Ave. 8 Min. From Downtown Pontiac Aussie Netter Refuses Offer PERTH, Australia (UPI) -Margaret Smith of Australia, twice winner of the Wimbledon tennis crown, Monday turned down an offer to coach youngsters in the United States. The 24-year-old Miss Smith said she was not interested in the job offered her two months ago, because it meant that she would have to turn professional. She recently announced her retirement from major competition. Mexican Racer | Prix 36S—3-1—MEXICAN RACER JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Pedro Rodriguez avoided problems that forced out his chief competitors and three former world champions, and held oh to win the South African Grand Prix Monday. The steady driving Mexican, in his Cooper Maserati, thus picked up nine points in the work! championship standings in the first event of the 1967 rac- Graham Hill of England and |. Californian Dan Gurney, driv-Jim Clark of Scotland, both!ing an American Eagle, left in filled to last 22 laps because of the 44th lap with a broken sus-mechanical trouble. 'pension. ing season. ★ Pontiac Press Photo KEY TASK — Center Gary Roediger of St. Frederick will have the task of holding down St. Michael’s high-scoring pivotman Bill French when the two meet this evening at Pontiac Northern High School. ■ ★ Rodriguez was one of only eight of the 18 Formula One starters to finish the 80-lap, 203,5-mile race on the Kyfclami circuit. His time was two hours, five minutes. 45.9 seconds, an average speed of 97.095 miles per hour. , ★ ★ ★ - John Love of Rhodesia, who relinquished the lead with seven laps remaining because of a fuel stop in his Coventry Climax, finished 26.4 seconds behind! John Surtees of England was third in a Honda. FLUID LEAK Denny Hulme of New Zealand was fourth, in his Repco Brabham after leading into the 60th lap before forced to stop for a brake fluid leak. Defending world champion Jack Brabham of Australia finished sixth in his^Repco Brabham after ignition trouble put him in the pits'- in the 41st lap when he trailed only Hulme. ★ ★ ★ Two other former champions, When In Doubt See Hanoute And Ask for Bob Bartlebaugh Bob ha» boon part of tho Al Hanouto salos team for four years. Ho also dovoto* timo fo tho loadorsbip of tho Eldorados, a local music group. A swingin' doai on ©no of Al Hanouto's fino now or used cars is waiting for you whon you stop by and- soo Bob at tho Hanouto doalorship. Al Hanouto's Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. 209 N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion MY 2-24H Action on Courts The action takes on added meaning this week in men’s recreation basketball.- Braves Deal Infielder HEAVY-DUTY NEW TREAD ATLANTA (UPI) - The Atlanta Braves, Saturday, traded veteran third baseman Eddie Mathews and pitcher Arnie Um-bach to the Houston Astros for outfielder Dave Nicholson and pitcher Bob Bruce. The Pontiac Parks and Rec-i^SS at 6:55 p.m., Day’s Sani-reation and the Waterford Town- tary will play Genesee Welding ship Recreation department’s at 8;20 and Powell’s Trucking Tomorrow, Spencer Floor Cov-I ,MEN' R Garden, 7 p.m.; Unbeatables vs. Highland Lakes,; :30 p.r MASON JHS — Star Generators vs.1 Dixie Square Deal Garage, 6:55 p.m.; Lakeland Pharmacy vi. Howe's Lanes, | 8:20 p.m.; Struble Realty vs. O'Neill I Realty, 9:40 p.m. j Offer Made to Lease Porcupine Ski Area WAKEFIELD (UPI)-The operator of the Indianhead Mountain Ski Resort near hei'e has offered to lease the Porcupine at Kennedy Mountain Ski Area from the International state cpnservatipn department, Flint Hosts Event League plays two at Madison and a single game at Pontiac Northern (along with an NL tilt) that night. The township’s regular action will start tomorrow night at Mason JHS. As last year, there will be triple-headers each aight. The Class A quintets will play Wednesdays at Mason, the Class in the .latest development in the controversy over state ownership of the Porcupine facility. 4 h A Jack English, Indianhead resort operator, said Monday, “I am ready to begin immediate negotiations with the Conservation Department” for leasing the facility. ★ * ★ In a telegram to Glenn Gregg Gregg replied in a letter to English Saturday, however, that the state did not want to sell the area because it ‘‘would create a private operation which wauld cause difficult problems not only for the park itself but for the owners of the private skiing facility.” ★ ★ ★ Gregg said several people had previously investigated leasing the area but had decided against it. « Jdnuary 21 B’s Thursdays at'Mason and the deputy director of recreation “C” squads Mondays at Pierce for the department, English said Beauty, Comfort, Dependability, Luxury, Smoothneti, Economy! Wouldn't You Rtally Rather Own A Buick? OLIVER BUICK 210 Orchard Lk. Ave. at Wmi. fE 2-9101 Open Mon., Tuei. A Thun. Night* JHS except for next week’s lid-* ; lifters at WTHS. Next Best Heat, to Sunshine WATERFORD Fuel ,& Supply OR 3-1229 3943 Airport Rd. at Waterford Depot Vi Mile North of Waterford Drive-In It will be “June in January’.’ come Jan. 21 as Flint hosts an experimental statewide Baseball Coaches’ Clinic at Ballenger Field House. Purpose of the workshop is “to improve coaching techniques as well as the quality of baseball played in Michigan.” Some 200 coaches from across the state are expected to attend. Eligible are college, high school and junior high coaches and assistants. Instructors will include veteran baseball coaches members of Detroit Tigers’ fielder star. The clinic will be staged under the joint auspfres of the Mott Program, Flint Commu nity Junior College and the Industrial Mutual Association. Deadline for registration is Jan. 14. Registration fee is $3 Application should be addressed to the community services department at the college, 14101 E Court, Flint. PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Jeff Alpert, Woodbridge, Conn., was in the lead today at the start of tiie second round of this Second Round Play foir Club Champions negotiations for leasing the ski area “should Commence as quickly as possible to insure ample time to make additions for facilities for next season.” Earlier English had charged the state should sell the facility because it presented unfair competition to priva'te operators. rf Club Ctom, pions Golf Tournament atf,.-, ___.. I.. * _____ __ Breackers Golf Club. Alpert carded a three-under-par 67 Monday. AYE LADDIE . Big Savings ON YOUR FOREIGN OR SPORTS CAR REPAIR!! FULL road Hazard GUARANTEE 12 MONTH TERMS ||CUf 1UIICEI C CfiO/ ACC ■ 30 DAY CHARGE SEW WIlEELd DU/oUrr AT . i B. E. AUTO’S MILFORD 508 N. MAIN 685-2642 Ex-Soccer Star Dies BARCELONA, Spain (AP) Grad* 1 Premium Custom RETREADS $095 7,50*14 6.70x15 WHITEWALLS $1 EXTRA 8.00x14 BUCK $11.11 WHITE $12.M WHEEL ALIGNMENT Scientifically measured and correct caster and camber $C95 • Correct toe-in and toe-out (the chief cause of tire wear) Mott Can BRAKE LININGS S A F E T T ish international soccer ace, died at his Viladecans home Monday. Are You In Trouble With THE FAMILY BUDGET? BASI •CO T&ed with 68s were Hank Bud* I ney, Berlin, Conn., Leroy Hin- ohk>ust. son, Douglas, Ga., and Kevin K" st Butler, Palm Beach. BIO TEN BASKETBALL Conftnnct Ml 0»m*» W L Pet. W L Ptf. PI*. OR 0,1.000 6 2 .750 . 700, 610 I .000 4 5 .444 697 0 .000 7 2 .770 m 626 0 .000 6 2 .750 602 720 i 0 .000 6 2 .750 606 625 O .000 6 2 .677 74V 670 i 0 .000 5 3 .625 604 50V 0 .«00 6 4 .600 7V7 022 0 .000 4 5 .444 615 650 Does Your Car .Need Help? Seat Covers..... mm *19“ Convertible Tops. .*r„m$7995 'SEE Bill Keller's SEAT COVER 1W Oakland Av.nut, Corner Kinnsy 1 Block* West of Montcalm Telephone FE 2-SUI Opon Dtily « a.m. to I p.m-. INSURANCE 185 Elizabeth Lake Road Comer of Mvrpky St., I Block! f. of Pontiic Mill FE 4-8284 CHECK THIS CONVENIENT MONTNLy ♦-TEAR TERM PAYMENT SCHEDULE: $5,000 • $158 Per Mdnth $3,000 -$91.23 Per Month $1,500 -$49,50 Per Month Lower Payments OverA Lot Period Alep Available! ■ NO CLBSINS COSTS ... NO APPLICATION ■ * FEES...NO COST FOB COMPLETE INSURANCE LOAN FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION FE 8-4022 111 National Building IB WIST HURON Botf grade, high qualify lining. 1,000 mile adjustment free. At low at $1.25 a week. 1 year —. 20,000 mil# guarantee. >or the SMOOTHEST RIDE , You've Ever Had, LET US TRUE BALANCE and TRACTIONIZE YOUR TIRES __ WITH OUR KIMSWAY 1^* TIRE CONDITIONER 30 DAY CHARGE 11, MONTH TERMS Wl HONQR AU APMQVID MAJOR CREDIT CARDS T MART SAFETY CENTER m ■ 121. last Montcalm FE t-7MlS ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a -.W.A I; ft! \ ■ THE JPONTtAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 C—5 By Life Insurance Institute Inflation Toll Viewed MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by th?m in wholesale package lots Quotat’ins are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, bu.............. Apples, Delicious, Red, bu......... Apples, Mdnloth, bu. .............. Apples, Jonathan, bu. ............. Apples, Northern Spy. bu........... Apples, Cider, *gal. .............. veoetari.es Beets, topped, bu.................. Cabbage, Curly, bu................. Cabbage, ked, bu................... Cabbage, Standard, bu.............. Carrots, Cello Pk„ 2 dz............ Carrots, lopped, bu................ Celery, Root, dz. ................. Horseradish, pk. bsk............... Leeks, dz. bch .................... Onions, dry, 50-lb. bag ........... Parsley, root ..................... Parsnips, % bu. . -................ Parsnips, Cello Pak................ Potatoes, 50 lbs. ..i.............. Potatoes, 20 lbs. ............/ Radishes, black, % bu........... Squash, Acorn, bu...............■/— Squash, Buttercup, bu. ...... Squash, Butternut, bu. ..... Squash, Delicious, bu. ............ Squash, Hubbard, bu. .............. Turnips. Topped ............. GREENS Cabbage, bu. ...y.................. LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery Cabbage, m.................. Poultry '/ nCTDAI and Eggs _ DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid per pound tor N°- I Hve> poultry: Roasters heavy type1 24-25; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites lRVb-19. / DETROIT EGGS - DETROIT (API—Egg prices per dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.): Whites Grade A extra large 43-45; large 41%-42, medium 35%; small 30-3t. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange — Butter Irregular; wholesale buying prices unchanged to % lower; 23 score AA 65%; 22 A 65%; 20 B 64Vi; 82 C 62%; cars. 20 B 65%; 82 C 64, Eggs weak; wholesale buying prices % to 1% lower; 70 per cent or better Grade A Whites 38; mixed 38; mediums J3% standards 35; checks 32Vb. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Live poultry wholesale buying prices unchanged; roasters 23-25; special fed White Rock tryers 18-20%. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)-Cattle 1600 slaughter steers high choice and prime 1000 to 1200 pound 26.25; choice 200 to 1250 pound 25.50 to 26.25; slaughter heifers a tew lots of choice 700 to 1000 pound 24.00 to 24.75; good 22.50 to 24.00. Hogs 500; a Few one and two 200 to 220 pound barrows and gilts 20.85; one. two and three 210 to 240 pound 12.00 to 20,50; one, two and three 300 to 400 pound sows 14,75 to 15.50. Vealers 150; high choice and prlmei 40.00 to 44.00; choice 35.500 to 40.00; good 22.00 to 35.00. Sheep 1200; slaughter lambs not established at 11 a.m. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Hogs 12,500; most 1-2 200-220 lb butchers 20.75-21.25; mixed 1-3 120-230 lbs. 20.00-20.75; 230-240 lbs 12.00-20.00; 240-250 lbs. 18.25-12.00; mixed 1-3 350-400 lb sows 15.00-15.50; 400-500 lbs 14.50-15.0. Cattle 2,50; calves none; prime 1,150-1,350 lb slaughter Steers 25.50-25.75; high choice and prime 1,150-51,400 lbs 24.75-25.50; choice 1,150-1,400 lbs. 24.25-25.00; high choice and prime 200-1,150 lbs 25.50-25.75; choice 24.75-25.50; high choice and 24.25-24.50; choice 800-1,100 Tbs 23.25-24.25. Sheep 1,000; choice end prime 20-110 lb wooled slaughter lambs 23.50-24.00; choice 80-110 lbs 22.50-23.50; good and choice 21.50-22JO; 5 cull to good wooled slaughter ewes 5.00-8.00. American Stock Exch. NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - American Stock AerojetG ,50a AiaxMag .10e AmPetro .40e ArkLGas 1.50 Asamera Oil AssdOil & G AtlasCorp wt Barnes Eng BrazilLtPw 1 Brit Pet .55e Campbl Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cinerama Ctrywide Rlt Creole 2.60k Data Cont EquityCp .05r Farao Dlls Flying Tiger Gen Plywd It Giant Yel .60 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp HoernerW .82 Hycon Mfg Kaiser Ind McCrory wt MeadJohn .48 Molybden NewPark Mn RIC Group Scurry Rain Sbd W Airlin Signal OIIA 1 Sperry R wt Statham Inst Syntax Cp .40 Technicol .40 UnConi rot .20 ted noon prices: Sales Net hds.) High Low Last Chg. 28 32* 31 Va 32* +1* 4 19* 18* )»% + % 2 9*- 9* 9* 1 40* 40* 40* — * -27 3 3*16 3* 3 3-16+1-16 94 7 2 2 + % 58 M i% 1* — * 5 79 28* 29 + % 14 9* '9* »% + % 1 8* 8% 8%+l-16 19 6 5% 6 + * 7 2 * 7 2 16 5% 5* 5* + * 18 3* 3* 3% + % 12 1* 1* 1* + * 6 33* 32% 33% + % 14 7* 7* 7% + % 3 3 3 3 1 2* 2* 2*+l-16 41 47 46* 47 + * 188 9* 8* 9 + * 35 7* 7 5+16 7%+5-16 7 2* 2* 2* + * 74 7* 2* 2* .... 29 7* 7 7% + % 4 18* 18* 18* 3 14 13* 13% - % 113 »* 9 9% + % 7 3 3 3 - * 18 23* 23* 23% + % 20 63 62* 62* + * 14 4% 44k 444 17 lVh 1 187/« 12 + 4k * 76 26% 25% 25% + 4k 5 26% 264k 26% + % 21' 2% 2% 2% + % ' 3 23% 234k 23% + % 102 72% 71% 72% +1 8% + % 5% + % Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1267 Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD ere representative inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do not include -retail markup, markdown or commission. Bid Asfcad AMT Carp.........................M H Associated' Truck 2-0 2.4 Boyne ........................ !!‘l "iji Braun Engineering-.............12.4 txo Citizens Utilities Class A 12.4 12.7 Detrex Chemical ...............W-f J'-J Diamond Crystal .............. NU 12.7 Frank's Nursery ................2.4 2.7 Kflty Services ...............’*•* ]*•* Mohawk Rubber Co. ............21.4 22.2 Monroe Auto Equipment ........14.0 14.4 North Central Airlines Units 5.4 5.7 Safran Printing ...............'2-3 12.7 Scripto'...................... 6.0 6.3 Wyandotte .(Chemical .........23.4 24.2 MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Fund ......... Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock Dreyfus .......... . - Keystone Income K-l Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth Mass Investors Trust Putnam Growth Television Electronics Wellington Fund Windsor Fund Bid Asked . 7.86 8.51 15-31 1682 . 2.41 10.28 12.65 13,81 8.68 2.48 . 5.86 6.40 10.51 11.42 15.10 16.50 10,90 11.71 8.74 283 12,25 14.12 14.54 17.28 STOCK AVERAOES _ Compiled by The Assadatak Press^ lad. Rails uML Stacks +4.2 +1.2 +1.1 +3,2 416.3 152.6 152.6 224.4 4118 i$7. ig3 m.r 417.3 160.8 J524 225. 416.7 iS.l 1MJ 292+ 523.6\ 126.0 16M »| 537 2 2112 1708 Ml, 388.0 1412 1108 262. 523.3 '1248 1788 358.. .4518 142.3 162.4 3088 et Change loon Tues. rev. Oey reek Ago tontoVlw 'ear / 16667 16667 _ 145 High >65 Low Ago 67+ngh 67 Low Canada produced 1.25 million tons of asbestos in 1965. Rec6vers From Setting NEW YORK (AP) - The 1967 stock market made its debut with a sharp rise today. Trailing was moderate early this afternoon. / The market rendered from heavy tax-loss selling and spurted from the start Initial trading was heavy. It moderated soon, however. / A ★ ★ The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 9.46 at 79&d5. Boeing, whose design for the supersonic air transport (SST) was chosen above Lockheed’s, spurted 3% to 68% on a delayed opening block of 100,000 shares. Lockheed sank AVi to 62 on 40,-000 shares, also on a delayed block. General Electric, picked to produce the engine for the SST, rose 2 to 90% on an opening block of 5,500 shares then trimmed a fraction from the price in later dealipgs. OTHERS BENEFITS Many other companies which are sub-contractors in the SST development rose in price. The rise came after a senes of four straight daily declines in the final week of 1966. The Associated Press average of 6Q stocks at noon was up 3.2 at 294.4 with industrials up 4.9 rails up 1.9 and utilities up 1.1. ★ ★ ★ Prices were mostj^ higher in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. Solitron Devices rose about 3 points, >Sim monds Precision, U.S. Radium and Silicon Transistor nearly 2 each. Gains of a point or more were made by Aerojet-General, Ameco, Canadian Superior Oil Inflight Motion Pictures, Leasco Data Processing, Microwave Associates, National Video, Savoy Industries and Syntex. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) — New York Stock Exchange selected noon prices: —Ar— Abbott Lab 1 ABC Con .SO Abex Cp 180 ACF Ind 2.20 AdMiltls .40b Address 1.40 Admiral .50 Air Reduc 3 AlcanAlum 1 Alteg Cp ,20e AllegLud 2.20 Alleg Pw 1.20 Allied C 1.90b AlliedStr 1.32 Allis Chal 1 Alcoa 1.60 Amerada 3 AmAIrlln 180 Am Bosch 60 AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 AmCyan 1.25 AmElP 1.44b A Enka 1.30a AmPPw 1.16 AmHome 1.80 Am Hosp .50 AmlnvCo 1.10 Am MFd .90 AMet Cl 1.90 Am Motors AmNGas 1.00 AOptic 1.35b Am Photocpy Am Smelt 3a Am Std 1 Am TAT 2.20 Am Tob 1.80 AmZInc 1.40a AMP Inc .60 Ampex Corp Amphenol .70 Anaconda 5e Anken Chem ArmcoSt 3 Armour 1.60 ArmsCk 1.20a Ashland Oil 1 AssdDG 1.40 Atchison 1.60 AtICLine 3a Atl Rich 2.80 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avnet ,50b Avon Pd 1.20 ties Net tfs.) High Lew Last Hhg. 14 45* 45* 45* - * 3 17* 16* 17 + %' 3 28* 28 V. 28* — * 12 38% 38* 38% + % 7 16 15* 15* 47 52* 51* 52* +2* 3 3)% 30* 30* +1* 9 65* 64* 65* — * 55 28* 27* 28 + % 3 7* 7* 7* 6 57* 57* 57* - * 14 27* 27* 27% - % 86 34* 34 34* +1* 10 23* 22% 23* + * 34 22 Va 22* 22% + % 11 78* 78* 78* ... 9 77* 76* 77% + Va 33 70 69* 69* + *, 4 20* 20* 20* + * 17 85 B4% 84 Va . 20 47* 47* 47% + % 6 14% 14% 14* + Va 69 31 30% 31 + % 45 39 38 Va 38% - % 14 29 28 29 +1% 7 17% 17% 17% 14 81* 81 81% +1% 14 48* 47* 48* 4 16* 16* 16* + * 69 14* 14 14* + Va 16 42% 42* 42* - * 95 7 6* 6% + % 6 38 37* 3 2 74 74 74 - * 56 6 5* 5% + % Salas Nat BabcokW 1.25 Balt GE 1.52 Beaunlt .75 Beckman .50 BeechAr ,80b Bell How .505 Bendix 1.40 Benguet. BethStl 1.50a BolseCasc .25 Borden 1.20 BorgWar 2.20 BriggsS 2.40a Brunswick BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co .80 Bullard 1 Bulova ,60b Burl Ind 1.20 Burroughs 1 Cal Flnanl Calif Pack t CalumH 1.20 CampRL ,45a Camp Soup 1 Can Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50a Canteen .80 CaroPLt 1.34 CarrlerCp 2 Cirterw .40a Case Jl CeterTr 1.20 CelaneseCp 2 Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.50 Cerro 1.60b Cert-teed .80 CessnaA 1.40 ChampS 2.20 Cht4 Oh 4 ChiMII StP 1 ChPneu i.eob Chi Rl Pac ChrlsCraft lb Chrysler 8 CIT Fin 1.60 CltlesSvc 1.80 ClevEIIII 1.68 CocaCole 1.20 Colg Palm 1 Collin Red .60 CBS 1.40b Col Gas 1.36 ComtCre 1.80 ComSolv 1.20 Comw Ed 2 Comsat Con Edis 1.80 ConElecInd 1 ConNGas 1.60 ConPow 1.90b Contalnr 1.30 Cont Air .80 Cont Can 1.20 Cont Ins 3 Cont Oil 2.60 Control Data Cooper Ind 1 Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a CrouseHd .80 CrowCol 1.87t Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20 Cruc St! 1.20 Cudahy Co Curtis Pub Curtiss Wr t Den Rlv 1.20 OaycoCp 1.60 (Day PL 1.33 Deere 1.80a Delta Air 1 DenRGW 1.10 DetEdls 1.40 Det Steal .60 DiamAlk 1.20 Disney .40b DomeMln .80 Goug, Alrc Dow Chem T DraperC 1.20 Dresslnd 1.25 Duke Pw 1.20 dupont 5.75C uq Lt 180 ynamCp .40 7 52% 58% 58% - 13 18% 18% 18% 462 55% 54% 55% + % 35 31% 30% 31% + % I 12% 19% 19% + % 1 5B% 58% 58% . 43 24% 24% 24% + % 11 19% 19% 19% + % 22 81% 80% 81% +1% 42, 12% 11 12% +1% 15 47% 47% 47% + % 16 32% 31% 32% +1% 6 47% 47% 47% - 17 32% 32% 32% . 3 51% 51%. 51% — % 39 28% 28 , 28% + % 1 67 67 67 12 86% 86% 6% -45 2% 2% 2% + % 86 23% 22% 23% +1% 38 18 17% It +1% 20 81% 81% 81% + % —B— 14 37% 36% 37 13 34% 34% 34% - 31 13% 13 13 + % 52 46% 46 46 7 28% 28% 28% + % 24 54% 54% 54% . 52 35% 34% 35% +1% 71 2% 2% 2% + % 62 30% 29% 30% +1% 2 24 23% 24 + % 37 30% 30% 30% - I 16 38% 37% 38% + % 3 41% 41 41% . 186 7% 7% 7% + % 34 23% 23% 23% + % 12 13% 13% 13% + % 6 16% 16% 16% + % 8 22% 21% 22% + % 12 28% 2 % 28% 32 88% 87% 87% + % 13 3% 3% 3% + % 4 26% 26% 26% + % 14 32% 31% 32 + % 4 20% 20 20 - 21 28% 27% 28% +1 3, 27% 26% 26% - 3 51% 51 51% + % 5 23% 23 23% + % Xl7 44% 43% 44% + % 7 77% 77% 77% 14 13% 13% 13% + % 5 20. 19% 20 + % 20 35% 35% 35% + % 25 542 47% 48% +1% 14 36% 35% 36% +1% 3 46 46 46 15 MH 38 23 13% 13 45 38 32 22 East Air .ISg EastGF 1.49f EKodak 1.60a Eaton Ya> 1.25 EG8.G JO ElBondS 1.72 EIPasbNG 1 Emqr El 1.50 End Johnson ErleLack RR EthylCorp .60 EvansPd .60b Eversharp FalrCam 75e Fair Hill .30e Fansfeel AM Fodders ,70e 32% +1% 13% + % 37% 38 + % 6 37 36% 36% 17 62% 61% 62 + % 15 36% 35% M% +1% 19 29% 28% 22% +1 4 18% 17% 18% +1 1 21% 21% 21% . 344 32% 31% 32% +1% 50 22% 22% 29% + % 15 47% 46% 47 + % 9 41% 41% 41% + % 17 12% 82% 12% + % 32 28% 28 28% + % 38 60 52% 59% + % 102 62% 61% 62 + % 1? 25% 25% 25% + % 22 26% 26 26% 36 32% 38% 32% +2% 5 51% 51 51% — % 12 43% 43% 43% + % 115 32% 32% 32% + % 38% 38% 38% + % 28% 28% -t- % __ 51% 50% 51% + % 12 27 26% 27 + % 26 77% 77% 77% 16 42% 41% 41% > 16 80% 80 80 + % 17 71* 70% 70% — % 226 35 33% 34% +2% 3 25% 24% 25% + % 14 47 46% 46% — % 3 310 302% 310 1 17% 17% 17% + % 27 41 40% 40% + % 4 42 48% 48% r- % 5 44% 44% 44% + % 4 ?1% 21% 21% + % 14% 6% 4% + % 16 10% 10% 10% + % 46 11% 17% It + % —D— 5 20% 20% 20% + % 1 23% 23% 23% + % 6 22% 29% 29% + % 19 62% 68% 62% +1% 43 111% 117% 118% + % 6 17% 17% 17% + % 14 33% 32% 33% + % 27 11% 11% 11% + % 32 33 32% 32% + % 11 72% 77% 71 —1% 26 42% 42 42% — % 117 47 45% 46%+1 83 61% 61 61% — % 12 21% 20% 20% +1 6 .22% 22% 22% + % I 40% 40% 40% - % 71 147% 146% 147% +3% II 31 31 31% + % 7 11% 11% 11% + % —E— 125 08% 79% 72% +2% 1 97% 87% 87% + % 54 128% 121% 128% -^1 . 