The Weather V. I. WMltar luriau Firidil VOL. 12if - NO. 27* THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1907 —42 PAGES un.teS^'sVPn0tK$8.onal Home Edition Bandits Steal $301,000 and Armored Truck Pontiac Plagued by Tax Question By BOB WISLER Will Pontiac have an income tax in 1968? This is a question that has been hanging over the city tor the past six months. Today it is still unresolved. The ordinance enacted by city commissioners in early October calls tor tax collections to begin Jan. 1. But at this point it doesn’t appear thatcollec-. tions will begin then, and it’s more likely they won’t begin until July, it then. It now appears that the answer lies in the deliberations and decision of Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer. City District Gets 1 School Center Pontiac and Royal Oak school districts hav^ been designated as sites lor the first two of Oakland County’s four vocational education centers. Oakland Schools Intermediate District Board of Education yesterday authorized its superintendent, Dr. William J. Emerson, to enter into contracts with the two districts. # Local districts will operate the centers with funds from Oakland Schools. The voter-approved centers are expansions of high school vocational education programs. ★ ★ ★ Emerson was also given board approval to enter into contracts with Walled Lake Consolidated and Clarkston Community districts for the second two centers, contingent on the receipt of state funds. WALLED LAKE, .CLARKSTON Vocational centers are planned to open in the Pontiac and Royal Oak districts in September i960, and in Walled Lake and Clarkston in September 1970. Contracts with Walled Lake and Clarkston depend on Oakland Schools receiving $1.3 million in matching funds from the state. The state reportedly has promised the money. Centers in Pontiac and Royal Oak will be the largest of the four. ★ ★ ★ School boards of the four districts now will have to approve the contracts before centers are built. ADMINISTRATORS SOUGHT Oakland Schools administrators were authorized by the board to search for the top administrators for the centers — home economics, business and distributive education, industrial and cooperative education and curriculum consultants. A budget of $3.4 million for vocational education for fiscal 1968-69 was presented to the board but not acted upon. It includes funds for construction and salaries. ★ ★ ★. Costs of construction and equipment for the four centers has been estimated at $6.4 million. In Today's Press Pontiac Schools 1 Short - range desegregation 1 plan draws pros, cons — PAGE I C-5.. Urban Renewal Rochester finds paper work, , 1 problems galore — PAGE A-4. 1 Waterford News Gasoline contract for fleet 1 vehicles is awarded — PAGE 1 A-7. 1 Area News ...'........ A-4 Astrology ............ C-8 Bridge ................. C-8 Crossword Puzzle .......D-ll Comics ................ C-8 Editorials .............A-6 Food Section ....... C-l-C-3 Markets . .»........ C# Obituaries ----,.v...... D-l Sports ......... D-l—D-4 Theaters....... C-8 TV4UMH0 Programs ......D-U Wilson, Earl...........D-H Women’s Pa|$ ........B-l-M The income tax issue has taken some torturous turns during the past year and its presence in Circuit Court is just one of the latest. * * * City officials foresaw a need for additional revenue in 1968 early this year, but it wasn’t until the tax advisory election in September that city commissioners decided definitely on an income tax. PREFERENCE SHOWN Voters showed a preference for an income tax — accompanied by a property tax cut — instead of more property taxes, by a 2-1 margin. The income tax ordinance was challenged when a group of income tax foes two weeks ago filed enough petitions to force a referendum vote — allowed under the city charter and state election laws. Now the validity of the petitions requesting the e}ectipn are being challenged, ostensibly by two residents who are city employes — a fireman and a police officer. . * ★ ★ The attorney for the plaintiffs also is the attorney for the Pontiac Police Officers Association. Both the police organization and the local firefighters’ union are vitally interested in the tax question. They figure that without the Income tax, police officers and firefighters will suffer. ‘IMPROPER PETITIONS’ In a suit filed Tuesday they charged that the petitions are not proper and asked the court to restrain the city from holding a referendum election. If the election is set the city would be prevented, under state law, from collecting income taxes until July, pending the results of the election. The court has issued a temporary restraining order, but how long this will remain in effect is in doubt. It is possible that the judge would rule that the petitions do not comply with the form demanded hy the city charter and state election law. PROVISIONS UNCLEAR However, the language and provisions of the charter and the election law are, like many such documents, unclear and seemingly ambigious. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) War Changes Viet Hill People • j &■■■»* ■ 4 rjpt JjU vvv - toJmsI f *• - >' STOLEN TRUCK — Detectives examine the scene where an armored truck was abandoned after thieves took it and store. The bandits emptied the truck of all but $32,000 and $330,000 in it from in front of a Boardman, Ohio, department fled, apparently in a getaway car. Denver Quake Link Is Probed DENVER, Colo (AP) - Renewed interest is being focused on a deep well drilled at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal and any possible connection with a five-year series of earthquakes in the Denver area. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has announced a study is being made to determine if waste fluids standing in the deep—and now unused—well should be pumped out. Denver had its heaviest earthqnake last August, registering 5.5 on one Rich- (EDITOR’S AO I'E—This is another in a series of reports by comedian Bob Hope, who is touring Southeast Asia entertaining U.S. servicemen.) BY BOB HOPE PLEIKU, Vietnam — As you can see by the dateline we went back home' —• back to Pleiku. We first went tip to the central highlands four years ago. Camp Holloway, as it was called then, was a picturesque spot of a few huts and a couple of copters and a round or two of ammunition. The who|e base was so small you could cover it with one snap of your In-stamafic. A couple of hundred men gathered around the truck to watch our medicine show. Afterwards they had a ceremony put on by the Montagnards or hill people. The Montagnards are a fiercely independent group and are savage fighters. They have a very positive though primitive philosophy. They hate every other group In Vietnam — the Buddhists, the Catholics, the Chinese, the Communists, the nationalists, the Vletcong, the low-landers and the city folk. The only people they like are the Montagnards who live pver the hill. The Montagnards, however, like most of usj have learned that one must put up with certain nodal demands. A tattered group of them came to the show banging pots and pans and bamboo sticks like they’d seen in the “B” pictures. Then they staged a very unenthusias-tic dance that was halfway between a lean and an outright stumble. After that we aD took a sip of warm rice wine (there's nothing like It on an empty stomach) and they put friendship brace-* lets around our wrists. The whole thing looked like a three-(Continued on Page A-8, Col. 1) f Truck Runs Amok I I -to Soy the Least | OPELOUSAS, La. (UPI) — Police said Eugene Neil Hoell was driving a semitrailer truck on U.S. 190 west of Opelousas yesterday when the truck: e Went off the road and hit a fence, a Tore the fence down, carrying it about a block, a Crashed into a garage between two houses, • Picked up a car while en route through the garage, a Carried the car and a part of the garage until it struck another car. • Slammed into a tree, still carrying the original car, hit a house and knocked it four feet off its blocks. • Finally came to rest. Robert Watts, 19, who was riding in the back of the trailer, suffered cuts. A man and his wife and their two children were knocked out of bed but were not Injured seriously. ★ ★ ★ Police said Hoell of Dayton, Tex., said he does not know what happened to start the whole thing. He was given a ticket for careless driving. ter Scale and causing considerable property damage. Another jolt last month was nearly as severe. No injuries have resulted. A Denver geologist, David M. Evans, has contended for more than two years that jumping of waste into the 12,000-foot well at the arsenal northeast of Denver triggered the earth shocks. Before that, quakes had been unknown in Colorado. Some scientists agree with Evans, but others are skeptical. ★ ★ ★ But this much is known: The Well was completed in 'March 1962 and wastes from the manufacture of chemical weapons at the arsenal were pumped under high pressure into the well for disposal underground. Just a little more than one month later, the UAW Near Finish of GM Pact Vote DETROIT (jn — Some 380,000 members of, the United Auto Workers are expected to complete ratification voting on a new three-year contract with General Motors tonight. ★ ★ ★ A union spokesman said Tuesday that GM workers are approving the contract by a five to one margin, with 83 per cent of the production workers who had voted favoring the contract and 79 per cent of the skilled tradesmen. Craftsmen and production workers vote separately on the pact. Balloting is to be completed by midnight tonight, the spokesman said. The contract parallels those ratified by 103,000 Chrysler workers and 160,000 Ford workers, and is expected to increase labor costs by roughly six per cent a year over the next three years. first quake ever measured on instruments in, Denver occurred. « Since that April day more than 1,500 temblors have been recorded here, although most of these went unnoticed by the average citizen. Evans, who is director of the Potential Gas Agency for the Mineral Resources Institute at the Colorado School of Mines, said the well was drilled into a stratum of extremely hard granitic rock. “As fluids were flushed down the well from the arsenal, pressure built up in the rocks below,’’ he said. “The forced-in liquids lubricated the rocks and caused them to shift and slide. As a result, we have earthquakes.’’ A ★ a Arsenal officers point out that pumping of wastes into the well was stopped in February 1966 at the order of Army Engineers, yet the earth shocks continued. Evans said despite this halt — and the U.S. Geological Survey agrees with him on this — waste fluids still are standing almost 11,000 feet deep in the well. He said this causes steady pressure on the shifting rocks below. Vehicle Taken in Ohio Theft Is Abandoned YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (JP) - Thieves escaped with $301,000 in an armored truck yesterday by driving it out of a parking lot crowded with people while the two guards were in a department store. The truck was found within 30 minutes abandoned about lVi miles from the shopping area, in nearby Boardman, with $32,600 still inside. Police said the thieves switched the rest of the loot to a getaway car. Authorities said someone evidently had a set of keys to open the truck doors that locked automatically when closed. There was no sign of forced entry into the Kane Secret 8ervice Co. truck. The two guards, Steve Sulik, 46, of Boardman and James Lockhart, 45, of Youngstown, were in the Almart Department Store “four or five minutes,” according to Boardman Police Chief Don Hawkins. “When they returned, the truck was gone.” SHOPPERS WATCH Several witnesses outside thp store said a man in uniform got into the truck and drove away. It was found in a wooded park area. “They were certainly familiar with the operation,” said Hawkins. “I would say it hat every appearance of being an inside job.” The chief said the theft, largest in the recollection of officials In the Youngstown area, was pulled by “two or three men.” * ★ ★ Police said at least two keys were needed by the bandits one to open the door on the driver’s side and another for a side door to get the money. BANK TRANSFER The Kane truck was carrying money on a bank transfer and making pickups and deliveries at Boardman Plaza Shopping Center on U.S. 224. The truck then crossed the highway to the department store in another smaller shopping area. ★ ■k k Hawkins said the guards “loaded a three-wheel cart with coins to deliver to Almart’s. Dog Mauls Girl, 7 UPPER DARBY, Pa. (AP) - A 7-year-old girl was reported today in serious condition after being mauled and bitten by the family’s pet German shepherd dog. ★ ■ ★ ★ Police said the girl, Diane Pateckis, was attacked by the dog at her home last night. Police, responding to an emergency telephone call from a babysitter, rushed to the home. Officers found the dog still mauling the child. Unable to pull the dog away, they shot and killed it. Weather Outlook: Light Snow, Cold Light snow or snow flurries with less than an inch accumulation is the forecast for late today and tonight in the Pontiac area. The weatherman predicts the mercury will dip to a low of 4 to 10 degrees tonight. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and cold with little change in temperature, the high reaching 18 to 25. Cloudy and cold with a chance of snow flurries is Saturday’s outlook. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: Today 40, tonight and tomorrow 20. The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 16. By 2 p.m. the temperature had climbed to 28. Crime Is Climbing at Record Pace The 1967 Pontiac crime rate continues to climb at a record-breaking pace, according to latest statistics. In the first 11 months of this year compared to the same period In 1966, there has been a significant rise in every major category. . Investigations of violent crimes show a huge increase. Armed robbery 1$ up 18 per cent over last year; aggravated assault Investigations have leaped 45 per cent. Forcible rape investigations and murder and manslaughter Investigations, while showing a small numerical increase, reveal staggering percentage increases. Police investigated nine murders or nonnegligent manslaughter cases last year, 11 for the first 11 months this year — a 22 per cent Increase. rape Figures In the rajpe by force and attempted rape category, the number rose from eight to 19, a 137 per cent increase. In addition, burglaries rose 38 per cent, larcenies 18 per cent and auto thefts 48 per cent. The over-all index for major crimes shows a 32 per cent increase over last year, 2,441 incidents for the first 11 months of 1966 compared to 3,231 for this year. * *' ★ Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Little Prostitution Found in City Prostitution is not a major problem In Pontiac, according to a report issued yesterday^ the American Social Health Association. _|T Harlan E. Raimo, regional director for the nonprofit organization, said that a four-day survey this month revealed that relatively little vice exists In the city. The study was conducted by an Investigator for the association on the request of the United States Public Health Service. Raimo, who directs activities for the. agency in 13 midwestem states, said tfie surveys are aimed at reducing incidences of venereal disease. All information, including the names and addresses of prostitutes and procurers obtained by the investigator, have been turned over to the Pontiac Police Department,, added Raimo. ‘GOOD INDICATION’ He admitted that the study, because of the time involved, is not a thorough analysis of conditions, “but it gives a goof indication of what is going on.” For the size of the city, the amount of prostitution and its accessibility, Pontiac was given the association’s best rating, according to Raimo. (Contitoued on Page A-2, Col. 5) Bronson requested the statistical breakdown from the police department to formulate ideas for more effective law enforcement. SPIRALING EFFECT He suggested that the huge increases in the crime rate indicate a definite spiraling effect of crime and violence. The incidents of violence are creating a climate which is leading to metre violence, he said. The statistical breakdown for various categories t • Murder and nonnegligent manslaughter — nine In 1966, 11 In 1967. a Rape by force — four in 1966, 12 In 1967. ★ ★ ♦,, • Attempted rape — four in 196*. seven in 1967. • Armed robbery — 190 in 1966, 225 ’ In 1967. • Robbery, strong-arm with no weapon - 55 in 1966, 67 in 1967. a Assault with a gun — 256 in INI, 375 this year. (Continued on Page A-3, Cel. 4) A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUKSDAV, DECEMBER 28, LBJ Signs Two D.C. Bills : SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) — noting that “public order is the; Johnson expressed some mis-Social Security health pro-President Johnson signed crime structure on which any society givings about the crime bill and grams, control and health bills he hopes grows and prospers.” ,said ‘‘The effectiveness of this| Johnson was taking on a pile-' ’wtH bring the nation’s capital „ attfimtiom jprovision will depend on the up of pending bills with slow) closer to becoming a model city, quality of its administration and precision-his tally now five out! and moved ahead today with] Johnson said he ho^s Con-the spirit of fairness with which of more than 40 measures I960 budget conferences. gress on its return Jan? 15 will He acted just before a mid-give “the most urgent atten-night Wednesday deadline to ap- tion” to his proposed safe prove a controversial bill that streets and crime control act will give District of Columbia “to help jit is carried out,” than 40 measures I awaiting the Presidential signature. “In our system of govern- crime conmoi aci ^ ^statements I Johns<>n has been occupied nrici ui uwumuia^ “-■i* local communities ’ 1 , maiulv with fiscal Droblems mf»pt thpir lnoai rpcnnncihilitipc taken from an accused can nev- niai,,|J; WiU1 nscai promems police more power to fight ™^tneir ^o^^ rosponsiDihties ^ substitute for carefui and! since his arrival two days in fighting the causes of crime,” and he also plumped for pas- crime in Washington. ★ ★ ★ The chief executive coupled sage of “strict gun control legis-1 the signing with a statement j lation to keep firearms out of/SPECIAL PRIDE’ from his Texas White House the wrong hands." J with “special pride," the calling on Congress to look to; The most disputed provision President also put his signature painstaking work by law offi- at his m «w»try Texas ranch the problem of crime in all cit- of the District of Columbia ies. Crime bill is one which permits “No more serious problem police to question suspects for faces America than the growing;up to three hours before decid-menace of crime in our ing whether to charge them streets,” the President said, with a crime. measure extending Medicare and Medicaid benefits to 180,000 poor and elderly citizens of the District of Columbia. Heretofore, the nation’s capital was not included under these 3 Hospitals Readied for Civilians in Viet SAIGON (AP) - The United States is preparing three hospi-. tals with a total of 800 beds and staffing them with American military doctors and nurses to help care for the thousands of civilian victims of the Vietnam war, high U.S. officials disclosed today. Civilian casualties are mounting-one American expert estimates them at 100,000 this year —and Vietnamese hospitals are unable to care for many of them. The U.S. officials said American military hospitals since last March have been authorized to J accept as many wounded civilians as they have room for, and about 300 a month have been treated. Some civilians had been treated even before that, they added. A 300-bed civilian hospital at Tuy Hoa, entirely staffed by SAIGON (AP) - Th, number!^' JUST .T"' Week s War Toll Declines inurin... ™«vland orderlies, will open in of Americans, South YfHdays, the officials said. i few second hospital, with 200 namese and enemy troops killed; in the Vietnam war droppedL^c pYnp,.tp,i slightty last week whfle the toll ^ chu Li before the Sd of of U.Sjwounded rose in fighting |january a third hospital, Can Tho in the Mekong Delta, is expected to open in late spring that officially was described light to moderate. The U.S. Command, in its weekly summary issued today, said 166 U.S. personnel were with 500 beds for U.S. soldiers and 300 for civilians. ■Hie first two hospitals are f “m existog period ending at midnight Sat-feS; feyftary facillties whil“ the Can Tho facility is a new urday. A week earlier 187 werej reported killed. * * The number of Americans wounded climbed to 1,361, after dropping to 932 a week earlier. Of the 1,361 wounded, the command said 762 did not require hospitalization. |structure. The space-available admissions at other U. S. hospitals are to continue. ★ ★ ★ The building-of the Can Tho hospital indicates that U.S. Officials expect increased fighting in the delta, and a consequent The new casualty figures, increase in both military and ci-pushed to 15,812 the number of vilian casualties. Americans killed so far in thej Vietnamese government fig- war and the total wounded to 99,305. Of the-wounded, the command reported 46,640 did not require hospitalization. Another 866 Americans are missing, captured or interned since Jan. 1,1961. ★ * * South Vietnamese military headquarters reported 234 government troops were killed in action last week as compared with 278 a week earlier. ures show an average of 4,000 civilians killed and wounded were reported each month during the past year, or at least 48.000 civilian casualties. ONLY HALF But Col. William W. Moncrief Jr., U.S. assistant director for public health, estimated that only half of the civilian casualties are reported and the war’s toll of civilians ttys year will be 24.000 killed and 76,000 wounded. WILLIAM G. GRAVLIN Trial Is Ordered in Ax Murders The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report ^PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Light snow tapering off to flurries or ending this afternoon with less than an inch accumulation. High 18 to 25. Clearing and colder tonight. Uw 4 to 10 above. Partly cloudy with little temperature change Friday. Variable winds 5 to 10 miles, becoming northeasterly tonight. Saturday’s outlook: Cloudy and cold with a chance of snow flurries. Chance of precipitation: Today 40 per dent, tonight and tomorrow 20 per cent. Tatey in Pantlac Wodnoiday In Pontiac it temperature pracadii - “•• Wind Velocity s Weather—Sunny Wednesday'! Temperature! >be A Troy man accused of murdering all seven members of his family three years ago has been declared mentally capable of standing trial. Circuit Judge James S. Thor-bum yesterday ruled on the competency of William G. Grav-lin after hearing four psychiatrists - testify that it was their opinioD he could assist his defense attorney' Gravlin, 33, was released into the custody of county authorities recently following his release from Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. He was admitted to the institution in January 1965 by Thorburn without ever standing trial. ★ * * Gravlin is specifically charged with the slaying of his teen-age stepdaughter, Judith Ann Bentley, 16. AXED TO DEATH She, her four sisters and a brother, a stepsister, arid their mother Bette, 40, were found axed to death in their Troy home! on Sept. 29,1964. Gravlin is scheduled to stand 75 miles from here. Budget Bureau Director Charles L. Schultze spenj Wednesday afternoon with Johnson in the ranch office going over budget proposals for the Agriculture, Housing and Urban Development departments, the Atomic Energy Commission and a number of other undisclosed agencies. Legislator Will Seek Vacant Senate Seat LANSING (AP)—A state representative plans to try to run for the vacant Senate seat of the late Harold J. Volkema, challenging not only Republican primary opponents but also an opinion by the state’s attorney generaj. * * * Meanwhile, Acting Gov. William Milliken’s legal staff picked Jan. 23 as the date for the primary election in the 23rd Senatorial District and Feb. 19 as the general election date. The district — including Ottawa, Allegan and Van Bureft counties and one Barry County township—is heavily Republican. ★ * ★ Rep. Melvin DeStigter, R-Hudsonville, told the Associated Press Wednesday he would try to file for the vacant Senate seat “within the next few days.” 63 LEGAL OPINION If that happened, said State Elections Director Bernard Apol, “I don’t know just exactly what I would do." * * The uncertainty is caused by a 1963 legal opinion written by State Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley which forbids a legislator from being elected to any state office which he would assume before his legislative term expired. ★ * * “A member of the Legislature is prohibited ... from election Birmingham Area News Work on Parking Facility Expected to Start Soon BIRMINGHAM — Construe- parking structure, located on Woodward near Willitts. It has capacity of 560 cars. * * * The new structure will provide parking for 710 automobiles, nine more than originally announced by the city. AT PIERCE, MERRILL It will be built on the site of the city’s municipal surface parking lots at Pierce and Mer-rilll. When the project begins, the 232 parking spaces in the surface lot will be lost for the duration of construction. tion of the city’s second and largest parking structure is- expected to get under way early next month with an eye toward completion by the 1968 Christmas season. Preliminary work could begin immediately since the construction contract was awarded Tuesday, but it is unlikely since the sale of general obligation bonds to finance the project won’t be held until Jan. 8, according to a city spokesman. The City Commission awarded the contract to the A. J. ~ Co. of Oak Park for bid of $1,543,900. Approval was recommended by the architectural firm that designed the five - level structure, O’Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach, Inc. Birmingham. Etkins built the city’s first AP Wiraphota DIVING FOR LOOT — Filipino housewife Mrs. Leonora Lopez plunges into a pile of pesos (top) and collects an armful (lower), even holding a few in her teeth, to win first prizef in a contest called “Instant Riches” held in Manila recently. The mother of seven scooped up about $3,420 worth of pesos which she got to keep as her prize. She and 11 other finalists were turned loose in a pile of 150,000 pesos on the floor of a bank. City Hospital Hit by 2 Suits The parking structure is to be paid off from parking meter revenues and a 10 per cent assessment to property owners in the central business distract. Commissioners, in other recent business, have approved a plan to install exterior water meters on most new rpsidences, and at homes where the occupants are away during the normal working day. The remote meters also can be requested by homeowners who want theni installed by the water department. The cost of the outside water .meter is about $15 which is to Two lawsuits asking a total be charge to the property own-BH “** in damages against er Labor costs will be absorbed Little Prostitution in City of j Pontiac General Hospital were by the water department. ; filed yesterday in Oakland! --------------------------- (Continued From Page One) “It definitely is not a wide-open town,” he said. Raimo credited the lack of prostitution in Pontiac on the public’s attitude, law enforcement and court support. The most recent survey comparable to one taken about “We don’t find many of the d^TthMe noticable increase in prostitu- j!fys’ sa d ^auno> ood f ttynk tion » | the association is mainly respon- ---------------------sible for the reduction.” County Circuit Court. In one, Barbara Antczak of Highland Township is suing the > city-operated hospital for $255, The Association, which is sup- 000. ported by the United Fund in! most areas, She contends that she suf-conducts similar | fered permanent damage to her studies in some 100 cities an- left arm when a radial nerve Dually, with about half of them was punctured by a hypoder-requested by the U.S. P-m-l11^ M9dk. dlirtl|? treatmentjjni 1966, 112 this year,, Health Service. Crime Rise Setting Marks (Continued From Page One) • Assault with a knife — 42 166 after an anto accident in Dec- Iper cent increase, ember 1965. • Aggravated assault with The injection, she said;hands, fist, or feet - 14 last caused paralysis for a timejyear’22 thls year‘ but remaining numbness prevents the use of her arm. Housing Push 'Amazes'Kuhn 'Crime, Riot Controls Should Be Targets' LANSING (AP) — A Senate foe of an open housing bill said to another state office, the term I today he is “utterly amazed of which is to commence dur- with the obsession” of acting ing his term of,office as ajGov. William member of the Legislature,” Milliken and the A nationwide organization, the agency is headquartered in New York, and has branches in Atlanta, Ga.;;San Francisco; Arlington, Va.; and Ann Arbor, where Raimo has his offices in the Municipal Court Building. The other court action for $100,000 was started by David Allison of Clarkston. He claims that he suffered a severe and permanent disability because lie was hot diagnosed properly before an eye operation in August 1965. Burglary, forcible entry -|633 4n 1966, 871 this year. Unlawful entry, no force -246 last year, 305 in 1967. ★ * * • Attempted forcible entry -86 last year, 155 in 1967. ’ • Larceny, over $50 in 1966,923 this year. • Auto theft — 234 in 1966, 347 this year. 777 Kelley’s opinion held. 'Absolutely ridiculous,” DeStigter said. “I’ve read that opinion four of five times and * still can’t understand why they would want to disenfranchise anybody who now holds public office. ”■■■ trial J 1.16. Romney admin-1 s t r a tion seeking passage | of such a meas-ure. !,§ In a letter to ft Mililiken, Sen. §K ^ George Kuhn, R-West Bloom- ■Pn The 1963 ruling was inter-j field Township, KUHN preted as permitting a House repeated his call for legislation member to run for the Senate in a regular November election, but not in a special election for a Senate seat which the representative would assume before his House term expired. Jail for Forger “to preserve law and order in our streets.” Hie No. 1 concern of the 1968 regular legislative session, which begins Jan. 10, should be enactment of “anticrime and antiriot legislation,” he said. “It is with deep regret that I remind you of the administra-j rRAiun n*nine (adi p a tion s ,ack of “dequate attention \ T^reYand action on this subject since I joined the Senate a year ago,” Kuhn said. “To me, this has been the biggest disgrace and tragedy of both the regular and special sessions of the 1967 Legislature,” he added. ‘CRIME CRISIS’ He said the FBI now cites Detroit and Michigan in the forefront of the nation’s “crime crisis. Thorburn directed the four psychiatrists who recently examined Gravlin at Oakland County Jail to make another re-evaluation of his condition the day before his trial begins. ★ * ★ The four psychiatrists are Abraham Tauber of Pontiac, William Gordon of Detroit,^ George Evseeff of Royal Oak|T Willborn. 3*. of Muskegon and Edward Wisniewsky of|Hei8hts was sentenced in fed-Birmingham. eral court Wednesday to five • i _________________________ years each on four counts in- m . \/ . r* Jvolved in forgery of government 22 riOUSing VOt© 5>©t checks and three years on a tis one count of stealing from the j GRAND RAPIDS (AP) — The • mails. The sentences are to run City Commission is expected to concurrently. He was charged , ........ «i 34 vote next Tuesday on the city’ll with forging two checks, $193.10 2) it KVn",nvci,*v 2t 24 Pr°P°8ed open housing ordi- and $103, uttering and publish- 20 T? Miarnln£aach w ’o nance. Recent changes removed ing May 3, 1967, and stealing 3 New'mh« »n North vutnam nr mmim h* ,_JL___ ,, u. ’ n ;vie. ’“mam in lmi nag to impart SAIGON (UPI) A wisp of a min who worked as a pastry cook in London and once lived in New York's Harlem has become, as far as America is concerned, one of the most inscrut- al?n v After seven years of war hv rin0Wn^ct if not in name with the NL,Sn u t h^.ofr‘ends..a*|United States, Ho Chi Minh still not victorious. But neither is means “he who will be victors- he defeated. of the most stable Communist governments ever formed and certplnly one of the most enigmatic and exasperating figures to cross American' history. Today be calls himself Ho Chi Minh — “he who enlightens." He is president of North Vietnam, undisputed head of r than With a country no bigge the state of Washington, 18 million people who call him ‘Uncle Ho," ai army extending into South Vietnam, Ho CM Minh has fought and stayed put. But 1987 was a tough year for him. t-WAY BOMBARDMENT The United States bombarded North Vietnam two ways during the past year — with bombs to try to thrive the North Vietnamese to the conference table, and with diplomatic notes and messages to try to persuade them to sit down and talk. Since July 1965, according to fficial figures, U.S. warplanes have dropped about 990,000 tons of bombs on North Vietnam, or about 100 pounds per person In the country. In this year, step-by-step escalation hammered bridges, rail lines, power plants, steel and concrete factories, highways, and jet bases. Rivers were mined. U.S. warships patrolled North Vietnam's shore line leashed bombardments of shells and rockets on coastal targets. North Vietnam responded with pontoon bridges which could be used at night and removed during the day, rationing of electric power, massive work forces that repaired rail lines within hours and removal of of their MIG jets to bases in Red China. Ho’s government called all U.S. peace proposals “sheer deception" and demanded time and again an unconditional end to the bombing with no promise of talks. The outlook for 1968 is more of the same. These are Ho’s twilight years. He is nearing 78, and reports that he is in declining health have cropped up. 3 IN RUNNING There is no clearly defined line of succession in North Vietnam. At least three men would appear to be in the Premier Pham Van Dong,~ Defense Minister Vo Nguyen Glap and Le Duan, first secretary of ithe Lao Dong (Communist) party’s central committee. In normal times, North .Vietnam would be a modestly wealthy country. * i But'that was before the U.S. bombing started. North Vietnam was fairly well off, with coal, iron and chromium for iexport. By one U.S. estimate, North Vietnam by 1964 was exporting 1.7 million tons against 1 million tons of imports. ★ 4 By the same estimate, North Vietnam in 1967 has to t . four times as much as it sms f. out. Big steel and cement plants like Thai Nguyen no longer exist. Bombardment of power plants has blacked out or at least “browned out" other industries. A lot of people read slowly because they unconsciously ‘read out loud.” Although there may be no visible movement of the jaw or lips when reading silently, there still ' may be activity of the speech i All Specials Subject, To Stocks on Hand SIMMS OPEN 1DNITE \ We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. Be The First In Your Block To Get Next Year's Christmas Shopping Done Now! And At These Prices You Could Give Gifts to Everyone In Your Block ... AFTER-SANTA SIMMS m Listen! At these low prices you can buy . im the gift yQu wanted all the time but you CT -?iiS didn’t get. • . so ta heck with it— buy it I yourself and really Save some dough too! So you didn't get the gift you really wanted. Maybe you got a check or cash instead. Now what you do is combo,, down to Simms and buy what you want at greatly reduced prices. In fact, you'll have enbugh left to buy somebody ng Store H 1 You Get It For Less At Simms Famous Brands On Sale! Simms Money-Back Guarantee 1 Ladies’Seamless Hose £ Now shipment of hotter how, mesh or plow In “ now foil shades of cinnamon, jet brown, black, _ ” pray, beige or ton. Sizes 816 to II. Clothing - Main Floor mo# DoubleDeck Playing Cards A Aft $3.95 value, 100% all plosUc ploying cords, regular deck with fancy backs. Bridge size. Sundries — Main Floor Wr Pycopay Electric Toothbrush $19.95 volue, cordless electrli rechbrgeable toothbrush cleans teeth and stimulates gum*. Drugs — Main Flbor 933 "fi" Soup Spoon O F 1A A • Heavy quality stainless steel for every day 0 1 or company use. Stock up at thivlaw price. H H B H -2nd Floor n -PL Eiderion PailtleS Irrs. of 59c values. Briefv6r band leg ■ pantio* with double crotch. Machine wash- A able. Clothing — Main Floor in00 Boston L Pencil Sharpener AA Q $3.00 value, all metal sharpener with, hardened solid 0 w steel speed cutters. 5-year guarantee. Sundries — Main Floor Foam After Shave Lotion $2.50 value. Sparkling Foam after shave lotion by Schick. Your choice of barkwood or lime. Drugs — Main Floor F 'SIS’ Storage Drawers W A % 50% off regular price on famous moke pull-out _ A ^B — __ drawers to organize your kitchen. 9", 12" ' M l ■ V []rF and 14" size. -2nd Floor , Boys’Shirt-Pants Sets ■Reg. $3.98 values. Colorful print shirts with harmonizing black cord pants. Sizes 3 to 6. Clothing — Main Floor 22» Single Deck Playing Cards arV(< Dental Jet Spray glgfe jB&avs: 433 Car Top Carrier Model No, 300 Ultra Top Carrier rack that damps under the window frame, Holds luggage and equipment. » 1 —2nd Floor 8®7 Ladies’ Benchwarmers Worm melton benchwarmers with zipper front and hood. Warmly lined. $12.98 value, wine or blue in small only. Clothing — Main Floor 581 Cellophane Tape JSLr IB J (• 39c value Tuck brand cellophane tape, 1500xVi Inch _ / 9 ‘ size complete with handy dispenser. Sundries — Main Floor Ronson Hair Dryer $29.98 value, 'Coltfurs' model with unique 'hood with. H In e hood'. Fits over the largest rollers. 4 Temperature 1 settings. ' Drug* — Main Floor 433 24”x32” Framed Wall Mirror J 97 Clear mirror wilh Pearllte frame enhances the op- /1 gff | ( pearance of your home; makes your room look larg- —-B* ’ * •r. —2nd Floor JHL Children’s Snow Pants Reg. $2.98 values. Choice of 2 styles, with straps or elastic back. Gray or block. Sizes 3 to 6. Clothing — Main Floor [97 20-Paper Dack Dooks A ST C Values to 75c bundle of 20 assorted titles paper back a ‘ books. For long winter evening enjoyment. § VII Sundries — Main Floor ^ Aluminum Roaster Rack Holds the turkey or roast to the juicee stay In tha meat. Will not rusk —2nd Floor 77* Ladies’Assorted Slacks Values to $3.98. Choose from cottons, corduroys, fortrel and others in this group. Sizes 10 to 'IS, assorted colors. Clothing - Main Floor [99 Papermate Dali Pen 144 Reg. $ 1.95, genuine Papermate ball ptn with medl- 1 urn point and blue ink. With card to send in for FREE jumbo refill SundriesMain Floor Contour Massager $9.95 value, Contour massager that massages away tension and tired muscles with hair brush attachment for scalp massage. 633 75” Steel Shelving Units For garage, shop, basement wherever extra shelves are needed. Easy to assemble and strong. -2nd Floor 622 Men’s Insulated Sox RTpIAA First quolity thermo-lnsuloled sox keep feet worm •'"’Ito R H V. without wbight. Ankle length. Sizes lOVbto 12. . A H « H — Basement W y « JH. 500-Count Filler Paper a Reg. 98c value, stondord 5-hole filler paper fits ^B Jg • 2 or 3 ring binder. Limit 1 per customer. Sundries — Main Floor V Jumbo Gannent Bags $2.98 value, (umbo size garment bags of heavy gauge plastic holds 16 dresses, suits, coats etc, Drugs — Main Floor J33 Sunbeam WaR Clock Self starting wall dock with simulated files In cocoa or yellow colors. Factory guarantee —2nd Floor ]99 Sweat Shirts First quality and American "mode sweat shirts , .With short sleeves and U of M or Mich. Stole emblem. --Basement [90 Box 50 King Edward Cigars A2A $3.00 value, regular 6c King Edward Imperial Cigars, WLr America's largest seller. Tax included. Limit 2. Tobacco — Main Floor Print Cosmetics Dags $1.00 value, colorful. prjnt cosmetic bogs dutch style, large size with snap closures. ("nematics — Main Floor 49° •um Headlight Bulbs Series 4001 and 4002 sealed beam auto headlamp bulbs for dual systems. —2nd Floor CO Boys’Sport Shirts Long sleeve, first quality sport shirts In solid colors and prints. Broken size range .12 to 18. —Bosomont 791 4’/2-0z. Ronson Lighter Fluid 1A 6 , 33c value — 4Vi-fluid ounces Ronson llghtsr fluid for 1 ‘ all wick lighters. Tobacco-Main Floor JL W W Gillette Razor and Blades $1.00 value Famous Gillette super speed razor with •ample package of double edge blades. Drugs — Main Floor 63° Wagner Rug Shampooer A big help In the after holiday clean-up. Dispenses cleaner compound to thoroughly dean rugs and carpets. —2nd Fleer 497 Boys’Orion Sweaters Blue jacquard design on cardigan orlon Sweaters. Size 6 only. Orion washes so easily without shrinking. —Bosomont [00 3“ Chocolate Deans A Reg. 98c value, famous Meyers liquid center chaco- IJ r' late beans — choice of mint, cherry or rum flavors. V W Candy — Main Floor Ladies’ or Men’s Supp-Hose $4.95 value, your choice of Ladies' seamless hose or men's lightweight supphose. Supports leg muscles. Drugs — Main Floor 2»9 Ironing Board Pad & Cover All foam pad with flannel back ironing cover. Drawstring binding to fit snugly. Fits ell standard size' boards. —2nd Floor [88 Boys’Western Cut Jeans Fine first quality, 13% Oz. blue denim western cut blue {eons, proportioned sizes, regulars, slims, and 1 huskies 6 to 18. — Basement $00 13-Oz. Tin Mixed Nuts AC 79c value, Delicious fresh mixed nuts with peanuts. T'H Betty,brand. Limit 2. Candy — Main Floor 9 ’W Sardo Bath Oil $3.00 value, you get a $1 bar of soap fret with your purchase of Sardo bath oil. 1 Drugs — Main Floor |99 Tension Bath Shelf Unit Fils snugly from floor to celling, chrome shed unit with 3 shelve* and a towel ring. Triple plated chrome. ModenNor4.l6. -2nd Floor 427 Men’s Broadcloth Pajamas First quality, American made coat, style pajamas. Fine washable broadcloth, size A only. —Bosomont' [99 Ronson Butane Lighter Fuel Uf 98c value, Ronson Multifill butane fuel for gas r* lighters. M's cleaner and odor free. §J‘A,M Tobacco — Main Floor ^ K Coffee Maker 1 Model P-12, Automatic coffee maker makes 4 H to 8 cups «f good coffin. Chrome finish. 1 Bakelite Handle. —2nd Floor JH 0oo Gas Line Anti-Freeze WnMAC Your choke of Prestone Prime or Monarch Q ^M -Dry gasoline antl-lreese ends stalling In cold A A weather. —2nd Floor ” W Men’s Wool Pea Coats 75% wodl navy blue poo coat* with quilted rayon lining and 70% wool,interlining. Traditional black buttons or gold color.' ( —Basement 8°° Windproof Cigarette Lighter tofQlkO 98c value, 'Bowers' lightweight sure fire windproof lighter, choice of gold color or chrome, finish. USA B H ■ W Made. Tobacco-Main Floor ^ West Bend Teakettle Famous Trig* copper bottom teakettle with trigger action flH and pour spout. -2nd Floor 287 5-Drawer Quilted Chest Quilted vinyl covered died 1s 34" toll, 12" deep an<| 15" wide. Just wipes deen. —2nd Floor 499 Men’s Knit Gloves ' Warm knit, gloves with leather palm that grips tho wheel belter. One size fits all. r> — Basement K? Men’s Casual Pants lz|.A Size 34 wolst and 34 length only In these 'Big Yank* fl .ML toJF twill casual pants or green work pants. —Basement ' Plastic Garbage Bags - 98c value largo size plastic* garbage bags with twist closure, 20x14x56 Inch size. —2nd Floor 38° 10-In. Chicken Fryer Heavy gauge dub aluminum chicken fryer cooks foods to retain flavor and vitamin*, —2nd Floor 498 Boys’ and Girls’ Slippers Corduroy and Torry CI0H1 Klippwo In solid colon, plaid* and print*, loot style or loudeut, Slight Im of t&4f values. amvtosi dwMNin J47 Msg’s Turtle Neck T-Shirts Sint quality end Amorlean mod* long sleeve 100% Mo knit cotton T shirts m an assortment of solid color*. SixosS-M-l 1#9 Dual Plastic Pail IT SIMMS'* SB i ■af W. Bloomfield Added Revenue Makes It Worthwhile to Rochester Unkn^Bieclbn Urban Renewal: Paper Work, Problems WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The township will wait for a certification election before recognizing a newly formed union Imre, which seeks to bargain for the township’s full-time firemen. According to Supervisor John Doherty, the township is acting on the advice of its legal counsel in not recognizing Local 1721 of the West Bloomfield Township Firefighters Association of the International Association of Firefighters. Doherty said the legal advice was to wait until an election had been asked to certify the union as bargaining agent for the firemen. Donald Nelson, Local 1721 president, said such an election would be sought. ★ ★ ★ Nelson, meantime, charged that the township’s fire protection was suffering for a lack of manpower. STATION CLOSED He said the Green Lake station had to be closed last Saturday for lack of manpower and that the same station would probably have to be closed again this Friday for the same reason. Doherty said he had no personal knowledge that the station was closed last Saturday. He further denied there was a manpower problem. “Of course,” he explained, “we don’t have as much as we’d like, but we’ve got as much as we can afford.” ROCHESTER — Urban renewal — held out as a carrot at end of the stick for the blighted areas of cities and villages — is 3 years old here. ★ ★ ★ It has recently been undertaken in the village of Oxford in regard to its downtown business district. Both areas are learning that the ins and outs of government paper work and the problems involved in carrying out the projects are a whole new field of education. Held out as the prize is increased revenue from taxes. * * ★ Rochester, for example, expects. to benefit from increased revenue to the tune of about $28,000 a year once the project is completed. The schools could conceivably benefit by some $93,000. LONG, HARD ROAD But it’s been a long, hard road to follow. When Frank Kelly added the job of urban renewal coordinator to his duties of city assessor less than a year ago,-it was doubtful that bo visualized a schedule like the last year has revealed. Kelly has been up to his ears in relocation problems involving the 44 families who had to be moved from the city’s 26-acre Third Street Urban Renewal district. ★ * ★ For him it’s been a case of helping the families find homes, arranging relocation payments which have varied from nothing to $500, and seeing to the payment of moving expenses. BECAME LANDLORD It has also meant that once the homes were purchased by thC city, Kelly has become a landlord. It's to him that the former owners pay their rent and complain about services until they can find new homes. So far Kelly reports he has seen to the moving of $2 families in the area. He expects to have the remaining 12 resettled by March, and then he’ll be more fully, aide to devote, himself to the clearing of the land. Yesterday Ke was checking bridge construction on the relocation of Paint Creek, The creek moving and the new Third Street bridge are a package estimated at close to $100,000 of the total $1.2 million project. A new channel, dug from where the New York Central railroad tracks cross the creek straight across to where the Grand Trunk Western railroad tracks cross it, has accumulated more surface water than expected, Kelly, revealed. There’s also been some sewer problems. maze of Details It’s just meant more of the same added to the unbelievable amount of paper work required in such a project, Kelly said. Mrs. Vera Secrist, the secretary, handles most of that, but both give credit to George Wilhelmi, the city’s urban renewal consultant, for being able to find their way through the maze of details. Urban renewal has been a three-year job here and it’s not expected to be wrapped upjor another two years, Kelly said. ★ * a Once the families are all removed, grading of the area to allow installation of utilities will follow. ACCESS TO AREA That Kelly visualizes that the roads in the area will be taken care of next. Involved here is a new Second Street access to the area graded to allow easy movement of truck traffic down into the creek basin area. r There are 21 parcels of improved land involved in the project. Buyers have been found for most of them and the remainder are currently bound by tentative purchase agreements, the director said. Some The board, in still other action, has approved the purchase of a %-ton truck for the water department. Matthews-Hargreaves Chevrolet, 631 Oakland, Pontiac, was the lowest of five bidders at $2,932. A suggestion that a deposit to guarantee proper work be filed with the building permit will be studied. The second proposal is a local amendment to the Building Officials Conference of America code used by the township which would regulate lawn grades above curbed roads. A drainage problem along Ann Maria Drive was referred to the developers of Bedford Square Apartments, the township engineer and the township department of public works for investigation. Residents contend apartment construction has caused a change in the drainage field. A plea to maintain the township’s weekend road patrol on a year-round basis was made by Justice Arthur Kol-len. The policy of the township in the past has been to discontinue the service during the first three mgpths of the year. property nearby, claimed the hole was not in tiie alley, but seven inches away from it. He could have been termed a “trespasser,” they claimed. ★ ★ ★ But Judge Edward J. Keating ruled Wednesday the hole endangered persons using the alley and found the fence company negligent. , ★ ,★ * “This man’s feet are more than seven inches long," he said. “He could have been standing in the alley with his feet still hanging over the hole." To File for Funds GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - The City Commission' in Grand Rapids has authorised filing an application for a 12.2-mlllion federal loan for the Campau Commons 1 Housing project in the inner city and a 171,000 fed* eral grant for a general neighborhood renewal plan for the southern portion of the downtown business district. COLORFUL AREA RUGS Large 27x48-inch size * plush nylon area rugs ET SALE 2.89 1.77 Lady Pepperell’s finest quality white cotton muslin sheets Brighten your bedroom with Lady PeppereH’s fashion look prints Linen closet mainstay, these finest quality bleached white cotton muslin sheets have reinforced sides and deep hems. 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DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28; 1967 J&t /C/\ jh=10_ Commerce Secretary Sees 'New Wave of Prosperity' WASHINGTON (AP) — Com- “Inflation breeds more infla- merce Secretary Alexander Trowbridge predicted today a “new wave 6f prosperity” dur ing 1968 with significant gains in employment, income, and purchasing power. But he said his forecast depends on congressional enactment of President Johnson’s proposed 10 per cent income tax surcharge, a measure Trow- tion,” he 1 said. “If there are excessive wage and price increases in 1968, the chances are much greater for more wage profits and price pressures in 1969. ‘NOT WANTED’ “The longer an atmosphere of fast-rising wages and prices persists, the tougher the measures that will be needed to keep them in check,” he added. “And bridge said would keep the j want to assure you that the economy on an even keel “so jast thing we in government that we can continue to grow.” Lant is wage and price con. * * * Itrols.” He also urged both labor and He made the remarks in a management to show restraint talk prepared for a meeting of in seeking higher wages and'the American Marketing Asso-prices. ' ciation. Egypt Starts Suez Survey CAIRO (AP) — The Egyptianjthe east bank of the canal and government has started survey- the rest of the Sinai peninsula, ing the bottom of the Suez Canal: ★ ★ * to find out what sunken obstacles mut be removed to free 15 A1 Ahram reported earlier , . .. . ,. ..r e . that the canal would be re- foreign ships trapped m ^ at southern end to erway since the Arab-Israelijlet the ^pped shlps $£ T(Xjay war last June, the semiofficial jt said government was newspaper A1 Ahram reported 'tildying whefher the ships torIay' ... . . . should leave through the south- No time limit has been set for ern or the northern*end. the operation. A government spokesman said Wednesday that although the trapped ships would be released, the canal will not be reopened to other ships until Israeli troops are withdrawn from SUNKEN SHIP Obstacles that must It will probably be the last ofc ficial administration economic Trial of Man in '43 Killing Shifted Here Father Admits Killing His Four Daughters JONESBORO, La. (AP) — Alin, he shook hands with him and father who told neighbors he they talked a few minutes considered the world “too across the "'hall. Afterwards, wicked”, for his four little girlslthey walked out ^together and BAY CITY (UPl)-Bay'Coun>,lver«l ^eir bad®* to 8 fu-'got in the car.” ty Circuit Judge John Tyler "er^ JW^nead^Md wid| * * * projection until Johnson unveils'agreed yesterday to shift the156 had 'uUed them. Mrs. Edmonds and the coro- his budget and economic mes- murder trial of John Woos, 45, to! The father, Earl Clinton Wat- ner, Dr. John M. Robison, be-sage to Congress early next Pontiac on grounds the 24-year- 800 • a 31-year-old worker at ajcame upset at the sight of the year. old case had received too much'Jonesboro me®t Processing j bodies. Both went to their publicity in Bay County. 'company, was taken to a mental homes ill. - - - - - msp mo_ hospital for observation and ex- * * ★- Watson told officers the death scene was on Walker Road, about eight miles east Trowbridce said the cross na ‘ Tyler'granted a defense mo-hosPita! for observation and ex-irownnage said tne gross na-lt.