I; ■ PMllM PrtH PHMm by RM UnltiMhrtr The Cold Meoni Fun Time At Pontiac's Murphy Pork'^ A Roaring Fire Helps To Fight Off^The Breeze The Weatherman continued to give the Pontiac area the cold shoulder as tungiefaiures again plunged toward the zero mark. A low of 10 above was recorded at 2 a.m. today. Temperatures are expected to dive to five to 10 above again tonight. ★ ★ ★ SUes will be partly cloudy with possible now flurries tmight throu^ &tur-,(by. High temperature will continue in theloerSOs. Becadse of the weather, 10 school | in the northern Lower Peninsula plan to extend Christmas and New Year vacations through the weekend instead of resigning classes as scheduled. kept FItOM CLASS Sdiod' officials said that slippery drivlni and snow-felogg^ roads would kniTitudents out of class at Gaylord, BUsworth, Vanderbilt, Falrvlew, WolvertM, Johannesberg, Inland Lakes, liloendKalevB. Swirling snow kept a Coast Guard bi»pMd[AB» from returning , to Traverse City from Manitou Island' in Lake, Superior. The helicopter was dispatched there to deliver supplies to a Hothouse. Full of Abases, Says U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal Investigators have discovered that hundreds of high school graduates—and even some college students—have collected government paychecks under Detrdt antipoverty programs set up to provide Jobs and training for high school dropouts. In a report to Congress, the General Accounting Office cited this as one of “a number of discrepancies’* it found in examtoiqg Neighborhood Youth Corps programs in Detroit, where slums were scarred by a major riot in 1967. The 82-page report also disclosed that: • Inadequate screening allowed some youths to receive federal assistance even though dieir families did not meet the anti^verty program’s low-income criteria. • Antipoverty officials made little or no attempt to follow up on the progress of youths who completed training, and thus had no way to gauge the programs’ effectiveness. • Sponsoring organizations indirectly used federal funds to help pay the local share of the programs’ cost, and local sponsors paid only half their required 10 per cent. • The weaknesses cited went undetected for months because federal officials assigned to insure compliance with antipoverty program requirements “wwe performing very; little mmitoring of tne 1 ! NYC sponsor activities in Detroit.” The Associated Press reported last April 10 that GAO investigators were delving into operations of the povertyfighting efforts in Detroit, one of two cities in the nation whose central antipoverty agency is an arm of city government rather than an independent nonprofit corporation. The othef is Chicago. The GAO report centered oa 10 Neighborhood Youth Corps programs sponsored in fiscal 1966 and 1967 by one of three organizations—the Mayor’s Committee for Human Resources Development, the city board of education at^ the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit. More than half the 118.7 million in federal funds involved went to the first group, headed by Mayw Jerotne P. Cavanagh. Slayer of 4 Kills Hiiriself WESTERNVILLE, N. Y. «) - Ralph MacLachlan, who shot and killed his estranged wife and three other persons in a rampage last night, put a bullet through his head today as rfficers closed in, police reported. MacLachlan’s wife, Anita, 33, was shot as she and members of her family sat In the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Turke, in tills central New York village. Her sister, Mrs. Jane lUngrose, 35, and Mrs. Ringrose’s 12-year-old daughter, Barbara, were killed at the same time. The other four occupants of the house were wounded before MacLachlan left. Related Picture, Page A-2 Missing Girl, 17, Is Found Slain Police said MacLachlan then ran to the next-door home of Mrs. James Pepper, apparently to try to get the Pepper automobile. Mrs. Pepper’s 10-year-old son, James Jr., was fatally wounded. Mrs. Pepper was critically wounded with shots in the head and spine. Another attempt to remove the helicopter, with five crewmen, was planned today. ★ ★ ★ Detroit Edison Co. reported that about 800 customers in Columbiaville in Lapeer County were without electricity temporarily when winds and ice attacked power lines. SNOW FLURRIES The weatherman said Lower Michigan would have snow flurries, mainly along Lake Michigan, that would diminish to occasional flurries today. There’s a chance of some light snow in Lower Michigan tonight. The low in Lower Mit’higan will range from five below zero to seven above. There’s a chance of snow flurries in file Upper Peninsida today, with lows tonight ranging from iero to M above. WORST ROAD CONDITIONS The womt road condttitmi due to snow were reported today in weatem «od nirtbem Lower Michigan, and the cast HOLLYWOOD W — The pretty 17-year-old daughter of an actress and a novelist, home on Christmas vacation from college, was found slain late yesterday at the bottom of a thickly wood^ ravine. Dark-haired Marina Elizabeth Habe, daughter of Hans Habe of Zurich, Switzerland, and Eloise Hardt, was last seen when she left on a date Sunday night. ‘‘She was dcfinitel/" murdered,” said Sheriff’s Lt. Norman Hamilton who was at the scene when the body was recovered. However, hq said the cause of death would not be annmmced unm after a coroner’s autc^y. Witnesses said there were no visible marks on the body. ‘‘A lot of detectives have some ideas on this,” he said, “and we want to hold off until we can investigate them . . . It’s important that this body be properly examined.” 2 HIDE IN CLOSET Two of the Pepper children saved their lives by hiding in a closet. MacLachlan, officers said, stole a Jeep from a service station and began a flight into the rough country of the Adirondack mountains that sit just above Westernville. volleys of shots were exchanged before MacLachlan shot himself to death. No motive for the shootings was established inunediately, but officers said MacLachlan and his wife had been separated for about two weeks.. MacLachlan, 37, was a 6-foot-2 out-doorsman. He wotked in Oneida, N.Y. as a meatcutter. ★ ★ * Of the five wounded in the shooting spree, Mrs. Pepper and Cynthia Ring-rose, 11, were listed in critical condition, Rotert Ringrose, 36, and Perry ’Turke, 68, poor condition, ^d Turke’s 62-year-old wife, Margaret, fsdr condition. All of the victims were shot more than once. Czech Reshuffle Results in No Leadership Shift Early today the blpe Jeep was fitted -------------------------wla Jr., by state troopers Dominick DePaoli and Thomas Buck and they gave chase. MacLachlan fired three shots through the windshield of the troopers’ automobile, ^ then retreated inside a tractor