24% 14% 24% 22 42% 42% 42% + % 3 32 31% 32- + % 48 18% It 18% + % l3 60% 60% 60% + % 3 21% 21% 21% — % 32 1% I 0% + % 32 33 32% 33 + % 48 24% 24% 24% + % 22 17% 16% 17% + % —P— 97 119 118 1W% +2% 565 10% 17% 10% +1% 76 32% 31% 32%+1% ■■ IS 13% U 13% + % FedDStr l-.TO xIOS Mb ,11% 54% + % Ferro Cp 1.20 4 25% 25% RSVi +. % fJKToo » + £ F restne 1.40 1 4 46 45% 45% — % FteriChri 'jnt 46 16% 16% W* L % Flintkote 1 1 9, 16% 16% M% + % Fla Paw .36 10 SO.-.. S3 51- +1 FI# PU 1.64. » 73% 72% 73% - ! PMC Cp .75 12 30% 30% 30% + % FdbdFalr .90 13 14% 14%’ 14% + % FordMot 2.40 200 40 *%40 fljf Fore Dalr i?0.44 Wt 20% 20% + % FreepSul 1.25 25 38% 38 St% + % Gam Sko 1.30 G Accept 1.20 GenAnilF .40 Gen Cig 1.20 GenDynam 1 Gen Elec 2.60 Gen Fds 2 20 GenMills 1.50 GenMot 4.55e GenPrec 1.50 GPubSvc ,38g G PubUt 1.50 GTel El 1.28 Gen Tire .80 Ga Pacific lb Gerber Pd 1 Getty Oil .10e Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35 GraceCo 1.30 Granites 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtA&P 1.20a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West Finl GtWSug 1.60a Greyhnd .90 G rum A ire 1b Gulf OH 2.20 GulfStaUt .80 Halliburt 1.70 Ham Pap .90' Harris Int 1 HeclaM 1.15e Herclnc 1.10a Hertz 1.20 HewPack .20 Hoff Electron Holid Inn .50 Holly Sugar 1 Homestk 1.60 Honey wl 1.10 Hook Ch 1.40 House Fin 1 Houst LP 1 Howmet Cp 1 HuntFds .50b Hupp Cp .17f (hds.) High Law Last Chg. 32 26 $5* 25% + Hi —G— 6 22% 22 22 2 19% 19% 12% + % 84 20% 19% 20% + % 31 18% 18 18 — % 51 49 48% 49 + % 145 91% 90% 20% +1% 16 71% 71 71% .... 5 59 58% 58% — % 396 67% 67% 67% +2 50 63% 63 63% +1% 11 5% 5% 5% + % 9 31 30% 31 + % 80 45% 44% 45% — %, 21 33% 33 33% + % 15 41% 41% 41% +1 4 24% 24% 24% + % 10 53% 53 53% + % 43 42% 41% 41% ... 8 9% 9% 9% + % 8 61% 61% 61% + % 18 42% 41% 41% + % 21 49% 48% 48% —1% 10 19% 19 19% + % 10 21 20% 21 + % 30 27 26% 27 + % 3 52 52 52 22 9 8% 9 +% 4 38% 38% 38% + ’A 59 16% 16% 16% + % 10 52% 52% 52% + % 22 52% 52% 59% + % 4 27% 26% 27% + % —H— 2 41 41 41 + % 3 31% 31% 31% - % 7 29 28% 29 + % 13 42% 42% 42% + % 7 43% 43% 43% - % 16 39% 39% 32% + % 4 51% 51% 51% + % 7 9% 9% 9% + Va 5 40% 40% 40% + % 2 17% 17% 17% — % 13 42% 42 42 + % 22 66% 66 66Va + % 10 36% 36% 36% + % 6 29% 22% 22% . 4 50 49% 13 48% 48% 22 20% ■ PltneyB 1.20 PitPIAt# 2.60 Pitts Steel Polaroid .40 Procter G 2 Publktnd .341 Pullman 2.80 $. Viet Outline Two-Thirds Ap Draft of Con, Saks Ntl (hds.) High Lew Last Chg, 5 48 47% 48 — % 8 54% 54 54% - % 8 9% 9% 9% + % 112 162% 160 162% +3% ■ 7i% 71% —1% + % 48% .. 20% + % 4 + % IdahoPw 1.40 Ideal Cam 1 IllCenlnd 2.40 Imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InsNoAm 2.40 InterlkSt 1.80 IntBusM 4.40 Int Harv 1.80 Int Nick 2.80 Inti Packers Int Pap 1.35 Int T4T 1.50. lowaPSv 1.20 JohnMan 2.20 JohnsnJ 1.40a JonLogan .80 Jones L 2.70 Joy Mfg 1.25 Kaiser Al 1 KayserRo .60 Kennecott 2 KernCLd 2.60 Kerr Me 1.40 KlmbClark 2 Kresge .60 Kroger 1.30 Lear Sleg .70 LehPCem .60 Leh' Val Ind Lehman 1.72g LOFGIs 2.80a LibbMcN .491 LiggettLM 5 Llttonln 1.541 Livlngstn OH Loews Theaf LorteS Cem 1 LOneSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.00 Lorillard 2.50 Lucky Str ,10 Lukens Stt.. 1 Mack Tr 1.59t MacyRH 1.60 Mad Fd 2.71e MagmaC 3.60 Magnavox .80 Marathn 2.40 Mar Mid 1.30 Marquar ,25s MartlnMar 1 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag l.60a McCall .40b McDon Co .40 McKess 1.00 Mead Cp 1.90 Melv Sh 1.25 MerckC 1.40a MerrChap le MGM 1 MidSoUtil .76 MlnetCh 1.30 MlnnMM 1.20 Mo Kan Tex MobHOII 1.80 Mohasco 1 Monsan 1.60b MontDUt 1.52 MontPow 1.56 AAontWard 1 Morreil Motorola l -MtS TT l.tl Nat Airlin .60 NatBIsc 1.90 Nat Can .50b NatCash 1.20 NatOalry 1.40 Nat Dist 1.60 Nat Fuel 1.60 Net Genl .20 Nit Gyps 2 N Lead 3 J5e Nat Steel 2.50 Nit Tab JO Newten; 48t NEngEI l.M NYCent 3.12a NlagMP MO Nortlk Wst 6a NA Avia 2.00 NorNGas 2.40 Nor Pac 2.40 NSIaPw 1.52 Northrop 1 NWStAIrl .60 Norton- 1.50 Norwich 1.30 Occident 80b OhibEdis 120 OllnAAath 1.80 Otis Elev 2 Outb Mar JO Owenslll 1.35 OxfijtPap -80 PacGEI 1.30 Pec Ltg 1.50 Pec Petrol PocTRT 1.20 Pan Am .60 PanhEP 1.00 ParkeOav 10 Peeb Coal 1 PennDixle M Penney 1 -60a Pa PwLt f .40 Pa RR 2.40a 1 Pennzoil 1:40 PepsiCo 1.60 PtizerC +J0a PhelpD 3.40a PhHa El 1.41 Phil Rdg 1 JO I PhilMorr 1.40 PhlflPet 2.20a 22 4% 3% —I— 3 34 33% 34 + % 13 14% 14% 14% 2 73% 73% 73% 25 5% 5% 5% + % 15 38% 38 38% — % 52 32 31% 31% + % 25 86% 86 . 13 26%- 26% 26% + % 30 375 370 375 +3% 45 35% 34% 34% + % 11 87% 87% 87% —1% 2 8% 8% 8% + % 67 25% 25% 25% — % 46 72% 72% 72% + % 1 25% 25% 25% + % 22 48% 48% 48% + 1 4 170 170 170 -1 19 41% 41% 41% +1 40 47% 47% 47% +U 20 25 24% 25 + + —K— 5 42% 42% 42 3 31 30% 31 22 38% 38 38 10 58% 58 58% +1% 11 81% 80% 81% 11 48% 47% 48% + % 7 38% 37% ^ 37% — % 21 22Vs .22% 22% +*% —I 21% 20% 21% + % + % 23 9% '9% 9 V 6 8% 8% 8% + % 5 30% 30% 30% + 17 41% 40% 41% + % 6 9'% 9% 9% + % 14 66 65% 66% +1% 94 13% 82% 82% +1% 24 5% 5% 5% + % 4 26% 26% 26% + % 20 14% 14% 14% + % 26 19% 19% 19% + % 15 22% 22% 29% + % 10 41% 41% 41% + % 5 17 17 17 + % 19 32% 32% 32% +1% r-M— 12 32 31% 31’% +1 4 42% 42% 42% 27 22% 22% 22% 14 53% 52% 53 + % 202 36% 37% 37% +,% 12 63% 62% 62% — % 9 28'% 28% 28% + % 106 14% 13% 13% 4 % 72 21r/a 21% 21% + % 24 32% 32% 32% 3 29% 29% 29% + % 1 26 26 26 33 31% 30 30% + % 10 45% 45 45 — 1 44% 44% 44% .. 5 34% 34% 34% 10 76% 76% 76% — % 1 22% 22% 22% 22 38% 38 38 + % 51 257/4 25% 25% + % 10 26% 26% 26% + % 26 29 % 71% 79 +1 7 5% 5% 5% + 112 45% 45% 45% —1 4 14% 14% 14%' + %' 49 42% 41% 41% + % , 5 30% 30% 30% . . . 5 31% 31% 31% — % 44 20% 20% 20% + % 1 25% 25% 25% + % 100 95% 94 95 +2 tl 21% 21 21% + % -rN— 25 09% 07% 00% +2% 4 47% 47% 47% — % 7 23% 23% 23% + % 16 67% 67% 67% — % 17 34% 33% 34% + % 27 40% 39% 39% 10 28% 27% 28% + % 135 12 11% 11% 'l3 30 29% 29% + % 20 56% 55% 56% +1% 1J 41 40% 41 + % 6 13% 13% 13% + % 6 15% 15% 15% + %. 5 27% 27% 27% . . - 39 70 69% 70 +*%' 17 21% 21% 21% + % 15 99% 90% 99% +1% 31 49 40% 48% + % 1 49 49 49 +% 3 44% 46% 46% + % 4 33% 33% 33% ..... 46 20% 27% 26% +1% 23 119 118% 118% — % 15 39% 39% 39% + % 3 60% 60 « + % 36 42% 12% 42%,— % 36 20% 20 20 - 35 St% 58% 5% + % X25 38% 37% 37% + % 25 16% 16% 16% + %, 9 54% 54 54% + % 5 17% 17% 17% + % —P— 10 35% 35%. 35% - 14 27% 27% ■ 10 10% 10% 10% + % 3 22% B% 22% — % 25 56% 55% 55% + % • 17 35- ' 5 8 ,+ % *23 27 »%»% + % 13 41% 41% 41% + % .11 11% 11% 11% + % 1J 55 S4% 54% + % 11 33% »% 33%-% 25 53% 53% M% + % 4 71% .77% 77% - % 8 73% 72 73 +1% 65 68% 68% M% —1% 14 66% 66- 66% — % 6 31% ,31% 31% - % 13 41% 40% 41% +1% 17 36% 34 % 34% + % If «% 49% 49% RCA .80b RalstonP 1.20 Rayonler 1.40 Raytheon .80 Reading Co Reich Ch .40' RepubStl 2.50 Revlon 1.30 Rexall ,30b Reyn Met .90 Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.20 Roan Sel ,98e Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 RoyDut 1.79e RyderSys .60 7 6% 26 43% —R— 74 4314 2 46 43 43’^ + % 4314 4- Va 46 13* +1 12 40 V2 +1* 77 35 33* 34* + * 3$ 53* 52* 53* + * 17 13* 13 8 12* 12 33 40* 401 63 46* 46 Xl2 26* 257/„ 29 51* 50* 50% + * 96 35* 34* 35 4- * 6 24 24 24 4- * 140 7* 7* 7Va 4- * 39 '24 23 23% 4-1% 6 22* 22 22 4- * 46 33* 33* 33* 4- Va 9 17* 16* 17* 4* * SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) — South Vietnam’s constituent Assembly approved today an outline for the nation’s new constitution. The official Vietnam Press reported two-thirds of the Assembly’s members have endorsed a pledge to defend the draft constitution agaist any tampering. ★ ★ it Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s military regime has the right to amend the final draft of the Assembly, which was elected in September, but the government could be overruled by a two thirds vote of the Assembly.. The pledge reported by Vietnam Press was seen as warning by the deputies to the regime to avoid any drastic changes. Assemblymen approved an outline submitted by its drafting committee consisting of nine chapters covering fundamental rights and duties of citizens, By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - The belief that inflation is more damaging to the life insurance industry. than to others “is a mental exercise rather than real,” the head of the Institute of Life Insurance said recently. Blake Newton Jr., president of the associa tion, discounted Savings should be sought, instead, in a savings account. ANOTHER) MATTER With endowment policies it is try to tell them to beware of the illusion.” He continued: “We have a responsibility to ring the alarifi another matter. These policies :So„PeaP^e w'^ react to tilings are purchased to protect for a *nfiat*onary. I dont think any certain period and after that to pay a cash return. People who hold these policies, Newton concedes, have found hopes and values eroded. “1 think what has caused us some trouble was the creation of the impression that all money | should go into life insurance. It CUNNIFF other business has spent more time and effort in educating people to the danger.” As Newton views it, then, inflation is indeed a danger and a great concern to the industry. SOME DISFAVOR The fact is that insurance companies, themselves, sometimes look more favorably shouldn’t be so. People custom- afij| invest in land, life insur-1eqUity investments and perhaps this’widely held belief. Viewed jance’ SaVi"gS and equjties” ;with disfavor on fixed in-in all its forms and effects, he! * vestments. Not always, but as said, inflation is bad for every- T"e same e r 0 s 10 n has °c- economic times dictate, one — not just for insurance: curred, of course, to any fixed jn summarizing 1966, the in- * * ^ j dollar investment, including stitute reported holdings of Manv neoDle aren’t con-i!^5 and sav*nSs: “^e only|u.s. government bonds, totaled vinced They have found badlylsa^e aPProach to subject of a^t $4 7 billion, down some-ereded ever»Jwhat from, 1965.” In 1965 the policies they purchased many years ago. Their emotions include despair, disappointment and anger. . Do they have the right to feei stocks? Hav^n t they seen then- bitter? Or should they be happyj"? kfP Paee- at least- w,th that, at least, they have hadjua a“on’ financial protection for their:‘SUPERFICIALIMPRESSION’ families over the years. \ “it js a superficial impression is hurt, Newton said. 1 industry owned $5,064 billion of What of those people who for- these fixed investments. In 1964 sook protection and, instead, in- the total had been close to $5.6 vested in equities such as; billion. ‘BUNDLE OF RIGHTS’ Newton believes that when a person buys a straight life policy he buys “a bundle of rights,” chief of which is protection, legislative, executive and judi-Jprotection, alone, should be the cial powers, constitutional! prime consideration, he feels. % amendments and political par-jThe-savings aspect is an added an illusion. Our responsibility is % ties and opposition. feature. i to educate the public about the PREVIOUSLY APPROVED The fact is, however, that danger of inflation, some of the that fixed dollars erode faster than equity investments. A great deal of damage is done by the philosophy that equity beats inflation,” he said. “The inflationary psychology (that inflation can be good) is Rise of Dailies' Safeway 1.10 StJosLd 2.80 SL SanFran 2 StRegP 1:40b Sanders .30 Schenley 1.40 Sobering 1 Schick SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper 1 Seab AL 1.80 Sear I GD 1.30 Sears Roe la Seeburg .60 Serve I Sharon Stl 1 Shell Oil 1.90 ShellTra 87e SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.40 SlhderCo 2.20 Smith K 1.80a SoPRSug .15g SouCalE 1.25 South Co 1.02 SouNGas 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind Sperry Rand SquareD .60a StdBrand 1.30 Std Kolls .50 StOUCal 2.50b-StOHInd 1.70 StOIINJ 3.30e StdOilOh 2.40 St Packaging StanWar 1.50 StauffCh 1.60 Sterldrug .90 StevenJP 2.25 Studebak .25e Sun Oil 1b Sunray l.40a Swift Co 2 Tampa El .60 Teledyne Inc Tenneco 1.20 Texaco 2.60a TexETrn 1.05 Tex G Sul* .40 Texaslnst .60 TexP Ld .35e Textron 1.20 Thiokoi .35e Tidewat Oil Tim RB 1.80a TransWAir 1 Transamer 1 , Transitron Tri Cont .92e TwnCen 1.20b UMC Ind .60 Un Carbide 2 Un> Elec 1.20 UnOCal 1.20a Un Pac 1.80a Un Tank 2.30 UnitAirLin 1 Unit Aire 1.60 UnitCorp .40e Un Fruit .75a UGasCp 1.70 Unit M^ 1.20 US Borax la USGyp6m 3a US Ind .70 US Lines 2b US Rub 1.20 US Smelt 1b US Steel 2.40 Unit Whelan UnivOPd 140 Upiohn 1.60 + 1/4 30 27% 27* 27% 4- * 4 57 56* 57 89 32Va 31% 32* 4- Va 25 56* 55% 56* 4-1 6 7* 7* 7* 4- 1 78 58 57* 57* 4-1 15 27% 29* 27% + ’ 3 40* 40Va 40* 4- 14 38% 3m 38% 4-21 ,67 45* 45* 45* 4- * 15* 15 15Va 4-lVa 7* 7* 7* 4- * 33Va 33* 33Va 4- 42 61 60* 61 4- 4- * 103 6 46 46 46 26 62* 62Va 627/ 35 47* 46Va 46^ 22 52Va 51* 52* 4- 65 23% 22% 23* 4-1 5 38Va 38Va 38V2 - 19 28* 28Va 28* 23 33 33 33, — 17 28% 28* 28* 4- 14 42% 42 42% + Va 52 16% 16* 16Va 4- * 68 30Vs 29* 29* 4- Vs 23 Wa 19 19* 4- 7 34Vs 34* 34* — 35 18* 18* 18* 4- * 74 60* 59* 60 114 48% 48 48% 4- Va 121 64 63* 64 + 68 Va 68 Va %- 9* 9»/a 4- 57% 57% 4- 68V2 thousands of individuals have heard life insurance salesmen emphasize the savings aspect. Many of these people purchased what they felt was a mixture of savings and protection. ★ ★ + The Assembly previously approved in principle a form of government with a president and vice president elected by universal adult suffrage. The president is to appoint ,a premier and cabinet which may be turned out individually or as a| “I think that when you substi-body by vote in the National tute one type of investment for Assembly. another you run risk?.,” Newton * * * said. The proposed government To seek an accumulation of borrows heavily from Korean j savings from a straight life poli-and French examples. things that bring it about, and Missing Trio Makes Way Out of Woods AT&T Income, 57% 38% 38% 38V 39% 39% 60% 40% + % 37% 37% + % 50% 50% _ _ 27V. 27% + V, 46 Vb 44% 46% +2V. 37% 50% 27V. 9 29Va 28 28% - V. 31 87% 86% 86% +1% 81 21V. .21 21 67 70% 70% 70% - % 26 20V. 20% 20% 74 107% 106% 106% +1% 52 1 02% 102 102% +2% 1 14% 14% 14% + % 15 51% 51% 51 Va — V. 97 18% 18 18% + % 10 73% 72% 72% — % 33 34% 34 34V. + % 24 74% 74% 74% +1 57 29% 29% 29% +1% 33 13% 13 23% 22% 19 35% 34% —u— 14 14* 14 104 50* 49* 12 26* 26 56 51* 50* 50* — * 12 37* 37* 37* 4- * 8 57* 56* 56* fj * 47 61* 61 61* 4- * 137 7?* 79* 79* -2* 107 " ■ 21 101 23 34* 4- * 14* 4- * 49* 4-2* 26% 4-.* 9 8* 8* — * 27* 26* 27* + * 49 48* 49 + * 23 23 23 + * 24 24 24 + * 57 56* 61 + * 15V* 14* 15* + * 30* 30* 30* + * 39 38* 39 47** 46* 46* +1* 38* 38 38* +1* 12»/4 12 12* + * 66 65* 66 + * 67* 65* 65* —2* Vanad 1.40a Varian Asso Vendo Co .50 VaEIPw 128 —V— 10 ,33* 56 30% 16 25* -w— 33* 33* 4- * 30* 30% 4- * 24% 25* 4-1* 47* - * Business Notes Charles Biegun of 1290 Maurer has been elected a director and officer of NEW YORK (AP) - The “ American Telephone & Telegraph Co., the world’s largest corporate enterprise, reported today record earnings and net Biegun has income for the 12 months ended been employed last Nov. 30. jin the consult- ing and AT&T said earnings for the 12 months were $3.67 per share on net income of $2,021 billion. But earnings for the three months ended Nov. 30 dipped to 93 cents per share compared with the record 95 cents in the three months ended last Aug. 31. Net income for the quarter was $514.3 million compared to the Aug. 31 record of $528.3 million. ONAWAY (AP)—Three young cy is, Newton states, an incor- ibrothers who disappeared on an rect approach to the concept, ice-fishing trip Monday made their own way out of snow-i dogged northern woods today while a manhunt was being pressed for them in this area 25 miles southeast of Cheboygan. The three, unable to restart the family car, had huddled together in it overnight in 27-degree weather three miles east of Wolverine. Twelve bars of candy made up their food supply. Giffels - Webster Engineers, Inc., Avon Township. contracting fields and is former city engineer Of Troy. The previous 12-month earnings record was for the year ended Aug. 31 when earnings were $3.63 on net income of $1,994 billion. AT&T said its annual stockholders meeting will be held Apr. 19 in the Baltimore, Md., Civic Center, the fourth time the meeting has been held outside New York (Jity. WarnPic .50a WarnLamb 1 WashWat 1.16 Westft AlrL 1 WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTel 1.40 WestgEI 1-40 Weyerhr 1.40. Whirl Cp 1.60 While M 1.80 Wilson Co 2 WlnnDIx 1.44 Woolworth 1 Worthing 120 x6 17% 17 ' 17% + % 15 38% 37% 38 - % 14 21% 21% 21% + % 70 45 44% 45 + % 44 31 30% 31 + % 39.30 37% 38 +1% 77 49 47% 48% + % 2 34% 34% 34% + % 5 32% 32% 32% + % 8 41% 41% 41% — % 19 61 60% 60% - % 3 31% 31 31 + % 32 19% 19% 19% + % 26 33% 32% 32% — % X—Y—Z— Xerox Corp 1 96 203% 199% 203% +6 YngstSM 1.80 =50 27% 27 27 + % 7»nithRad la 110 49 48 48% +1%, Copyrighted by The Associated Press.1967 Sates figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends' In the foregoing table ere annual disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular ar#». Identified In the following footnotes. a_Also extra or extras, b—Annual rale plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1967 plus stock dividend, e—Paid last year, t— Payable tn stock during 1967, esti-mated cash value on ex-divldend or ex-distribution date, g—Declared or paid so far this year, h—-Declared or paid after stock dividend or split up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative issue with dividends in arrears, n—New issue, o—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deterred or no action taken at last dividend meeting: r—Declared or paid in 1966 plus stock dividend, t—Paid In stock during 1966, estimated cash value on ex-divldend or ex-distribution date. „ z—Salas to full. . , i , cId—Called. x—E# dividend, y—Ex dividend and sales In full, x-dls—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without warrants. ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wi—Whan Issued, nd—Next day OMwy. ' __.. v|—In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or, securities assumed by such com-papl,- tn-fOrelgn Issue sublect to Interest equalization tax. DOW-JON El AVERAGES STOCKS 3t India ..................... 795.16 +9.46 10 Rant ......................205.58+2.61 IS Utils 137(01+0.83 65 Stocks .................. 284.79+3.20 BONDS 61 Bonds '................... 80.86-0,01 10 Highor grade rails ....... .. 72.46 10 Second grade rails .......... 10.72+0.01 10 public UttimSs ...........,.. 02.73-0.85 10 industrials . ........, , . WJI+O.OJ News in Brief Burglars who broke into Precision Automatic Parts Co., 366 E. South Blvd., rifled vending machines and took an undetermined Amount of money, it was reported to Pontiac police today. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)—The cash position o! the Treasury compared with corresponding date a year ago: Dec. 20, 1966 Dec. 21, 196] Balance— I 6291,713,406.2! 8 6,853,908,002.72 Deposits Fiscal Year July I— 69,614,906,776.46 57,639,148,171.88 Withdrawals Fiscal Year— * 83,102,764,752.32 68,622,347,478.28 X—Total Debt- 330,100,569,415.24 322,601,496,102.27 Gold Assets— . a 13,159,019,06272! 13,731+49,397.90 X—Includes $266,204,729.29 debt not subject to statutory, limit. t, BOND AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press 20 11 10 10 Net Change Noon Tups. 70.1 Prev. Oey .70.1 9}4 Week Ago 706 91.4 Month Ago 71.0 90.9 Year Ago 79.3 100.9 1966-67 High 794 101.4 1966+7 Low 70.1 18.9 1965 High . 63.7 \1024 1965 MMI . 794 99.9 r-Revtsed. Rails ’ Ind. Uttt. Fgn. L.Yd +.1 1 +.1 914 IIJ ‘ #1.8 16.1 66.1 79.2 66.9 664 90.4 90.4 904 «&3 917 931 90.4 95.0 ' 914 BIEGUN John K. Martin, manager of Goodbody and Co.’s Birmingham office, has been admitted to the firm as a special partner, it was announced by Harold P. Goodbody, managing partner of the national firm tof securities brokers. ' Martin of 5261 Deepwood, Bloomfield Township, has managed the brokerage office in Birmingham Hills since 1959. H. Albert Inkel had been pro- William Moran, 16, and his ;brothers, James, 12, and Daniel,-17, made their way at dawn today to a highway where a passing motorist from Onaway, Charles Hoffman, picked them up and returned them home. Hoffman was en route to work in the woods when he spotted the youths, who had been_sought overnight by sbefTFfsrnen and volunteers. LEFT HOME The three left home Monday to go ice fishing. Passable roads and lakes and streams had been checked overnight in the Onaway area, some 20 miles east of Wolverine. Onaway Police Chief Ray Preston organized today’s , , , . , .. search which fanned out from mo ed to amount underwriter|Qnaw ,g Waterworks Park s off,eei Mf?jr- °Hf rway’ Inkel of 1445 Glenwood, Sylvan'[J1® fatfier. said the sons Lake, joined Allstate in 1964 as|hadn 1 mentioned where they portumty to purchase one share an underwriter. planned to fish. of its stock. * • 1966 Estimates Show Advertising Record NEW YORK (DPI) - Total daily newspaper revenue for 1966 was Estimated at $7.05 billion today — a record $4.85 bit lion in advertising and about $2.2 billion in circulation income. The advertising revenue was up about 9 per cent over 1965. Classified advertising and national advertising both increased about 10 per cent to $1.33 billion and $960 million, respectively, and retail advertising increased 8 per cent to $2.56 billion. The figures were released by the American Newspaper Publishers’ Association’s Bureau of advertising, which said the 1966 , gains continue “a trend of steadily growing share of annual advertising growth dollars going into print media, in general, and newspapers, in particular.” ★ ★ ★ The report said severa.l dramatic developments in colts' advertising contributed to the gains. NEW INKS New inks developed by t h e ANPA Research Institute, the American Association of Advertising Agencies and the National Association of Printing Ink Makers became available early in 1966 to more than 1,000 dailies offering run of press color advertisers. The Newspaper Preprint Corp, was formed in May of 1966 to speed the growth of preprinted newspaper advertising by..coordinating orders to-simplify traffic and reduce operating costs, the ANPA report said. ♦ ★ ★ The new corporation, which purchased the assets of Preprint Corp., offered each of the nation’s daily newspapers the op- Detroit Edison has announced!»