^fnr ® mA amination. tional product-the value of all f0" f°r f cha"^ vetnuue-an(| tentatively scheduled the trial goods and services produced in the economy—should increase by at least $50 billion next year from 1967’s level of $785 billion. A STEP-UP’ “Even this minimum ’gain would mean a step-up in the rate of growth from 5% to 6V4 per cent,” he added. Trowbridge said the rosy fore- ist’s overriding question mark is the course of military and political events in Vietnam.' * * * The secretary said he’s confident Congress will enact higher taxes to help finance the war, for Jan. 16 at Pontiac. Tina Charmine, 9, and Karen _ . _ ! HH iHope, 8, had been killed with a Oakiand County authorities |3 and Faith Er]i^t 3| side over ‘“e case a ft e r it had ^en strangled. moved to Pontiac, the j u d g e , .. said - a | Townspeople said Watson fre- t quently announced that the Tyler also granted, a motion! “world is too wicked a place far to suppress physical evidence inmy kids to grow up in!” He bad the case, on grounds the evi-j talked of studying for the minis-dence was obtained by illegal try search apd sefatfe. He delayed pRETENDEDVBrr Watson told his wife, Margaret Ann Watson, Wednesday morning that he was taking the four girls to visit his mother. Later he drove to the funeral home, woned by Mrs. E. L. Ed- a ruling on another defense mo- tion seeking suppression of ad 24 years ago if theater man- head off inflation and to keep in-jager Floyd_Ackerman during a terest rates down. robbery. He pleaded guilty to a monds. A vast increase in retail sales murder charge, and was sen-j “I didn’t know anything was likely to overshadow other Itenced to life imprisonment. wrong,” Mrs. Edmonds said, economic developments nextl^g^ TRIAL WON year, VMratogg be present. were filed fiofe! . H .......... advice. units compared with 7.4 million At the time Ackerman was' units in 1967. developments next|NEW TRIAL WON j“He appeared calm. I asked if Trowbridge said, while u„_______ , ■ ___ej could help him.” j .. .’ ' I He< won a new trial on grounds . . ed to bounccTback Sjj| SuHon^*,,^ not have sufflc,ent leSal| she quoted Watson as saying, “I’Ve had an accident. I’ve I slain, Woos was on parole on a roy babies. A rise in" hming starts shoJ^S"* murder tartil olfers arriyed. He prompt a sizable gain in sales of | _________________ |was dressed m slacks and cleared include at least one {household appliances,' he added,! The earliest Halloween cele-|spprts 3acket-sunken ship, the Egyptian oil as the private economy—rather brations were held by the:SHOOK HANDS tanker Magid, and several uni- than any new substantial in- Druids in the second century, “He didn’t have anything to dentified objects that accumu- crease in federal spending—sti- B.C., in honor of Samhain, Lord say after that,” Mrs. Edmonds lated during the fighting. Imulates the economy. |of the Dead. Isaich “When the sheriff walked north Louisiana community but officers were unable to find anything to indicate the children welt killed there. Watson, was discharged from Central State Hospital in Pine-ville six weeks ago after undergoing psychiatric treatment. He was taken to the East Louisiana State Hospital in Jacksoh for treatment and observation. He will remain there until the next grand jury convenes, probably in March. Friends and neighbors said he recently showed signs of deep depression. Fundral services for the little girls wej-e set for this afternoon at the Southside Baptist church in Jonesboro, which Watson attended. The services will be conducted by the Rev. J. W. Kennedy, one of two ministers at the church. He was overcome emotionally at the deaths and at first thought that he could not Buy Now and Save! LADIES' SHOES Naturalizers dress i woo Regular to 18.99 ■ ■ CASUALS MO Regular to 15.99 W Life Stride dress imo Regular,to 15.99 IV CASUALS V90 Regular la 12.99 M Miss America DRESS A90 Regular to 12.99 V CASUAL JK90 Regular to 11.99 9 Hush Puppies MEN'S SHOES Porto Peds Oxford* and Slip-one ■ p Oft Regular ta 24.99 | 9 Nunn Buss Regular to 21.99 18" Pedwin 890 Hush Puppies Regular to 12.99 ^99 CHILDREN'S SHOES CHUmS SHOES Bettor Braun and Robin Hood fay*, to! 1.99 8" ; Hush Puppies WS* 3** to 5** Use A Lion Charge Plan with option terms SHOP EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. Ladies' Skirts, Sweaters, Slacks, Jackets Regular to 15.00 4" to 6" Men's Suits Regular to 100.00 *62.. *89 Regular to 150.00 *99 to*126 |clearance of famous || brand shoes for the | entire family Now io the fimo to stock up on shoos for oweryono in the family ... come in whilo our selection It complete. You'll find woman's-shoos with tho lower hauls, blunter tons, colors and materials you've boon looking for; sturdy, well-built shoot for children; and handsome, rugged shoes for man. Buy now and scoop up tho savingsl Ladies' Fur Trimmed Coats Regular to 125.00 *49.. *99 Children's Snow Suits Regular to 30.00 99 to |999 Men's Topcoats Regular to 135.00 *62 .0 *105 Ladies' Untrimmed Coats Regular to 60.00 *39.. *44 Ladies' Better Dresses Regular to 30.00 8" to 17" TJm m QUESTION: Why is California called the Golden State? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: In California, 1848 and 1849 were great years. “Gold discovered at Sutter’s MM” was the cry everywhere. Shining nuggets had been found where John Sutter built his mill on the American River, and people began pouring in to stake gold claims. The great gold rush of 1849 was on, and all America was linking the words “gold” and “California” together. Soon Californians were finding other golden thing, besides metal nuggets. When irrigation came, desert soil turned into magnificent farm land and soon there were golden oranges, wonderful fruits and vegetables which brought showers of gold to the growers. By 1910, the gorld mine of moving picture production had made Los Angeles the world’s motion picture capital. The Golden Gate International Exposition of 1939-40 brought attention not only to the spectacle of the golden sun sinking westward in the glittering Pacific, ,but also to the golden opportunities opening in California in every field of effort. Dental Plan Eyed for Gl Dependents By JERRY T. BAULCH AP Newsfeatures WASHINGTON—The Pentagon is now studying just how far Unple Sam should go in providing cost-sharing dental care for the wives, children and other dependents of servicemen. A big factor is the cost. ★ ★ ★ Already, a basic, $100 million-a-year- plan has been approved by a House Armed Services subcommittee headed by Rep. James Bryne, D.-Pa. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., has introduced a bill in the Senate. The Defense Department is starting a survey on costs by sending a questionnaire to 10,000 military men in this country and to 7,000 civilians working on military installations. The civilians are included so the survey team can compare the costs and kinds of care available to -military families with those available to civilians in the same localities. Some of the questions will include the number of members of each family, how much dental care costs the family and how far the family has to go to its dentist. Unlike the Medicare law that went into effect this year for military dependents, the Bryne committee dental program would not take in retired servicemen and their dependents. But the report suggested that might come in the future. Under the basic plan, civilian dentists wobld handle the work load; almost all dental procedures would be covered except purely cosmetic repairs; there would be cost-sharing with different rates for various procedures; there would also be a sliding scale so those in the lower ranks would get more help with dental bills; to encourage .children in gopd dental habits the deductible would be lowef1 for those under age 14. BAULCH No Free Mail Extension The free airmail privileges will still be restricted to men in the Vietnam war area. One of the bills to die in this session of Congress, killed by the Senate, would have extended the privilege to all servicemen overseas. The Senate Post Office Committee expects, however, to take up next year the granting of additional mailing privileges to servicemen hi combat zones. ” ★ ★ * Incidentally, there is some confusion about the free mail rule for the ben in Vietnam. It’s limited to letters and tape recordings—not .packages. AT 4TH CLASS RATE As for packages, they may be airmailed by servicemen overseas anywhere in the world at the low fourth class rate if they are marked “SAM”—meaning space available parcel. They are flown to a U.S. port, where regular fourth-class surface transportation takes over. ★ ★ ★ Civilians can mail a package to a serviceman through the same system in reverse. Have the post office stamp it “SAM.” It'll go normal transportation to the port of embarkation and then be flown overseas when space is available. A Tough Row to Hoe BOLTON, Kan. UF> - Mrs. Sal-lie Gullick, 68, a widow, reports that she has harvested and sold the only cotton grown in Kansas this year. ‘ « * * , * She says the 4,500-pound crop grown on the 17-aqre farm she operates left rpuch \o be desired. ’'There was to' much rain . . I didn't have t team and the necessar^ 24-inch sweeps to drain the water off the rows.” But she is not discouraged. '“I just love to plant, chop and watch the plants grow,” she said. "Next year I'll be at it again.” ...._____TlIE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 Area Night Spots Set to Ring In 1968 By ED BLUNDEN Area New Year’s Eve celebrations of the imbibing type . will take on a different twist this year due to the state law on Sunday drinking. Though liquor will not be served until midnight, area night Spots reportedly have taken on extra Supplies of beer and champagne to stave off thirst until the nrgw- hour. Bars will be permitted to stay open until 4 a.m, with an extra half hoar to get everyone | Sarajane I kept for years. She sent it to sible to print a similar column I Serwin and : me and asked that I reprint it titled, "Things Every Woman* Terry Mark It was concerned with what a Should Know About Her Hus- Silver I husband should know about his band?” I think it would be well Thai*- t wife. worth the time and the space. parents As a result of this 1 received Her« toes: j .are me letters from many husbands. • Men like a wife who makes "TnV I Here is one of them. .life seem easy and uncompli-| Oak Park, ★ * ★ cated and lets him know that g| j Dear Mrs. Logman, [he is most important of every- I I have Just read your article thing in her life. We often hear in today’s paper concerning the!P®°P,e *»y. “I don’t know what 12 tips to husbands. I found ithe sees in her. She is down-quite stimulating. I feel that ev- riSht mousy.” She is mousy! nt w"~v~.u ... n . ery husband should read them,1*® 8 to*> qot really, be- 1 €W IOTK- Unite rOir Of know them, and pat them into ®888® 8l>» sincerely feels that practice,Ip improve his relation- way- i ship with his wife and makej • Men like a little peace and their marriage really wonder-jquiet, a warm welcome when I •fuL ^ v I they first return home in the Our Lady of the Lakes Cath- You can infer from what I late afternoon from work. They I olic Church was the setting bave 831(1 that’my goal in life are aware that their wife may Tuesday evening for the wed-is to make it as happy and re-have had her problems too, and' ding of Nancy Marie McCulloch warding as possible. I think want to help, but not the first and Cpl. Michael T. Bradley, this starts at home, although minute they stick their head ip USMC. unfortunately many others do the door. * ★ ★ not seem to think so. | • Men' hate nagging (who skl11 Mountains followed recentjwitz. For the evening wedding, the 1 want to thank you for print- doesn’t?) and also highly emo-ivows for Sara’ane Serwin and' Ushering for the ceremony daughter of the L. J. McCul- in8 that article. It serves as a tional conversations. Usually, »Terry Mark Silver I were Bruce Serwin of Ann lochs of Cambrook Lane wore 11 —............. i a velvet ensemble fashioned with a high rise waist, long sleeves'^ and a cathedral train which flowed from the shoulders. I HEADPIECE ' Jj Four satin orchids, trimmed [with tiny seed pearls and crystals, capped the bride’s floor length veil. For her bouquet she carried red roses and white carnations. Honor attendants for the vows were Florence A. Ford and Patrick Bradley. Other members of the wedding party were Mrs. Michael L. McCulloch, Lynne Springer, Mary Ann Vulckovich, Dennis P. McCulloch, Gary Priemer and Dean Sovey. | Pair Honeymoons East After Detroit Wedding A wedding trip to the Cat-*of Detroit and Rosalind Suro- man will be willing to ’talk! For the ceremony In the Arbor, Dr. Richard Serwin qf !about a problem reasonably a!Plaza Room of th® Pontchar-1Montgomery, Ala., Larry Kan-day later but not in the heat oftraln Hotel ta T^troit, the bride tor of New York City ami emotion. Actually, about half wore an A-line Alaskine sheath.|David Weinstein of West the time or more the wife will P*arl h«a(lin8 by Christos ofjOrange. N-J. Richard Weil of find that it isn’t worth talkino Gallna highlighted the gown at Fairlawn, N.J. and William C0l,8r’ CUffs and scalloped iMoskhowitz of Mt. Vernon, N.Y. cooled off. cuffs and scalloped j* hem. [concluded the list of ushers Most men are not attract- Jl,USi°n.Veil beareMwhfs 88 Prior to their honeymoon de- Bible mounted with Stephanotis p ed to overweight, but they pre- capp^, w}'h 8 la(r«e bow She carried her confirmation j fer a few curves to bones. | i • They are attracted to vi-!f^‘ • . ., , I ;Sty8eWomliVneineSShin 8 ^arkI® ^ Detroit and i r iy T8 ^he ri Charles Kaufman of Mll- I ’i5 nJ, Party- u « iW8uke®’ wis- served as honor • They like a woman who is attendants ■ .natural, not putting On an act. ★ ★ w IThey appreciate Uttlej Bridesmaids were Mrs. [thoughtfulnesses or an unex-Bruce Serwin of Ann Arbor, [pected gift just as a woman Mrs. Richard Serwin of Mont-does- 'gomery, Ala., Suzanne Serwin The bridegroom is the son of . . .. Mrs. H. J. Campbell of Pitts- An earlV May wed-burgh, Pa., and the late James ding is planned by Linda |- Bradley. Quick and Robert S. ~ S? Akroyd. Parents of the Before uring chemicals drugs, engaged couple are the and pesticides, read the labelsi M T /-. •i__fix u j carefully and follow the direc-| Ouick^ of Orchard 1 Lake and Dr. and Mrs. To Reside in Georgia parture, the newlyweds were honored at a reception. The bride, daughter of Harry Serwins of Oak Park, formerly of Pontiac, and the bridegroom, son of Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Silver of New York, will make their home in Brooklyn, N.Y. tions exactly for proper use, storage and disposal. | Make it an OLD I FASHION CHRISTMAS ! with a Handmade Gift from Cecil Akroyd of Bloomfield Hills. Miss Quick's fiance is a graduate of Heidelberg College. Reinforce Area Before Resewing To mend a hole where a button i has been torn off, cut a patch of heavy material a little larger Ross E. Bowkers Are Wed f” ■ hole 1 patch between the garment and the facing, and baste around Ens. Ross Edwin Bowker.i an A-line sheath of peau de^.0,^1**,edge ofthe Patch t0 USN, and his bride, nee Deb-soie. A Dior bow capped herjnoT? v,ace' orah Stackable, win make their elbow length veil. Using the sewing machine, j stitch in circles and criss-cross home in Athens. G«. following Honor attendants for the eve-|«lLri»tartX owVthrn»^h “r.SSN!F,»'p “ KeS Mhvrm V,re.MS ]^SmTS^TmW Dr. ,„d Mr,.|LE“‘ma“ ^ Lyl* «* button on Janet and Linda Bowker and erved as 6465 Williams Lake Rd. Two Blocks Wost of Waterford Drivo-ln Our prlcss art Old Fathloned. tool T || r . R?" TS^ckable Park k?kel Janet ana una Tell Engagement1*™' Ind,epf »ne T,7"sh,p saiiv Sutherland 07 a and son of the Miles W. Bow-lu .. . Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bemis kers. of Madison, N.J. of Bald Mountain Road in Pon- wdd recently in the First Meth- Jay Eastman. tiac Township announce the en-j0^81 Church, Clarkston. gagement of their daughter, Bet-| FLOWERS ty M. of Troy, to Phillip G. Carrying a bouquet of Eu-Holliday of Broadview, 111. Vowsicharis lilies and caladium foil- Know* your directions when ' bridesmaids with ushers Russell pointing inside. Ceiling wer® Strieker, Gil LeFreniere and painted frst, across the width 1 are slated for fall of 1968. Before they departed for their wedding trip, the bridal couple were honored with a reception I age, the bride was attired injat the Kingsley Inn. of the room so that you always have a wet edge to work to. Start walls in a top corner and work downward on strips as wide as the arm can reach comfortably. JACOBSON’S WHITE SALE NOW IN PROGRESS save now on wrinkle-resistpnt, no-iron bedspreads from Fieldcrest's "Fashions of the World" collection... a colorful group of prints and sculptured patterns for master bedroom, guest andchildren's rooms... machine wash-and-dry cotton/rayon blends with matching cotton drapes that require minimum care. We show two prints from the collection that alk6 includes Tony the Tiger, Class Boats, International Road Signs in t^in size,' Flower Bed, Queen's Garden, i Lazy Daisy, ah# Imperial Rose in twin and full size. A. Pony Boy: 81" x 110" twin, 19.00 48" x 36" drape. e£00 B. Inn Signs: 81" x 110" twin, 19.00 48" x 36" drape, 6.00 Jacobsons Birmingham Open Thurs. and Frj, 'til 9 THE PONTIAC, PllKSS, THURSDAY. DE SCKMBKR 28, 1967 B—0 Bride elect Joette Kathleen Schultz and her fiance, Ronald Gene Brock, are planning aw early May wedding. Miss Schultz, a freshman at the University of Michigan, is the daughter of Mrs. Anita Schidtz of Clarkston and Joseph Schultz of Rossdale Drive. Her fiance is the son of the Harold Brocks of Guyette Street, Independence Township. The engagement of Donna Louise Langdon to Fireman 3.C. Charles M. Wallace, USN, is announced. Parents of the betrothed couple are Mrs. Daniel W. Hall of Frembes Street and Donald W. Langdon of Elkinford Street, White Lake Township and the Charles E. Wallaces of Lola Court. Miss Langdon is a junior at Western Michigan University. Her fiance is currently serving in Vietnam. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Harris of Willett Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Edna E., to Seaman Recruit JohntFahrner, USN. He is the son of the Fred Fahrners of Kenilworth Street and is presently serving at Great Lakes, Naval Training Center. A midsummer wedding is planned. ■Ek&i The engagement of Beverly Ann Kitzmiller to Floyd A. Miles Jr. is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin B. Kitzmiller of Rochester Road, Oakland Township. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd A. Miles of West Columbia Street. Miss Kitzmiller is a graduate of the Shapero School of Nursing in Detroit. A May wedding is planned. A September wedding is planned by Diane Dean Derrickson and Seaman Appren. Thomas George Mclnally, USN. Parents of the engaged couple are the Harry F. Derricksons of Allentown, Pa. and the George F. Mclnallys of Rochester. The bride elect is a student at the University of Montana. Her fiance is currently stationed in Brunswick, Ga. NEW YORK (UPI) — Resi-jThursday ‘afternoons off and en-dents of Bermuda get Thursday joyed the custom so much it afternoons as well as the week-,*188 remained-ends off, reports Today’s Secre- tary, a publication for gal Fri- AerOSOl Safety days. ' * * * S if NEW YORK (UPI) - Some The custom began years ago reminders from the aerosol in-when there would be one ship dustry on proper use of these in port from Monday un til'containers: Read the label. Keep Wednesday, another from Fri-' cleaning products.separate from day to Saturday. Retired Teachers Enroll as Students DALLAS, Tex. OB — Two sisters, Miss Stella LaMond and Miss Lila LaMond, are no longer teaching school, but they are back in the classroom as students. ★ * ★ Stella retired in 1959 after teaching art for 30 years at Southern Methodist University and Lila retired 12 years ago after having taught school in China. Now they are both taking courses at Dallas College of SMU. YEAR END SALE 2 DAYS ONLY on DuPont “501 Nylon Carpet by Bigelow Your Choice of Colors-Plains - Tweeds - Patterns Port Schedule Starts Custom Recent Bride Carries Holly in Bouquet Ferndale Free Methodist Church Was the setting Saturday for the marriage of Helen Louise Wheeler and LeRoy Duane Mjovig. Carrying a bouquet of Chrysanthemums centered with a corsage of orchids and holly, the bride wore a velvet ensemble highlighted with lace appH ques and crystals. * ★ ★ A satin train complemented the Empire gown. To secure her English illusion veil, the bride chose a matching lace headpiece. Honor attendants for the ceremony were Rebecca Belson and Romaine Erickson. Laurie Atwood and Scott Hutchins! were flower girl and ring! bearer. WEDDING PARTY Other members of the wedding party were bridesmaids! Jan Mjovig, Mary Moore and! Janice Banks with ushers' Joseph Suzor, Raymond Mjovig, Gerald Martin, Phillip Wheeler and David Smith. A reception at the VFW Hall in Madison Heights followed the vows. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Charles Wheeler of Blast Auburn Road, Avon Township and the late Mr. Wheeler. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Lawrence Mjovig of Muskegon and the late Mr. Mjovig. H Shoe Sale food aerosols. Store, all aerosols away from direct heat. Keep So people started taking the {them out of reach of children. 1 Brass Hardware To remove dirt and tarnish from old brass hardware,, unscrew it from the furniture, brush - scrub it with salt and vinegar (mixed- in a ceramic dish), then wash it with soap or detergent suds and wipe it dry after rinsing. The next step is to oil the screws, and reattach the gleaming pulls to the fur-Initure. Our Entire Stock of Dress Shoes, Little Heels, Sports and Casuals! Now's the time to add several pairs of this season's greatest looks to your wardrobe at a tiny price. For campus, for casuals, for dress, for nighttime fun .. .vou'll find just what you want in the latest brights and basics, exciting suedes and patents, trims and heels and textured looks. AIR STEPS Regularly to 17M NOW $1190 "Tempos mguiaitytoi6.99NOW $1190 IpiflH PARE SB regularlyto12.99N0W $99° FLATS and SPORTS regularly to 10.99NOW $790 0^ Open Every Evening *til 9 BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI rcrrrrrrrrmrrYYrrirra^ FREE NUKES h GREAT GIFT, TOOI DuPont “501” NYLON byBIGELOW $4?s sq. yd. *595 sq. yd. ?69S sq. yd. This Vacuum Sweeper With the Purchase of 20 Sq. Yds. or More of 4 Kitchen Queen CHATEAUBRIAND Kitchen Caiyet HOSPITAL CLEAN! Superior bacterial control REAL COMFORT! Exclusive kitchen cushion WATERPROOFED RACK! spills wipe right off stop m NOW AT OCR NEW LOCATION Corner of Perry and Pike Streets IN. Perry St. FE 4-2531 Open Tonight ’til 9 P.M. 'oweQu/pttUiq 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS Elevator Service to All Floor* Provincial Colonial Traditional Modern All by America's Leading Manufacturers YEAR END Okwmti The Big Event You’ve Waited for! Hurry for Best Selections FREE DELIVERY! Quantities are limited, and many are one of a kind and will be sold on a first-come basis. Sorry, no mail or phone orders on sole itemsl DONT MISS IT! Our Greatest Furniture Sale of j the Year! YOU’LL SEE SAVINGS GALORE THROUGHOUT THE STORE Save on Sofas Chairs Dining and Bedrooms Mattresses Lamps Occasional Tables Accessories EVERYTHING FOR YOUR HOME N OPEN MON., THURS., FRIDAY TIL 9 P M. Phone- FE 2- Hit l tit,nn»nt.i.,i 1AJUUULAJL 4231 “jom must be satisfied- UULOJUUULSULSUUULOJUUUULOX NO MONEY DOWN 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH Convenient Credit Terms Arranged •this we guarantee" A Atmnui B—i THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 Only 40 Selected Stidents Trained Each fear by the Famois Instructor imi Applications Now Being Considered hWs School of Beauty Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 Marguerite AAldrich Becomes Mrs. Patterson 1890 1895 1910 1920 Patterned Stockings Add Color to Viewing Pastime TONIGHT 8:151 CHARLEY'S AUNT [ By HELEN HENNESSY NEW YORK (NBA) — About three years ago the ailing hosiery industry got a shot in the arm. I The life-giving prescription Enjoy New Year’s Eve DINNER AT ■fetfe OPEN UNTIL 4 AM. Sunday Breakfast Buffet 9 A.M. ’til Noun Friday Night Shrimp Fry 5 P.M. ’til 10 P.M. was the patterned stocking — jbe on to anything “new" did the gal behind the hypo the a fine job of making anyone young, the daring, the unin- who resisted the trend feel out hibite4 lass who would rather of things, switch than be called old hat. j recall reading one comment Fashion reporters, quick to | by a fashion writer about how drab and monotonous it was to watch hundred of beige legs ascend a department store escalator. A picturesque phrase— but I agree, a boring pastime. Yet it is a fact that any hosiery designer with the double asset of an elderly lady relative and a curiosity about what went on underneath the ankle-length hemlines of her youth could have given the in Bloomfield Hills WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD—FE 4-6630 CLOSED NEW YEAR’S DAY industry this needed boost years Jnjc The truth is that our current, tricky, colorful leg coverings aren’t’ “new" at all. As far back as the late 1800s fancy gaihs were “in." In the Gay Nineties, lace stockings tripped their way through the Turkey Trot. Today they Swim, Banana, Frug and Watusi. (Or do they any more? I can keep up with the hosiery, not the writhings.) PLAIDS Plaid hose may strike a bright, n$w note on campus today, but “new it isn’t. In 1865 [ the ladies wore plaid stockings to indulge in a little mild ten- pearled orange blossom crown capped the bride’s silk illusion veil. She carried white camellias, small white rosebuds I and Christmas greens. I Laura Aldrich was maid of ! honor for her sister with Lawr-sleeved flannel nightgowns. |ence Patterson performing best The cotton stockings of the man honors. Cadet Joseph E. early 20s gave way to lisle. Aldrich, USMC, West Point, Then when skirts went up, lisle N.Y., and Michael Aldrich ush-gave way to silk. Next came ered. nylon and everyone delighted! ★ ★ * in the sleek, sheer beauty that) Archie J. Patterson II, son of clung and enhanced dainty the senior A. J. Pattersons of ankles and trim calves. And Rochester, and his bride are no one complained about the; honeymooning in the south, monotony of beige legs. MRS. ARCHIE J. PATTERSON II The Jewelers’QufiljWatck Vantage* DIVISION Of HAMILTON MATCH CDMfAMt OVER 350 STYLES FOR MEN, LADIES, YOUTHS from 12.95 WMTCR0FT JEWELERS 7 N. SAGINAW DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FE 8-4391 BLOOMFIELD PLAZA MAPLE at TELEGRAPH 851-1022 F. from Fiancees, Risque, our owh Win-Debs and Pace-setters, Sandler, Barefoot Originals, Cavaliers, Mr. Easton. ((Jill l(clm Cm( semi-annual sale of bras and girdles 1.99 to 7.95 Long, line, bandeau bras by Olga, Youthcraft, Exquisite Form, Warner, Formflt Rogers, Peter Pan, Jantzen, Hollywood Vassarette, Playtex, more. 3.19 to 10.99 Choose your favorite style girdles from the same famous-makers. Save on regular 2-way styles and panty styles in overage, long, extra-long. (AJhaWtm sale pile car coat, stretch pants coat 18.99 pants 6.99 Fashiony car coats In acrylic pile or cotton suede cloth with pile lining. Rayon/nylon .stretch pants have detachable stirrups. In black, brown or navy. Misses' sizes. special purchase two-tone dresses of textured wool 14.97 Famous-maker dresses * at great savings. Here, two from a collection of favorite shapes, colors; in misses' sizes. sale mink-trimmed ottoman coats 89.90 Cognac/black wool ottoman rib in double-breasted or side-close styles with natural mink collar, in misses' sizes. P-Jwj* ••b.lW »• »h»w country o» 1 PONTIAC MALL f’GL-HURON CENTER lUVHK&tm PONTIAC MALL GMf TEL-HURON CENTER THE PONTIAC PftESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 The William V. Maules pf Bathurst Street announce the betrothal of their daughter, Joyce Anne, to Robert L. Dawson. He is the son of the Galen L. Dawsons of Rowley Street and a junior at Northern Michigan University. August vows are planned. An April wedding is planned by Christina Jan Bays and Milton Duane Hubbard. Parents of the betrothed couple are the Louis W. Bays of East Mansfield Street and the Milton G. Hubbards of Hillman. Mr. and Mrs. George Tuorin of Wixom announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Joy, to Karl E, Santti. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arne Santti of Southfield. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde E. White of West Ann Arbor Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Cheryl Elaine, to Steve Goodman. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Goodman of Jordon Street. A spring wedding is plannedby Brenda Joyce Damron and Marvin Workman. The bride elect is the daughter of Mrs. Patton Willis of Cameron Street and the late Windell Damron. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Cluster Workman of Logan, W. Va., and the late Mr. Workman. Campus Chapel Is Setting Kanley Chapel on the campuslare the John Provosts Of Ot-of Western Michigan University sego and the Herbert Wettlaufe was the setting Friday for vows of Edgefield Avenue. spoken by Linda Diane Provost! —„ t ---------------- and William Herbert Wettlaufer, I ii> ^ i.. both recent graduates there. | /ViNTOr wUOIIty ,, * r * * , a | Test mirror quality before buy- Honor attendants for the after- fog. A finger test will reveal noon vows were the bride’s sis-,the thickness of the glass and ter, Susan, and the bridegroom’s beveled edges. Try mirror place-brother, John W. jment before hanging to see that Prior to their departure for a it reflects just the beauty and honeymoon in Florida, the hew-icolor you want to be seen. ly weds were honored with a ------------------------ dinner reception. j Use a nutcracker to open Parents of the bridal couple bottles with tiny or sticky lids. What’s Special Friday Night? ■fetfe SHRIMP FRY Served Family Style I UALL YOU WANT9 BROILED SHRIMP, served with Drawn Butter. DEEP FRIED -SHRIMP, with home-made Snappy sauce. Huge TOSSED SALAD. Choke of POTATOES, Hot HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 5 to 10 P.M. [ in Bloomfield Hills Woodward at Square Lake Rd. ! *■. —1 BUY! SELL! TRADE! |USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI A summer wedding is planned by Gladys Irene Carter and William D. Heiligenthal. She is the daughter of Mrs. Marie Carter of Dewey Street and Herbert Carter of Richmond Street. The, prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Raymond Heiligenthal of Tasmania Street and the late Mr. Heiligenthal. Blue Favored in Shirt Sales NEW YORK (UPI) - The white shirt may be going the way of the old stick pin. Today’s favorite color is blue. So reports one major shirt-maker and haberdasher, A. Sulka & Co., which finds that fewer than four of every 10 shirts it sells is white, com- pared with eight of every 10 five years ago. ★ * ★ Merchandise manager Louis DiLonardo attributed the change to the growing popularity of more elaborately colored and styled suits which demand shirts of stronger contrast. It’s an open and shut case. This dress is a winner. The front view is deceptively simple -| A line with a slight flair of skirt. Then conies the finale — and there’s enough back Interest here to steal any show. So steal it in a pale linen, or a heavy (Uque — and try the shorter version, if you’re feeling even more daring. Spadea’s exclusive ready-to-wear sizes produce a better. ' fit. .. I .. * * * See chart for size best for you. I Junior Size 13 requires 2T/« yards of 36” fabric with or without nap for Long Length Dress. I To order pattern NS-238, state size; send $1.25 plus 10 cents for sales tax and postage. Pat-Item Books No. 29, No. 30, No. 31 land Booklets 1, 2, 3 and 4, Sewing Tips by World Famous Designers, are available for 50 cents each plus 10 cents postage per book. Duchess of Windsor Pattern Book is available for $1.00. Include your name, address and zip code and mail to SPADEA, Box 323, Dept. PX-6, Milford, Jersey, 08848. (Make checks payable to SPADEA). 'S3 The first recprded use of wine in therapy was around-.400Q B.C. on the tomb of Ptah-Hotep. A " the: stormcoat makes a great coat Plaid or tweed wool stormcoats in assorted fashion right colors. All with pile linings and dyed mouton collars. *58 sizes 38 to 46 and 14V2to24yi &ecBr!M Order by mail or phone 682-7500. Add 35c for delivery plus 10c for CO.D.'s and 4% tax PONTIAC MALL a representative selection of fine stormcoats Is available at our other stores 1520 Woodward — Northland — Eastland and Westland These Low Discount Prices-Essy Credit Terms Every Conceivable Style in Those Price Groups X 50% to 75% Off Reg. $45......... now * 274 Reg. *75________now * 39^ Reg. *115 ...... now * 65 Reg. *175........ now * 85 Reg. *225 .......now *125.* Reg. *275.......now *15fl Reg. *325 ...... now *I75~* Total Weight Diamond Set, Reg. $595 *295 BUY! SELL! TRADEJ , . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Bra and Girdle SALE OUR MOST FAMOUS MAKERS UP TO Vz OFF Famous maker bras and girdles you will see in our regular stock for twice the pricel Large group just arrived for this sale only. Newest colors, latest styles and sizes for teens, moms and grandmoms. BRAS r.„ New Youthcreft Voisarette WorneF Maidenform Cetsord Peter Pan Formfit 4.00 2.99 5.00 3.99 6.00 4.99 6.00 4.79 4.00 2.99 3.00 2.49 4*00 3.19 5.00 3.49 2.50 1.99 5.00 3.99 4.00 2.99 5.00 3.49 3.50 2.79 6.00 4.79 Yeuthcraft . Vesserette . Warner Maidenform . Costard Formfit Magic Lady. GIRDLES Reg. .............. 11.00 .............. 5.00 ................ 6.00 ................ 11.00 ................ 11.00 ................ 9.00 13.50 12.00 13.00 14.00 15.00 9.00 14.00 8.00 4.00 5.00 6.00 7.00 New 8.99 2.49 2.99 5.49 8.99 6.V9 8.99 9.99 10.99 9.99 10.99 11.99 12.99 6.99 10.99 4.79 3.19 3.99 4.79 5.59 • ALL SALES FINAL • NO LAYAWAYS • NO PHONE ORDERS • ROYAL OAK, 314 W, 4th • FERN DALE, 220 W. 9 MILE • BIRMINGHAM, 142 W. MAPLE • PONTIAC, TEL-HURON • ROCHESTER, NORTH HILL PLAZA SAVE Up to 40% on OCCASIONAL TABLES, UPS, ACCESSORIES! SAVE Up to 30% on RECLINER CHAIRS Of EH FRIDAY MIGHT TIL 9 - PARK FREE Rear af Store! 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Decorative Sofa and Floor Pillows Various Shapes, Sizes, Colors. THK PONTIAC PliESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 B-7 MMMmmmmmmimMmmmmmtiKmtxm I in the News! He Associated Press eel Vivienne stepped onto a specially h a wave of her baton made Company.' woman member of the company t Sadler’s Wells, theater in London. 5 feet tall, stood in for regu-io was 111. at the head of the orchestra for wo-hour opera "A Penny for A Song,” the stage carpenter raised the podium six inches to give the 52-piece orchestra a clear view. “I wanted very much to conduct, but there is a great deal of prejudice against women,” she said. “I’ve asked before why we could not have a woman on the rostrum, but the company always put me off with a vague reply.” The last woman to conduct at Sadler’s Wells was Dame Ethel Smyth, who presented her own opera, “The Wreckers," at the theater in 1931. But die was a guest, not a member of the theater’s own company. Hazel was rewarded with four curtain, calls. Even the ' orchestra applauded. FBI Probes Article Urging Protesters to ATLANTA (UPI) —• The FBI' The article also urged 'Viet-spid today it was investigating nam war demonstrators to adopt nam protesters spit at Presl- un^ M °^er dent Johnson and attack his cholct'butidath.” limousine to make him “afraid Stanley Wise, executive direc-to leave the White House.” |tor of SNCC, said the Leater The article, appearing in the did not mean the SNCC current issue of the Student Non- ent*orsed the tactics, violent Coordinating Committee Norwegian King to Visit U.S. CHARGED IN POISONING - Mrs. Janie Lou Globs, 35, holds photographs of three of her sons, all of whtinn died in the past two years. They are (from left) Marvin, 13; Roger, 19; and Melvin, 16. Mrs. Glbba has Three Bodies Exhumed been qharged with the arsenic poisoning death of Roger. The bodies of her husband and the other two sons were exhumed yesterday. King (Mav V of ington April 24-25 and United States, the palace The announcement did die tour would be or wha king would visit. King Olav has visited several times, bat never Since he was crowned mi ago, he has paid official countries on five continents. will visit Wash-ake a tour of .the announced today, not say how long it other cities die the United States as chief of state, are than 10 years visits to 17 other AP WIr.photo AUTHOR DIES - Max Mil* ler, 68, author of the best seller “I Cover the Waterfront,” died yesterday at La Jolla, Calif. Draft Call Set for February The State Selective Service a Murder Probe Shocks Town CORDELE, Ga. (AP) — Au-graves at the request of the speeded up and results avail-thorities have exhumed the bod- state prosecutor, Solicitor Gen. able within a few days. Z ‘S’TrSL fiD- E' ^ Posey pointed out, the next SS 21 JJ* »atl « .«■ »«* constd- term ot Superior Court begins ered necessary to exhume the body of the infant grandchild. Rainey said results of the ex-Mrs. Gibbs, who spent her Hna‘*ons a/e not expected un- 35th birthdav in iail Christmas^11 next week, but Crisp County awn Dirtnaay in jau Lnnstmas _ _ . The Tournament of Marigolds ? ? ? plump brunette whose arrest on1 a murder charge has shocked this southwest Georgia commu-| nity. Day, fyas been charged with murder in the arsenic poisoning d6ath of her 19-year-old son, Roger Ludean Gibbs. His death SDarked a Georgia Bureau of, Investigation probe into the deaths of four other members of j the family, all of whom suc-| cumbed within the past two yeqrs. ★ t. ★ ★ The arrest of Mrs. Gibbs was a shock to the community because she operated a small nursery and at times cared for more than a score of young children. But the community’s greatest shock came Wednesday when authorities ordered the bodies of her husband and two other sons exhumed from Sunnyside Cemetery. Sheriff Earlie E. Posey said he thought the tests would be! Jan. 29 and said he expects the to be ready for trial at that time. He also said Mrs. Gibbs has made a statement to authorities about the death of Roger Gibbs, but he declined to elaborate. Sen. Eyerett M. Dirksen, R-lll.. is in Los Angeles preparing to lead the Rose Bowl parade New Year’s Day but the 72-year-old lawmaker isn’t sold on the flower involved., “Give me a year or two, and we make it the Tournament of Marigolds,” Dirksen told newsmen after arriving yesterday. In the Senate he has pushed marigolds for adoption as the national flower. Why, a newsman asked. “Well, because I like the marigold,” Dirksen replied. “Don’t I count for something.” (SNCC) newsletter, advocates 'the attacks as part of a strategy | to make Johnson fearful of barnstorming to make speeches about his Vietnam policies. | ( An FBI spokesman said federal authorities had been ad-i vised of the article, written by Julias Lester, a field secretary; for the militant Atlanta-based SNCC, and that it was being “looked into.” He declined to elaborate. j j Lester, who recently returned, from a trip to North Vietnam! and Cuba, wrote that to “resist1 is to make the President afraid '* to leave the White House be-| nouneed today that 136 m e n cause he will be spat upon where! from Oakland County will be ever he goes to tell his lies, drafted into the armed services ..His ilm0usine will find the during February. street filled with tacks and thou- _ _ ....... sands of people who will surge Draft Boards in Michigan are around it, Smashing the win-te deliver 1,668 registrants for dows and tacking the car until ,Induction during the month, with it is turned on its side,” he I the largest number coming from wrote. Wayne County, 497. According to Col. Arthur Holmes, Selective Service director, an additional 4,594 r e g 1 s-trants will be ordered for pre-induction physical examination at Detroit or, Milwaukee during 1 February. | Those to be inducted will be | chosen from a list of single registrants and registrants mar-i ried after Aug. 26, 1965, ages 19 .through 25, with the oldest being I selected first. The first Jewish synagogue in American was founded in Newport, R.I., in 1763. Announcement tb clients of Bloomfield Animal Hospital 1669 S. Telegraph, Pontiac Effective January 1, 1968 New Office Hours will be: Weekdays 9:30-12:00 and 3:00-6:00 Wed. 9:30-12:00—Sat. 10:00-3:00 Dr. M. G. DeLaney Authorities now are awaiting, the result of an examination of * those bodies. Mrs. Gibbs was jailed two days before Christmas, authorities said, after an autopsy revealed several milligrams of arsenic in the body of Roger Gibbs. His body and that of his infant son—Mrs. Gibbs’ grandson—are in the same cemetery but were not exhumed. * * * Roger Gibbs died Oct. 28 in a hospital at Albany, Ga. His small son died just three weeks earlier. Another of Mrs. Gibbs’ sons,! 16-year-old Melvin Gibbs, died. Jan. 23, 1067, of what was listed as a rare muscular disease. On1i Aug. 29, 1966, Marvin Gibbs, 13, died in Columbus of what was described as hepatitis. HUSBAND’S DEATH Her husband, Charles CaMon Gibbs, 40, died Jan. 21, 1966, in Crisp County hospital of' what was believed to be a heart attack. Actually, authorities said an autopsy was performed on thej body of Melvin Gibbs somej months ago in Americus. But the physician who performed the autopsy, Dr. Frederick H.i Thompson, said Wednesday night he would have no com-, ment on the results of the au-! topsy or the exhumation of the' bodies. ★ dr ' dr The Gibbs’ home at Arab! burned after her husband's death and she moved to her' present home in Cordele. / [1 The Crisp County coroner, J. D. Rainey, who also is an undertaker, directed the funerals of four members of the family. He petitioned Crisp Superior Court lor the order to open the Speed Phonc/Radio .. 9Z9.N I0R8PN0NK96,11 IITM CASKS . . . . $10.10 record top Hits COUNTRY and WESTERN SAVE! APPLIANCES! 30" Frigidoire Rang* with two 8" and two 6" burner?. Removable bottom storage drawer. Easy to clean. Reg. $179. Now ... 30" Gas Rang* with removable burner tops for easy cleaning. All porcelain. Heavy duty fiberglass insulation. Reg. $108. Now......... Frigidaire Top Loading Dishwash-ar. 12 place setting size. 5-year warranty. Reg. 199.00, Now..................; Frigidaire' 17 cu. ft. 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Now............... *132 SAVE Up to 40% on LIVING ROOM SOFAS and LOUNGE CHAIRS I SAVE ON STEREOS! I RCA Victor Portable Stereo with solid fllQR state 6-watt amplifier. Studiomatic automatic m w(8 ■ V 4-speed changer. Reg. 89.95. Now.... m RCA Victor Portable Stereo with two PAAE 5" speakers in swing out, detachable wings. # W iJ Reg. 59.95. Now..................... im Famous Brand Stereo, with two 10" jQQQ woofers, two 5" speakers. Walnut. Reg. ** M i X 249.50. New....... .....77. RCA Victor Storoo, 40 Watt amplifier, ft A M A 6 speakers, maple only. Reg. 399.95. T A X SAVE ON TELEVISION! TIIE PONTIAC PH ESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 196T Lucky Dtessm Hits Rerio Jackpot As anybody with gambling experience knows, you can’t beat the house percentage playing the slot machines. But you can't prove that by Mrs. Clarke. She says she has been bucking the one-armed bandits at Harold’s club with consistent success since 1963 and has the cash to prove it. Mrs. Clarke, who runs a dress shop in Vancouver, B.C., told an interviewer: * “I’ve got $12,000 worth of Har-| RENO, Nov. (AP) - “I get in front of a couple of machines and I feed and puli and feed and pull and get a rhythm going-the faster you play the more you get.” And the first thing you know you’ve got a brassiere stuffed with currency and a set df shin-uards made out of C-notes. You do, that is, if you are Mrs. Anne Clarke, who tackled the new $5 slot machines in Harold’s club with a $20 stake the other night and staggered away 10 hours later with a cool,0id*s ciU|, money in a bank atl $13,750. I home marked ‘Reno money.’ I “After I got my brassiere full,|usuauy carry $2,000 down here I stuffed $100 bills into the tops; wjt)) me, and I only play with of my stockings until they were!what j come down with. The I running down my legs,” she rest ^ ta safe deposit and j said. Ican’t get to it.”’' “ Mrs. Clarke said she plays! Harold’s club about four times a year. She started in 1963 after surviving an illness which required three operations and almost killed her. Health restored, ”1 decided; 'd do something silly,” she’ said. “I thought I’d come to WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reno and gamble some.” I Agriculture Department, asked I Mrs. Clarke said she left Reno to rush in where many a hus- in 196$ with a net profit of $560, band fears to tread, may at- made another $3,900 in the tempt to put a dollar value on spring of 1964, clipped the ma-the homemaking tasks of house-chines for $4,900 a few months wives. later and cleared $3,300 on a The research project was sug- Christmas visit, j " gested at a recent meeting of, * * * the department’s Advisory Com-I She said she had a losing year: SAIGON (AP) — South Viet-jto clean their weapons, a head- mmee on Human Nutrition and in 1965, including a $1,700 trip to namese soldiers today credited quarters officer reported. That Consumer use. The panel is the cleaners in April, but aver- the M16 rifle,which U.S. troops is one reason jt worked socomposed of national leaders in aged a $500 profit in four visits STASHING WINNINGS - Anne Clarke of Vancouver, B.C., stashes away $100 bills she won in a big payoff on Nevada’s first $5 slot machines. A casino employe is at right. Housewives' Valuation Eyed " S. Viets' Battle Showing Tied to Use of M16 Rifle had criticized, with the punch well, that enabled them to kill scores of Vietcong in a lopsided battle earlier this week. South Vietnamese headquarters announced that the 1st Regiment of the South Vietnamese _ I . the nutrition and consumer in I960. On Tuesday night, play- S®™ American troops on Kiyice fieWs iing the $5 slots, Mrs. Clarke hit! first receiving the M16 reported + * * it big. it had a tendency to jam. Offi-j Dr Axel L Anderseni the She ran her $20 original facers ^ say this has largely been committee’s executive secre-vestment into $450 with small eliminated by slight modifies-)tary sajd the proposed study,winnings, and then hit jackpots „ . . j . ., ftons in the weapon and by giv- grows out of some committee of $5,000, $750, $5,000, $750, $750; 1st Division was issued theing troops better instruction in members’ feeling that many land, finally, simultaneous $750; weapon only two days before its maintenance. j working wives actually contrib-jackpots on each of two ma- the battle Tuesday in Quang Trl Province. * ★ * The commander of the regiment’s 2nd Battalion, which saw the most action, reported that the M16 was “largely responsible” for. the showing his men made. The major commanding the battalion, who had been fully briefed on earlier troubles with the Ml$, reported he had only minor difficulties with it. YELLING AT MEN “During breaks in the fighting the battalion commander was going around yelling at his men * * * ute little to the family coffers. The South Vietnamese 1st Di- Their extewfacome as outside vision took to the weapon enthu- job-holders is in many cases off-siastically, headquarters report-1 &t by their outlay for home-ied. The slight South Vietnames!making services they normally soldier prefers the seven-pound would perform but which—be- M16 to the far heavier weapons he has been carrying up to now. Its rate of fire also far surpasses anything that had been is- cause they work—must be done by others, say those backing the research. Andersen only smiled when it sued the South Vietnamese sol- was suggested such a study dier. might give many a wife a finan- cial club to hold over her husband. But at the same he noted the committee has sidestepped an immediate decision on whether to undertake ‘the research. Officials report a 77 per cent increase in the immigration of scientists, engineers and physicians to the United States between 1956 and 1966. chines. Mrs. Clarke pooh-poohed cyni-l cal suggestions that the club| had softened up the newly intro-, duced $5 machines for her on the theory that a big killing would be good advertising. ‘I’m really • lucky,” she declared. Mrs. Clarke said she turned to dressmaking after a professional stage career which included a stint as a Ziegfeld Follies girl in| New York. She is married to a truck driver, Teddy Clarke, whose vices are poker and playing the horses—both with indifferent results. Tact! Hasn't it happonod to you? You com* across soma things around tha housa that you no long-ar naad... things lika an outgrown bicyda or a dining room tabla. Thasa things ara still good. Somaona also can usa them and is anxious to boy thorn from you. Your problam is to locate*" this parson. It's a fact... tha solution is easy! Phono 332-8181 today and lot a low cost Want Ad do tha job for you. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS * DIAL 332-8181 A helpful Ad-Visor will assist you in wording your ad The Thrifty Six Time Rate Saves Money OPEN DAILY 10-lQi SUN. 10-5 THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY mciriFI Holiday Party Sale 1-Lb.* Cashews or Pistachios 88’ Bac 1-Lb.* Bag Pate Cheese Peps 48* DELICIOUS DRY ROASTED PEANUTS 57** Reg. 98c to 1.17 3 Days- Discount Price Charge It Our Reg. 68c Charge It 6-oz. Snack Mix ......... 33c 5*/i-oz. Popped Korn ... 23c A favorite party time treat. •BUt Weight •N.lwa.gM w.igh* 1-LB.* BAG Kmart® POTATO CHIPS 44* Discount Price Charge It 9-o*. Pickled Pig Foot... B3e ■ICED BA#1 | l-Lb./CANNED BACON CC0VEnEDC CHERRIES Milk, dark covered chocolate. Boxes I GLASSES SZ Set of 6 glasses. Assorted stylea $|18 PAPER NAPKINS ‘ 250-cott nt C package. Save., SbPwPkg. GAY PARTY HATS PARTY M 4 to package, 3^* c —Pkg. Ea. “Blowouts, Pkg. 6 .... 41c 50 POLY CUPS 9” PAPER PLATES | Reg. 58c pkg. Mm* Reg. 68c pkg. KXC 9-ounce size. *f f of 100.White WW FANCY ICE BUCKET Our Reg. 5.33 Charge It Fancy ice bucket* for holiday entertaining. 7” high, 7” diameter, vinyl covered, 4 colors. Savo. 4.44 “GREEN TREE” 1-LB. HAMS Our Reg. 1.17 Sunday Only w8 ja Pre-cooked . .. ready-to-serve hot or coldl Boneless “Green Tree”hams are imported from Holland. Shop now and lave at this low, low Kmart price! Don’t forget to lay, “Charge It!” Llmilad nunntitu — Mama TEFLON BUFFET SKILLET NN REV Our Reg. iHwf ^ Days Only Discount Price Charge It GE deluxe Teflon® coated buffet skillet cook* food eight at yonr serving table. Features 3 position tilt-top lid, adjnsta-bio steam vents, High dome gives extra cooking eapicity. Msko tasty popcorn wi»«s me rofioria j-quart polished aluminum corn popper. Features transparent glass lid and black plastic handle. Specialty priced, just say, “Charge It.” GLENWOOD PLAZA . North Perry at Glenwood 608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1907 Stretch Post-Holiday Bud Balls CURRIED BEEF BALLS Curried Beef Balls These KMray Beef Balls make it easy to get meat on the table without wrecking the wallet. In addition to saving money, this recipe offers still another bonus: it’s a real time-saver, lie beef balls can be prepared ahead, frozen, and used later. 10-WAY BEEF BALLS 4 pounds ground beef chuck or round 2 cups fine bread or cereal crumbs 1 cup finely chopped onion 4 eggs 2 cups milk 2 teaspoons salt 44 teaspoon pepper 2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce 44 to 44 cup shortening 44 cup flour 2 cans (10(4 ounces each) beef broth or consumme 214 cups water Combine beef, crumbs, onion, meat balls are I liquid in pan is completely ab-especially when the eorbed before cooking is com-cooked and P,eted- •** v* CUP water, and cheese,| pHe meat balls on top of hot » in cooked spaghetti tossed with grated cheese. Makes 6 servings of 3 meat balls-each. Another idea that is not only but partiehhfty a simple trick to as-good texture and 44 "cup dark seedless raisins 44 cup bottled lemon juice % cup gingersnap crumbs 1 package (8-ounces) noodles 1 teaspoon poppy seeds ORIENTAL MEAT BALLS Meat Balls: 1 8%-oz. can crushed pineapple • 1 lb. ground beef 44 lb. ground pork 1 5-oz. can water chestnuts, drained and diced 1(4 teaspoons soy sauce 1 clpve garlic, crushed 1 teaspoon salt Sauerbraten Meat Balls. It’s small amount of hot fat. I v* teaspoon ginger ground beef combination | Remove meat balls; add 1 e88 which includes a tangy sauce *y« cupg WRter to drippings % CUP m»k just like that of the famous'and bring to a boil; stir in % cup raw oatmeal German Sauerbraten. Jbetitilon cubes, sugar, raisins, Glaze: SAUERBRATEN MEAT BALLS V« cup lemon juice and ginger- i 1 beef bouillon cube 1 pound ground beef crumbs. Add meat bails;' (4 cup firmly-packed brown 84 cup soft bread crumbs |5?