sales house in the hamlet of Remsen, 10 miles east of Westernville. VOLLEYS EXCHANGED DePaola and Buck were reinforced and LIVED SIDE BY SIDE The Turkes, the Peppers and the MacLachlans lived side by side in the rolling, snowy hills of Westernville, their homes separated by small fields. The officers Involved in the Remsen shootout said MacLachlan never uttered a word. * * * James MacLachlan of Rome, N. Y., an older brother of the slayer, said I^h MacLachlan had once undergone private psychiatric treatment for a few months. That was before he was married, the brother said, and MacLachlan never was a patient at any mental institution. PRAGUE (AP) — Czechoslovakia’s most sweeping government change since the August invasion left the occupied nation today with familiar leaders still in control and still pledged to press ahead with stalled reform programs. Premier Oldricb Cemik’s new federal government,, announced yesterday, contained no unexpected members. ’There was no indication that the wholesale reshuffle involved in setting up the new federal system would lead, under Soviet pressure, to a purge of progressives. ♦ ★ ★ Diplomatic observers said the new lineup made no basic shift in the balance between progressives and conservatives. There were two additions to the Cabinet’s senior ranks. Jan, Marko, 48, a relatively unknown engineer and economic specialist, was named fmrdgn minister. He succeeds Jirl Hajek, who resigned Sept. 19 under ^viet pressure after denouncing the invasion at the United Nations. ★ ★ ♦ ■ The other new man is Jan Tabacek, also an engineer, named foreign trade minister. County Shortchanged, Says Commission (Ck)ntinu^ on Page A-2, Col. 4) ALARM SOUNDED • No arrests were made, but Sheriff’s Lt. Harold White said an alarm had been issued for a car seen near the girl’s home early yesterday morning. He said the male driver tried to molest a woman. The girl’s home in the Hollywood hills is located about four miles from the ravine where Marina was found. A search party fotlnd Marina’s body about 30 feet down a slope. Searchers went there after a woman walking \ , ' ,, '. ^ '. "■ . ' \ ^HE PONTIAC PRJESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, IP69 # t ] y"®' >■'«, Mifc;* -te*' •i. .1^ ':“ "-W Before LBJ Leaves ' END OF THE BATTLE^-Attendants load the ’body of Ralph M««>T.effhlan into an ambulance near Westemville, N.Y., this morwii^- MacLacfalan shot and killed; his wile and three others last oi^t, woundihg lour more persons. Police say AP Wiraplwta MacLachlan killed himself as they exchanged fire with him. Police (right) examine the snowplow on a Jeep ^at MacLachlan used as a shield. WASHINGTON W - AcUon on the nuclear nonproliferation treaty Is the major task facfaig the new S«i>ate, but chances for ratification before President Johnson leaves L ' ■ ■ "A Ar . ,' . , A'Jordanian army spcAesman said .six p Israeli Mirage jets attacked the Zig- lab Dam in the northern Jwdan Valley with napalm, rockets pnd machin»gun fire but claimed %ey were turned back by antiaircraft fiie. ) Hte qxAeftinan said Isradi tanks opened fire on ploUitations in the Mov-shia area. wore no casualties in either attack, he^ added, but a house near the dam and some plantations were damaged. • On the Suez Canal front, an Israeli army spokesman accused the Egyptians of opening fire south of Lake Hmsah at A Chilling End to '68 naMAmi county residents were treated to a white Christmas,, thanks to a two-inch snowfall Dec. 23 followed by below-freezing temperatures. > !,:/ « And the bdiance of the mcntb chaJldtiged tlu( sl^s (rf cmnmutors as they«mida tteir way thro|igh a.,^ze of sleet-and-snow-sUcked streets and freeways. !‘ • The Aiwnuwt of iwecipitation for the month, however, fell short in rainfall and furfffdad the previous December’s snowfall. Rainfall for last month totaled l.$0 with the snowfall 8.5 inches as compared to the December 1967 accumulation (d 2J0 inches of rain fnd six inches of snow. Netther year challenged the record snowfall of December 1966, when 16 inches carpeted the Oakland County area. (HiOOHY SKIES fUtina during the month were mostly gloomy, as only 11 days of sunshine were^ dttrted. TUs was two more days of sunshine than the area recdved during Decenor bar 1861 , Rain danqiened the spirits cd shoppers and partygoers on nine days during the month, mudi of it turning into sleet by the below freeing temperatures. ■t Temperatures ran the gamut during December, with a high of 48 reached Dec. 3 and a low of minus-two Dec. 31. This compared to the previous December’s high of 60 and low of four below zero. Mean reading for the month was 25.84 degrees, 4.36 degrees colder than Dec. 1967. The Weather , , 'rnllU.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — VmrhiUe cloudiness and cold toniidit and Friday wltii periods snow flurries. Highs today 19 to 24, lows tonight five to 10. High Friday 21 to ^Saturday’s ontiook: a little colder with snow flurries. Winds westNiy 10 to 18 mites per hour, becoming variable tonight. Precipitation probabilities In per cent: 20 today, tonight, and 30 Friday. ’ Today in Pmtlu Lowut Icmperoturo precedlna ra.m. 10 At 8 o.m.; Wind VelocHy, S m.p.h. OIraetlon. Norlli Sun sots Thuroday at 5:13 p.m. Sun lint Friday at l;0Z a.m. Moon tats Friday at 8:22 a.m. Moon riooo Thuraday at 3:45 p.m. Ona Year Ago In Faollic HIgtiast tamporatura Lowest ............. Mean temperature ............. Weather—Partly tunny 4 a.m. 7 a.m. 8 a.m. 9 a.m. 10 a.m. Oornitoem Temperaturet ....... 13 II a.m, . ........12 12 m. 7 ......12 12:30 P.m. 2 p.m. 15 ’1 ,j,v '-I* too roeordod Hlghoat tamporatura temperature Moon timparatvro ..... WMUmr—Mt Inch anow Hldhaat and lawaat Temperaturaa TMa Data in ys Yeart In UTS. 1 . -12 In 187» Wednatday't Alpena 16 Escanaba 16 Flint 13 Gd. Rapidt 15 Houphton » Houphlon L. 15 JacKaon 10 Lanting Marquette Muskegon le Oscoda 18 Pension 17 Saginaw 14 Traverse C. 18 Albuquerque 46 Atlanta 34' Btsmarck 6 Boston 34 Chicago 9 Cincinnati 21 ______ 57 30 0 Detroit 12 9 13 Fort Worth 44 39 0 Jacksonville 64 32 S Kansas City 26 17 0 Los Angeles 81 53 5 Miami Od. 74 56 10 Milwaukee 2 -3 10 New Orleans 47 42 13 New York 37 13 11 Omaha IS Phoenix 12 Pittsburgh 11 St. Louis 21 Tamoa 42 44 19 S. Lake City 28 19 -4 S. Francisco 54 45 12 S. S. MOrle 10 -17 6 Seattle 43 38 11 Washington 39 18 Israeli troops on the occuftied east bank, Tie Isri^is fired back and there wow .no casualties in the 36-miipte exchange. The lake is. about mldway' in the canal. ..The jurtny also said it indmepted and drove back a band of saboleurs who crossed from Jordan near jMaasada, just *south of the Sea of Gaii^e last niidit. He reported the Israeli tr^ps found