+: recent changes in the under-!* ground lines department. William M. Dull of 4399 Chis holm Trail, Bloomfield Town, ship, has become head of the department. He was assistant general superintendent since 1965. Pjpr ' * * JP b ;#*** .if Successfuhlnvesting #:v+l «r 4*' By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “We are in our early 60s-with plenty of cash reserves. We bought Gillette in 1951 and through stock splits we now own 1,200 shares. Should we add to this holding? Should we buy more stock now, such as Minnesota Mining & Mfg. and Flying Tiger? Our objective is both growth and income.” A. A. A) Your 900 per cent gain in this stock shows very clearly why buying for long-term growth Bernard W. Hafeli of 2732!is the 1)681 P°licy ,for most in* Brady, Bloomfield Township,j^68^6rs- ^oui men^*on 6^6r has become superintendent of L ° DULL HAFELI the cable division/ Hafeli, a registered engineer, joined the company in 1949. Stock exchange member Wat ling, Lerchen and Co. have admitted Thomas A. Mackey, Detroit, as a general partner. The firm maintains ofices at 2 N. Saginaw. ' ' ' /.'/'v ' , • v —. . .. _ . , Pontiac Scrap Co. recently TuaMlay'i 1st DIvMmEi Dtclared U ■, , , r.. J , Pa. stk. o« pay won an award m the 10-or-fewer- Ratr ri## Raearu »w«jemploye class in the Institute us 2+ j of Scrap Iron and Steel's 1966 ,.24| Safety Contest. Rsllabta ttri REGULAR Puritan Fashions . .10 Q 1-17 11 holding, s6 I assume that Gil lette represents your entire portfolio. If that is so, I would not add more shares, but would gradually lessen my dependence on a single issue by switching a* portion into other consumer stocks — a^, tax considerations warrant. ... > For this purpose, I suggest Consolidated Foods and American Home Products. Since the market outlook at present is pretty uncertain, I would not dip too heavily into cash reserves; A moderate commitment in 3-M seems justified because of * its excellent growth record. Flying Tiger is too dependent on military business and is a stock for speculative gains rather than growth. No cash dividends are paid, and I do not believe the stock is suitable for your goal. Instead, 1 recommend Plough, Inc., a consumer stock with a consistent pattern of rising earnings and dividends. ★ ★ Q) “I am a widow looking for more income. What do you think of Public Service Electric & Gas; Columbia Gai and Seaboard Air Line?” M. L. 'A) I believe your first two choices are excellent inconie stocks. Their growth rate has been moderate,-but Public Service and Columbia provide stability, safety and a good return. Both utilities provide satisfactory yields. Although Seaboard’s dividend iooks secure and a proposed merger with Atlantic Coast Line is encouraging, I would rather, nee you in a stronger, more stable situation h as Union Pacific, currently offering a substantially higher return. . » (Copyright. 1967j H. C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1067 pppw mm.....ft? hr&m "wWffwlgBS Deaths in Pbntiad, Nearby Areas Rev. Albert Amerson Als0 surviving are a sister, two grandchildren and six great-Service for Rev. Albert Amer- grandchildren, son, 67, of 19 Grant will be 1 ■ p.m. Thursday at the New Beth- Ronda E. Jones el Baptist Church. Burial will be i _ . ■ . _ , in Oak Hill-Ottawa Park Cerne-!, Servic* R°nda ,EJones’ ’ tery by Frank Cambers Fu-! ^earRold d«uShter 0 and _ J . A _ Mrs. Roland Jones of 207 Mar- Masonic Service will be at 9 ^“’ wdl ™ ____. „ ... mm u„,u ! at Kingdom Hall with burial in p.m. tomorrow at the New Belh-iftot romot_, K„ P , c „ ,, el Baptist Church. Oak Hill Cemetery by Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. James C. Smith Service for James C. Smith, 85, of 235 Draper will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Donelsori-Johns Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Smith died yesterday after a short illness. He was a member of Emmanuel. Baptist Church and a retired farmer. Surviving are two children, Rev. Amerson died Friday. Hq Th jH rii . catl.rriflu „ftpr „ UU1 v,,lue a,c lwu WlllUie i was a mWber of ..he Pilgrin-a ^L^She w^mm^^Grady and Claude, bo.h of P„„ tiac; a brother; 11 grandchil dren; and 15 great-grandchil- Zion Baptist Church and an em- ber of Kingdom Hall, ploye of the Wilson Foundry and Surviving are her parents andj j*p"’ Machine Co. He was an Inter- a halt-brother, Johnnie W. Bord-naUtmal Mason and a member jers of Pontiac n c1Ifla.a TllHla Of. the Ralph Bunche Grand' , Mrs. Eugene Tuttle Lodge. ‘ Mrs. William R. Kester Former Waterford Township Surviving besides his wife, 'resident Mrs. Eugene (Selma) Jettie, are 12 children, JSddie: S^ice for former Pontiac|T tI of Lak8ewood F1J Lee, Robert, Pearline and Mrs. r,e s ■ dg\ jjg William R.^ Sunday ’ Surviving are three sons, Ken- Service for former Pontiac iresident Mrs. William R. MaUieTmith. alPof'Detroit,'and!'JaneJ> Kes>f. 31 Selfridge Mrs. Johnnie Stales. Mrs. Eliza- Alr Force Base, Mount Clem/ beth Weeden, Albert Jr.. Joe “s;. wdI. fe 2 p.m. tomorro> Willie, Lonnie, Sylvia. Neassicat th* Pixley Memorial Chapel and Mrs. Irene Powell, all of Pontiac. Rochester, with burial in White neth G. of Waterford Township, Vincent of Milwaukee and Eric of Texas, and two sisters, Olga Vreeland of Walled Lake and Joseph D. Griggs after a long illness. 'She had Service for Joseph D. Griggs, been an employe of Detroit Edi-85, of 467 Bartlett will be 1 p. rti json Co., when living in Pontiac, tomorrow at Messiah Baptist Surviving are her husband, Church, with burial in Oak Hill;Maj. William R. Kester; a son Cemetery by the Frank Car- and daughter, Phillip and Kath-ruthers Funeral Home. leen, both at home; her par- Mr. Griggs died Friday. He ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ku-was a retired farmer. |gler of Farwell; a brother, Rob- Surviving are his wife, Mar. ert1 Kugler of Pontiac; and a etta; two daughters, Mrs. sister, Mrs. Eugene Harry of Juanita Dinkins of Pontiac and j Pontiac. Mrs. Gladys Gill of Detroit; and Chapel Memorial Cemetery,.. „ „ cu c ., Tr0y •’’ Mrs. W. C. Richards of Cadil- I lac Mrs. Kester died yesterday a son, George of Mt. Clemens. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed bids addressed to the Pontiac Township Clerk, 2060 Opdyke Road, Pontiac, Michigan, will be received until 5:00 p.m. of February 13th, 1967, for Fire Truck Chassis, Apparatus and Accessories. Bids to be opened at 8:00 p.m. on February 13th, 1967. Copies of specifications may be picked up at the Township Clerk's Office between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. except Saturday. The Township Board reserves the right ♦o reject any. or all bids. GRETA V. BLOCK Clerk January,3, 4 and 5, 1967 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The Zoning Board of the Village of Wolverine Lake will hold a public hearing January 9, 1966 at 7*30 p.m. at the Village Hall, 425 Glengary Rd£ Walled Lake, Mich. Purpose )|S Rezoning the East Side of Benstein Rd. from Delmontei to Connecticut, Blocks 13, 8 and 7, also Lots 1 thru 12 in BloclT 1, £pring Lake Heights Subdivision, from Residential to Commercial. CAROL CHI ESA Village Clerk January 3 and 9, .1967 Mrs. C. Walter Nelson Service for former Pon-tica resident Mrs. C. Walter (Olive) Nelson, 64, of Sioux City, Iowa, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Rummell’s Funeral Home in DeWitt with burial there. Mrs. Nelson died in Sioux City yesterday. She was a member of First Methodist Church, Sioux City. Surviving are her husband and a sister, Mrs. AB Leddick of Pontiac. Mrs. Fred Nierstheimer Service for Mrs. Fred Nierstheimer, 71, of 575 E. Madison will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Eagles Lodge No. 1230 will hold a memorial service at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the funeral home. Mrs. Nierstheimer, a member Earle W, Parcells, 67, of Grosse PoJnte Park, a stockbroker with Charles A. Parcells & Co., Detroit and former Pontiac resident, died Sunday. ★ * i Service will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at All Saints Episcopal Church. His body is at Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Surviving are his wife, Katherine H.; a son, Earle W., Jr. of Bloomfield Hills; a daughter, Mrs. Donald O. Frazier of Porterville, Calif.; eight grandchildren; and three brothers. PARADE WINNER — A float prepared by the city of South Pasadena was named “Sweepstakes Winner” in the Tournament of AP Wirephoto Rases parade in Pasadena prior to the Rose Bowl game yesterday.* Train Kills Man ROYAL OAK (AP) - A 25-iyear-old Royal Oak man, Gerald W. Erickson, today was killed when struck by a Grand Trunk & Western Railroad train at a crossing in Royal Oak. Police said Erickson apparently slipped and fell in front of the train. Parcdlls was a general partner of Parcells from 1920 to 1949 when he became a limited partner. In 1953 he became a-director and an officer of the company. He was a member of the Detroit Club. The family suggests any memorial tributes be made to the Michigan Cancer Foundation. More than half of the world’s resins and turpentine come from the state of Georgia. LOW lease rates. LOtS Of extras at: Birmingham Leasing Gall 647-32II Chuck Montgom/ry Birmingham, Mich. A CHRYSLER LEASING SYSTEM! Pension Plan to Be Eyed by Commission Cause No. 22379 STATE OF MICHIGAN - In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile Division In' the Matter of the Petition Concerning Richard Tate, Minor TO Robert Tate, father of said minor Petition having been filed in this Court I ^ p® E3gles Lodge, died Sun-alleging that said child comes within the [day after B long illneSS. provisions of Chapter 712A of the Com-' piled Laws of 1948 as amended, in that the present whereabouts of the father of said minor child is unknown and said child has violated a law of the State and that said child should be placed under the jurisdiction of this Court. In the Name of tye People of the State of Michigan, You are hereby notified that the hearing on said petition will be held at the Court House, Oakland County Service Center, t in the City of Pontiac In said County, on the 12th day of January, A.D. 1967, at 8:30 o'clock in the forenoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally at jsaid hearing. If being impractical to make personal ^service hereof, this summons and notice than be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing Hampton Palmer Service for Hampton Palmer, 62, of 112 S. Anderson will be 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home, with burial in Ball Cemetery, Beatty-ville, Ky. Mr. Palmer died yesterday. He had been a security guard with the U.S. government and a member of the New Hope Gen- uitc wcva picviuua lU aaiu near my hi in ,• , p. " , The Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed! Cral baptist CnUrch. m and circulated in said county. Surviving are his wife, Anna Mrs. Charles Wilkison Service for Mrs. Charles (Edith E.) Wilkison, 66, of 13 Chamberlain will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees Siple Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Clarence Dobson BIRMINGHAM -Clarence L. Dobson, 72, of 1352 Cole died today. His body is at Price Funeral Home. Mrs. Claud Haddix LAKE ORION - Service for Mrs. Claud (Sussie B.) Haddix, 83, of 345 Newton will be 10 a.m. Thursday at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Bentley Cemetery, Bentley. Mrs. Haddix, a - member of Lake Orion Methodist Church, died yesterday after a long illness. ★ ★ ■ ★ Surviving are two sons, Elmer and Max of Lake Orion; two daughters, Mrs. Beatrice Brennan of Des Moines, Iowa, and Mrs. Alta Pifer of Pontiac; two brothers; and 12 grandchildren. Delbert B. ScHoff GROVELAND TOWNSHIP — Service for Delbert B. Schoff, 58, of 860 Thayer will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville. Burial will be in Romeo Cemetery, i challenged to 13-year-old J i m Romeo. jBrisse who came from Sao * * * Paulo, Brazil. Mr. Schoff, an employe of the! ★ * * Allen Cooler Co. of Rochester,! Jimmy, the son of a Ford Mo-died Sunday. [tor Co. officer, was the guest A resolution will be considered tonight by the City Commission to put city employes under a reciprocal pension system. * ★ ★ According to provisions of a 1961 state law, the city can vote .to, join the system which essentially provides that local employes can’retain their earned pension rights if they transfer to another/unit of government. ★ ★ ★ City officials are making the proposal in light of the pending transfer of Pontiac Municipal Airport to Oakland County ownership. ★ ★ ★ In other business, final action is expected on an application to the State Municipal Finance Four Perish in Plane Crash ARDMORE, Okla. (AP) -AiKAir Force sergeant from Muskegon, Mich., and his wife, infant daughter and sister-in-law were killed Monday when their light plane crashed at Ardmore. Killed were Staff Sgt. Gordon A. Hunter, 32; his- wife, Johnnie Bell, 29; their 2-months-old daughter Michelle Renee, and Mrs. Ella Rodgers Dunn, 19, of Malvern, Ark. Hunter, stationed at Sheppard Air Force Base at Wichita Falls, Tex., recently, had been reassigned to Korea. ,. ★ ★ ★ The single-engine plane, a Mooney Mark 21, stalled while Postal Official Issues Warning [ to Area Vandals' Some 25,000 iftail receptacles; in the United States were damaged or destroyed in the past year, Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson said today. ★ * * Mailboxes are protected by federal law and pranksters or | vandals tampering with the boxes or their contents may be in for a heavy fine or imprisonment, he added. ★ it ★ Fines for destroying or damaging and mail receptacle, private or public, may not exceed $1,000. Imprisonment may be no more than three years, accord- j ing to Donaldson. ★ ★ ★ How to get a Better Job without risking your present oneJT If you are in the $12,000-$45,000 inebme bracket and are wondering how much better you might be doing, the Chusid Career Advancement Program provides the logical answer. We determine your true potential and help you to achieve it, without revealing your name, as we have done for over 25,000 others. Each year, Chusid clients choose from among more than 40,000 positions at the $12,000-545,000 level—desirable positions in General Management, Finance, Manufacturing, Marketing, Sales, Advertising, Engineering, Research, Administration, etc., with good, growing companies both here and abroad. To learn what we can do for you, you are invited to meet with one of our staff of over 100 Career Advancers. These ate successful leaders who have already made their mark in business or a profession and who now fin'd their greatest personal satisfaction in helping others, like you, to achieve greater happiness and career success. For a confidential interview, without cost or obligation, writ* or phone our nearest office. FREDERICK & COMPANY ,. , , ..Citizens noticing anyone making a landing approach ati tampering with mailboxes are] Ardmore’s Downtown Airpark I ^ to t the incident to ~ witness said. The craft hit;tllQ „r „ law en.| CHUSID World s Largest Consultants in Executive Search and Career Advancement 1 st National Bldg., Detroit—963-8695 ^T,?fi°M:l°LaLP.rlVai I the ' ground and cartwheeled | ^gency^immediately sue $1.8 million in revenue bonds for two trunk-sewer projects short of the runway ★ ★ ★ Brazil Boy Takes Inaugural Honors and note the person’s descrip- . . , jition and license number of car A spokesman from Sheppard' ... ITR coiH iho pl3IlC W9G on. I r ATLANTA BOSTON CHICAGO CINCINNATI CLEVELAND COLUMBUS . DALLAS DES MOINES DETROIT HOUSTON INDIANAPOLIS KANSAS CITY MEMPHIS MILWAUKEE' MINNEAPOLIS NEW YORK OKLA. CITY OMAHA PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURGH ST. LOUIS TOLEDO TULSA WASH.# D.C. and other major cities Not an Employment Agency IAFB said the plane was en route from Malvern to Wichita ! Fails. An Important P. S. Our continuing relationships with over BOO corporete clients, our experience in fitting men and jobs together in thousands of companies, plus the intelligence we gather from our over one million annuel contacts with top management—show us that, today, there-ere unprecedented career opportunities for able management men of ell ages. LANSING (UPI) - The honor of traveling the* greatest dis-i tance to attend Gov. Romney’s' inaugural probably will go un- J 1965 Mother of Year Dead in Utah at 78 WITNESS/ the Honorable Norman R* Barnard. Judge of said Court, in the City of Pontiac in said County, this 30th day Of December, A.D. 1966. (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD (a true copy) Judge of Probate ELIZABETH A. BALLARD Deputy Probate*/ Register, Juvenile Division January 3, 1967 NOTICE OF ZONING HEARING Notice is hereby given of a scheduled public hearing to be held by the Pbntiac Township Zonlhg Board at the Township Hall, 2060 Opdyke Road, on Tuesday, January 10th, 1967 at 7:30 p.rp. to consider the following applications for re-zoninq: PETITION! #66-14 to change from AG to RM (Multiple Housing): "Parcel H" Commencing at the corner post of Section 25, T3N, R10E, Pontiac Township, Oakland County, Michigan: thence N 00* 55' 40" W 557.09 ft along the N-S U line of said Section 25; thence N 0I# 58'40" W 150.00 ft along' the of said Section 25 to the I F.; 11 stepchildren, Mrs. Faye Wilson, Mrs. Linda Harris, William Morgan, Mg, Janet Hughes, Mrs. Terry Hines, all of Cincinnati, Ohio, David Morgan and Mrs. June Coffey, both of Louisville, Ky., Airman l.C. Duane Morgan of Tokyo, Japan, T. Sgt. Edward Morgan of Wa-verly, Iowa,. Hugh Morgan Of Chicago, and Mrs. Ila Ball of Pontiac; and two sisters. Surviving are his wife, Viola; a daughter, Adele Allen Schoff of Waterford Township; two sons, Jacqueline of Berkley and John of Ortonville; and 10, grandchildren. Mrs, Giarles C. Schuelke TROY — Service for J^rs. Charles C, (Louise) Schuelke, 78, of 6805 John R will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Gethsemane Lutheran Church, Rochester. Burial will be in Union Comers Cemetery. ★ ★ * Mrs. Schuelke died yesterday after a short illness. Surviving are a son, Carl O. of Troy; a sister; and a brother. yesterday of newly elected state Sen. George W. Kuhn, R-West Bloomfield. ★ ★ ★ Jimmy said he has been looking forward to meeting the governor for some time and added “I’d vote for him if I were old enough.” Illness Takes Life of Area Lumberman PROVO, Utah (AP) Lorena Chipman Fletcher, America's Mother of the Year in 1965, died Monday in Salt Lake City hospital after a long illness. She was 78. • ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Fletcher was the wife of Dr. Harvey Fletcher, professor of physics at Brigham Young University, an expert on accous-tics and inventor of stereophonic sound. ★ ★ ★ She also is survived by five sons, all of whom are . leading professional men: Dr. James C. Fletcher, physicst and president of the University of Utah; Stephen Harvey Fletcher, an attorney, vice president and general counsel of Western Electric Co., New York; Dr. Robert Chipman Frank C. Paderewski Emma Trost in Waterford Vandals went on a rampage in Waterford Township last night and early today, ripping about 40 mailboxes off posts on at least eight streets. The destruction, which was done manually, occurred in various parts of the township. ★ ★ ★ Police saifl mailboxes were torn off posts on Cass-Elizabeth, Shelby, Orchid, Baybrook, Winslow, Highgate, Pinegrove aiid Silver Circle. There are suspects, according to police. But no arrests were made immediately. ^ j LBJ, Romney Get Attire Honors NEW YORK (AP)—President Johnson was selected for the John H. Rosso, owner &hd jNew'Vork• * "^^bert"chiiMiffli' Monday on ari%- president J of the Birmingham &h£ vice presidentTthe nual M oi Best Dressed Men’ Lumber and Supply Co., MS the category of states- ■S ' TROY — Service tor ^ ^ “““•llP'a" *“= Requiem Mass for Frank C. Trost 71 of 930 Sylvanwood , * * * lDr- Harvey J- Fletcher, profes- Paderewski, 81, of 34 Miami will will be L30 p.m. tomorrow at! Service £u ?0r of mathematics at Brigham __P _ ,krt rni/I nt 1A «*v* rv», _ . _ F _ _ _ | I OCIVIU^ > point of beginning on the North line of the new M-59 Freeway; thence continuing N 01° 58' 40" W 1007.44 along .the N-S V* line of said Sec 25; thence s oo" em 129.jo f»; | with burial in Ferry Mount Park thence N 87 20 00^ E 730.00 ft; thence 1-^ . J s 216 20" oo" w 88Q ft to a point on ai Cemetery ... , • vi uiaurotuauca cu di igncuii said at 10 a.m. Thursday,!^;™ Funefaf Hnme R n r i aTo V‘cc 'vill be c'W:1,irs'\l3S8aHe“1:l surviving are his wile. Beryl! Mil-Hia 31“ t two sons. William A. aiill Henrietta, Birmingham, found- I York for 36 years until 1952. For ed the lumber company in 1948. p® those years Dr. Fletcher He, had been a building con- was a research scientist at the tractor prior to that time. He Telephone Laboratories. served 12 years on the Bir- i * * * * The funeral will be held Thiu-sday in a Mormon chapel herr\ 690 ft along the East line of said Sec- » tlon 25 to the North line of the new! * M-59 Freeway; thence S 85* 24' 40" W 197.88 ft along the North line of said M-59 Freeway to a poitft of curvature; thence along a curve radius 23,115.3-2 ft and long chord bearing S 83 41' W Jjg 710 ft which is along the North line ' said M-59 Freeway; thence N 21' 00" E 880 ft; thence N 87* 20' 00" E klirjal 346.41 ft to a point of curv^turj; thence UUI iai 1,1 along a curve chord bearing S 79* 41' | CdTlCtCry 36" € whose radius is 5,721.96 ft and c % J arc length is 259.47 ft to a point on the.oUnCUiy. East line of said Section 25; thence S juc »■ i ■ anniiii. i a. n ivunaiy i = grandchildren- twn hrnthere Sf“id se^,o7n025 rme'wmEiaoi be' Mrs. Robert Ross* wiil be saidat 8tonight atBei! | A Shaniey Rosso of Royai|/^ursin8 home care under the g,nn,n, and cdntain.n, ,37 acres ,oj; of ** Wllham R' Ham'!oak and Neil Rosso of Roche3-;federal government’s Medicare PETITION #66-16 to change from AG> /ROu©!