°k uncovered over low heat sugar use slices of French tantalizing for any appetite, is well soaked with wine as of the meat mixture. This important step beacause these are meant to be sauce. All their flavor is self contained. Burgundy meat balls 3 slices French bread 1 cup Burgundy 2 pounds ground beef chuck 1 egg, beaten 1 tablespoon instant minced onion 1 teaspoon garlic salt, 1 teaspoon seasoned pepper (4 teaspoon dry basil 2 tablespoons cooking oil Combine meat, bread crumbs, onion, 2 tablespoons lemon Juice, 2 tablespoons water, salt and pepper. Shape into 1-inch bills. Brown meat balls in small amount of hot fat. 44 cup finely chopped onion 2 tablespoons bottled lemon juice 2 tablespoons water (4 teaspoon salt Dash pepper 244 cups water 3 beef bfiilin cubes i (4 cup mown sugar Place French bread slices in mixing bowl; pour on 44 cup wine. Let stand (4 hour until ibread has absorbed wine and very soft. Beat with egg, onion, salt, pepper and basil until well blended. Combine with meat lightly but thoroughly. Divide into 18 equal-size por- Peas, Oyster Stew I I „____________________________________I__________— T fp- "“Ik 8alt- WP* ^tions; shape each one into a a Maw fnmhinatinn mix well. ^ Brown mejit b.iis S|0w!y a INcW LOmDinallOn Shape into balls using 1 table- ta beated oil 0B aI, sldes. Add S,bJll°f meat miXtUre f0r remaining wine to pan. TWs vegetable and seafood . ^ , J Cover tightlv and cook over combination compliments both Brown bails in shortening, m jow beat until meat is done, turkey (or chicken) and ham. | Dutch oven or large covered fry* about 15 mjnutes longer. If Tinfjuu! p... *r» turntoI Wh as needed t»TT^ ■. t.TT.-----------~ brown evenly. Remove meat 2 cans (each 10 ounces) frozen from png. stir flour Into pan oyster stew soup, thawed ! drippings. Add beef broth and 4 tablespoons flour (regular water and cook, stirring con-or instant blending) blended gtantiy, until mixture comes to with Y« cup cold water |a boil. 2 cans (each 1 pound, 1 ounce) ' ' . . J • very small green peas,1, Turn heat to low; add meat drained * balls and cover pan. Cook gent- 2 cans (each IVs ounces) king ^ ji o 111 meat' is thorough y crab with tendons removed, c9°ked> ab°ut 30 mftutesl drained and sliced into fair-' ly big pieces Pack beef balls to within 44 iniscent of fall is Butterscotch • W ★ ★ inch of top of plastic freezer con-Mincemeat Fie. This pie’s a Remove oysters from soup tainers; pour beef gravy oter creamy one, since the butter-and cut in half; reserve. To the■balls. Cover; freeze at once. Use scotch pie tilling is cooked with undiluted soup add the flour!^ j or more pints to prepare'milk. Mincemeat and rum fla- Rum Flavor Is Secret of Pie Recipe A good pie with a taste rem- 10 minutes. Turn meat balls,! 2 teaspoons soy sauce | spooning sauce over; cook $j (4 teaspoon salt minutes, stirring occasionally. 3 tablespoons vinegar | Cook noodles according to| 3 tablespoons cornstarch package directions. Drain and * CUP water top noodles with poppy seeds.! * * * Serve meat balls and sauce Drain Popple, reserving over noodles. Makes 5 to 8|Juice- Thoroughly combine | servings. I drained pineapple and remain- ing ingredients for meat balls. Shape to form 24 meat balls. * * it Cook over medium heat in just enoueh shortening to cover bottom of large fry pan. Turn frequently until browned on all sides. ★ * * Add enough boiling water to the reserved pineapple juice to make 1(4 cups liquid. Add bouillon cube, brown sugar, soy sauce, salt and vinegar. Pour over meat balls; cover and simmer 25 to 30 minutes. Remove meat balls from pan. Combine cornstarch and water. Add to liquid in frv pan, mixing well. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly until thickened. Add meat balls and heat about 5 minutes. Makes 6 servings. sauerbraten meat balls burgundy meat balls mixture; over moderately low|your favorite meat balJ entrees heat, «»k **d stir constantly YieId. About 6 pints until thickened. - 1 ■ Add reserved oysters, peas add crab; reheat but do not hoil. Makes 12 generous servings. Make Appetizers One-Bite Size Chicken Nuggets are delectable party appetizers. Bone 2 whole chicken breasts, remove the skin, and cut each Curried Beef Balls, Madras Style 2 pints beef balls 2 cups chopped peeled raw apple 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 can (1 pound) stewed tomatoes (4 cup raisins 3 teaspoons curry powder (4 teaspoon salt 3 to 4 cups hot cooked rice voring are folded in. Splurge with a whipped cream toppinf for the chilled pie. Butterscotch Mincemeat Tie 1 package 4 oz.) butterscotch pudding and pie filling 2 cups milk 44 cup moist mincemeat (4 teaspoon rum extract (optional) 1 baked 8-inch pie shell, cooled (4 cup heavy cream Combine pie filling mix and milk in a saucepan. Blend well. _ , T .7* . until mixture comes to a ful Defrost beef balls. Saute apple b&il. in butter or margarine until soft. ' breast half into 8 nuggets about!Add tomatoes, raisins, curry Remove from heat. Cool 144” square Dip in melted butter add simmer gently to blend *o°ot 5 mlmtes, stirring once and roll in seasoned crumbs, flavors, 10 to 15 minutes. Add* Jwice. Fold in mincemea Place in 0 single layer on foil- beef balls and gravy; mix care- , ™ extract. Pour Into lined baking sheet and bake in fully. Colter; heat thoroughly. P'e a 400 degree oven for 10 min- Serve with hot seasoned! Cover surface with wax paper Y|eld: 3 dozen nuggets. 'condiments. Yield: 6 servings, overtop. 1 JUCKOHY ngsi SMOKED JB EI P HAMS 45* Vi or Whole lb. HICKORY SMOKED BACON 49* 1 or Whole ■ w HICKORY #1 SKINLESS SMOKED HOT DOGS PicoicsOu! tut •1“ OPEN ALL DAY MO POTATOES PI0JI- PETERS SLICED BACON 3 LBS. ASSORTED LUNCH MEATS 55<:. Bake Stuffing With Beef Balls FRYERS BREWED 27k } STEWERS a ORANGES ^ - 59c ORANGES 3 *1°° LETTUCE CELERY 25?. 25?. RADISHES 10c CUKES 2 ^ 5° PEPPERS TOMATOES *19e FOR YOUR NEW YEAR'S SALAD Just to be sure that the “Kis-| sin’ won’t be Missin” put the recipes for the beef, balls potpourri on your cookin’ list. BEEF BALLS POTPOURRI Casserole 44 cup chopped celery 4jf cup chopped onion 44 teaspoon pepper 144 teaspoons salt 2 quarts (44 inch) bread cubes, toasted A cup butter or margarine 44 cup hot water 1 cup soft bread crumbs (4 cup milk 1 pound ground beef or hamburger 3 tablespoons cooking oil Sauce 3 slices onion, separated into rings (4 teaspoon minced garlic 1 (1 pound, 12 ounce) can tomatoes 18 (44 inch) slices peeled cucumber 1 tablespoon sugar 44 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons flour 44 cup cold water 1 medium-sized green pepper, seeded and cut into strips Combine celery, 2 tablespoons onion, 44 teaspoon pepper and 1 teaspoon salt with toasted bread cubes. Melt butter in hot water; blend with stuffing and place in a greased (244 quart) casserole. Mix remaining onion, pepper and salt with soft bread crumbs add milk and beef. Divide meat mixture into 15 portions, using about 3 tablespoons for each; shape into balls. con- GRAPEFRUIT B <».<>■ 6m. 49c SUPER MARKET Opoa Weekly 8 to 9 Friday, Saturday 8 to 8 PRICES SUBJECT TO UAHKETOHM#* Heat oil in a large skillet, add beef balls and Cook over medium heat, turning to brown lightly on all sides. Arrange cooked beef balls on top of iver and bake in oven (350 degrees) Reserve fat left in rings In com cook-tomatoes sugar and for 30 1 s=±- Till 1‘ONtJAC ritKSS, TilVKSDAV, DECEMBER 28, 1907 Color Coded Menus Aid Ann Arbor Patients to Choose Foods ^NN ARBOR — Color-coded and various therapeutic meals1 menus have just been introduced prepared to give the patient f I at The University of Michigan boost on the road to recovery-! Hospital as added insurance that | At the same time, tile hos-|each patient gets the right meal pital dietitians strive to give for his particular illness. every patient a wide choice of| Almost half of the 3,000 meals foods for each meal. Hie result 'served to patients here each is a complex assortment of| day are tagged “special diets.”|meals reflecting individual taste, They include salt-free, liquid,'preference, doctor’s orders, proper nutrition, and general attractiveness. The new menus are printed! on blue, yellow, or white cards. Each patient receives the color that reflects his basic diet at this moment in his treatment, j White is for those on a general i diet, yellowis for therapeutic diets, and bine is for those on i low-sodium diets, j The patient then selects-what- , ever appeals to him, circles the items on the card, and returns it to his dietitian. At mealtime, the meal is giv-jen a final check: the color-card! is compared with the contents' of the tray and with any last-i minute orders from the physician. Then the patient is served, j One additional change has een made. Some of the mere! colorful language of the*chef’* ' is giving way to plain cvioni [world Items like “carrots vlchy” an, “carrots julienne” have been re- placed ;by. “carrots,” wWby? Mainly for simplicity. The jjjni-verffty Hospital attracts,-patients from pH walks of life. Ahd from experience the dietitians found that the most cosmopolitan gourmet can understand “whipped potatoes,*’ -but any number of patients might be wary of;Mduchess potatoes.” CORNED BEEF ’N’ SAUERKRAUT BAKE - Combine one can (1 lb. 13 oz.) sauerkraut and V* cup brown sugar. Turn into shallow baking dish. Sprinkle wilh caraway seed, if desired. Flake one can corned beef with a fork. Add one egg. Tear one slice bread into small pieces and add to corned beef and egg, blending well. Shape beef mixture into six or eight balls. Nest on top of sauerkraut mixture. Arrange unpeeled apple wedges between corned beef balls. Bake, uncovered, in a 350-degree oven about 30 minutes. Makes 4-6 servings. There's Reason Asparagus is forMteffc“ EAST LANSING, Mich.-Was your last turkey a little tough?! Once again the New Jersey Well, homemakers, it may not'Asparagus Industry Council is have been your fault. [sponsoring an asparagus recipe * * * 'contest. You may be able to blame the j t hi r t y - o n e prizes will be Whole thing on some error in awarded for the asparagus re-1 processing. But more than like-: cipes judged best by a panel of ly, it was the fault of the bird home economists. First prize is Nsd'- la $100 U. S. Savings bond. j Recent research by Michigan! Contest rules are simple . . . State University food scientists • Recipes must use aspara-shows that poultry tenderness is gus in some manner, affected by the “degree of bond-j • Recipes must be written ing within the muscle fibers.” legibly. No labels or special This, says Dr. James F. Price, forms are required, is related to the ability of the • Recipes should list title: in-muscles to contract when the gredients, step-by-step cooking bhd is either living or dead. | instructions and number of serv-i “We found that very subtle j®*8- Lin»t-three §f entries changes in protein occur within Per family-the muscle fibers and that these , U * , s m.ust .. P°st' changes iff protein are related j marked not later than midnight, to the muscle’s ability to de- •*anuary 15, t®68- | velop tension or contract.” |Mail to: Asparagus Recipe Con-j 4 * test, Box 366, Millville, New Jer-1 Dr. Price adds that breaks oc-,se£ ,* cur within protein chains at the Here 18 on« unusual "by same time popltry muscles be- use asparagus, come tender. Sunday Night Treat 1ft cups cooked mashed po- * tatoes 1 lft cups* cooked asparagus cuts and tips ft cup bread crumbs ft teaspoon onion salt “We know that poultry meat can become tough if birds are frozen too quickly or overscalded soon after they have been killed,” he comments. “A turkey can also become tough be- „ cause of dryness, if it is over-l ft teaspoon celery salt. i cooked at home. • % cup sliced frankfurters “But none of this dryness or I 2 tablespoons butler j toughness affects the nutritional ®rea8e a ^mch pie plate, vahie of the bird. We found no'F°rm * cnist with mashed po-changes in meat composition as *a^oes- Add drained asparagus, the result of freezing too quick,1 Combine bread crumbs with sea-oversealsing or overcooking.” .sonings and sprinkle over as-i * t Si. * |paragus. Surprisingly, there Is a great-j Arrange frankfurter slices on er chance of getting a tough h>p. dot with butter and'bake for young bird than a tough old one,130-45 minutes at 300 degrees.' according to Dr. Price. A11 Serves 4. “biochemical changes” occur. ‘Equivalent of one standard very rapidly in mature turkeys, UNo- 300) can, glass container so the odds are good that birds or package of frozen. will be frozen or scalded after| ---------—----------- these changes have taken place. |fs Continental “It's only fair to say that toughness caused by quick freez-| Add ft cup chopped ripe ing or overscalding is not too olives, 1 tablespoon phopped great,” says Dr. Price. “Most green onion and a dash liquid people, would still consider even red pepper seasoning to ft cup the ’tough’ bird acceptable.” mayonnaise thinned with 2 table-1 The MSU food scientist is cur- spoons half and half. Delicious rently conducting basic studies over lettuce wedges. of meat composition and factors i —------------------- I that,influence tenderness in an' Fresh tender vegetables still effort to insure fine tasting, high crisp with morning dew are best quality poultry meat products, for freezing. list the Host for Loss At o Michigan POTATOES 50 ib. 98° Zr Chiqwita BANANAS 1-Lb. 10* M APPLES 1/2 Bu. (23 Lbs.) $-|25 Corner of Clarkston and Sashabaw Roads ft Milo MsrNi of Sashabaw bit ‘Spaa Daily, Except Monday, 10*00 to 8t80| Sun. tM 7:00 HIE Goodbye V / HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM ALL OF US HERE AT BAZLEY AND FAIRWAY MARKETS Quality Mealn Since / 931 3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU: MARKETS 78 North Saginaw Street - Pontiac OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 7 P.M. 4348 Dixio Highway - Drayton Plains WEDNESDAYS 0:00 A.M. TO 8:10 P.M. - THURS. THRU SAT. • A JR. to 9 P.M. SUNDAYS 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M. - CLOSED MONDAYS AND TUESDAYS 1220 North Pony at Madison OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. TO 1P.M. - SUNDAYS II A.M. TO S P.M. Authorized S.D.D. Distributor WINE • LIQUOR • BEER, FOODS 1220 North Porry at Maditoo, Pontiac ACROSS FROM PONTIAC NORTftMN HIGH SCHoSl ITo Rtmervn Tk* Right To Until Quantities OPEN DAILY lilt A.M. TO I P.M. SUNDAYS 11A.M. TO I P.M. PE 4-2260 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 Recipe From Retirees' Cookbook "A Cookbook for the Leisure Yews” by Phyllis MacDonald (DcuWeday and Company, Garden City^N. Y., $4.50) is more than a cookbook filled with recipes: Each chapter is devoted to an individual interest, such as "Bargain Buys," "A Light Diet Temporarily,” "Meals In Minutes from Your Pantry Shelf” and “Meals from a Table-Ton Kitchen.” ★ a. it There is chapter "especially lor Men” and another with recipes contributed by famous Junericans, all of whom are over ; A dividend is the listing of booklets and pamphlets available to retired people, includes many publications related to food and nutrition — also to Social Security, medical and health benefit*, and protective services. In tlie chapter on "Cooking for One” is a recipe for Stirred Shrimp, a dish that can be prepared in minutes but thoroughly enjoyable. Stirred Shrimp 2 teaspoons butter or margarine % pound raw shrimp, shelled and deveined or H of a 7-ounce package frozen ready-to-cook shrimp ' % teaspoon cornstarch V* teaspoon salt | 1 tablespoon sherry 2 teaspoons chopped chives Dash ground ginger In a small skillet melt butter. Combine shrimp and remaining ingredients in a bowl and stir them to mix well. Cook shrimp mirture in hotter butter oyer low heat, stirring frequently with a fork until shrimp is pink and tender — about 4 to S minutes, depending upon the size of the shrimp. Makes 1 generous serving. Roast Onions Ever bake medium-size onions, unpeeled, when you are I baking potatoes? Peel the roasted onions before sending to the I table, making a criss-cross over I the top and inserting a square of butter; sprinkle with paprika. Semi-Boneless Winter Savings at City Side USDA Choice PETERS Assorted Whole or Half 69* g Sirloins 99f,1 | Lunch 1 T-Bones $1ff i 1 Meats lb. SPARTAN SLICED CHEESE .Porterhouse ’ll* SILVERDUST Breast-O-Chicken DETERGENT (with Towal) 19® 49* O’/z-Oz. Can limit 1 with coupon Limit 3 With Coupon CITY SIDE 1718 Joslyn OPEN SUN. 9 to 9 P.M. SUPER MARKET 8 Blocks North of Walton Blvd. 338-0377 Felice. TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS and FRIENDS VISIT OUR BEVERAGE DEPARTMENT -A COMPLETE LINE OF IMPORTED WINES* CHAMPAGNE* ETC. % Wm CLOSED NEW YEAR’S DAY Iflt. HAWAIIAN PUNCH 28 44 Swift's Lunch Meat PREM 12 oz. weight i Fresh Made POTATO CHIPS e Hunt’s TOMATO JUICE 14 oz. weight Phg. 1qt. 14 oz. can 48'J ORC Northern ■■V Assorted iso f | Dove Liquid DETERGENT Ass’t FLAVORS MAVIS POP , 12 oz. Fluid Weight CAN qt. plastic Me Oven Fresh Black Bread ■ u,. aa BAVARIAN RYE ^29 HILLS BROS. COFFEE NAPKINS, \ Dixit 9-Inch C White m t PLATES ,°il KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP' LB. CAN I Fresh Grade “A” CHICKEN LEGS I With Portion of Rib Attached CHICKEN BREAST lb. VAH CAMP’S PORK & BEANS1 11b. CAN FRESH DRESSED PAN-READY WHOLE FRYING CHICKENS t Grade “A” CUT-UP FRYERS .h.33* HYGRADE’S Sweet’nizad SLICED lb. | BACON pkg- 59 HYQRADE’S 'e SSSB 5 £,*3" 1 HYGRADE’S GRADE 1 LITTLE LINK PORK SAUSAGE it 59 HYGRADE’S |C ASSORTED EQC LUNCH MEATS 2^33 KRAFT PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE 8-0z. Wt. Pkg.' RISDON FRENCH ONION aoz. CHIP DIP eft. SEALTEST FRESH EGG NOG FRENCH’S CREAMY I*- MUSTARD j!? SWIFT’S VIENNA SAUSAGE to i 00 4-0z. Wt. Cn. 49* SPECIAL JENO’S PIZZA MIX oz.wt. SPECIAL D0LE ol8w» TROPI KAI carJ APPLE or BLACKBERRY BANQUET Fruit PIES 24* SINGLETON 3 Frozen SHRIMP 4 oz. COCKTAIL fi TREESWEET Florida Frozen ORANGE JUICE OAKEN KEQ SWEET PICKLES 48' U.S. Ho. 1 Michigan |fl|A POTATOES III* 10-Lb. B.( ■ W U.S. No.1 BANANAS 1116 W. HURON STREET Sale Dates: Nationally Advertised Brands at Money-Saving Prices D#0,2W*n> 2 . 3® THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28. 1967 Jacoby on Bridge NORTH (D) A Void WEST 4 84 32 ¥J97653 ♦ J 9 3 4 Void EAST 4 J 10 9 7 6 S V AQ 4 10 2 4 Q 8 4 SOUTH AAKQ ¥K 1084 ♦ Q6 4 10 7 6 3 North-South vulnerable West North East South 2 4 2 4- 6N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 2 By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY Tannah Hirsch, the associate editor of the American Contract Bridge League Bulletin, plays a lot more bridge •than mo " members of the league staff. One reason is that TannahJ who played top flight bridge Europe for many, years, wants to become a Life Master in this country. He writes very scientifically for the bulletin. His own bidding is of the simple style as may be seen from his si* no-trump call with this hand from a recent tournament. < A scientist’s scientist would have taken up to a dozen bids to get to the eventual slam and if that slam happened to be in clubs, the scientist would have bad no play to make his THE BETTER HALF I .tract against a heart lead. ievent. If clubs brbke I could I A spade was opened against spare a club, but if diamonds Ithe six no-trump contract. Tan-broke and clubs did not, I |nah Jooked over dummy a while |couldn’t spare one of dummy’s land called for the deuce of diamonds.” clubs discard. Then he led a Fine! analysis and a most un-rclub to dummy’s ace. East usuaj hand .We wonder if many1 showed out and Tannah went player would have made that after diamonds^ ^ winning play at trick one. j When that suit broke all Tannah had to do was to lead a heart toward his king in order to make his no-trump slam, j “Lucky discard,” said North. “Not at all,” replied Tannah. I “It was the correct play. I I could not make more than six I no-trump unless I could run |both minor suits. Clubs figured to break but I didn’t really need | six club tricks. Five clubs plus | three spades plus three dia-jmonds would represent 11 tricks j jand East was marked with the ! ace of hearts for his spade overload. If neither suit broke I wasn’t going to make my slam in any No Handicap FT. LEWIS, Wash. (AF)In a physical combat proficiency test for Company E of the 3rd Brigade’s 4th Infantry Battalion, one soldier posted the highest score ever recorded in the company. And he ran the fastest mile of any of its 200 Army trainees. ' Company officers p r b u d 1 y identified the soldier today as Pvt. John J. Wooden Legs, a Cheyenne Indian from Lame Deer, Mont. ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbers , 'PROFITS ARCATAH ALL-TIMS \ MM00 HIGH, \M3NPER WHY I FEEL BECAUSE 30 ANXIOUS ABOUT rue Jyour-br- fribnps r pom last NIGHT ARB ,.ay;TSVyi ^ AMUvm terns*# HGKBfLCWR Amy, mv . ^GOODMAN? THE BERRYS • MO If NUk U*. Mushroom ? poriorno ? ircouLPNreeRGLATep 70 TheMfdUST NERVE'S 1 Guess — By Cali Grubert THE BORN LOSER GOOD.' WE b miMLt- FOR TOMORROW'S JACOBY Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 14 Pass Pass 2 ¥ l Dble 4 ¥ ? You, South, hold: 42 ¥J4 4K109543 47543 i What do you do now? A—Bid five diamonds. Your “My secretary came to work today wearing a wide sash around her waist, but upon closer inspection it proved to be a mini-skirt.” BERRY’S WORLD—By Jim Berry fw|P IJraPHPP1 pi |As!troio||ieaL Forecast" CAPTAIN EASY Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Thursday, Dec. 28, the 362nd day of 1967 with three to follow. The moon is between Its last quarter and new phase. The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn. .•» , * * * On this day in history: In 1869, members of the Knights of Labor observed the first Labor Day in American history. In 1869, chewing gum was patented by William Semple of Mount Vernon, Ohio. ★ 4 * In 1945, Congress officially recognized the “Pledge of, Allegiance’’ to the flag. In 1966, Red China touched off its fifth atomic device. Ferry Suspended CHARLEVOIX (AP) - Ice conditions Wednesday forced the I ronton ferry, which carries M66 traffic across the south arm! of Lake Charlevoix hi northwest Lower Michigan, to suspend operations for the winter. The firry, operated by the Charlevoix County Road Commission, normally runs from April until December. ■ rk I’M RECOVMENDIkJG I THE HIRING OP A GTY PERSONNEL OFFICER /SOMEONE WHO CAN SELECT THE RIGHT MAN ^SCIENTIFICALLY/ BOARDING HOUSE TVE SEEN TH0Se1W/H£N HE FAILED HEADSHRINKERgY THEY'D CLAIM IT l WORK, DATA I THEY’D (1 WAS BECAUSE , f HIRE A GUY WITH THE]} THE FOREMAN * HICCUPS TO BE A / LOOKED LIKE GLASS BLOWER IF HE J l Hi 5 FATHER/ SCORED HIGH , ENOUGH ON THE J INK BLOTS' // EEK& MEEK By Howie Schneider WHAT KIND OF WEbU / YEARS ResOLOTfOlOS / DID MDU MAKE, / \PR. BRITEBITE I RESOLVED THAT WITH ALL OF MY PATIENTS X WILL TREAT EACH AND EVERY TOOTH AS AN EQUAL, REGARDLESS of its size or FbsmoiU! rrs MY WJAY OF DOIUQ something to HELP DEVELOP A MORE . DEMOCRATIC AMERICAN J MOUTH / . ‘$*1 r IWI( Nt*. I«. TM. t* V A hi. OH « --g—k ia-a» By Ernie BushmiUer I'LL BUILD A 5NOWMAN ON THE SCALE AND SEE WHAT KIND OF A FORTUNE IT GETS WeiGHT AND FORTUNE Mumhmu. TUMBLEWEEDS £ YOU HAVE A VERY COLD , I PERSONALITY by Tom Ryan PLEASE] \tXJ GOTTA\ ^^ HELP MEi THE WIN Isorry^ FROM THIS SPLINTER ttfgJU IN MY FINGER IS eKcrutiating] DONALD DICK By Wnlt Disney XE iVe taken Twer handle 1 OFFTHft FRIDGE DOOR ] so **ojcan't’RAorf 4 ^WHILE IM CUT l , m THE PONTIAC PKKSS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1907 [School Desegregation Plan Draws Pros, Cons , > By DICK ROBINSON j Basically, the short - range thirteen years after the Su- Phw allows students from Jef*, :4>reme Court’s historic decision'ferson to attend "W other jun-1 iivschool segregation, race sUU fUf' " * ' remains a ma- "ext year* pr°vitded that there ior issue in edu-is room and not too many other ration Negh) 8tudents there thati Some educa- 8e‘ there by their own toresay*t*h* transportation, problem is * * * growing faster1 The long-range plan provides [ than efforts are for only east side and west side being made to~ senior high schools, a new Jun-| solve racial ior high'school in the Central balancesln High building and the phasing ROBINSON schools. out of Jefferson Junior High. ’ll A clamoring f6r better racial pros AND CONS balance in Pontiac schools has a number ofmros and cons been particularly noticeable in have been expressed on the1 , thp post six months. Sixty-one modified open enrollfhent plan ~phr cent of the city's Negro stu- to alleviate de facto — created .^ents attend predominately Ne-by housing patterns —segrega-' grp schools. tion at Jefferson. * i As a result of one suggestion Critics say the so-called solu-; to reduce de facto segregation tion represents a token gesture " pt Jefferson Junior High School, toward racial balance but does l the board of education a few hot wipe out de facto segre- weeks ago adopted short- and gation. One critic 1$ Negro long-range plans to relieve de board member Dr. Robert R. facto segregation. Turpin. He claims that only a small] Enrollment predictions indi-jboundary lines between Jeffer-number of Jefferson students — cate that three of the four eligi- son and Washington junior highs just the best—will be able to ble receiving junior highs will was dismissed after study by transfer to fdur eligible junior be beyond reasonable capacity top administrators and members highs. Secondly, he points to with just their own students, 'of the board of education, transportation as a problem. How can they still take Jeffer- * * * Eastern Junior High has been son students? ruled out of the picture because m»RNTNr« «.v rnAnw it is already 57 per cent Negro. ° „S"NGS BY GRADES solution m/tw ! W^tmer emphasizes that solution SLOW small amounts of pupils still : “It may not be possible to]could go to a school even if the wipe out de facto segregation'total enrollment is beyond ra-totally overnight,” one author-1 parity. For example, the ity, Schools Supt. Dr. Neil V.l eighth and ninth grades may be Sullivan of Berkley, Calif., com-1 overcrowded but the seventh ments, “but a community must grade could have openings, accept the fact that tendon will continue yd the.Problem WU1 HiL"!? the students of the two “com-1 “tors agree that the'approach not be solved until segregation "ars u X^ abirto !cceJt bined attendance areas attend;08** hi attacking the problem federal housing project could be transferred from Jefferson to Washington. • A three-year plan to phase out Jefferson as a junior high _ ,. . school be reassigning Jefferson They said the plan would In- p u p i 1 s to other junior high crease travel distance by stu- schools, except Eastern, by prodents, would be more hazard- viding transporstation ous for pupils and would result The firgt vear all ninth _rade in white parents moving out of “fE lond year all eighth and ninth PRINCETON PLAN ] graders and the third year Turpin advocates what is' eighth; ninth and 10th. called the Princeton (N.J.) Plan. | * * , 1 It abolishes segregation between But no matter how much 'op- two schools by having all opposition to any given plan, edu- i fact to ended. ^ mQg( jeffmon j|e one of the schools for certain var,es from community to com- ( Pontiac Schools Supt. Dr. estimates about 100 openines iFades and then all of them go|munity- There are no pat solu-Dana P. Whltmer, on the other _ , . , . to the other school for other t,ons that can be applied unihand, says Oris Is the best ™at is than notbin8.! grades. versally. workable nlan at nreceot as two acho°' board members „ ________________* , ,, J workable plan at present. indicated, but some say it isn’t' a« *even,h a«* Although he can not estimate enough. eighth graders who would go to how many spaces will be avail-: * * * Washington and Jefferson could able for transferring Jefferson other objectors to the short-®? ®nly to Washington and all students, he does sa tho timo to save tremendously! Floor •ample* 1 Urns* M 1 suites, one-of-a-kind items, overstocked linos, all reduced 1 JM 1 to go! You must bo early for tho best! \ ^.^i| OUTSTANDING VALUE FOR EVERY ROOM \ C#1# IN YOUR HOME! BE EARLY! 4-Pc. Modem Bedroom—Double Dross- QQ95 or. Mirror, Chest and Bod vw 4-Pc. Modem Bedroom — Plastic Top \ QQ95 Dbl. Dresser, Mirror, Chest, Bkcaso. Bod 1 Vw Maple Student Desk — ACOO Plastic Top *#v Maple Plastic Top Double Dresser and CQ95 Mirror OU Maple plastic Tap Table—42" Round, QQ95 with loaf, 4 Matos Chairs 99 Walnut Plastic Top Table—42" Round, 11 095 with loaf, and 4 Chairs 1 19 2-Pc. Living Room Sot 1 OQ95 in Decorator Colors 1 v9 ’2-Pc. Living Room Sot- OCQ95 French Provincial Stylo mOw 2-Pc. Living Room Sot- 90Q95 Italian Provincial Stylo ....... •«>.. iOO Mapl* Hutch and j "| 095 SOFA Ethan Allen Occasional Tables— 1TM t Odds ana Ends If W Hido-A-Loungo 169 Sorta Hldo-A-Loungo— 1 QQ95 with Vinyl Fabric 109 Strata Roclinors—Choice of colors 0(|95 in Vinyl Fabric 19 Maplo OQ95 Record Cablnots 09 Smooth T6p Mattress—no buttons — 0750 any si» Af 8aswrr? 20##>*. smn^wHH 7-Pe. Dinolto Sot-36x48x60 Table "1095 and 6 Chairs 19 WALNUT FINISH BOOKCASE BED Bunk Bod—Complete with 2 innerspring QQ95 Bunkottos, Guard Rail and Ladder.... 199 DOUBLE DRESSER LANDSCAPE MIRROR m Odd Walnut .. OQ95 Chest £9 GLOBE FURNITURE 2135 Dixie at Telegraph E-Z Terms 334-4534 /"'IDEM Mon., Thurs., Fit. 'til 9 UrtlM Tuoi., Wad., Sat. 'til 6 • A modified open enrollment plan in which Negro pupils at Jefferson could attend bea[ the brunt of the drawbacks, “y tbe 8Cho° district. Gjlmore,s Christmas tree con. such as long-distance travel. TRANSFER PLAN jtained Adam’s boa. What other short-range alter-! In addition, up to 100 pupils -‘I got it, I got it, I got my datives are there for desegrega- living nearest Washington in the boa," he squealed. tion that could be implemented f ^ ^ ~ == ' ■ ■ ■ T------------ next September? One proposal by a citizens] committee ,to change attendance Electronic Device to Help Heart Patients Hailed WASHINGTON (UP!) - The National Heart Institute says it has successfully tested an elec-i tronic device which permits some invalid heart patients to resume normal physical activity by pressing a button. The. apparatus consists of a small transistor worn outside the body Which patients suffering from angina pectoris can switch on before engaging in( activities that might cause pain.' ★ a + The transmitter, by electrical impulse, stimulates the carotid sinus nerves in the neck tc duce blood pressure and blood vessel tone, thus reducing heart work and oxygen requirements. The Heart Institute said yesterday the nerve stimulation enables patients to work 15 times longer than before the devices were installed. Boy Gets Wish -Boa for Yule DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — Five-year-old Adam Gilmore of Day-ton had his heart set on a boa constrictor for Christmas. And he got it. He learned about snakes from a picture book. When he saw the bda in a pet shop, it became his! Court Funds Cut; Councilmen Face Contempt Count HAMMOND, Ind. (AP) - Six they considered to be raaaoa-able appropriations. Several yean ago, stodola forced’through his office budget in a mandate suit to toe Indian* Supreme Court. r*’’ ~ Lak^ County councilmen face contempt of court charges today before Superior Court Judge Frank A. J. Stodola because they cut his office budget. Stodola sent the council his budget last September accompanied with a writ of mandamus' giving the budget the force of a I judicial order. * ★ * The councilmen did some: trimming in court operating ex-: penses, however, based on what CORRECTION Goto Paper Towels 150 Count roll advottloMl In tho Wod.. Pm. 25 Pontiac Prosi for Farmer Jack Peed Storea should have bean priced 28c Wo 'regret if this error has earned any inconvenience. The Pontiac Press YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE Italian Knits $1000 Sweaters 1/3 OFF Suits Trousers Sport Coats , . Alterations FREE for New Years M PflMII’C RHPSS bURR 0 BOYS’ WEAR 73 R. Saginaw-Downtown Pontiac 1955-6 '56-7'57-S'5S-9'59-60'60-1 ‘61-2 ‘62-3'634 ‘64-5 '65-6 '66-7 '67-S SPENDING INCREASES - All U.S. institutions of higher education have been suffering financial strain in recent years because of inflation pressures, staff salary increases, the expanding technology of .education and—above all—rapid enrollment increases. But the heaviest burden,, particularly in enrollment, has fallen on public institutions whose resources have not been equal to the demand. As a result, public expenditures per student have fallen steadily behind per-student spending in private institutions. Switching your savings to the bank that pays 5-5 is as easy as bringing us your passbook. And you can do that right in your own neighborhood. Convenient Banking Hours: At hours that are convenient for you: Mondays through Thursdays from 10 until 5;' Fridays from 10 until €; and Saturdays from 9 until 1. Free Parking: Most of these Bank of the Commonwealth branches provide you with free parking while you’re doing your banking business. Drive-In: Many branches also offer convenient drive-in banking to save you additional time. Come in and see us., □ Twenty-Three Mile Road-Mound Road (Shelby Township) John J. Impellizzeri, Mgr., 739-0500 Woodward-Square Lake Road (Bloomfield Township) Clarence A. Davis, Mgr., 333-7908 iTh* young-old bank BANK OF THE COMMONWEALTH it Mimhii fitiill 0«,Mit IMWWC, Y Risky '66 Kidney Transplant Now Hailed THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1987 PHILADELPHIA (AP) -When doctors at the Einstein Medical Center implanted dead man’s kidney in Irving Fa-gelson’s body 16 months ago, it arts considered a rarity, and a major risk at best. It’s being hailed today because the 37-year-old Philadel- transplants are rare, but it is more unusual to transplant a dead man’s kidney. The transplant procedure which took 68 minutes, complicated. It involved risk be-Of the body’s tendency reject foreign tissue, the doctors reported in an issue of the hospital’s medical journal. “I thought I was a dead man when I first came to Einstein,’’ said Fagelson, whose one remaining kidney had ceased to function normally. Twelve years before, he had lost his other kidney to disease. Baneett and Jerry L. Rosenbaum said the plant kidney was removed from the body of a man in his early 40s. The man had died of brain hemorrhage and was o$H blood type compatible with Fa-gelson’s. The kidney was washed and F. Lucchesi, the center’s medical director. "The need for kid-! ney donors. Healthy kidneys for transplantation usually from two sources—from living donors, who give one of their two kidneys and from persons who die from causes that do not affect their kidneys.” n’s case points u sed,” said Dr. Pi Cigarette Vendor Faces Removal LA MESA, Caltf. (A - The medical staff wants to have two cigarette vending machines removed from hallways Grossmont Hospital. The presence of the machines, which bring the hospital 18 a day profit, is “tacit to endorsing smoking,” a physician said. Directors of the hospital appointed a two-man committee to prepare a report. Phone Workers Seek Protection Decrease in Year's Highway Toll I WASHINGTON CAP) - An More than 30.000 CWA mem- CWA spokesmen say they *v & f WASHINGTON (AP) - An lea right out of the horse oper-s—a shotgun rider who protected the Wells Fargo strongbox f—has been adapts by union workefg, as a way to protect them when they have to go into dangerous neighborhoods. So many workers have been assaulted while on assignment in slums of the nation’s big dt- ; M»«ipi^pr«cuaa>. SSs The annual highway toll U end the seventh year since ord-keeping started in 1883 that highway deaths have1 the 2,000 mark. 7,300 FEWER The accident toll is projected at 105,800, a drop of about vember in enforcing Michigan'! 8,100 and expected to be the first decrease hi nine wears. State Police travel is expected ftreiKhtt.8fniMm The 13.6 million maea^n traffic pa- trol. hide inspection, authorized by the start of operation of a Michigan law enforcement information network, limited program of motor ve- Police East Lansing Theadquar- provides record checks < such items as stolen cars ai wanted persons. •mVof .toM three ntlUta. p»-.uondh to 1*1, the President L. E. Tlmberlake, was I * a ★ due in Las Vegas, Nev., and the Farm Bureau Muiual, affili-j third man in line, Council Presi- ated with Farm Bureau Lief In-dent Pro Tem John S. Gibson surance Co. of Michigan and«“ •« did and also to be heavier and Jr., is vacationing in Boston. Community Service Insurance '* aUer. A one-year-old child The city charter doesn’t pro- Co., said dividends would be nJXt 3____________________ Pfr cent heavier than vide for an acting mayor be- paid on all policies in force VE85SJ & SJM i child in the previous century, yond those three. ^of Dec. 21, 1967. i LA Is Without a Mayor Today LOS ANGELES (AP) - This Car Insurer Sets Rebates LANSING (AP) - Michigan’s! Dividend checks iome declining traffic accident rateU)o,()06 will be mailed in ml* January, the company sail The dividend Is the second within Isix months. will bring a 10 to IS: per dividend to policyholders insuring 55,000 cars and . trucks,! Farm Bureau Mutual announced News in Brief SKIERS’ SPECIALS Selected Items; X 1/2 0FI DELICIOUS SHRIMP DINNER BOYS’ and GIRLS’ PRAM SUITS, SN0 SOHS, JACKETS, and COATS BOYS’ CORDUROY PANTS and SHIRTS, SLEEPWEAR FE 5-9955 TEL-NUR0N Childrens ""Jsssn&ssr £ I 1967 YEAR END Clearance Buy a SKI PACKAGE and SAVE Also all CHRISTAAAS ITEMS, and CHRISTAAAS CARDS (Norcross) at fantastic, end of the year savings! Jumbo Meaty Fried Shrimp from the Blue Waters of the Gulf of California, Served with a generous order of French Fries, Tangy Sauce, Crisp Tossed Salad, Hot Roll and Buttar. A & T “FIREBIRD” SKIS On* *1 the UmsI imparts • AfaU H»«tio top .Sen j^MUuttraw'tinhk • My-Ww ml" km** LANGE BOOTS o German made double boot A AT POLES Tapered aluminum shaft, molded grip, leather strap. Guaranteed plaatie ring CUBCO BINDING Sturdy, safety strep, installed Reg. 02.18 Value now *65°° JAYSON JEWELERS TEL-HURON FE 5-9955 FE 4-3557 Open Every Nile til 9 Charge Accounts Invited - Easy Credit Tefine TEL HURON SHOPPtNO.CENTER-8 MILE AT VAN DYKE-16 MILE AT CRATI0T Use Our Convenient Layaway Plan FE 4-0259 Open ItSO to • Mon., Thorn., Frt., Set. Tuesday end Wedhtsday til 6 TEL HURON 29 S. Telegraph • Coats • Suits • Dresses Sportswear ELIAS BROTHERS ★ Cunningham’s 'At Winkelman’s ★ Osmun’s ★ Kresge’s ★ Sander’s ★ 1 Hour Valet ★ Jayson Jewelers ★ Children’s Shop ★ Griswold Sporting ★ R.B. Shop ★ Beekwith-Evans ★ Shoe Box ★ Wrlgley’s ★ Camera Marl ★ Petrusha & Sons ★ Golden Thimble Michigan Bankard - Security Charge Diner's Club Yes, anything (or everything ■ in this case) goes, signifying the beginning of the end of the year sales. Following Christmas we find ourselves with lots of merchandise we can pass along to you at terrific savings. Slop in today and bring home some examples of our '“Every^ thing Goes” Sale. elsgraph Silver Lake ltd. and im Tel-Huron . Dixie Highway i Good Only at Theta Two Big Beyt now 129** on Telegraph at W. Huron Street Year-End Fabric iAIRICS .during Osmun’s Great Annual WBBic Value, to v Mm e I'° A0und Syndic • Bland SuJ»(n i m^°V*n Cohon one Wus Many Others FOR COLOR $124 pet SLIDES, K115-25.... | roil FOR ALL IMSTAMATIC CAMERAS FOR COLOR 7QC pei PRINTS OP-125-12. •. 19 rol ’flRCNCH $Nm (Available at Osmun’s Tel-Huron & Tech Plaza Stores) [ part el Pontiac since 1931 SMUN’S fen!(llm&rit The Canma, M TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Phon. 335*5471 ■ffiHgF *^* *•** shop every C MALL FREE PARKING at ALL STORES ■ Downtown Pontiac ■ Tel-Huron Center In f » . , !* Opan fri. ’til» v Optn Evary Night ’til 9 :enter HUSH PUPPIES - (Oi»e Style Only) « Men’s — $7.99 Vfa Women’s—$6.99 Him Children's-$4.99 ^ AMERICAN QIRL LOAFERS?r.?$5.99 MIOHEtlS $3.97 to|I.M S’kn FLATS $3.97 to$i.n *NATURALIZER HEEL end Cesaels Discontinued Style, Only New $9.90-$!! .9° PEDWIN’S FOR MEN ARO BOYS Di.contlnued Style* Only Now $0.80 PORTAGE Discontinued Style. Only Now $11.80/$15.80 Value, to $24 JUMPING JACKS DiK Style. Only Now 33.IT/34.98/$8.99/S6.§9 C—8 THE PONTIAC PllKSS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 Are You on LB J's List? WASHINGTON (AP) — Ifg "No Retreat From Tomor-you’re one of the 25,000 people grow" is a privately published, -Lyndon B. Johnson really cares |243-page ejection-of the 23 mes-about, you may now have a sages Johnson sent to Congress' copy of his book "No Retreat in 1967. '. From Tomorrow.’’ |; The printers, A. Hoen and Co. With if comes a warm note j Inc. of Baltimore said a run of from presidential aide Marvin 25,000 had been ordered. The Watson saying, “The President Hoen people wouldn't talk about hopes that you will accept this the expense involved but one of-little holiday gift as a token of ficial said the job “had to be " his personal esteem and warm perfect. Every little fly spot we gratitude ..had to take care of.” HURON Last 6 Days! ^MMfHFICENT!' -CHICAGO AMERICAN "BREATHTAKING!1 MIOES THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY -TORONTO STAR "An Achievement Of Mighty THE MIRISCH CORPORATION PRESENTS JULIE ANDREWS-MAX VON SYDOW-RICHARD HARRIS ADULTS HITES, SUNOAY and HOLIDAYS...................2.N • WED. and SAT. MATINEES.. NEXT ATTRACTION! "THE BIBLE” Food Stamp Project Continues to Grow WASHINGTON (AP) — Or-1But no one at Agriculture kids inge and blue bills that look like himself that there’s 100 per cent play money are helping 2.6 mil-J compliance on this. Especially lion needy Americans buy near-in the little one-man neighbor-1 ly $1 million worth of food every day. Known as food stamps, they’ll be circulating by July 30 in 1,200. areas of '43 states and Washington, D. C„ including hood groceries where the cus-j tomer and the man behind the' counter are friends from way, back. A more serious offender is the) occasional customer who sells eight of the nation’s 10 most her stamps to a willing store-' populous cities. ★ ■Aw Backers of the stamp program call it the most promising approach yet to the goal of putting better food on the poor man’s table without making it a handout. Nobody gets food stamps for free. The poor pay for them, keeper, asking more than she paid for them but less than their j face value. She makes a profit and so does he when he turns! the stamps in at the bank for full credit. The one restriction that stamp users find hardest to live with is1 the rule that food and only food May We, at The Liberty Lounge, Extend (pur Sincerest Wishes for New Year to All Our Friends! A Prosperous Liberty Lounge In The Heart of ' Downtown Pontiac 85 N. Saginaw swapping cash for stamps worth may be purchased. This means many dollars more. i stamps are no good for soap, COLD-BLOODED j toilet tissue and other nonedible 'essentials. Some find it a little cold-i blooded that the government ex-|c0 laint „ tracts money from those it pro- „ The official answer to this as laudable as tracts money fesses to help. But Congress shows Us ap- ' what Bg stamps are all about: Prth|Soap and toilet paper are, howi I nutritious are they? And that’s FREE COFFEE FOR OUR PATRONS 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 1I1MA.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous—334-4436 NOW SHOWING FOR MATURE ADULTS CONFIDENTIAL RUES REVEALED! . ..JSOTtRIST TELLS ALL! It starts where the Knsey Report left off —— g “THE Q0LDEN GIRLS” -----------— AN ART FAKE? - Beverly Hills art dealer Frank Peris paid a Berlin art dealer $7,600 for this statuette, which he j says he later found to be a | fake. The 14-inch bronze sculpture bears the name of Alberto Giacometti, a Swiss-born artist who was a pioneer of modern art. FISH FRY Every Wed. and Fri. ■ ■ • $1.19 Materiel Firm Fire Kills Girl Clam Plate *1.65 Newest taste treat under the sun Friod Tendersweet Clam Plato with goldon-brown French Fried Potatoes, Cole Slaw, Rolls and Butter UoujARDjounson'f 3650 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Open Sun.-Thurs. T to 11, Fri. and Sat. 7 to 12 GOODYEAR, Ariz. (AP) Fire flashed through a plant making munitions, killing one person and burning another seriously, in one of two fires in the nation Wednesday in munitions plants. One man was killed and 15 injured in a fire and explosion at a Hanover, Mass., plant that manufactures antipersonnel mines for use in Vietnam. ★ w * The fire at this Phoenix sub-lurb occurred in a small building j housing a mortar shell assembly room, about 30 feet from the I main plant of Unidynamics, Inc. The building remained intact. A company spokesman said only two persons were in the building when the blaze went through it. He declined to say what was manufactured in that building. SECURITY Guards restrained photographers from taking pictures and kept newsmen behind an eight-foot fence. WWW Carolyn Joyce Miller, 19, was killed and Cirilo Almanza, 23, was critically burned. WWW The plant, a division of Universal Match Corp., produces explosive compounds for weapons used in Vietnam, and components for missiles and aircraft. Opened in 1963 at a cost of more than $1 million, it employs about 550 persons. At Hanover, Ralph Garrett, the Massachusetts state fire marshal, said that blast was caused by “human error." Howard Chute, 20, of Marshfield, .Mass., was killed at Hano-|ver. proval by giving the Agriculture Department a bigger budget for stamps ';very year—$185 million for the current fiscal year, up from $116.3 million last year. WWW. “We’ve got to get away from this idea of giving the poor everything ,we think they need,” said Rep. Leonor K. Sullivan, D-Mo., the stamp program’s best friend on Capitol Hill. "In this program the people are taught how to spend their money,” she said. “As little as it is, they learn to budget it.’flj| THROUGH 1950s Mrs. Sullivan and others badgered the Eisenhower administration for a stamp program through much of the 1950s. It had too much of a welfare state aroma about it to suit Agriculture: Secretary Ezra Taft Benson. Exit Eisenhower in 1961. with him Benson. Enter President John F. Kennedy, determined to have stamps. WWW Kennedy’s first executive order was to establish a pilot program in a handful of cities. Congress put it on a formal continuing basis in 1964. A shopper armed with books of stamps, signed on the back so no one else can use them, can buy just about anything on the grocer’s shelves so long as it's food and—with the exception of icoffee, tea, cocoa and bananas —American-grown. LONG-TIME FRIENDS Purchase of tobacco and alcoholic beverages is forbidden. better diet. Washington sets general guidelines but leaves to state, county or municipal authorities -usually welfare departments —the task of setting amounts to be charged for samps. WWW On the average, families pay $6 for each $10 worth of stamps. But the bonus is much better for those at the very bottom of the economic scale. 1 ; virri-ft. I 1 FI S-4500 • mB pontfas 9 DRIVE-IN THEATER 2935 01X11 HISNWAY (U.S. 10) ' 1 BLOCK N. TILI6IAPH ID. ' DRIVE-IN THEATER SO. TILI6RAPN AT ML LAKE 90. 1 MIU W. WOODWARD 9* DRIVE-IN THEATER ■ 0PDYKE R0 AT WAIT0H 01VD. E ir MAM MARVIN osMATT HEIM* , THE AMRUSMRS G TECHNICOLOR-ANn alu-time Fun‘#1 BEST-SELLER Valley of the Dolls MIUMSION* COLOR by DeLUXE- j.c dj Fu" IRWTM a* MOT* ELIZABETH TAYLOR MARLON BRANDO REFLECTIONS MX *%»• GOLDEN chii2E„ MMMBStY BUNN ifL monica vim ss I1H IlSSfel T&ur'V qumVhowto Mfmai?M! ^ammion JMHslsI Train Derails in S. Illinois; 3 Are Injured CARBONDALE, 111. (AP) -Eight cars of the Illinois Central Railroad’s Panama Limited-Magnolia Star derailed south of Carbondale late Wednesday night, injuring three persons, one seriously. The rest of an estimated 150 passengers who had left Chicago Wednesday afternoon were able to resume their trip to New Orleans within three hours after the midnight accident. WWW Among the uninjured passengers were William B. Johnson, Illinois Central president, and O. H. Zimmerman, the line's vice president and general manager. A railroad flagman, Orvis Crain of Centralia, was admitted to doctors hospital in Carbondale'with serious injuries. A porter and one passenger, identified were treated and released. Several other passengers were shaken up, none seriously enough to require hospital treatment. FEW ARE HURT “We were very fortunate that more people weren't injured,” said Harry B. Coonce, IC division superintendent at St. Louis. The cause of the derailment was not immediately learned. INVENTORY CLEARANCE MBaaal DM. 29<30tli ALL PRODUCTS REDUCED BEFORE INVENTORY *192°° TWO SPEEDS DURABLE PRESS ONLY 4 LEFT 1 CUSTOM IMPERIAL MODEL WASHER RIDUCID *100" CRATE MARRED mehem RSE-36L 30* •lactric NEVER BEFORE-A FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC-CLEAN OVEN RANGE AT A PRICE LIKE THISI *247°° OTHER RANGES from $189.00 EVERY ITEM INSTOCK PRICED LOW QUANTITIES LIMITED SEVERAL ONE-OF-A KIND ITEMS DRASTICALLY REDUCED ALL SALES MUST BE COMPLETED BY 5:30 DEC. 30th Easy Front Loading $19900 A SAVINGS OF *60 ON THIS DISHWASHER SEVERAL TOP OF THE LINE MODELS AT REDUCED PRICES LOW PRICED! & MmM DAN, SiwweiMt WhR* Even this Lowest Priced Frigidaire Dryer has Durable Press Care • Durable Press Care helps Durable Press Items keep their no-iron promise • No-stoop lint screen in the door • No-Heat setting for fluffing. INSTALLED FREE ON DETROIT EDISON LINES *129 REFRIGERATORS UP TO *70 SAVINGS LOOK FOR SPECIAL SALE TAGS CRUMP ELECTRIC FI 4-3S73-UL 2 3468 AUBURN ROAD THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28. 1967 C-~6 Time to Pay the Bills Budget Appraisal Due Stock Mart CohtLower The following are top prices, covering sales of locally grown j produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the; NEW YORK (AP) — Thei Most gains and losses were optional nature although Data Detroit Bureau of Markets asstock market continued lower in! a fractional nature although Processing was off 7 at 10JMA of Friday. Produce FRUITS lathan, 6u. Apple*. Northern Spy. bu........ Apple*. Red Delicious, bu. .. Apple*. Golden Delicious, bu. . VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu............... Cabbage, Curly, bu............ Cabbage, Rad, bu................ Cabbage. Standard Variety, bu. Carrots, topped, bu............. Horseradish, pk. bskt. Leek*, dz. ben*................. Onions, dry, 50-lb, bag ........ Parsley, Raet. dz. bch.......... Parsnips, %4u. .......... active trading early Thursday Control Data was off 5% at (afternoon. 133%. Polaroid and du Pont flThe New York Stock Ex- posted gains of M. change ticker tape lagged be-1 The market dip came the day ts hind from the start. after the Federal Reserve At noon, the Dow Jones in- Board decided to raise required bank reserves against demand deposits. However, brokers said they were unsure what effect, if any, the action would have onij stock prices over the long run. 1 Trading was mixed on the r American Stock Exchange withn most gains and losses of a frac-| ft; HotSouse, . 2.5# I Losers outnumbered gainers I 2.50 by a fair margin. ; gift The Associated Press average ; 1% of 60 stocks at noon was off .2 at Jjg 319J) with industrials off .1, rails off .3 and utilitits unchanged. '• '•&! " Wallace Race Gets GOP Eye and Levin-Towns end Computer off 2% at 69 . National Video, Syntex and! Pancoastal posted fractional! gains. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - For every American in these post-Christmas days the time has come to pay the bills, financial, moral, ethicaL Anguish replaces mer-(rlment as reality raises its head 2 Senators Differ*11 everv house, the White House! on 3rd-Party Impact included. I This yearly __ recognition of WASHINGTON (AP) - The human- frailty, two top-ranking Senate Republi-!or match in ’ _ BOND AVERAGES Complied by Th* Associated Prtu 20 10 it it tl Rail* lag. util. Fgn. L. cans are at odds over what ef- early hopes] feet a third-party candidacy by against ultimate former Alabama Gov. Georgeja ccomp 1 isb-| _o C. Wallace would have on'the;meats, is usual-! JJ J 1968 presidential race. ly accompanied CUNNIFF m i | Meanwhile Wallace, ah appar-j by an agonizing confrontation « »i tant victor In his drive to qualify with conscience, from which 1 for the California presidential there is no release except bis economic message early this year, was quite accurate. But the problems quite often eluded the prescribed solutions. HOPES SOUR 25 of the 1967 “Economic Report of the President’ are 14 consecutive lines that show that the hopes even of the President of the United States, with all the resources at his command, sometimes sour frustration. of social progress, and provide, growth of incomes. ..” . [ The same question can be asked today, for It^remaina the dominant one. The inability to 1 travel between the ^dangers of inflation and recesajtai without encountering the shoals has been one of the big problems of this administration. | But, one year ago when Johnson was marking out this route, “Neither the threat of infla- Je.was.ful1 of b°Pe' Tam con‘ tion nor rif recession is ever dis-tant in a high level economy,” ® Johnson stated. Since both 1 threatened in 1967, this assess- E ment was right on the mark. MVaab, Buttercup, bu. . LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery, Cabbage, dz. Lettuce, bibb, hothouse, 5-lb. bskt. . Lettuce, leaf, hothouse, 18-lb. bskt. The New York Stock Exchange fldent that we can ftad such course,” he said. “We'will continue to coordinate th# tools of monetary and fiscal policy. . One needs read no ftirther in that paragraph to realize that hope itself must have fallen upon the shoals. The inability to exercise fiscal policy, perhaps body, not even a king or presi-!he had the answers. But, in through indecision but mostly dent, is excepted. terms of today’s economic and ibecause a doubting Confess , President Lyndon Johnson un-1 d*8’ a nof® °* exasPera" turned down a tax increase, was And former President I)Wight doubtedly ig now undergoing|tion can be read into the ques- *............................. - this self-annraisal in nronaraJt*0n- , What followed was a question that was then rhetorical and for ST, ballot, reportedly has targeted (resolutions to do better. J No-jw^c^ die F’res*dent- felt certain ~ Ohio for a similar campaign. IKE DENIAL Poultry and Eggs I fryer* AirRedln DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Prl pound for No. 1 live poultry: Heavy typo hens, 2021 cents; heavy type. 24-27; broiler* an whit**, 19-21. DETROIT EOOS DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Egg per dozen paid by fint receiver* ...