an assault file and a bag of antipersonnel mines, i HEUCOPTER ATTACK Jonhin reported earlier that armed Israeli helicopters struck at Jordanian forcesfiti' the southern desert yesterday and that a Jordanian soldier was killed. A Jordanian spokesman in Amman said that five Israeli helicopters o-ossed the frontio: with a jet filter escort and machinergunned Jordanians, near the frontier village of Gharandal, 40 miles north of the port of Aqaba. In addition the soldier killed, two ctyilians were omded in the attack, the spokesman lid." Greek Airliner Forced to Cairo CAIRO (AP) — An Olympic Airways DC6 plane landed at Cairo airport today after being hijacked by a lone Greek gunman following takeoff from Crete for Athens, Egyptian officials said. Airport authorities said the pilot told them the hijacker fired a warning shot over the airman’s - head through the cockpit window when he tried to contact Athens airport. Officials gave this account: ■A ★ ★ The hijacker burst into the cockpit soon after takeoff and told the pilot to fly south to Egypt. When the pilot tried to warn Athens airport, the gunman fired the warning shot. The hijacker was taken into custody and the plane’s 97 passengers and five crew members were provided accommodations by Egyptian authorities until they return. Officials said the passenger list included 27 women and seven children. OPPOSED GOVERNMENT Officials did not immediately identify the hijacker, but Cairo Radio said he was Geotge Lamoretz, 29, who had been sentenced to a year’s imprisonment for opposing the Greek military regime in 1967'. ♦ 71 39 14 12 22 14 r O i"' E C A S T ,40 Showori 50 Snovy 60 flurriao 1 XXXj tC-v. Flgurat Show low , U„,i| ftkk.y ^ - h«oloi*a Frttipitotiow tatal r»>»five acres on Cooley Lake Road near Cass-Elizabeth Lake Road in Waterford Township. NOT IN PLANNING CORNER DEVELOPMENT LAND^FILL PLANNED The Arm of Fons and Fannin had requested the change with the ultimate idea of building an industrial park. Their iiRmediate objective however, is to create a land-fill. The land adjoins the Silver Bell property and the old Silver Bell dump. Pontiac Prau Photo SUBFREEZING TEMPERATURES - The cold yesterday insured that the ice-coated trees of Lapeer County would remain for at least a while longer. Jeanne Moore, 16, of 1796 Mayfield, Lapeer, inspects some of nature’s latest work in downtown Lapeer. Holiday Traffic Takes 161 Lives In Avon Township, the committee recommended approval for a service station, motel-conference center, stores and apartments on 21 acres at the southeast comer of Adams and Walton Roads. Dan Holefca of Rochester, developer, may not have the clearance he wishes on motel construction however. Members noted that the B-2 zoning requested does not permit motels! A B-3 designation would be necessary. ★ ★ ★ The committee noted Holefca has promised to buy up existing vacant lots in Springhill Subdivision for the purpose of constructing single-family homes as a screen to the proposed development. The reason given: Apartments thqre i are in conflict with th^ Intent of the comprehensive development plan for the township. The proposed development would be partially in the flood plain of the Clinton River. Waterford Township Planning Commission had recommended approval with some reservation about the flood plain. ★ * " w The committee recommended approval of 9.7 acres on Orchard Lake Road north of Maple for a community business center. Planned is a business and office center. Two proposed zoning ordinance changes in Waterford and Farmington Townships were concurred in by the committee. Both changes -were to set specifics for office districts. Waterford also Included parking and sign regulations. All committee recommendations are sent to township boards for final action. A BUSY YEAR The committee, chaired by Elbert M. Wilmot of Pontjac, noted it had processed 206 applications in the past year, over 60 per cent in regard to residential construction of some type. Funds for the three new schools were •PIK'OVed by district residents as part of i $18.S4DDillion bond issue in December 1965. Buildings already constructed under |he bond issue include a junior high school, three more elementary schools, a district supply warehouse, seven research centers, and a swimming poo] at Adlai E. Stevenson Hi^ School. State Unveils Plans By The Associated Press Traffic accidents claimed a record toll of lives for a one-day New Year’s observance during the holiday period which ended at midnight Wednesday. Late reports pushed the count of 161 early today. THE PONTIAC PRESS for M53 Extension 1^ Yule Tree Pickup Set j'PONTlAG TOWNSHIP -- Hie liutnuti Heights Area Jaycees will dcHwt a curb pickup of resists’ Christmas tr«es tomoi^ow tnd Saturd^, to be followed by tree4niming cereoumies Satmrday n^t at 8 in a vacant lot north pi!Jlsdred Heart Catholic Church, The State Highway Department has unveiled tentative plans for the extension of M53 north through Washington and Bruce townships in Macomb County and into Lapeer County. ; Whiie construction of the proposed extension is not planned until about 1980, department representatives have met with officials from local municipalities to answer questions and discuss the proposal. The department has mapped out several alternative routes for' the freeway extension, depending on whether State Road Tax Rebate Too Small it is constructed west or east of the villages of Romeo and Almont. The primary alternate route, preferred at the present time by the department, runs west of Romeo and east of Almont. 'This route, the shortest of those proposed, would cross land ali*eady purchased for an interchange between 27 and 28 Mile roads near ’tfan Dyke. A second interchange on Van Dyke, which would help to collect traffic for the freeway, would be located at 37 Mile. At that point the extension would cross Van Dyke and proceed to the east of Al-mrnit, which lies almost directly north of Romeo. Another major alternate route would continue to the northwest from the 37 Mile area, passing west of Almont and running west of the present M53 all the way to Imlay City. The third major alternate would pass to the east of Romeo with a possible interchange near 33 Mile and Powell and continue east of Almont. The record for a 30-hour New Year’s period since World War II had been 160, set in 1957. This also was the most recent time the holiday driving period ran 30 hours. During a recent nonholiday midweek period of equal length, highway mishaps took the lives of 107 persons. ’The count was made by The Associated Press for a comparison with the New Year’s toll. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1969 A—4 BELOW, ESTIMATES The National Safety Council had estimated that 200 to 2M persms might die in traffic accidents during the period ‘ which began at 6 p.m. ’Tuesday. Bad driving weather was , common throughout the Pacific Northwest, over much of the Great Lakes region and in a large part of the Northeast during the holiday. Parks-Rec Commission Staff Moves to New Office Space Beaten Ex-Exeds Condition Better WOULD END AT M21 DE7TROIT UPl — Condition of Ray R. Eppert, 65, retired board chairman of Burroughs Corp., was reported “very much improved,’’ at Grace Hospital yesterday, where he was taken Monday (Continued From Page One) mile ratio. Oakland County, along with Wayne, Macomb, Genesee, Kent, Washtenaw, Ingham and Jackson, is subsidizing lesS-populated counties,’’ said Van Roekel. “Wayne gives more, but it gets more Mck because its population is denser than Oakland’s,’’ he said. FORMULA EXPLAINED “The formula was set up on the basis that it costs almost as much to maintain a mile of road serving one family as it does to maintain the same road were it serving a hundred families,’’ Van Roekel said. It doesn’t work in Oakland. “Many of our local roads are very old. We have subdivision streets that were constructed in post World War I days. They began as trails for summer cottages vdiich are now permanent homes. “The roads have never been built and they’re expensive to maintain. We have unique soil conditions, particularly in the Farmington and Bloomfield area. Our maintenance costs are high.’’ Can relief be obtained on the basis of federal grants? “Yes. Last year the Oakland County Road Commission received only $611.25 per mile on rural local less traveled roads while Pontiac received $1,316.31, and most other incorporated Ureas received better than $1,000 per mile for local streets. 'The Wayne County Road Commission got $1,531.18 under the same setup,” Van Roekel said. ★ ★ ★ The engineer noted the county had fared somewhat better on primary roads, receiving $6,452.45‘per mile. The reimbursement figure for primary roads in^cities and villages of Oakland County was $7,078.60 per mile. Since nearly all the Oakland County Road Commission income fbr maintenance and constructicHi comes from state gas and weight taxes, the problem is vital to the county. * ★ ★ ★ “There is a wide variation in the counties and cities between tl^e ‘amounts per mile’ actually received for frequently very similar conditions and roads,” Lomerson stressed. “Something has to be done about it.” All of the proposed routes would end at the M21 east-west freeway, some of which is imder construction, which is planned to cross M53 just south of ImIUy City. Department officials emphasized that the routes are presently being considered in “corridors” up to a mile wide, and that no precise assignments of any kind have been determined.' ★ ★ W At the meeting, individual reports on the proposals were distributed t o representatives of each of the municipalities involved, for comment or question. Further public meetings for discussion of the proposed extension are likely, department officials indicated. after he was beaten and robbed by three youths. Dr. R. W. DeBusk, director of the hospital, said he visited Eppert yesterday and “He knew and talked with md. He has lost some of his left side paralysis and some of his good humor has returned.” Oakland County’s Parks and Recreation Commissicm staff has moved into new quarters in a converted home at 2800 Watkins Lake Road. The building is on part of the Waterford Oaks Park acquisition which lies adjacent to county ^rvice Center property. ★ ★ * The 1914 acres on which the new office, two other residences, a former church, dining hall and 20-room motel are located was purchased at a cost of $150,000 earlier this year. It is part of a 110-acre parcel which the county hopes Jo develp as a high use recreation area. activities center, which has scheduled ‘ the Pontiac Kennel Club’s annual winners’ show as its opening feature Jan. 19, The dining hall is to be converted to a club house and one of the residences will be occupied by the park director. ★ ★ ★ The motel is marked for use as a storage facility. Van Natta said. He envisions a full golf course on the property, a lighted par three course, the permanent soap box derby hill and supervised winter activities including skating and sledding. MILLAGE PAYS COST Work on the golf course Is to start In the spring. Van Natta said. ★ ★ * The doctor said the prognosis “for recovery is very good.” Eppert of 295 Lone Pine Court, Bloomfield Hills, a longtime area civic leader, said he was beaten by three youths in the lavatory of the Kennedy Square underground garage in downtown Detroit, Police said a gold watch and $70 werd taken by the youths. The total cost of the acquisition, $375,000, is being paid from the 1966-ap-proved quarter mill, which was collected for the first time in 1968. The new commission quarters, decorated in browns, greens and yellows, houses a staff of five. ★ ★ ★ It is being converted at a cost of about $23,500, according to Kenneth VanNatta, director of the commission. The department was formerly housed In a section of the Welfare Building on Service Center grounds. Snowmobile Victim Is in Fair Condition CONVERSION PLANS It's Tough Sledding for 'Asfrofot' Plans for the area include conversion of the 12,000 square foot church to an LAPEER — An Elba Township man is in fair condition this morning at Hurley Hospital, Flint, following a snowmobile accident yesterday morning, He suffered severe bums and compound fractures of both legs in the mishap. Richard Artress, 34, of 44 S. Elba, driving a snowmobile on Cranberry Lake, ran off the lake and hit a tree. ★ ★ * The snowmobile caught fire while he was trapped in it, according to the Lapeer County Sheriff’s office. Pentitc Pmt PhotM by Ron Untomohror All systems appear go as 2-year-old David Koenig, 519 E. University, Rochester, prepares to take off, with the aid of his father, Martin, from a launching pad in Ponflac’s Murphy Park (right). Moments later (below), David’s first suMwar trip coipes to an abrupt halt in a thicket where the chagrined explorer contempteCSs “the eihbarrassment of it all.” ‘DRW* IN THE BUCKET’ “We get about a quarter-million dollars yearly in federal money. It’s a (foop In the bucket. The money is meted Ml a population, mileage and area ' bpsls.” 