*^. (ROSBllff) ROSS, | lltOIl CO. ^ I tpr* tWO SlStCFS Helfill of SUlHjiy. WUUams died * * ♦ post ot section 25 T3N, RtoE, Pontiaciflay. Her body is at the Sparks-jciay* m6n of Cridersvilie Ohio s *, ■ ★ Two Republicans, Gov. George Romney of Michigan, and Mayor John Lindsay of New York, were chosen under the respective designations of government and civic affairs. ill peace of mind iSparics-GriffuiV? V FUNERAL HOME J j ■ FE 8-9288 Outstanding In Pontiac For Service And Facilities 46 Williams St. !Holy Name Church. Burial will T , „ D . . - ... n . r, John M., both of Birmingham; be in Franklin, Pa. A Rosary le,„_ Medicare in Effect at Nursing Homes Township; thence . N 00' 55' 40' 557.09 ft; thence N 01* 58' 40" W 1157.44 ft; thence N 2*05‘40" W 1232.29. ft; thence N 01* 43'20" E 578.52 ft to the point of beginning; thence continuing i Ottt-N OI* 43'20" t 560- ft, thence >0* 17' 20" E 1243 59 ft; thence N 60° 44' 50" E 562.27 ft; tflence S 01* 43' 20" W 840.00 ft; thence S 81* 43'20" W 640 00 ft? thence s 53’ 43' 20" w 290.00 ff;1 fhp IJrtitpd rtitireh nf thence S 16’ 28'51" »l80.08 ft; thence !115^ uniiea VWUTOI OI n 8e- ,4' <0" w 735 oo ft to the poipt] Surviving are three sons, Clif-jford, Charles, and Russell, all A copy df the proposed change Is on of Beaverton, Ont. and t WO fie ih the office of the Township Clerk and may be examined Dt any time, daughters, Florence May White Griffin Funeral Home. Funeral! Surviving are her husband; a and burial will be in Beaverton,jdaughter, Susan M- at home; five'sons, Richard E. of Royal Mrs. Ross died after a Iongj®a^> Peter 3P. of Oak Pprk illness. She was a member of Michael J., Timothy J. and- ... ■ . . | - ted Oiurch of Canada. Stephen M., all at home; a Sis- \ , - , # ter; and two grandchildren. | HOSOltal Firings Memorial tributes may be sent to the Michigan Cancer Founda- Two Pontiac nursing homes, Seminole Hills, 532 Orchard Lake, and Grovecrest Convalescent Center, 121 Prall have announced they have been certified to provide, the added Medi-parfe benefits. \ ★ * * X Dr. Howard H. McNeill, Grovecrqst admiftistrator, said Plan Your Next Business Meeting at Bedell’s Private Dining and Meeting Room seats up to 100. P.A. System, and piped-in. music in soundproof rooms to assure you of complete privacy. Mabel Goodwin Will help you with a choice of plant... • Complete Meeting and Meal Package • Individual Meal Prices • Choice of Mtutus j Rattlesnakes are -the worst OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Mni M Snakebite offenders in thelAlameda Gtounty has dismissed he thought four or five»Pontiac roy wahl, chairman 0f Pontiac and Mrs. Fayne;^nited States: ncxt are copper- 350 hospital vnorkers who struck area nursing homes had been Oscember l/^^tid 'jfnu^y ^lwl Freshwater of Columbus; Ohio. and then cottonmouth j two public hospitals for higher i similarly approved. Grovecrest —;----------- ! moccasins. I wages. 1 has 48 beds. 2395 Woodwa.rd at Sq. Lk. Rd. 334-4563 '...j. TljE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1907 C—T Castro Hints Vanished Red May Show Up MIAMI (UPI) — Cuban guerrilla warfare expert Ernesto (Che) Guevara, missing from the island fra* almost two years, can be; expected/to turn up “any day now where Yankee imperialism least expects him,” according to Premier Fidel Castro. y -■* * * But the Cuban chief, in a lengthy Havana speech yesterday marking his eighth anniversary in power, once again failed to give any specifics about the Argentine - born Guevara’s whereabouts. “Someday we shall have very concrete news about Che,” was all that Castro would say about his former confidant as he presided over ceremonies in Havana’s revolutionary square. He cryptically compared Guevara’s supposed future reappearance with the Egyptian myth of the “Phoenix which was reborn from its own ashes.” ★ ★ ★ Since Guevara dropped out of sight in March 19%, Castro has consistently employed only vague and guarded language in referring to him. Mention of Guevara’s name yesterday drew yesterday drew prolonged applause by the throngs in the plaza. RADIO SALUTE It was late in the speech when Castro suddenly gave a radio /salute to “Major Ernesto Guevara and his comrades wherever they are.” The bearded ruler used the major portion of his address to attack “Yankee imperialism” and said U.S. economic policies aimed at squeezing his Communist regime out of existence were failing. He credited past and pending trade deals with free European countries — in defiance of the United States — as being a ma jor factor in Cuba’s continued economic survival. ★ .★ ★ He denounced the United States for allegedly trying to pressure Britain into blocking a projected fertilizer plant sale to Cuba but expresswl "doubt’ that Britain will cancel the multimillion dollar deal. CITSls PRESSURE He called the alleged U.S. pressure “criminal and absurd” and said “no sovereign nation will submit to such pressure.” Castro also disclosed h i s regime was negotiating with unnamed Italian firms and charged the United States “has been pressuring the Italian government to block the deals. “Europe wants increasingly to become more independent from the United States and many European countries have confidence in Cuba,’’ he said. “They want to sell their products to Cuba.” ★ ★ ★ He claimed ^many Europeans shared his hatred of “Yankee imperialism, specifically mentioning Frenchmen and Spaniards as being among the leading critics of U.S. policy. SOLIDLY BEHIND Castro claimed the Cuban people are solidly behind him and “with each passing year a revolutionary fervor goes on growing instead of diminishing.” He repeated his pledge of all-out support for Latin American Red guerrilla leaders and saluted several of them by name — particularly those in Colombia and Venezuela. Death Notices AMERSON, DECEMBER 38, 1966, REVEREND ALBERT, 19 Grant St.; age 47; beloved husband of Jettie Amerson; dear father of Mrs. Mattie Louise Smith, Mrs. Johnnie Mae Styles, Mrs. Elizabeth Weeden, Mrs. Irene Powell. Albert Amdrson Jr,, Eddie Lee, Robert, Pearline, Willie, Lonnie, Sylvia and Neassic Amerson. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January S, at V p.m. at the New Bethel Baptist Church with Rev. Thomas Ford officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. .Rev. Amerson will lie in state at the Frank Carruttwrs Funeral Home after S p.m. Wednesday. COMPAGNONI, DECEMBER 31,1966, MODESTO, 525 Galipgly; age 76; beloved husband of Frances Com-pagnoni; dear father of Louis and Frank Compagnoni; also survived by 10 grandchildren. Recitation of -the /Rosary will be today at 7:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 4 at 9:30 aim. at the St. Michaels Church. Interment in Mount/ Hope Cemetery. Mr. Compagnoni will lie In Kate at the funeral home. GRIGGS, DECEMBER 30, 1946, J& seph D., 447 Bartlett Street; age >5; beloved huisband of Maryetta Griggs,- dear father of Mrs. Gladys Gill; Mrs. Juanita Dinkins and , George Griggs; dear brother of Mrs. Julia Griggs; dear grandfather of Joe Haymer; also survived by two grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. . Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 4, at 1 p.m. at the Messiah Baptist Church yrith Rev. Roy Cummings Officiating, interment In Oak jtlt! Cemetery. Mr. iGriggs will lie In state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Rite evening. ; . Death Notices FALKENBURY* DECEMBER 31* 1966, ALMIRA J., 116 Oak Hill; age 78; beloved wife of Clarence B. Falkenbury; , dear , mother of Mrs. Payne (Mabel) Ransom and Miss Helen Falkenbury; dekr, sister of Mrs. Savilla Locker Mrs. Emma Spraguer Mrs. Lillian Patricks Mrs. Mary Heckmans and Charles Burley; also survived by one grandson. Prayer service will ,be held Wednesday, January 4, at 11:00 a.m.s at Voorhees-Slple Funeral HortW with Rev. Theodore R. Allebach officiating. Following the prayer service Mrs. Falken- * bury yrill be taken to the West Deerfield Methodist Church, West Deerfield Township for service's and burial at 1:30 p.m. with *Rev. Robert O. Bryce officiating. Mrs. Falkenbury will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visit-ing hours 3 to 5 and 7-to 9 p.m.) HADDIX, JANUARY 2* 1967, SUSSIE B., 349 Newton Drive, Lake Orion; age 83; dear mother of Elmer L. and Mak Haddix, Mrs. Beatrice Brennan and Mrs. Alta pifer; dear sister of Bert and John Boakes; also Survived by 12 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held January 5, at 10 a.m. at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in Bentley Cemetery, Bentley. Mrs. Haddix will lie in state at the funeral home. JONES, DECEMBER 31, 1966, BABY RONDA E., 207 S. Marshall Street; txhpved infant daughter of Hazel and' Roland Jones; dear sister of Johnhie W. Borders. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 4, at 10 a.m. with Overseer Strong officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Baby Ron-da will lie in state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. this evening. NIERSTHEIMER, JANUARY 1, 1967, ETHEL ESTELLE, 575 East -Madison; age 71; dear mother of Mrs. Ethel Hall, Mrs. Helen Hag-ner, Mrs. Margie Fowler, Mrs. Ruth Burns and James Patrick McWest; dear sister of Erwin Odgen; also survived by 15 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren. Memorial service wilf be conducted by the Pontiac Eagles Lodge No. 1230 Wednesday, January 4, at 7:30 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 5, at 1:30 p.m. at the funeral home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Niers-theimer will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) PADEREWSKI, JANUARY 2, 1967, FRANK C., D.G., 34 Miami Road; age 81. Recitation of the Rosary will be Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the "Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 5, at 10 a.m. at St. Perpetua Catholic Church. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Paderewski will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) ________________ PALMER, JANUARY 2, 1967, HAMPTON, 112 S. Anderson Street; age 62; beloved husband of Anna F. Palmer; dear stepfather of Mrs. Faye Wilson, Mrs. Linda Harris, Mrs. Janet Hughes, Mrs. Terry Hines, AArs. June Coffey, Mrs. I la Ball, Airman I.C. Duane Morgan, William, David and Hugh Morgan, and T. Sgt. Edward Morgan; dear brother of Mrs. Georgia Lee Baker and Mrs. Retta Barnett. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 4, at 7:30 p.m. at the Voorhees-Slple Funeral Home. Following service Mr. Palmer will be taken to the Newman Funeral Home, Beatty-ville, Kentucky, for service and burial. Mr. Palmer will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting .hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) _________________ QUANT, JANUARY 1, 1967, OL%, 883 Kettering Street; age 61; beloved wife of Clyde Quant; dear mother of Mrs. Nardy Bolt, and Mrs. Daisy Hlpsher. Funeral ser-> vice will be held Wednesday, January 4, at, 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Marion Sherrill officiating. Interment in Perry Mounts Park Cemetery. Mr. Quant will lie in state at the funeral home. ROSS, JANUARY 2, 1967, ROSELLA, 1061 Voorheis Road; age 94; dear mother of Florence May White, Mrs. Fayne Lillian Freshwater, Xlifford, Charles and Russell Ross. Mrs. Ross will be taken to Beaverton, Ontario for funeral service and burial. Arrangements by the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. SCHOFF, JANUARY 1, 1967, DEL-BERT B., 860 Thayer Road, Orton-ville; age 58; beloved husband of Viola Bowerman Schoff; dear father of Adele Allen Schoff, Mr. Jacqueline Russo and John Schoff; also survived by 10 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 5, at 1 p.m. at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, 135 South Street, Ortonville, with Rev. Kyle Ballard officiating. Interment in Romeo Cemetery. Mr. Schoff wifh lie in state at the funeral home. SMITH, JANUARY 2, 1967, JAMES C., 235 Draper; age 85; dear father of Grady and» Claude Smith; dear brother of Joe Smith; also survived by 11 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 5, at 1:30 p.m. at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Smith will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) TUTTLE, JANUARY 3, 1967, SELMA, Lakewood, Florida, formerly of Drayton Plains; age 81; dear mother of Kenneth George, Vincent and Eric Tuttle; dear sister of Olga Vreeland and Mrs. W. ,C. Richards. Funeral arrangements are pending. Friends fnay calf Mrs. Kenneth Tuttle, 3970 Em-barcadero, Drayton Plains. WILKINSON, JANUARY 1, 1967, EDITH E., 13 Chamberlain Street; age 66; dear mother of Noel, and Lowell Wilkinson, ’ Mrs. Eugene Ewing, Mrs. Joyce Gooch, and Mrs. James Boat; dear sister of Grant Singleton; also survived by 18 grandchildren and 2 greatgrandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 4, at 1.30 p.m. at the Voorhees-Slple Fuperal Home with Minister Glen W. Mellotf officiating. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Wilkinson will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p,m.) Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS AOS RECEIVED BY S P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. All arrors should bo reported Immediately, or no later then the day following publication. If no notification of such error is made by that time, It will be assumed the ad is correct. The* Press assumes no responsibility for errors«.other than to cancel the charges tor that portion of the first Insertion of the advertisement which has been rendered veloeless through the error. The deadline for cancellation of transient Went Ads Is 9 a.m. the day of publication after the first insertion. When cancellations are made be sure to get your "KILL NUMBER." No adjustments will be given without Closing time tor advertisements containing type sizes larger than regular agate type is 11 o'clock noon the day previous to publication. SASH WANT AD RATE* (when cash accompanies order} Unas , - 1-Day 3-Days 4-Oeys 2 32.00 $2.46 *3.84 3 \ 2.00 3.40 SJI 4 1.44 4.M 4.96 „« J,05 5.40 1,40 4 .3.66 6.41 10.00 7 4:27 7.54 11.7* t 4#8 8,44 ISM s 5/49 par. ini 10 6.10 10.80, 14.80 An additional charge et 50 cents will be made tor use of Pontiac Press Box numbers. The Pontiac Press FROM g A.M. TO S FAX In Memorfam IN LOVING MEMORY OF MARY Ann end Lynette Wilson' who were killed e year ago J|an. 3, 1944. The buds that the Gardner gave us, The lowly daughters. He gave them in our keeping, to cherish undeflled. But lust as they were opening to the glory of the day. they ware taken away so tragically. No pen can write no tongue can tall our sad and bitter -Joss. But God alone has helped so well, to bear the heavy cross. . Sadly missed by their Mother. Sister, Brothers, Relatives, nelgh-bors, and friends. ■ Announcements 3 $50 DONATION For your church, club or nonprofit organization. Distributing 100 bottles of Watkins famous vanilla. Phone 332-3053 8 to 10 a.m. and 4 to 5 p.m.__________________ ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. office, 710 Rlker Building, branch of Detroit's well, known Debt Aid. Inc. to serve the Pontiac Community. GET OUT OF O E B T - AVOID GARNISHMENTS. BANKRUPTCY REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. We have helped and saved thou-sands of people with credit problems. Let us consolidate your debts 1 with one low payment you can at-ford. No limit as to amount owed and number of creditors. For those that realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." Home appointment arranged anytime AT NO CHARGE. Hours 9-7 Mon. thru Frl, Sat. 9-5 FE 2-0101 (BONDED-AND LICENSED) LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dex-A-Dlet Tablet*. Only 91 cents at Simms Bro*. Drugs. r ? BOX REPLIES 1 At 10 a.m. today there I I were replies at Thej (Press Office in the fol-i lowing boxes: j 2, 5, 7, 10, 15, 22, 30, [ 32, 34, 35, 41, 42, 60, 65, 1 66, 82, 92, 105 Funeral Directors 4 C.,1. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Ketgo Harbor. Ph. 482-0200 COATS Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 years 79 Oakland Ave.__FE 2-0189 DONELSON-JOHNS Funeral Home ____"Designed tor Funerals” SPARKS-GRIFFIN Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME, FE 2-8378 Established Over 40 Years Personals 4-B GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME , . SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702, Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 8-0456 ■__________ ANY GIRLOR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before 5 p.m., or if no answer, rail FE 2-8734, Confidential.' DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES , 2028 E, Hammond FE 5-7805 "HOUSE OF WIGS" Wigs starting at (59.95 For appointment In your home or mine, CALL FE 8-4214.___________ ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, DE-cember 28, 1964, I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. James Kellum, 52 N. Paddock, Pontisc, Mich. OLD’ FA5HIONED HORSE DRAWN sleigh rides are exciting Winter fun. Includes Spaghetti Dinner or Hot Dog meal In club room. Childrens party Includes farm tour. Groups of 20 or more call tor reservation. 628-1611. j UPLAND HILLS FARM WE WOULD LIKE YOUR OLD carpeting to use In our basement. Please cal.l 628-1478. WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY r ( Professional Color. Free brochure available. 338-9079 anytime. Lost and Found__________.... 5 BLACK AND WHITE BEAGLE, FE-male, lost nbrth of M^yville on State land off of 46. Reward. FE 8-0794, __________ FOUND: BLACK-WHITE MIXED terrier, male, approx. 3 yrs. — Bloomfield Animal Hospital, FE 4- 9991. FOUND; HUSKY OR SLED-DOG, St. Joseph Hospital area. FE 5-8949. LOST: MALE BASSET HOUND, SIL-ver Lake area. 332-8412. LOST - BUT WANTED PERSON with conscience to return white male sheep dog to 1355 Athlone Dr., Red Bam Sub, Laka Orton. LOST: NEAR ADAMS AND BUNN Rd. Large male, black-white, mixed breed. Marked end built siitilllar to coach dog or English Setter. FE 5- 0841. LOST: BEAGLE-2 YR. OLD MALE, large, tan, black and white, without collar In area of Strawberry end Crotched Lks. near Holly. Call collect, Clio 686-1052, Lost: a^ale huskie, oak wood Manor, 13 month* old. 335-2360. Reward. _________ ■ ■>* LOST: VICINITY OF TWIN BEACH, black and tan 1 year old German shepherd, Lucky Boy, under veterinarian'* care, can be dangerous Lie. 17100. Phone Ai Cesaro at 624-3377 of 682-0270. '•< THE 1944 CIVIL RIGHTS -S LAW PROHIBITS, WITH -X //CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS. X; v DISCRIMINATION RE-X- cause of sex. since ft X SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE -X X CONSIDERED MORE AT- -X m TRACTIVE TO PERSONS 18 OF ONE SEX THAN THE X; -X OTHER, ADVERTISE- X-•AMENTS ARE PLACED ;8 UNDER THE MALE OR -X FEMALE COLUMNS FOR ’-X •.'•'. CONVENIENCE OF READ-.'v •X ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE X-:•>. NOT INTENDED TO EX- •; X CLUOE PERSON* OF-X ;* EITHER SEX. Help Wanted Mai* ________________6 4 MEN NEE6ED AT ONCE FOR evening work, age 21-45, married and employed, $200 a mo. guaranteed to start. Call Mr. Miller ba- tween 4-7 p.m. FE 4*9647:_______ 4 OR 5 WELL DRESSED MEN to deliver advertising material, $15 per evening, car necessary. FE 5-1957. ___________ 4 WELL DRESSED MEN TO OE-liver advertising material, $15 per evening. Car necessary. 625-2448. $400 Draftsmen /Trainees 18-25 High School of College drafting. $500 MONTH UP HIGh SCHOOL GRADS ■ Training programs In all fields of Industry. 21-30, Mr. Moreen. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 8to S. Woodward B'ham 642-0241 $500 PER MONTH\ . Factory branch .has steady year around work. No strikes or layoffs. $3000 AIRLINE TRAINEES 19-28 Exc. Future, No exp. necessary INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1010 w; Huron 334-4971 Help Wanted Malt 6 $5,000 Electronics Trainees 21-26, electrical or mechanical background. Mr. Moreen. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Woodward, B'ham 442-8240" $6000 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES 2136 Soma College INTERNATIONAL $7800 FEE PAID 1 OFFICE MGR. TRAINEE 21-30 Degree, No exp. necessary. International personnel IMP W. Huron___________334-4971 ALERT YOUNG ■■ , MEN ./ We need more men 10-26 to complete staff of new office. In Pontiac. Must be high school graduate and converse intelligently. ' Salary of $124.50 a week to start. Exc. chance tor advancement. Call Mr. Wells, 333-0359 9-2 daily. ADDITIONAL MUSIC INSTRUMENT salesman needed at Grlnnell's Pontiac Mall store. Young man with musll: Instrument knowledge, must have car. Full time with advancement. Excellent opportunity to get into the music business. Contact Mr. Allan at Grln- > nail's Pontiac Mall.__ APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-en for ushers and concession help Apply Blue Sky Drive In Theater 2150 Opdyke Rd. Apply after 1 p.m. ASSISTANT TRANSPORTATION DIRECTOR Full time position Ih 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. Phone 651-4210. _______________ Bus Boy Ted's of Pontiac Mall has Immediate openings for full tlmy bus boys. No Sun. work. Apply In person only. I ED'S _________PONTIAC MALL________ CARPENTERS CIGAR CLERK, EXPERIENCED IN running tobacco dept. Apply In person. Perry Pharmacy, 689 E. Blvd., Pontiac, an equal opportunity employer. CUTTING TOOL ESTIMATOR/PLANNER The West Coast's largest and fastest growing cutting tool manufacturer has immediate and permanent opening for energetic person experienced, in estimating and planning -the manufacture of endmills, milling cutters, circular form tools, flat form tools, etc. Attractive salary commensurate with experience and aggressiveness. Paid holidays, vacation, insurance and bonus. Liberal • traveling and moving allowance. Write or call (collect): DON WILSON Vehm Engineering Corp. 5836 Marilyn Ave. Culver City, Californio (213) EX 1-7181 Equal Opportunity Employer DAYTIME KITCHEN HELPER wanted. Apply In person the Rotunda Country Inn 3230 Pine Lk. Rd. Orchard Lk. DISPATCHER AGES 25-32. SOME knowledge of freight business helpful but not necessary. Call FE 4-3561 for interview appointment. DELIVERY-STOCKMAN Familiar Birmingham area, neat appearance, over , 21, consider older person, some writing and figuring, rate $2 per hr., up, steady 5 day wk. 635 E. Maple, Birmingham, Mich. DISHWASHER- ./ For day shift* good wages* working conditions. Must toe reliable «and have transportation. Apply in person. HOWARD JOHNSON'S Telegraph at Maple Rd., Birmingham DRAFTSMAN - ELECTRICAL AND mechanical — experienced. Gemco Electric Co., 1080 N. Crooks Rd,* Clawson.