^RPSEMP ing U.S.): Allied C 1.90b White Grade A lumbo, JM9 cents; AliledStr extra large, 32-35; large, 31-33; medium, Allis Ch A GamSko 1.30 “*■ iG Accept 1.40 1 Lab 1 10 46V* 45% 45% GenAnilF .40 Cp 1.60 21 29 2(96 29 4 % Gen Clg 1.20 Ind 2.20 27 43% 43V* 43% — % GenDvnam | Ills ,40a 27 62Va 62 62% £- % Gan Elec 2.60 ■" 1 4| ||i Uk +1% Sen Pd* 2.40 - . . . — Vk San Mill* .to 34% 34% 14% %• %|anMol 3.80a I 19% 19% 19% — % I 34% 5"' *— | *" I 26% 3 73% I 71%, 26-21; , 20-21. CHICAGO • UTTER, EGOS Am A*Mn CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Am Botch Exchange—Butter steady; wholesale buy- AmBdcst 1 ing price* unchanged; 93 icore AA 66%; Am Can 2 . 92 A. 66%; 90 B 65%; 89 C 43%; cars,AmCrySug 90 B 64%; W C 65. AmCAfTl Egg* unsettled; wholesale buying prices AwEIPw I unchanged to I lower; 75 per cent or ‘ ~ ' bettor Grade A white* 29%; mixed 29%; medium* 25%; standards 25. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Llv* poultr wholesale buying prices unchanged io 2% higher; roaster* 24-27; special fed White Rock Pryor* “ E>i Eisenhower, indirectly quot-|this self.appraisal in ed by the New York Times asitlon for his mU-January eco- How can we steer te^een I saying Michigan Gov. George and budget meg8ages these dangers,” Johnson asked, - . . Jtt! ?0lH"ey was t0° indecIsive toI which involved problems of aV‘and at the 8ame time 41 74“ 73% 741■* _ vL be President, denied ever mak- magnitude unknown by ordinary 1the needs of national defense, 1! S'* 3.. ?2% 4 % ing Such a statement. I man I strenerthen nur. m/arenne nav. These %:litical developments: |L * . | . r , - I VSH4V tsw woovaoiiibiH Vi HO" | ”0,M' 6SW.SVJ mill >><511 iiutivoi t5ia H r?”0,n*s tional problems, as expressed in'rates, maintain the momentum 21 247* 245% 2% + % H Kuchel, R-Calif., GOP Senate--------------------- r----------------------------------- ......... *oob — v« whip, predicted Democrats1 would lose far more votes than 29% - % —»imen. strengthen our overseas pay- " «% «% “,1'*- ese were Wednesday’s P°"| Looking back, Johnson will ments, relieve the inequities of Sf* 45% - v, litical developments: (find that his assessment of na-jtight money and high interest failure for the administration. “We are steering toward lower interest rates,” the President continued in this foment made last January, “a better balance in bur economy, a budget and a Social Security program that reflect national priorities.” AtttPPw 1.16 15 32% ■ Homo 1.20 35 56% Livestock =dy .90 97 Cf 1.90 49 MP^gtors 81 jAmNotGm 2 61 Am Photocpy 368 Am smalt : i 19% DETROIT LIVESTOCK l„„, PI DETROIT (API—(USOA) - Cottle 75, Am Tob 1.84 calves 25, hogs 25, sheep 25. SlaugHtar.AMP Inc .36 steer* active, steady to strong; heifers Ampex Corp steady; cows actlvo, fully 50 higher. Amphenol .70 Slaughter steers: choice 908-1,207 IB * ***■ 26.59-27.50; mixed good and choice U... d 24.50-25.75; utility cows 16.50- Shoap: prim* 98-118 23.50-24.50. Hogs: supply too small for market tost, j-CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API—(USDA)- Hogs 8,000;! butcher* steady to 75 lower; 1-2--------- lb 17.75-18.50; (round 108 head 218 18.75-19.08; 1-2 185-190 Ibe 17.25-17. 35% 34% 35% 28% 21% 28% 14 13% 13% 24 23% 23% 73% 73% 6i — % Grant 1.10 -+ % Gt ALP 1.30a 4 % Gt Nor Ryl 44%iQt West Fini iGWSug 1.40a -Is % GreenGnt M + % Greyhound 1 — % GrumAlrc .88 + % Gulf Oil 2 60 — % GulfStaUt .08 »% 13% 13% — IV.72% 72 72% + % | 4jftao% 53 53% + %1 t-r,——, x-- 23 ^41% 40% 41% + %, Revlon 1.40 1 26% 26% 26% — % Rexall 30b 4 35 34% 36% Reyn Met .90 34 ink 28 28 — %'RoynTob 2.20 15 Sf% 55% 5St6 —1 % RheomM 1.40 592 13% 12% 12%— % Roans* 1.47g 95 44% 44% 44% + % Rohr Cp JO 15 37% 37% 37% — % ReyCCoia .72 59 22% 22 22 — % RoyDut 1.90g 70 35% 35% 35% RyderSys .80 23% 22% ! 88 38% 37% 37% -I- Transit Union Move by Fed Voles to Strike! ^ldpfh,rorl ! Spending Cut Retirement Demand . . . I WASHINGTON (AP) - Some Is Big Barrier in NY {business leaders view the Fed-eral Reserve Board’s moderate NEW YORK (AP) — Thou- m0Ve t0ward ti8htenin8 credlt Bucktye State Jan, 5-10 to _ * strategy aimed at qualifying for ere, shouting and roaring their, . . . cutsDendinB %•%■«««• i1^. *r. ,"^tMaS!*S»*. * * * L Vwir’c n»v nnipcc day unanimous decision to Two members of Wallace’s £Jfw Years Day uriess theyLaige reserves on checking ac- 'l campaign staff in Montgomery, "J*'“J™*} Mneenadavlcounts-meaning banks must 6 - -• - - times and thus cutback on lend- board, M so 49% 49% _% Republicans if Wallace qualifies .R_ as a 1968 presidential candidate. 52% 52% * * * ... m «% - % But Senate Republican Leader «% 'ao*4 ir4 +1% Everett M. Dirksen, in Los An-661* 43% «% “ Reles to serve as grand marshal of the Tournament of Roses, j told newsmen he feelra Wallace os 35% 35% 3f% .A'lnto both parties’ ranks. 4? 47^ 46% ^1% • In Columbus, Ohio, a Wal- 20 32% 31% 32 + % lace spokesmen said the farmer —S- ; governor plans to visit the 90 23% 23% 23% - - - - - 17 40% 48% 48% 12 50% 50% 50% in 3i'- — 135% 135% —2 TPPwvs 54% 55% 119 , 27% 27% 27% 23 48% 48 48% 21 59% n 58 3s% 35% - %1SUC*1 P^ans- however. ~ . . - „. ” . umes ana inus cui Dacx o 8 st®te election officials s«klj"1 appeal ^ ^ ^ The action, said the os «% - % earlier this week Wallace ap-|SG.OOO-man Transport Workers! flg tt>m jnfj„ ap-|^?rTTr .. ** ”^*~*,* *:T^:i^as taken to stem inflation at iparently has succeeded in get-lUn,on for the Transit Authority |hAm- OIlfl to make an equitable offer. 38 74 18 70% 32 $% m% 37H + %thig enough Californians to re-i *s Si-2S% + %'S*s*®r w*th his American Inde-i48 28% »% w% + % pendent party to qualify for the! “We don’t want a strike,” 34 3% 22% 22% i % presidential ballot in the na-1 Matthew Guinan,__intemational mi 2?% »% »% 1 % tion’s most populous state. 17 "U 34% 35%+-% WWW 61% «% + % In Concord, N.H., meanwhile, . .VI spokesman for a state organi- tEi f4.*4 *2* t!!4 zation supporting President 71 home and strengthen the dollar I abroad. “It shows that Martin IViaiUlCW VJUlIldll, UUCI lUUIUUdl_._. . , . president of the TWU told the!^ggri.his messa«aag« meeting. “We know that the last *° lfe Pr“,dent- 8a'd one M^‘ strike cost the city a lot and our westem banker ol the surPri8€ own w°rkers a lot. j The banker, who asked that ... ... .... , P# , Daniel Gumartin, president of hi8 namA nnt h„ n„„ri r#,fArr.H 31 53% 51% 51% ti% Johnson disclosed plans for a Local 100, and other speakers chSrman Wiliam Me- i t U "aa £.*322? “xi? -96 —% —T— ---------- 27% 27 PRIORITY LACK Interest rates are now at all-time highs. The economy hardly |can be called'balanced. And some economic analysts claim that more than a few of John-'8 financial prahlema have come from an absence of spending priorities. f' To judge an administration solely on the Basis of hopes it expressed a year earlier would be unfair. A president must set his hopes high, and the resolutions made - by Johnson were mighty looai anyway. IF * * In addnion, the administration has a long list of accomplishments as well as frustra-tions, not the least of which is the maintenance of the world’s highest level of material wealth. /Nevertheless, every American, mighty and weak, is now going through the same ordeal as one year ends and another begins. is SURPRISES IN STORE 35 51 50% 51 106 20% Hi 13 60% .. 57 51 50% 56 51% 51% Trik ... 31% 32 Parking Is Cut at Rose Bowl Perhaps the wisest statement made in that economic message back in January was: “There will be surprises in store along the way.” ' * The statement was accurate in all respects. {demand for retirement at h0lf cuts greater than those recom-ipay after 20 years’ service. mended by Johnson while back-j‘NOT BARG AIN ABLE’ ,ing the President’s proposal to I “The Transit Authority says h'ke taxes. | that it’s impossible to give us i A similar assessment was giv-20 years at half pay,” he said.len W w«rd C. Krebs, chairman j“We said it is riot a bargainable °f th« credit policy committee MHp.......................... item and we have jo have it and °f Wells Fargo Bank of San Lander Co., Inc., of Sodus, N. Y. 2 Firms Agree on Purchase PALMYRA, N.Y. - AlUng- jwe are going to have; it.” -Francisco. 23 12 ji% 32 +% PASADENA, CaUf. (AP) - While the union was meeting,| “Since there has bera no fis-'5 103 io3% - % This note for 65,000 football fans Mayor John V. Lindsay joined ica* support in combatting Infla- ' 4 ovnpr'fnrl in trounl Ku /tat* in iho Lin ikunoo mnn mo^lbiinn nonnl tlOll bV this administrBtiOLl Slid r Oil 2a i sr am Corp Kaiser Ind MlchSuo .10q Mohwk D SCI 16%B 16* 16* . 1 3 o% 66% I * CltiesSvc 1.80 ’*'Clerk Eq *“ k ClevEIIII 1,80 Paneeathl ■ RIC Group Scurry Rain SlgnalOIIA la Statham ln*l Syntex Cp .60 61 68% . « ‘ 652 19% 19% • 172% 172% — % cocaCola 2l | m 60% 40% I Cota Pal l lu .8 ’l** *!» 'Piv Hifii * U? ««. + * MMlwi 1.6K9 JEZ i’4 ••,** £»» '-60b 201 50% 48% 49 —1% rgi l 44 ” 35^ 36% 36% % 1 ComlCre 1.98 nn / X v ' Comsolv 1.20 ’S? 26% If4 26% + %;C«"wE9 9 3T% «% 31% — V 11 69% 68% 68% - 9 12 60 59% 60 . * WarnLamb - WestnAIrL' ■ Wn Banc ' * WnUTel MontDUt U Mont Pw 1.5 MgntWard 1 Morrell ,30g Motorola l % — % i £ wiyerhr 1.40 5 + 44 WlnnDIx 1.50 expected to travel by car to the,his threee-man ipedihtion panel,tion by this administration and 19% _ % Rose Bowl game New Year’s'at De Pavilion restaurant to dis-1Congress, it is necessary for the 68%-%-Day: I cuss the status of negotiations, {Federal Reserve to go it alone,” m% 1% There will be only 15,500 park- ★ * + , ™d Krebs. 76%+3 Ung spaces now that 6,138 other Afterward, chief, mediator That view'was oft-repeated by M .... _.. «% t % spots have been eliminated. iTheodore W. Kheel said the ma- other bankers contacted by the * * . *■ jor issue holding up the negotia- Associated Press in the wake of. The 6,138 parking areas wereltions was the demand for retire- ti»e board’s announcement. I The Precision Seal Division of j Brookside Golf Course, ment after 20 years of service. All seven board members (Garlock, Inc. (formerly the where the Los Angeles open Kheel said the wage issue, have publicly endorsed John- Michigan Precision molded Di- rS tournament begins Jan. 25. In'which is also a key to the talks, j son’s proposed 10 per cent in-vision) has manufacturing fadli- Z% order to prevent damage to the could not be taken up until the come tax surcharge, which the ties at Gastonia, N. C., and mar- course, parking won’t be al-|pension issue is settled. |House w«ys and Means Com- keting and engineering head- + lowed there. Aside from the pension plan,mittee plans to consider for alquarters at 2175 W. Maple, v.. Wi-*\ ' * * * {issue, Wrist df the discussion at;second time Jan. 22. |Walled Lake. » z ^' Police are urging game-goer's! the union meeting concerned the, _\V * to come by bus or park far I state's new Taylor law which ... , 6i«% «% «% + % from the stadium—or walk. (prohibits strikes by public em-;(j|, < # ■% -Afk M.f% S% S%-%| The game will match South--ployes. 1.... % 1 % ern California and Indiana. 1 4% — IDO Sri« 4/ 47* 3$ 44* 4* 43* IfcS i 132 69% 49^ —V*- Bent 1.20 52 29% 27% iso iivk io% u * 30 27% I7Vk 27% — % k ■—D-— 'I 315 32% 2t% 21% - % I 51 120 52 2l% —N— 35 34% 33% 34% — *1 35% 35% 356 20 t2 ism lin 35 35% 348b 361 - 38% 39 66% — % I i 116% —3% XtroxCp 1.40 k 21% — % VngitSht 1.00 zenlthR 1.20a Copyrlghtag by — %- II 112 24% J4 24 —X—Y—Z— I 27% 3 26% + 43% 43% - Keystone drowtb K-2 ... Mast. Investors Growth . Mau. Investors Trilfl .. • ,1-il »•» 0*3 JJ-fJ 30.66 Bell 10.51 11.4? pet .15.27 iMr Kfii m S ■ M M Dresslnd >0.09 11.00 puu Pw 13.92 14.fi Dunhlll .1 » S’A 35% SSl^INfiOenTld M ii* ?j% p a% H% » ... fiMSTst iS M 26% I 8 WSWtt » 66' 65% .65% - } i.60 300 31% : E 31% ! 36% + % NEngEI i e% >i% iEfla H m p p iNoXkwtii 2 37% 37 37. — I 5 17% 17% 17% 61 157 155% 157 42 13 30 39% 30 + \ las 13 37% 37% : NoAmRock 2 NoNGas 2.60 Nor Pec 3.90 NoStaPw 1.60 : ii i3i. 21 65% 65% 65% - % 10 28% 27% 28 8 B% T fr -1 116 19% 19% 19% .. 46 99V» 19 99% - % unofficial. ________ .....-----noted, rates of dividends In th* foregoing tubli are annual disbursements baaud An th* latt quarterly *t semi-annual declaration. Special or (tre dlvldfrtds or payment* not dnlg-Btad *t regular art Idkntlfltd In the iKowIng footnotes. a—Also extra or axtrat. b—Annual Ite ulu* track dividend, c—Liquidating Ivldend. d—Decl»r«d or paid In 1967 lut Mock dividend, a—4>ald last year. I Quickie Marriage j Will Soon Cost More in Nevada \ NY Post Office Gets Santa's Mail Successfuhlnvestmjm By ROGER E. SPEAR lyour mutual fund — which is Q - We are retired and own stron* and consery«tive - .tans _ . „ _ ¥ _ .mainly at protection of princi- Santa Fe Rwy., Iowa Public ^, raJther than Wg asKt build- I advise you to hold your NEW YORK (AP) -VThe Post service, Columbia Gas, and Office here estimates its dead Treasury Position 'HL 20% 3 cash value on ax-dlvldand ‘ton data. a-Declar ' year h—Declared vldt—---------^ n accumulative Dapeilfs Fiscal Year J .ton Y* YS GLG .10 • liiondt 1.72 MPflRjM IPesoNO'l mar El 1.88 KiiTW ^•t”cp Tm 34 14|VI 147% 1M 17 34 Wk SB 56 S3 Vs 53% 52% ii li% 56% S6% • 31'% 31% Nwst Airl ,70 68 8% {6% g% - ^ | »Ccb "8%^ Wd 1 NwB.n 2.10* 1 50% 80% 58% 4 % 1966. estimated cash value Norton 1.50 41 41% 40% <8% —' or ex-dlstrlbutlon date. Nwwleh -78 * 46 46 44 4 % l-|*|e* In full. cld—Called x—Ex dlvldl 1 10 37% '27% '37% OhloEdls 1.38 qjtiiW i o* jOkiaNGi 1.12 + u oiMMdt tie 4 % Om*rk 1.171 - % I Otis Elev 2 liik _ % Oufbd Mr I ^4l,6l'4,077.62 " 81,(53)316,429.51 330,037,723,926.21 ISlrSttf jSo* Fansteel Mat 111,261.1 it8l/p«M-/345,357,1 Me 18EHH . ■ „JP 12,433,723,692.06 13,159,104,266.60 Pedd*r6 .80 1 Includes *260,702,:6I 47 debt not Mb- PfdDStr 1.70 ict. Io stitutory limit. , < Pirte Cp 1.20 Thursday') 1st Dividends Declared Ps- Ilk. el P* I?Sck r"- ****rd *' Fischer 8 For^^g^g Alter man Foods .125 1 pflntkotd ] Fla Paw 1.44 PMC Cp .75 > fBMsIr »0 . FordMot 2.40 2-26 ForM^K ,l2g 51 VVk 36% 36% IJ JUi I —f— 8 ■H il|,„wk 10 74% 74% 74% 4 %|?8CT|T |.*D 2 33 33 33 IPanASUI 1.50 37 54 53% »%-%!£•" Am .48 49 31% 31% ft% — % Pfnh |9* 1.60 71 23% 33% 33% 4 % POrktDav. la if 43% 44 4 vklBHl ,7 ranto, ww—wi vi—if m# warrants. wiF—Whan_ {waiting period or blood test for PHHH PR_______________PR R I marriages. Last year 86,335 cou- 124 30% 30% ij^-5BSlS®n2S^i#et bTF were married in the state n _5I% 11% 85% — % laresf equalization tax. —P— -----------,--- 35 34% 34% 3<% 4 % „ . . .. . week divorce decrees. 296 1A* If* 16* — * STOCK AVIIAAII ' 3> »T% «}J - w Csmplled by Thl/Umialed Pr.ii . , I ! . Wellington Fund. Our invest- CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - letter department received! _ It will cost a little more to ob- about 2,500 letters this year ad-, tain a “quickie” marriage or di- dressed to Santa Claus, North paper loss of around $2,800, yet vorce in Nevada, beginning Jan. Pole. U.S.A. In past years 3,000 Je purpose of buy ng was to 1 , to 4,000 letters were routed to hedge against inflation. What or ax I Tte st&te, which ranked fifth the office here from ar You bought a fund which n v e s t s exclusively in Mill. With money rates rising sharply over the past year, bond pricta have dropped to their lowast level since the 1920s. You can get out even now and 1 advise you to do so. For a nominal fll# the management will switch your bond shares into its 8tock Series, which will noti from dividend Income, match savings Interest but will offer a chance for appreciation. ,, (Copyright, 1187) - ^KlL^gsl fZikl «275 ?m«S33 ~"~*2*9 RCA VICTOR 18” COLOR TV PORTABLE msssssssm "”329 ipSSSSSl K $149 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1987 MOTOROLA 18” UHF/YHF PORTABLE *97 ZENITH 18” DIA. FREE instalUTion WHIRLPOOL HOTPOINT PORTABLE DETROIT JEWEL ^BSSSaS^1^ * s»w “fio skHHS'HSsHEH s^SSSSSSSSSe Sr’iSsSH.iSSSS ■^if, “*#0 $85 . M EaHHvaninM mal.Tnritatour«tpMst. sp»“ $376 $343 $337 ipi§§= *809 ESSaSe $759 mft!!S gBBjsasaa gasssasss = sss&»5s^g $89. . $108 ns $159 SrS^rr: $130 *397 SS“H“ $300 «=«:! $357 $197 sess^st $133 BOP BRAND IICU. FT. “*100 &8atig&555£E SfiZ $647 ^stcssst-s $197 ........... $39 was Sgpv* HfW $90« mutism ,K aa&aaa wjs^.siS: *43w *6” S5^Ha&raSi5£5 $50 S32SSSS?« pBr *289 ss®=: $97 SSS *145 SSSSS2SS $349 aH3££~ $457 EEr™ $151 SSH5H2S! $190 Essassc^ *WT KESsfe-”* *88 SS*5£3e $07 5S*-r $147 'SBE55S5 $170 EYE-LEVEL GAS RANGE SSSS»rj5srr£?££ *187 NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY » PONTIAC NALL SHOPPING CENTER | TELEGRAPH ROAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN DAILY I AM. to I P.M. • PHONE 6I2-2SII *134 / City Foes Clash Tomorrow PCH, PNH Cagers Trying to Shift Gears < Both teams wijl be trying to shift basketball gears when Pontiac Northern travels to Central tomorrow night. The Huskies will be attempting to shift from second to high and cut into Central's 20-3 margin in the city cage series. Getting out of reverse wiH be the Chiefs' main objective. Northern will go into the contest as a solid favorite for the first time in the series. 40 and 25-potnt wins over Farmington and Walled Lake in its last two outings. The Huskies have posted a 3-1 record while averaging 82 points a game. Lone blot on the record is a 74-72 overtime And Dana Coin, the top scorer and rebounder last season, is expected to make 'bis initial appearance of the campaign against Central. He has been i at Highland'Park. PNH rolled to nursing a leg injury. The Chiefs, on the other hand, have been going backward since defeating Roseville, in their opener. They have lost three straight,. “I just don't know what to expect against Northern," said PCH mentor Fred Zittle. “The game is a big question mark for us.” He was speaking of the performance of the Chiefs/Zittel is well aware of what Northern will offer. including Northern will throw more of the same at the Chiefs. MAIN PROBLEM THE PONTIAC PRESS SPORTS “Northern is a very impressive team," he said “They have four good guards and are strong up front.” Central’s mam problem has been at guard. The Chief’s came to grief against the pressing tactics of Bay City Central and Arthur Hill. In an attempt to shore np the back-court situation, Zittel has moved Lewis McNair into a starting role. He will team with Frank Russell who is the team’s leading scorer with a 16.5 aver- age. This would indicate that future foes, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 D—1 Aging Packer Gains Lift Against Rams Crystal Ball Battle Under Way The honor of all athletic minded men, football fans and the Lqyal Order of Swamis (female members prohibited) lies in the hands of the champion prognosticator of the sports department, Swami Spears. GREEN BAY, Wis. (I) - A balding Henry Jordan of the Green Bay Packers, who probably has less hair and more moves than any tackle in football, is. feeling like Henry Jordan again — he’s worried as usual. “Don't talk to me about the Super Bowl. I don’t even think about the Super Bowl," said Jordan Wednesday as he prepared for the Dallas Cowboys and John Niland, the 'guard he will oppose In Sunday’s National Football League championship game. “That Niland, he’s a good one,” said the 6-foot-3, 250-pound veteran. Having been challenged, needled, insulted, dared and even threatened to match wits in picking the Bowl Games against the 1967 champion of the Editorial page football contest, Swam] Spears has . . . eh, volunteered to battle Seeress Wilson in the six big bowl predictions. GETTING READY There will be steak for the winner and crow for the loser. Seconds for the battle are editorial writer Howard Heldenbrand for Seeress Wilson and sports editor Bruno Kearns for Swami Spears. It was Jordan’s typical way of getting ready. Niland is good. So is Jordan, although a week before he wasn’t so sure about that. Rose Bowl—Indiana-Southern Cal. Gator Bowl—Florida St.—Penn St. Orange Bowl—Oklahoma-Tennessee Sugar Bowl—LSU-Wyoming Cotton Bowl—Alabama-Tex. A&M Sun Bowl—Mississippi-Tex. El Paso SEERESS WILSON SWAMI SPEARS Indiana Southern Cal. Florida St. Florida St. Oklahoma Tennessee L.S.U. Wyoming Alabama Alabama El Paso Murphy Leads Collegians Top Scorer in Motor City The most prolific basketball scorer in the country at this time, Calvin Murphy, is expected to shatter all existing records when the 16th annual Motor City basketball classic begins Friday at the University of Detroit Memorial Building. college scorers with a 45.6 average, including scoring outbursts of 57, 52 and 41 points. The 5-10 sophomore, who averaged 49 points a game as a freshman, leads all Morphy will be the feature in the opening game when Niagara meets Valparaiso at 7:30 p.m. Host University of Detroit tangles with Portland in the nightcap at 9:15 p.m 'Ailing'Wolverine Sparks 93-76 Win The opening night losers will play in the consolation bracket Saturday night at 7:30 with the championship game following. ACCURATE SHOOTER ANN ARBOR (B — Michigan basketball coach Dave Strack can stop Worrying about Rudy Tomjanovich’s bruised and battered legs. "He was in an auto accident over the Christmas holiday,” said Strack. “He couldn’t run Tuesday but he was okay tonight.” In one game at the Philadelphia Palestra, Murphy hit on 19 of 36 shots and converted a perfect 14 of 14. from the free throW line for his 52 points effort even though his team was defeated by LaSalle. * 1 'Straight Football' Oakland Title Plan His 6-game total of 270 points is expected to mount in the touniament with NON-LEAGUE WIN The slick Wolverine sophomore scored 21 points and hauled down 10 rebounds as Michigan rallied in the second half for a 93-76 nonconference victory over a good Butler team Wednesday night. Butler, now 3-6, jumped to a 10-4 lead at the onset as Clarence Harper hit his first three floor shots. The Bulldogs led by one to six points until Tomjanovich and Bob SuUivah, who came off the bench with a hot hand, rallied the Wolverines to a 28-27 lead with seven minutes to play in the half. aaacvr.i’ia-, js,s ff!r IM Ifet Ifi ! -- fjwwpr 1M I « 4-s 23 MmSr * 0 M 0 Non. H 0 Spord'da »lr LONG THROWER Coach John McKay says the Trojans may play quarterback Mike Holmgren, a third stringer but the longest thrower on the club.1 In order to shake things up, Abel will shift his lines for tonight’s Nattenal Hockey League game, with Gordie Howe centering a line lor Alex Delvecchlo and rookie Doug Roberts I Ik I V D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 BASKETBALL scons HOLIDAY TOURNAMENTS «t River Route Northvllle 5 &sr Thurston 98, Dear Fobichaud Ecorse 72, Lincoln Park 43 ~ r Rouge *1, Highland Pi at Livonia itriity Livonia • entity 41, Berkley 1 «----■—, as, Livonia Steve Farmington 5 s Gain in Tourney MARSHALL "OPTIMIST CLASSIC Wayne Memoria Stockbridge 78, A pair of Farmington squads i Tonight at Bentley, Berkley moved up a notch in the Livonia meets Stevenson at J p.m. and !Bentley tournament with vic-|Redford Union takes on South-jtories last night, while a couple;field at 8:30. Tomorrow, Bent-| of other area teams took their J ley and Farmington collide at 7, 1 lumps in the same tournament and North Farmington meets Mich si in opening-night action. lYpsilanti in the 8:30 scrap. The Falcons of Farmington Kalamazoo Centra squeezed out a 65-60 verdict over Livonia Stevenson, while the Raiders of North Farmington gained a 74-65 win over Red-ford Union. Pewamo-Westphulia 70, Morri Willlamston 93, Portland St. f PottervHle 80, Ashley 50 Carson City 97, Dansville 4G At Swartz Creek Far West Class! Oxford dropped into the losers bracket at St. Clair last night after dropping a 57-34 decision to Marine City. In the other game, Madison Heights Lam-phere downed Marlette, 62-58. In the other two contests,, ____________________ Bentley knocked Berkley into SLATED TONIGHT the losers bracket with a 62-51 j On tonight’s schedule at St. decision, while Ypsilanti Clair, Detroit Country Day ' trimmed Southfield, 65-63. Mercury Outboards and Stem Drives • STARCRAFT • SHELL LAKE • IMP BOATS Fiborgloi Aluminum "Booting** On* Port of Coll*' IMS S. Woodward at Adam* Road JO MW Ml MUS Mon., Thurs., Fri. I - 9 Hand Car Wash ......... $2.00 Nek Up and Sol..........$2.50 Wo Plow Snow—Start Your Cor SPANN ft OWEN'S H S. Parry St_I to 4 Mon.-Sat. evada Southern 17, I All-Colltga Basketball Tournamant Auburn 65, Arkantae SI meets Marine City at 7 p.m. with St. Clair taking on Lamp-phere at 8:30. Finals are slated for tomorrow. Capac ran its record to 4-0 by opening tournament play at Yale! with an 82-50 nod over Brown City. In other games, Richmond tot” Pet. Bahind dumped Armada, 77-64, and Im-: ; lay City trimmed Yale, 71-65. Fade in Fourth Sinks T-Hawks The league leading Grand hap-ids Tackers of the Western Division of the North American i Basketball League showed the Pontiac Tomahawks why they are rap title contenders of the NWBL. The Tomahawks played one of their better games for three! iperiods, and, as has happened; often in the past, faded away and took a 139-124 lacing from the Tackers. | The first place Takcers found; themselves matched basket -for basket by the cellar-dwelling Tomahawks until the opening [moments of the fourth period. Former Michigan star M. C. Burton and player coach Nick Mantis, with help from former Northwestern star Willie Jones, then manuevered a couple fast breaks and pushed the margin from 81-77 to 93-85 and a bigger gap of 100-85 from which the T-Hawks were never able to recover. Pontiac started strong with Piston taxi players Paul Long and Sonny Dove sparking t h e early attack along with the ret bounding of Jim Patterson. V York . II itat* 66, Western Michigan Baltimore l Arkansas State 71; st. Louis lean Holiday Clonic Elrst Round :h 99, Houston Slata 10 13'/, On the Friday schedule at TWO POINTER—Coach Bob Duffy, still trim and active as a player, activated himself with the Pontiac Tomahawks hoping to stop the T-Hawks’ skid in the NABL. Duffy lays up a two pointer here, getting past Bob Wilkinson of Grand Rapids and Bob Woollard (right). The Tomahawks again * Slot* 7< r Tech 9. n II. Emporia, Kan.. Slata in Splka Taumamanl Los Angalas ... Chicago ....... Yale, Brown City-meets Yale at faltered in the final period and lost to the league-leading Ijm -................. - 1 Tackers, 139-124. eSRSRIPgRPBIPqkn gt I es Philadelphia 1M. New York St. Louis 116, Boston 113 6 p.m.; Richmond takes on Capac at 7:30; and Armada takes! on Imlay City at 9. Finals are1 slated for Saturday. I. Papptrdlns 7] San Francisco San Dlago State 6S Quaker City Teurnament Wisconsin 86. Penn 47 Temple 93, Providence 63 St. Francis, Pa., 85, Arizona 71 Duquesne 78, Vlllaneva 59 l Seattle -iday's Gar Philadelphia Northwestern in Semifinals Albright Invitational First Round Colgate 73* Albright r AAA .* |m|| jj 0f See the Beautiful new 1968 Cadillacs on Display NOW at JEROME MOTOR SALES 1980 WIDE TRACK DR. FE 3-7021 m ‘ HOCKEY RESULTS W Wf Less Worry Puls Guard in Spotlight With 76ers HONOLULU (AP) - North-; s Angeles lladelphla Minnesoi St. Loull Oakland Montreal 3. Toronto . , ...... ■ ... . NEW YORK (AP) - Wallyito Philadelphia and averaged western s^Wildcats ran wild in jones t0 worry about his 9.0. Last season he averaged the second half to defeat Hawaii [shooting, but since his coach 13.2 and currently is firing at a 96-71 Wednesday night and gain has taken over the worrying, 115-point clip, the semifinals of the fourth an- waiiy Wonder has become quite REPLACE COACH nual Rainbow Classic. a marksman. [_.„.. , . . . I The Rainbows stayed with the Jone*a oeD1)erv 6-foot 2L n nf if Z r * COaCh’ ! Jones’ a pepp^y. o-toot-z when Dick McGuire was i hom^^d1guard for the de,ending Nation- dropped in favor of Red Holz-j f36 v h m :*al Basketball Association cham- man, a New York scout. New| 32 wf 97 If* **Ha4 under a ba|rage of pion Philadelphia 76ers, helped York has lost nine of its last 12 31 90 83 field goals in the second half. !his team trim the New York games and is in fifth place in In the opening game of the Knickerbockers, 114-105 the six-team Eastern Division, tournament, Marquette defeated Wednesday, scoring 24 points | paul Silas hit for 10 points in Akirt CiaiA A4 fiA nfkiln kAMinrt Dill Dfn/Hatr Moan Li. »_ The Tomahawks held an 18-11 lead, stayed ahead through most of the first period which finally ended in a 28-28 deadlock. LEAD CHANGES The lead changed hands throughout the second period before Grand Rapids moved ahead by seven and Pontiac cutting it to two at intermission. Coach Bob Duffy, who reactivated himself with the hope of perking up the Toriiahawks* defense and floor play, said dejectedly after the game, “there’s a lot of talent on this team, I just don’t know why we run out of gas in the final period. We haven't played together as a team, and a win or two under lour belts is what we need to !get a little teamwork,’’ he !added. I Burton was uncanny at the free I wow line where-he connected with 21-of 24 and finished with 43 points. Dove led the Tomahawks with 28 while Long added 27 and Patterson 23. Ohio State 64-60. Wadntsday'i Rtsullt LONG WAY—Paul Long <33) Detroit Pistons’ taxi squad member playing with the Pontiac Tomahawks tries a layup against Grand Rapids’ Nick Mantis. Long had 25 points in DEFENSIVE SPURTS Long, 6-2, All-America star from Wake Forest, did an outstanding job with his court play, but the Tomahawks as a unit have been playing defense in spurts. The Tackers claimed at least n .. T me lauitcia uauiicu m least trrtf5 a a,**™ Fort Wayne at Port Toledo at Da* Molntt Muskegon at Dayton Start the New Year With a Better Automobile Deal from Matthews-Hargreaves -Land. You'll Bo Money Ahead! n Chevy- New 1968 Corvair 2-Dr. Hardtop Only II a Plus Tax and Plates INCLUDES: Factory inatallod hooter, backup light*, hazard warning flaahar*, factory inctallod suat baht, alactric wipurt, waahor*, podded doah, poddod visors. Note: fort In otock of big >w 1967 Chevrolet Mileage and Demon*! BO Warning to 1967 Chevrolet Owners You era required to validate your warranty every 12 months from data of purchase. Failure to do to could null and void your warranty. Coma in and let our sprvica department help you. iavings Satisfaction Matthews hargreavis D31 Oakland at Cass FE 5-4161 /j while holding Bill Bradley, New the fourth quarter, broke three York’s heralded rookig, to 13^ ties—the last at 112-112-and led ;points. ;the St. Louis upset of Boston.! PAD LEAD |Sam Jones of Boston led all I The victory, plus St. ^’[scorers with 30 points while [116-113 victory over Boston, put Zel™ ^ and Ridges the 76ers 1% games in front of each had J* for*the Jawks- j the Celtics in the Eastern Divi- _ . , . .. . " . sion standings. Cincinnati' Robertson hit eight of nipped , Los Angeles 132-127 in hls 34 P°in4s in P ,lasf 3* the only other NBA game sched- m,nu fs as Cincinnati fought off uled 8 rally by injury-plagued Los * * * Angeles. Mel Counts had a I Asked about his transforms- j^eer high 30 for the tion from benchwarmer into a crs~ ____________________ vital cog in the 76ers machine, . , ' Jones sqid, “It’s a matter of Quits Prep Cage Post confidence.” Jones, in his fourth NBA sea- FELCH (UPI) — Carl Lemin son, played ope year at Balti- Jr. has stepped down as head more and averdged 5.3 points basketball-baseball coach at per game. He was then traded Felch High School. Ex-Champions in Mat Lineup [lapses of the Tomahawks. Sunday at 5:30 p.m. the Chicago Bombers visit Pontiac Northern, and coach Duffy said there is a possibility the Tomahawks may make a deal within the next day which may help perk up the team. T-HAWKS (1M) Wrestlers Battling!** CHICAGQ (AP) - Two form- T#,*“ “ »■»™*t» < er national collegiate heavy- 1P#nf„c ,c weight champions top an expect- 0- Me ed field of 300 grapplers in the »»■« Midlands Wrestling Champion-j . . . . ships at suburban LaGrange Fri- rTfJr/Pr C Inilirx/ day and Saturday. ° IlljUl / Expected to progress to SKOAL HUB'S EM VliKS KOREAN BOOTS Gov't, surplus ... used. The worm.it inauletod A _ MO95 Buy note, while all tieei are available. INSULATED UNDERWEAR 2 Pice* Suit Jacket and Pant Red or Brown Sitrt.S-M-C.XL Dacr intulntetl Thermal-Lined Nylon Outer Shell Red, Bret *12" U.S. Air Force, Insulated Nylon Flight Pants 181 98 SfmtlamlM $ 9.95 Sites 41 BBS 42 $]3,95 Dacron Insulated Coveralls Water rupullunt $1 ADS Full zlppur I *9 PORTABLE CANVAS FISHING SHANTY 4 STYLES TO CHOOSE ♦lO" to *60“ SHANTY HEATERS BOTTLE OAS NEATER . . $ S.M OIL HEATER .......$10.01 SKAR..............$ 4.00 SPU0..............$1.40 TIP UPS............ ........t 1.11 May the Spirit of the Holiday Season Abide with You Through a Prosperous Now Yoar JOE’S! i ARMY , NAVY { ; **°n- ~ Thur*. - Fri. V to 9 ■ SURPLUS s mi axpeciea ro progress 10 a t • * . heavyweight title showdown are I riQQerS iVlOVG Joe James, former Oklahomai ^^ State NCAA champion, and Mi-| chigan’s Dave Porter, NCAA titlist. Porter ' was a star football di966j by Club Brass tackle for Michigan. James, who . „ .. D . „ . „ 5H once competed at 213 pounds, I ^?rg’th? Bo®ton Red Sox now scales 245 after a weight Y011^ Award w,mnfr % *he lifting fitness program. American League s toh pitcher A hot 137-pound championship ,in l9f.7’ a re,cu- scrapis possible between Ration period o mend his left Waterloo, Iowa, products, Dan’Sf'f bfs*b*U brass mapped Gable of Iowa State, and DalelP,a"Sf ° ^ Players’off-season Anderson, NCAA champion from acTt,viSs which/»se danger. Michigan State Lonborg, a 6-foot-5 right-han- 8 der injured while skiing on the „ .. . . , , ,, slopes of Lake Tahoe on the Cai- Gable last year was voted the if0rnia-Nevada line last week-meet s outstanding wrestier aft-end, underwent surgery for two er capturing the 130-pound torn ligaments in the knee cr®wn- - „ • . Wednesday. An outstanding 130-pound en-| ^ john McGillicuddy, assist-try is Masaaki Hatta, twice ^ bv Red ^ physician Dr. voted the Midlands outstanding Thomas Tierney, performed the wrestler, who competes for the * hourt io.minute operation at BOSTON (AP) - Jim Lon- Michigan Wrestling Gub of Detroit. For ALL your Santa Maria Hospital. McGillicuddy said the surgery was more difficult than anticipated because a second tom ligament was found. Otherwise, he said, the surgery went as expected and everything is satisfactory. The doctor said that Lonborg | will be hospitalized about a week and will have to wear a cast for six weeks before starting special exercises. The Red A- [Sox hope he will be on hand Y.jJlNSURANCE [when SENTRY.*^ INSURANCE [when battery men report for The Hardware Mutuals Organization 8Pr^n8 training Feb. 'Winter Haven, Fla. ["Drive a little-save a lot” Come to our big Anniversary Party Jan. 8 thru Feb. 3. Free gifts. Free refreshments. Daily door prizes. "Win Your Money Bock" contest. shelton PONTIAC • BUICK 855 Rochester Road, Rochester 651-5550 TUB PONTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1907 | Windsor Raceway jwnr,e Worthy 4*0 S.M >30 Hmm I^rmtafo *ur/ 3.70 3.30 ■ V'“‘ WSStt-w .Direct Star I Ho 24.70 Echo yam* 5CSS Cond. Paco; I MNoi ' i:Si 7th—*1700 Cond. Trott 1 ffi5 Sorno/hlnp US E 1 Rita Rodney dh-Doad Hoot lor Pint AoNtMOt CM) Paid llt.tt Ith—03UO Cond. Paco; 1 MltOi Drummondvtllo 3.30 Canadian Dutch... Butternut Lad wMtOOO Claiming Pact; 1 Mil.. ***** Man 12.70 1.70 4.40| New Leader in Cage Polls Once-beaten Kentucky Wes- Indiana State and leyan took over first place from Lang-Island Unlverrtty. 4o San Diego State in The Asso-J;?? elated Press’ small-college bas-Iketball poll today. The Aztecs, J, .^defeated twice last week, m 2.J0 dropped to fifth. Evansville climbed into the ,n LTo runnerup position, followed by ,{• j^gg*** »oto'l» Tho Top . aronthoiii. _ games of Saturday. ■ 10-9 8 7 * 5 4 3-3-1 oaaia: 3. Indiana Stata (i) ..... 4. Long Island U. (2) ....... t. San Diego Stata (2) ...... 4. Southwoafarn Louisiana O) parentheses, season records through #4 » 7-0 43 . m 4-3 34 ti % I Odette Adlo* 7 I I Irena Mack I ]*tb-**0* Claiming Troll 1 Milo: I PrInc* Eddie *.00 4 ■ 1 Sneaky Pot* 3 I Lomac 1 Oulnollai (1-0) Paid 02*.70 2 4th—*1200 Cond.---------- — Finns '6' Held to 2-2 Draw Australian Netters Romp in Cup Play HAVING A BRAWL — Defenseman Bob Woytowich (2) of the Minnesota North Stars and forward Reg Fleming (9) of the New York Rangers square off for a short fight during the third period of their National Hockey League game in BRISBANE, Australia (UPI) —Australia completed a 4-1 victory over Spain in the Davis Cup Challenge Round today when Roy Emerson defeated Manuel lOrantes 6-1, 6-1, 2-6, 6-4, after COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. Manuel Santana downed John (AP)—Denver University fought Newcombe 7-5, 8-4,6-3. a stubborn Finnish team to a 2-2 New York Idst night. Both drew major and minor penalties ' —five minutes for fighting and two minutes for high sticking. The bout ended in a draw and the game, also, 3-3. draw Tuesday night in the second game of the Broadmoor International Hockey Tournament. In the afternoon game, Russia trounced Italy 28-2. The concluding singles matches of the Davis Cup Challenge Round had no significance inasmuch as the Australians had already clinched the title with Ex-Black Hawk Scores With Boston's Bruins victories in the two opening Cliff Koroll put Denver ahead!singles matches on Tuesday and lin the final period Only to have|in the doubles match on Wednes-I Juha Rantasila tie the match day. 1 with another unassisted shot. against New York. Ray Cullen scored two of the goals and assisted on the third. By the Associated Press So who needs Bobby Hull anyway? Certainly not Phil Esposito, who is passing less and enjoying it more now that he no longer centers Chicago’s Golden Jet. \ Esposito was the playmaker for Hull’s 54 and 52-goal outputs the last two seasons, which shattemed National Hockey League records. ★ ★ ★ Traded to Boston during the summer, Esposito has become a scorer himself. He proved that to his old Black Hawk teammates Wednesday night when he notched his second three-goal hat trick of the year in a 7-2 Boston romp over Chicago. STRING SNAPPED The loss snapped a 10-game unbeaten string for the Hawks and dropped them back into a first place tie with the surprising Bruins. ★ •* * Elsewhere, New York and Minnesota battled to a 3-3 tie, Montreal tied Toronto 2-2, St. Louis topped Los Angeles 4-2 and Oakland and Pittsburgh played to a scoreless tie. Esposito’s three goals gave him 15 in 32 games with the Bruins compared with 21 all last season for Chicago. ★ ★ ★ “I think the big reason Pi scoring more,” said Esposito with perfect logic, “is that Pm shooting more. I don’t think I took 100 shots all last year with Chicago. l)fow I’m well past 100 and the puck is going in for me.” EXPLODE WITH 2 Against the Hawks, it seemed the puck was going in for all the Bruins. After Doug Mohns had given Chicago the early lead, Boston exploded with a pair Of goals by Esposito and apiece by Tom Williams and Eddie Westfall for a 4-1 first-period edge. Then Eddie Shack fired a pair and Esposito completed his hat trick in the middle period. ★ * * Minnesota, scoreless in three straight games, saw the frustrating streak extended to 11 periods before bursting it with a flurry of three third-period * • goals inside of 3% minutes Stemkowski had snapped a the season. The shutout was the! 111 the afternoon, Russia third this year for Binkley and “°rel13 goals, f nod, then mauled Italy for two I more periods for the scoreless tie early in the period for the Maple Leafs. the first for Smith. COM! MsaiP A wm-' OC'li HARRY NICHOLIE Calling. „ Let Our LIFE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT Serve You And Your Family! k|H| 1. Com plait Family Programming 2. Pantion And Disability 3. Butina.. Continuation 4. fitat. Planning H. R. NICHI DUE TcCY When Bear Bryant coached j Kentucky, Paul Dietzel coached! his offensive guards. Bryant WANT TO SELL ICE SKATES, SLEDS, SKIS, TOBOGGANS t now is at Alabama, Dietzel at USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD.---------T(jf South Carolina. PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-6181. That wiped out a 2-0 Ranger edge, but New York managed the tie when Rod Gilbert poked a loose puck past Cesare Mani-ago with just 72 seconds left to play- STANDOFF Danny Grant and Jean Bell-veau scored with less than four minutes left, giving Montreal its standoff against Toronto. George Armstrong and . Pete Gary Sabourin fired a pair of goals as St. Louis droped Los Angeles. The Blues, who outshot the Kings 37-19, were in a 1-1 tie until Sabourin’s second goal and jingles by Gerry Melnyk and Don McKenney gave them some breathing room in the third period. Oakland’s Gary Smith and Pittsburgh’s Les Binkley played the NHL’s first scoreless tie of Dogs to Race? BOSTON (JB-The first application for 1968 racing dates in Massachusetts, is for 100 nights of dog racing at Wonderland operated by the Revere Racing Association, Inc. The State Racing Commission said! Wednesday a public hearing on' the proposal wrill be set later. SPECIAL PANELING V-GROOVE —LAUAN 4x7' Sheet $259 4x8' Sheet $339 Lg. Paneling Selection in Stock B Walnut and Cherry Print ■ PANELING, 4'xS' $495 a Sheet Covered Formica Sink Tops J. $3** Gold Flack, Nn. Ft. ■CBILIN4S TILE e Suspended 19 1 Sq. Ft. ACOUS- TICAL 11141 I Z0N0LITE INSULATION i ALUM. FOIL 1 SIDE ! mx16”x100 It 3.8T j jVjgjjaiE !a%x1S”xS0V 3.57 3.17 ■ 3ytx24»x60» 4.15 Bflush Doors 30” 7173 ■Masonite AxlxVfc .... 1.ST ■Peg Board Vfc-4x8 .... 1.96 "Shelving 1x12.......V ■fit Purring $hrlgi.... __ ■lx3 Furring Strip .... 3o 2 Cedar Lining AxlxVfc.. 8.50 PLYWOOD Va”___2.75 S %”.... 3.75 ! W*.... 4.75 l 4.75 ! SNOW FENCE I 3/4” Birch $13.95; PAINT $099 ■ Interior-Exterior M . 5 stmi-aioi* Mm g«l. B SECONDS DOORS so ■ Many Sites « ■ Hinges, 22c pr. Cupboard ■ Pulls, 22c ua. ■ Bi-Feld Doora, 24" . $10.60 5 SPECIAL LOOK SALE ' TEXTOLITE | MatHaLaarioatod ■ ; Entry 33.BB Bath ...... $2.2* Patui* ....$1.71 Cloia-out ■ 29*'<. f Ft. 2 Oldsmobile 98 Holiday Coupe with Power Steering, Power Brakes, Power Windows, Power Seat, Tinted Glass, Radio, Whitewall Tires, Wheel Covers and Auto-malic Tran«mi«*ion. ^ Merry Oldsmobile-GMC, Inc. 525 N. Mein St., Rochester 861-5761 $10,000 IN MERCHANDISE PRICED FOR A FAST SELL-OUT BEFORE OUR END-0F-YEAR INVENTORY LAST 4 DAYS • Hundreds of tires ... discontinued tread designs, odds ’n ends, slightly used take-offs, good used tires, etc. •TV and appliances... discontinued models, demonstrators, trade-ins, scratch and dent, etc. • Home and auto supplies ... over stocks, out-of-season items, discontinued lines, etc. ijfi &J£| NO MONEY DOWN-MONTHS TO RAY! . HURRY! EVENT ERRS DEC. 30 Don't miss out! Get here early for best selection! D—A THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1067 New Snow on Slopes Ski Outlook Brightens suing conditions range from) The snow base at seven areasl fair to excellent at 41 locations in Southeast Michigan ranges in Michigan this week. |from five to 24 inches, with "”' * * * (skiing conditions listed as good ,*™!— Reports from 16 skiing areas very good. New snow is urd»v.M' In West Michigan say skiing!reported at an areas. lingTU conditions vary from good to, ™ L,S”R excellent. Another area. reports a **t and «NT**L ( Brigy excellent tobogganing. Snow: b.»«?nM*inch»» ”w .now, Suino •*«'• base ranges from A to 36 inches, | rs2b!S° i^dS? ski R«or», otyiom, with new snow reported at most pnv.i., 4-s *reas- I Knolv'olytwd!11^* base. *4 new. Seven mountain areas in the .*cen.n*^||#y Gaylord ^ ^ M WW( Upper Peninsula have fair ISSSg&lgSv juJj i.k., a base, excellent conditions. Snow base fl(£dto. axceiiwt. jnakino_,now. ranges from 2 to 16 inches, with1^"’1 new snow having fallen at all ttdjl SOUTHEAST MICHI«AN Irish Hills, Clinton, MS base, J iry good to excellent. Mt. Brighton, Brighton, 14-1* IN iw, very good. WBST MICHIGAN Mountain, Boyn* City, 4-lB Conditions range from fair to good at 11 areas in East and Central Michigan. Snow base ranges from three to six inches,! with some new snow reported. | Skyline, Roscommon. 4 base, "‘snowsnake Mountain, Clare base, fair to good, making sno Bear Mountain, Grayling, 1 ~ew. fair to good. , Mlo Mountain, Mlo, 4 base, PONTIAC ARIA Alpine Valley, 7 base, t-10 Cannonsburg, Grand Rapids, 2 new, very good to excellent. Hulu Heights. Hudto MlMaM excellent. Mount Mancelona, Mancelona, 4 basi Nub's *Nob, *Harbor Springs, 4-4 bast 4-4 naw, good. Pando, Rockford, 4 base, very good. Schuss Mountain, Mancaiona, 7-20 basi —gar Leaf Village, Traversa City, ' base, S new, excellent. , | Thunder Mountain, Boyne Falls, 12-M- t. Christie, I basi t. Grampian, S tx t. Holly, 10-24 bas ["Drive a little-save a lot” See for yourself how much you can save on a new Pontiac or Buick by driving to Shelton — just a half mile south of downtown Rochester. shelton PONTIAC • BUICK 855 Rochester Rood, Rochester 651-5550 Walloon Hin*, Walloon Like, gt 1 opening today. I Traverse City Hotldey, Traverse C I good to excellent. UFFBR PENINSULA g Big PoWderhorn, Bessemer, 4-4 basi Brule Mountain, Iron Rlvor, 1-14 b< new. excellent. Clifts Rldgt, Marquette, not opon. Indj.nh.ad Mountain, Wakeflald, 4 b, lr*oqu^s°Mountaln, Sault Ste. Marie, wse. 2 new, good. Mount Ripley, Houghton, 2 base, ew, fair. Pine Mountain, Iron Mountain, 1, porcupine' i Raider Receiver Added to West All-Star Squad SEEKS MIDWEST HONORS - Pam Mason, 14, of Birmingham will compete in the Midwestern Figure Skating Championships Jan. 4-6 at Green Bay, Wise. She qualified for the Midwestern by placing third in the novice ladies division of the Eastern Great Lakes championships held recently in Bowling Green, Ohio. Area Skater Bids for Midwest Title UCLA Quintet Adds to Streak in 95-45 Rout r Minnesota's Gophers Victim of Coast Five . in Tourney Contest JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Fred jBiietnikoff, Oakland’ wide receiver, has been added to the West team for the American Football League’s All-Star game in Jacksonville’s Gator A 14-year-old honor student Bowl Jan. 21. , will be striving for honors of + ★ ★ another sort next week. Biletidkoff was one of 11 players added to the West squad Wednesday by Coach Lou Saban of Denver, who will tutor the stars from the west. ’67 MODEL DEMO SALE!!! Must Sell This Month! The first 22 choices were announced earlier. *, ★ ★ I Saban also named Len Daw-l.son, quarterback from Kansas E! City, and veteran kicker George ^{Blanda of Oakland. ★ ★ ★' He added guard Ed Budde of Kansas City, center Larry Kaminski of Denver, tight end Willie Frazier of San Diego, halfback Brad Hubbert of San Diego and fullback Curtis Mc-Clinton of Kansas City. Pam Mason, 1001 N. Adams, Birmingham, will be seeking the1 Midwestern novice ladies figure skating championship Jan. 4-6 at Green Bay. This will be her third try since moving into the novice class in late 1965. ★ ★ * She finished sixth and n her two previous bids. '67 Chryslfr Naw Yorker NEW CAR WARRANTY 440 4-lbl., T-Flita, Air, Full Power, Flu* Many Other Extras. $3475.00 PIN* Mich. 141m Tax •'67 Plymouth Sport Fury Convertible lit C.I.O., Power Steering, Power Brakci, Radio and Whitewall Tiro*. $2414.00 Plw Mich. HIM Tax '67 Chrysler '300' 4-Dr. H.T., 440 C.I.D. Power Brekat, Power Steering, T-Flito, Pfux Many Other Extra*. $2701.00 Plw Mich. Solos Tox '67 Barracuda Convertible 6-Cylindor, T-Flito. Radio, and White Sidewall Tiros. $2370.00 Plw Mich. SMM Tax Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 OAKLAND AVE. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Second-Half Sag Costly as State Five Falls, 69-59 (AP) — The Soviet Nationals b e c a m * intere*ted ,n figure Francis, Pa., and Duquesne. scored twice in the final four . said ^rs'.bu^ Minnesota {»»_ JONESBORO, Ark. UR — New Mexico State took command early in the second half Wednesday night and downed Western Michigan 66-59 in the Arkansas State Holiday Basketball Tournament. By The Associated Press The high life goes on at 40 for UCLA’s all-conquering basket-bail dynasty. The Bruins rambled to their 40th consecutive victory in appropriate fashion—with point cushion—Wednesday night, burying Minnesota’s gasping Gophers 95-55 in the opening round of the Los Angeles Classic. Lew Alcindor popped id 28. points as UCLA, the nation’s reigning college power, shot 61 per cent on the way to Us sixth victory of the season. The Bruins surged to a 51-25 halftime bulge and upped the count to 67-28 before Coach John Wooden let his reserves play out the string. Lucius Allen i gar Lacey supported Alcindor with 19 and 14 points, respectively. NEXT HURDLE UCLA’s next hurdle wiU be a! tall one. The Bruins play St Louis University, 97-78 first-game victor over Utah State, in! Friday night’s semifinals—with 7-foot-2 Alcindor pitted against! 7-foot Rich Niemann of the jj| " 'likens. \ ] A top student at Derby Junior, * * * High,' Pam skates five days a| Unbeaten Oklahoma City got week winter and summer. She a total of 76 points from Rich is a member of the Great Lakes Travis, Charles Wallace and Figure Skating Club. | Henry Koper on the way to a “Pam is a good thinker and tnurophov^Fordhamin • hard worker,’’ said her coach,ot °!* ** AU Ron Brown, pro at the Iceland Tournament-the na- Skating Center in Troy. faction * I 'You have to be able’to think Travis scored 29 points, Wal-before getting into this kind of laee 26 and Koper 21 as the skating.” |Chiefs roUed to their sixth victo- Brown feels that Pam’s future ,ry after Auburn trimmed Ar-in figure skating is bright. “But kansas 65-58 in the tourney you can never really tell until^ opener at Oklahoma City. , UNITED TIRE SERVICE “YEAR-END SPECIAL” HEAVY DUTY SNO-CAPS T,18x14 . Tubeles* Full 4 Ply 8.25x14-$10.88* Retread Fed. Tax She to 61c Whitewalls $1.11 Nor*, Free Meuirtlng "Soify&ink-AoaUoMi • INSTANT ORBDIT - NO MONEY DOWN VISIT UNITED TINE TODAY ... AND SAVE OPEN MON. thru FBI. M, *AT. M, CLOSED SUNDAY UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHERE PRICES ARE 01 (COUNTED—NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. Soviet Ice Team Halts Finland, 3-1 COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. you get all of the dedicated, hard-working skaters together in one place,” he pointed out. SIX YEARS The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WORST BEATING At Philadelphia, Temple handed Providence its worst! beating in four years, mauling! the Friars 93-63 behind a tena-| Innbc lilfA krMr *« DAMAGE Looks like onck.0N#D»»RooF.r. ifsreaHy Frederick Mason, Pam has been cious zone press to advance to skating for six years. Ithe semifinals of the Quaker ■M'l can’t remember how she!City Classic with Wisconsin, St.' minutes of the second period Wednesday night to defeat Finland, 3-1, in the second round of the Broadmoor International Hockey Tournament. ★ * i It was Russia’s second win of the tournament, having trounced Italy 28-2 Tuesday. In the other match Tuesday, Finland fought to a 2-2 draw with the University of Denver. Tlie only game scheduled for today will pit United States Nationals against Denver Univer- she kept begging to take les- Mlkin' 'ro ot t> sons and we finally arranged ov*?k.i „ „ iKondl* mem. Gardner Pam’s first placement was in the 1963 Eastern Great Lakes “fa*** meet when she took fifth in the juvenile division. She was second in 1964 which qualified her for the Midwestern. She placed The Citadel bea t Arkansas',.,, State 79-71 in the second gamejS1 ^ of the evening to earn a berth! SS^>SM“*“ s““" “e' Western Flavor in Ice Tourney S-T. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -North Dakota blasted Harvard, |8-1, and Colorado College ral- UCLA (ft) F0 FT T Shcklfd 3 '0-0 « AlclOr 12 44 : 4-2 it Lacey 7 0-1 i She won the novice ladies Eastern Great Lakes title in 1985 and placed third in this competition the last two years. The top three finishers in each 1 0-1 4 Lynn ) 0-0 0 Nlelian I 0-0 0 Sweck Haiti Suthl.d Total* 22 11-21 11 Fouled out—None. Total tout*—Minnesota IS, UCLA It Attendance *,14». Mohawks Lead ' By the Associated Press , The Muskegon Mohawks redivision advance to the Mid-|tained their lead in the Inter-western championships. national Hockey League Wednesday night with a 4 - 3 n . . _ victory over the Columbus Britain Removes Checkers. In the only other league action, the Toledo Blades Ban on Racing LONDON (UPI)-British agriculture leaders have removed SPECIAL THIS WEEK IMS-W 7.38x14 Harrow White I Wo at King Tiro wish to taka this j I Opportunity to wish oach of you a | j HAPPY and HEALTHFUL ! rNEW YEAR,] KING TIRE CENTER 31 WEST mStCALM°^8KTIAC, MICH. L, TMER PAW AND WISE OVAL TIMS The Michiganders stayed close until New Mexico State went into a press and grabbed a two-point lead, 41-39, with 13:58 left in the game. m. mix. stati wbstkrn mich. for four goals in the third the ban on horse racing, and the | Tumor 5*3-7 n Locefitid s* .»2i Ito upset Boston College, sport will resume next month, l*ur?2nin. j o-'t to f*o #od 1 1*1 Wednesday night, setting up providing the foot and mouth . Landia 2 o-o 4 KMney 2 o-o ” an all-western finale in the St. disease in the country doesn’* Lacev i V-2 ’» mSm**” 4 m a Paul Classic Collegiate Hockey get worse. Morahllad o 2-2. 2 vancMoro o 04 # (Tournament. | The decision to resume racing cri»* i oo j coiaman o m i North Dakota and Colorado,tm Jan. 5 was reached after a IjJ* * t*mi» • a imi »» College play for the champion-meeting between Agriculture ship tonight after Harvard and Minister Fred Peart and racing College meet fpr third, (officials. dumped the Des Moines Gak Leafs 4-2. ZZ ouf—'Xaltarn Michigan1* Ford?