'Has anyone got any ideas for a more equitable solution? M '5 •k it 4 ;“No,” agreed Lomerson and Van Roekel. “We do think a special study should be initiated by the Legislature. We are in hopes the county will get behind such a move.” ; Can you get help from other counties? HEW AHBMimUNG : “R dO(M*t'8eem so. Only about three ire really burUng under the present irogram and moat of the remaining 80 gnbeneStting.” i.Did the raoeii adjustment of the state ihelp? I “No,” said ..Ten. Roekel. “it took I of our money fqr mat roadi .ipay and gam it to cities XhM ml UHtaa there will be even less THE PONTIAC PRESS. TIIIJIISDAY, JANtJAIlY 2, 1909 Install Zonolite Vermiculate Insulation • E-Z TO INSTALL • ROT RESISTANT • FIRE RESISTANT • ECONOMICAL 120 per Bag LUMIIR a BUILDINQ SUPPLY tlNOC tIM AUBURN HEIGHTS 10T SQUIRREL RD. UL 2-4000 Killer. Escapes With Woman's $6 Purse Snatcher Guns Down Dad of 4 ST. LOUIS (AP) - Raymond Sansoucie, 30, stopped his car and gave chase to a purse snatcher after witnessing an attack on a woman. Ir *■ W ★ Moments later, a shot was heturd. SansouciO felt in an alley. His wife, Ruth, 24, who was In the car with three of their four diildren, hurried to the Howard, 1; Raymond, 3; Debo-ITatnmy, 7. Mrs. Sansoucie rah, who was 9 Wednesday, and|expectlng a fifth child. ★ ★ ★ Witnesses said Mrs. Sansoucie arrived only to hear her husband say: "I love you." He was pronounced dead a short time later. The thief got away with the rirse of Mrs. Maude Robinson, widow. It contained $6. TRUST FUND DRIVE The incident occurred New Year’s Eve and the Grand Jury Association of St. Louis announced Wednesday a drive to set up a trust fund for Mrs. Sansoucie and her four children. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX ]44 N. Saginaw Special 'purchase at SIMMS ANNEX cf first quality steel cabinets use your MIDWEST BANK CARD to charge your purchases WIUSMIA*®* open tonite *11? 9 - Fri. 9 am to 9t30“Sat. 9 to 9 1$t Quality STEEL UnUTY CABINETS is Elmer Rosenthal, president of the Grand Jury Association, said, "This jnait made the ultimate sacrifice for society. I think society owes his family soipethlng." , Sailsoucle, a Ford Motor Co. ★ ★ w employe Uved with his family at Cadet, Mo., a rural community idKHit 60 miles southeast of Si Louis. DADDY IS DEAD — The two oldest children of Raymond Sansoucie, Debbie, 5, left, and Tammy, 7, are shown at a Potosi, Mo. funeral home where their father lies dead. He was killed while chasing a purse snatcher in St. Louis Tuesday. Debbie's fifth birthday was yesterday. 'National Guard a Haven for Draft Dodgers, Racism' 24»-30»>36»-and 42” widths Regular $24,95 to $42.95 • all steel utility cabinets-some with locks • folding or sliding doors choice of 24-30-36 or 42” widths - choice of grey, white or brown colors • wardrobe cabinets 42”-24”-30” widths 19t96 DETROIT (UPI) - A Wayne State University study has described the Michigan National Guard as a haven for white draft dodgers and a "conservative if not retrogressive force in the struggle of blacks for participation and equality” It recommended abolishment of the guard. TTie recently-concluded study, directed by Dr. Paul Lowinger, a WSU psychiatry professor, focused on a Michigan National Guard battalion that served in Detroit during the 1967 riot Permission to conduct it came from Lt. Gov. William Milliken, who was acting governor. if if if Among Lowinger’s conclusions was a claim that the guard has a “white tradition’’ with "elements of a social club,” and that "training In urban racial problems, while desirable, will not bring meaningful reform.” ONLY 2 BLACKS It pointed out that 79 per cent of the guardsmeif in the study were Etetroit area natives and Eighty-six per cent of the guardsmen said they joined the guard to "beat the draft” while three per cent had seen active military service. ★ ★ ★ Despite the fact that most observers had said the U. S. Army was most effective in controlling the riot, guardsmen credited the Detroit police first and the guard second, the study said. if if if When asked if they felt they had become more hardened against Negroes after the riot 43 per cent said they had, while 31 per cent report^ no racial changes and 25 per cent said they now had a more favorable attitude toward Negroes. Lowinger summarized the average guardsmen as a 25-year-old white Detroiter “with a year or two of college, employed in an office or a skilled factory job. Often his father has a tetter job than he does.” just two out of the 295 men were Negroes. About 98 per cent were high school graduates and George Wallace was listed as the presidential candidate favored by 22 per cent — a greater percentage than any other candidate. SAVE on Genuine 'PANASONIC' RADIOS-RECORDERS, PHOI^OGRAPHS and STEREOS AT SIMAAS . . . and tHARGE IT' ...... . instant credit at Simms, choice of 30 days, same as cash, plan on purchases of $10 to $150 or use your AAIDWEST BANK CARD} Vertical or Hortiiontal Operation FM/AM PORTABLE RADIO Goes Where You Go $39.9SValttm As shown -r modal |RF68O0 with/dynamic {speaker. Lighted slide rule tuning. Tone control. AC power jock. With cose.' Automatic ROeord Player With Bata aRit Oiiif Hovar $49.9S Vatum ,, 4* ' , 4 Plays ;45 rpm and 33Vs, rpi|t records. Automatic changer, too. Fits Panasonic systems, model REi 767 and RE 7070. , " . ^ Tape Recorder STATE $125 Value AC solid state capstan driver monaural recorder with 3 speeds, 2 speakers, tone control, 7" reel, remote pencil mike with stand. Model RQ706. SGLIO STATE-8 SPEEO 4.Traok STEREO REC9RDER iiH.tifiiia«ttt. SfMMSJ? $179.95 i^value-4eapifan I drive, vertical or hdricontal operation. 2 pencil type mikes, tone and volume control for each chonnel. Built-in 6" oval speakers. Pause control, too. Sbund on sound. Speakers, as shown, ore air optional extra. Model RS750S Park Fraa for 1-Hr. in Gownlewn Parking Mall HavtTiekttttai 37 GLENWOGG AT PERRY in the Kmart Shopping Center OH SALE ONE WEEK ONLY-HURRY A' The Biggest Dress Buy Ever at SIMMS Misses’ and Ladies’ Dresses Hundreds of Styles to Choose From For, Every Occasion-Every Day Values to $1498 -Your Choice The most tremendous purchase ever of ladles' and misses' dresses, hundreds of styles to choose from for every occasion and every day. You'll find Bonded knits, 2-pc. styles, drossy crepes, textured theater suits, 100% Orion bonded shifts, feminine A-llne styles, silky 100% Celoneso'acetate prints, Arnel shifts, cowl neck tailored blouse on A-llne flairs and many others; All first quality and American made. Sizes 8 to 24Vh but nbt in all styles. So come early and see this tremendous selection, you'll surely find several to add to your winter wardrobe and preview stylos of spring and summer dresses. Ladies' Wear—Main Floor SIMMSiS OOgortii SagiaseSL rrr .Ml $mr-' lOT: PRESS HyrMStrttt ,, ? ' THURSDAY. JANUARY 2, 1969 SStoaiM el*thr5Saiil JONH A. II lUOMAM M. ntMIMM Trcuurtr untf nnsns* Otmw Pontiac. Michigan 6805$ now««> R. rmomAu. ii prttidtnt Md Pul^Uiiwr BSU|%« leNN A. lllur . ^ ,, , — utd AdmtUlof Arm Mooour OlrouUtlon M*nMf«r o. ifumAUi JMBUf LeoirAdvtrttitBt IfAQdtw BuiMit Expenses Control Budget Officially. Richard M. Nixon assumes office as president on Jan. 20. In one profoundly important area, however, it will be a year to a year and a half before the new administration can really begin to take over from the old.