______ Evenings Part-Time 3 men needed Immediately tor part time evening work. Must be neat, mature, married end have good work record. Call OR 4-2233, 4 p.m,-7 p.m. tonight.___ Evenings Part-Time 3 men needed Immediately for part tjme evening work. Must be neat, mature* married and havto good work record. Call OR 4-2233* 4 p.m,-7 p.m. Tonight. __ EVENING JOBS % 6:38 to 18:38 P.M. Precision Machinist Prototype work INSPECTORS Lay-out TEST TECHNICIANS For pneumatic and hydraulic components M. C. MFG. CO. An equal opportunity employer Excellent Opportunity for a young mail between the ages of 21-26, draft, exempt and Interested -In a 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. Austin at 624-1584 tor an appointment. Evenings Part-Time 3 men needed immediately f o r . part time evening work. Must be neat, mature, married and have good work record. Call OR 4-2233, 4 p.m-7 p.m. tonight. __________ EARN WHILE YOU LEARN REAL ESTATE FREE CLASSES. Work part or full time. You .earn big $$$$ with C SCHUETT'S 78 per cent plan, plus sales courses, hospitalization and life Insurance benefits. * MR. COSWAY EM 3-7199 MR. CROSS FE 3-7088W C. SCHUETT FOR REAL ESTATE Experienced milk route salesman for supervisory lob, good salary and fringe benefits, wholesale and retell. FE 4-2547. Help Wanted Malt GRILL MAN Day shift. Night shift. Part time. Good wages and all benefits. Big Boy Restaurant, Talegraph and Hurori, INSURANCE INVESTIGATOR needed. Experience preferred. Will consider trainee. We pay top wages, we have complete Insurance package as fringe benefits. Pay car depredation plus ex-„ penses. Work out of Pontiac office. Working Oakland County and Northern Detroit Suburbs. No typing, must have own car. Send resume to P.O, Bex 911, Pontiac. IBM pEoGrXmER — MULTI-DI Vision mfg- In Central Michigan expanding present EDP application Into an on-line mgt. Information system utilizing IBM 340. Challenging position with opportunity for advancement. Must have 1401 experience. Knowledge of mfg. applications plus disk and tape experience helpful. Send resume' and salary requirements to Pontiac Press Box 40. Equal opoprtunlty employer. INTERESTING CAREER IN OF-fice machines mechanics for qualified young • mm. Must have mechanical aptitude but experience not necessary. Exc. training program and future. Call Md. Thomas at 335-7301. ft MAN TO DO DELIVERY OF AP-pliances and deliver* initall and service of water softeners. Must be over 25* have mechanical ability and able to supply references. FE 4-3573 for appointment. MAN, 45 TO 60 YEARS OLD* FOR year-around maintenance work In office building. Apply* 406 Riker Bldg. _____________ MAN, 45 TO 50 YEARS OLD, FOR day porter. Steady employment. Apply Big Boy Drive-In. 2490 Dixie Hwy. ___________________ MEN TO WORK IN SERVICE STA-tion. Driveway salesmen* wrecker drivers and mechanics. $2 per hr. to start for experienced men. Full time only. Must be 25 yrs. of age. Shell Statpn* Woodward and Long Lake Rds. Bloomfield Hills., MICHIGAN BELL Has Immediate Openings for LINEMEN and INSTALLERS In the Pontiac, Royal Oak and1 Southfield Areas ENJOY STEADY WORK WITH GOOD PAY AND EXCELLENT BENEFITS No experience necessary but prior training and related military experience helpful. HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION OR EQUIVALENT REQUIRED Minimum height 5'6" with parportionate weight. APPLY AT: 90 Lake Street Michigan Bell Garage J Pontiac, Michigan 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. JANUARY 6, 7, 9, 10 ONLY APPLY AT: 1365 Cass Avenue Detroit, Michigan 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY _________EMPLOYER MOTOR ROUTES, DETROIT FREE Press. Immediate opening Waterford and N. Farmington areas. Exc. opportunity for anyone desiring to supplement present Income — Also opportunity for 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 repair man. Good future and benefits. FRY COOK, TOP WAGES, GOOD working conditions, fringe benefit*. Steak and Egg, Watortord. Apply between It a.m. and 6 p.m..____ GAS STATION ATTENDANT: Experienced, mechanically inclined, local ,ref., full or part time. Gulf, Telegraph and Maple. O'NEIL REALTY HAS OPENING for experienced salesman. Must be neat, aggressive, personable and have proven sales record. Guaranteed weekly Income. 30 per cent listing commission paid. Inquiries will be kept strictly confidential. Call Mr. Proksch, sales manager, OR 4-2222 or OL 1-0575 after 7 pjn._____________________ OFFSET PRINTER Opportunity for an energetic young men with some layout experience should be familiar with 1250 L and W Multlllth, Itek platemaker, Nuarc exposing unit and plate-maker, verltype equipment. Salary $4800 depending on experience and back-ground, excellent fringe benefits In addition -to salary Including hospitalization life Insurance retirement program linked with Social Sec., paid vacations and sick leave. Examination. Apply In person to Personnel Dlv., — Oakland County Court House, 1200' N. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac._________ PLANNED ' PROMOTIONAL OPPORTUNITIES This position offers a career opportunity through planned advancement steps to managerial levels and high earnings. We require a college graduate or e high school graduate with several years business experience, preferably In Consumers credit. ' We often a good starting salary, plus liberal employee's benefits. Applicants must have good driving records-^company car furnished. For an interview appointment—Cell Mr. Fred Paupard; 71 Teiegrapn wo. (Tel-Huron Shopping Center) Universal CIT Credit Corp. 333-7961 PART TIME $200 Monthly to Start Position open as area representative tor National Distributor. Must be reliable, end able to furnish good references. Call 674-2233, Mr. Taylor. Ask about the sub-distributor ____________opportunity._________ ROY BROS. STANDARD, 205 N. Telegraph, full time, permanent, paid vacations, top pay. Must be experienced, older men preferred. Apply bet. 9-5. ______________ Real Estate Sales Attention ell qualified Real Estate -Salesmen in Pontiac and Waterford area. An appointment with ma IS A MUST — l am offering a totally new plan of profit iharlng to my sales personnel. Substantial listing commission paid, r am a member of Pontiac Board of Realtors and Multiple Listing Service. l JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtbr 5730 william* Lk., Rd. 674-2145 Real Estate Salesmen Due to the expansion and expected extra traffic at the Mall -> we now have openings tor additional < salesmen. For Information call Mr, Vonderharr 482-5800. , VON REALTY SECURITY GUARDS NEEDED. AP-/ ply -in parson. Holiday Iftn, 1801 5. Telegraph. STOCK CLERK AND DELIVERY, exp. not npc. must be 18 and have driver's license, apply In person Ferry Pharmacy, 409 E. Blvd., Pontiac, an equal opportunity employer. - Help Wanted Male SALARIES TO $10,000 DRAFTSMEN Trainees or experienced — needed how. Mr. Moreen. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward B'ham 642-8268 Tool Designer Tool Detailer (1) Year on board, preferably on tooling. Days, many fringe benefits, steady employment ahd overtime. M. C. MFG. CO. 118 Indianwood Lake Orion, Mich. 692-2711 An equal opportunity employer TOO OLD? Is that what people keep tolling you? Well, I'm looking for men over 40 who want an interesting sales position and a rewarding career. Call,;332-3053 8 to 10 a.m. and 4 to 5 plm.____________________ Turret lathe Moonlighters or ? An experienced operator only. 6 p.m. to midnight. Able to mike own work. Come In or phonei 65 S. Main, Clawson, $85-1970; 2320 Hilton, Ferndale, 540-7070; 8561 E. 10 Mite, Center Line. 755-9220. EMPLOYERS TEMP. SERVICE TV TECHNICIAN SWEET'S APPLIANCE SHOP 422 W. Huron _<34-5677 Wanted Man or Woman FOR MOTOR ROUTE IN Bloomfield Hills Area at Once Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPT. Help Wanted Female 7 3 LADIES Hostesstype, age 21-39. $400 pef month, plus share of business profits. Call Mr. Taylor, 674-2233 9 a.m.-l p.m, or 4-7 p.m. $70.00 YOUNG TYPIST No experience necessary. Interesting work. Deal with public. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron ________334-4971 $85 WEEK MATURE WOMEN It yog are Interested In full-llm# employment and have any office skills. We can place you. Call Mr. Piland. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward B'ham. 6424261 APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-an for cashier and concession help. Apply Blue Sky Drive In Theater. _2150 Opdyke Rd. Apply after 1 p.m. ATTRACTIVE GAL WITH 2 YEARS exp. Bookkeeping helps. $375. Call Cathy Diamond, 334-2471, Snelling and Snetllng. A HAPPY NEW YEAR Will be 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, Dreyton Plains.__________ A Part Time Job 4 hours per day, choice of hours, top earnings for right girl, pleasant telephone voice. Call Mrs. Wixom, e) 674-2233. _____._________ BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN. Private room and wages. Call aft. 5 p.m. or all (lay Sun. FE 8-9427. BABY SITTER — part time. BARMAID AND WAITRESSES, night shift, exp. preferred but not necessary, over 21. Apply In person, 6-9 p.m. Airway Lounge, 4825 Highland Rd. BEAUTICIANS, SHAMPOOISTS, full or part time, high guarantee, plus commission, .call Jolt of Birmingham. 647-6566* ““BOOKKEEPER 3 days per week. Experience through trial balance and financial statements. Camp Oakland 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. CLERK-TYPIST Experience preferred with drivers license* days 30 to 40 hr. wk. FE 8-0429. -________________■ • CONFIDENTIAL SECRETARY Needed for board of education office. For Western Oakland County School District. Call 807-4118, CLERK TYPIST We have an opening In our Birmingham office tor a mature worker. (Female or male) who can type 54 w.P.M. and with figure aptltuda No recent office exp. necessary. Prater Oakland County Resident. Call FE 2-0153. Aft. 9 a.m. CLERK-CASHIER, MUST BE 10, exp. apply In person Perry Pharmacy, 698 E. Blvd., Pontiac, an equal opportunity employer. CARE OF 1 CHILD. 6 DAYS, 6 TO 2. Own car. Your home or mine. 5m S. Francis. COOK NIGHTS. SOME EXPERI-ence% Dobskl's Union Lake EM 3-9112, _____________a COUNTER GIRL AND INSPECTOR, experienced preferred, will train, .top wages, full time. Douglas Cleaners. 534 $■ Woodward, Bir-.mln&ham._________ Curb Waitresses Ted's restaurant has openings for curb waitresses on both bay and night shifts! Free Blus Cross and lire insurance. Uniforms and meals* furrtifhed. Top wages and tips, vacations and paid holidays. Apply In person only. TED'S BLOOMFIELD HILLS, CLERK-TYPIST-RECEPTIONIST If you would like to work as a receptionist or a' clerk-typist (35 wpm ,or better) * In a friendly neighborhood office of a large finance organization, apply immediately. No experience necessary good starting salary, outstanding employe benefits. - LIBERTY LOAN CORP. , « 1224 W. MAPLE RD. ________WALLED LAKE CURB GIRLS No experience necessary, will train — Full time. Day or evening shifts — Paid hospitalization, Insurance, vacation and pentkSn plan. Apply Ellas Bros. Big Bay, 20 S. Telegraph at Huron. Help WantBd Femuto 7 COUNTER GIRL, NO EXPERIENCE necessary. Apply One Hour Mar-tlnlzlng, Miracle Mile, apply be-|tween 8'and 5. DENTAL RECEPTIONIST -part time, some typing required. Please send resume to Pontiac Press Box No. 20. DENTAL ASSISTANT. PART TIME now, full later. West Pontiac Orthodontics office. Medical or dental experience. Pontiac Press Box 4K ■ DRYCLEANING INSPECTOR Experienced only* mU&t be able to sew. Elk Cleaners 220 S. Telegraph Rd. v DlNTAL ASSISTANT RESPON-sibie position in a lovely area. $325. Call Marge Parker* 224-2471* Snelling and Snelling. DOCTOR'S All around girl experienced only. 5 days* good salary* opp. Gen. Hosp. Pontiac Press Box 39. Dining Room Waitresses Do you en|oy meeting people and working with children? We will train you as a waitress to work in the friendly atmosphere of our dining room. Day and night shifts. Free Blue Cross and life Insurance. Vacations and paid holidays. Top wages and tips. Apply in person .only. TED'S Woodward at Square Lake Rd. DISHWASHER* FULL TIME EVE-ning work. Roccos* 5171 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains* Apply evenings. DRUG CLERK — GOOD PAY — Lake Center Drug* 4387 Orchard Lake Rd. Pontiac._______ ELDERLY WOMAN TO BABY SIT for 2 young children* Days* Will furnish transportation. FE 4*4148. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS” grill cooking* afternoons. Call OR 3-9919. GENERAL CLEANING* TUESDAY and Frl.* own transp. Refs. 626-9934 GENERAL OFFICE* MUST BE good at figures and good typist* over 25* telephone experience help-il* good salary*vpleasant working GIRLS 18 OR OVER, APPLY BIFFS Grill 575 5. Hunter Blvd. Bir- mingham.______________________ HELP WANTED: WOMEN OVfR 18 for nights only. Apply In person. Champs (Chips) Drive-|n. 5815 Dix- ie Hwy. ._______________ HOUSEKEEPER, COOK, FOR 2 adults* live in, call 642-6154 before 5 p.m.* 644-1591 evenings. HOUSEWIVES You will earn $30 in your first 15 hours or I will pay you the difference. Fuller Brush Co., Fullerette .Dept,* Mr. Bryan. OR 3-8565. IF You can work 6 to 9 P.M. — 3 eves, a »*. — wish to earn $80 to $120 wkly. — have use of car — Call be-■ fore 12 noon 642-7363 — 92-YEAR,OLD CO. KITCHEN HELP, FULL TIME EVE-nlng work. Roccos, 5171 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains. Apply evenings. KEY PUNCH OPERATOR Pontiac General Hospital has an Immediate opening for a key punch operator* minimum starting salary* $385.70 per mo. 40 hr. wk. Exc. fringe benefits. Apply personnel department* Seminole at W. Huron. " LEGAL SECRETARY-MUST BE neat* mature* personable and with ■ good skills. FE 4-9501. LAUNDRY HELP. EXPERIENCE not necessary. Pontiac Laundry* 540 S. Telegraph. NURSES RN'S — $6219.20-57945.60. LPN'S - $4638.40-$5928.00 Positions available on all tours of duty. Wa also have Openings •' 1n our new Rehabilitation Unit. Time and one half for overtime plus shift differential based on 10 per cent of hourly rete. Excellent new fringe benefits program. Contact St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital — 900 Woodward Ave., Pontiac. FE 8-91 p. X238. Equal Opportunity Employer Help WaiitBj fmuk 7 NIGHT SHIFT WAITRESS, OVER 2ir no Sundays or holidays. FE 4-5760. NURSE AlbES All shifts. Training program on a year-around basis. Good working conditions. Experienced and Inexperienced. Apply In person any weekday from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake Ave,, Pontiac. NEED EXTRA CASH If VJb have 15 flexible hours weekly (??) end need $35 to $50 and would Ilka to service your area as a (FULLERETTE dealer, please contact me. Mr. Bryan at QR 3-8565.,_______________ NEED REAL SHARP GIRL THAT can tend bar and manage night shift. Must be reliable with ref. Pay Is very good. See Ralph for interview. Chalet Inn, 79 N. Sagl-naw, Pontiac._____________ PRIVATE ROOM, BATH, WAGES. Take over for working mother. Fit Into congenial, busy family* permanent. 647-1106.___________ ROUTE WORK Transportation furnished, salary and commission* Apply 117 N. Cass Thurs. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. RN's—$3.75 PER HOUR ” LPN's—$2.85 PER HOUR NURSES AIDES—HOUSEKEEPERS FULL OR PART TIME Bonus -r- 2 weeks all expense paid vacation in Florida. Call EM 3-4121. RECEPTIONIST: Part time 1:30*5:30 Must be excellent typist* some bookkeeping preferred. Lynn Optl- . cal* 138 N. Saginaw. RECEPTIONIST-SECRETARY FOR dentist office* mature* experienced preferred but not required* transp. necessary. Wlrte in own handwriting qualifications to Dental Office* 2251 S. Telegraph* Pontiac. REGISTERED NURSE NEEDED for full time* 3 to 11 shift. P.M. and weekend differentials. Con-tact Mrs. Indlsh at 651-9381. TYPIST, HIGHLY GEARED MA-ture gal for golden opportunity. Nice area. $400. Call Anaie Rook* 334-2471* Snelling and Snelling. WANTED: WAITRESS FOR SNACK bar work. Apply In person* 300 Bowl 100 S. Cass Lake Rd.______ WAITRESSES | Start the new year with a new |ob, Howard Johnsons has Immediate openings on both day and evening shifts? WE offer: 1. Complete training program. 2. Above average earnings. 3. Paid vacations* health* and Ufa insurance. 4. Meals and uniforms furnished. 5. Pleasant working conditions with fine clientele. Apply in person only. HOWARD JOHNSONS Telegraph at Maple Rd. BIRMINGHAM WAITRESS' FOR NIGHT SHIFT, top salary, good tips'. Apply In person only. Blue Star Drlve-ln, cor-ner of Pontiac and Opdyke Rds. WAITRESS. HOURS, 3T0 PM. weekdays. 3-12 p.m. Frl. and Sat. Only experienced girl wanting steady work need apply. Must have own transportation and ba 21 or older. Apply In person. The Cracker Barrel, Union Laka Rd. Just S. of Commerce Rd. WAITRESS, FULL TIME. APPLY In person. Town and Country Inh, 1727 S. Telegraph. WAITRESSES, TOP WAGES, EXC. tips, choice of shifts, fringe benefits. Apply between 11 a.m. and i p.m. Steak and Eggs, Water-ford.___________________________I WAITRESSES , Full time, part time and weekends. Excellent benefits, paid meals, hos-plteiiiallon, 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 5. Telegraph-338-8020. WAITRESSES, DAY HELP, FULL and part time openlnga. Apply In person The Rotunda Country Inn 3230 Pine Lk. Rd., Orchard Lk. Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Mala 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 learn. You would start in a training program. You would be taught how to instalr and service IBM data processing equipment. Later, you would be assigned your own territory to handle. But that's only the BEGINNING of your education! Throughout your career as a Customer Engineer, you would attend meetings and classes to keep you informed of latest technological advances. This education prepares you for greater professional responsibility, too. Customer Engineers average more than a month each year in IBM educational programs. What do you need to qualify? A mechanical' aptitude plus a good knowledge of basic electronics. And an ability to get along well with people. If you're interested in a job with continuing built-in educational and advancement opportunities, write or call for on appointment. , R. F. CASELLA ' IBM Corporation 26200 Greenfield,-Oak Park, Mich. 398-1880, Ext- 18. Placement available in Pontiac and North Detroit area. ■ An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F) V*. V/ A,; C—8 Http Wanted Feuwle7 j Work Wonted Female 12 WAITRESS WANTED, DAYS! NO I DAY 'RONINO SERV{C« REF. ! Sundays or holidays. Apply Pete's! Donna Holcomb, FE 5-7917._ Lunch. 195 Orchard Latte._j GENERAL CLEANING. Call after 4 wciuan Tn CLEAN INSIDE OF! p.m. 3X4751. cars for reobndit toning shop. ISO MATURE WOMAN WANTS PART-per week. 338-3514. __________ time baby-sitting. Needs transpor- WOMAN, 24.35. OFFICE WORK, NO experience necessary. 3354)322, between 12-5. ________11 WOMAN TO BABY SIT, 1 'CHILD. 3 p.m. to midnight, 5 days. Must Have own transp. In Rochester. 451 3284. _________ YOUNG WOMEN WASHING ANO IRONINGS, up and deliver, 33S-Q414. Building Service-Supplieil3 CUSTOM BUILDING ANDERSON-6ILFORD, INC. Builders and Designers FE 8-8114 No experience necessary, no typing,_____ required. Will employ ^pung^tmm-1 BgSjnej5 Service en In personnel control In management dept., , , .. Must be able to start work Immediately. For appointment 5:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. CALL 332-9137 YOUNG WOMAN 18-26 to assist me In my business 15 SNOW PLOWING Fast, Service, UL 2-2625 or Ml 4-8402. Criedil Advisors 16-A Must bTn»tTouring' and high Convalescent-Nursing 21 school graduate. No typing re,' .— _ ^ mk'IPRiVATE ROOM FOR ELDERLY ohnson 338-0359, 9 a.m. |ady special diets. Priced reasonable. 332-3222 Wanted to Rent 32 WE HAVE QUALIFIED TENANTS with verified employment, credit checks and security deposits for rental In the Pontiac area — Waterford and Drayton Plains Area. Sislock & Kent Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 338-9294 338-9295 WANTED - BUILDING TO LEASE or rent. Minimum 5,000 ft. on one level with parking spaca available. Zoned for business or commercial. We are' principals. Writs Including description and location. Pontiac Press Box 15. Sherri Living Qcarters 33 ELDERLY LADY WANTED TO share 3 bedroom mobile home with woman. 338-2954 after 9 p.m. Wanted Real Estate 36 Call Mr. Johnson 338-0359, 2 p. Help Wanted M. or F. 8 Moving and trucking 22 BLOOD DONORS ' URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positive V JO RH Neg. with positive factors siu A. B. 8, AB neg. }'* O Neg. i *H DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE In Pontiac FE 4-9947 1342 Wide Treck Dr., W. Mon. thru Fri., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Wed. 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 687-4118, Limousine drivers wanted Good pay. Call FE 2-9146. SNYDER BROTHERS Moving and storage, hourlyor flat rates. Plano experts. FE 4-4949 Painting and Decorating 23 : LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Papering. FE 8-6214. PAINTING AND PAPERING. You're next. Orvel Gidcumb, 673-0496. QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-ing; papering, wall washing., 673-2872. 