** Total foul*—New Maxtco State 17, Wait-irn Michigan IS. Hi His We with you health. wealth & happinoit in abundance! 1 SPORTING GOODS 1 AUTO... OOOO DRIVERS - SPECIAL RATES PERSONAL PROPERTY ... •OATS AND MOTORS - AIRCRAFT BUSINESS. BONpS—MALPRACTldl LIFE... MORTGAGE INSURANCE IE 4-1551 IN RIKNI BLOB. PONTIAC Family Plan Lit. Monte Protection SICKNESS AND ACCIDENT .. OVER 35 YEARS OF DISTINGUlf HED INSURANCE SERVICE HW UT1 UTTENLOCHER AGENCY INC H. W. Huttonlechor — Max K«ms — Jam*. Huttonlochor — Richard Huttenlocher — Chariot F. Hatter Give your kitchen or dinette ■ “brick wall” that'looks-like the reel thing—but It to much easier to applyl You Just petl off backing and smooth on. You’ll use this self; adhesive, washable plastic for dozens ef decorative projects. Come tee Woodgrains, marbles, florals, many more...Including new Terra* cotta Brick shown. 18* wide, 491 a yard HAPPY NEW YEAR |n |j|| ELECTRIC gutter cables HUMIDIFIERS *5*” Poole Lumber 161 OAKLAND AVE. • PONTIAC • PHONE FE 4-1594 SLIP INTO SOMETHING IRRESISTIBLE We are almost giving away our brarid. new, 1967 Demos for nothing. So, pick pne up for the holiday, (jilso, we’re making up for lost time since the strikes over and we have a fine selection of1968s on hand) WARNING TO 1967 FORD OWNERS Yea ant moulted te veMqte yeur warranty every 12 mentht frem date of eurchate. Failure te de *e could null ana veld your wowenty. Come In and let our service department help you. m wmiffEHiD 630 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 ) THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1967 Carless Model Cities Urged n & ALTON BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Writer ' NEW YORK — One solution for our vexing, horrendous city traffic and transportation head-aches: Build a city in which cars and trucks were totally banned-ex-cept for some perhaps underground. Instead everyone would ride •-entirely for free—on semipri- vate pods, motoriess, driverless, The city would be operated .tl-----«__■■_a 1_____. ... . . - i!>. F _ noiseless, all controlled by com* puter. They would whisk yon to store, office or home speedily and nonstop. Such a transportation system would or could be a feature of a new way of life, in a program called the Experimental City, to be built from scratch, with no propensity to follow practices of existing cities. much like a big hotel, says Dr. Athelstan Spilhaus, president of the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. In hotels and other buildings, elevator service to ride you up and down is free, he remarked, so why not free transportation across town? City problems, pollution problems, transportation problems are among main topics being ww m amass a x mmmd Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby Areas iwiroirnwiiiMii i in in Ralph Andrews | Howard D. Ray of Walled Lake and great-grandmother Mrs. Ralph Andrews, 80, of 4876!Lena W”11 of Decatur- Ala-Uke«lew, Sylvan Lake, dkdj Jessi, Wa|ker yesterday. His body Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mrs. Charles E. Bearrs Service for former Rochester resident Charles E. Bearrs, 74, of 184 W. Princeton will be 10 a.m. Saturday from Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery, Rochester. Mr. Bearrs, a retired Pontiac! sier, 65, of Van Nuys, Calif., will be 2 p.m, Saturday at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home. Burial will be in Pine Grove Cemetery, Davison. | Mr. Ransier, a self-employed Service for Jessie Walker, 48, commercial photographer, died of 842 Stanley will be from the ' McNabb Funeral Home in Pocahontas, Ark., with burial there. Mr. Walker, a garage mechanic, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Finet-tia; his mother, Mrs., Joseph Walker , of Jonesboro, Ark.; a brother, Allen of Pontiac; and two sisters. yesterday. He was a member of the Ispans Club of Royal Oak and the Adcraft Club of Detroit. A. Cal Rosen BIRMINGHAM - Service was held yesterday for A. Cal Rosen, 66, of 833 Henley at Ira Coffman Chapel, Southfield, with discussed this week at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). This relects an awareness, say officials of the AAAS, that the applications coming ont of science and technology have! created pressing social, economic and human problems to which science and technology could help supply some solu-1 “one. Dr. Spilhaus told the association there is urgent need to start soon to build an experimental city, and then add many more of them. * * ★ The city would have a central core of homes, stores, industries. businesses, schools, hospitals, with open green land,! farms and forests surrounding j A typical population might be just 250,000 people. RUN LIKE UTILITY It would be operated by a quasi-public quasi-private poration, run like a hotel or public utility. If 800 such cities, all of controlled size, were scattered evenly across the country, all Americans could live in them, and “we would not have the Family Left Homeless by Blaze “We lost everything,” explained Mrs. William Miller, whose house and possessions burned to the ground Saturday in Pontiac Township. The Millers and their daughters, Barbara Ann, 2, and Geraldine Marie, 3, were visiting | Mrs. Miller’s mother when a friend came to tell them the 1 neWs. I “We had no insurance,”! added Mrs. Miller. The family is currently living with her sis-| jter-in-law, the Allen Davisons! of 125 Hickory Lane, Waterford! Township. The Millers have ai-| ready rented a duplex at 130 j | University Drive but can’t move , until they find furniture. j Death Notices Ived by two]r»n33fndr»n * nd %Sr2 * Interment In RMpalewn Cemetery. I Mra. Seen will He in deli it the funeral heme. fc. AUGUZV ___________ day, December 29, at It o.m. at the Puriley-Gllbert Funeral Home. ,, Interment In Parry /Mount Peril Cemetery. Mr. Bokender will lib i in date at the funeral home, (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. To BOROFF, hrnry L.i December 27, * 1947; 571 LtBaron; ape «7i beloved husband of Lousbia A. Bor-otf; dear lather of Robert L, t Borofl; dear brother of Mrs, Mar, Bare* Conway, Miss Lula Oaraff. —' -------*t Borofl; also granddaughter. • - -- — —....It be hsief Saturday, December 30^ a‘ ----— survived in-Johns Funeral . Borofl wl Suggested 1 Motor Division employe, died Mrs McRov Canterbury! S"?*1;/" B’nai ***" Cemetery> pro“ems» congestion yesterday. He was a member Y Lanterbuy Deroit (problems the riots and many ***# “'■! MILFORD—Service to to£| Surviving ere twe daughters, Si Sfbe , "V*0 slst*"' “rs'jDr' Sp“h*“’ Hunru Pniung oevt Ue. 01 wron win De| Loretta Rashken and Mrs.| He said urban renewal ori The Salvation Army donated money and gave the Millers s iMrs Henry Cullin ^ y > wt ujjriuu wm uc i Marietta Tioucks, both of Pon-! Lrd^u^arHoml^lt^bS 'j6!""6. T*i3s’ b®.th ®f faring-!^'el_ city programs tear down | _ VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) - ered by military men in Vienti- 80(1 by ^rs~ Linan- MARATHON BIBLE READING — Thirty high school students, members of the Methodist Youth Fellowship of St. Paul’s Church of Monroe, have taken on the task of reading ___ ^ w mtt the Bible from beginning to end. The marathon reading idea I change "of clothing^fof christ^ came from the Rev. Dennis Thompson, associate pastor of mas, according to a neighbor St. Paul’s and adviser to the group. It began on Christmas Mrs. Betty Linan of 725 Alberta’ Eve. Shown reading in the half-hour shifts and broadcasting Pontiac Township Mrs Linan their readings outside the church are (from left) Fred Woss, also collected money from 15, Carol Bragg, 16, and Karen Williams, 15, all standing. ! friends to help the Millers John Hile, 17, is broadcasting on the microphone. * * * ' —"T,- --- ... - -.J Miller, a GMC Truck and Coach Division employe, is cur-1 rently laid off. He reports back' to work around Jan. 9. | COLLECTIONS ! Furniture and clothing for the Millers are being collected by Mrs. John Mangan of 3056 W. Newberry, Waterford Township,! M0 Union Loko Road, Corn-Town ship; age 14; balovad bf william Brandt; dear of Mr*. Ethel M. Lowney 5 r*. Evelyn Tyler; eleo *ur-by one grandchild and ene ’ randchlld. Funeral service held Friday, Dacambar 29, . ,m. at the Elton Blade Full Home, 1253 Union Lake Road, Reds' Activity in Laos 'Not on Invasion Scale' CANTERBURY, LAURA jRAN; Do, camber 24. 1947; 772 Byron Court. Milford; agt 49; balovad wMeof McRov Canterbury; dear mother • of Mrs. Pet McQulre, Mack, Grig, . Candice and Vikkl Canterbury; s Funa " Milford Memorial Cemetery. Mr*. * it Home, Clarkston with R tiac; six graridchildren; six Milford M€morial Cemetery., great - yandchUdren; and a; Mrs. Cantterbury, secretary! brother, Merle Bearrs of Water- ;for ^ insurance company, died Tuesday. Surviving are her husband; ford Township. August Bokander Service for August Bokander, 67, of 2605 Mann, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park. Cemetery. Mr. Bokander died Tuesday. ham, and two brothers, Jack old slums, but make'morel room for more people and lead | to future slums. And “new cities” like Reston, Va., and two sons, Mack and Greg, both at home; three daughters, Mrs. Pat McGuire of California and Candice and Vikki, both at home; and a sister. Arnold W. Soper KEEGO HARBOR - Arnold W. Soper, 67, of 3086 Moss died yesterday. His body is at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Mr. Soper was an employe of the Oakland County central Reliable military and diplomat- ane to be an unlikely target for ic sources said today that North the Communists. Columbia, Md., are in danger of being swallowed up by the spreading out of Washington and Baltimore. In the experimental city, garage. .everything could be preplanned, pJwrirJ u I Surviving are his wife, Wini-including waste disposal, and cawara n. v.ox ifred |g a son wuiiam A of ultimate reuse of wastes. So „ . . „ Cadillac; two daughters, Mrs. could transportation systems, l76&rfim3fi%^frdwSArS|Robert E- Walter bf Waterford ^d **** disposal of buUdings Henry L. Boroff and Mrs. Louis R.thatbecameobtmoded dr which Service for Henry L. Boroff, neral Home, Clarkston, with ’ 8randchddren- Vietnamese and Pathet Lao forces are more active than usual in Laos but no large-scale Communist invasion of the country is taking place. The sources, both American and Laotten, said the Communists have staged unusually large scale raids for rice on the! Saravane, another town in the south near the Bolovens Plateau, is near the Ho Chi Minh trail and came under attack two days ago. The attacking Communist force was estimated by military headquarters in Vientiane to be less than two battalions, or about 300 men. Half of NetwoiksBid for TV’Flop Fred T. Dowling Service for Fred T. Dowling, 89, of 398 Boyd will be 2:30 p.m. tombrrow at Parsley-Gilbert Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Dowling, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday. Surviving is his wife, Edith. John W. Kelley Service for John W. Kelley, 65, of 77 Foster will be 10 ajn. tomorrow at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with burial >n White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Kelley, a foreman at the former Baldwin Rubber Co., died Tuesday. Knute V. Leaf Word has been received of the death of former Pontiac resident Knute V. Leaf of Galesburg, III. Service and burial were Saturday at First Lutheran Church, Galesburg, with burial there in the Knoxville Cemetery. of 578 LeBaron will be 1 burial in White Chapel Memor-p.m. Saturday at Donelson-Johns lie'. Cemetery, Troy. Funeral Home with burial in Mr. Cox, a retired self-em-Crescent Hills Cemetery, Waterford Township. Mr. Boroff, an employe* of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday. He was a member of the Zion Church of the Naza-rene. Surviving are his wife, Louis-ine; a son, Robert L. of Pontiac; two brothers, Alfred and Barrett, both of Pontiac; two sisters, including Lula Boroff of Pontiac; and a granddaughter. human needs. MAIN AIM LONDON (UPI) - American, European and Asian television agricultural communities of i the force was believed to be /®r Nam Bac, near the royal capital:Pathet Lao, the other half North „ scr*eiun8 |be of Luang Prabang, and Pha-|Vietnamese. ^ £ lane, near Savannaket in the' Officers at Laotian ArmyiLv thp an<* Producedj south. headquarters said every attack! ... s' ... . ,1 Military sources said both so far had been beaten back in- M t T ' f, ..Magical areas are still in government eluding one early today. Mystery Tour’ had ,ts worldl hands. i ---------------------- Bond Interest Delays Dallas ployed plumbing contractor, died yesterday. He was a member of Acacia Lodge 477, FfcAM. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Terry Schroeder of Waterford Township; a son, David E. _... , , of Waterford Township; two DALLAS, Tex. (AP)—Dallas grandchildren; and a sister. ICounty’s plans to build a memorial to President John F. Kenne- Rev. Roy J. Eastman KEEGO HARBOR - Service for Rev. Roy J. Eastman, 72, of 3 Kleist Court will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Williams Lake Church of the Nazarene, with burial in Crescent Hills Cemetery by the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home. Rev. Eastman died yesterday. Clete H. Flint TROY — Service for former resident Clete H. Flint, 73, of Sandusky, Ohio, will be 2:30 p.m: tomorrow at the Temple of Memories, White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Burial will follow there by Price Funeral Home. Mr. Flint, an automotive mechanic, died Tuesday. Surviving are his wife, Mary; Lewis of Royal Oak and Mrs. Mary Newton of Fairhaven; |four stepchildren; three sisters; (a brother; 13 grandchildren; and 21 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Stern tine SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP-Service for Mrs. Stem (Addle) Line, 85, of 11355 Rattalee Lake wifi be 2 p.m. Saturday at Da-visburg Methodist Church, with burial in Davisburg Cemetery dy have run aground again, this time on the New York bond market, Hie $100,000 memorial to Kennedy, slain Nov. 22, 1963, two blocks from the proposed site, is to rest atop a $2.8 million, 490-car underground parking garage. ★ * ★ County officials had hoped to take bids on the garage project before the first of the year. But financial advisors are now counseling the delay of the sale of revenue bonds until the New York market promises lower interest rates. Construction time for the garage, once the dirt starts flying, is estimated at 18 months. |be* to provide people with op-i®1^ to explain reports of aj SoVIQtS SOV portunities for rewarding use 0f I Communist invasion, said the 'their increasing, leisure time. I ^ ot,aJ\ frequently, II r D/r|np it ir it claimed the situation is tense \J. f IUI IC in order to protest the presence of North Vietnamese troops in D.i7Ta/J Qnin the country. DUZ.Z.KSU OlllfJ American intelligence sources: estimate there are 40,000 North MOSCOW (AP) A U.S. Vietnamese combat and supportiNavy two-engine tracker plane! The film, an imaginary Beat-j troops in Laos in the areas con-1 buzzed a Soviet Navy ship in the les bus excursion, into the Eng-trolled by the Vietcong. Mediterranean and dropped ex-lish west country, was said by I Memorial to JFK1 Dr- sPi,haus said such an experimental city might cost $4 billion — “about the cost of the supersonic transport, and little less than one year’s space program expenditures.” An artificial skin that looks and feels like the real thing has been developed which will cut the mortality rate of victims of severe burns. It can be worn! four years if necessary premiere on British Broadcast-, ing (BBC) Television Tuesday night. It was fast turning into a magical money spinner. Its earning potenttel — $5 million minimum — seemed to! I be increased by Beatle Paul McCartney’s public admission | last night that critics were correct in their unanimous “flop” v* grandchildren and OIM greatgrandchild. Funeral sdrvlct win M held Friday. December 29, at 2 p.m. at the williams Laka Church at the Naiarane. Interment in Crescent Hills Camatarv. -Rev. Eastman will lie In state at the c. J. Godhardt Funeral npnw,. S Keego Harbor, until 11 a.m. Friday at which time ha will BB'j taken to the church lor sarvleM.;' (Suggested' visiting hours 2 to S ; KELLEY. JOHN W.; December 24. 1*47; 77 Foster Street; age 45. Fu- | neral sarvice will ba held Friday, i December 29 at 10 a.m. at the El- MCLAUGHLIN, CLARENCE F.; camber 24. 1947, SI North AM age 42; beloved I McLaughlin; 'dieTr brother of N bond of Roee I Body of Man Is Identified Pontiac police today revealed le identity of the second man found dead yesterday of asphyxiation. The victim, according to police, was John Kelley, 65, of 77 Foster. The bodies of Kelley and Jessie Walker, 53, of 842 Stanley, were discovered in a car parked in a garage, operated by Walker at 84 W. Sheffield. Walker’s name had been withheld until the next of kin was notified, but police said no close relatives could be found. ★ * * The deaths' were ruled acci-1 dental by the police department. U.S. WATCHES CLOSELY In Washington, the Pentagon and the U.S. State Department at first took a similar attitude toward reports of new Communist military activity in Laos. But after reports from Saigon and Bangkok of large-scale North Vietnamese inroads into the kingdom, State Department spokesman Robert J. Closkey said Communist attacks in Laos are of serious concern to the United States “and1 we are watching the situation closely." Mr. Leaf, a native of Swe- by Dryer Funeral Home, Holly, den, died Dec. 20. He had! M™- Line died yesterday. She worked for 27 years at GMCiwas 8 member of the Davis-Truck & Coach Division where: burg Meteodist Church and a he was general foremen of the inspection department.'He retired from the company in 1950. A member of First Lutheran Church, he also belonged to the Elks Lodge, American Legion and Vikings of Moline and was . a life member of Foreman’s Cooperative Chib of the Automobile Industry. Surviving is a sister. Baby Girl Ray Graveside service for Baby Girl Ray, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn H. Ray of Nurenberg, Germany, was to be today at Christian Memorial Estates Cemetery, Rochester. Arrangements are by the Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home. The baby was dead at birth Dec. 4 in Germany, where her father is serving with the U.S. Army. Surviving besides the parents are grandparents Afr. and Mrs. life member of Austin Chapter No. 396 OES. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Nelson Wold of Royal Oak, and Mrs. Merle Kinney of Davisburg; two grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Marvin E. Mortzfield ROCHESTER - Service tot Marvin E. Mortzfield, 51, of 115 Campbell will be 2 p.m. Saturday at Pixley Memorial Chapel. Burial will be In Glen Eden Cemetery, Livonia. ■., Mortzfield, an employe of National Twist Drill & Tool Co., died yesterday. He was a member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, Aerie No. 2634. Surviving are his wife, Constance; a brother; and a sister. Frank E. Ranifor QRTONVILLE - Service for former resident Frank E. Ran- AF WlrsphOts CHILD OF THE STREETS - One of the hundreds of homeless Saigon boys settles down for the night under a movie billboard. His bed is the sidewalk and a piece of canvas.. He earns just enough to live on by washing cars, shining shoes or begging. He washes in a public fountain Or at one of the many fire hydrants turned on In the city. like bombs” and bathed the in blinding light, the Soviet defense ministry newspaper Krasnaya Zvezda (Red Star), reported today. pioding devices that sounded:McCartney in a television inter- view to have no aim and no plot. J “We boobed, but aren’t we en-| titled to have a flop?” he asked. “It’s hard because it’s our first, the captain of the (but we’ll get used to the idea, supply ship Magomet Gadzhiev The, lesson is good for us, and! srjiri 29, at T Luttwrat While Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Me- ' Laughlin will lie In state at. the ‘ Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. (Sub- ' jested ^ visit In* hours 3 to 5 and ■ MUHLHAUSER. VIENA D.; Decern- * her 25. 19*7; 309 terre, Milford; ’ ago 57; dear mother of Mrt. Don- ‘ aid (Carol) qulnnell. Mrs. Paul * (Grace) wmMte, Carl W. and ’ Richard L. Muhlheuser; dear slater * of Mra. George (Martha) Johnson; • alto survived by 12 |i—— - _____I. Stephen's Lutheran Church, i Interment M Christian Memorial j Estates, Rochester. Mra. Muhl- , hauser will Ito In Mote at the , Costs Funeral Homo, after 7 p.m. , was a “prank” or a real attack, not the WORST the newspaper said, he would nm he added. „But 8urely J have been within his rights tojwasn>t the worst program over open fire on the American Christmas. I mean, you couldn’t Ptene. (call the Queen’s speech 8 gas * * * either, could you?” McCloskey linked events \n ^ ^^n^action^ndthe i The film, to be telecast again Laos to reports of increased!color by the BBC next week, Red pressure on Thailand’s northeast border and use of neu- RANSIER, FRANK E.t December , 27, 1947; Van Nuvi, California • (formerly of Ortonvllte); ago 45; , daar father of Mrt. Angelo Loth- , ricchio, Mrs. Calvin Plana and ! Ranald R. Ransier; dear brother j tral Cambodia as, a sanctury for Vietnamese Communists. Thailand’s army chief,'Gen. Prephas Charusathien, said in Bangkok Wednesday that Thai troops had been flown to the northern border of Thailand to face three Communist battalions in Laos. The Pathet Lao, the Laotian Communist movement which controls much of northern and eastern Laos, in a broadcast to day acknowledged that fighting had broken out in southern Laos at Phalane but made no men-involved. planeitew off. The accusation was one several such charges made in a recital of alleged harassments of Soviet ships in the Mediterra- i grandchildren, fummm I _________.'III be hold Saturday, Da-1 camber 30 at 2 p.m. at Ih# C. F. f Sherman Funaral Homo. 13S South • —% Ortonvllte with Rev. Kyto . . reportedly has an earning po-01 tential of over $1 million in the United States alone. The three major American nean by the U.S. 6th Fleet. It television networks were all pre-was the first such accusation i Pa^ *® Pay ?*is fl*ure’ ac’ from Moscow since the Soviet lco«i,n* *® “du8try "ft"*8-naval buildup in for screenings in Hong Kong and nean began just bfefore the; Arab-Israeli war was prompted by a U.S. charge |__________________________________— Dec. 15 that Soviet ships had: 0n JinUara B3^li9MUStTluh3o a.m. at been harassing 6th Fleet »hips.|»w OTHER INCIDENTS IhiJ^sYtriddar Cv'may'bo IraptcMM The article reported three oth-‘ er incidents of American harassment. RAY. BABY GIRL; pocombdr £ S 1947; 14 Horddralr. Nornbarg, Oar- ! many; beloved infant daughter of , Gtenn H. and liokto Ray; balovad ! Infant granddaughter of Mr. and ! Mrt. Howard D. Rayt balovad * great-granddaughter of Mrt. LoHa * Whitt. Grayeawo service will b*i • held today, December 23, at 2 p.m. at the Christian Memorial Estates Cemetery, Rochester. Arrangements by the Voorhees-Slate Fu-; The broadcast claimed that . three U.S. advisers had been1 In one, Capt. Yur A. Kalinin, lriiioH commander of auxiliary ships, 1 ordered the covers removed CLAIMS BY HANOI |from the guns of a ship being cr« Hanoi’s Vietnam News Agen- buzzed by a U.S. Navy plane.: *' cy claimed that Pathet Lao The captain did not intend toj fire on the aircraft, according to the account, but only wanted to give the crew training under action conditions. Once while the Magomet Gadzhiev was supplying a> Soviet submarine the U.S. destroyer Davis tried to “push” the sub away. Capt. Potekhin protested! and the Davis pulled away. | The report added that U.S. planes buzz Soviet ships frequently and that this happens sometimes two or three times a day to the Magomet Gadzhiev. The Soviet fleet in the Mediterranean now numbers about ships, compared to 55 ships for the United States. The last previous case of alleged harassment protested by B. J. BAMBACK, Motors Acceptance Corporation Dacambar 21, 29, 1M7 BOARD MEETING 1947; 30M Moss, Ksago Harbor; aga 47; balovad huiband at Winifred L. Soper; dtar tether ** **» Robert E. (Marjorie JT) eight t------ Godliordt Funeral* Mr, Soper v"1 j larjorle J.) Walter, (Mary J.) Zako Mtt ier; also survived by forces had shot down a U.S. F106 jet fighter-bomber and damaged “a number of others” Monday in the northeastern Laotian village of Sam Neua. Nam Bac, which was captured from the Pathet Lao in 1966, has- been the scene of numerous small skirmishes and sporadic shelling by the Communists. The situation there has always been described as tense, but no serious Communist attempt to retake it has been reported. Red troops surround the valley of Nam Bac and frequently fire at government planes. The British military attache in Laos, Col. Horace Moore, was wounded by Communist ground fire a Ml Charter Township of -------------- M conceited and the next regularly scheduled meeting will be held on January l, —— Shg Township High School, 1*15 te Rood, Pontiac. Michigan, ownshlp, at 7 P. M. (EST). NOTICE OP HEARING NEW ENGLAND ESTATES SPECIAL ASSESSMENT ROLL NO. 35 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that tha lew England Estates Special Assessment lisTt'ft JESSIE) tiocomtar 27,; Startley; age 41; beloved1 Flnettia Walker; be-f Sarah Welker; door ...—t Newfim, and Mten tonight. (Suggested 3 to 5 end 7 To 9.) WALKER, JESSIE; Dtcoml n the amount of S140.400.4S, week ago while taking off from!Moscow occurred in the Sea of the airfield there. The town' of Phalane in the south is some distance from the Ho Chi Minh Trail and consid- Japan on May 19-11, when U.S. and Soviet destroyers scraped together. Each navy blamed the other. ownthip to A. 1,805 feet of I inch sanitary sewer In Newland Drive East from man-1 hole D 90 of the Walnut Lak* Arm B. 335 let! of 0 Inch sanitary tower In Barnaby Court from Newland . Drive East easterly. |C-1.225 feel of I Inch sanitary tower Blackburn Drive from the Inter-ot Blackburn Drive and newwnu Drive last southerly. D. 2,035 foot of I Inch sanitary tower In Newland Drive West from West Long Lake Road southerly. E. 175 foot of I Inch sanitary tower In Portland Court from Newland Orlva —- — ihsrly. Inch sanitary tawer "— •‘swung Ot West Long L*k*~Road from 'manhole D 90 of the Walnut Lake Arm wast-erly. hot been filed In tha offlca of fho Township Clerk for public anamination. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the Township Board will moat In the Township Hall, 4440 Orchard Lake Rood. Or- January* *440,'* of*"':*)" pV^iVsten! Standard Time, to review said Special Assessment Roll and to hear any ob-loctions thereto. THIS NOTICE IS GIVEN BV ORDER I OF THE “ a—— Dated: Decal f DORIS O. L f Towntl LOOK HERE ... thousands I do, every day! that’s why it’s such a good' idea to pioc# a WANT AD whan you want to sail, buy, rant, trade, hira, find. . ; Whathar it's a buyer or an Item you seek . . . findina is easy when you use and read Press Want Ads. | Phone 1 332-8181 ‘ Classified J 1 P~6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 qftHdlfcwb . l OH of IfemlB EXPRSSS OUR W . hpertteit wit friends, neighbors and relatives , tor their many act* -* *'i~w**1 and floral offerings recent bereavemant In . dvr aen and brother, plftomk.Ahraro. Mr. Frank Ahrens, Jamas V our son, jimmy King. Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Proof Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION ADS RECilVIO l\ 041 10.01 7 Si i 1.76, • 64 13 44. lost and Found FOUND, SHIRT Dot* LIBERAL REWAftb ----------- I---- fawn and white boxer missing since Dec. S3. Mlddlahelt-Long * Rd. Area. Answers to name : LADIES^fAWbOAO mar Jack parking lot at Mali Wed. Will womb) e Cadillac who picked up I_W sa return bag and contents by si glasses. Reward, 674.1056. take c I keep h s companlt POODLE .(•ego Hart... ... .reward. 661-2660. Holy Wnntod Mate WASH - sr-round work tor qualified man 85.06 Par hr. plus 6 per cent ..j. pay/ hoap., and penalon w* hire ail mln&jty grawe. a^en“te^^^actino CORO CHIEF PHARMAfcilt. ilgiSnrer” MO— Salary to be negotiated. Assured Increases, generous fringe *H«g|toJh||i|^B pro- Wrti- 4 g retirement a RJwBjnt admlr General Hospil i. Saginaw, Mic a 317-753-34)1 a: I, DAYS' C N LOVING MEMORY OF BOBBYLOST: BLACK DOG, BLACK CURLY CLERK, COLLEGE Cushing who passed away Dec.| hair, answers to name of Laddie,I nights, part or fu......_. ____ .. 28. 1766. | Bob I* Lk. Rd., Plnacrast, please nekt, Hunter Maple Pharmacy, 653 Sunshine passes, shadows fall, | return. 363-3371, | E. Maple, Birmingham. br^ny *or, , coITegIgSadOSt1§' „ LOST, 1 MALE BEAGLES, 1 LIGHT-' or er, smaller and Aider than other, i missing silica XWlas morning,! i Pl««»« call Ipneiy family, 631-3546.1 I LOST, BOYS LARGE SISSleI —-.1 Hound, Elisabeth Lake Rd. end , 3 Marlon, reward. 661-7767. 1 $7200 UP IRIHl-....ent positions In ait items INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 60 W. Huron, Pontiac 304-071 ---------- I lost Ilack Labrador •AVON CALLING"—FOR SERVICE *riS'er'B * W™ »» IN YOUR HOME. FE 4-043». | of Un,on l-Rke, I RIKER BLDG ; M3?*>' ____________ LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY LOST; BLACK AND TAN GERMAN Shepherd, male, red coll ■ j ‘"1 dog tag. Believed —| vicinity of Square Lake COLLEGE GRADUATES PUBLIC HEALTH — SAJ GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX-perlenced, mechanically t_lncllned. Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only 7 OPEN HOUSE FOR MR, AND MRS, Lake. FE 6-3473. _________________ — SMALL BROWN MALE! Euclid, FE ................ - 1 . FE 4-7233.' your hosts, LOST:IRISH SETTER. MALE ma,^ Bob jj and At New-| vears^ddW Vicinity^ Gr * mm m MRriRNiRdMii SCIENCES. $8000-$l 0,000 Oakland County Is se fled men to work as fie atlves for the County ■———----—— • partment inr'--4— , PEKINGESE taring irlng flea assigns PUBLIC HEALTH seeking qkall-" 'd represent-......... Health Da- Includes Inspections, Investigation of an and public relations PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS New Year's Eve party. 363-5364, 334-1716, or 363-7327. I Pontiac Trail. Reward ! Lake. 68,000-67.000; require; ITARIAN I: B.S. decree MA 6-5270. *v " '‘•""'“ I mental™ health, civil engineering, i»T, PART COLLIE, SMALL WIThI *en'*«',V * blotoglcal scl- black A tan with white paws 8, mnrmm chest. "Sandy," female. Please call 333-7776, ----J VILLAGE LIVERY __________________________ tTak".ndT?il!f S SfmmL th?AW®lte °^Y I scenic Lake Trails, rear, 3200 acres, private i, picnic facilities. Rellva yes-! iar at Kettington Antique1 i. Call 667-4033 or 335-4111 a LOST, SMALL FEMALE-GERMAN registration. Excellent f dBa Include paid si-" 1 t, 10-20 vacation o legal holidays, i LOOK Longfellow area, reward, FE j BOX REPLIES { ) m «|'iu today there \ Help Wairtod MQls 6 | were replies at The Press j > Office in the following \ boxes: i 5, 18, 39, 59 $400-$600 FEE PAID MANAGEMENT TRAINEES In office# finance, retail, sales Age 21*31, some college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971 $500-$650 PLUS CAR reimbursement, II full paid family h< ■ Information or a PERSONNEL DIVISION Oakland County Court House N. Telegraph, Pontiac, * COOK, GRILL MAN. NIGHTS. TOP tor good man. Meals, unl-ns, benefits. Biff's. Telegraph HERE Funtrnl Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS ... thousands do, every day! that's why it's such a good Vidso to piaca a WANT AD Voorhees-Siple Whether it's a buyer or an Itarn you seek . . . finding is easy when you use and read Press Want Ads. when you wont to sell, buy, rent, trade, hire, find. 1 Cemetery lots These Graves are privately owned. Either Way -They Do the Trick - Quickly ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEOING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before 5 p.m. Confidential YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID I Just Dial - 332-8181 Pontiac Press SALES TRAINEES in all fields, age 21-30, some college „ international personnel Pontiac 334-4771 EXPERIENCED AUTO SALESMAN to tail Chevrolet, Bulck and F*jv iteratf Motors l EXPERIMBI gonerol shop si ’unity bwhdfkl Ernst, ic„ Oxford, t Onl"' IP Adorns, 536-1671 i t actory Workers By day or week: Warehousemen;| kftSBfnMBffJ ----*-- material hem orers; etc. Di Help Wanted Female PORTER Used car department. Must valid driver's license, many__T tile, too pay, steady employment, See DON W1L80N. SUBURBAN OLDS, 655 S. Woodward, REAL ESTATS SALESMEN WITH KSMIT mi M M ______tinea. KINZLER RIAL- ty. nie Plxie Hwy. 6»m ATC 3 REAL ‘ ESTATE SALESMEN, full time openings are availi.... Experience preferred. Generous MmMb,aUm. —) fail'll new and used wivWiiie mMSm. .. ...... . Reol Eitote Salesmen pey. Report any salt real aateta at the Mall. On# sfijta *■ it locations In Oakland Employers Temporary Service ion 65 S. Main; ----Qilnd DHj Co. Lots t. Can i oak ton lots of business.’ GUARD Far Utica, trait graa. Top Union aci Blua Cross, vacation oi day boneflti. Call us Bondod Guard Servlcss E. Grand Blvd-, DEI LO 8-4150. collect. roi*t HAULING OVER THE ROAD. Ex- cellent SALESMEN HELPI WE NEED YOU! EXPEREIBNCfO AND TRAINEES Many good lobe need to bo flltod. Wo novo the tob orders, now we INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL » S. Woodward B'h: STANDARD C Http Wootod Fesoaie 7 ^..^“w^rsiodK Experienced mcanerv ha rallaMe. Call Sfl-lM Paid vacation, paid holidays, good working conditions. Jonof Davis Dry Cltanars. 647-3007. FUU- TlMfe WAIT A ESS, EVE-nlngs, R« - 5171 Dixie Hwy. FIRST BAKER solid background I cedures. Wo otter and now frlng* N Reply PonWoc Prat TIME SECRETARY AND toper, typing and bookkeeping necessary, T»hone Ml 7-026, GENERAL OFFICE $3254525 Receptionists, typists, accounting clerks, many varlad positions. Many fee paid. Mrs. Tanner. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL pallets : Call VE 5-0001. ollno attendants. ----- I -.......I 5 p.m., off Sundays. Good pay, excellent conditions. Part time 5 to 10 p.m„ Sundays, 7 am. to 7 p.m. Call Ml 7-0700. SI com-’tool AND FIXTURE BUILOERS. xes andi class B. Also tool and fixture traitors builders readers. Rato 63.71 H GOOO CLEANER, 26 TO 46. 7 time, 7-1 p.m., 5 days, own ti 835.00. Ref.. Birmingham Help Waated M. or F. | Payroll Clerk Personnel Clerk Women with general office peyrel or personnel experience. Must tx tudo tor figures. The personnel position requires good typing ikllls. Apply Porsonntl Dept, tod floor. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED Si* Nop1stortth* WJ* gijJ?\«iee^ AB-neg. *’«« maMWWX'ry * Pontiac ■ FE 6-7747 (MWldt Track Dr* w. Mon. thru Prl., 7 a.m.-4 p.m. Wad. 1 p,m.-7 pm. CURTAIN AND DRAAERV.SAtls, top oalary, downtown Birmingham. Irving Kay's Droportos. 644kfew, EVER CONSIDER A Pontiac Mall Montgomery Ward An Equal Ojpportunity Employer PHARMACIST REGISTERED HOISERY SALES GIRLS. PULL time, apply Lady Orvo Holsory, Pontiac Moll, Pontiac, Michigan, Schoenherr, Warren. PR 5-1414. manager, experience m ,■«,»,»■■■«■, ------ftbnuiiiJft-----c i tu snd-or commercial real astato-l TRAINEE, GROWING F IRM ^jeiaett and imasina necessary. Wall ncaas you. nign scnooi graa, Dpoo. established cXany Is expanding Cd« Kathy King, 334r24?l, Spelling and offers excellent opportunity * snoiimg.___________________________________ <— ..I* «*»rter who can direct, w A N T E D: FURNACE SERVICE Send resume or coll man and Installer. Call 334-1027. Thompson- ....................................... ........................... tor IntorvCw ...... Brown Co. 3203 W. 12 Mlto Rd. 476-6700. Ask tor Mrs., Goodspeod. KITCHEN HELP, AJTERNOONS, person. Four Corners WANTED: CAR Walton and inngd bene-Thompson, , SHELTON PON- nually. Shift differential tor after non and night duty, 30c par hour Weekend differential $2.50 on urday and 6130 on Sunday anv e hour . shift. Outslon benefits. Sand Resume FOR MOTHER-, Ponltoc “Press ' Box Number C-ll Punch Press . _ _ .___________________ Operators wanted HOUSEKEEPfR. LIVE IN. CARE prtU>r , tamm,ri»tlon with for Invalid. FE 2-7446._______> grestive punch press opera ly and night shift. Apply HOUSEKEEPER-* charge, no children. 5 days week,! own transportation. 611-0777. I HOUSEKEEPER - 2 SCHOOL-AGE j children. Motherless horn*. u«d In. Troy area. 677-0674 collect. ufacturer. Call Yeagl Milford. 664 PERMANENT OM. appliance man-i military obligation. Skuttls Manuf. Co., MACHINE OPERATORS wnlngs, days t II train tor advance- fits. Call Tommy Salta Manager, SH" »lec-Bulck, 631-3500. , , _________________________ WASHROOM HELPERS. FULL OR HOUSEKEEPER, MATURE part time, day shift only, Pontiac ble ----- ld|M ‘ Laundry, 340 S. Telegraph. WELDER AND LIGHT MAINY1-nance, steady employment, apply in ------ ■■•--l^m^Bulldlno Com; Thompson. Employers Temporary Service 63 S. Main, Clawson ....lediate openings, days afternoons, will train lor ad ment. Reliable men with some era vlous exp. on lathe, mill, or grind ors. Exc. year around working conditions and overtime. 2721 ln-j dustrtol Row, Troy bet. 14 end 15 Mile Roads, off Coolidge Hwy. or phone 347-7432. WELDERS-FITTERS EXPERIENCED EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS . RECEPTIONIST POSITION -------- permanent home, 4 children, must, flai with good bookkeeping exp. °r! FOT' M.v.H0:VS!yl^MgI!?hti.RSHm„x "fC^TIONIg - «CRETaTy weekly? Can you use 6120-6136! consider CAREER IN REAL ESTAtE We have recently office feclllttot end l qualified people n Income. isently selling real l contemplating a change oi ________ ___________ before, you could guallfy tor1 our next training clast starting soon. We offer a fine building program, an excellent bonus and profit sher-plan, plus a liberal commis- sion schoduto, I floor and model time. FOR CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW CALL DICK BRYAN FE 4-0921 AT KAMPSEN REALTY & BUILDING COMPANY 1071 W. Huron St. Pontiac 334*401. I ■ Linda K i anticipation. Position • ■” >*« Dr. Jac-*“ 4, Oxford. ship, cor billing experience ferred. however, beginners w sharp math background wll considered. Salary open. Cal FOR REGISTERED DENTAL HYGIEN-!0tor-| |5t. full time position tor de-iihre* P7nclab|e Person I In dentistry. Cell 363-4410 Huntoon A PART-TIME JOB t married man, 21-34, to work I tours per evening. Call 674-0520, $200 PER MONTH ADVERTISING SALESMAN p i- Executive sales oi 610,000 Plus Management opportunities Established clients Salary plus commissions Bonuses and Incentives Complete Insurance programs District and homo office This opportunity exists in the sale: Promotion field right hero In Dt trolt with rapid advancement an; DESIGNERS DETAILERS CHECKERS PRESS WELDERS BODY FIXTURES DIES BASIC QUALIFICATIONS: • Plan you can afford. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC. 614 Ponttoc ktoN Bonk Bldg. ■T0TE LICENSED-BONDED Open Saturday 7-12 — GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 7lBwi6 ___ 7ft>W FOR DELlGHfPUL — id slolgh ride. Ideal -yto ur club or group, all kinds. Lovely dining areas. Daytime parttos Ih-------- “* your holiday party. Call orvatlona, 626-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM DEBT AID, MIC# 711 RIKER BLDG. ” 2-0111, Rater to Credit Ad-rs. 16-A________________________________M VIRGINIA: contact atoly. Jai J MUST Imlted In his between 26 and himself and take seek Is probably > $730 per month, is 1 employment,: Heavy overtime and frlngas. 1 Industrial Div. of Pioneer Engineering & Manufacturing Co. 2500 E. i Milo Ing to apply M^^^Ktton. Inter- ___________I position with BROWN! A BIGELOW will be set up. Immediately. Telephone: Rufus Stamesi 762-0330 MARKETING TRAINEE $6600 or, no foe, 2130, soma college referred, National Growth Corp., KELLY'SERVICES RN FOR EMERGENCY ROOM. 12 noon till I p.m. Exc. salary add working conditions. Mrs. n Avon Center " ........M I, 631-7311 ■ 642-7630 123 N. Saginaw INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 3722 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lake_______ You Can Be In 3 DEPARTMENTS OPEN Men accepted will bo trained tor! a career position. Must be neat appearing fnd able to converse Intelligently with willingness to work. Opportunity tor rapid advancement. Above average starting pay. nation furnished. NO — 1 ANALYST DETAILERS JERED INDUSTRIES, INC. 1277 Axtel Rd.. Birmingham sk tor Mr. Chisnell Ml 7-12 i equal opportunl ASSIST/ ASSISTANT BODY SHOP .an tor Ford volume " i Pontiac. Apply to . Sat., Sun off. isporl IIENL. . ABLE TO START WORK MEDIATELY. Coll Mr. FO: I 2:30 p.m., 330-0357. NIGHT COOK WANTED, 10 TILL DISHWASHER ANO BUS BO> night shift only, good wages plu all benefits. Ellas Bros. Big Bov Telegraph rumen^^^M Electronics Trainee $5000 L 623-3370, NEEDED One married men over steadily employed to « time. 363-0504, 7 d-qi- to 7 630 Oakland Avo. Pontiac. Smith, 831-1030. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL "122 W. Map! Orchard L; . Oakland: a station | specialize Avo.. Pontiac a Dealer Franchise, in gasoline sales _____________________________________ 66,000 per year to Hi I ......... ENGINEER. GROWING RESEARCH opportunity tor advancement, Hos- development oppo: i.......itabiisi_mmmm Personnel Department. Crittenton Hospital . Contact I AUTO MECHANIC TUNE-UP MAN intae, _, ______MiTim 5 AUTO MECHANICS AND HELPERS, , parts clerk. Keego Sales and Serv- ____________________- „nn, c ice. 3080 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-3400. LOST FEMALE BEAGLE, SADDLE -----------■ ---- vicinity of Gale end Toggflej;- AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE OPERATORS Excellent oppoi _______ Call Helen Adams, ■ _____7471, Shelling 6. Snolling. _ inting.'* Supervisory ESTIMATOR FOR GENERAL CON-ggd knowledge of tractor specializing In design and alpful. Liberal: build Induatrlal. commercial and ---- multi-family protects. Coll or sand resume to Thomas Frank* Construction Co. 32(23 W. 12 Mile Rd.. Farmington. 48024. 474-5000.__ EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOfi man prepared to work on a variety of assembly and equipment building problems associated with ■ami-conductor device manufacturer. The successful applicants back-ground will ba In elactrlcal mechanical assembly, Instrument making or tool making. Soma electrical experience would bt desirable. Full benefits, pltillzatlon, Life and Retirement ------- &—ram available. Ages 21 to 60.1 additional Information and In-ow coll LI 6-7222 Or FE 2-2017 benefits, excellent flat Modern new shop with an new equipment. Inquire at 700 Oak-'—d Avenue, Pontiac. benefits. Energy Convoi Vicos. Inc. 347-7300. _ EXPERIENCED MEAL OPPORTUNITY MANAGER WANTED and R. Block, America's larg->t Income tax sorvico, wants to cete e person capable of homing o volume income tax service i Pontiac. Excellent opportunity ir right parson. W* train you. or (totals write H. and R. P. 0. 46301 or call Mr. Edwards, 767- 3340, Flint. ____________ PARKING ATTENDANT. REFER- 0N THE GROUND FLOOR AND EARN IN EXCESS OF $15,000 PER YEAR YOUR 1ST YEAR THE GROWTH OF WATER CONDITIONING HAS BEEN TREMENDOUS IN THE PONTIAC AREA YOU WILL RECEIVE TRAINING IN THIS VITAL AND MOST NECESSARY FIELD AND WILL BE OFFERED MANY BENEFITS AS A FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE CALL: EARL REICH BETWEEN 10:00 A.M. AND 12 A.M. MATURE BABY SITTER, 6:30 TOi Gar* ANY DAY THIS WEEK 6Help Wanted Male MECHANICAL ENGINEER Graduate Engineer for development of new body die construction techniques. Must be able to function effectively in non-reoccurring assignments. Should have some die construction background, and a sound knowledge of engineering principles. MECHANICAL ENGINEER Graduate Engineer to engage in all phases of development project work. Involving metal forming, with .the exception of sheet metal. MECHANICAL ENGINEER Graduate Mechanical Engineers to work on applied development of numerical control and computer technology in the areas of engineering, Jpol design and tool construction. Opportunity for creative work in development of N-C machines, controls, procedures and entire systems. Minimum 3 to 5 years experience in one or more of the reloted areas. CONTROL'S ENGINEER Graduate Engineer capable of developing fluid control techniques and applications. Should have experience in this field. WRITE.STATING QUALIFICATIONS, EXPERIENCE, SALARY TO: PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT Manufacturing Development General Motors Corp. GM Technical Center 12 MILE AND MOUND ROADS Warren, Michigan, 48090 An Equal Opportunity Employer EXPERIENCED GAS AND ner serviceman. *4.30 per ..Ml e Vj tor overtime, O'Brien manufacturer, Some previous single spinal* experience preferred. Steady w---------) —| •••'“■ < benefits. Phono 547-7432. Automobile Parts Assistant salesman opening I _ realtor, 1450 N. Pontiac. FE 5-8165 MV ESTATE adlat* Stout, FISHER BODY DIVISION Livonia Plant Ford |>rrftj IMMEDIATE OPENINGS HILLSIDE LINCOLN MERCURY 1250 Oakland______ BARBER idy, replace ret) apprentice O.K ;E 2-7271. , DAYS, MUST 6 IN THE FOLLOWING JOURNEYMEN CLASSIFICATIONS: PAINTER-GLAZIER ELECTRICIAN TOOL MAKER taurant, Woodwi CARPENTERS - ROUGH, f5S custom homos, over time, 6 I— day, 2-yeor protect, 646-4431, Rings, 662-6003 or 356-8275. 28400 Plymouth Road Livonia, Michigan N EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 6 Help Wanted Male WANTED COMBINATION Service and Parts Manager For GM Dealership, must be fully qualified, with ability to match- Starting salary of $13,000 yearly with regular raises and benefits. All Inquiries Confidential For Appointment Call 693-6266 Ken Johnson 334-994^ Culligan Water Cond. 336-0336 An Equal Opportunity Employer ADY FOR PRE’SSlWG IN QUAL-Ity dry cleaners. Paid holidays, vacation, and other fringe bane-tits. Top pay.; Exp. preferred — but will train. Apply to Ona Hour Martinlzlng. 1377 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Waterford of call » 16 to 50, 62 LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED; MEDICAL 'TECHNOLOGIST, ASCP, may b* ----------------a.--—.. — time, | lent it creases. OLOG1ST, ir equivaM r_________ position. EW artlhg salary, regular i M|P retirement plan. Contact Ptr-sonntl Director, Saginaw General Hospital, 1447 N. Harrison, Sagl-naw, Michigan. ____________________ RN AND LPNs Openings on all shifts. VIM benefits, Includes; 7 paid holidays paid vacations, hospitalization an Ufa Insurance, pension plan an. free parking. Apply personnel da- MONEY LIVE-IN, 311 SECRETARY, 1 benefits qefc Kathy Kli Shelling. Crittenton Hospital 110) W. Unlverlsty Drive rsI IN A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE Opening tor several salespeople. No experience needed It you qualify otharwlse. Instruction class In Real Estate starting soon. Wa will train you. Tap earnings, excellent bonus plan If you or*1 Interested In making money. Call Jack Ralph — FE 8-7161 at Bateman Realty Corn- 363-! SALAD AND GRILL GIRL, Experienced. Dev work only.* No Sunday's or Holiday's. Birmingham, 646-4333. SHAfcP OPENINGS. USHERS, CASHIERS, concession help. Apply after 6 p.m., Pontiac Drlve-ln Theater, 2435 Dixie Hwy. SHIPPING CLERK, MALE AND k JOB WITH A FUTURE?, jjjgs K»-a—. — helpful, 34-2471, SHIRT LAUNDRY experience necessary, rain. Paid vacation, paid holiday: in Lake area. EM 3-4121. TYPISTS Orchard Laka Avenue, Pontiac. 5M;CALL MANPOWER OFFICE GIRL WITH INSURANCE i per lane* - -■ ■ riting ail -n, Sfl-7—.. OFFICE JOBS UNIQUE SITUATION - LIVE-IN d rating. Call Nina A shorthand Typing," phone, dictaphone, statistical. general 18 to 45. comptomete assignment WAITRESS, EXPERIENCE. AFtiti- 334-3667.______________________ WAITRESSES, DAY WORK ONLY, Sundays or Holidays. Birming- . transcribing i Bring. NIc* of fit it. Office txparl In Blrmlng- graph : neC*sur|j w""' PERSONNEL SECRETARY, MUSTi I assuming responsl-rds, reports Insur- I ________ benefits prot gentral secretarial duties. WOMAN WANTED DA to 7 hrs., S days i 3712. Call after 4. Help Wauled M. or F. 8 required, d 40. Apply i hours of , B * 5375 Dixie '. Far Information raqulra OaklanC ...female. ______ _________ typing. ADI Beechcraft, •Pontiac Alrpert, SHOULD YOU Make an employmant change? NOW IS THE TIME I Michigan Bell is Ave., Detroit Phene: 373-5615 (ANTED — EXPERIENCED travel agent, setery open. Cell Collect Lee Travel Bureau, CE Sales Help Mate-Female 8-A CAN YpU SELL? If ia, we have an opening tor 2 people Interested In making money. Real Estate experience helpful ..... —---------- ---------s g00[| attrac- tive IA 3-7546. . Taylor, OR COMMERCIAL li INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE SALES Executive sales position open In well established Detroit firm tor qualified person. College graduate i successful background, pre-■ obly sales. Salary and c--||tiaw m. Phans (313) 333-1000. BYRON W. TRERICE C Southfield, Michigan ...... la worth up to 816.530 In year, plus regular cash bonus. Air mall M. L. Fata, Prat., Texas Refinery Corp., Box 711, Fort Wbrth, Help Wanted M. or F. BHelp Wanted M. or F. BHelp Wanted M. ar F. 8 Part Time Job rled over 21, $50 guarantei weak, call 334-2771 between 4 PHARMACIST REGISTERED I Immediately i YOUNG MEN Pleasant Outdoor Work PONTIAC AREA EVES. MO P.M. Hourly wag* OteteMOp, FE 6-0337 before 2 nually. Shift differential tor t Sk!' ::i WAITRESSES. COOKS. FULL, Send Resume l i Number C-16. PHARMACISTS Professional men interested retail pharmacy and willing to take an active part in store management. We are rapidly expanding and advancement opportunities numerous. Previous store management experience helpful but not necessary. Full range of company benefits. CALL W0 3-7760 CUNNINGHAM'S Personnel Dept. ( To Arrange For A Personal Interview An Equal Opportunity Employer n, 334-2471, AUTOMOTIVE ‘l ____________________ laminar with warranty* lovely spot 6433. call Hair- ------ Snelllng A Shilt.... BABY SITTER NEEDiD, BAGY SITTifc, 2 OlIkLt ... ... own roam. Dapenda-... 820. FE a-OTl, beforeTp.m. BABY SITTER IN mV MGME. tram 1 p.m. to 11 B.~ —— PHARMACIST STARTING SAURY $13,000 PLUS Finest fringe benefits, Ufa ck pay Incam* pi vacation, Hera - opportunity wl Ing drut i. Talk H PLANT MANAGER ilnum and gleaa fabricator, building products, located west at Pontiac, having 20 ampleyaas. Ra-hulras man strong In production central, Incluiwi —S ix C-1S. purchasing, ar-wlm customer, Into plai«*6: Write PORTER good^ seler^~CTi^ny|0b»rw^to.* HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MKRCURY 1250 Oekland Are. Public Reltions Troinn $6000 llte pro-w. Fry, INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1722 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lake _______________FE 2*651 $60-$80-$ 100-$ 120 GENERAL OFFICE-TYPIST SECRETARIES-BOOKKEEPERS Age 21-50. Very good skills INTERN ATI IONAL PERSONNEL BO w. Huron, Pontiac 334-4771 A TELEPHONE GIRL 11.75 par hour to start plus bonuses! Iar advan——* totepwgwa ly. 674-223 Adams. 334-2471, TBTTlO BABY SltYtR t6 LiVt-IN, LIGHT -------- KBGSM. ART IMMfGl- CLERK-TYPIST Cod typist, shorthand hatptoj, prataranc* tor axparlanca In J- S day weak, good working .... ft lens. Fay subtect to oualHIc*-tlcns and ability. Ptipn* Mr. Vets, FE 5-4636. Far Information and COUNSELOR. IF wi" wwi ____ to ability, there la no nmit to , - j r potential In fteto. Calf Angle Rook, 324-2471. Snelllng A Snelllng. peo^e* t LAST CHANCE!! To Enroll In Our 1968 Training Course Career Opportunity in Real Estate BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF ITS 1968 . . . “TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN" Fundamental Salesmanship Preparation for Board Exams Real Estate Law Appraising THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS, STARTING JANUARY 8th. CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY C0r, 377 S. TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 P.M. FOR INFORMATION ON ENROLLMENT PLEASE CQNTACT MR. JACK RALPH FE 8-7161 • A' Yf- SiIh IMp MuMutwulg |4 Work WiafoJ Malt REAL ESTATE SALESMEN •on Real Estate needs 3 mo •oMomon for fho uiic* office. I ffuarbv ■root to looming operation of locol business. Experlnce not neettfer SAURY DISCUSSED AT INTERVIEW Coll Mr. Poftofd f o.m.-i p.m. RifMPIf 1 i-iwr pAintjn< - JoHdaytr pi »mr. SALES REPRESENTATIVE EXPANDING NATIONAL drug manufacturer xetu rap., fa Detroit Metro, area territory. •ACKGROUND PREREQUISITES Married men. pge 24-35, with pri OFFER y above Industry i bonus incentive, < Write outlining background to Riel ard Calk (Mv. Manager. Hoechst Phar. WorkWERtgdFgmale experienced references. IR°N'N<« wanWd. excellent MATURE BABY SITTER — NEEDS transportation. 33S-44M. U5 k PLIABLE MATURE WOMAN •TOltoW^f^^babysitting. Call otter Instructlont-SdiMls ATTENTION AUTO MECHANICS DAY-NIOtfT CLASSES STARTING JANUARY 22 ENROLL NOW—START TRAINING Auto Body Collision Acety-Arc Welding WOLVERINE SCHOOL APPROVED UNDER 61 BILL 1400 West Fort WO 34X02 LEARN BULLDOZERS, GRADERS. .D TRAINING. GREER I REGISTER NOW Day and evening classes Federal & State IncomeTax Course MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS HURON ________ UpliafEfrlm 244 Wuntid Raul Estuta 36 AGED FURNITURE Rauphototornd, batter then new at half th» price. Big savings alto on carpet and draperies. Cell 135-home,<>r FREE •*"mefe in your zrJcZ/x tiWuMoo"un- “ ■' tASti ~— 41 Hours Lend Contrscfs — Hemet Wright 333 Osktond Ave. FE MI4I firawportortwi 25 AAA Auto Drivtaway prlvn our cert to (4t Angeles, Sen Frendsctk Seattle, Dalle*, Domer, New YorST^Florid*, Ari zone, few*, Virginia. Ship your % Insured, ICC licensed. 2310 Op-rid Staff Bldg. Detroit. Ht-UU. 5o YW WAHT Ybuk ^ PROPERTY «OL07 , edrertUIng!