^^ , President Johnson’s last major constitutional duty win be to present the new Congress with a budget under which the government will be asked to operate from July 1. 1969 to June S6,1970. ★ ★ ★ Although Congress has the final say on spending' and although the new president will not be without influence on Capitol Hill, the basic Johnson budget for fiscal 1970 is, some-the Nixon adndfistration will have to live Witb^nd ac- cept responsibility, for—for a full quarter pf its term in office. It is estimated that out of every Federal dollar now scheduled for spending, the president has control over less than 30 cents. The balance has already been committed by previous acts of Congress or, like the interest on the national debt, is automatically provided for. Rep. Wilbur Mills, D-Ark., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, has pointed out that because there are so many of these builbin growth factors, Federal spending next year would go up by $7-$10 billion over this year’s $185.1 billion without a single new appropriation bill being enacted. Even the most economy-minded president can’t get around that fact. Voice of the People: Freedom on High Seas Discussed by Reader I commend The Press for your strong stand for freedom on the high seas. However, your condemnation of the Soviets’ feelings towards U.S. destroyers in the Black Sea is most extraordinary. I shudder to think of the hue and cry your newspaper would raise, if Russian destroyers decided to spend some time cruising in the Gulf of Mexico. r Why should Soviet destroyers cruise in the Gulf of Mexiro? Why should American destroyers go to the Black Sea? One would think that the Pueblo incident would have diminished the arrogance of the American military establishment. RICHARD C. SWARTOUT 91 E. CHURCH, CLARKSTON (Press Reply: Both seas are completely open to world travel.) . Marking Time! Airport Ground Congestion Fed by Employes Bob Considine Soys: Airports in nearly every city are growi^ fc^er and busier, and the bigger they get, the more people work there. Some aii^rts have actually reached the point where their employes outnumber passengers and have begun contributing heavily to surface congestion in terminal areas. A survey of 18 major airports in the United States, England and France by American Aviation maga-2ine found this problem common to all of them. John F. Kenueidy International Alrpori in Niw Vork enq^loys 42,S00 i^fsons, and at any given time as many iri^SO.OOO of them may be on duty at the terminal. Pairing a peak ground traffic hour, ito manyas 6;000 vehicles |o atr^jiK, amiidovt of these are occupied by airport-based employes. London’s Heathrow employs 42,-200; Orly in Paris has a work force of 22,000. At all three of these air-^ ports, employes outnumber the daily average of passengers. Many of the airports surveyed have plans for some sort of public rapid transit system to serve the terminal and relieve pressure on highways and parking (facilities. Unfortunately, notes the magazine, theip woidd seem to be tyw employe groups in the world r . less inclined to use public transportation than airport employes. Even where such transportation is available, the survey found that the overwhelming percentage prefer to drive their own ■ cars.. New Jobs Aplenty Seen in New Industries Tens of thousands of Americans are worldng at jobs that didn’t exist, in industries that were unheard of, making products that were unknown 10, 20 or 30 years ago. The electronics, computer and space fields are prime examples. There is no reason to believe that tens of thousands will not be working at jobs a few years from now that do not exist today, although no one can predict what they might be. We do, however, have some good ideas about what fields will expand tremendously in the near future. ★ ★ ★ High school and college career counselors attending a recent panel discussion in Chicago, sponsored by the Water and Wastewater Equipment Manufacturers Assodation, were told that “the best of tomor- row’s brains will be needed in the water-supply and pollution-control industries if the Nation’s economic life is going to survive, let alone grow.’’ ^ The Federal Water f^Uution Control Administration estimates that some 111,000 more professionals, technicians and operators will be needed in the next five years in water pollution control alone. Fortunately for the Nation, young people today are searching more for personal satisfaction than monetary reward and seem to gravitate toward public service careers. But fortunately for young people, there is good pay and chance for advancement in Government as well as industry. Americans will drink deeply of the talents that flow in this direction in coming years. In Washington: Mao Fears U.S.-Soviet Deal CRGMLEY By RAY CROMLEY WASHINGTON (NEA) -Communist China’s insistence ear. I understand Elbinger’s nude scene was but the latest in a series of questionable events. Only after it was given tacit acceptance via administrative silence did the Senator ask why. Rather than being critical of his Interest, one might better ask why it took him so long. ★ , /'★ ★ More power to the Senator. May his investigation strengthen the “improvement of life” we seek from our universities. And may more of our citizens uphold, by action if necessary, those standards in life which we maturely believe to be worth fighting for. DAVID BRADBURY 4009 HARBOR VISTA, ORCHARD LAKE ; The new baseball commissioner will make a solenm declaration of independence, Uken himself to Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, promise to restore baseball as the national pastime, then go back to his regular job as Walter O’Mafley’s butler. PLANS FOR TED Sen. Ted Kennedy will begin mapping plans to speak at increasingly expensive Democratic dinners In 1971 in behalf of congressional and gubernatorial candidates — just as Dick Nixon did in 1966, restoring his image. There will be less trouble ^between the Israelis and the Arab world when Israel gets its F4 Phantoms. It The world will be sadden^ by the deaths of four international figures. Mickey Mantle will call it quits, and there will be the greatest going-away ceremwiy since Sir Harry Lauders last last farewell. Moreover, Arthur Ashe will turn pro for $500,000, almost as much money as Bill Hlden, Paavo Nurmi and Sonja Henie made