25 MAN AND WIFE TO CLEAN RES-taurent, hours, 12-mldnlght to 6:30 - , a.m. Apply at Ellas Brothers Big Transportation Boy, Telegraph and Huron. 1 j - —------------- - CA| pc PFPCON CAR AND FUEL FURNISHED FOR jHLlj rcnjyix adult to drive car to Florida abiut Excellent opportunity to learn tem- Jan ]j M2-0434. -ily shoe business and advance to position of responsibility. GOOD SALARY, AND COMMIS-SION. LIBERAL COMPANY BENEFITS. APPLY MANAGER , THOM McAN Insurance 26 2191 S. Telegraph Rd. Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Pontiac. WANT DAILY RIDE PROM WIL-liams Lake-Hatchery Rds. area to downtown Pontiac. Working hrs. 8 to 5. 673-8716. 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd., FE 5-8165 Urgently need for Immediate Sale! Pontiac Dally ‘til 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 3-BEDROOM HOME NEEDED IMMEDIATELY, CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY. CALL AGENT AT: 674-1698. CALL OR 4-0363 For the best deal of your property. An expanding company needs property In Drayton Plains, Waterford and surrounding areas. Prompt no obligation appraisals. We buy outright, no fees, no waiting. For fast attlon be sure to call: YORK WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 4-0343 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains WANTED COUPLE OR LADY TO live, In, Lake Orion area, to get 2 children off to school In exchange for rent, 1 child welcome, no drinkers. Reply Pontiac Press Box No. 42. ____________ Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE Instruction Class now forming ♦or a class in real estate. Opening to rseveral salespeople both male and female who are interested In making money. Bonus plan and many advantages In one of the fastest growing offices. Both existing and new homes. Call FE 8-7161 ask for Jack Ralph. BATEMAN REALTY Route Salesmen Manage your own Home Service Retail In the Pontlec Area. / Service our regularly trading. cuV tomers with a variety of 3 FE 4-4595 Roofer A-l NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS » Call Jack. Save the lack. 338-6115. OR 3-9590. Snow Plowing FOR LEASE, NEW 1- AND 2-bedroom apts. in Reego Harbor area, ready for immediate occupancy. Air-conditioned, hot water baseboard heat, carpeted, ceramic tile bath and completely soundproof. For information ond applications call 363-7000, Mon. thru Sat., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tree Trimming jService^ B&L TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL. Free estimate. FE ^-4449, 674-3510, 'DALBY & .SONS" LARGE nished. 2-2622. UPPERS PARTLY FUR $25 plus heat turn. FE Rent Rooms 42 SLEEPING ROOM, 2 ROOMS with cooking, Pontiac, 852-4959 BUSINESS MAN, SHOWER, WEST Side, FE 2-3517. ROOM FOR MEN, QUIET ANO cleon. Single end double, Christian home, no drinkers, please. 33 Flor ence near Oakland Ave. ROOM FOR 2 GENTLEMEN, NO drinkers, walking distance to Pen tiac Plant. FE $5544. Sale Houses 49 6 PER CENT Lend contract terms on this con* forteble 2-bedroom home near Watkins Lake. On 2 large lots with many fruit trees and ample garden space. Full basement, g as heat, attached garage. Within walk ing distance to new elementary school. Lake privileges. Shown by appointment. R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor 244 S. Tele^rsgh FE 3-7848 625-5275 385 AIRPORT RD. WATERFORD Lovely 3-bedroom home with baths. Full size basement. Attached 2-car garage. OPEN DAILY 1-5 OR PHONE TO SEE ANY TIME Convenient to schools, St. Perpetua School, super shopping. Possession soon. Only $2000 down payment. C. SCHUETT FOR REAL ESTATE 5280 DIXIE HWY. FE 3-7088 COMMERCE RD. EM 3-7188 HARTLAND Historical land mark — 5 bedroom colonial home — could have apartment — corner setting. Must be seen to be appreciated. $25,000, terms. OC 2875 HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Off ice PHONE: 313-685-1585 HIITER WEST SIDE — 10 room Income with full basement, garage, close In. $10,500, terms. WESTSIDE — 4 bedroom brick with full basement, rec. room, garage $16,500, terms. » WE BUILD — 3 bedroom ranchers with oak floors, vanity In bath, full basements, gas heat. $11,550 on your lot. To see the model call b. c. hiiter. Realtor, 3792 Eliz. Lake Rd. FE 2-0179, after p.m. FE 2-3573.______ $7950 ON YOUR LOT. 3 bedroom ranch, full basement, alum, siding, plumbing complete. You do the finishing, no money' dn. 3 BEDROOMS BRAND NEW with full basement, close to Union Lake and College. Only $16,900, terms. We trade. Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BUILT Russell Young 334-3830 53Va W. Huron HAYDEN New Homes—10 Per Cent Dn 3 bedroom, trl-level finished family room, V/i car garage SI3,750 plus lot. 3 bedroom ranch with full base ment, 2 car garage, alum, siding $15,200 plus lot. 3 bedroom brick trl-level, IVj baths, 2 car garage, loads of closet end storage. $17,750 plus lot. TRADES ACCEPTED J. C. HAYDEN J. t HAYDEN, REALTOR 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd, (M59) SUBURBAN WEST Worth your Inspection Is this attractive large bungalow. 3 bedrooms, large kitchen, carpeted living room, walk-ln cedar closet. 15x25 ft. family room. 4 rooms carpeted. Basement with 3 paneled rooms set up for BEAUTY SHOP. Carport PLUS 3-car heated garage. Large well landscaped corner lot. A GOOD BUY - CALL TODAY. SMITH M WIDEMAM REALTORS 3344526 412 W. HURON ST. Eves call 625-2059__ LAKE FRONT. BEAUTIFUL 4 BED rooms, 2 baths, aluminum siding home, on Lake Orion. Sacrifice by owner. 693-1069 tor appointment NO MONEY DOWN Ranch or tri-level shell on your lot, exterior complete. 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 bed-rdoms, plenty of room to live in. The siding is new, the roof is new and there is a new gas conversion to keep ylpu warm. Full price: $11,-500, terms available. Sislock & Kent, Inc. . 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 338-9294 338-9295 Brown Realtors — Builders Since 1939 3 BEDROOM RANCH home In Waterford Is a real prlzel Large airy rooms, Including 20 ft. gpneled family room, country kitchen with &ilt-ln range, all charmingly decorated. Aluminum siding, gas heat. $15,500. Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. (Across from the Mall) FE 2-4810 or FE 4-3564 NEED MORE ELBOW ROOM? Try this on for size, a neat 3-bedroom brick and asbestos home, situated on almost a V? acre, nc money down to a qualified Gl, early possession, be sure to call today. WE BUY OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy. WE TRADE OR 4-0363 Drayton Plains BEDROOM HOUSE ON LARGE lot. 536 E. Glass Rd., Ortonvllle, or call 627-3894. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE, APPROX. 4 acres of land, bet. PontlaoLake Orion. Inquire 2335 Dixie. CHEAPER THAN RENT Get early possession on this sharp 3-bedroom home with gas heal, farm styled kitchen, panelled living room, oh yes, It is newly carpeted and fenced. Owner asking $10,900 With no money down, to a qualified Gl. Ask with much haste en this one. YORK 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, 1 car garage. Convenient terms. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 Opdyke 332-0156 KINZLER LAKE ORION AREA Here's • beauty In a ranch colonial with attached 22'x22' garage 6 delightful rooms, 1’/a baths, daylight basement for recreation -Gleaming oak floors and kitchen with bulft-lns, gas heat, low taxes Only 15 per cent down plus costs. Quick possession. LAKE FRONT HOME Spatlous colonial ranch with. Interior charm. Center hall plan to 8 spacious rooms. 3 baths and walk-out recreation room, all central air-conditioned. Plus carpeting and draperies throughout. Nicely landscaped and gentle slope to safe *and beach. Now too large for present owner and priced way below reproduction. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwy. 674-2235 Across from Packer's Store Multiple Listing Service Open 9-8 • CASH FOR EQUITY—LAND CONTRACT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION — On this custgm-bullt brick end aluminum colonial. 3 nice bedrooms. Loads of cupboard space. Doubt.' vanity in ceramic beth, plus vy-bath. Family-size dining room. Convenient kitchen with built-in oven and range. Snack bar and plenty of eating space. Family room with fireplace. Basement. Gas heat. You can't beat this for only $27,-950. Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor PHONE 682-2211 3 LEFT In Red Barn Village Subdivision $16,400 mortgage. $950 moves In. VILLA HOMES Model phone 620-143$ 3 LOW DOWN-PAYMENT HOMES 712 Linda Vista — 3 bedrooms, 2-car garage, large lot, close to school, beautiful home with Immediate occupancy. 305 S. Jessie — 3 large bedrooms, living room, large dining room, 1W baths, paneled den, new IW-car garage. This Is an ebove-average home with immediate occupancy. AH homes shown by apR. only. Cell 332-1696. • Water Softeners TURN WEST FROM MAIN ST. AND DRIVE 2 BLOCKS TO WILCOX. CEMENT FLOORS FOR PARTICU-°lar people Bert CommihS FE 8-0245 Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. PE 4-7677 Eves. FE 5-9122 CEMENT WORK, ALL KINDS, SPE-ciel winter price, OR 3-6172. A 1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON FE 4-8364 A-l QUALITY PAINTING.■ REASON-1 “ 'iL■ vL*■! able. 628-1670. | SALES ANO RENTALS Cullioan Water Condt. 334-99441 ALL INCLUDED IN LOW lOH2-------—ml--------------— MONTHLY RENTAL; 1- AND 2-BEDROOM PIANO TUNING ANO REPAIRING/-—-----------------:-------------- Oscar Schmidt FE 2-5217jBLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Piano tuning Plastering Service ’A-1 PLASTERING New and Repair. FE 8-2702 PLASTERING- FREE ESTIMATES O. Meyers, 363-9595,________ Restaurants BIG BOV DAlVE-IN, DIXIE' AT Silver Lake—Telegraph at Huron. Walls cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631 Weddinglnvitotions WEDDING INVITATIONS 12h0ur ..service - UL 2-3234 Well Drilling FORESTER WELL DRILLING, EX-pert repairing, 2" to 16". 887-5634. ViTi'''u’''vivv':,(i'''ii''ate'4•jlih'V,' • ______________S x...> COMPLETELY CARPETED CUSTOM DRAPES | HQTPOINT AIR-CONDITIONING HOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR HOTPOINT OWEN RANGE. GARBAGE DISPOSAL EATING AREA IN KITCHEN CARPETED HAL‘ LARGE CLOSETS LAUNDRY AND STORAGE SPACE HEAT INCLUDED SWIMMING POOL PLENTY OF PARKING MASTER TV ANTENNA $125 H FE 24181 CORAL RIDGE , t APARTMENTS Tuftt. west from Main St.* drive 2 blocks to Wilcox* Rochester, Michigan. Reel Value Realty 4-H REAL ESTATE CITY — 5-ROOM BUNGALOW, full basement, oil heat, near Fisher Body, newly decorated. VACANT. Price, $11,-500, approx., S1,000 down, payment 865 mo. plus taxes and Ins. on land contract. 5844 Dixie Hwy. OR 4:2296 After 5 p.m. OR 3-0455 OR 3-2391 Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 1-6 3 bedroom, family room end 2 car garage priced at only 815,490 plus lot. Located In new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out M59 to Crescent Lake Road turn right to Crestbrook street and model. DON GIROUX ‘"““REAL ESTATE 4511 Highland Road (MSB) 673-7837 4-Bedroom Ranch NEW HOME, Dishwasher — Garbage disposal Range — Baseboard heat. Fireplace lit Family room, will ac cept trade. ' 8228 FOX BAY OR. White Lake Twp ROSSI BUUdipg Co. 1 427-413! NEW FINANCING 10% DOWN. ■■ H'JNTOON SHORES and WtSTRIDGE OF WATERFORD 9 Models Visit our models at Huntoon Shores West on M-59 — Right on Airport Rd. lVi mitjes, open dally and Sunday 2 to 6 AND Westridge Of Waterford North on Dixie (U.St.10) to Out- Lady of Lakes Church, open SUnday 2 to 6. Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. OR 4-2222 'FE 5-8183 WEST SIDE Three-bedroom two-story home. Living 8. dining rooms. Kitchen. Den. Full basement. Gas HA heat, m baths. Garage. Cash to mortgage. WEST SUBURBAN Two-bedroom bungalow. -Living 8* dining area. Kitchen 8, utility. Gas HA heat., Vacant. About $1,000.00 required. 9 EAST SUBURBAN Two-bedroom bungalow. Living 8, dining area. Kitchen & utility. Gas HA heat. Vacant. About $950.00 required. WATERFORD MEA Four-bedroom bungalow. Living 8, dining area. Kitchen A utility. Family room, l’/i baths. Oil HA heat. Garage. Vacant. About $2,0003)0 required. Eve. cell MR. ALTON FE 4-5234 NICH0UE & HARGER CO: 53Vz W, Huron St.____FE 5-8183 Struble 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL IN THE PRESTIGE AREA of Twin LSkes Village. This "Weinberger Home" has everything to Otter for the particular buyer. No need to list the many extra? Included with this lovely home, such as) Intercom system throughout the house, garbage disposal unit, etc. Here Is a new home with the hard work ot landscaping, etc., already completed for you. With all there I* to offer — you couldn't duplicate for the price "of $36,950. Call for appointment now. MILO STRUBLE Realtor — MLS 3881 Highland Rd. (M59) ______FE 8-4025 ____ iVAN W. SCHRAM $450 DOWN 3 bedrooms with lVa car garage, like new condition, full prica $15,500, it's vacant, so call today to see. PLEASANT DALE SUB 3-bedroom home with aluminum siding, large corner lot, lust $450 down, to move In end monthly payments less than rent. MIXED AREA 3-bedroom home, brick rancher with full basement, close to Schools and shopping, lust $2,000 down and take over payments of $105 per month. No credit report, no red tape, quick possession. List With SCHRAM and Call the Van Joshln' Ave. FE 5-9471 Sewer available. $25,000 cash down, Terms arranged. Warden Realty- 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 If no answer cell 335-1190 SYLVAN VILLAGE rancher. Ideal for young marrleds or an older couple who don't want a lot of steps to climb. Attractive corner site, plenty of shrubs, trees, an outdoor fireplace. Indeed a double lot! Great big piano size living room, wall to wall carpeting. Extra spacious two car garage. Asking $13,900, owner leaving area. Will trade. Up or Down! No. 1-39 The home you have been waiting for, in the area you wanted It to be. Swim In beautiful Sylvan Lake while you en|oy the nouse this summer. The following are lust some of its outstanding features, Family room with fireplace, three generous bodroooms, living room with dining ell, built- in refrigerator, range, dishwash-inn . nnnn saic css o -70zi er, the basement has a finished OR 4-2222 MLS EM 3*7961 recreation room with bath, two-car garage. Alt this and more awaits your Inspection. Priced at $23,950 with $3,600 down or trade your old home in. RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD Thinking ot selling? Give us a call— Ask for one of tne following courts-out salespeople: Jo Suit, Dave Bradley, Leo Kampsen, Emery Butler, | Hilda Stewart, Lee Kerr, Elaine! Smith, Marge O'Brien. 1071 W. Huron St. MLS FE 4-0921 After 0 p.m, cell _OR 3-08661 ^Buzz'f ' BATEMAN Acreage Homesites 1.10 ACRES. 200* road frontage, . mile northwest of Clarkston. $4,900 $14)00 down, 2.9 ACRES. 365' road frontage: 1\4 mile norttnyeit of Ctorkfton.i $3,900, Torms. ■ Clarkston Real Estcfte 5865 ~S. Mein. MA S-5821 KENT Established In 1916 GOOD BUILDING LOT with 2-car • garage, paved street. 81,350, terms. 150 FT. OF DIXIE HWY. FRONTAGE. Only $50 per ft., 425 ft. deep. Call for Informotlon. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor ' LOTS Lake Igts — wooded lots — golf course lots. We hive lots of all kinds priced from $3000. Terms available. Dan Mattingly CALL 'TIL 7 P.M. FE 5-9497 or FE 2-2444 ROLLING SCENIC LAND 40 acres with 10 acres of woodland, located In the Me femora area. Approximately V5 mile off of M-24. Several scenic building sites. $22,500. Reasonable terms. C. A. WEBSTER, REALTOR 692-2291 or 628-2515 Start the New Year , with excitement! Select e scenic beauty spot In Hilly, wooded HI HILL VILLAGE, and watch your value growl Paved roads, sensible restrictions, easy financing terms. Come end see us. LAOD'S OF PONTIAC FE 5-9292 3005 Lapeer Rd. FE .5-9291 *‘f/can see now what Janie meant when she said we probably never would see him open his mouth around here!” Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS vo?**!i'I n'Med- S" #* b*,or#| 'setsBUm!95aup" you oeai. pear*“ WARREN STOUT, Realtor I tie e. Pike 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-1165 Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m. Sale Hoasehold Goods 65 sale, BRAND NEW. Lei., small size (round, drop-leat, rec- PEARSON'S FURNITl'RE WALTERS LAKE Privileges, several scenic large homesites — hills — trees — $1500 Owner. 625-1086 or 334-8222. WE HAVE MANY COUNTRY homesites and smell farms In the following areas — Clarkston, Or-tonvllle. Holly, Davisburg, and White Lake. Drop In to our office — secure your parcel before the spring land rush. Underwood Real Estate 625-2615 8665 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston It no answer, 625-5015 or 625-3125 EQUITY TRADE THE HOME'S ON EASY STREET After a thorough looking at our homes now listed for sale, I have found that many of, our listings fit the above " descriptions. Many are located near excellent recreation areas. The ease of shopping, of getting to and from work moke many of these fine hdmes an Ideal place to settle. Cell now for more Information on the McCUL-LOUGH WAY to buy or trade for one of these homes. Call the action tine. 674(2239 Pontiac Northern Area - 3 bedrooms. In e nice friendly neighborhood. Cldse to schools end shopping. Low down payments and monthly payments. Cell the action line. 474-2239 BRICK RANCH 3 year old 3 bedroom ranch has full basement, gas heat, aluminum storms end screens and beech facilities. Only $3,000 down, on lend contract. Full price $16,950. Call the action lint. 674-2239 Gl's Nothing down on this hjindy man's special. Full price only $8,950, take privileges# 2 bedrooms, aluminum ftorms and screens. I mmediata possession. Call tha action Una. 674-2239 McCullough realty -544) Highland Rd. (MS9) MLS No. 42 ST/iRT THE NEW YEAR RIGHT In this comfortable, well-located 4 bedroom Cape Cod. Aluminum siding, basement, garage, Silver Lake privileges end Pontiac School District. Bargain priced at $14,500 with $3,000 down and NO MORTGAGE COSTS with immediate possession. Better Not Welti CALL NOW I No. 47 i 1967 BARGAIN! $6,950. START THE NEW YEAR right by -saving money In this cozy two bedroom with garoge. Convenient city location; and must be sold to settle estate. NO MORTGAGE COSTS; lust assume existing 4Vfe per cent G.l. mortgage with full monthly payments of $55 per month. Takes approximately $1,600 td handle. No. 79 COLONIAL LIVING ALL CITY CONVENIENCES: lust outside city limits. 4 bedroom, I to bath brick and aluminum colonial In Bloomfield Orchards. Gas heat, 2 car garage, sealed glass-sliding doors to outside .patlo end extra Insulation ere lust a few of the quality features you will find and lust 4 years old. Priced to sell quickly at $22,800 with wonderful torms. Better make your appointment NOW I r No. 90 HERE'S ONE THAT WAS HALF SOLD WHEN LISTED: It's that nice. New Clerkslon schools lust 2 blocks from this Immaculate 3 bedroom brick rancher with aluminum trim, lto baths, 2 car garage, blacktop streets, large 100x149 ft. lot and spotless throughout. Priced for immediate sale and you can move in upon dosing. No welting end lust $16,950 with terms to suit you. MODEL HOMES COLONIALS, RANCHERS AND TRI-LEVELS plus several new homes for Immediate occupancy. A price to fit every pocketbook and 80 per cent end 90 per cent mortgages available. Shown dolly by appointment. YOU MAY TRADE your present home equity. Make your appointment TODAY! NATIONWIDE FIND-A-H0ME ANOTHER BATEMAN "NO-CHARGE" SERVICE BATEMAN FE 8-7161 OL 1-85)8 REALTOR-MLS 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 730 S. Roch. Rd. Sale Farms 56 37to ACRES — EXCELLENT 4 BED-room Dutch colonial with field-stone front, nice kitchen with bullt-Ins, large dining room, carpeted living room with fireplace, 17' master bedroom, lto baths, plus shower In basement, 3 car garage with tool shob- A good value at $38,900. Carrlgen Quality Homes, Inc. at CE 3-3165 or MA 9-5573. A. SANDERS. 628-2013 Rep. H. Wilson, Lapeer 3 Lovely—Brand New Water Front 3- and 4-Bedroom Homes as low as $3,195 • Down New 90 per cent Financing To those who qualify LOT INCLUDED Quality Homes by ROSS Lakeland Estates On Dixie Hwy., lust past Walton IN 9iF0RI? ,°N MAlil'L,STRE,?,T Blvd.-williams Lake Rd. Inter tec -'*' "“* 1 lion. Will Build Your Lot — Or Ours Open Daily 1-7 p.m. Except Friday Ross Homes, Inc. OR 3-8021 - FE 4-0591 CASH For your equity or land contrads. Don't lose that home, smallest possible discounts. Call 682-1820. Ask for Ted McCullough Sr. ARRO REALTY 5143 Cass-Ellzabeth Road NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts. EarlGarrels. MA 4-5400. EMpIre 3-4086.____________________ OUR OFFICE SPECIALIZES IN land contrad collections. FLOYD KENT, REALTOR 62Vb N. Sagirihw FE 5-6105 BRAND NEW BARGAINS Gas Ranges (chipped) $87 RCA Whirlpool auto, washer $168. RCA Whirlpool auto, dryer $146. Electric range $124. Name brand TV's $134. Color TV's low*low-low. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin FE 2-684! CHROME DINETTE SETS, sembla yourself, save; 4 c table, $69.95 value, $29.95. 1967 designs, formica tops. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orch FE 4-8462-33. Income Property 50 Attention Investors We have a 4-family apartment located on the north side of Pontiac, only a short distance from Wide Track. Presently renting for $130 per wk. Gross return on Investment, 27 per cent. Full price only $22,000, $5,000 down, $170 per mo. on 6 per cent lend contract. Don't welt, cell OR 4-0306. J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Real Estate^lnsurance—Building 7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 4-0306 Eve*. EM 3-9937 or EM 3-7546 CASH Immediate cash for your Incoma Lake Property 51 COMMERCE . WOLVERINE LAKES. Private beaches, fish, swim. Many tots $995, $10 per* mo. Bloch Bros. 623-1333, FE 4-4509. Open Eve. and Sun. XcATINGTON Beautiful lake-front and lake-privilege lots available. Plan to live in this beautiful' new town In Orion Township. Models open 3-6 dally, 11-6 Sat. end Sun. HOWARD T. KEATING CO-22060 W. 13 Mile Rd. Birmingham Ml 6-1234 IRWIN 80 ACRE Farm In Lapeer County has 5 room, ranch style home with full basement. Only 13 years old. 30'x-50' barn with basement and loft, tool shed, chicken house and silo. t$ stentlons end water cups. Will Include ell machinery except tractor. Columblavtlle Schools, Price, $40,000, $12,000 down. 1 WHY RENT? When you can have privacy In this smell 3 room home. Full basement, with auto, oil heat, large lot, 10'*-280'. Priced 87900, $1000 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 end stores. Priced $10,250 on tend contract. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR j MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 298 W. Walton FE 3-7883 LAKE FRONT ESTATE Lovely ranch home located at end Sale Business Properly 57 BUSINESS PROPERTY NEAR downtown Rochester. 115 ft. of frontage, now has older house on lot. City water, sewer and paved street. $19,500 with terms. MILTON WEAVER Inc., Realtor in the Village of Rochester 118 W. University__________651-8141 commercial store building, 19'x-50' with full basement. In reel good condition, imply, move right In. Next door to Gamble Store. Full price 113,900, 13,000 down, balance on land contract. . HUMPHRIES REALTY Money to Loon 61 (Licensed Money-Lender1^__ LOANS TO $1,000 to consolidate bills Into one monthly payment. Quick service with courteous experienced counselors. Credit life Insurance available — Stop In or phone FE 5-1121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N. Perry St. FE 5-1121 9 to 5 dally. Set. 9 to 12 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 59 BAR • RESTAURANT Located Va hour drive from Pontiac. Top reputation* for fine foods and choice liquors. Doing $13,000 month gross. Call for details. Warden Realty LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick, friendly, helpful. FE 2-9026 is the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 9:30 to 5:30 — Sat. 9:30 to 1 LOANS $25 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 8-0421 LOANS $25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER t LIVINGSTONE Flnanca Do. 401 Pontiac State. Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 Swaps 63 1966 DODGE POLARA FOR PROP, erty or $2100. Need blder car. 673-7138. CABINET SHOP Weil equipped millwork 8$ cabinet shop. 30' x 80' block building. Owner retiring — long established — good paying business. $18,850 down will handle. LUMBER & BLDG. SUPPLIES Only $5,000 down will put you In business including real estate. Owner retiring and will even finance the inventory for someone with good credit. Fast growing surbur* ban area. GOLF COURSE 9 holes — includes 7 acre private lake, 124 acres of rolling wooded scenic land, less than 30 miles from Flint. Ideal for private club. Convenient terms Or trade. Tavern license include*!. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338*9641 After 5 FE 4-8109 PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" A HAPPY NEW YEAR of peninsula on Oxbow Lake. In-lit will be - for you If you build 1966 YAMAHA, 50 CC SWAP FOR outo. of equal value. 634-8169. Salt Clothing 64 M P O R TED BLACK PERSIAN lamb to coat with saphlre mink roller. Only worn twice. 693-6979, LONG WEDDING GOWN, HOOP and veil, size 8, ell for $35, worn once, FE 4-0608. OYSTER WHITE SHEARED MUSK-rat lacket. Mink collar. Almost now. Call Thurs. or Sun. FE 8-3585. Maytag wringer wether $45, washer-dryer set $85 both. V. FE 5-2766. RESS rarer,, and bedrooms, $66 and $99. Used Maytag Washers $47. Good refrigerators $48. Get or electric stiWes $15 up. Used furniture of all kinds gain prices, easy terms. LITTLE JOE'S TRADE-IN DEPART MENT. Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-6842. _______ GAS RANGE HOLIDAY SPECIAL 30" deluxe Detroit Jewel has light, timer, window oven auto, surface burners instant-on oven Coppertone or white. A give-a-way at $139.95 $2 down, $2 per week. -RETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTL 150 S. Telegraph_________FE 3-7 GE AUTOMATIC WASHER A HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL 20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS FURNITURE - Consists of: (1) 9'xl2' rug Included. box spring end 2 vanity lamps. S-plece dinette set with 4 chr chairs and table. All tor $399. ' credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. E.' Pika St., FE 4-7881. MATCHING LEATHER NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC MO. tor 9 mos. or $53 C UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 Dixie Hwy. 673-8011. eludes approx. I acre of lend with over 300' of lake frontage. Home features 3 bedrooms, family room, 2 fireplaces, lto baths. Ap- prox. 2,000 sq. ft. of living area. Priced far below duplication at $31,500, terms to suit. Call OR Rich In History; yet the true picture of this homo ties to foe future. With Increasing tend values, and the demand for property on the busy Mghwalra If • makes this-.land with MS' of frontage on Dlxlo High- " way In Drayton Plains an excellent investment in Waterford's future growth. Waterford's population Is forecost to double by W80. Lend vetoes ere • ear- *' telnty to boom wllh foe population. Handsome, profits are the reward for those with the foresight to Invest NOW!!! Included here % • UWoom mansion. An excellent* rental will make the payments. 1947 1$ the ■# ’ best-time to inve$t to your future. ,*f- •• ■ • McCullough Realty MLS 5460 Highland td. (M59) 674-2239. 4-8306, J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Reel Estate — Insurance — Building 7732 Highland Rd. (MS9) OR *tt» Eves. EM 3-9937 or EM 3-7546 LAKE FRONT HOMES - NEW AND used — J. L. Dally Co. EM 3-7114 SYLVAN LAKE Lake front, 2 bedrooms, nice size living room, modem kitchen, get heat, large petto for additional room on front of house. Price reduced — only $19,000. Owner Irani tarred, must sett. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lika Rd. 682-0900 WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES New 2000 sq. ft split foytr all brick home -- 2to baths — large oak paneled family room — 2 natural fireplaces — gas heat-fabulous kitchen — t acre lot — Everything you evor wonted In quality and extras In this 1967 dramatic model home. 625-1886—SYLVAN—334-822? Northern Property 514 2-BEDROOM Retirement special. New. on good fishing lake with W lake fra' . open basement, 2 .hours from Pa Use. Only $12,500. Terms STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 2661 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orton; Let* Alreege 54 5-50 ACRES. WOODED RIVER frontage. Fowler, EM 39531, OR 10-30 ACRES NEAR OXFORD-86SO acre, nice—628-3015, 10 ACRES Foil PRIVACY. Pt.|A . 14 VACANT LOTS Near Longefelldw School. Wilt trade for lend contract, house or what »R REAL ESTATE .. William B. Mitchell, Sotos Mgr. 724 Riker Btdg. HLAfMll your future with this Chicken Delight franchise that will do close to 8100,000 this year. Ex-, cel lent location, attractive store tnd big profits for 827,500 With liberal terms. A PROSPEROUS 1967 Is yours and for many years to come by building your future with this modern 20onif family motel on Michigan Avt. Then Is 7 acres for future expansion or use. A lovely 3 bedrid, home. Heeled pool, bar-tvq, petto end playground for the kids. All Mr $45,000 dn. and ws Iredell PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. Huron, FE 4-3581 OPEN NITELY TIL 9:08 SEND FOR FREE NEW CATALOG SMALL INVESTORS - $1000 TO SV0,000: Highest Interest will be paid by Investment Corp.. many benefits for you. Cell EM 3-6703 ask B. N. U. Hockstt Rtty. Sale Household Goods 65 to WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY | Brand New Furniture 3 Full Rooms . $276 $2.50 PER WEEK Or, buy each room separately E-Z TERMS LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin at Walton FE 2-6842 Acres of Free Parking Open Eves, 'til 9; Set. Til 4 Sale Load Contracts 60 , 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS See us before you deal. WARREN STOUT,’Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 5-1165 Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m. 1 AS IS Sots, chair, T lamps, 3 tables, 5-plece bedroom Outfit, 5-plece dl nette, $177. Torms, $2.35 a week Cell Mr. Adems, FE 4-0904, World Wide (next to K mart). 1-2-PIECE LIVING ROOM, *25; bedroom sets, $50 to $75; chest. $1; dresser, $8; bed, $10; studio couch, $50; desk, $5; dinette, $20: stove, $15; refrigerator, $28; din Ing room, $35; TV; plane. M. C Llppsrd, 539 N. Perry. 1 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-olsce (brand new) living room 2-plece living room suite, two step tobies, matching coffee table, two iroretor lamps, all for $!09. Only for $129. t1.St weakly. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pike FE 4-7M1 Between Paddock and City Hall Open Men, and Frl. Tit 9 p.m, ACTION On your land contract, large or. small, call Mr. Hliter, FE 2-0179j Broker, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Road; LAND CONTRACT AVAILABLE ON Midway Street. $7500 discounted to SS4S0. 6to per cent interest returned, on, $75 per month. Excellent buyer with credit reports to show. R. J. VALUET, Realtor ' ' FE 44S3I - 5-PIECE MAPLE BEDR6OM OUt-flt, $75. Cuitom made turquoise davenport, $75. 2 rows nylon frii club chairs, $25 etch. Kenmoro LAND CONTRACT BUYERS WANTED. PLEASE CALL FE $4116 FOR INFORMATION. GILFORD REALTY. _____________j NEW LAND CONTRACT, SALE! priced at Siam dep. $1,000 Bel. due, $9,500 at 895 per mo. including Interest at 7 per cent. Will discount to 88480. Purchaser has excellent credit record. ;j, J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY ' Reel Estate—Insurance—Building. 7732 Highland Rd. IM59) OR *03il4 Eves. EM 34937 or EM 3-7S46 Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 604 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. H. J. Van Welt. 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR S-I3S5.________________ ’ 9x12 Linoleum Rugs ) .$3.89 Solid Vinyl Tito ... ..... Pc ee. Vinyl Asbestos tile .... 7c ee. Inlaid tile 9x9' ......... 7c ee. . Floor Shop—2255 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Mall" > ——_______________p..........839.95 id TV'S .................... $19:95 dwttrs Radio and Appliance, Inc, 422 W. Huron . \ 334-5677 1500 LAKESIDE, BIRMINGHAM near Woodward and Quartom 1 bedroom suites, 2 piece curved factional divan, maple dinette, me* hogeny server, chairs, tablet, tempi, kitchen set. Reasonable. APARTMENT SIZE REFRIGERA-tor, excellent runnlm S29. V. Harris, FE S-27i BUNK BEDS . Choice ef IS styles, trundle beds, ...„ . _ triple trundle beds and bunk bads Guar. alec, washer fundtoJM e. $49.50 ro, Wl and up. Paaraen't B.PIke. ' ' REPOSSESSED GE STEREO $3.25 PER WEEK Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr„ West Pontiac ROUND TABLE; CANED sofa; champagne step-table Ity and chest. FE 5-1907. REPOSSESSED ROTARY LAWNM0WER , $1.25 PER WEEK Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., West Pontiac REFIRGERATORS AND SINGER ed zlg-zegger and cabinet. . buttonholes, monograms, brodery. 5-year guarantee account balance of $33.35 or $5.00 monthly. Call 335-9213. RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC $6 PER MONTH payments. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 SAVE MONEY and colors. Froe ost. FE, Froyor's. ________ SPECIAL for free home demo. RICHMAN BROS. \ SEWING CENTER MA 4-1356. TWIN NEEDLE ZIG-ZAG y 3 months old, .designs, ton holes, horns, “ all >rythlng Pay *51.41 cedi or t; and fancy' sowing tachments, everymli monthly, start Fab.' 3153-2622. : ." W \ CERTIFIED SEWING WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At our 18 w. Pike Store Only Odd Chairs it$ 6 Mangle Iren $14 Walnut dresser with mirror .. $24 2 pc. living room suite . . . $29 38" elec, range ............$21 Gusr. elec, refrigerator .....$5t Your Credit it good et Wyman's EASY TERMS FE 2-215 Sale Hoasehold Goods 65 Music lessoas 71-A 1 WASHER $25, REFRIGERATOR, ta/freezar 849, Dryer 835, TV Set $25, Gas Stove $35, Washer end Dryer Set $85; V. Harris, FE /S-2766. ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS. H Sales-Service Pulenecki OR 3-5596 3UITAR 'LESSONS, BEGINNING and advanced. Pontiac Music and Sound. 332-4163. Hi-Fi, TV l Radios 66 21" USED TV -$29.95 Walton TV, FE 2-2257 ‘ Open 9-6 515 E. Walton, corner of Jostyn 3RGAN, PIANO AND ACCORDION, popular, classical, 673-5071. 5835 Mill St., Waterford, June Dearlng. [porting Goods 74 23 INCH MOTOROLA TV, CONSOLE perfect condition. $50. OR $-8473, after 5:00. 6 «H>, BOLEN DIABLO SNOw\ mobile. Come on out for a ride. Evan's Equipment# 6507 Dixie Hwy. n 625-1711. - COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain House, FE 24842 1966 BOW—CLOSE-OUTS Gena's Archery—714 M. Huron ALL GUNS REbuCED 5V GUNS—720 W. Huron—FE 4-7651 RECORD1 PLAYEfc NEEDLES herd to find? See us — wt have all kinds. Johnson TV - FE 8*4569 45 E. Walton near Baldwin SUNS. BUY# SELL# “TRADE. BURR* Shell# 375 S. Telegraph. ^ SELL, BUY OR TRADe GUNS o Opdyke Hardware FE 8-6686 ZENITH 21" COLOR TV In beautiful walnuir cabinet e repo, but in axe. working, condition May be had for unpaid bal. of $353 Easy terms may be arranged. FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET 150 S. Telegraph FE 3-7051 SKI DOO'S GUNS-CAMPERS S. CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 Walton Dpily 9-6 p.m. PE 8-4402 > Water Softeners 66-A NEARLY NEW, FULLY AUTOMAT-ic, Culligan water softener. Pay balance of $160. 335-4069. * Ski-Doo ] Polaris t Sno-Traveler ss low as $695 LARGE SELECTION OF GUNS AND EQUIPMENT s Cliff Dreyer Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly# ME 4*6771 4 Open Dally and Sundays For Solo Miscellaneous 67 AIRNS SNOW' BLOWER# practically new# will sacrifice# 852-1692. 9'xl2' LINOLEUM RUGS $3.95 EACH Plastic Wall „ file 1c ea. i Ceiling tile — wall paneling, cheap. B&G Tile. FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Huron Sand-Gravel—Dirt 76 FILL SOIL PIT FOR LEASE ON Baldwin at 1-75. FE 2-2144. 23 INCH MOTOROLA TV, CONSOLE, perfect condition. $50. OR 3-9473# after 5:00. GOOD RICH TOPSOIL AND BLACK dirt. Del. FE 4-6588 . 6 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP- v ply. Sand, gravel, fill dirt. OR 3-1534. ■ 52 GALLON ELECTRIC HOT WA-ter heater, will sell or trade for a gas. 852-1692. Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel 77 100,000 BTU GAS FIRED BOILER, new, only 1 left, $199. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M59 W. ALL BRONZE SUMP PUMPS, SOLD# repaired, exchanged# rented. CONE'S 71 W. Sheffield FE 8-6642 A-1 OAK WOOD, SPECIAL THIS week only. 2 cord $26 delivered. Discount on larger orders. FE 8-9846. FE 5-2483. FIREPLACE WOOD DELIVERED FE 8-2205 ANCHOR FENCES i NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 FIREPLACE WOOD Phone 334-0457 BEDROOM LIGHT FIXTURES# IR-regulars $4.95 values $1.95# circus cowboy fixtures, children's bedrooms. Michigan Fluorescent# 393 Orchard Lk.# FE 4-8462—20. CLASSIC GUITAR $35, 9to HOCKEY skates $3," Caravelle Skis with cable binding $15. 674-1322. SEASONED FIREPLACE WOOD. 625-5263 after 6 p.m. week days# all day Sat. Sun. WHITE BIRCH FIREPLACE WOOD. S25 cord, $30 delivered. 363-9367 Pets—Hunting Dogs 79 DISHMASTER FAUCETS AT G. A. Thompsons. 7005 M59 W. l-AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. JA-HEIM'S Kennels. FE 8-2530. FURNACES - SOLVE YOUR HEAT-Ing problems. 625-1501, 682-7812. l-AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. STUDS Estelheim's — FE 2-0889. Fbr The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall 1-A POODLE CLIPPING, $3-up. 860 Sarasota. FE 8-8569. ADORABLE PUREBRED SMALL, shaggy terrier. 692-1901. AKC BRITTANY PUPS, 8 WEEKS, 335-5528. AKC POODLES, SMALL MINI-aturo puppies, miles, rsas. 624 3070. JANUARY'S CLEARANCE SALE qj ell used end new deski, files, typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, etc. Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton, OR 3-9767. ALL PET SHOP, 55 WILLIAMS. FE 4-6433. Parakeets end finches. BLACK, TAN AND RED BONE pups, 1 pair left, $25. f female black and tan treeing with other dogs $35. 682-4979. NEW HOT WATER BASEBOARD, 7' length, *1.35 per foot. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M59 W. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, AKC,. wormed, shots, heavy boned. Guaranteed healthy. Cali Holly, 1-313*34-8573. ONE OF THE FINER THINGS OF life — Blue Lustre carpet and upholstery cleaner. Rent electric shempooer $1. Hudson's Hdwe., 41 E. Walton. MALAMUTE P U P P 1 E S, EXCEL-lent companion for children. Reasonable. 332-3222. PONY CUTTER 1664 Giddlngs Rd. OODLES OF POODLE PUPS, AKC. Make us an offer, must*go. 626-2)97 or 358-2053. PLUMBING BARGAINS. FREE Standing toilet, $16.95. 30-gallon heater, $49.95, 3-piece 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 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 841 Baldwin. FE 4-1516. PUPPIES, DACHSHUND AND POO-dle mixed. FE 2-1643. POODLE BEAUTY SALON Clippings—AKC Pups—Stud Service Pet Supplies—682-6401 or 682-0927 PEKINGESE, AKC, FEMALE, PUP, also stud service. 682-6721. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2678 Orchard Lake. 682-2820. TOY COLLIES, AKC PUPS, PERM-anent shots. S3S up. Terms, tamales to lease free. Studs. 625-4831. SNOWBLADE AND ELECTRICAL f lift. FE 4-9762. WIRE HAIRED FOX TERRIER puppies 9 wks old, papers, 447-0172. ' J TALBOTT LUMBER BPS housa paint No. 218, 86.95 gal a BPS ranch housa whlta No. 748 Auction Salts 80 * Cook-Dunn alum, roof paint, $5.5( gat. Oil base Interior, $4.00 gal. le Mlsc. latex pelnt, 50 cents a qt. r 1025 Oakland FE 4-4S9. EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY .... 7:30 P.M. EVERY SI/NDAY 2:00 P.M. Sporting Goods — All Types Door Prizes Every Auction We Buy — Sell — Trade, Retail 7 day Consignments Welcome B8.B AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs 1 Clothing, Furniture, Appliances 1? TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS. ONL1 >, $25. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M59 W HALL'S AUCTION SALES 705 W. Clarkston Rd., Laks Orion. Closed until February 4) 1947. 0 WASHED WIPING RAGS, 19 CENT lb. 3 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. bales . Blvd. Supply 500 S. Blvd. E STAN PERKINS SALES 8, SERVICE AUCTIONEER—313-9400 11314 Miller Rd—Swartz Creek livestock 83 WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prices. Forbes Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9676. APPALOOSAS, QUARTER HORSES. Reg. Nice! CAM 628-3015. WANTED TO BUY ARABIAN, WELSH, POA STUD services. Kenlo. 627-3792. lamp shaoas. FE 4-9096. BLACK GELDING, 7 YEARS, 8100. 6670 Westphalia, EM 3-2839. YOUR WELDW0QD HEADQUARTERS DRAY ION PLYWOOD 4112 W. Walton OR 3-8912 DOUBLE D RANCH CONTINUING business as usual. 673-7657. TENNESSEE WALKING MARES, (no papers), 11 year old, 15V5 hands, sorrel bred to registered Arab Stallion (July 1966), S3S0. Welch mare, 5 years old, 12 hands. Bay bred to registered Arab Stallion, $250. Arab Gelding regls- Hand Tools—Machinery 68 36' SEMI STORAGE VAN, A-1. $450 Fork lift trucks, $800 up. Blvd, Supply ^ 500 S. Blvd. E FE 3-7081 rel, $300# 637*119$. Hay—Grain—Food 84 1500 BALES OF ALFALFA AND clover mixed hey. Good condition. OA 8-3548. Musical Goods 71 AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE, A M-peg. Fender, Gibson—guitars, amplifiers, drums, cornets, trumpets, flutes, clarlnsts, saxophones, new-used bargains. People's. FE 4-4235. COW AND HORSE HAY. WE DE-llver. Al's Landscaping. 801 Scott Lk Rd. FE 4-0358 or FE *3661 EXTRA GOOD HORSE AND COW Jiay, will deliver. 627-3229. FIRST QUALITY ALFALFA BROME i —hey, straw. No rein. 628-2056. BARITONE UKES. 121 AND S26. All Mahogany. STORY 8. CLARK ORGANS $585 and up MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2*8567 Across from Tel-Huron HAY FOR SALE. CALL 628*2313 HAY FOR SALE# 625*5263 after 6 p.m. week days# ell day Sat. Sun. HAY AND STRAW. HILLSON LAWN and Garden. 7617 Highland. EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIANOS WANTED Bob's Van Service 363-5432 Farm Equipment 87 HAMMOND M-3 SPINET ORGAN. Excellent condition, S700. OR 4-- 1863. MASSEY-FERGUSON Snow blowers, blades, tire chains, and garden' tractors. Pony carts, and pony sleds. Htllson Lawn 8. Garden 7617 Highland 673-0330 Used Organs Choose from Lowrey, Wurlitzer, Hammond, Sllvertona, etc. Prices from. $450 GRINNELL'Sh(>owntown 2/ S. Saginaw USED RIDING TRACTORS WITH snow blades, priced at $195 and up. ' KING BROS. ‘ FE *1662 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. lust east of Opdyke Homo of tha Pontiac Hammond Organ Society Travel Trailers 88 METRONOME, MADE IN GERMA-ny, Lake Orion, MY 3-2848. in' TOUR HOME CAMPER, LIKE ntw, $900. 673-7292. PRACTICALLY NEW Spinet piano In beautiful timed oek save $30C Used spinet plane ....v $389 Used Spinet $469 Used Conn Organ was 11800 now 869S GALLAGHER'S MUSIC 1710 S. Telegraph South of Orchard Lake Rd. FE ,4-0566 AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for life. Saa them and get a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales, 3098 W. Huron (plan to loin one of Wally Byem's exciting caravans). 