* experllmS' end^ven reeffiff'cal * DORR 1 son! RBALTORI tor p trap apprsltsl. AAA-1 CALIFORNIA CAR DRIVE YOURSELF CARS WAITING. TO 5 5700, Detroit. fOOtl Woodward Couples 12A experienced husband To?22, “ WM ” I **' BuildlBflSgrvIcBS-Supplles 13 HUDSON'S HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER Cell Hudson's Pontiac Horn* Ir provement Center tor: SIDING ROOFING HEATING & COOLING BATH MODERNIZATION KITCHEN MODERNIZATION WATER HEATERS and many other home Improv ments. Convenient credit terms; i charge for estimated. AH work a cording to city codas. 412-3232; a tension 342 or 343. • Hudson's PONTIAC MALL GET OUT OF DEBT S/UnHBHn* RASSMENT. BANKRUPTCY - LOSS OP JOB. We have I irance at Hempstead. Barr Associates. 334-4714 — Wanted Household Goods 29 ICES PAID P 60 what have yout B & B AUCTION m Dlkla Hwy._________OR 3-2717 Wanted Miscellaneous LARGE FAMILY WANTS ANV SIZE sleds. 673-4331. SILVER CERTIFICAl mrn dollars, SI .40. Wantod to Rent HAVE CASH BUYER FOR SMALL HOUSE . ELWOOD REALTY YORK AT 474-1400 LISTINGS NEEDED p ARMS-HOME S-ACR E AGE RIDGEWAY, REALTOR S________________ 131 4004 Afrtnients, UnfnmWiod II A IlMfradTralaLmdl "ihi mfmnwmmn, viifinwiiii ## , 363-7571 Of *12.2144. REALTY* 642-4220 NOTICE: CLARKSTON AREA HOME, LOT AND ACREAM OWNERS, titog Kara SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH pond, or small lake tor hunt club. Write BILL JENNINGS, 37411 Grand River, Farmington, Mlchl-pan or fall 474-3000. ■ OTHER._____HPH CALL NOW. HAGSTROM _____ TOR. OR 4-0351 OR EVENINGS FE 4-7005-______________ " wanted-houses to Sell Call BREWER REAL ESTATE. 734 Rlkar Bldg. FE 4-5111. LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, ttovt and refrigerator, all utllitiae, couple only. k O O M S, FlkST FLOOR:, utllitlaa paid, 340 and dap. Elderly couple or tklarly lady prefarref No pate, nochlldren. 334-1315.________ 2-BEDROOM, STOVE. REFRTGERA-tor, elr-condltionlr~ ------------ ----- Short Living Quarters 33 MAN WILL SHARE 3-BEDROOM homo with two man. Color TV, cooking prlv.. Cats Lk. 4(2-0441. WOMAN OR COUPLE TO SHARE tarn# bedroom, near I I 334-0014.______________ ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE. vtilltMt furnished, bath shared. $20 EMBASSY WEST APARTMENTS 1- AND 2-BEDROOM Nanlng,' pool?Sepp'rc»*orijlr being cepted. 5367 Highland Rd„ Apt! 7, Waterford Township. 4 miles tot of Tel-Huron Shoppln- rs. tcfwlfz. Mar.__ E APARTMEI ova and ratria Sale Housei ORCHARD CT. APf5T~ 1 bedrooni apartments Manapar-Apt. 4. It itlmar 'LVan on Yhb laimsTano : bedrooms from 4112 402-4440, OR J57-4JOO,__________________ R>nt Huusut, Farmthtd ~39 l-BEDROOM COZY, CLEAN, CHILD EiOROOM, FURNISHED, JUNE SlOO^eposll. Commerce village! $ WEEK. $11,590 BRAND NEW. 3-bedrm. ranch, ... money down. MODEL. UNION LAKE' 4BW 3-BEDRM. ranch wtil basement, largo family-size kltch- Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT 3-BEDROOM HOUSE. S30 1 bedroom house. S35 Lake Orion. 493-302*.___ biDROOMl MODERN, "UTILI- BEDROOMS, NEAR LAKE ORION, 1, 4443 Mandon, Junt It 343- :, CLEAN 3-BED- A NEW YEARS START AT WALTERS LAKE PEATURINO: Split foyar — 2000 aq. ft. of "living'' on 1 acre country site. Clarkston Schools. $30,-000. 10 percent dn. Immediate occupancy. Ranch house — 1400 aq. ft . — on top of a beautiful — Clarkston Schools — ready for your own point and tllo selection - 134,100 — 10 2 bedroom - now and furnished — at 111.4M. Lake front i-bedroom apartment, fully carpeted. Refrigerator ond s‘ Welcome pets, $145 monthly, MODiftN LAKE FRONT, ADULTS — 1 child, 5127.30 monthly, le‘“ and tost month rant Tn :e, near Union Lake, call oftor rooms, second flooiTfrSRt, utilities paid, $71 and dtp., married couple only — Middleaged preferred. No pets, no children. 334-1315. ROOM. WEST SIDE. HEAT AND problems by provtdlng 'ii planned Wanted Real Estate managed, organized program. LET ~~——---------— US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS . _. _ _ WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU 1 Tt'V CA CAN AFFORD. NO jlmlt as to 1 OU HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE FAR, room, beaament, IIP____... ____ month, plus security deposit. Utlll-"" mtm 1 to 2 children 0key.U7a.uu iday, vacate In June — after 4.__________ T - 3-BEDRbOM, 1 H ---------1 includes bulth This DRAYTON WOODS 3 bedroom contemporary t fireplaces, targe IMS roam, In range and oven, full MB.... On ler&Jpl, , 3 BEDROOM RANCH One of the nicest of America' most popular home styles. SSVKWfUSNP rancher yvetertw-d High School teeturea to $21,400 with 10 per cant gt— The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Shelton R. Smith, R*tlP- “•“"Sffi. EASTHAM • 1 rxW door wall «na car poled living bedroom lr | belcon^1 We Hbubbb IMMEDIATE POSSESSION ' Three-bed room BriCk' ranch. Living mom with boy. lac roem, lur-fact swimming. rrifh fitter. Petto. Garage. Walking dlftancn to schools, eMMMg and city pork. VACANT. tSSw. , EXTRA SPECIAL l-Vtar-eid four-bedroom brick colonial. »b baths. Largo family room with fireplace fitted tor gas toga. First floor loundry. Over-sized frag tom gam with decorative pool and wotorML .CarMt and dromi'WoB^MOlStod. tfct-lets condition. IMMSP1ATW POSSESSION. 545,100. A QUIET COURT With lovely trees, ping. Chao to Kh room brick raneh-try space. Full In now. «U.lMk BRICK INCOME rhent, 2 Cor attached garage or many other qualities. Reduced $34,158. TRADE INTO THIS iar^e,n?E* 0. $50 s between 10 ^ at PARTLY FURNISHED 1 house, and garaga. Pc 122-2805, Detroit. Hk to thee- 1, Throe-bed-bothi. Pon- vsraa pom With tiro-ling room. Two full both, Sppo-Corpeting and dtdn with atove, Two family ... unit haa living n place. Separate dir bedrooms and new rate basement. ret., and toting apace, szv.vuu. BRIGHT, CLEAN, HAPPY brick ranch with throe bedrooms and full bsaamenti Convenient to all schools. Walk to shopping. Eating space in kltchein. Fenced yard with patl.o Alum, storms and ocretnt. Gas hoot. 2V*i-cor ga- rage. 74,500. 2 bedroc i fom?ht* ro incy or mnip..jh isjioo R 4-0304 — evanlnr ... Taylor. Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 2-BEDROOM BY MALL, NEWLY decorated, adults only. FE 5-4545. t-BEDROOM, 530 A' WEEK, NO *— J “ 1 child welcome. FE pets, e 2-5874. AND 3-BEDROOM HOUSES WITH — Pontiac and Qrtcnvllto. _______Eves, call 427-3117, 2-BEDROOM ' H6ME, 3 ROOMS, BATH, BASEMENT. 2 ROOMS. BATH, WARM. CLEAN. Manage CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT . _ • LICENSED AND BONDED Homa Appointment Gladly Arranged ,.________ Hr Interviews ■ruixo t-7 P.M.—SAT. 9-5 p.m. DEBT AID I Rlkar Bldg. CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PRQF-ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS1 WARREN STOUT, Reoltor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 54145 Urgently —3 *----" ' Pointing and Decorating 23 Work Wanted Male A-l CARPENTER, ROUGH AND'WALL MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH For homos any place In Oakland County- money Tn 24 hours. YORK BARGAIN 107 Emerson 2 bedroom bungalow, mcnl, automatic hoot, lot, $800 down plus closing co WRIGHT REALTY 3*2 Oakland. FE 2-0141 roperty Beauty Rite Homes 7 MODELS FROM $20,140 Elizabeth Lake Front MOTORWAY DRIVE 24' Hying roam, new carpi beautiful drapes, 2 extra large bedrooms, breakfast room with scontc view. Kitchen with toads of cupboard space, large dishwasher, full basement, completely paneled with divided area tor additional bedroom H desired. Two-car garage with divided space for cookout. Large patio, automatic sprinkling systam, excellent beech, many ether teeturea. Immediate possession. Only 145,000 wHh reasonable down payment. SNYDER KINNEY & . BENNETT EVA HOWARD HERRINGTON HILLS. Extra nice ----In fine location. Carpeted llv- om, ] bedrooms, lovely kitchen, isement with paneiotodMMSM - . tiled floor fcpr large corner lot. Onl) land contract. ... H Paddock, S20 i FE 5-2707,_____________________ r6oms and BATH. CLOSE 1 2 ROOMS, NICE, CLEAN, ADULTS only, profor middleaged coupla 1 ofnoto. FE 4-4003. , 2 rooms And bath, child wel- 2 R60MS AND BATH. MttVAtB entrance otto bath. Utlllttos torn- lehod. 15 S. Edith.________ _______ 2 rooms, ill Week, 3 rooms. 75 Clerk. WE TRADE 2 ROOMS AND BATH, NICE LOCA- OR 4-0343! --------------- Drayton F.Plns ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE, no children. 43 Therpa. 3 ROOMS Alio BATH, S25 WEEKLY, ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT Utllitlaa furnished. Private both ami entrance. No children. 334-4477, ROOM, FRIVAtE, bath. Entrance, FE 5-8444, 115 University. 3 ROOMS, NBWLY PANELED FOR 3 ROOMS COMPLETELY REMOD- Bonts and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family booting headquarters. Starcraft aluminum ond liberal" Shall Lake and I.M.P, flborqli-1345 S. Woodward ot Adams Road. Ml miSsTstlMWoBIN ------- • -a ond storoqo. Brkk It Block SewIcb BRICK. BLOCK, ,»TONE, CEMENT Building Modernbntl— -A QUALITY GUARANTEED, licensed, free estimates, Sprlng-—id Bldg, Co» 05-2125. .kitchens, bathrooms. Stoto CARPENTRY AND PAINTING Carpentry and cement work. Free estimates. UL 2-5252. CARPENTRY. NEW AND REPAIR Fencing QUALITY ROOFING. NEW AND reroof. Bonded materiel. Free to tlmotos. Reasonable. 413-7514. . L. BILLS SR., NEW AND floor sanding. FE 2-5719. . SNYDER. FLOOR LAYING Floor Tiling Sign Printing SIGNS. HAND PAINTED. MADE TO CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. Ll-noleum, formica, tile. Carpeting. 741’N. Perry. PE * **** Jantiorial Services SNOW PLOWING. REASONABLE TALBOTT LUMBER service, wood or elumlm id^ndHerdweresupg1^ Painting and Decorating Tree Trimming Service •1 TREE SERVICE BY BA Free estimate. FE 5-4441, 474-1510. TREE TRIMMItfO AND REMOV- Free eat. 335-4521, 335-7515. _. CUSfbM CXhPlNfRY, BASE-ments finished. Fanellng, celling _!!* tile, tonracp 473-1375. A-l FAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON FE *5344 vi~PXIRTing. work gTJaran- teed. Free estimates. 412-0420. INTERldR FINISH, KITCHENS paneling, 40 years experience -1 FES-IBS. QUALITY FAINTING. REASON- He. 428-4423.__________ COMPLETE DECORATOR SERVICt *--- —heme euetor* ■“*“ 1 coordinated bt Carpet, draper! ■w, custom designed ’ own craftsman, appliances. Appoint imp. Don Prpyirt,_________ ervlce furniture store, 1101 ALL TYFES^F^MENT WORK BLoCk 'ktfb cBmBnt WoKK. Pontiac, VMM._________ expert Painting and paper Commercial Bldg., COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL remodeling specialists OTINN'I COWfrl CO. 334-7477 or 311-S571__________ Dressmaking, Tailoring^ litTY JO'S DRESSMAKING Widdlnpa, woratlane. 474-3704 DRESSMAKING AND ALTERA- APPROVED AUTO DRIVING ORYWAU. new. 427-3 SERVICE, OLD AND Trucking LIGHT MOVING, TRASH ___sd reasonable. FE 4-1353. CAREFUL MOVING, FRfeE ESTI- euphol-anfs In Pfcatagrnpfcy NEED A COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHER? Call DONOVANI That's HBS DONOVAN, 852-2351 Pimm Tuning F Pwiwring Sorvlcs -1 PLASTERING. NEW AND ( RE- PLANTER REPAiWS Prompt sorvlcs. 334-3715_ PLA»ti*INd.“FBI(i~E'4TTMA“tgS. O/litovatibltl-lMi. CONDRA PLUMBING B HEATING JACKS DRIVE INN l^'.BPldwI^BIjA7II3 W. Montcalm. 332-9271. , Roofing across from St. Hosp. PE 4-8900. CLARKSTON, 3 ROOM, UflUTIES. i, Marllte bath, 350 dep. 524.50 Mature person or couple. ____ 474-1511. “ROOMS, BATH, NEATLY DEC- Keeflo’ HarbeV F E 5-2707. ROOMi AND BATH, BABY WEL- at 273 Baldwin. Phone 330-4054. ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS, NEW BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS situated in Bloomfletd-BIr-luxury !■ * BEAUTIFUL SECLUbiD COUMfltY state lust off 1-75 «' ‘ •lus Road. Minutes llrmlnghem, Pontiac, Rmpelnt, elr conditioning and --pllancts, large family kHchans, ewirnmlng pool —' —- •*—t- — All linmiea _______ looked in BYoorr?lald*OrD!ard ApK located on Sairth Blvd. ( |j| Rd.), between Opdyke and proasway. Open dally, 1 to Sunday,! 13 to ( p.m. Par L-----... lion: UN 44303. Mgr. 335-M70, J R Y APARTMENTS bedrooms, ,bal( ■ r conditioning, 130 to *145 Inc I tlvo. a., Mercy rl^dacoretad lake-privileged - -...2 lake front homes ready wlth 1300 immediate occupancy. Model on Airport Rd. at Pleasant Dr., V/» miles north of M59. Call 674-3136. rivet* bath or fourth awn. Partially carpeted ■ _____ awn. Full basamant, attached 3 5rrM...................... caF garage; an in I tlon on Extra large e« tot, far small family wno maintain It aa la. 5130 month security deposit. OL 2-3443. HOUSE FOR RENT ____________FE 5-3442 IIRMINGHAM, 3 • BEDROOMS, brick, fireplace, ree Team, 2-car nrage, carpet B drapes, $23,100. Waterford ip pets. 3373 Ceelay Lake Rd. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS Rochester's Outstanding Velue Featuring 1 and 1 bedrooms Community Building and Syrlmmlng Pool LOW LOW RENT FROM $132.50 INCLUDED IN RENTAL: RENTAL Unfurnished homa li and tost i....... raqulrad. 3130 par month. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty 3S16 DIXIE HIGHWAY “ “~‘LTOR Open 1-1 dolly :OURT, IDEAL FOR xiple or retirees, 2 ' - --nent, $100 per I. SMITH CO. Rent Rooms 42 CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM. NEAR LARGE SLEEPING ROOM, MAN Pontiac, 352-4131. __________ large Clean, refrigeration. Brown Realtors A Builders Since 1131 HIGHLAND ESTATES:. Three bed-om Brick with full basamant id beautiful landscaping; largo 1^ and fenced yerd.^ House has b enclosure. 1304* Dundee. n dally 124 p.m. Phone: 651-0042. 38Apartmtnts, Unfurnished 38 l-A SNOW PLOWING, BY JOB OR season. 332-4113 er 852-2872._ ROBERT SCOTT, SNOW PLOWING. ■_______3384771. LIGHT HAULING AND - —l"-T raps. FE S-7443. haulingTTJaSemTnTs, al arid' front-end' toad IrigT f8^3$403! u6Ht HAULiN4,jMWiM(i, Heas 333-7515 Grand Prix Apartments 1-2 Bedroom Apts., from $125 per month 1-2 Bedroom Apt. with carpeting, from $135 per month All utilities except electricity • Private Pool and Recreation Area • Huge Walk-in and Wardrobe Closets • Insulated, Sound-Proof Walls • Electric Kitchens • Ceramic Tile Baths • Private Parking • RCA Master Antenna • Air Conditioning • Aluminum Sliding Windows 315 S. Telegraph Rd.-Pontiac See Manager Apt. No. 1 Phone 334-7171 £elore*Rol n preferred, no drinkers. tOOM IN NEW HOUSE, NEAR GMC Truck A Coach. Kitchen privileges. 335-4509, er 333-1107. SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OG- SLEEPING ROOM-LADIES, WEST slda. Phone FE 3-3455 after 5 p.m. SLEEPING ROOMS, CLEAN. WARM _ ^ -.y. an wk. and dap. > drinkers. 333-13)5. ______ Cloet to plant. 335-1471 Rent Office Space IT TAKES SO LITTLE TO OWN A HOME — If tastes art modest and you you want to get ahead. Let ua shew you this newly decorated 2 bedroom home near. Lotus Lk., attached garage. Just (800 down plus costs. (62.50 mo. plus texts and Ins., Total $18,580. HAGSTROM, REALTOR DO W. HURON MLS OR 44353_______EVES. FE 4-7005 ___Track Rental _ Trucks to Rent | Industrial Tractor Co. 135 S. WOODWARD I 4445) FE 4-1443 Open Doily including Sunday BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls cleaned. Root. Satisfaction1 guaranteed. Insured, FE 2-1431. wall! WAkHiM6, reasonable F E 44305, 5734717 wall VAsHiho, ir VBars ex- parlance, raaa. FE 2-18157 L L DRILLING. F ,POINT service, Ul DARLING COURT New Luxurious ALL-ELECTRIC APARTMENTS Awarded the Gold Medallion by Edison for excellenct in All-Electric Living 1- and 2-Bedroom Apts, from $165.00 per month Including All Utilities • Clean Electric Heat • General Electric Kitchen Inoludlng wesher/Dryer, Dish-wesher. Garbage Dlsgosel. Refrigerator, Range and Oven . ( . Plenty of Formfee-Top Cupboards, Lazy wean Pantry. • Insulated Sound- "*• proof Walls • Central TV Antenna • Private Paved Parking • Central Air , Conditioning • All Rooms Fully Carpeted • Storage Area in Eacn unit • Close to Xwayi and Pontiac Mall Furnished or Unfurniihed Reel Estate, jnturance Office. Plenty of rarking. Call 551-4574 or 7314400. __________ ItENT OFFICES—$35 AND UP. 454$ * Immediate Occupancy OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK-1 P.M. TO 6 P.M. 3440 Sashabaw Road (South of Walton Blvd.) , Waterford Township ,, 674-3136 Rent Bmlngss Property 47-A 25,200 SQ. FT. adjacent bldgs, acreas from pathlc Hospital. Will ranr-^-' I----| — will prevlda 48. Contact Bruce Annatt paraonaiiy Annett Inc. Realtors » E. Huron St. SSL____ Offlct Open Evenings A Sundays 1-4 OstJY 0,060 SO. Ft. BUILDING WITH II ft ewarenaa, and railroad IhB, O'Ndll Realty OR 4-2222. t. alr-canditienad _______,., HH On^H.ofc) H‘ fT’V*1 ,torag* Bodg. Annett lnc„ Realtors 21 E. Huron St. PE 1 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive a i 1 1 DAN MATTINGLY ■3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTOAbi COSTS MODEL OPEN MS Fisher 1:30 to 3 p.m, - 5-day weak WESTOWN REALTY PE 5-2743 daya if 7:30 p.m. - LI 2-4477 4-H REAL ESTATE SUBURBAN — 2-bedroam Mow, alum, ildlng, util-lament, ga* furnace, 1 car garaga. Lika prlvlltgas on Caiue Laka. - VACANT. Quick possession. Price 110,-MO 171 mo. total payment. BIRMINGHAM ADAMS RD.-DERBY SECTION Breakfasf oak floors paneled racra room. Vacant. See fhle today. BIRMINGHAM MAPLE RD.-EATON RD. lVk-etory brick, 4 bedrooms, i baths, natural fireplace, tile 1 1 FE 2-6412 Miller Realty Co. 670 W. Huron Half 4/10 Ml 6-0700 Risdon Realtors FINE NEW HOMES BY ROSS IMMEDIATE POSSESSION WATKINS HILLS ______$24,900 ' Dixie, STM Lerent, l’/i baths, HMaiM lIMevel, 1400 ft. big. BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS *43,100 - mile N. of Bloomfield Hina. Hugo 4-bedroom, 3Vk bath, COtonl. al. 2571 Wandovar. Just 14.400 dn. Pick carpet colors. LAKELAND ESTATES mile N. Walton Blvd. eu Dixie t. Shoreline Blvd. MODEL PHONE: 4234470 O^erHQwlly, Sun. IjtjLm LAZENBY EXCELLENT 4-roem, 3-bedroom home. In very good condition. 11 x 14 llvtog roem, ^re^nr'U^ with gas heat and hot water heat- > er, twiced In rear yard, screened • *— porch. Must be er“ ited. Priced to set n land contract. R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open daily from 1 a.m. to t:30P.m. "" W. Walton — OR 44)81 FIRST iN VALUE RENTING $78 Mo. $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. (Across from the Mall) 332-4111 or 334-3544 BUDGET MINDED? FOR JUST $1000 DOWN — wa will build yeu a Baalc-Biit 3 bedroom alum, aided ranch on our lot near Crescent Lake. Total price $10,550 on land contract. Will furnish your tastes are modest and to contract. BY owner Golf Manor Subdivision. Union Ldka and Commerce Rds. 4-bed-room, 1V4 torn. Living roam. Dining room. Family room with flre-piaca. Kitchen with buiit-ina. Completely carpeted and draped. 2- &r.»r%s2%:c,ll*"t eon^on- GAYLORD CLARK INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP: THIRTEEN ACRES with prlv laka. Also (00 toot frontaga on dlan Laka. Lag cabin name. . bedrooms. Stone flrtpiaee. (deluded tree. Plenty ef privacy. Call MY 2-2M), FE *W3. MODEL OPEN every day. Three bedrooms. 512,100 total price. Directions: North an M-24 to Orion Rd. left at light to Par ~~ Model on corner. GAYLORDS INC. roams, family ana dining _______ hardwood floors, plastered walls, mittment, purchaser •< &•»*; oniy need qui Price 113,500 I THINKING QP SELLING! CHI I today I Buyers waiting. CLARK REAL ESTATE , 1352 W. HURON ST., PE 3-7881 Multiple Ll«tlnq f—■— Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3-bed roam, tan QBriNi priced lot. Located In straata, curb, 01 city water. Dm__ cant Lake ROM, turn right Crestbrook Street and model. GIROUX DRAYTON PLAINS 3-bed room ranch, conveniently Heated near schools and shopping. Mas laundry room off kltcnan and 3-car garaga embargo let. Oniy 5400 to LAND CONTRACT Lika new 3-bedroom ranch. Has carpeting "—' CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO 3417 Sashabaw Rd. 5R W0 pay cash ter used horr REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 FREEDOM OF CHOICE mi telact the brick, paint, caran tile, tormica vanity, atyto a color ot kltchpn cabinets, 3 t_. garage, and tharmo-saaM glass windows. Home under construction. move In 10 days. Directions: 5 blocks North ot Walton Boulevard and Edit elf SaiMbaw. At 4148 Pomeroy. PRESTON BUILT-HOMES AND REALTY 673-8811 IRWIN NEAR PONTIAC MALL Ideal tor retired couple. 3 bedroom bungalow with carpeted living room and dining ream, kitchen with loads of cabinets. Lovely new bath with vanity, tiled basement with good etoragd space, water softener. Immediate possession. Priced ad $13,- NORTH END 2 bedroom bungalow with Ing room and kitchen, gat furnace and many *r»« i nested easy wel 5L fhX LONGFELLOW Aebestoet Ranch, hill .hi-- Aluminum itorrna . and .serpens. Home reel clean, immediate occupancy. PHA approved. Owner Agent, 574-1541. LOVELAND 2 BEDROOM Full bt foment, gee heat, garage, $9250 With $1,800 down. Leona Loveland, Realtor LOVELY CORNER LOT Beautiful 3 bedroom ranch In Bloomfield Hills. SVk baths, separate dining room, pretty kitchen with built-tot, finished bppampnt with bar, carpal A drapes Included. Clots to 1-75 134.500. 447-5950 Chamberlain Has large paneled family room, buiit-lns In the kitchen, new carpeting, and spacious living roem. Easy Terms at IH.500. Shgpord Real Est. 651-0853 landscaped. Knead yard, fireplace, patio, many exlret. Fey»n «*">••-ell new hemes, tSjm. C Dr. Phone 4114771. New Model OPEN ANY TIME BY APPT. l-BEDROOM BRICK TRI-LIVEL on WllTlpme Lake Rd, I Wadi north of Uhton lake village. Choice of 3 elevations, $11400 to 330,330 plus TELY Al th Vh bat id bear (i Lai us dispose of yi it honit Ntte ffr Highland Estates A well built 3 bedroom all brick rancher with attached brick garage. Ceramic tile bath, built *~ range, oven and hood. Full be: men! with email bar end go possibilities. 75x150 lot, wall toi scaped and tonced-ln rear yai Patio, paved driveway end ek walks make thll the home to m Full price $21 jOO. SISLOCK & KENT 1201 Pontiac Stott Bank Bid. 338-1214____________________338-1' G. Schuett EM 3-7188 FE 3-7088 HIITER NEW YEAR SPECIAL I bedroom ranch, full bees- aluminum siding, iareo lot, immediate possession, I144w, tarma. , (pH dining room, kbCHll+IR SUBURBAl4 — NEW i-bedroom aluminum rancher. Fern- f.v: $12,200 * I let, 314,H ... | bedroom ranch- .... oak floors, vanity In Mlh, full beevment, get heel, on vour lot, to eee model call Hllter Res Estate, 3713 Ells. Lake Rd. et2-“■* efter l p.~ — i :** sdroems in Land IRWIN NEEDS SOME REPAIR: Located on ^ melor er requires some vlerk to' get end *bnth up INCOME: Two family. Efficiently arranged. Locatod ^ln Huron Oardans, ’ bedrooms dawn. Two up. lac with private bath Ml antranci basamant. gat heat. Can be aaa meat anytime ky appointment. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN A SONS 313 Waat Huron —'llnca 1125_ PE 1-1444 attor I P.M. FE *4513 OAKLAND UNIVERSITY AREA ! 3 bedroom, plastered wells, odk floors, carpeted living room, get heat, ie’x250' lot. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE PONTIAC-VACANT ROYER Melt and l-lns In kitchen ana i-cer garage. Full price, 314.1M. MACEDAY LAKE Home 1$ sharp throughout. ■ ClarB-.ton eehaele. Call tor ditalli. CLARKSTON ■am ranch, ceramic bath WE BUILD-TRADE 682-2548 Lajww RAj^W^MafE *YALLFkHchaPeH ppnd, compHtoty ’’' “'"green ACRES 1451 S. LapaarRjLi Laka Orton 4 D—8 T11K PONTIAC PKKSS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 RHODES I ACRES, »nnall lake. (life TH-M------ — basement, 2Vk car attached garage. A real Mr at $so,ooo. SOUTH MARSHALL. Nice 2 bedroom home, excellent condition. Only 000, $100 down, balance low I , term*. JUDAH LAKE. Nice r, fenced yard, r. oat KINZLER PRIVATE KINGDOM On 5 scenic acres and a spaclods 2-room brick colonial wlm J — ■n trees. Has modern kitchen all well maintained. To '■ e carpeting, draperies and heat, city * top streit. Ti RHODES, REALTOR | PE 8*2306 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712; MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ' START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT By Investing In this (lew brick 3 TIMES ORION TWP. Offers tor your spacious 1 bedroon 49 CARNIVAL COLONIAL RANCH This is one of those populi pillar brick and frame raised r--- colonial^ 6 delightful rooms andi better than new. Has highlight 4 CLARKSTON SCHOOLS tord. Natural fireplace in living room, beautiful dining room, lot*) of closet space, full basement, oversized 2 car garage, gas heat, . $29,950. c. A. WEBSTER. Realty « 428-2515 a,* UTsT ____,____fenced, blacktop stret walking distance to downtow..^ Wideman WEST SUBURBAN .Large family home, 5 bedroom* Targe living room, closets gt lor*. Full basement, gas Fi rear' currently renting for $1C per mo. SEE IT TODAY. spacious^ kitchen wlth^ new^cat Basement, gas FA heat. Leri garage. Central High and Po , tlac General area. CALL FO APPOINTMENT. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 334-45.. EVES. CALL_______________332-4490 STRUBLE ! Frushour | HANDYMAN'S^PARADISE ing complete Gl NOTHING DOWN r»9* on large tot AporMima will move vow m PrtctG $10,700. MILO STRUBLE REALTOR ' * _________674-3175_______ TUCKER REALTY CO. *£3 Pontiac State Bank 334- y Cape Cod^h JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 5730 Williams Lake Rtf. MLS 674-2245 ready for early occ out the New Ye. home and 534 per i particulars. well'kept,1 "BUZZ" -JbatemAn SS "Says" eith s!hii! THINK TRADING mortgage >NO. 1 for the NORTHERN EDGE OF TOWN: Just inside city I By Dick Turner 423-0400 REALTOR ( UNION LAKE FRONT 3 bedrooms — full basemei 2 car garage - large glass-enciosed perch — a fine beach — $22300. Terms. FLATTLEY REALTY 626 Commerce Rtf. 363-6681 VAN 548-6217 torn ranch* In the city of Orion. 2-car garage* 60'x]25' DORRIS GENERAL MOTORS HOME. Built m last Is the best description || home located off jXTyn rooms and situated on a la I landscaped corner lot wit / walking distance of Oakland PRICE REDUCED ON 97 S. A son to $13,250 on FHA term real buy with 2 lots. 2-car rage, solid paved drive, 2-bed- 7 day possession. Own- Warden OK FOR HORSES ivy acres In West Bloomfield Township with a beautiful all brick rancher, around 40 friflt trees. Upper Straits lake privileges. Has excellent room layout, 2 natural walk-out bee-----* plastered garage, BIG VALUE with small price tag of lust $31300 with terms. LAKE PRIVILEGES Excellent Ice fishing and coming up. Large older h salespeople’"help[and schools. Better ybul No obligation and no guar- 3-year-oltf -------------- anlees, lust down to earth good !u" * selling and aqpral to help you, call , be glad you did. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES." Times Realty 0 DIXIE HIGHWAY ARRO TED McCULLOUGH, Realtor CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT OR EQUITY I NICE WOODED LOTS with this1! ri»An 0.hprtrnnm bUngalOW, n£W 11 septic system, I basement and ground-le s little as 10 per c plus costs. NO. 51 LAKF ORION LAKE FRONT: 2-story colt 5 bedrooms and 2 ball maintained, attractive ant —for large family, ed as a 2-famlly Ince ..... porches overlooking I manent dock aiti outside b spectlon. Priced at $19,950 ACRES With newly painted 2-story t Just off 1-75. , . E HAVE MANY PARCELS pi___I TO too ACRES ON EASY LAND CONTRACT TERMS. CALL TODAY. BRIAN 623-0702 Dixie Hwy, Waterford OPEN SUNDAYS__ HOWARD T. KEATING 22040 W. 13 Mile, Birmingham rolling, beeutl-estate, encamp-Approxtmately jorches! "full “ba'romMt ’ wim'n’ew COI%P^BL^n 7av« NSttwf,N w»h P2T land Janch"*al»Vs hM^^orn??^0.0^ TODAY?”0 RETIREE? Than this 2-btdroom home should fit you like a glove. This beautiful little home Is situated on a lot 100x185 for the gardener and hai a 24x24 attached garage that la wired for 22* ** suit the handyman, complete!. .. modeled kitchen, separate dining roam, 11X17 living room, new —| furnace, 8x10 breezeway and blacktop drive. $15,950. i payments iuding texts PHONE: 682-2211 5143 Cass-Ellzabeth Road MLS OPEN DAILY M MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR STOP RENTING. Start the New misting mortgage| nq ^ C $92 .a month, $g'95Q py^ pR|CE WILLIAMS LAKE privileges end NO DOWN PAYMENT to veter(-on this cute one-bedroom bungalo* Pull basement, new furnace ar. large 8-ft. picture window. Excellent starter home with payi-------- than rent. CALL TODAY I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SCHRAM NO. 81 OUT OF TOWN WITH CITY CONVENIENCES I as: Water, sewers, paved sti and dose to shopping and scho This 3-bedroom brick ranch Is a choice location situated on a la .---■ oversized 2-car gar, He as 51900 down * i show you TODAY I i,! Best of a MODEL HOMES city. Nice condition v li basement plus lots me °rT5 RANCHERS ,Bas^hown by appointment CALL ~NOWI LOVELY BRICK RANCH featuring ^ RATFMAM^ carpeted living room with fireplace.! BATEMAN REALTOR-MLS WEST BLOOMFIELD Comfortable 3 bedroom 1 floor . gas heat on 80* x 140* landscaped site, attached garage, only 114,900 l!P|| ... ...fireplace,, Woodruff Lake. 813,506. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 WYMAN LEWIS REALTY "BUD' CITY LIVING WITH COUNTRY AIR Splc and span 3 bedroom home. Northern High School approximately vt acre gre_ lake privileges, fireplace up and down, plenty of closets, stove ,and dryer, til* bath with vanity. attached garage. Priced a 950.00 terms. Cell now! UPPER LONG LAKE Canal front lot. West Bloomfield Township, breakwater and boat well, o.k. pare test, <0'xl74' paved road. Priced at 58,800 terms. NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. 49 University Dr. FE 5-1201, after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 GILES EASTERN JR. HIGH AREA IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 8-roam bungalow with 1-car garage, in Eastern Junior High dis- most popular large living room, my ragt, on largo shaded lot. mediate occupancy. Only Sli $1400 down. BRICK RANCH 3-bedroom with bastmenl, ished-off family room and \-- shop, private fenced yard. Only 815,950, FHA terms. OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY List With SCHRAM And Call Van FE 5-9471 1 JOSLYN AVE. ANNETT Sylvan Shores ______________carpeted LR with natural fireplace. Full basement. Well tar--------- yard, 2 car garage, tlon on closing wl1 29 Acres—W. of Pontiac 6 Apartments TRAOE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St, Olfice Open Evenings A Sunday 1-4 338-0466 Val-U-Way ATTENTION Special Opportunity Preowned, redecorated, like ni Home. Contains 4 big, big roon Warm gas heat, aluminum storr ■nd storm doors. Convenient FE 5-8183 WEST SUBURBAN bedroom bungs - - Kl and dining ,100 moves you NORTH SIDE petwT living0 room”Klich«In heal. Gar area. Utility. Automatic m .............. low. Attached furnace it $1350 i BRICK BUNGALOW wX din. Carpeted living A < Claude McGruder Realtor 221 Baldwin Av*. FE : Multiple Listing Service Ope lets—Acreage Fireplace. Summer porch. ---------- ment. Gas HA heal. Two car garage. Nice landscaped lot. S' van Lake privileges. Terms. Eve. Call MR. ALTON 973-4130 54Lots—Acreage 1 Contract - 3 bedroc CASS LAKE WOODS - r - |ust 84250. EM d building site - 53300. 3 PHONES SERVING YOU HACKETT REAL ESTATE 363-7700 363-6703 363-5477 . Rec. b master^bedroom < ir-1 Pontiac iii;fe B"a' 8-421! §L^*8518 ^ EM 3-4171 Rochester 8175 Cot-----fijj VON CABBAGE The greenback variety will multiply In your bank account It you ln\—‘ ln^ this furnished 3 family hoi repairs necessary. You'll whittle while you work, because your efforts will bring good returns. Only cont^acT"* 52,040 dowr m * LETTUCE Show you this Gl special. Only 5250 will move a qualified Into this big 3 bedroom ho Monthly payments as low as per month can be arranged. . a short walk to grade school ... the kids. Also walking distance to stores. Call today. We have the keyl Immediate possession can be yours. Only 57,900. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Ret _ ~ H m...........* Room 110|i STOUTS Best Buys Today YOU'LL BE SNUG HERE cozy end cute as can be 955 this home otters load lor a larger family all oi itstandlng features Includi mlly room, 3 bedrooms petlng and drapes, ga iched garage, patio, gain eep ot. Quick possession. mmmmm-.___________<■ Best c. all >14,500 Is the total price. SEE THISI 4 BEDROOMS Only a short distance to Oakland University from this 4 bedroom, ogilt in 1950. Mu-d sewer. Gas heat r. Paved drive to “That’s Freddie! He’s the slow, but stubborn type!” | Sale Houses 49 tale Hgiww 49 HALL Lauinger SACRIFICE! 5 bedrooms .commercial CLARKSTON AREA — 3 bedroom | bungalow with plenty of closet living and dining room, gorgeous modern kitchen with Indirect light- home. Out of town. Must sell Immediately. Only 515,500. OFFICE OPEN 9-9 GUN. 1-5 674-8919 673-3148 Ing* full basement* IVb car garage* large Anchor fenced lot. Home is Income Property 50 priced to°sel*,a{yon?ySSM?500. Call! early on this one. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty ' NEW 3-BI=DROOM — Tri-level with ell brick end aluminum exterior, plus 2V? car attached garage. Home features ^1 Vj ceramic^ baths, coun- BUSINESS AND HOME Commercial !26‘ of frontage on 1 Commerce Rd. (over 1 acre). Attractive home, fireplace, basement,1 gas heat, garage with an attached room, carpeted living and family completely finished for early possession. Approximately $2500 will Active area. Good Investment!* Priced to sell 529,580. Good terms.l Call for details. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2S83 UNION LAKE ROAD 10 ACRE FARM — with large 4(Y x60‘ barn. New 5 bedroom colonial, all aluminum exterior. This home has many extras such as 2 full ceramic baths, family room with large brick fireplace, country kitchen with beautiful cabinets end EM 3-3208 363-71811 KENT system, thermo windows, marble windowsill. Offered ^at only 545,000. Established In 1914 B. HALL REALTY 6549 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 daily 425-4116 680" PAVED ROAD FRONTAGE. Approx. 7 acres. Monthly Income oh present units 5500. Plenty of. . room \eh for large multiple dwelLj KAMPSEN $50,bo(?*ATerms.00*** ,r0,n Pon,l*c FURNISHED INCOME — 8 units. ! "IT'S TRADING TIME" Spacious grounds. Wonderful location. Total price 545,800. 1100 FT. LAKE FRONT ON WHITE LAKE 2 FAMILY INCOME — West side location. Big lot, 815,000 with 82,580 | This^all brick lakafront home has ttx>kingFfhr*lBk ^tl9* *n Be,0,'a $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF I FURNITURE - Consists of: WARREN STOUT, Realtor )$-piea ii----------m.... U50 N. Opdyke Rd. Sale Farms 80 to 800 ACRES In lower Michigan. Dairy, grelrv beef or hogs! Name your term needs, we have If **--------** Coldwater, Farm Broker OU Write or call 517-278-2377 - days Headquarters — Dean Realty Co., er 517-2884127 - nights. - Sale Batiness Property 57 THINKING OF SELLING OR TRADING HOMES — IR OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE YOU nc»L _ Ca..- -- s«v. Leo Kampsen I . __ ____ bwk tor PROMPT, EFFICIENT today?* i afford. Move In|AFTER* 8 I bedroom LARGE QUIET OAKS Shelter this beautiful brick located on secludi In Bloomfield School Dll tains newly carpeted II..... ____ with fireplace, dining room, paneled den, cheerful kitchen and full both I. CALL FE 2-3457 ...... room for recreation. Paved * bedroom home .... drive to 2 car brick garage. Im- *nd fireplace, mediate possession. Warren Stout, Realtor . Opdyke Road FE 54145 “-'“Iple Lilt*— *— Dally irrenged kitchen, 4 ly 085 pi . Complete payment 375 Central Street Gl buyer, only 849 to move In e cute (Ike new 2-bedroom home. He* bill beument, gas heat, mod-bath. Hold ypur price. Only SHOO, ern kitchen i hat for the li TED'S Trading O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? INSTANT HOUSE large car garage, "lake" i*. Plenty of extri... . .... W* Invite your Inspeetlop. TRIBUTE TO A GREEN THUMBER For the small family that wdnts •o get away from the hustle bustle, 2 acres ol land with oc_— ol garden space lor spring planting with a pond that supplies the sprinkling system lor Irrigation of gerdet end lawn, a root cellar to keep those vegetables, 2 bedroom home, 2 car tKinic 0f iprlng, ir than you think, ly 111,900. Why Northera Property i your present home, with 2 full baths, living room, family room, country style kitchen, 2Vj i rage and a full basement includes living room, bedroi ,£modern We offer *wh?eh located I t. Fun R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave,_Open 9 to 7 Mattingly IF YOU ACT NOW YOU CAN HAVE YOUR NEW YEAR EVES PARTY IN ONE OF THESE LOVELY MODEL HOMES IN — WATERFORD TWP. ..BEDROOM DUTCH COLONIAL, 2-CAR GARAGE, 523,580. DRAYTON WOODS - 3-BEDROOM RANCH, 2-CAR GARAGE, WILLIAMS LAKE RD., 522,900. ROOM TO ROAM THIS SPACIOUS RANCH WITH BEDROOMS, BATH. CARPETf_ LIVING ROOM AND DINING AREA, WITH LARGE 2'/i-CAR GARAGE IS LOCATED ON WILLIAMS LAKE RD. WITH A HUGE FENCED YARD. PRICED AT ONLY $. $15,900 THIS 3-BEDROOM BRICK HOME IS VERY CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- LANDSCAPED ________ „„„ PRICED AT ^NLY 513,900. DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY 402-9000 OR 4-3540 - OL 1-0222 SE MAGNIFIQUE Lake living at Its finest! Bar none. Custom built by Zuehlke .. —, large family rmml replace and walk-out o the lake. Carpeted ed for 55,100 oi financing with ’ appointment 1 Builders, rang* !£| LAKE FRONT M Mighty nice el this price. S-P-A-C-E ed w,,h inis of appeal. A on* floor ng>well arranged, 2 bedroom h6m*. Va The joys of home ere accented by / pleasant kitchen s COLONIAL IN WATERFORD Starting Soon New luxury, 8 unit apartment buildings for sale. Required cash $28,900, bal. mortgage. For full details call 674-3136. Model at 3440 Sashabaw, S. of Walton Blvd. ED - NORTHERN PEN-■ Move In on Old Highway, ouse and garage — large unt - fish and play. 11.888 II 843-5477 — Hackett. Resort Property Wnotod Ceotracts-Mtg. 60-A J Million r, Michigan. Dale, A VAN LI (-4217 81 acre farm on Fenton R black top frontage, beautiful bar good aider farm tidme, 8495 p acre >14,880 down land contract. living room suite, 2 stop tables. I cocktail tabl*, 2 table lamps end (1) 9'xl2' rug Included. 7-plece bedroom suite with double dresser, chest, full-size bed with innersprlng mattress end matching box spring and 2 vanity lamps. 5-plece dinette set with 4 chrome chairs end table. All for 8399. Your credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON _____________FE 5-1581 day. Call i TED MCCULLOUGH JR. 674-2356 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us befo 'warren STOUT, Realtor 150 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5416S _____Open Eves. *111 > p.m. NEED LAND CONTRACTS. S EVES. OR 3-1272j 6680 Sq. Ft.-Comm'l Glazed block garage JBR 60x90, plus a 20x44 and 18x20 -xcelfent condition. _____ make * fin* machine shot 50 miles north of Detroit. Reduced to $20,000. terms. Dixie Highway-Comm'l Ultra-modern masonry bldg. In excellent condition con-talnlng 5400 sq. ft. Space could be divided. Ideal, tr-medlcal clinic. Insurance < conditioner, burglar alert plenty of parking space. Pc session on dosing. 575,01 Annett Inc. Realtors 31 'E. Huron St. 3384 Office Open Evenings 0> Sunday 30,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING with 18 ft. dMranco, and railroad sk"— O’Neil Realty, OR *.2222. GARAGE ON BALDWIN NEAR ORCHARD LAKE RD. Near Commerce Rd. 2500 sq. ft. building with extra lot for park- nec'ted to sewer, water available. tracts. Clark Reel Estate. UUIEUHI . piece walnut iMMIIV dinette set, exc, condition 575. 6 piece' Bassett bedroom set, exc. condition, complete tor 8115. Splndl* type Willett Cherry Bed, exc. condition 545. French provincial living room set, exc. condition. Pontiac Resale Shop. 3354932. Days, 335-7942 Eves.____________ s selection, free estimates, nlshlngs. KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION — $50 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2417 DIXIE HWY.________474-2234 Curt's. 674-HOI. E. Pike St.. FE 4-7881. MAPLE BUNK BED SET WITH d r^tier, $40. Wringer washer, hard-used, >75, FE 2-9387. MISCELLANEOUS LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick, trie ly. helpful. FE 2-9206 It the number to cell OAKLAND LOAN CO. 203 Pontiac State Bank B 9-5 Mon.-Thurt.-9-7 Frl. LOANS $25 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 8-0421 LOANS 825 to SI .000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER ft LIVINGSTONE Morfgogt Loom Lott—Acreage ACRE LOT* ______ ____________R K STON Schools end phone, 200" pavement ’mft v> ml>* ,rom DIx19 MENZIES REAL ESTATE 625-5485 9220 Dixie Hwy. 425-5015 Investment. 2-2144. BATEMAN AMERCIAL DEPAI 377 9. Telegraph 338-9641 I______Attar 5 call 322-2759 03 HLttCJ 1 ORION TOWNSHIP — LAND FILL With Vi mile road frontage, stream Wajs*1 K LowjKxeT Dryd«n er»!I BvsImss Opportunities 59 Beautiful building sites. Can be___________________ ......... Second mortgages tor everyone, even If behind. Widows, divorcees and people with bad credit are OK with us. Call ALL RISK MORTGAGE CO.. Mr. Winn. 1-308-7902._________________________ be occupied, used one "year,"you I SwOBS 63 can buy It for SS5.000. 10 Acres,!. r_________________________________” ment tloor, alr-conditloned office.I^ ACRE, FINE BUILDING SITE, Clos^ to 1-75 and M-S9, lust flVjW ,J“^e^,0“r,J,ear*Snew ce" 1 >3,000 velue?e4«-3749?*ar "** C/f~ ! HAY BALER AND SIDE DE-livery rake. For tel* or swap. FE 44358. WANTED: OLDER USED FURNI-ture, dlihtt and mine far cub. 391-2267. ■ 0RT0NVILLE INDUSTRIAL , ,54iM-lS, newer cement block building! 2500 sq. tt. 2 garage doors at. rear, small office et^-- 120x150. now being ut room, patio, 2Vs car garao good neighborhood. Full p 500. Terms or trade yovi "The Realtol"? Her# »rj troven tacts. You do n the time to arrange lor r|see if today. |REDEYED J furth»r**0«erlni "est city lo lot. This financing. Full | Northern High Sc Ml at only 512.951 ,|20yeACRES, a 10 ACRES* l $60*000* $15,* end contract. 5 ley, 115.000. months perhaps end litigation l free your properly In order to pi It on the market once more. fh. realtor will enlist the service of fellow real estate agents giving the owner the advantage of his entire local sales market. " ' buyers seek a reputable VMM because they realize the pitfalls of direct negotiations. The realtor will price the property lo sell *1 a fair market value. The average owner over prices but eventually accepts a price below the mark*' value. Let your broker do l talking end leave the sailing to i McCULLOUGH, REALTY REALTOR •60 Highland Rd.. (M-59) MLS pen 9-9 ------ > ads??? •lion. Gas furnace” FOX BAY MODELS OPEN SAT. & SUN. 2-5 P.M. tt onto Fox 8 ■Ive. Priced It toic* let. West on Ellz. on Perry Blyd., right to Marla I 125,500. Including LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY For 3 Good Reasons W« think Our Sens* of Values Our, List of Good Prospects And Our Tireless Efforts Will Make You Glad You ( RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake Rued OR 4-2222 MLS 3324219 ’ Ortonvllle, S850C "'Vi? LAKEFRONT LOT Oft Lllfto Mar HOME SITES, Indianwood Short! No. 3. Call today for details. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FB M306 BETWEEN ROCHESTER iTHl Orion — so acres with v, mile o paved road front eg*. Land Con tract—terms. NEAR ROCHESTER—27 acres wltl —tag* on 2 road*. Land can I Terms with 10 pet. down. AT ROCHESTER—120 roallng acres “FROSTED MUGS" To serve the ever demanding "i iff'' Root Beer In, along \ ment. Terms available. 711 W. University ~~ 4514141 END OF SEASON SALE irgalnt gelort, telling out *11 left In HI-HILL VILLAGE No No. 2, hurry on these, not nr SMO.OO dS^L ** l°W “ m LADD'S OF PONTIAC 2577 LAPEER RD. 2tl-UOO WE BUY SELL TRADC .e skates sporting gn~t« ernes A Hargreaves --------------------- NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC net model — embroiders, blind hems, buttonholes, etc. 1943 model. Take over payments of: $5.90 PER M0. for 9 mos. Or $53 Cash Balance UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER FE 4-0905 ONE OF A KIND , Freight Scratch :. bedrm., (walnut) ..... $79.95 round table, 4 met* cliairt $7t!50 Ion rockers ..............$32.95 Pearson's Furniture 1. PIKE_______________FE 4-7881 Pontiac Resale Shop Buy-Sell Antiques, furniture, glassware,, mlfc. 10 Lafayette, first street pest Oakland an wide Track. 3354932 REBUILT VACUUM CLEANERS, REFRIGERATOR, GAS STOVE, — ------ washer, $75. 3747 Au- Auburn Heights, after REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES-1967 closeouts, save plenty. Little Joe's. Baldwin at Welt-m. FE 24843, SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zlg zag sewing machine — In modern walnut cabinet — makes designs, appliques, buttonholes, etc. Repotsested. Pay oil: $54 CASH or $6 per month payments UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER FE 4-0905 WANTED: RENAULT C any condition. Will *-6 cyl. engine. 482-2 S«ie CmMm ................... ^ Corner hutch .................559,50 nearly new natural tour Pearson's Furniture - — - ■ -----—-tt>lffl»l2t» E. PIKE ! FE 4.78*1 With I nr- - - ■ — —-----------—------- HOUGHTON LAKE ----------------- <,anLlno aJ2*,ood northern BACK li permit, located on busy highway* ----* $13*000 down. STATE WIDE REAL PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" able. Going tu Florid*. UL 2-17 a year around u can n " 6 month* __ -***“ fhli DO net Sole HeueelwM 6gg6s 65 V WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 No payments during * strike. LITTLE JOE'S Bargain House 1481 Baldwin at Welton, FE >4142 Acres Of Free Perking JUBA HI ft Sat. Til 4. EZ Term 3 PIECE SECTIONAL - BRAND UPRIGHT-PIANO, WORKS RECON-'•"‘“ted, will be tuned in your ), $40, 823-8482. * USE6 MAYTAG WASHERS (OUAR-enteed) $39, Apartment Elec, range S29. Range hood with tan 810. 9X12 rig and pad $19, Pearson's Furniture,In E. Pike, FE 4-7MT USED TV'S, $19.95-----r~ _ COLOR TVs, $299.95 Repo. Hoover Washer 199.95 SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCE. INC. » lit u..— 334-5477 additional money n are amblllou*. Full — with 520,880 dn. also prove to you h< Stop In our office a* join the; NMMCLUB Your chance to go tort in the union Lake are* Ior Optn Wk. NHis III 9:00 WANTED TO BUY t-MXed glass lamps er leaded glass shades. FE 4-9W4. WRINGER WASHER, mTTnSIBe doors complete, $5. Apartment size ■efrlgeretor, *29. Dryer, exc. con-llflon, $49. TV set. $15. Beautttul ■ - slectrlc range, $49. Herrls, FE 6-2744 t, now 9139. Pearson's Fuml >, HO B. Pike, FE 4-7191. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl TIM ........... 7cm Vinyl Asbestos til* ..... 7c ta Maid TiiTexO -------------7c to Floor Shop-2955 Elizabeth taka "Across From the Mall" IS9.00 HO t.~ Vtie' .2.50 Wi PEARSON'S FURNITURE^ I 4 chairs, enNiia -imi Vlctrol, and records end otharf flemt, cell 315-392$. 1924 FORD MObEL T. POUR-DOOR teden. Best offer. 651-110L «Tt -^1**. LiAbife LAfiy. '•TH weil clock, organ stool, bul- h.nd hmm' ,!l0na hand gun over 100 years old, l-YEAR-OLbS^REaTlOo! *EjfahTOTPwi~c5L6* Tv.’T. yg>r-ofd, <250, 424-1201.*tt.>sp*. rni.,"i\,S?Lx?,^ir°000 CON. Hl-fl, TV t Rtdles 66 "Vgk'M Tv- _ «T0« fSS£ CTjgffit-tg-*rg" KROAINS, LITTlI FtfSQleMIusHBiWBai 67 *?<>». CUT^tttTiW# READY TO S&jSt&SC-* jplwiw rRmiw, >wif 9o,m hWMlTDW»-Midffi^ 6| 3MPRESS0RS, LUM equipment, hydraulic Sfej THE PONfrlAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES hard to find? , see us — Wo haw* moat ail klndi Johnton TV—RE 8-45(9 motort Alio"rebuilt '» Loyd. MA t4MT Cameras—Service MINOLTA Nr. MATIC 7, V E R > 800d condition. Electric oyt, win MJ-iStO o$or*«' JJf,r,I,n® ,IH,r* WAREHOUSE SALE OPEN TO PUB-lie. Entire Inventory of new Zenith, RCA end Motorola TVs. color TV and atareot mutt be told. Every Ham dltcountad. Scratched ittt priced accordingly. No root, otter Terms. Sale today and fSNITH ft" M#fMR4j[ TI year eld, In good condition, ttand, 482-4455 alter 0:38 p.m. Water Softeners hot water heat and water lofttnert a specialty! Condra Plumbing fc Heating Ft S-8443. Ftr Salt Whctlhi—at ~67 w TO >4 HP SUMP PUMPS, NEW and uted, alto repaired, 12 to 24" 4x4 fireplace wood. — SNOW MOBILE IjLieNTAI. 1ST TIME OFPfR _ FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON OIESON, GOYA A EPIPHONB Guitars and Amplifiers Call right now 312-4103 PONTIAC MUSIC A SOUND w at *29 PER MO. >. Telegraph FE 4-054 tile south at Orchard Lake Rd. SN0WM08U.ES , EVINRUDE «l DISPLAY 2 1«M demos LAKE ANDREA MARINE fe 4-tiat SKI OOOS jho mighty SypertUpRe ttw H?! Electric, wbhtwtnlS" trocki *uH lino ot tnowmachlne accatsoi OAKLAND COUNTY'S MERC-CRUSIER DEALER Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports CEntor 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4TTI THE GREAT SNOWMOEILE SCORPION Built to perform and endure Hi moat rugged terrain. ORDER EARLY AND SAVE STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (MSt) 4»2-t440 USED SKIIS AtlD BOOtS. t corner Walton ant Livestock 83 FIRST LESSON FREE. KLENTNER Riding Academy. 3*3-0000. HORSES BOARDED, BO>Ts?ALLS, Walled Lake area, 34t-i«04. ___ PONIES AND RABBITS. __ 423-0473_______ REGISTERED quarter HORSl . — Palamlnos, ------ ------ iti&h. KloisftKKD " ¥ If A k f I ft AND orade horses ter everym service. Buy, eell, trade. Exit 2104 W. Hill Rd., WANTED: GOOD USED ENGLISH ' I S I T FEDERAL'S Drayton Plains Shopp National Brttui Ski it SHOP, t'Kir LINOLEUM RUGS, 13.05 E Plastic wall tile ...... ..v 1c < celling tile — well paneling; cites BAG Tile, PE (99S7. 107S W. Hur 22 BAGS FRESH'MORTAR, *25. ' 4034)04 J7 SINGER Touch end Sew Model Practically new. Flat needl sign. Excellent. Yours for ‘--lines, Sill, or pay ft pe....... ill 343-4031—Northern Appliance. 105.000 BTU NEW GAS FURNACE, installed with duett, -avg. *595. Alaa power humidifiers IMWIM, rl A A H Salts, 425-1501, 425-2537. “ ANOTHER CHRISTMAS!! (TAX-INVENTORY CLOSE OUT) A $100 BILL GOES WITH EVERY NEW ltU TRACTOR WE SELL FOR $1,000 or more Before 12 noon, DECEMBER 10, 1*47. HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 .W. University 4S1-701 , DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER > Dixie, Draylon, OR BROWNIES HARDWARE BRUNSWICK POOL TABLE 4' X FE M329. BUBBLE WHEEL BALANCER) VIC-•or adding machine) both like new, 335-9601.______,__________ INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC . Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0501 0192 Cooley LaksRd. FLOUR MODEL OATH TUB Carry with, 025. G. 0 —- For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandisa Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Moll Office Isjelpmewt 72 2 LARGE DESKS. 1 ART METAL, 1 All Steel, with Interchangeable secretary "L" and file. Beth top Spertlnf Qeqjt__________74 Rot WATER BASEBOARD RADI-Otors, Sl.39 per lineal ft. G. A. Thompson, 7001 M-59 W. c values. Mlchig LIONEL TliAIN, AMERICAN FLY-er train, race tat, mono-rail train. FE 5-144S. NEED A COMMERCIAL PHOTOG-repher? Call DONOVANI That'-H&s DONOVAN, 2(71 N. Adami 052-2351. 7______________ PLUMBING BARGAINS. F~RTTt standing folM, *14.95;, 30-gallon heater. 149.95) 3-pleca bath salt) *59.98) laundry *r«V, trim, fjf.95) shower stalls Wfln trim, 039.95) 2-bowl oink, 02.05) lavs., 02.95) tubs, $20 and up. Pipe cut and tbraadad. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 041 Baldwin. FE 4-1 SIS. POLAROID CAMERA, COUCHES, chairs, tables, baby clolhss. Ml SINGER LIGHTWEIGHT FOR able. Beautiful portable sewl machine runs Ilka new, zlo z • fancy it Itch bar., 029.10 e Sr- SPOTS BEFORE YOUR EYES on your new carpet — ramo them with Blue Luetre. Rent ale steel Drums, S2 each, w e. STOPWATCH Box C-14, Pontiac, Mich STUFFED ANIMAL^, toys, (• novelties, lay-eways. Liberal Bl. 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9474. Open 10 iuMP PUMP GE MOTOR 079.50 value, $29.95, marred. Terrific buys “'-htaan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard ■ FE 4-1443 —-32. TALBOTT LUMBER 14" Black and Dackar drill, *9.99 Appliance rollers. S7.95 a or. 4'xl'xH" particle board. S3.75 aa ™«&, WKSLt&'&S. USED AND'NEW OFFICE DESKS, cMlra, tables, flHpa, tygewrlMr* adding mammae, off sal qrlnti presses, mimeograph. drtltl beards and tablet. Forbes, 4! Dixie, Drayton. OR 3-9)47 or 1 ». BTU) two 104,000 BTU ussd I furnaces, basement models) 2 Md get 40,000 BTU m^uL - Cell 334-1239. WAREHOUSE sale open He, Entire .Inventory of Brand refrigerators,^ freezers^ and rslusad. Terms. Sale today and tomerrew, IM, HILF APPLIANCE CO. *4f| 14 MILN ROAO ‘—" id Crooks Hijltrs, ( or for tlorags. Start at GIBSON 2 PICK-UI GIBSON DoOELE PICk-UF" tar, cherry finish. deluxe 8MP ease. Fender 1 vlbrelux reverb conmioion. l-yeer- L0WREY ORGANS ie and hear the nei awrey Rhythm section -ifore you buy. Also se\ al good buys In ussd 01 ins - PRICED PROM $295 GRINNELL'S Downtown Store V S. Saginaw Sand-Gravel-Dirt me building di rfy lex. AH be told. Fun bedroom ea FOR SALEi HAY ANO STRAW. _________MB-2BSS HAY AND STRAW M CENTS PER Rochester Rd. 425 I o) Rochester Pealtry FREEZER CHICKENS UP TO S LE. ANO OVER 50 CENTS PER HEN IN LOI OF S AND OVER. 2350 BALDWIN__________ 444-3070 FarmJEquipmcnt Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel Pets-HiiRting Dogs ■ A DACHSHUND PUPS. AKC, ESTEI HEIM KENNELS. 391-1109 CLEARANCE SALE IN USED TRACTORS AND SNOW BLADES - AS LOW AS $150 t large selection to choose KING BROS. Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily—9 a.m.-8 p.m. ..tarlettt I Champlo Royal Embassy Reger now and save at these OUT 1 DOOR Special Prices. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT Just N^ol^Weterford HIII -a English bull Dogs, oacH , ___________, . _______■ shunds. poodles, tropical fish, pet TRACTORCYCLES AND LAI supplies and grooming. Uncle line of farm toys. John Deere ____ Charlies Pet Shag. 0M W. Huron. New Idee parts galore. You bomt-332-8515. Open Sunday* I to 5. I Hie chain saw dealer Davis Mi SEALYHAM TERRIERS. RDtM ~^!Ky. *** ?•”*?• males, 7 weeks eld, AKC, Champion sired, 875. 3545294.______Travel Trailers 81 WITHIN 2S0 MILES.. SPECIAL 2 ONLY - 1941 Champion 12 x (O' — S4995 IN DISPLAY AT: Cranberry Lake Mobile 9420 Highland0>Rd., . and Tues., 9 A.M. to 0 P. [ 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Closed « STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (8*591 402 l AaDlIy CAMBER, PlCkUP, sleepers and covers. 