as amateurs, and, of course, the San Francisco Giants will win the pennant for Willie Mays. (I’ve been predicting this for years, come to think of it.) FINAL PREDICTION Now my final, positive prediction: You will repeatedly violate the following New 'Year’s resolutions: You’ll cut down on smoking because you know it’s no good for you. You’ll say “no thanks,” to the guy who says at the end of a long hard day’s work when he offers you a cold beer or a sparkling, icy, bone-dry martini. ★ ★ * You’ll do 20 minutes of push-ups the first thing every -rt--------------"p----------------------—----------------------------------- morning. « i • Y.uu^y sowhatswr^ ^Fur’ Resotutiofis foT tkc Ncw Year Question and Answer . How can I get in touch with the American Civil Libertiei Union? DEFENSELESS REPLY The Detroit office of ACLU handles all cases in this area. It’s located at 808 Washington BovXe-vard Building, Detroit 48226, phone 961-4662. They tell us limited resources make it necessary for them to be very selective with cases they handle, but anyone requesting it and sending name and address will be mailed information about the organization. Question and Answer I have a beautifnl singing canary. Several months ago he moulted and didn’t, sing as usual. At that time I got him ■ new cage and he ham’t resumed his singing. I’ve bought everything I find at the pet counter to encourage it, but it’s been more than six months. Will he ever sing again? MRS. E. T. S. REPLY It’s hard to say, because we talked with several bird dealers, and they all said there could be any number of reasons, why he isn’t singing. However, a dealer in Royal Oak suggested a remedy which seems to work with many birds, even though he can’t tell you any good reason why it should. First, if the bird is a year or older, put it on n strict diet with no frills. If he’s too fat or out of condition, he won’t sing. Then cover his cage a couple of hours each day and keep doing that until he starts to sing again. If that doesn’t work, cover his cage well with a blanket so he won’t catch cold and take him to a bird dealer for an examination. Several are listed in the yellow pages. Let us know what happens. with that?” when you learn that the house next door has been sold to a Negro, Puerto Rican or Mexican-American family. You’ll attend the PTA meetings and take control pf them away from the gas bag who runs them, even if it means missing a good night ball game. YOU WON’T FAIL TO VOTE You’ll let your mayor, governor, representative and senator know you’re alive by calling, writing or wiring them when you feel they’ve done something right (or nvong), or if you feel you have a good idea for the city, state or nation. You’ll never fail to vote. You’ll stop searching for loopholes in ypur income tax returns. " You’ll stop Cheating at solitaire. You’ll swallow, the temptation to tell a joke reflecting on any minority group. You’ll atop iifiiMMlr(Hi>piiig in fiip hope of Imprenring your superiors. By DICK SAUNTERS ’Ha the ^e to he a bit KAUNDERS Once a year, we aiU get a c h an c e to make a batrt of resaluti^ CENTER 3030 Oiai* Highway WATERFORD nAU 507A Hlghlonrf Ciauaia Laha - ."Phww6T3-9»3l NORTH nILL CENTER 1431 NarlO Maln—Rochattar Ph^ 63I-M37 TEL-HilRON CENTER 3 Sauth Talagraph^Pontlac Pha^a 331-7317 1 I I VINYL I PHOTO ALBUM [ FRAME ■ LIMIT ONE ■ With this coupon ond every roll of Koddcolor film ! I brought in for developing and printing by our lob. I I Cunningham's coupon expires January 6, 1968. | A WHITE SALE at CUNNINGHAM’S? i ...CERTAINLYI W«*v» g«t thw most tpwetdeuTar iovings you’ll find on tho colorful "Whito Goods” you nood mostl Don’t fill your linon sholf without chocking tho sholvos at Cunninghom’i •’SOFT TOUCH” FOAM BEDfHLOW beautiful comforters, fluffy Dacron for wcumth without weight Sale 12.99 72x8rtwin Fantasia nylon comforter, filled with buoyant Dacron*. The scroll stitched water color floral pattern reverses to a coordinated solid color. Washes and dries beautifully, will last for years to come. Choose from blue or gold in 80-53-10, 72x84' twin at 12.99 or 80-53-12, 80x90' full at 16.99. In our Blanket Department. Harsndnaire naver-press dust tufflo ih colorfast sky blue, dk. blue, pink, yellow, avo(^o or white. 82-36-18 twin size at 6.99, 82-36-19 full size at 7.99 and 82-86-20 queen at 8.99. Sale 14.99 72x9(ytwin ..k~- Bfajasty by Barcslay, a diamond stitch quilted comforter that reverses for longer wetu*. The shdl is of the finest cotton, the filler is lofty Dacron* that can be machine washed without matting or pilling. In dk. gold/lL gold, verdian greoi/lt. green, dk. rose/lt. pink and dk. blue/lt. blue. 8040-11, 72x90' twin at 14.99. 8040-12, 80x90' full at 16.99 and 8040-14,108x90' queen at 29.99.* See it now in Hudson’s Blanket Dept. *AjUm4daii$/»Mimy. Knifa i^tsd dust ruffla of polyester and cotton in white. It. blue, dk. blue, maize, pink or avocado. 82-12-10 twin at 8.99, 82-12-12 fall at 10.99 and 82-12-14 queen at 12.99.* MBow t toMb/er delcRny. KCXJI3SON’ Dowtitom DOroU NartMand CtvUer EtuOaM Cmter We$Uatt4 Ctnier « PonHaeMaU « * Oakland MaU > THE,PONTIAC FHESS, THURSDAY, JANUAEV 2, 1969 : I' A-O : 'I* if'S: STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE Now’s the time to visit Hudson’s for one of the most money-saving offers during our Savings-Go-Round event! If you’re filling in a stainless steel flatware set you started years ago, or even if you’re beginning anew, check these fantastic buys. Hudson’s brings you outstanding savings from two famous makers, Oneida and International, right now in Hudson’s Housewares Department and save! \ * SALE 4.48.„dS. Oneida (above) saves you money by. the place setting. Eight beautiful patterns to choose from, each in ,6-piece place settings that include dinner kn.'/'e with serrated blade, dinner fork, '^^SALE14.96t<,26.21 .........-...-..... salad fork, soup spoon and 2 teaspoons. From Oneida’s fine Community line — Venetia, Paul Revere, Frostfire and Wopdinere, s.98a setting. And from their Deluxe line — choose Chateau, Lasting Rose, Textura or Wintersong, sale-priced at just 4.48 a place setting. Visit Hudson’s Housewares Depanment soon International (below) saves you money by the 25-piece set. the .Selection includes six handsome patterns, each in service for four. Get 4 dinner knives, 4 dinner forks. 4 salad forks, 4 .soup spoons, 8 teaspoons, 1 tablespoon and a storage tray — all at one low price! Other pieces are available at most any time ft;om our open stock. Priced per set: Carino or Royal Bouquet, 14.96; Sea Island or Concept, 18.71; Coronado, 22.46; and Navaho, 26.21. See these in Hudson’s Housewares Department. 