196*1967 TRUCK CAMPERS AND travel trailers, on display — Some will be heated every Saturday end Sunday during December I We carry: STREAMLINES, FRANKLINS. CREES, FANS, and MONITORS In travel traitors, also carry: Crees, Franklins, and Mackinaws Truck Campers. Coma on out tola tweak to Holly Travel Coach, 15210 Holly Rd., Holly. ME *6771. SILVERTONE ELECTRIC ORGAN, $225, 332-4396. USED ORGANS 1 Wurlitzer spinet end Leslie speaker, big sound, tow price. Conn Spinet organ, built-in Leslie speaker, walnut, almost lust like new. . - PIANOS ? For the beginner, spinal piano, our prices start at SS25. . LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. (Across from Birmingham. Theater) Free Perking Ml 6-8802 BOOTH CAMPER ALUM. COVERS, CAMPERS, PARTS, ACCESSORIES FOR ANY PICK-UP. 7330 HIGHLANO RD—PONTIAC OR 3-5526 AT STACKER'S INSPECT CENfURY-MALLARD-SAG* TAG-A-LONG Also '• •>...: ' _ • ■ LIFETIME PREMIER MOTOR HOME S - 1966 MODELS LEFT STACH^jR TRAILER SALES' INC * ; 3771-Highland (MS9) FE 2-4928 Mon. and TUes. 9 e.m. to 8 p,m. Wed. thru Frl. 9 a:m. to 4 p.m. -Sat. 9 a m. to 5 p.m., ctosed sunday - • WURLITZER ANO THOAAAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND 1 INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC 449 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 •192 Cooley Lake Rd. 363-5500 Year End .Clearance j> <• on All BALDWIN Pianos and Organs . y TERMS' ' Smiley Bros. Music Co. • * (Prev., Cate) Musk) tit N. SAGINAW—PONTIAC 1 FE 54222 • FC *4721 SMALL WANT AOS BIG DEAL FOR YOU! Classified Department .. trailer*_____ ♦ It HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS, campers and coven. Room rawtite hitches- 3255 Dixie Hwy.. OR 3-1456._______. PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS Over 30 Different models On display at all tlmas BILL C0LIER Camping Suppllas On M-21. Lapeer, Mich. v o wfluujvcrI* ii (673 ano up* T & R CAMPER MFG. CO. Auburn Rd. $52-3334 PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS 8, CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (8"-27"-35" cover*) ALSO OVERLAND & COLEMAN Huron FE 2-8989 SALE Year End Closeout, New nftwood Camper ........$109$ ’ Bee Lina *-c ............$1895 ' Frolic, s-c ............ $1895 Looking for a good used trailer? Our entire rental fleet is now on sale. Jacobson Trailer Sales 90 Williams Lk. Rd. OR 3-5981 Stronger welded tubular frame. Lined and Insulated .....$295 10 Foley, Waterford 673-7843 SOUTH BOUND? Now In stock —. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 7 Dixie Hwy. 625-4400 and sleepers. Nsw and used. S395 up. Also rentals. Jacks, intercoms, telescoping, bumpers, ladders, racks. Lowry Camptr Sales, 1325 S. Hospital Road, Union Lako. EM 3-3681. Spare tire carriers. Mobile Homes YOUR APACHE DEALER EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 650/ Dixie Hwy.; Clarkston 625-1711 89 Rent in our January Only Complete Mobile Home Service RICHARDSON-WINDSOR LIBERTY-HAMPTON-HOMETTE Colonial Mobile Homes Opdyke 332-16S7 (Corner of M-59 el Opdyke) 30 Dixie Hwy. 674-2101 (to mile south of Waterford) take over balanca $2100. 338-2956, after 9 p.m.___________________.________ condition, furnished, air conditioning, completely set up. Immediate occupancy, $2,300. 3384579. TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES 294-1520 294-1520 mobile lot. Near Pontiac, tot mo. Bloch Bret., 623-1333, FR 4-4509. Open Eves, and Sun. FALL SALE SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS on these new and used beauties > Over 40 to choose from In 5 different decors. FORESTPARK PARKWOOD HOLLYPARK All at reduced prlcei. 16 to 60 ft. long, 8 to 20 ft. wMt We have perking 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-Bedroom $4288.00 — Only $788.00 down. Also many used af bargain prices Guaranteed parking space. Authorized DETROIT-KROPF Dealer Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homos 4301 Dixit Hwy. rayton Plaint OR 3-1202 Open daily 'til 9 p.m. Set. & Sun. *tll 5 p.m. MARLETTES extra charge. Also see the famous light weight Winnebago Traitor. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 9-8, CLOSED SUNDAYS mile south of Laks Orion on AA24 MY 24721 SPECIAL $350 down end walk Into 52'xtO', 2-bedroom Marietta coach, all set up. Warm and ready to live In. Call OXFORD TRAILER SALES for details. MY 2-0721. Rent Trailer Apace 90 TRAILER SPACE ROOM AVAILABLE Pontiac Mobile Home Park. Motorcycles 95 20 Per Cent Off on all Bridgestone cycles From 50 cc to 175 cc PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. ■yton Plains OR 4-0411 Dixie Hwy. et Loon- Lake Open Dally 9 e.m. to 6 p.m. Charlie, 334-4290. 1967 HONDAS TRIUMPH, BSA, NORTON Matchless, Ducattl, Moto-Guzzt All models and colors Special Winter prices asy terms — Buy now and save ANDERSON SALES S SERVICE 145 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102 SUZUKI :rambler-they're TUK0 SALES INC. AUBURN - ROCHE UL 2-5363 Mlnibikes os low as $129.95. Take Mil to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left land follow sighs to DAWSON'S SALES AT tTPSKO LAKE. Phone MAIn 9-2179. Boot* — Accessories 97 have them till Wide Trade, and electric start. Also single and double snowmobile trailers. Coming soon! I The new end different land, and snow vehicle, the Scatmoblle. Take MS? to W. Highland, Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to OMh PS1C new TtBIrd Snowmobile from $695. tear's Bodts * Motets, take Orion. MY 3-1490. Open weekends only. On Display 'mVw 4-etaeper exp. 4-stoeper exp. < 4-sleeper exp. Ireft fiberglass e: - CHECK OUR DIAL LAKE & SEA MARINA South Blvd .-Saginaw — FI 4-9507 1 \N \ ^ C—io THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY a. 1067 Boots - Accessories 97 ; PINTER'S ' Presents '67 MODELS Starcreft, MFG. Johnson boats, motors. Carver Sea-Skiffs, Weeres Pontoons. LAYAWAY NOW! 1370 N. Opdyke (1-75 at Oakland University exit) ,| TONY'S MARINE FOfe JOHNSON, motors, boats, and canoes, 682-3600.1 WINTER STORAGE AND SERVICE Motors tuned, boats repaired. Phone In your reservation today. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1999 S. Telegraph Rd.__332-80331 Airplanes 99; private pilot ground school| course — Starting Jan. 3rd, '1967. New and Used Tracks 103 1964 GMC Vi-Ton Pickup radio, heater, sharp! $1095 HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. On M24 in Oxford, Michigan OA 8-2528 Foreign Cars 105 1964 VOLVO P1I00S, MltHELAN tires, air blower, radio and Iwatar, 626-9972 or 626-0745. 1965 KARMANN GHIA Club coupe with radio and heater and whitewall tires, full price $1395, only $49 down end $10.92 weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER New and Used Cara 106|MARMADl’KE By Anderson and Learning New Ptd Used Cara_106 BEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A CAR ' with as low as *3 down? Try King Plan Financing. Call Mr Start;. 33F40M. Sign up now - API — OR 4-0441,, -i/-\/-\r-7 /O* "K K Wanted Cars - Tracks 101 j J^O / LxIVlL-/ HX*TRA 1966 VW, BLUE, 1300 SERIES WITH sky tight. Only 3/000 mi.,, driven in Europe, >1,500. 682 1 323. 1966 SUNBEAM TIGER, „BLACK with black interior, tonneau cover,* 4-speed, Ford V8, $3,200. 625-3473 after 6. i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, Seat belts, 2- 900 Oakland Ave speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the rest, then get the best" at Averill AUTO SALES F E 2-9878 2020 Dixie FE 4-6896> HELP! We need 300 sharp Cadillacs, Pon-j tlacs. Olds and Buicks/tor out-of-state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900________FE >-8875 MORE MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars I need hundreds of sharp cars to fill out-state orders, and to stock my lot, that is a full city block in size. GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales | KING BROS. 1304 Baldwin FE *-4525! FE 4-1663 FE 4-0734 Across from Pontiac State Bank | Pontiac at Opdyka Rd. See All the New 1967s * TRIUMPH—MGs-SUNBEAMS AUSTIN HEALEYS—FIATS AUTHORIZED DEALER Grimaldi Imported Cars i OalcUnrt A up PP 5-9121 $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 INTERNATIONAL StOUT 1964, 4 WHEEL DRIVE 2 speed transmission, A-l condition VW CENTER 60 To Choose From —All Models— —All Colors— ■ —All Reconditioned— Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer W mile North of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph FE 8-4531 New and Used Cars 106 ESTATE STORAGE 1966 Cadillac Sedan DeVil le. Gold with a while leather top, full power, and air conditioning. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cadillac Ml 4-1930 ~ Now Is the Time to Save On a New Model Matthews-Hargreaves 631 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4547 1954 CHEVY, chrome engine, mag wheels -4-1746. TIGER GOLD, tiger uphblstery, best offer. 1963 COME T HARDTOP WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, RADIO AND; HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE *792, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly rayments *7.81 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks al HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-750ti. LLOYD 1965 MERCURY Monterey 2-D o or Hardtop. Twilight turquoise, automatic, power, full factory equipment. Sold by us new end serviced. 24 months or 50.-000 mile werrenty available. Full price New and Used Cars 106 DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—Big Lot so Cars to Choose from We buy or will adlust your payments to less expensive car._________ 677 M-24, Lk- Orion MY 2-2041 Niw“lN THE AREA? Drive e new or used car from Keego Pontiac" Sales. Call Mr. Clay at 6*2-773300-_____________________ 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA. 2-OOOR hardtop. Good condition. FE 5-7612. New and Used Cora_______106 2ND CAR HEADQUARTERS 75 cars in stack — all tlmas *50 to $800 MARVEL MOTORS 251 Oakland (N. of Baldwin) FE 0-4079 $1789 $89 DOWN LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 Transportation L Specials “What do you mean, ‘playing’?! If I was playing with him, I’d be smiling, wouldn’t I?” STOP HERE LAST ay more for sharp, lata s. Corvettes needed. M&M MOTOR SALES ROCHESTER DODGE Always a fine selection of New end Used Trucks . . . NEW '67 DODGE PICKUP S1958. Taxes Included 651-6100 Now at our new location 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 338426! Special Units 1963 CHEVY 1-ton stake with aerial ladder, A*1 condition. Only $1,895. 1965 FORD F-500, 12' dump stake. Only $1,895. 1964 FORD F-600, 14' alum, van Fine Used Cors Are Found at: STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 4-5967 AL HAN0UTE, INC. BUICK-CHEVROLET ON M24 IN ORION CALL MY 2-2411 ■ Only $2,795. 1964 FORD Pickup Vj-ton, S995. ,---------------- --—__—_ 1961 CHEVY VHon, pickup, $695. TOP S FOR CLEAN CARS OR 1951 poRD pickup. Only $95. trucks. Economy Cars. 2335 Dixie.; 19;; divcO milk unit. Only $150. 30 Others to Choose from New 1967 rhodels Ready For Delivery "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 952 West Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 1962 BUICK SKYLARK CONVERTIBLE WITH V8 ENGINE, POWER STEERING, RADIO, HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $892, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments ortly $8.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr, Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Mi 4-7500. "John McAuliffe Ford TRUCK DEPT 277 W. Montcalm FE 5-4101 1963 BUICK SPECIAL, VdOOR, Stick shift. $797. Full price, no I money down. Ilucky auto BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused BANKRUPTCIES, REPOSSESSIONS FULL WKLY. CAR PRICE PYMT. 1959 CHEVY 2 door *347 $3.99 1961 CORVAIR Auto .*297 .*3.05 1961 FALCON 2 door .*397. *4.10 1961 CHRYSLER Auto ... .$397. $4.10 1961 FORD « auto ...*397. $4.10 1960 PONTIAC hardtop .. S497 . *4,75 1962 BUICK Wagon ..$697. $6.98 1962 MERCURY auto ... $297. .$3.05 1960 BUICK 2 door .$497 .$4.75 1961 PONTIAC Starchlef S597 $5.95 NO DOWN PAYMENT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM _ „JusJ east of Oakland 1959 CHEVY BEL AIR ^-DObRrT-owner, very nice. 333-7542, Riggins, dealer,___■■________ 1962 CORVAIR, 4 TO* CHOOSE j • from—as low as; $397 and up. Can be purchased with no down pay-| ment. LUCKY AUTO New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DOOR hardtop, burgundy finish with black vinyl top, automatic transmission, power steering and stilt under new car warranty. $2295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birming-ham, Ml 4-2735. OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth Valiant-Imperial I960 DODGE 2 DOOR V-B, RUNS good, SI25. Save Auto, FE 5-3278. KESSLER'S . DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service Oxford__________OA 8-1400 1959 FORD STATION WAGON. Excellent condition. 47,000 actual ml. 1 owner, *350, 651-0825. 1960 FORD. RUNS GOOD. POWER Steering, Power Brakes, Full Price *59. Reliable Motors, 250 Oakland Ave. FE 8-9742. 1962 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, POWER STEERING, WHITEWALL TIRES, Full PRICE *766. ABSO-LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only *7.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. WINTER SPECIAL 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 Pontiacs 1957-64 $55 up Others and trucks (ECONOMY CARS. 2335 DIXIE HWY.)______ 1961 T-BIRD POWER, AUTOMATIC, $795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. 1962 FALCON 2-DOOR WAGON. 6-cylinder standard transmission. Extra sharp. Only $595. Jerome Ford, Rochester's Ford Dealer OL 1?9711. 1963 FORD GALAXIE.4 DOOR. V-8, automatic, radio, heater and power steering. $895. Jerome For^l Rochester's Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711 SPECIAL $1875. FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP - EM 3-4155 or EM 3-4156 TWO - 1959 FORD F100 5200. PARTS FOR ALL Foreign, Rambler, Jeep New end Used — Reasonable GRIMALDI IMPORTED CARS 900 Oakland U.S. 10 FE 5-9421 OB OLIVER BUICK FE 2-9165 1963 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 9 PAS-senger Wagbn. 1 Owner. V8, Radio, Heater, Power Rear Window. Grimaldi Cars 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 1963 BUICK LESABRE, 4-DOOR hardtop, a real sharp car. $1197. Can ba purchased with no money down. LUCKY AUTO New and Used Trucks 103 1953 CHEVY Vi-TON PICKUP. 4-cylinder standard transmission. Extra clean, good rubber. Priced at only *395. Jerome Ford, Rochester's Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711. YOUR AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR JEEP complete parts — service — equipment. Will not be undersold. Grimaldi Jeep 900 Oakland Ave. __FE 5-9421 Auto Insurance Marine 104 YOUNG BRAVE HAVE HEAVY FOOT ON MUSTANG OR GTO? MANY HORSES UNDER HOOD? TROUBLE WITH AUTO INS.? CALL OUR TUBE FOR INS. MANY MOONS TO PAY ON » BUDGET PLAN BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle Mile FE 4-0589 - LLOYD 1963 BUICK LeSabre Sedan. Automatic, power, sandstone beige. Immaculate condition. One owner. Full fcrice $1097 $45 Down LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1966 RIVIERA COUPE. POWER steering, power windows, bucket seats, Console, -an^ a beautiful or- LUIMU Ml UI1LI *JZOO. FISCHER BUICK 1963 CHEVROLET VMPALX HARDTOP WITH Y8 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $995, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only $8.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON vertible, automatic, sharp $995 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr mlrtgharh, Ml 4-2735. 1963 CORVAIR MONZA, 2, DOOR - hardtop—turquoise blue, radio and heater-defroster, whitewalls, auto mafic transmission, $495/ Private owner. Call Earl Jones.l/FE 2-8181 or evenings 546-1880. i 327 1964 CORVAIR MONZA /COUPE. A-l owner new-car trade. Automatic, buckets. Nice color, rave. Grimaldi Cfers 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 1964 CORVAIR MONZA 2 DOOR with 4 speed transmission, $795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Bir- cningham, Mi 4-2735.______________ 1964 CHEVY SUPER SPORT 31:55 (4) News 10:00 (4) Reach for the Stars (9) Hercules i (50) Yoga for 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) Dickory Doc 11:25 (9) Tales of the River Bank'i^JjST* 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 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (7) Father Knows Best Composer Berlin Keeps His Artistic Talent Under Cover By EARL WILSON Irving Berlin, a secret painter, has hung 16 of his best oils on a wall in the midtown apartment of his dear friend, bon vivant Irving Hoffman. Like most geniuses, Berlin’s shy about showing his work in another field. He’s even forbidden J Hoffman to have guests in his own apartment Ufor fear they’ll see this valuable art collection I which includes still life, nudes and self-por{rait. (9) Communicate (50) Movie: “Nancy Steele Is Missing” (1037) Victor McLaglen, Walter Connolly I 12:45 (2) Guiding light 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: ^Casablanca” (1942) Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (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 2:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night « 0 (4) You Don’t Say! ’ ‘ ' (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the (Sown (7) Dark Shadows (56) Managers in Action 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (56) Let’s Lip-Read 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) News (50) Alvin (56) Preparing for Reading 5:30 T9) Cheyenne (50) Little Rascals (56) What’s New 5:45 (7) News 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall NEW YORK (AP)—The Ford Foundation has announced grants totaling $730,000 for genera) operation 6f the NAACP and the National Urban-League and promised more funds in the future if the two civil rights organizations can widen their own fund-raisihg base. The foundation granted $430,-000 to the league and $300,000 to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. 'it * * A foundation spokesman said it was the first time Ford funds have been given toe two organizations without a specific purpose. Previous foundation grants earmarked for special projects have been given toe league and the NAACP’s legal defense and education fund, however. ADDITIONAL FUNDS McGeorge Bundy, Ford Foundation president, said additional one-year grants may be made over toe next several years. “Such a decision will be based in part on whether these organizations can-achieve a substantially greater level of support from their members, from other private sources or funds, and from American society generally,” he asserted. * * * 3 Bundy said the foundation’s one-year grants “cannot possibly sustain the services arid programs that the times’demand of toe Urban League and top NAACP. A whole new scale of financial support foi1 them is essential. “Nationally and in a growing number of cities, the services of the NAACP and toe Urban League are in growing demand.. They are already spreading their resources and staff thinly to meet these demands.” ACROSS 1 Ship’* word 4 Vint 8 Harvest 12 Fruit drink 13 Iroquoian Indian 14 Italian stream 15 Number 15 “*** requrt*! 49 Utopian spot* 52 Asseverate 3# Operated ST Gapital of Norway 39 Basks in solar warmth 40 Widgeon 41 Feathered scarf 42 Rush'of words 45 Automotive • fine (law) 20 Property Rem 21-—Angeles, California . 22 Sea eagle 24 Killed 26 <3oed 27 Bad's doling 30 Photographic device 32 Contrivance 34 Spongy substance 33 Newspaper 7 Pasture 8 Lift 9 Ages 10 Poker stake 11 Versifier 17 Disembarked 19 Propelled a water vessel 23 Western cattle 43 Surface a street show ‘ 44 Greek war god 24 Cicatrix 46 Minister to 4 Roman goddesi 25 Tibetan monk 47 Charles Lamb 5 Range 26 Brief rest ' 48 Depend 8 Thrash________27 Condition 50 Fo lower 53 Musical quality 54 Lubricant 65 Promontory SO Concludes S7Nigstive vote DOWN 1 Behind time 2 Poems 3 Fine-mannered male 28 Portrait statue 20 Weights of India 31 Was a lodger 33 Cap part 38 Severe lecture 40 Helvenly bodies 41 Foundations 42 Bridge U.S. War Film on Tokyo TV Bandsman's Gl-Son Killed TOKYO (UPD - The feature movie on a Tokyo television station tonight was “The Sands of Iwo Jima,” starring John Wayne arid dubbed in Japanese. A television program listing in one of Tokyo’s major newspapers said the film portrays “one of the most drawn-out and terrible battles of World War II.” i 2 r" 4 5 6 7 B 5" 10 11 i i 13 14 ir 16 17 19 20 21 23 24 vT 31 26 ■ 5? 28 29 ar 22 33 w 25 36 m f 35 r 42 w W i 47 48 49 61 , sr 54 ST 5T 5? 3 The film, which depicts the capture of Japanese-held Iwo Jima by American Marines, is well-known in the United States. NEW YORK (AP) — Hugh F. Winterhalter, son of orchestra leader HugS Winterhalter, was* killed in Vietnam Dec. 29 while on his second tour of duty there. Winterhalter, 33, was attached to- the Army’s lwth Combat Engineer Battalion. He will receive a military funeral at Arlington National Cemetery Friday, his parents said Monday night. ★ ★ ★. v" During his first tQur in Vietnam, he was a corfibat helicopter gunner with the 20th Aerial Artillery and received the Air Medal with six clusters. Kentucky and Georgia are the Tokyo’s Channel 12 scheduled:^ states which p<,rinit voting a holiday .’it it it Although American portrayals at this time of Skerriff-Goslin Co. Pontiac's Oldest Rooting and Siding Company! Free Estimates 332-5231 ditionally take a week-long New Year’s holiday and the stations have to djg down deep into film libraries to fill up broadcasting time. Sleeping Pills Fatal to Widow 5 Funerals Aftermath of Teen Holiday Trip President Back at White House WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson was back at toe White House today after a 17-day visit to his Texas ranch. His first announced appointment of the day was a luncheon conference with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. Three Rivers High School’s jun-LONDON (UPI) - Mrs. Alex-,ior class. THREE RIVERS (AP)—Five.former St. Joseph County pros-1 funerals Wednesday in this ecutor and there is a younger southwestern Michigan com-; brother, David. Luther Warner, munity of”7,092 will mark the!Gary’s father, is parts manager end of what was to have been for an auto dealership and his r c*|__ happy New Year’s Eve tobog- wife is a supermarket cashier. Of r11171 rroaucer ganjng for five teen-agers from The Warners have two younger sons, Michael and Stuart. Mrs. Warner and Mrs. Lock-An automobile in which the wood are sisters, daughters of a boys were headed for an Echo former Three Rivers city com-Valley resort was struck by a missioner. Warner is a former train at a crossing five miles American Legion Post corn-east of Kalamazoo Saturday mander here, night. It was Miqhigan’s worst ONLY SON tiagedy of the New Year’s holi-1 The (ook the only ^ of