32S9 S ' " Drayton Plains. OR 3-9521. HAVE A MERRY CHRISTMAS and buy a now 1940 Ottroitcr Mobile Homt New on display at BOB HUTCHINSON'S 4301 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) Drayton Plains OR 3-12 22350 Telegraph Rd. between 0 i. This meent we are overstocked git. point where we must sell ; :W AND USED mobile homes. ALL AT A LARGE DISCOUNT FOR EXAMPLE -OO'xIS', list price *5,185 OUR PRICE: SM95 See them and get a tlon at Warner Trailer Sales, 309S ... „ ■ AND RENTALS BEAUTIFUL COLLIE PUPPIES. 492-19** BEAUTIFUL YOUNG IRISH SET-•er. AKC rsglstered, champion stock very affectionate, S12S. with papers and shot records. 338-2434 after 4 p.m. BRITTANY PUPPIES, AKC. RE-' ~ed tor Christmas, FE 5-7941, OAKLAND CAMPER YEAR END SALE fyjear od selection of covers ______ el similar savings. 335-0434______Baldwin at Colgsto PICKUP COVERS, 1245 UP. 10‘4" cabcovers, *1,295 and ui TAR CAMPER MFG. CO. Ills Auburn Rd. *52-3334 CHIHUAHUAS; REASQNBLE. 343-2178. ________ COLLIE PUPPIES, LOOK UKE HEADQUARTERS for Rupp Sno-Sport Polaris, Scorpion SNOWMOBILE ' Buy early , Pnd save SO DOWN, EASY BANK TERN M6 SALES & SERVICE COLLIE ftjPPlfci Afct, BRED FOR ! gentleness. Intelligence and beaut* 1 males and females, $75. MY 3-2979. DACHSHUNDS, MINIATURE, AKC, * wks., black and tan males, Aftsr JOHNSO^SSNOWMOBILE AT TONY'S MARINE FREE — 1 DACHSHUND, 2 HALF-Dachshund puppies, haH-Pwdle. all females, 141 Cedar, OrtonvIMa. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC and Padlgrse Included, S weeks, good temperment, shew duality. 402-2536. 5 GERMAN SHORT HAIRED POINT-er malty 10 mos.p paper*-852-3862, btfort 1 PM. JOHNSON SKI HORSE SNOW MOBILES Ice fishing tackle Tip-ups rods, augers, spears PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, 2 -idles, terms. UL 2-1457_llOWFmllc, 's.C. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC S' Tour-A-Home LABRADOR, 4 MONTHS, FEMALE^ BRAMBLEW00D COUNTRY CLUBS WINTER U*ORTS BASIN DIR: FROM HOLLY 2 MILES NO. OF GRANGE HALL RO^ ON FISH LAKE RD., THEN LEFT ** MILE. ISA MINER RD. HOLLY 434-9209 LIKE TO ROUGH IT? Like to punish yourself? Don't like liflturyT Then don't came and the meat luxurious camping ti ars on the market. The wor EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 02S-171I . Just N. ol Waterford Hill titf Dixie hwy. SKI-DOO'S $695 . i complete llna of skl-doo ng access, and traitors. Coma KING BROS. |a PgNTIAC RD’ATOPOYK^ BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 S, BlVd. E._PE 3-7001 —TiiorlnE SKI-DOG SKI-DADDLER Snowmobile BUY NOW AND SAVE) CRUISE OUT,INC. 13 fl, Walton Dolly. Of FE 0-4402 ENGLISH SPRINGER SPANIEL pups AKC, champion hunting stock, loveable pats. 724-MU, Imlay Clt^. PICK-UP TRUCK CAMPERS Del Ray, Nomad, Zipper, Flee wing. Over 20 different new 191 models to choose from at close oc. prices. New 1947 Apache camp trailers. New 1947 travel trailers. S74S up while they tost. Ner snowmobiles, $425 up, New V Upper boat trailers, til. New t] aluminum,boats, SU7. We are ovi "bIliTgowCer , ay^oiflesr ~ PIONEER CAMPER SALES. ‘ t CAMPERS CAMPERS » COVERS H ___ -jvers) ALSO OVERLAND Si COLEMAN SALE Fall Inventory Reduction 14' Frolic .............. *1,495 14' Frolic ............... S1A95 19* Frolic .............. $2,395 21' Trovelmastor .........*3,595 24' Bolas-Aaro .......... *5,175 All ar^gdlllllllMkKwwg *1,795 MPEMMPBililiiinilP i ill SEE THESE VALUES TODAY I traitors POODLE BEAUTYF SALON Clippings—AKC Pupa—Stud Service Pet Supplies—412-4401 or 002-0027 POOOLE cLlRfjNQ AMlT SHAM. poolng, by appOInfmenl. FE 5-4005. POODLES, WHITE S' {jjj0(,l*p°al,,on SHELTIEi AKC SABLE R0PS BY champion, exc. h--1"- --J iporamsnl, FE 0-4104. SIAMESE CAT. FEMALE. chlldron. MA 4-2042, ST. BERNARD PUPPIES, PURE- STANDARD SCHNAUZER FUFPiES AKC rag., champion or-' Ready tor Christmas. ayiffiarjuu”' ■*! Aactien SbIm WE BUY - SELL- - TRADE RETAIL 7 DAY* WEEKLY CONSIGNMENTS .WELCOME .. CASH FRIZi EVERY AUCTION ' 5009 Dixie HWV. OR 3-2717 PERKINS bAL t-ifc k VI t E-XuctTon- Jocobson Trailer Sales 490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-8981 Open Mon.-Frl., 9 a.m.-O p.m. set., 9 to 4, Closed Sundays SFORTCRAFT MANUFACTURING Steel frame pickup sleepers and tops 4140 Foley, Waterford, S23-0S50 TRAVEL TRAILERS Your dealer for — LAYTON .OQRSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO CAMPERS , trailers In ALSO CORSAJR PICS. _. I_ NEW SERVICE DEFT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy.____, 425-4400 TROTWOOD AT J< ^ 517 B. Walton_ FE 4-0410 PE 4-5051 WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, Ritz-Craft Travel Trailers Skamper and PleasursMate Campers—7 & 8 Sleepers Holly Travel Coach into Holly Rd. Holly. MR 4-4771 Open Pally and Sundays - ' WOLVlilNE tftutk CAMfSR} and stoapara. Now and usdd, up. AIM rantato. Jacks, intore telescoping, bumpers, laddars, racks. LOwry Camper Salas, 1325 tjnEfeiszy*-EM iobilo Hentas 19 1-A Beauties to Choose From Richardson delta monaech duke HOMETTE H LIBERTY COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES jsR 2-1457 ^ , ' 423-1310 i. *.:*TyKB 5430 DIXIE —mm it * r —- Oi 330-1431 By Kate Osann D—0 Used Auto-Truck Ports 102 Ferel|B Cars ) Pontiac, 227 E. Pike. This USED ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, rear axis, trl powers, ball hous- feii:,tc-H H Au>0 New and Ussd Trucks 103 1 JEEP TRUCK, SNOW BLADE and contracts. FE 5-3908._____ 2 ukit- UNIVERSAL JEEPS 1941 and 1943 with snow plow, ax-cellant condition and at right prica. Both new Jaap trades. GRIMALDI JEEP 900 Oakland Ava. FE 5-9421 WHEEL DRIVfc, CHEVY 1941, to jon. wUh snow plow, naw and clutch. condition 10S BILL G0LLING VOLKSWAGEN "HOME OF THE L.V.W." Michigan's fastest Volkiwagen1 tsaler 1821 MopMawn Blvd. Off Maple Rd. (15 mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT TrW___________ 442-4900 New and Used Cars 100 BEEN BANKRUPT? DO YOU NEED - 'er? Gsmlshoad? Got a ? Divorced? Naw in the Mr, White FE Q-40B0. Klni NEW FINANCE 'PLAN.' PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHEED WAGES, WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE hove over 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHSED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE' CREDIT MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO FE 4-1000 “You’ll find your room a little more cluttered than usual —I tossed in the broom, mop, dust cloth and vacuum cleaner.” 89 Boots-Accessories MOON, CARPETED, GLASSPAR, STEURY, urnlehed, 2-bedroom, 1400 < ATTENTION! House trailer, ownera or BRI 1943 Ford, N-400 fully (quipped John McAuliffe Ford canoes, Evlnrude motors, Pamco trailers. Taka M-59 to W. Highland.! Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to WMOto*' fallow signs Inventory Reduction ' SALE INSIDE WINTER STORAGE KAR'S BOATS B MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON RO. LAKE ORION - MY 3-1400 SAILBOAT — VIVACITY, Airplanes Wanted Cars-Trucks t Mile EL 4 wt . We will not knowingly PINTER'S 1959 FORD PICKUP. RUNS’ GOOD. Make otter. 335-21)4._ 1941 FORD ECONOUNE VAN, good condition,^ owner, UL 2 2385. j 1941 FORD' ECONO VAN, GOOD condition. Call between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. FE 5-5151._____ 1943 DIESEL CHEVY (60 SERIES)'. U' stake, air brakes, air horn, wheels, txc. condition. UL 2-2792. 1943 FORD PICKUP TRUCK, Vi stick, balance due 1410.92. Just assume payments of 15.07 par week. CHOICE OF 4. CALL MR. WHITE _FE 0-4000. KINO. 11966 DODGE Vj-TON PICKUP. LfiTl' | of extras. Sacrifice, 492-1521._ | 1964 DODGE VAN, 5050. I FE 5-7213. Tdkins AUTO SALES i _ 1963 CHEVY PICKUP ^ 736 Oaklpnd |_________ si COMPLETE ?| NEW SHIPMENT J68 JEEPS end speciH°et|uiprnem discount prices. Grimaldi leep Been Bankrupt? Had a Repossession? Need a Car? Call Today For Mr. Wyatt at FE 8-4521 STANDARD AUTO. OF OAKLAND 1942 CHEVROLET IhlpyATf)UHN-GER STATION WAQON, Whlto With red Interior, deluxe chrome reek, (cylinder, automatic, P.S., F.B.. radio, heater, whltewalw. Balance due 1334.74. Assume weekly payments of S3.00. CALL MR. WHITE FE S-40IS, KINO. M2 CHEVROLET SYaYioN WAO-on, V-S, eutometic, power steering, power brakes. Save. COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars , Dixie ... Drayton I Standard Auto* A CAR? NEW IN __________ 1 Repossessed? Garnished? •nkrupto? Divorced? Got e a? Bafl Mr. Whlto FE 5-4080. RIGHT CARS At RIGHT PRICES MANY MANY TO CHOOSE .5 FROM 0PDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pont) FE I 1944 BUICK LaSABRE, I On* Owner, Holiday Special, KEEG0 PONTIAC Keego Harbor______________6I2-34Q0 fe 5-0491! If44 BUICK RIVIERA, 1 OWNER, ■ ■■ I »«c. condition, ft*» ucmW BUY HERE! -PAY HERE! STANDARD Auto. Sales 3400 Ellzabtth Laka Rd. block Watt of West Huron (MS?) 681-0004 CHEVY 1963 IMFALA SYATIDN wagon, power stoarlng, radio, heater, jjood^condltlon, by original own- TOMR^DEMACHER I CHEVY-OLDS 1943 CHEVY impala 2 door hardtop, VO, automatic, power tt,„. Ing, brakes, whilawallf, el ready to go. S109Sc On l MIS, Clarkston, MOMiimi OL 1-9711 215 M THE SEASON IS COMING, SO MAKE THE MOVE NOW . . . HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS ffYour Evlnrude Daator" 1099 S. Telegraph 332-OCM L APPROVED SCHOOL -— uctors teach you1 ti, .._ , Pontiac Airport. OR 4- SALES. NEEDS EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car in gat tha bait" at’1’**1' 7 Averill A u t o Insurance-Marl ne 104 AUTO INSURANCE Terms Available CALL TODAY I ANDERSON t, ASSOC. --- ~~ 4 JOSLYN AVE, 105 Foreign Cars 1944 VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE top, this is prica BLER, MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Open 9 to 9 7 Days Waek 2257 Dixie Hwy._______330-07)2 TbWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES CLEARANCE SPECIALS NEW UNITS $5495 irxsr Bahama ....... ......... ||g Homecraft ....... USED UNITS tow Suncraft 1944 .......$3250 low* Suncraft 1944 *3450 DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY 334-66?4 HELP! MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ava. Oxford Trailer Sales MARLETTES — 50 to 43 tong, 12 wide, 20 wide. - Early American, Conventional and modern decor. Expando or Tlp-outs. Priced right. Rent Trailer Space Metercydes 1 CHRISTMAS SALE Mini Bikes; Go Carts 6 brand* to choose 1 RUFF — FOX — 'LIL INDIAN RUTTMAN - TACO — BONANZA From $119,95 UP. SO down or uie your Michigan Bankard MG SALES & SERVICE 1447 Dlxla Hwy. Drayton Plaint Open ‘ill 0 p.m. 6 day* wk. MINI BIKES Candy paint, chroma fender*, 3W h p., tetoty throttle |l«T with *5 down. MINI BIKE KITS — *119. ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE 1445 S. Telegraph____ FE 3-71« SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-2S0CC. I Mlnlblkes as low a* *139.95. IM M59 w W. Highland, Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to bemode Rd. Lett and follow sign* to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE, Phone MAIn 9-2179.____ WINTER >RICES SPECIAL REbUCEO PRICES on all motorcycles ANDERSON^A*LEs1?'SERVILE M5 S. Teleoraph ______PE 3-7102 Bicyclee 96 Birmingham BOAT CENTER FREE SUMMER STORAGE WITH THE PURCHASE OF, A SNO-MOBILE NOW , . . PRICED FROM S8I9 SAVINGS NOW ON Starcraft, I.M.F., silvarilna boats. Mercury outboard* — Slarndrlvai. Fiberglett and anilhlnum. A ds—“ -ow, spring dalivery. FREE MERC mraOARO TORS TO BE GIVEN AWAY . .. . STOP IN AND GET YOUR LUCKV MERC CALENDAR NOW Special dote-out pricer' on some 1947 models. S. woodward at Adams __________Ml 7-0133 ’ v* iffAt; Won1 ABB Tl*A"i L11, ' Aluminum boat, hern, radio, run-stoarlng CLEARANCE 1967 MODELS •OATS AND MOTORS SAVE-SAVE'GAvE CRUISE OUT INC. ) E. Walton Delay 9-6 fe i-h USED CAR— $500 CASH. PREFER COMPACT Or VW—CALL .EM 3-4167 ANY TIME,.______ STOP HERE LAST M & M “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S r, 646*0173, Va-ton, 1-ton, plckui I----------------lals. C SPCECIAL 1966 GMC ’/2-TON PICKUP GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass _____FE 5-9485 JEROME 1961 CADILLAC, 4-DOOR, 20.000 t 1943 CADILLAC DE VILLE, CLEAN, I OWNER. *1300. FE 4-7608. ', 0900. Coll 674-0717 ohtr 5 p. RENAULT, LOW MILEAGE, 1945 TR 4-A SLIGHTLY DAMAGED. *1100. 402-1718. ,-d finish ..... is really sharp and sail. ROSE RA ____________n Laka, EM 3-4135. JAGUAR XKE 2-PLUS-2. Medllerranlan Blue WHITE COUPE, lights, power traction, wile's MIKE SAVOIE v,Jpoy's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1900 W. Maple 2 Miles. East of Woodward Ml 4-2735 fieri - Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ava. IWc ICOLN-MERCURY, 1250 Oak- YOUR VW CENTER 70 To Choose From —All Models— —All Colors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn HILLSIDE 1941 1CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 1MO Oak.! doofi stick, radio, heater, full p..-S184.97. KING AUTO, CALL MR. WHITE. FE (-40SS._________________ 161 CHEVY" BEL AIR, AUTO-matlc, 652-9223, Riggins, dealer, 61 CORVAIR - GOOD TRANS-porlatlon, IS5. Call 33S4091 after ' 1 CORVAIR 4-SPEED SFYDER. RUY HERE! PAY HERE! 1942 CORVAIR' Monza 1948 W NT*»8fc~ Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ava. Star Auto WE FINANCE 1943 Chevrolet ......... $497 19(2 Ford Convsrtlblo .. 8397 1941 Comet.............. si 95 1941 Mercury ......... *195 1944 CORVAIR CONVERtl'ICC'AfD- ABSOLUTELY DOWN. Assume weeny payments of S7.92. CALL. CREDITT MGR. ford*m' £mSA*0L0 TU*N“* TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 19(4 CHEVY' 2 door sedan, ( cyl. stick, radio, haotor, one owner. — — trade, ideal second cor. 10 at MIS, Clark. Only « HASKINS AUTO SALES 1944 CHEVY Super Sport, convtr-t'bie. rod with whlto v-s. Hwy- ctorkston, MA Mon/ 1964 CHEVY BEL AIR hardtop, power brakes, radio, heater, V-8 automatic, good condition, best offer. OR 4-0158. 5i30 to 7:30 HASKINS AUTO SALES 194S CHEVY Impale 2-door hi top V-8, automatic, power a» Ino, on'y *1415. At 6495 Dixie H Ctorkston. MA Mill; $1395 GOOD CONDITION. Wanted Sharp Cars! We Pay Top Dollar! Immediate Cash! All Makes and Modtls WE WILL -TRADE DOWN SPARTAN DODGE today. FISCHER BUICK , 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 WE'LL MAKE YOU A IBTTER DOWNEY OLDS, INC. 558 Oakland Ava.______FE_ Junk Cers-Trucks lOl-A 2 JUNK CARS-TRUCKS, FREE ow anytime. FE 2-2444. JUNK CARS. PAY FOR SOM* .708 tow, 452-7888. AUifAYs kUYING JUf ' and W)P, wo tow, rw rmm, COFFER - BRASS) RADIATORS— alarltrs and generators, C. Dim son, OR 3-5I49. 1________ Ised Auto-Truck Parti 102 4 ST MAG WHEELS. NEW 1158* 343*929 4,; rtlAQ WHEELS. FITS f OR B, i foBd. 390 cubic Inch, 4j) lady cam., 4 speadt ♦“*— r parti. EB 4-3281. Authorized vw Dealer 14 mile North of Mirada Mila 1745 S. Telegraph fe 8-4531 681-0004 1944 CHEVY CAPRICE, 14,888 mjtos. Olr, full powtr, 81850. Ml( DRIVE < j A LITTLE „ fcaveALot! ! 1845 FONTIAC Grand Prlx, beautiful blue mist, with matching Interior. Low mileage. One owner. ■ Only ; sms 1947 FONTIAC Bonnovlllo 4-door Hardtop, with beautiful white finish, with ell trim, ^new 1945 BUICK Skylark (door sedan, with power steering, brokas, automatic, v-8. A beautiful one-owner, and Is like nswl Only 81495 1945 FONTIAC Bonneville Convertible, beautiful maroon with a whlto lop. one owner, with 23,000 aduel miles. Only 81995 1961 BUICK LeSebre 4-door sedan, like new throughout! Only . .*79S 1944 BUICK Skylark, 4door herd-top, with guaranteed actual miles. Bought hgra — serviced here since new. Beautiful custom' interior S1995 1944 BUICK 225 Eledre 4-door herdtop, sir, full power, only 82695 1967 OLDS ”91" 2-door hardtop, full powtr, 4900 guarantaed actual nm.lron.FOlk*',U‘,,"‘VbUy,S?W? 1944 OLDS "91" 2-door hardtop, full power. Folks this one Is priced to sell leal S199I 1943 BUICK Skylerk Convertible, power steering, brakes, VI, auto- sconomlcal *995 1944 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-door Hardtop, whlto with a black vinyl top. One owner,, and Is Ilka nswl Only *2295 1943 BUICK LsSabre 2-door hardtop, baautlful gold tlnnn, with custom Intorlor. Lot of car tor lha money. Only *1095 mmm m 1f67 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door hardtop, and folks, this Is tha last 1967 Pontiac Oamo In stock. Beautiful champagne finish $2695 1944 BUICK Convertible, with V-l, eutometic, buckot Mats. Yours for 1944 FONTIAC Catalina (door hardtop, with beautiful geld finish. On* owner. Drives out Ilka newt BltOI 1945 VALIANT 2-door sedan, 4 cyl., automatic and only . *1095 ! v F 1962 FORD 2-door, GatoxlO, automatic, 2-door. Yes, Folks, this Is a rtal stool ot Only 1391 1942 OLDS "98" 4-door hardtop, beautiful one owner, with all Only ' 8888 1965 BONNEVILLE Brougham. Yas folks this 1$ Ilka buying a • Cadillac. Sava a bundle .. $1195 1944 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON. Y04, folks, has oil ttio goodies, and Is' like brand new. we have 2 to chooM from. Frlcod at only 11995 1845 CHEVY impala conyqrllbto. Powtr steering, Bramsi V-l. DM owner. With BMUtiful Bliw Ribbon tiree. Locally owhOB. Darrell Thybault, Golie Smith, Tommy Thompson, Salei Mgr. 1 PONTIAC-BUICK 651-5500 OPENr MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 855 S. Rochester Rd., Vt Mile South of Downtown Rochester ( i - ' - • i THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 VANDEPUTTE BUICK JMJ BiUuUmX‘ 4 door ht£T' gss.1 p£S| HH T^AnTg^'whl’*:^ VANDEPUTTE 196-210 Orchard Lake HAVE A NICE selection I —— ^RS. STICK 4-SPEEDS. RONEY'S AUTO, Chry sler-Ply mouth-J eep Rambler YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE . —We Must Sell These Units Now— —$99 SP] ECIALS— 1956 CHEVY 1959 PLYMOUTH *$99 woor s$c9Vv'3 Short 43 %Vrt 40 Conclusion 50 Streets (ab.) 52 Bulgarian coin TOMORROW MORNING YEAR-END STEREO SALE! Save Up to 33%% Special Sale Hours Thurs. and Fri. 8:30 Tues.-Wad.-Sat. 5:30 CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS, INC. 4540 W. Huron St. 673-9700 Open Men. end Fri. Till 8:90 00 (4) Classroom :15 (2) On the Farm Scene :20 (2) News (C) 30 (2) Sunrise Semester (C) (4) Ed Allen (C) (7) It’s a Wonderful World (C) :00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show (C) ;55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round :00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (C) (9) To Be Announced :30 (7) Movie: “Francis in! the Haunted House” (1956) Mickey Roopey, Virginia Wells. (9) Bonnie Prudden (C) :00 (2) Merv Griffin (C) (4) Gypsy Rose Lee (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) TOMORROW AFTERNOON le 7 8 9 w I12 3 Is W~ Year End Clearance Stile Budget-Priced Color Consolette RCA VICTOR abwUetd COLOR TV Color viewing at i burse-pleasing price. Rectangu- eolor TV from lor RCA Super Bright Hi-Lit* Color Tuba. Powerful **ie «$•»• Hiat 25.000-volt chassis for unsurpeseed performance. tMM' ^ THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN ELECTRONIC# OPEN TILL 9:00 P.M.-N0 PAYMENTS TILL FIB. I SERVICE PE 4-9736 12:00 (2) (4) News (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Take 30 (50) Movie: "Two Guys from Milwaukee” (1946) Dennis Morgan, Jack Car-son, Joan Leslie, Janis Paige 12:25 (2) Topps in Fashion (C) 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (C) N (7) Treasure Isle (C) (9) Movie: “Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves” (1943) Maria Montez, Jon Hall (C) 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1:25 (2) News (C) (4) Carol Duvall (C) 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 2:00 (2) Love Is a Many Splendorcd Thing (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) (50) I Love Lucy (R) 2:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) 2:55 (7) News (C) 3:00 (2) Divorce Court (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (C) (9) Pat Boone (C) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) (56) Smart Sewing 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (C) (4) You Don’t Say! (C) (7) Dark Shadows (C) (9) Swingin’ Time (C) (50) Captain Detroit (C) (56) Marcel Marceau 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (C) (4) Woody Woodbury (C) (7) Dating Game (C) (56) Koltanowski on Chess 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas' (C) i (7) News (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) (50) Three Stooges (R) L (56) What’s New 5:00 (9) Bozo the Clown (C) (50) Superman (R) (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) George Pierrot — "Yankee Sails Across Europe” (C) (7) News — Jennings (C) (9) Fun House (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) TV Kindergarten „ CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio WHter NEW YORK - Two of the top younger comedians by sheer coincidence — and the acute shortage of subjects to get funny about — used the same topic as the basis fpr a sketch in variety programs last night. I The comedians were—in order of appearance—Woody Allen in a "Music Hall" revue on NBC and Jonathan Winters in the premiere of his CBS weekly variety show. The subject was miniskirts, worn respectively by Liza Minnelli and Abby dalton, both playing the wives of the male stars. Although the treatments ofj the subjects were quite different, the basic joke in both] sketches was identical, and were summed up in a line given to Abby Dalton: “Men want every girl in the world to dress like Jane Fonda, except their' Wife.” successfully pulled out of storage is grand old lady, Maudie Fickett. SINGLE PROP Winters has a gimmick in which he Is given a single prop and improvises around it. He has done it a number of times (before on television and it is always interesting if not always : complete success. His prop last is a towel and he did pretty well. Members of the television audience, most likely, will either adore the Winters’ brand of outrageous humor! or they will be left cold. He was cushioned consider-' ably on the first show by the | presence of dependable Red Skelton and attractive Barbara Eden. The series may work out pret-. ty well as it shakes down and people get a chance to accus-i tom themselves to Winters, Winters’ opening, program' was a well-paced mixture ofi sketches, and in the first one hej Earl Moved by Sentiment Hope's Viet Tour Aroused Woody Allen’s alleged view of 1967” was a bright funny hour that didn’t review much of anything but was notable for! Allen’s debut on television play-! ing assorted characters in sketches. And Allen, the actor, j is pretty good and pretty funny whether he was the outraged! spouse of the girl in her first | miniskirt or a spoiled child i movie star having a tantrum. I Object of Dispute Over Obscenity of Films Is Cited DON DENYES GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -Floyd Bloss, Hastings theater j chain operator whose judgment of films hasn’t coincided with] the opinions of Kent County; jauthorities, yesterday found' himself in' trouble in another field. 'Typical' Teen Gains Honor Bloss’ Capri No. 1 theater here was locked up last year, because of his alleged showing! of obscene films. By EARL WILSpN., . DA NANG, Vietnam—It was a holiday spirit I’ll never forget First, the explosions of laughter for the Bob Hope gags and the whistles for the shapely girls. Then a great khaki wave of some 16,000! ■ GIs extending as far as I could see . . . standing1 bareheaded on a hillside on a sunny afternoon . . . singing “Silent Night” with Barbara McNair . . , many of them, especially the wounded in hospital outfits, gulping back a tear. | Twenty-one-year-old Miss World (Madeleine Hartog Bel of Peru) cried openly, and later came near collapse on a tour of a hospital ship at seeing, not a wounded GI, but a critically' sick civilian child. WILSON gob Hope’s Christmas < troupe of 63 people had brought a cargo of laughs here to “Big D” which, somebody says, “has wall-to-wall airstrips” ... but there was an j|BLN R| .......... ,ri1TO imi underlying seriousness as we rehearsed at the Hotel Erewan in ninth grader has been selected Lone jnto book-selling busi-Bangkok. as Waterford' Township’s Teen1 ^ * * * (of the Week. "It Will be a 2Mi-hour flight iifto Vietnam. For security rea-( Recipient of the honor is Don . . K . r . Piwrutnr sons we do not tell where we are going. It is not safe to stray Denyes, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs. ^ / Stevens aL ve terri_ from your group ...” » |W. Hugh Denyes of 3564 Shad- “What if you want to go to the bathroom?” Bob Hope dick, Waterford Township. 'against Bloss charging him with quipped. "Do you have to take a general with you?” j The members of the faculty possession with intent to sell, It was Da Naag that we were bound for — in, a prop-driven who selected him feel Don is and the sale of, obscene ma- C-130 . . . what an awesome sight for a civilian ... an incredi-!as close to a typical teen-ager terial. ble amount of hardware . . . oceans and oceans of young GI as they could find. *ace8, j Sports of all sorts greatly in- THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N Y. . . . terest Don A Crary Junior High School Recently, he obtained an or-j jder in Circuit Court permitting: him to reopen the theater. In the meantime, Bloss had M-DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE FB 2-2257 WALTON TV 615 E. Walton Blvd. Comar Joolyn Opan 9 to A Xavier Cugat’swifejandvocalist) Charo stompedoffstage, ^ is member of ^ at the Paramus Steak Pit when the audience was noisy. But. TV... ... „ . . ... „ Ctf, wen, after her ^ ewee,-***I her taU. ftnft^ «* £* * Sfj npHv anH the philHrpn hpariincr for a va-1 _ ... , , , golf, water skiing, hockey and skiing. Destroyer Tender Is Fogged In for Family Day Sail show) . . . Jackie Kennedy and the children, heading for a vacation in Antigue, will extend their stay till Jan. 7 . . . Producer Joe Levine says the best review of “The Graduate” wasn’t from a critic, but from his accountant, who said: “Joe, it’s a money- ASSET TO TEAMS maker!” According to school officials, Tammy Grimes’ Christmas gift to her sheep dog: a Persian Don is not a star athlete, but lamb wool blanket . . . Eddie FisherTl fly to Mexico to ask Budd enjoys participating and has Schulberg to do the screenplay of “The Man" . . . Sean Con-, been a valuable asset to all nery’s learning to ride a horse, for a western he’ll make in teams with which he has been Spain . . . Ava Gardner’s begun filming “Mayerling” — playing associated. Omar Sharif’s mother. i Don’s goal in life? “To be TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Jackie Vernon gave his son $25 successful and to do the best I for Christmas, with a word of advice: “Spend it right away — can f°r other people." soon it’ll be worth only $20. I Don has shown marked RICKY’S {jL Cheese and Pepperoni DINE-IN; TAKE-OUT PIZZA OS^C* Call for 1 5 Minutt Service Om 335-7164 or 335-1782 819 WOODWARD AVE. (Across from St. Joe's Hospital) WISH PD SAID THAT: Comic Pat Cooper recalls the peo- academically, making pie in his home town were starved for entertainment: “They’d I1"® sc‘100* s honor roll for the first time recently. LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) -j For weeks, relatives of sailors aboard the Navy destroyer tender Frontier waited for Wednesday and a day at sea aboard the1 ship. Fog closed in shortly before, the ship was to sail around San-' ta Catalina Island with 400 ofj the sailors’ wives, children and sweethearts aboard. even applaud a guy trying on REMEMBERED QUOTE: "A boy’s voice changes when he . . T, .7. .. become, . moo. A girl’, vok* change, when ft* become, ■«herB;nte^te EARL’S PEARLS: Mayor LbKteey’, problem with City Hall aides quitting or being fired is getting serious — it’s breaking' rock and roll band up his touch football team. t|,______ Rodney Dangerfield mentioned some relatives: "Their kidsj * are so ugly that in the family album they just keep negatives.”: I . . . That’s earl, brother. I _____________(PuMIshsrt-Hsll Syndics!#) | PLUMBING DISCOUNTS , “Sorry, folks,” Capt. Jay S. Howell announced. “We can’t see to sail.” The visiting continued all day anyway. Term Commuted for Murderer. 79! ■ 3-Pi6C6 BATH SET S I White or oniy$EA95l 1911 for killing a man in a fight. | Colored "B” 99 8 In his letter to* Gov. John A. Volpe, and the advisory Execu: tive Council asking for clemency, Freeman wrote: “I’ve done BOSTON (AP) - George R. Freeman, a life term prisoner for murder, won a commutation Wednesday and will soon be paroled. I TOILETS “■» m* Freeman, 79, went to prison in a lot of time.” — Radio Programs— WJR(76Q) WXYZQ 270) CKIW(900) WWJ(930) WCARQ130) WPON() 460) WJBK(1 $00) WHH-FM(94.7) > FIREPLACE Gas Logs if 24” VANITY I tiSS—WJK, News Snort, WWJ. Newt. Sports CKLW, NtWl, MUSK i Ollas WJBK, Nsws, wall. wjr, But. Barometer *:4S—WWJ. Emphasis WJR, LowsM Thomas 7is*-wr-“ — ..... IBM li Lowell The Blocker WCAR. Rod Millar WJR. Spsclsl Nsws MS—WXYZ—Dateline. Davs WWJ. Nsws, Sports WPON, NOWS, MUSIC WJR, Woods S, Waters 11:«F-WWJ. Nsws. Sports WPON. Arizona Wsstefl wjr, Nsws, Sports. Music lltlS-WCAR, Medical Journ 11 [IS—WCAR, Rod J--- WCAR, Nows. Bill Delull WWH, i ••••-WJR/Nsws, Sunnyslds f:W-wjR. News. Harris WNW. uikjio jay WCAR. Newt, Jim Davis CKLW. Nawa, Joe Van MS-WWJ, Ask Neighbor I0t»0—WXYZ, Breakfast Club, . Don McNtlll WJBK, NOWS. Patrick, Music !'l •«! WPON# Newt# Music WJR, Nows. Music I1iSB»WJR, Nsws, Kaltldo- RlDAY WJBK, Nsws. Patrick, Music WWJ, Newt, Music WCAR, Newt, Ron Ro WHFI, News, Beyls WPON, News, Music CKLW, News. Davs I WITH TRIM 49“ ; EXTRA SPECIALS! [ I I • Showar Stall with Tflm.S3».¥» . 1 St Gai. II Year 1 ry Tray and! Trim.......$19,95 I -taalSInfaae.........$22.9$ " Irrag...........$20 00 up | ill with Trim .... * * “ “* • It Cal. 1G Yaar " | Get Net Water Ntettr $49.95 I ] 11 FITTIWM. WI CUT ARP THSIAD | WPON. News, Music WJR, Nawa, Musk 3:00—WCAR, News, Ja< ifiovB plumbing! 841 Baldwin FE 4-1116 or FE 5-2106 j Open Mon., Sat. S:10 P.M. • • mmtm ObM J window problems? wa will ramova and raplaca yourold, sweaty steal and aluminum windows with insulatad “vinyl teal” windows! TO SOLID VINYL WINDOWS / "P A / GUARANTEED NO SWEAT Adds beauty and value to your horn* both inside apd out. Vinyl windows or* guaranteed not to sweat, ret, ar need painting and at an in-oulatar against heat and cold vinyl is 7,680 timaO mere officiant than stool, 20 timas mor* officiant than wood, 34,800 timoo mor# officiant than aluminum. Custom made, and claan both old#* from tha inside. Mad# to " From *59” FOR FAST tlRVICC AND WIDTH ENJ0YMINT *10. Minimum 4 Windows (any tito axcapt picture) DILIVIWV mo iNSTALUTiOW emu IWeedon fonslrudion ffa .4%. f D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY* DECEMBER 28, 1967 YEAR END SALE Wgffe MIRACLE MILE CLEARANCE! OUR ENTIRE STOCK Girls’ • Boys’ • Better Coats • Coat Sets • Sno-Suits • Jackets • Brand Names • Loads of Colors • Styles Galore W26 Reg. $15 to $37 Sizes 2-44-6X7-14 LAD 'N' LASSIE Children's Apparel MICHIGAN BANKARD • SECURITY HONORED Telegraph and Square Lake Roads Here's the long, lean look that everybody wants-and ^“^3 650 the only way to get it is to wear famous WHITE LEVI'SI TheyTe slim, trim and tough as a course in solid geometryl Get a couple of pairs-in your favorite sportswear fabric! MamcatacV*! MEN'S WEAR FREE GIFT BOXES U*« Your Stourity Chart* or Michigan Bankard Open Evenings Until 9 P.M. FLOOR DEMONSTRATORS • GUITARS •DRUMS • BRASS •OTHERS ALL CLEARANCE SALE PRICED! VENICE MUSIC CENTER MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 2323 S.Tslsgraph 334-5197 Free Personal Checking Accounts Available at All 12 Offices of Pontiac State Bank Pontiac State Bank iin Office Saginaw at Lawrence-Open 9 A.M. Daily 12 Convenient Offices Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation asuss WATCHBANDS _ , Friday, Decembe- ' Regular 2fch 0n]y $495 $2?9 • Free Engraving • We Service What We Sail! • You Need Not Be 21 To Open A Charge 4-WAY PAY Lay-A-Way, Security Charge Lou-Mor Charge, Mich. Bankard Bloomfield Miracle Mile SAVE TIME! SAVE MONEY! MIRACLE MILE ECQN-O-WASH FE 5-0725 SPECIAL TV & STEREO CLEARANCE RCA VICTOR Takes the Guesswork Out of Color Tuning! RCA VICTOR rw COLOR TV AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING (AFT) Whan you’re first in Color TV, there’s got to bo a reason, liko Automatic Fine Tuning that locks in ClGMrdllCO tha picture signal. And new RCA tube with X% M . . brighter highlights this year. You get these-and PriCOU mora-fram RCA Victor. ®THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN ELECTRONICS Miracle Mile Shopping Center tenneuf LWAY8 FIRST QUALITY B COATS Collection of casual, neatly tailored and high fashion winter coats. Sporty tweeds, luxurious elegant fabrics—self trims and fur trims in group. Assortment of Misses, Juniors and Half-sizes. Group 1 27“ Group 2 3988 PENNEY'S MIRACLE MIL! JACKETS Plaids, solids, tweeds, plushy piles, rich wools, sleek meltons, sporty corduroys, cotton suedes and more — some have opulent fur trims and pile linings. The latest styles — pick your jacket nowl Group 1 17“ Group 2 22“ Nylon taffeta ski parkas reverse from plain to floral prints.VII .88 CHARGE IT! STORE HOURS 9(30 A.M.-9 P.M. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph Road at Square Lake Road A The Weather V. I. WMHwr Burttu FtrKIll Flurries . <0.t»IU Pt«l |) . VOL. 125 — NO. 278 THE PONTIAC PRESS + 'k +_______PONTIAp, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1907 —42 PAGES UMIT*0*PRiMTfN® BRNATIONAL $301,000, Armored Truck Stolen Pontiac Plagued by Tax Question By BOB WISLER Will Pontiac have an income tax in 1968? This is a question that has been hanging over the city for the past six months Today it is still unresolved. The ordinance enacted by city commissioners in early October calls for tax collections to begin Jan. 1. But at this point it doesn’t appear that collections will begin then, and , it’s more likely they won’t begin until July, if then. It now appears that the answer lies in the deliberations and decision bf Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer. City District Gets 1 School Center Pontiac and Royal Oak school districts have been designated as sites for the first two of Oakland County’s four vocational education centers. . Oakland Schools Intermediate District Board of Education yesterday authorized its superintendent, Dr. William J. Emerson, to enter into contracts with the two districts. Local districts will operate the centers with funds from Oakland Schools. The Voter-approved centers are expansions of high school vocational education programs. ★ ★ * „ Emerson was also given board approval to enter into contracts with Walled Lake Consolidated and Clarkston Community districts for the second two centers, contingent on the receipt of state funds. \ WALLED LAKE, CLARKSTON Vocational centers are planned to open in the Pontiac and Royal Oak districts in September 1969, and in Walled Lake and Clarkston in September 1970. Contracts with Walled Lake and Clarkston depend on Oakland Schools receiving $1.3 million in matching funds from the state. The state reportedly has promised the money. Centers in Pontiac and Royal Oak will be the largest of the four. A a A School boards of the four districts now will have to approve the contracts before centers are built.. ADMINISTRATORS SOUGHT Oakland Schools administrators were authorized by the board to search for the top administrators for the centers — home economics, business and distributive education, industrial and cooperative education and curriculum consultants. A budget of $3.4 million for vocational education for fiscal 1968-69 was presented to the board but not acted upon. It includes funds for construction and salaries. ★ A a ' Costs of construction and equipment for the four centers has been estimated at $6.4 million. In Today's Press Pontiac Schools Short - range desegregation plan draws pros, cons — PAGE C-7. Urban Renewal Rochester finds paper work, problems galore — PAGE A-4. Waterford News Gasoline contract for fleet vehicles is awarded >— PAGE A-7. Area News ............... a-4 Astrology ...... ..... ... C4 Bridge ................ C-6 Crossword Puzzle .. ..... D-ll Comics ................. c-t Editorials ............. A4 Food Section ..... c-1—C-3 Markets ............... C-9 Obituaries ... .......... D-S Sports ..... ....... D-l—D-4 Theaters .... ......... CM TV-Radio Programs .......D-ll Wilson, Earl ... ......D41 Women’s Page ........B-l—B-4 The income tax issue has taken some torturous turns during the past year and its presence in Circuit Court is just one of the latest. City officials foresaw a need for additional revenue in 1968 early this year, but it wasn’t until the tax advisory election in September that city commissioners decided definitely on an in-. come tax. PREFERENCE SHOWN Voters showed a preference for an income tax — accompanied by a property tax cut — instead of more property taxes, by a 2-1 margin. The income tax ordinance was challenged when a group of income tax foes two weeks ago filed enough petitions to force a referendum vote — allowed under the city charter and state election laws. Now the validity of the petitions requesting the election are being challenged, ostensibly by two residents who are city employes, a fireman and a police officer. The attorney for the plaintiffs also is the attorney for the Pontiac Police Officers Association. Both the police organization and the local firefighters’ union are vitally interested in the tax the income tax, police officers and firefighters will suffer. ‘IMPROPER PETITIONS’ In a suit filed Tuesday they charged that the petitions are not proper and asked the court to restrain the city from holding a referendum election. If the election is set the city would be prevented, under state law, from collecting income taxes until July, pending tile results of the election. The court has issued a temporary restraining order, but how long this will remain in effect is in doubt. ♦ A W It is possible that the judge would rule that the petitions do not comply with the form demanded by the city charter and state election law. PROVISIONS UNCLEAR However, the language and provisions of the charter and the election law are, like many such documents, unclear and seemingly ambigious. STOLEN TRUCK — Detectives examine the scene where an armored truck was abandoned after thieves took it and $330,000 in it from in front of a Boardman, Ohio, department store. The bandits emptied the truck of all but $32,000 and fled, apparently in a getaway car. Denver Quake Link Is Probed (Continued on I i A-2, Col. 3) DENVER, Colo (AP) — Renewed interest is being focused on a deep well drilled at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal and any possible connection with a five-year series of earthquakes in the Denver area. 1 the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has announced a study is being made to determine if waste fluids standing in the deep—and now unused—well should be pumped out. Denver had Its heaviest earthquake last August, registering 1,5 On one Richter Scale and causing considerable property damage; Another jolt tost month was neariy as severe. No injuries have resulted. A Denver geologist, David M. Evans, has contended for more than two years that pumping of waste into the 12,000-foot well at the arsenal northeast of Denver triggered the earth shocks. Before that, quakes had been unknown in Colorado. Some scientists agree with Evans, but others are skeptical. AAA But this much is known: The well was completed in March 1962 and wastes from the manufacture of c h e m i c a 1 weapons at the arsenal were pumped under high pressure into the well for disposal underground. Just a little more than one month later, the first quake ever measured on instruments in Denver occurred. 1,506 TREMBLORS Since that April day more than 1,500 tremblors have been recorded here, although most of these went unnoticed by the average citizen. War Changes Viet Hill People Wilson Sees '68 Hope (EDITOR’S NOTE—This is another in Hope, who is touring Southeast Asia a series of reports by comedian Bob entertaining V.S. servicemen.) BY BOB HOPE PLEIKU, Vietnam — As you chn see by the dateline we went back home — back to Pleiku. We first went up to the central highlands four years ago. Camp Holloway, as it was called then, was a picturesque spot of a few huts and a couple of copters and a round or two of ammunition. The whole base was so small you could cover it with one snap of your In-stamatic. A couple of hundred men gathered around the truck to watch our medicine show. Afterwards they had a ceremony put on by the Montagnards or hill people. , The Montagnards are a fiercely Independent group and are savage fighters. They have a very positive though primitive philosophy. They hate every other group in Vietnam — the Buddhists, the Catholics, the Chinese, the Communists, the nationalists, the Vietcong, the low-landers and the city folk. The only people they like are the Montagnards who live over the hill. The Montagnards, however, like most of us, have 'learned that oiml must put up with certain social demands. A tattered group of them came to the show banging pots and pans and bamboo sticks like they’d seen In the "B” pictures. Then they staged a very unenthusias-tic dance that was halfway between a lean and an outright stumble. After that we all took a sip of warm rice wine (there’s nothing like it on an empty stomach) and they put friendship bracelets around our wrists. The whole thing looked like a three-(Continued on Page AM, Col, i) PENZANCE, England (AP) — Prime Minister Harold Wildon predicted today that 1968, wiD be Britain’s “year of opportunity” with a start on the long haul to prosperity. ★ ' a • a Wilson said in an interview: “In the new economic situation we have the opportunity now to expand our production. It has to be a restrained increase, but this can lay the foundation for steady expansion year by year thereafter.” Evans, who is director of the Poten-titd Das Agency for the Mineral Resources Institute at the Colorado School' of Mines, said the well was drilled into a stratum of extremely hard granitic rock. “As fluids were flushed down the well from the arsenal, pressure built up In the rocks below,” he said. “The forced- UAW Near Finish of GM Pact Vote DETROIT (At — Some 380,000 members of the United Auto Workers are expect-, ed to complete ratification voting on a new three-year contract with General Motors tonight. A union spokesman said Tuesday that GM workers are approving the contract by a five to one margin, with 83 per cent of the production workers who had voted favoring the contract and 79 per cent of the skilled tradesmen. Craftsmen and production workers vote separately On the pact. Balloting is to be completed by midnight tonight, the spokesman said. WWW The contract parallels those ratified by 103,000 Chrysler workers and 160,000 Ford workers, and is expected to increase labor costs by roughly six per cent a year over the next three years. in liquids lubricated the rocks and caused them to shift and slide. As a result, we have earthquakes.” * * a Arsenal officers point out that pumping of wastes into the well was stopped in February 1966 at the order of Army Engineers, yet the earth shocks continued. EVans said despite this halt — and the- U.S. Geological Survey agrees with . Mm on this — waste fluids still are standing almost 11,000 feet deep in the well. He said this causes steady pressure on the shifting rocks below. One who is skeptical of Evans’ theory is Dr. Maurice Major of the Colorado Mines geophysical department and the school’s seismologist. Major said, “After apparent evidence in the first four years, there was a lack of correlation between the well and the quakes in the last two years.” Evans said he feels “judicious lowering of the fluids” in the well by careful pumping would ease subterranean pressures. But Major said he fears that removal of the fluids from the well might cause even more severe quivering deep in the earth. Marines Battle Reds SAIGON (AP) — U.S. Marines battled a powerful Communist force today 20 miles south of Da Nang. A helicopter airlift landed a detachment of the 5th Marihe Regiment in a Muddy rice paddy that later seemed ringed by a battalion of the enemy—perhaps 500 men. AP correspondent Kim Ki Sam reported in a dispatch from the area that virtually every helicopter that landed Leathernecks* and removed the wounded drew sniper and machine gun fire. Vehicle Taken in Ohio Theft Is Abandoned YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio UP) - Thieves escaped with $301,000 in an armored truck yesterday by' driving it out of a parking lot crowded with people while the two guards were in a department store. The truck was found within 30 minutes abandoned about ty miles from the shopping area, in nearby Boardman, with $32,600 still inside. Police said the thieves switched the rest of the loot to a getaway car. Authorities said someone evidently had a set of keys to open the track doors that locked automatically when closed. There was no sign of forced entry into the Kane Secret Service Co. track. The two guards, Steve Sulik, 46, of Boardman and James Lockhtot, 45, of Youngstown, were in the Almart Department Store “four or five minutes,” according to Boardman Police Chief Don Hawkins. “When they returned, the truck was gone.” SHOPPERS WATCH .Several witnesses outside the store said a man in uniform got into the truck and drove away. It was found in a wooded park area. “They were certainly familiar with the operation,” said Hawkins. “I would say it has every appearance of being an inside job.” The ctoef said the theft, largest in the recollection of officials in the Youngstown area, was pulled by “two or three men.” 1 ’ ' ' it ★ * Police said at least two keys were needed by the bandits one to open the door on the driver’s side and another for a side door to get the money. BANK TRANSFER The Kane truck was carrying money on a bank transfer and making pickups and deliveries at Boardman Plaza Shopping Center on U.S. 224. The truck then crossed the highway to the department store in another smaller shopping area. it ■ A * Hawkins said the guards “loaded a three-wheel cart with coins to deliver to Almart’s. Weather Outlook-Light Snow, Cold Light snow or snow flurries with less than an inch accumulation is the forecast for late today, and tonight in the Pontiac area. The weatherman predicts the mercury will dip to a low of 4 to 10 degrees tonight. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and cold with little change in temperature, the high reaching 18 to 25. Cloudy and cold with a chance of snow flurries is Saturday’s outlook. Precipitation probabilities In per cent are: Today 40, tonight and tomorrow 20. The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 16. By 12:30 p.m. the temperature had climbed to 25. Crime Is Climbing at Record Pace The 1967 Pontiac crime rate continues to climb at a record-breaking pace, according to latest statistics. In the first 11 -months of this year compared to the same period in 1966, there has been a significant rise in every major category. ; » Investigations of violent crimes show cent, larcenies 18 per cent and auto thefts 48 per oent. The over-all index for major crimes shows a 32 per cent increase over last year, 2,441 incidents for the first 11 months of 1966 compared to 3,231 for this year. Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome a huge Increase. Armed robbery is up 18 per cent over last year; aggravated assault investigations have leaped 45 per cent. Forcible rape investigations and murder and manslaughter investigations, while showing a small numerical increase, reveal staggering percentage increases. it . Police investigated nine murders or nonnegligent manslaughter cases last year, 11 for the first U months this year 22 per cent increase. RAPE FIGURES In the rape by force and attempted rape category, the number rose from eight to 19, a 137 per cent Increase. In addition, burglaries rose 38 per Little Prostitution Found in City Prostitution is not a major problem ' in Pontiac, according to a report issued yesterday by the American Social Health Association. Harlan E. Raimo, regional director for the nonprofit organization, said that a four-day survey tills month revealed that relatively little vice exists in the city. The study was conduged by an investigator for the association on the request of the United States Public Health Raimo, who directs activities for the agency in 13 midwestern/states, said the surveys are aimed at reducing tar, {Atidences of venereal disease. All information, including the names and addresses of prostitutes and procurers obtained by the investigator, have been turned over to the Pontiac Police Department, added Raimo. ‘GOOD INDICATION’ He admitted that the study, because of the time involved, is not a thorough analysis of conditions, “but it gives a good indication of what is going on.” - For the size of the city, the amount of prostitution and its accessibility, Pontine was given the association’s best . rating, according to Raimo. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. m ■ Bronson requested the statistical breakdown from the police department to formulate ideas for more effective law enforcement. SPIRALING EFFECT He suggested that the huge increases in tht crime Fate indicates a definite spiraling effect of crime and violence. The incidents of . violence are creating a climate which is leading to more violence, he said. < The statistical breakdown for varhms categories: • Murder and nonnegiligent manslaughter — nine in 1966, 11 in 1967. • Rape by force — four in 1966, 12 ■ in 1967. A. A jj ' A • Attempted rape -- four in 1968, seven in 1967. • Armed robbery — 190 in 1966, 225 in 1967. • Robbery, strongarm with no weapon -55,in 1968,67 in 1967, • Assault with a gun - 258 In 1966, 375 this year. / / * v* (Continued on Page AM, At. 4) , ; A—« ^r THE PONTIAC 1*K1£SS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 18.87 LBJ Signs Two D.C. Bills health SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) —Inoting that “public order, is the; Johnson expressed some mis-iSocial Security President Johnson signed crime structure on which any society .givings about the crime bill and grams, control and health bills he hopes grows and prospers.” Isaid “The effectiveness of this| Johnson was taking on a pile- will bring the nation’s capital IIRr„WT Iprovision will depend on the up of pending bills with slow closer to homing a model city,quality of its administration andiprecision—his taUy now five out |md moved ahead today with' Johnson said he hopes Con-jtj,e spirit of fairness with whichlof more than 40 measures! 1989 budget conferences gress on return Jan. 15 willljt js carried out.” lawaiting the Presidential signa-! He acted just before a mid- give most urgentJ atte"'i * * * ]ture. night Wednesday deadline to ap-1'00’’ to his proposed safe w, our system of govern. prove a controversial bill that ®treet® and crime cra^ol ct^ment," he added, “statements will give District of Columbia t0 ® P oc taken from an accused can nev- police more power to fight meet their local respons.b hUes ^. for carefu, and crime in Washington. painstaking work by law offi- cers.” land he also plumped for pas-j The chief executive coupled jsage of “strict gun control legis-1 the signing with a statement ^tion to keep firearms out of SPECIAL PRIDE from his Texas White House, the wrong hands. | With “special pride,” the calling on Congress to look to! The most disputed provision | President also put his signature the problem of crime in all cit- of the District of Columbia to a measure extending Medics Crime bill is one which permits care and Medicaid benefits to “No more serious problem police to question suspects for 1180,000 poor and elderly citizens faces America than the growing, up to three hours before decid-1 of the District of Columbia, menace of crime in our] ing wheather to charge them Heretofore, the nation’s capital streets,” the President said, with a crime. i not included under these Johnson has been occupied | mainly with fiscal problems: since his arrival two days ago! at his hill country Texas ranch] 75 miles from here. Budget Bureau Director! Charles L. Schultze spent Wednesday afternoon with John-the ranch office going over budget proposals for the Agriculture, Housing and Urban Development departments, the Atomic Energy Commission and a number of other undisclosed agencies. 3 Hospitals Readied for Civilians in Viet SAIGON (AP) - The United States is preparing three hospitals with a total of 800 beds and staffing them with American military doctors and nurses to help care for the thousands of civilian victims of the Vietnam war, high U.S. officials disclosed today. ing—one American expert estimates them at 100,000 this year —and Vietnamese hospitals are unable to care for many of them. Week's War Toll Declines Civilian casualties are mount- SAIGON (AP) — The number of Americans, South Vietnamese and enemy troops killed in the Vietnam war dropped slightly last week while the toll of U.S. wounded rose in fighting that officially was described as light to moderate. The U.S. Command, in its weekly summary issued today, said 166 U.S. personnel were killed in the seven-day reporting period ending at midnight Saturday. A week earlier 187 were reported killed The number of Americans wounded climbed to 1,361, after dropping to 932 a week earlier. Of the 1,361 wounded, the command said 762 did not require hospitalization. llie new casualty figures pushed to 15,812 the number of Americans killed so far in the war and the total wounded to 99,305. Of the wounded, the command reported 46,640 did not require hospitalization. Another 866 Americans are listed as missing, captured or interned since Jan. 1,1961. The U.S. officials said American military hospitals since last March have been authorized to accept as many wounded civilians as they have room for, and i about 300 a month have been treated. Some civilians had been treated even before that, I they added. I A 300-bed civilian hOspita) at! T\iy Hoa, entirely staffed by I U.S. military doctors, nurses and orderlies, will open in a few days, the officials said. A second hospital, with 200 ] beds, is expected to be completed at Chu Lai before the end of January. A third hospital, Can Tho in the Mekong Delta, is expected to open in late spring with 500 beds for U.S. soldiers and 300 for civilians. The first two hospitals are being converted from existing U.S. military facilities, while the Can Tho facility is a new structure. The space-available admissions at other U.S. hospitals are to continue. Legislator Willi Seek Vacant J Senate Seat Birmingham Area News Work on Parking Facility Expected to Start Soon BIRMINGHAM - Construc- tion of the city’s second and largest parking structure is expected to get under way early next month with an eye toward completion by the 1968 Christmas season. Preliminary work could begin immediately since the construction contract was awarded Tuesday, but it is unlikely since the sale of general obligation bonds to finance the project won’t be held until Jan. 8, according to a city spokesman. The City Commission awarded the contract to the A. J. Et-kins Co. of Oak Park for its low bid of $1,543,908. Approval was recommended by the architectural firm that designed the five - level structure, O’Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach, Inc., Birmingham. Etkins built the city’s first ,parking structure, located on Woodward near Willltts. It has a capacity of 560 cars. The new structure will provide parking for 710 automobiles, nine more than originally announced by the city. AT PIERCE, MERRILL It will be built on the site of the city’s municipal surface parking lots at Pierce and Mer-rilll. LANSING (AP)—A state representative plans to try to run for the vacant Senate seat of the late Harold J. Volkema, challenging not only Republican primary opponents but- also an opinion by the state’s attorney general. DIVING FOR LOOT — Filipino housewife Mrs. Leonora Lopez plunges into a pile of pesos (top) and collects an arm*-ful (lower), even holding a few in her teeth, to win first prize in a contest called “Instant Riches” held in Manila recently. The mother of seven scooped up about $3,420 worth of pesos which she got to keep as her prize. She and lr other finalists were turned loose in a pile of 150,000 pesos on the floor of a bank. City Hospital Hit by 2 Suits WILLIAM G. GRAVLIN Little Prostitution in City I Trial Is Ordered in Ax Murders A Troy man accused of murdering all seven members of his family three years ago has been declared mentally capable of standing trial. Circuit Judge James S. Thore-burn yesterday ruled on the competency of William G. Grav-lin after hearing four psychia-tirsts testify that it was their opinion he could assist his defense attorney. Gravlin, 33, was released into the custody of county authorities recently following his release from Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. He was admitted to the institution in January 1965 by Thorburn without fever standing trial. Press Wednesday he would try to file for the vacant Senate seat "within the next few days. ’63 LEGAL OPINION If that happened, said State Elections Director Bernard Apol, “I don’t know just exactly what I would do.” I Two lawsuits asking a total of $355,000 in damages against i Pontiac General Hospital were [filed yesterday in Oakland [County Circuit Court. In one, Barbara Antczak of Highland Township is suing the (city-operated hospital for $255,- (Continued From Page One) , The association, which is sup-1000. including! 11 definite,y is not a wide-1ported by the United Fund inj she contends that she suf-„ mg|open town,” he said. [most areas, conducts similarjfered permanent damage to her * . * * [studies in some 100 cities an-[left arm when a radial nerve R .| Raimo/Cfedited the lack of in prostitution in Pontiac on the * + A public’s1 attitude, law enforce- Rep. Melvin DeStigter. R. ment and court support. Hudsonville, told the Associated EARLIER SURVEY Meanwhile, Acting Gov. j William Milliken’s legal staff picked Jan. 23 as the date for the primary election in the 23rd Senatorial District and Feb. 19 as the general election date, j When the project begins, the 232 parking spaces in the surface lot will be lost for the duration of construction. The parking structure is to be paid off from parking meter revenues and a 10 per cent assessment to property owners in the central business distract. Commissioners, in other recent business, have approved a plan to install exterior water meters on most new residences, and at homes where the occupants are' away during the normal working day. The remote meters also can be requested by homeowners who want them installed by the water department. The cost of the outside water meter is about $15 which is to be charge to the property owner. Labor costs will be absorbed by the water department. The district Ottawa, Allegan and Van Buren|u counties and one Barry County township—is heavily ■ finally, with about half of them was Pictured by a hypoder- requested by the U.S. Public ““ need,e duri“f treatment „ ... _ . after an auto accident 8- n— Health Service. j ember 1965. We don’t find many of the i Dec- The most recent survey is comparable to one taken about two years ago in Pontiac, added Raimo. “There has been ho noticable increase in prostitu-! The injection, she old red light districts these caused paralysis for a time days,” said Raimo, “and I think but remaining numbness pre-the association is mainly respon-lvehts the use of her arm. sible for the reduction.” I ★ ♦ * Crime Rise Setting Marks (Continued From Page One) • Assault with a knife — 42 in 1966, 112 this year, a 166 per cent increase. Aggravated assault with hands, fist, or feet — 14 last year, 22 this year. tion.” The uncertainty is caused by 1963 legal opinion written by State Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley which forbids a legislator from being elected to any state office which he would assume before his legislative term expired. Bronson Plans Youth Division New Unit Will Fight: Crime, Drug Abuse “A member of the Legislature is prohibited . .. frqm election] to another state office, the term! of which is to commence during his term of office as a member of the Legislature,”P- Jerome Bronson announced' Kelley's opinion held j yesterday he will form a newj Oakland County Prosecutor: South Vietnamese military headquarters reported 234 government troops were killed in action last week as compared with 278 a week earlier. The Weather The building of the Can Tho hospital indicates that U.S. officials expect increased fighting In the delta, and a consequent increase in both military and civilian casualties. Vietnamese government figures show an average of 4,000 civilians killed and wounded were reported each month dur- Gravlin is specifically charged ing the past year, or at least with the slaying of his teen-age 48.000 civilian casualties. stepdaughter, Judith Ann Bent- ONLY HALF ley, 16. But Col. William W. Moncrief1 AXED TO DEATH inhliy Shpf n!at I She’ her foUr sisters and a 11 still can’t understand why they Snlv half n^thP rMU^a«Illi lbrother’ a stepsister’ and their [would want to disenfranchise tiesyare reported and the war’s !m°ther Bette’ 40’ were found anybody who now holds public 24.000 killed and 76,000 wounded. 56,31 29’1964 Th 1W.„ . . , Gravlin i8 scheduled to stand T,h* 1963 rul,Ing was >nter-i preted as permitting a House mmmmmmmmmmmmmm mai Jan- i | member to ran for the Senate Thorburn directed the f o u r i in a regular November election, psychiatrists who recently ex- but not in a special election for amined Gravlin at Oakland a Senate seat Which the repre-j teachers, students, parents and County Jail to make another re- sentative would assume before even police, he said • Burglary, forcible entry 633 in 1966, 871 this year. * * * 1 • Unlawful entry, no force The other court action for|246 last year, 305 in 1967. A nationwide organization, the $100,000 was started by David * ★ • ★ agency is headquartered in New Allison of Clarkston. • Attempted forcible entry York, and has branches in At- He claims that be suffered a ilanta, Ga.; San .Francisco; Ar-severe and permanent disability ] lington, Va.; and Ann Arbor, because he was not diagnosed .where Raimo has his offices in properly before an eye opera-the Municipal Court Building. |tion in August 1965. 777 86 last year, 155 in 1967. • Larceny, over $50 in 1966, 923 this year. • Auto theft - 234 in 1966, 347 this year. Absolutely ridiculous,” DeStigter said. “I’ve read that opinion four of five times and youth crime division to meet; “an alarming| -increase” in icrime, especial-: |ly drug abuse.] ;among those 17 ithrough 21. division! jwill have an investigator at its head and will a i m primarily at education of BRONSON Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Light snow tapering off to flurries or ending this afternoon with less than an inch accumulation. High 18 to 25. Clearing and colder tonight. Low 4 to 10 above. Partly cloudy with little temperature change Friday. Variable winds 5 to 10 miles, becoming northeasterly tonight. Saturday’s outlook: Cloudy and cold with a chance of snow flurries. Chance of precipitation: Today 40 pfer cent, tonight and tomorrow 20 per cent. evaluation of his condition the |his House term expired. I day before his trial begins. Jail for Forger He said the division expected to be operating early in January. will require additional funds allocated from the Oak- GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Fred visors °* Lowest temperature prc At « Wind Veloci iun rwhkTiwr'diabl\ 5 i Thursday Jt The four psychiatrists are Abraham Tauber of Pontiac,] William Gordon of Detroit,! George Evseeff of Royal Oak T Willborn, 38, of Muskegon [ and Edward Wisniewsky 0fHeights was sentenced in fed-1 Bronson said he is confident Birmingham. ertd court Wednesday to five of cooperation from the super- ’___________ years each on four counts in- visors. u . \/ c volved in forgery of government * * * Housing Vote v>6t| checks and three years on a, One of the undertakings of the one count of stealing form the division he said, would be the GRAND RAPIDS (AP) — The mails. The sentences are to run gathering of “empirical data” City Commission is expected to concurrently. He was chargedjon drug use, abuse and depend-vote next Tuesday on the city’s with forging two checks, $193.10 ency from a variety of sources 1 :inp nrrli. anrl t1A4 lat+Acinet orwl ~..ki;„u ______;_ 2i 24 Proposed open housing ordi-iand $103, uttering and publish-[including state governments in 77 si nance. Recent changes removedling May 3, 1967, and stealing!California and New York where m 17 an exemption for homes not [mail containing a government much of this work has been ” Jo listed or publicly advertised forlcheck Nov. 10, 1967 in Musko-!done. ““ “sale or rent. Von. Tax Issue Plagues City NEW APPROACH Bronson said a new approach to drag problems is needed since the approach of “arrests, prosecution and jail 'is no answer.” ' ' (Continued From Page One) Bronson said drag abuse is prevalent throughout the county, but particularly evident in areas Deputy City Attorney Thomas day for “leave to intervene in T ICuU Hunter told Judge Beer he is) the case ” of affluence, reluctant to show why the cityjCAMPAirN, K,4nij.„ He said it seems that afflu- should not go through with the enee, plus overpermissive par- election since the city official-! ^,ecd ^ Mullinix, the chief ents, provide a fertile climate •• « . _ orr>hiin/ii a( iUa r,_i11: ____________i » ■ dom would like nothing better |arch,tect °* t,le petition cam-1 for drag use. than not having the obligation ipaign’s"d he and his suPPO»t- Areas that are particularly of holding it. |ers wlll “use all the legal means sensitive, he said, are Bloom- Hunter contends that the oar-i“T referendum.” fieid Hilis, Birmingham, Royal contends that the par j While this is going on, how- Oak, Oak Park and Southfield- • NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow is forecast tonight from -.Pennsylvania northeast through New England. More snow I is expected over the Rockies in theldabo-Utah area and in i^over the Plains states with rail) along the Gulf d vast. Coast. *! pill be colder in the Mid,west and i ties interested in seeing a ref-ever, the city must act on the Lathrap. erendum should argue the valid-basis of what funds it knows' _ *ty. of the petitions and Beer) will be coming In. |agreed Until a definite Circuit Court | * * * jruling which would forestall the Robert Coon, a Pontiac attor-commission from setting the ney and one of the phief movers election is made, this means of the petitions, said tfo morn- assuming there wilt be no iikna [ing he will ask Judge Beer to-lcome tax money fn 1968. * Spacecraft destined to visit] other planets must be made ’clean,” that i|» sterilized because otherwise , enough biological organisms to contami- ■ SIMMS ■ DISC :OUNT ANN 4 N. Saginaw St. EX here are a few odds ^ ends left over from santas bag . . . naturally we expect you to buy 'em for next year's gift-giving . . . or better yet, why don't you buy 'em for your own use now! open tonite 'til 9 pm—fri. 9 am to 9:30 pm and Saturday 9 am to 9 pm — just for you! big deal! so it's cordless electric carving knife 744 you'll feel secure in this upholstered home bar stool gtlg! 2 s 15°° it looks better than drawn step end table » good enough for your H88 who needs a desk now? at these prices, we hope you do . .. limed oak modem desks tha better looking desk (not pictured) is only £ ]588 19S8 iate an entir^ world could be believe. tken along, scientists I ■ SIMMS DISC ZOUNT ANN EX 4 N. Saginaw St. Ho One of Most Exasperating Figures in SAIGON (UPI) - A wisp of a man who worked as a pastry cook in London and once lived in New York’s Harlem has become, as far as America is concerned, one of the most inscrutable of all Orientals. i ... I ! In those days, he was known by some of his friends as!ftjjf«° u nf J ^ Sn Nguyen That Thanh, whicb|United States, Ho Chi Mmh stiU means “he who will be victori- one of the most stable Communist governments ever formed and certainly one of the most enigmatic and exasperating figures to cross American b i s-tory. is not victorious. But neither is |he defeated. Today he calls himself Ho With a country no bigger than Chi Minh — “he who eniight- the state of Washington, some ens.” He is president of North) 18 million people who call him Vietnam, undisputed head of|“Uncle Ho,” and a guerilla army extending into Sou t.h Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh h fought and stayed put. But 1 was a tough year for hifn. 2-WAY BOMBARDMENT The United States bombarded North Vietnam two ways during the past year — with bombs to try to drive the North Vietnamese to the conference table, and with diplomatic notes and messages to try to persuade them to sit down and talk. Since July 1965, according to official figures, U.S. warplanes have dropped about 900,000 of bombs on North Vietnam, or about 100 pounds per person in the country. In this year, step-by-step escalation hammered bridges, rail lines, power plants, steel and concrete factories, highways, and jet bases. Rivers were mined. with pontoon bridges which) These are Ho’s twilight years, could be used at night and re- He is nearing 78, and reports moved during the day, rationing that he is in declining health of electric power, massive work | have crapped up. forces that repaired rail lines j within hours and removal of 3 IN RUNNING some of their MIG jets to bases! There is no clearly defined in Red China. jline of succession in North Viet- Ho’s government called all.nam\ |U.S. peace proposals "sheer M least ^ men wouId P .deception” and demanded timejpear to be in the running H U S. warships patrolled Northland again an unconditional end premier pham Van D De. Vietnam’s shore line and un- to the bombing with no prom-!fense Minister Vo Nguyen Giap leashed bombardments of shells lee of talks. and u Dua„ firgt 8*c;et and rockets on coastal targets, | The outlook for 1968 is more)the Lao Dong (Communist) par-North Vietnam responded (of the same, ty’s central committee. uaiii wuuiu oe wealthy country. U. b. History j In normal times, North Viet- Vietnam in 1967 has to Import would be a modestly four times a*,much as it sends But that was before the U.S. bombing started. North Vietnam was fairly well off, with coal, iron and chromium for export. iwUl till ICO Oo illUtU W H oCIlUS out. Big steel and cement plants like Thai Nguyen* no longer exist. Bombardment of power plants has blacked out or at least “browned out” other industries. By one U.S. estimate, North Vietnam by 1964 was exporting reaa ou 1.7 million tons against 1 million may be tons of imports. | ■ A lot of people read slowly, because they unconsciously ‘read out loud." Although there visible movement of the jaw or lips when reading* _ " " .w silently, there still may be* °y same estimate, North activity of the, speech muscles.. All Special? Subject To Stocks on Hand SIMMS OPER Be The First In Your Block To Get Next Year's Christmas Shopping Done Now! And At These Prices You Could Give Gifts to Everyone In Your Block |---AFTER-SANTA We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. SIMMS Worm melton bertchwormers with ripper front and hood. Warmly lined. $12.98 value, Wine or blue in small only. Clothing — Main Floor >» Cellophane Tape . || 39c value Tuck brand cellophane tope, ISOOx'/z inch / 1 size complete with bandy d.soenser. , U~\ Sundriel — Main Floor • | Ronson Hair Dryer j 14* | 24”x32” Framed Wall Mirror M W Clear mirror wilh Pearlile frame enhances the ap- /■ pearance of your home, makes your room look lorg- L.B Children’s Snow Pants Reg. $2.98 values. Choice of 2 styles, with straps or elastic back. Gray or block. Sizes# to 6. Clothing — Main Floor |€)7 20-Paper Back Books |k (fg I OF W Values to 75c bundle of 20 assorted titles paper back . jTTfcl ‘ ■ books. For long winter evening enjoyment. A A Ego R» ■ Sundries — Main Floor ^ Aluminum Roaster Rack Holds the turkey or roost so the juices stay In the meat. Will not rust. —2nd Floor Ladies’Assorted Slacks Values to $3.98. Choose.from cottons, corduroys. Fortrel ond others in this, group. Sizes 10 to 18, assorted colors. Clothing - Main Floor i 1 €|C| Papermate Ball Pen ] I OF OF Reg. $1,95, genuine Papermate ball pen with rnedl- I urn point and -blue Ink, With card to send in tor FREE jumbo refill Sundries - Main Floor J 1 ?? Contour Massagef gMjg 75" Steel Shelving Units lor scalp niossage.nUISCleI * are needed. Easy to assemble ond strong. VI \n Men’s Insulated Sox mpMfUt 500-Count Filler Paper m First quolily therma-insuloled sox keep feet warm R 1 wF OF Reg. 98c value, standard 5-hpte filler paper fits ' without weight. Ankle length. Sizes 10’/a to 1,2. ^ H 2 or 3 ring binder.limit 1 per customer. -Basoment V J 1 ' ' ■, * ’ Sundries - Main Floor V || (• Jumbo Garment Bags Drugs — Main Floor Ji |*|*| Sunbeam Wall Clock l 1 ^-^1F Self storting woll clock with simulated tiles In cocoa or yellow colors. Foctory guarantee. | |99 Collegiate Sweat Shirts with short sleeves ond U of M or Mich. Stole emblem. — Basement [00 Box 50 King Edward Cigars r. Tax included. Limit 2. Tobacco — Main Floor 229 Print Cosmetics Bags $'l.00 value, colorful print cosmetic bag* clutch style, largo size with snap closures. Cnkmetics — Main Floor 49< 1 Headlight Bulbs 83 Boys’Sport Shirts 79 0 4’/2-0z. Ronson Lighter Fluid 2 for 33c value — 4’A-fluld ounces Ronson lighter fluid lor 1,50 oil wick lighters. Tobacco—Main Floor 19' Gillette Razor and Blades $1.00 value famous Gillette super speed fa.-nr with sample package of double edge blades. Drugs — Main Floor 63 Wagner Rug Shampooer A big help in the oiler holidoy clean-up. Dispenses cleaner compound to thoroughly dean rugs and- 497 Boys’ Orion Sweaters Blue jacquard design on cardigan orlon sweaters. S'le 6 only. Qrlon washes so easily without shrlnk-*n8- , —Basement [00 Canter Chocolate Beans Reg. 98c value, famous Meyers liquid center chocolate'beans — choice of mint, cherry or rum flavors, Candy — Main Floor Ladies’ or Men’s Supp-Hose ftttfft Ironing Board Pad & Cover lOO ■ 1 IB ~ r°!u8' your choico ot lc,di05' 5eunilo‘s 1,050 W 17 1V All foam pad with flannel back Ironing cover. Draw- ■ O O ^ y or men s lightweight supphose.^Supporls leg muscles. »rr,ng^ binding to fit snugly, fit* all standard size ■ , Boys’Western Cut Jeans Fine lirft quality, 134k Oz. blue denim western < blue jeans, proportioned sizes, regulars, slims, ai huskies A to 18. — Bqseme 2## 13-Oz. Tin Mixed Nuts 79c value, Delicious fresh mixed nuts with peanuts, Betty brand. Limit 2i Candy — Main Floor 49' Sardo Bath Oil $3.00 value, you gel a $ I bar of soap free with yptfj; purchase of Sardo bath oil. Drug* — Main Floor [99 Tension Bath Shelf Unit Fils snugly from floor to ceiling, chrome shelf wuh 3 shelves and a towel ring. Tripla plated chr Moden No. 4.16. 2iid F 427 Men’s Broadcloth Pajamas Firs) quality, American mode coat style pajamas. Fine woshablo broadcloth, size A only. —Basement’ )9f | Ronson Butane Lighter Fuel ff W 98c value, Ronson Multifill butane fuel for gas u lighters. It's cleaner ond odor free. A Tobacco — Main Floor k(< K Coffee Maker | 1 Model P-12, Automatic ccdfoe muter makes 4 1 W to 8 cups of good collee. Chrome fiuu.li. 1 " , fSul.ellteHandle. -2nd Floor J 10#( 1 Gas Line Anti-Freeze ■ ^ Your choleo of Prestone Prtmo or Monarch te“| Dry gasoline ontl-freeie ends stalling In cold A 1 5179' Men’s Wool Pea Coats 75% wool navy blue pea coats with quilled rayon lining and 70% wool interlining. Traditional black buttons or gold color. -Basement 8## Windproof Cigarette Lighter 98c volue, 'Bowers' lightweight sure fire windproof lighter, choice of gold color or chrome finish. USA Mode. Tobacco — Main Floor 59 0 West Bend Teakettle 2#7 5-Drawer Quilted Chest 499 Men’s Knit Gloves Worm knit gloves with leather palm that grips me wheel better, One sizefitz^lh 4 — Basement | Hr 11 Men’s Casual Pants 1 TP 'QfCF ' ' Size ${lwolst and 34 length only in these'Big Yank' I M [’ ipfof qyoal poms or greed wockportt*. ■ . —Basement Plastic Garbage Bags 58 0 10-In. Chicken Fryer 496 Boys’and Girls’Slippers Corduroy end. terry Cloth' slippers in solid colors, plaids end prtnss. loot style clin.ton ^at-Pontiac on grounds the 24-year- 8®n- a 31-year-old worker at a old case had received too much Jonesboro meat processing publicity in Bay County. OTgE wasKtaken‘° 8 mantal Tyler granted a defense mo-ihosf,ta? for observation and ex-tion for a change of venue, and amina*lon tentatively scheduled the trial * * * for Jan. 16 at Pontiac. I Tina Charmine, 9, and Karen _ ,, . _ to a 33 Hope, 8, had been killed with a Oakiand County authorities,^^ rifle Margaret asked Tyler to continue to pre-,Wend 5 and Faith Erliiie, 3] side over the case af ter it had ^ strangIed. moved to Pontiac, the judge! __ sajd | Townspeople said Watson fre- quently announced that the Father Admits Killing His Four Daughters! in, he shook hands with him and they talked a few minutes across the hall. Afterwards, they walked out together and got in the car.” * * * Mrs. Edmonds and the coroner, Dr. John M. Robison, became upset at the sight of the bodies. Both went to their homes ill. * * ★ Watson told officers the death scene was on Walker Road, about eight miles east of this Tyler also granted a motion to suppress physical evidence in the case, on grounds the evidence was obtained by illegal search and seizure. He delayed a ruling on another defense motion seeking suppression of admissions and confessions. world is too wicked a place for my kids to grow up in.” He had talked of studying for the ministry. PRETENDED VISIT Watson told his wife, Margaret Ann Watson, Wednesday morning that he was taking the four Woos confessed 24 years ago girls to visit his mother, to the slaying of theater man- Later he drove to the funeral ager Floyd Ackerman during a home, woned by Mrs. E. L. Ed-robbery. He pleaded guilty to ajmonds. murder char ge, and was sen-j “I didn’t *know anything was tenced to life imprisonment. jwrong,” Mrs. Edmonds said. NEW TRIAL WON “He appeared calm. I asked if I He won a new trial on grounds couId ^ gH n0t have sufficient legal| She quoted Watson as saying, At the time Ackerman was ,accident 1>ve slain, Woos was on parole on ai u ,y . ,, . . sec^degree murde? conviction'J* fggffk jwas dressed in slacks and alii north Louisiana community but officers were unable to find anything to Indicate the children were killed there. Watson was discharged from Central State Hospital in Pine-ville six weeks ago after undergoing psychiatric treatment. He was taken to the East Louisiana State Hospital in Jackson for treatment and observation, will remain there until the next grand jury convenes, probably in March. No charges were filed. Friends add neighbors said he recently showed signs of deep depression. Funeral services for the little girls were set for this afternoon at the Southside Baptist church in Jonesboro, which Watson attended. Hie services will be conducted by the Rev. J. W. Kennedy, of two ministers at the church. He was overcome emotionally at the deaths and at first thought Jhat he could not be present. 4 Sots! 67 The earliest Halloween cele-|sports jacket brations were held by the'SHOOK HANDS Druids in the second century, “He didn’t have anything to B.C., in honor of Samhain, Lord say after that,” Mrs. Edmonds of the Dead. (said. “When the sheriff walked Buy Now and Save! Ladies' Untrimmed Coats Regular to 60.00 *39 * *44 Ladies' Fur Trimmed Coats Regular to 125.00 *49*99 Ladies' Better Dresses Regular to 30.00 8" to 17" spd mm THE PONTlAc PHKSS. 'M U KSDA V, DECK CM HER 28, 1907 ah Ywyi-Erul Safe Untrimmed Winter Coats Regular to *85 $49 to $69 Regular to *210 *79 »$159 Fur Trimmed Coats Regular to *200 $99 $169 Regular to *350 *119 • *279 Knit Suits and Dresses Regular to *110 $29 $69 Casual and Dressy Dresses Regular to *26 Regular to *50 Regular to *125 *10 to *19 *21 to $31 *34 to *69 DRESS SHOES Andrew Geller Were to 35.00 189° De Liso Debs Were to 22.00 149° Caressa Were to 20.00 12’° Adores Were to 20.00 129° Town & Country Q90 Were to 16.00 ' First Edition Were to 16.00 9^ Capezio Were to 18.00 99° CASUAL SHOES Kicky Fun Shoes in many designs labeled by CAPEZIO, CALIFORNIA COBBLERS, COVER GIRL TRAMPEZE, TOWN & COUNTRY Were to 18.00 690«nd79° MRS. M. T. BRADLEY Recent Vows Unite Pair ot Ceremony Our Lady of the Lakes Cath- A short time ago I printed a reminder to all husbands that column I had written many their wives are indeed some-years ago, which a reader had thing special. Would it be pos-kept for 25 years. She sent it to sible to print a similar column me and asked that I reprint it. titled, ‘Things Every Woman It was concerned with what a Should Know About Her Hus-husband should know about hisjband?” I think it would be well jSfe (worth the time and the space. [ Their parents I As a result of this 1 received Here goes: letters from many husbands.! • Men like a wife who makes | Here is one of them. I life seem easy and uncompli- * * * cated and lets him know that Dear Mrs. Lowman, he is most important of every- I have just read your article toing in her life. We often hear in today’s paper concerning the!people say, “I don't know what 12 tips to husbands. I found Itjhe sees in her. She is down-quite stimulating. I feel that ev- right mousy.” She is mousy ery husband should read them, Ufee 3 fox, but not really, be-know them, and put them into cause she sincerely feels that practice to,improve his relation- way- ship with his wife and make • Men like a little peace arid) their marriage really wonder- quiet, a warm welcome when they first return home in the' You can infer from what I late afternoon from work. They MRS. TERRY M. SILVER olic Church was the setting i*lave that my goal in life are aware that their wife may - ■ - ■ • is to make it as happy and re- have had her problems too, and) warding as possible. I think want to help, but not the first! this starts at home, although minute they stick their head in' unfortunately many others do] the door, not seem to think so. Tuesday evening for the wedding of Nancy Marie McCulloch and Cpl. Michael T. Bradley, USMC. IlillgW ilii For the evening wedding, the daughter of the L. J. McCul-lochs of Cambrook Lane wore a velvet ensemble fashioned with a high rise waist, long sleeves and a cathedral train which flowed from the shoulders. HEADPIECE Four satin orchids, trimmed with tiny seed pearls and crystals, capped the - bride’s floor length veil. For her bouquet she carried red roses and white! carnations. Honor attendants for the vowsi were Florence A. Ford and Patrick Bradley. Other members of the wedding party were Mrs. Michael L. McCulloch, Lynne Springer, Mary Ann Vulckovich, Dennis P. McCulloch, Gary Priemer and Dean Sovey. Pair Honeymoons East After Detroit Wedding I * wedding trip to the Cat-iof Detroit and Rosalind Suro-u - ,Men hate nagging (who|skl Mountains followed State Police this year started a limited program of motor ve-hide inspection,, authorized by the Legidatura. Police also joined other jaw agencies in No- te enforcing Michigan’s new implied consent law involving chocking suspected drinking The year $aw the start of operation of a Michigan law enforcement information network. The central equipment at State Police East Lansing headquarters provides record checks on such items as stolen cars and wanted persons. Three recruit schools graduated 149 troopers during the year. Another recruit school is expected to bring enlisted strength to 1,538, the highest The child bom today is apt to live longer than his forebears did and also to be heavier and taller. A one-year-old child today is 7 per cent heavier than a child in the previous century. LA Is Without a Mayor Today LOS ANGELES (AP) — This city of almost three million people is without a mayor today. Mayor Samuel W. Yorty is vacationing in Acapulco, Mexico. The acting mayor, City Council President L. E. Timberlake, was due in Las Vegas, Nev., and the third man in line, Council President Pro Tern John S. Gibson Jr., is vacationing in Boston. The city charter doesn’t provide for an acting mayor beyond those three. Car Insurer Sets Rebates LANSING (AP) - Michigan’s declining traffic accident rate will bring a 10 to 15 per cent dividend to policyholders insuring 55,000 cars and trucks, Farm Bureau Mutual announced Wednesday. * * * Farm Bureau Mutual, affiliated with Farm Bureau Lief pp surance Co. of Michigan and Community Service Insurance Co., said dividends would be paid on all policies in force as of Dec. 21, 1967. Dividend checks totaling some $300,000 will be mailed in mid-January, the company said. The dividend is the second within six months. News in Brief niS •ovlamii Postponed a meeting THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 Are You on LBJ's List? WASHINGTON (AP) - If you’re 9 a ELIZABETH TAYLOR MARLON BRANDO REFLECTIONS HA <••»« INVENTORY CLEARANCE DEC. 29-30th ALL PRODUCTS REDUCED BEFORE INVENTORY *192* TWO SPEEDS DURABLE PRESS ONLY 4 LIFT 1 CUSTOM IMPERIAL MODEL WASHER RRDUCID *100°° CRATE MARRED RSE-SM. 30* electric NEVER BEFORE-A FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC-CLEAN OVEN RANGE AT A PRICE LIKE THISI *247°° OTHER RANGES from (189.M EVERY ITEM INSTOCK PRICED LOW QUANTITIES LIMITED SEVERAL ONE-OF-A KIND ITEMS DRASTICALLY REDUCED ALL SALES MUSTDE COMPLETED DY 5:30 DEC. 30th Easy Front Loading $19900 A SAVINGS OF *60 ON THIS DISHWASHER SEVERAL TOP OF THE LINE MODELS AT REDUCED PRICES LOW PRICED! Model DAN, Snowciost Whit* Even this Lowest Priced Frigidaire Dryer has Durable Press Care • Durable Press Cafe helps Durable Press items keep their no-iron promise 5 No-stoop lint screen in the door 5 No-Heat setting for fluffing. INSTALLED FREE ON DETROIT EDISON LINES $129 REFRIGERATORS IIP TO *70 SAVINGS LOOK FOR SPECIAL SALE TAGS, CRUMP ELECTRIC AUBURN ROAD FI 4-3S73-UL Tl " ■; 1 i .. .I- ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1967 Time to Pay the Bills ; The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Active Stock Market Is Lower NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market was lower in active trading early today. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 0.81 at 10:90 a.m. The ticker tape on the New York Stock Exchange ran three minutes late. Prices were mixed. Gains held only a slight edge over' losses. transition, Universal American, Eastern Air Lines and General Aniline posted fractional gains. OPENING BLOCKS Opening blocks included: Transition, up % at 181ft on 16,000 shares; Detroit Edison, off V* at 26 on 12,900 shares; Mas-sey-Ferguson, unchanged at 17% on 11,000 shares, and Burroughs, off 3 at 189 on 9,500 shares. Burroughs was down 2%. IBM and Polaroid each gained 1%. The market dip followed the late Wednesday action of the General Dynamics was off lift. Federal Reserve Board in rais- ing required bank reserves against demand deposits. Brokers said they still were not sure what effect, if any, the move, would have oh stock prices over the long run. But some pointed out that the Federal Reserve action did end speculation. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Bell Electric and Zapata were off while Falcon Seaboard and Plume & Atwood were up 14, Data Processing was off 51ft at 111. lbttucb and greens Celery, Cabbage, dz. .......... Lettuce, bibb, hothouse, f — The New York Stock Exchange I, hothouse, 10-lb. bskt. . 2.50 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—(USDA)—+rlces poynd tar No. I live poultry: Rocks, 2JV4-24; heavy typo roasters, 26-27; ducklings, 32. DETROIT EGOS DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Egg prices per dozen paid by first receivers (Includldg lb Law Last Chg a +1% Mills ,M ....Mot 3.10a OonPrec t.so 1 3fc 38 it 7 39 63% 62% 63% -»» 77% 76% 76% .. •.» . White Grade A [Umbo, 36-41 cents small, 10-21. CHICAGO SUTTER, EOGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile —>( buyliii >%; 92 A » 1.20 28 22% 22 Exchange-butler steady pr(ces unchanged; 93 s «6%» 90 B 65%; 19 C 63 9 37ft 37% 37% + 116 398b 398% 35% — ,, 37 78% 77% 78*4 +1% sfsmi \i Gan Tire .80 donates i.so Ga Pacific 1b Garber 1.10 mejp Gian AM wl Gian AM .70 Goodrich JJ0 Goodyr 1.35 Onem i.4o Granites 1.40 C 65. batter* Grade* A whites »%-30%: mixed 29%-J0%; mediums 2SW-36; standards 26. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Live poultr whalesale buying prices unchanged to 216 higher; roasters 24-27; special fed white R«Ck Fryers 19V6-22. ■ mm oov* tx _ Am'AIrlln Jo 149 31% 3114 3188 Am Can 2.20 25 51% 81% 5184 + 88 AmCrySug 1 1 24V8 2414 2414 88 AmCyan 1." •** “* jj% AmCyan 1.25 116 2788 2784 2714 AmEIPw 1.52 87 8514 3514 3584 Amfnka 1.30 - 7 39% 38% 39V. 2 1214 3214 3214 , .. 71 55% 5514 55% + 14 12 IS 85 B + % AmFPw 1.18 AmMFdy .90 Livestock DITROIT LIVESTOCK . DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Cattle 250; cholce_1.000-lnxt0 pounds slaughter steers 26.50-27.50; mlxe good and choice 25.75-26.50; good 24.50-25.75; one load, choice slaughtar halters 24JO; ether — ' Hogs 200; U.S. 1 and 1 wOO-22p pounds barrows and gilts 19.25-19J0; 1-3 210-240 pounds IB.25-19.25; 1-3 300-100 pound sows t3.75-14.S0; 2 and 3 100-600 pounds 11.7* 13.75. Vealars 135; high choice and prime 40.0043.00; choice 35.0040.00; good 30.00 35.00. Sheep 400; few lots choice and prims 90 to 105 lb. woo led lambs 23.50-24.50; cun to good slaughter ewes 5.00-8.00. CHICAGO LIVRSTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Hogs ' ’ • •“*“ - *-■—— ”-5-1971;!' GWSug 1.60a GreenOnt JS Greyhound 1 1 GrumAlrc .80 90 1984 1984 19% + 1 29 4084 4084 4084 — 1 •6 ’* 1284 1284 — 8 3414 34% - 1 Am Smalt 3 Am Tab 1.80 I* 9 S — 191 1314 13 13V4 4 2414 24V4 24%.......... 27 7184 71% 71% + 84 40 20% 2988 20 507 50% 50V. 50% 31% gun- % jr jtv. 3884 3884 — % 83 38% 3588 36% + % 40 4484 4614 4684 4- % 96 4684 46 4684 — | 23 1186 1184 1184 + Holldylnn JO Honeywl l.fo Hook Ch 1.40 Houio Pin l HoustonLP 1 48% - AshMOII 1.20 AssdDG 1.60 Atchison 1.60 I 190430 N 3.500; 1 . ------ - 1 3 220-240 Ibt 18.00-19.00; 1-J 240-250 Ibo J*"" , 17.25-18.25; 1-3 340-400 lb saws 14J0-15J0.iAvcn pd 1 '■-***- ' ““ fiMnlBabck W 50 35% 3484 , 35 + W 50 55% 55% 5514 ... 12 3584 M84- 3584 — 6 72% »% 72% — 40 27% 2784 27% + . 18 100 99% 100 — % 36 19% 19% 19% + % 60 6% 684 684 — % 51 62 61% 61% + •' 35 65% 64% 64% + cattle ..jmmmmmm 1,325 lb slaughter steers 27.25-27.78; 950-1,325 lbs 25.75-26.75; mixed go choice 24.75-25.75; slaughter heifer: 26.25; Choice 850-1,000 lbs 25.00-2 Liggett AM 5 LllyCup 1.20b Litton 2JST .....—- el| 2.20 LonBCamT Longfk— .... Urlllard ijg figures otter decimal polnti_______... OVRR THR COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from tho NASD art re,, tentative Inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. Mar-malar markets manga throughout the day. “— not Include retail mart"1- - eighths | control Dote Com Pd 170 CorQW 2joa 29 13814 13714 137V4 —11 27 2% 39% 40 + 1 1 347 347 347 .... 1 1584 1584 1584 —' 3 5284 5284 5284 - AMT Cerp. Aiseclotad ______ Braun Engineering ClflzwM Utilities Cl Dftrfa Chemical .. Diamond qj*M 'ear Ji ..,../,/m,9MJ8 ----------,----I drowols Fiscal Veer— .Ota|,7^«5.727J7 81.404,710.303,27 UL966J08.254.63 330466,064,186.27 1 12J337U7M.77 13,159,015480.21 -Includei 8360,70247 debt not sub- loct to statutory i CHICAGO (AP) - Grain open today. Whoot — March 1490 May lJJ-51%; July 1 J1%; Sept. 1.8484.1 FMC Cp .75 38 37% 1684 3684 — % 19 II 1794 18 . —F— 30 8794 17% 17% ..... 33 22 11% S' . 12 54% 53% B% ....... IT 4886 48% 48% — 86 i 3s 8S rat + % .7 5386 jS% 53% - % 17 2M4 21% 1)94 — % 38 22% 22% 22% hds.) High Law Lost Ch*. 12 35% B% 35% + 84 58 82% 8284 82% — % 6 TV 71% TV + % 36 27% 27% ssls Reading Co RfichCh JDS ROpubStl 2.80 , 4184 — 1 10 2V% 3 + % ■ .... 97% 98% + % 114 61% 61 61 ... 32 13% 13 13 ... 153 1384 1384 1384... 4 72% 72 72 ... hi 51% S3 53 — 41% + 70 M 1284 12% - _ 94 44% 4484 44% + % '* 25» 5 25% 25% 3 « t 67% I 9 99 i 67% •+ I 44% 44% 44% * 71% 70% 10% 4 12% 12% 9 539* 5 32 14 mi 25 j 53% 53% s a _ ........... 107% 106% 10^84 + % 1184 31% 9 i 44% 44% MMXS 14% 04 14% + 1 41% 41% Will 87% 5784 S7% + i 1784 ,1784 + % Imp CP Am RigarRand 2 Inland Stl 2 ' It Am 2.40 4 43% 43 43% 30 32% 32% 32% 20 56% 56% 56*4 , .. 2 29 29 29 + % 14 426% 425% 626% +1V4 30 34 33% 33% — 84 21 21% 20% 2S% )N J sMSa .JOh 2.50b lSfCh*^'.8? Start Drug 1 StevansJ 2.25 jtude "Worth .... v.% Iowa PS v 1.24 ITS Ckt 1 21% 21% 21% — % 13 32% 32% 32% + aLA” KanPwL 1.05 2 27% 271+17% + % 6 33% 33% 33% + % —K— S 47% 47% 47% 7 34% 24% 24% ~ 3 20% 20% 20% 4- % Ttx PLd .330 Tlmk RB MO TyanaWAlr l 30 130% 120% 128% -2% > 12% 12% 12% — % 2 15% 15% 15% 10 70 70 70 M 26 24 24% +1% 14 108% 106% 106% 64 9% 9% 9% UMC Ind .60 ... 4384 4 Steal IJB 130 4094 Vartan Asia Vanda. Ce .60 VaEIPw 1.36 66% 66 - xxx- 46% 40% 6 91% Vt% 91%' ■ 16 4994 49% 49% —V-. 49 32 %194 3194 , I 31 21% 37% 2794 + Hi 14 44 43% 4194 — —W— 25 46% 45% 45% i a a a _____ 40 34% »% 34 — % 44 27% 27% 17% + “ 35 35% 34% 34% — Wavarhr 1. Whirl CP i White Mot 1.60 . 63 34% 24 24 — % _x—Y—Z— ______ ljo 19 100 299% 299% - YngstSht 1.96 22 if 30% 30% - ionlthR 1.20o 42 51% 57% 57% - Copyrighted by The Associated Press figures ar I ptflaii naiad, ratas at divl-ting Table art annual quartarly SBUnAisa's — —— ictan ragutar are1* Identified In toomotes. plus stack dlvMsnd.»-Paff Mat yai f — Payable In atack dunm 1967, • mated mab value on ex-dividend or i dlstributlan date, g-beclarsd ar paid far this year h—Declared or paM af stock dividend or spilt up. k—Oeclai or paid this yaar, an accumuiativa isi with dlvMwMs In arraart. n—New Isa— p—Paid this yaar, dividend amltied, deferred or no action taken at Imt dividend mottlng. r—Declared or paM In 1966 plus stock dividend. *—PsM In stack'during 1966, estlniatad cash value an ax-dlvMsno -----Ilstrlbuflon data. it In full. —lad. x—tx dividend. y—Ra sales In fulT. x-dls—Ex ail •lx rlghta. xw-withput »CK AVERAGES Nat changa , RT. « ITOCI. ....____rT. ad by The Asseclated Picas ind. Ralls UHL ^anth % m _. .461.4 1».V 143.5 1)7.9 .469J 179.0 M », 467.0 178J 142.9 lli-x m & P w JP-I M-f 136.5 292.6 170.5 661.7 126.2 269.4 •ONDAVERAGRS mpHal by Tbo AsaooiaMd fl_ 19 16 16 It 16 RMIO lid. UHL Pga. L. Yd N^nCwT «:! 86.7 Sil S M tliilP is iSSi? % 1? k ai Wallace Race Gels GOP Eye 2 Senators Differ on 3rd*Party Impact WASHINGTON (AP) S- The two top-ranking Senate Republicans are at odds over what ef, feet a third-party candidacy by former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace would have on-the 1968 presidential race. Meanwhile Wallace, an appar-tant victor in his drive to qualify for the California presidential ballot, reportedly has targeted Ohio for a similar campaign. IKE DENIAL would lose far more votes than Republicans if Wallace qualifies as a 1968 presidential candidate. But Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen, in Los Angeles tq serve as grand marshal of the Tournament of Roses, told newsmen he feels a Wallace candidacy would cut equally into both parties’ ranks. In Columbus, Ohio, a Wallace spokesmen said the former governor plans to visit the Bucktye State Jan. 5-10 to plot strategy aimed at qualifying*for the presidential ballot there. Two members of Wallace’ campaign staff in Montgomery, Ala., said they knew nothing of such plans, however. State election officials said earlier this week Wallace apparently has succeeded in getting enough Californians to register with his American Independent party to qualify for the presidential ballot in the tion’s most populous state. if Budget Apprai By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK — For every! American in these post-Christmas days the time has come to pay the bills, financial, moral, ethical. Anguish replaces merriment as reality raises its head in every home, the White House included. This yearly? recognition of] fraQtyJ or matching] early hopes] against ultiixmte] a ccomplish-j ments, is usually accompanied by an agonizing confrontation with conscience, from wh^h there is no release except in resolutions to do better. Nobody, not even a king or presi-dent, is excepted. President Lyndon Johnson undoubtedly is now undergoing this self-appraisal in preparation for his mid-January economic and budget messages, which involved problems of a magnitude unknown by ordinary men. Looking back, Johnson will find that his assessment of national problems, as expressed in CUNNIFF his economic message early thift year, was quite, accurate. But the, problems quite often eluded the prescribed solutions. HOPES SOUR On page 25 of the 1967 “Economic Report of the President’’ are 14 consecutive lines that show that the hopes even of the President of the United States, with all the resources at his command, sometimes sour in frustration. “Neither the threat of inflation nor of recession is ever distant in a high level ec Johnson stated.' Since both threatened in 1967, this assei ment was right on the mark. What followed was a question that was then rhetorical and for which the President felt certain he had the answers. But, terms of today’s economic and social ills, a note of exasperation can be read into the question. “How can we steer between these dangers,’ ’ Johnson asked, “and at the same time supply the needs of national defense, strengthen our overseas payments, relieve the inequities of tight money ami high interest rates, maintain the momentum Transit Union Votes to Strike Retirement Demand Is Big Barrier in NY NEW YORK (AP) - Thousands of bus and subway workers, shouting and roaring their approval, have voted overwhelmingly to strike at 5 a.m. New Year’s Day ilnless they have a new contract by then. ■ The voice vote at Wednesday night’s mass meeting followed an appeal by leaders of the 36,008-man Transport Workers Union for the Transit Authority to make an equitable offer. WASHINGTON (AP) -/Some business leaders view tie Federal Reserve Board’s moderate move toward tightening credit as not-too-subtle pressure on the administration amjf Congress to raise taxes The board announced Wednesday its unanimous decision raise reserves on checking accounts—meaning banks must keep more money on hand at ati times ami thus cut back on lending. Hie action, said the board, was taken to stem inflation at home and strengthen the dollar abroad. In Concord, N.H., meanwhile, a spokesman for a state organization supporting President Johnson disclosed plans for a drive to get write-in votes for Johnson in the state’s March 12 presidential primary. Parking Is Cut at Rose Bowl PASADENA, Calif. (AP) This note for 65,000 football fans expected to travel by car to the Rose Bowl game New Year’s Day: There will be only 15,500 parking spaces now that 6,138 other spots have been eliminated. “We don’t want a strike,’’ Matthew Guinan, international president of the TWU told the meeting. “We know that the last 8trike cost the city a lot and our own workers a lot.” Daniel Gilmartin, president of Local 100, and other speakers emphasized the union’s unwillingness to compromise on “ demand for retirement at half pay after 20 years’ service. ‘NOT BA RGAINABLE ’ “The Transit Authority says that it’s impossible to give us 20 years at half pay,” he said. 'We said it is not a bargainable item and we have to have it and we are going to have It.” While the union was meeting, Mayor John V. Lindsay joined his threee-man mediation panel at De Pavilion restaurant to discuss the status of negotiations. Hie 6,138 parking areas were n Brookside Golf Course, where the Los Angeles open tournament begins Jan. 25. In ' r to prevent damage to the course, parking won’t be allowed there. Police nit urging game-goers to come by' bus or park far from the stadium—or walk. The game will match Southern California and Indiana. Afterward, chief mediator Theodore W. Kheel said the major issue holding lip the negotiations was the demand for retirement after 20 years of service. Kheel said the wage issue, which is also a key to the talks, could not be taken up until the insion issue is settled. Aside from the pension plan issue, most of the discussion at the union meeting concerned the state’s new Taylor law which prohibits strikes by public employes. Quickie Marriage Will Soon Cost More in Nevada CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) -It will cost a little more to obtain a "quickie” marriage or divorce in Nevada, beginnihg Jan. The state, which ranked fifth in the country last year ip marriages performed, has a new law requiring county clerks to collect (1 more for marriage licenses. The additional levy also applies to divorce and annulment decrees. The marriage license fee jumps to $6. Nevada does not require a waiting period or blood test for marriages. Last year 86,335 couples were married in the state which has an estimated 500,000 population. There were 9,615 six-week divorce decrees. m 74.71+0,12 tdF“ ssas NY Post Office Gets Santa's Mail NEW YORK (AP) -The Post Office here estimates its dead letter department received about 2,500 letters this year addressed to Santa Claus, North Pole, U.S.A. In past years 3,000 to 4,000 letters were routed to the office here from around New York State and abroad. Letters ranged from petitions for toys to promises of good behavior. One girl wrote: “I have not been a good girl as your already no. But I will not be to bad anymore. I hope you will come to my house next year. And I will not fight with Bigmouth Ros-marie to much. O.K.?” News in Brief The larceny of two speakers valued at 8274 from the dance hall at Elizabeth Lake Estates Improvement Association, 740 Lakeside, Waterford Township, was reported to township police ■ fcT Move by Fed Said Push tor Spending Cut of social progress, and provide growth of Incomes.. The same question can be asked today, for It remains the dominant one. The inability to travel between the dangers of. inflation and recession without encountering the shoals has been one of the big problems of this administration. But, one year ago when John-in was marking out this route, he was full of hope. “I am confident that we can find such a course,” he said. “We will continue to coordinate the tools of monetary and fiscal policy.. One needs read no further in that paragraph to realize that hope itself must have fallen upon the shoals. The Inability to exercise fiscal policy, perhaps through indecision but mostly because a doubting Congress turned down a tax increase, was a failure for the administration. “We are steering toward lower interest rates,” the President ontinued in this statement made last January, “a better balance in our economy, a budget and a Social Security program that reflect national priorities.” PRIORITY LACK Interest rates are now at all-time highs. The economy hardly can be called balanced. And some economic analysts claim that more than a few of Johnson’s financial problems have come from an absence of (pending priorities. To judge an administration solely on the basis of hopes it expressed a year earlier would be unfair. A president must set his hopes high, and the resolutions made by Johnson were mighty loose anyway. “It shows that trying to get his message across to the President,” said one Midwestern banker of the surprise action. The banker, who asked that his name not be used, referred Chairman William Me-Chesney Martin of the Reserve Board, who has urged spending cuts greater than those recommended by Johnson while backing the President’s proposal to hike taxes. A similar assessment was given by Ward C. Krebs, chairman Of the credit policy committee of Wells Fargo Bank of San Francisco. “Since there has been no fiscal support in combatting inflation by this administration and Congress, it is necessary for the Federal Reserve to go it alone,” said Krebs. That view was oft-repeated by other bankers contacted by the Associated Press in the wake of the board’s announcement. All seven board members have publicly endorsed Johnson’s proposed 10 percent income tax surcharge, which the House Ways and Means Committee plans to consider for a second time Jan. 22. In addition, the administration has a long list of accomplishments as well as frustrations, not the least of which is the maintenance of the world’s highest level of material wealth. Nevertheless, every American, mighty and weak, is now going through the same ordeal as one year ends and another begins. Martin is SURPRISES IN STORE Perhaps the wisest statement made in that economic message back in January was: “There will be surprises in store along the way.” The statement was accurate in ail respects. 2 Firms Agree on Purchase PALMYRA, N. Y. - Ailing-Lander Co., Inc., of Sodus, N. Y. and Garlock, Inc. have entered into an agreement whereby Garlock will acquire the stock and related business of Ailing-Lander. The purchase price is reported to be in excess of 81 million. The transaction involves stock and cash. The Precision Seal Division of Garlock, Inc. (formerly the Michigan Precision molded Division) has manufacturing facilities at Gastonia, N. C., and marketing and engineering headquarters at 2175 W. Maple, Walled Lake. t V * \ SuccessfulnvestirMs •\ <■# »'«*■ v*s> By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — We are retired and own Santa Fe Rwy., Iowa Public Service, > Columbia Gas, and Wellington Fund. Our investment In stocks now reflects a paper loss' of around 82,800, yet the purpose of buying was to hedge against inflation. What has happened and what should we do? i L. S. A —You bought good stocks, strong and safe as regards dividends, but they do not necessarily qualify as inflation hedges. You must first understand, if I may say so, that stocks are not necessarily short-term hedge against dollar devaluation, beaause of market fluctuation. Issues which can move ahead faster in earnings and price than the dollar is depreciating should supply longterm protection over a period of five to 10 years. Your stocks have made little price progress for a long time, since they are not strongly situated for growth. Rails are not growth shares, few utilities have done well in recent your mutual fund — which is strong and conservative — aims mainly at protection of principal rather than big asset build-I advise you to hold your Wellington and, if you can afford some drop in income, I would switch the others into Talon; Walgreen and Wm. H. Rorer, which seem well situated for price enhancement in the years ahead. yean, pipeline issoe^have generally been/ out ofTnvor and Q—I invested in National Securities Bond Series Mutual Fund. They have performed poorly and their value Is below cost. What should I do? My objective Is better than saviagi-iccount Income. C. C. A — You bought a fund which n v • a t s exclusively in bonds. With money rates rising sharply over the past year, bond prices have dropped to their lowest level since the 1920s. You can get out even now end I advise you to do so. For a nominal fee the management will switch your bond shares into its Stock Series,, which will not, from dividend income, match savings x interest but will offer a chance for appreciation. m . (Copyright, lMlff m