1 ... '' r ' •i '/V' iiiiwiiiii ^ w w A Nuclear Nonproliferation This was a bright spot In the Treaty, of 25 years duration, aviation picture, but traveling was signed July 1 in slmulta-|by air became not necessarily neous ceremonies at Washing- the fastest way to get there dur- ton, Moscow and London. ★ ★, * In^ the peak vacation period. Early in the month, air traffic Stoe Al natloMi were slgnato-1 controllers had launched a. by- ries to the treaty aimed at halt- Ihe-book safety campaign that ing the' spread of nuclear pow- slowed service still further er; France rehised to sign, al-'^Wlc planes circled the over-though she agreed to abide by crowd^ skies above major a^ Its provisions. Ports. Not Hailed by President Johnson gers unhappy, trapped for hours as “the most Important interna-,in holding patterns, but so were tlonal agreement since the be- waiting families and friends, ginning of the nuclear age,” it air TRAFFIC JAM was designed to restrict the pos-l Hearings and discussions byi session of nuclear weapons to^Q„gj.ess, the Federal Aviation the United States, the Soviet Un-1 the Civil Aero- neapolis to Miami became the month’s first victims of an armed fellow traveler. Two weeks later a Jet carrying 64 persons from Los Angeles to Miami was captured over Texas by a self-described Castro agent and forced to fly to Havana. He kept control even during a tense refueling stop at New (Cleans. The political pot continued to boil and Sen- Edward M. Kennedy squelched rumors, hopes and predictions by declaring that he would not be available for the vice presidential spot on the Democratic ticket. >; POPE AND THE PILL I To many the most personally meaningful event of the month I was the encyclical, issued Julv 29, in which Pope Paul reaffirmed the Roman Catholic ban on birth control by any wrtiQclal means, a pronouncement that sparked demonstrations and protests from both laymen and clergy. ion, Great Britain, France and Red China, while allowing other countries to develop nuclear devices for peaceful purposes nautics Board and airlines offi-; cials resulted in an FAA proposal few federal relations to linor: it arrivals at major airports and] Such countries would be protect-0,5 Aelds ^ most small ed by the United States, Russia i_|gjjgg ^uj-ing peak traffic per-and Britain should one of them come under nuclear attack. | Another aspect of the aviation SYSTEMS UMITATION |news was a rise in aircraft More encouraging still was an piracy. . announcement by the United | * * ___ States and the Soviet Union that| On July 1, 91 passengCTS they would begin talks “in the aboard a plane flying from Min-, "on limiting of- ' ! nearest future' fensive and defensive nuclear missiles systems. Meanwhile, after a decade of Intermittent negotiations, regu- ■ THE WORLD IN 1968 " The Pontiac Proji, ■ PontioCt_Michigan I P.O. BOX 66. I POUGHKEEPSIE, I N.Y. 12602 s I Enclotod it $..... ■ Ploato tond .... copiot ! of The World in 1968 at * $3.64 ooch incl. tax to I I Namo...... I Addrott... I City ond Stolo I Zip No.... Divorces Evtren P. from Hdtn Schafer. Willie E. from AAordoelor Buford. Robert from Mlldrod M. Paul. Karan from Gerald Atoptoomri VIrsInIa M. from Grant X. Sim Alma B. from Maivtn F. Cryderman; vnillam D. tiw Boatrlca J. Boham. atlMronr Amy J. Williams. John $. from $usan B. Colman. Theodore L. from Lalla N. Ronne. Donna R. fTOm Arthur E. Allen. Roberta L. from RoUle C. Wamaor. Carolyn M. from David W. Markey. Alloen M. from Harley Ci Bernerd. Fern from Sidney Fine. Judy A. from Raymond. B. Smith. Robert P. from Shirley A. Auborg., Felicia A. from Lee H. Sanisio. Josephiiia D. from Joseph J. Shannon. Ruth N. from Owen P. Smith, i Nathan frwn yetfa Isakoff. tiMuram W>rrom Mavin F. 1 George W>from Merle E. Thigpen. J a; Cameron. Joyce C. from Kenneth B. Hill. Loren from Ruth M. Davenport. Phyllis C. from Charles G. Mendelson. Wilfred L. Jr. frpm Rosemary Trigg. i Sind gifr cqrflficoto;;fo: Nam*, I AddiWte........... I City ond Stat*.,.. J ZfF Mbi; *1? j * I I W(SS. tsT. ■ < Thu Wadjy^.SNi41 Z «^)..i?Tha,Wer¥i« I .... The Tamil Is PptMd(StM).... IT FOR THRIFTY . HOMIMAKBI VAUIE . Shop «t Your ACE Start < 5070 HiOHlAND RD. Ill tIm WBttrfgrd Shopping ',v P|au. IThe Wemn Rapprt (SI .SM. ■.. IhhMeg i I Out >f hiMl (Sl.Mt.... Tduelph aed'f I Out ei hraal (S3.0BI I Tragedy(SS.I3)....iiKloMdisS/ Country St|iiire ,;Shop Bloomfield Miracle Mile JANUARY WHITE SALE! WASi-IERS & DRYERS Spedal ShvingsNowl 2 SPEEDS! 3 CYCLES! AUTOMATIC WASHER • SSiieedWfidh • 3 Cycles to Chooae • Surgilator Agitator • New “Super-Wash” UMKtt UDAVt SAME AlCASH! tdpptiiUiee 422 West Huron FE 4-5677 Open Monday and Friday Ewning* 'M9P.M. MONARK will remain OPEN ALL NIGHT long ... in Fact from 10 this morning until 6 P.M. tomorrow . . . NON-STOP . . . UNTIL 20,000 YARDS of Carpet has been sold regardless of prjginal cost! UF-VEM inventorv COME IN ANY TIME! tax forces MONARK TO SACRIFICE 2M00 YARDS OF EXCESS CARPET STOCK! HOT COFFEE and ROLLS SERVED AROUND THE CLOCK! Mona* murt imm.dirt.ly diroo.. 20,000 yard. kM .n lU ■ T «"«ivobl. quobly rt caqrat I. .„ B,i„, room measurements with you and we'll ^ .ntfont, „. obligatim, „timo“.° **" DOST BUY CARPET UNTIL YOU CHECK THIS SALE! HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS OH SALE! ARMSTRONG ROLL FLOORING IN 6 FT. WIDTHS Coronelle, Sabril, Terrina, and Embossed Linoleum AS LOW AS *1 75 per Kn. ft. l>ONTIAC ONLY BORG WARNER FAUCETS PONTIAC ONLY 22x19 CAST IRON LAVATORIES With Faucets and Pop Up Drain Reg. 39.95 PONTIAC ONLY DELUXE CABINET WATER OOWmONER 15000 GRAIN WATER GONOITIONER With Plaoticon Brine Tank Reg. $171.55 Effactiv* Thru January 2?8 Btoeinfidid Miittcl* Mils 2215. S. TslAaraph Rd. Open Daily 9-6 PHday9-9 % 4101, E. Baldwin Rd. Msar tbs Cemgr of Heily-ond Baldwin Roodi WALL to WALL This carpet Reg. Sells for $12.95 Can’t Come In ... Call us and We’ll Come to You! 331-4091 . CARPETS, Inc. 148 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ‘ S|dwteom opon dally idr© 8.:. Sat. 10 to 7.,. Closad Sunday! Member Chamber of Commepee Free Parking ANN ARBOR, JACKSON, LANSINO, II INI, KAI AMA/OO, BAnil CRtEK. SAGINAW, RONIIA'' \tHE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, I9«0 St^iel Ball Flung dt Hirohito TOKYO (UW) — An ex-von-vlct roM tn ■ crowd of 14,000 persont shouting “bansal" today and Pred A steel ball from » Biin«ihot at Etnp^ror HirObUo. , No dpi was hurt but it was the first Urns in 46 years any Japanese iuited violently toward the man tinv once worshiped as a god. " ■'-* * * Police'^ arrested Kenzo OkuzaU, do, and identified him as a convicted murderer who once told a prison guard he would die gladly if he could kill the emperor. He blamed Hirohito for'World War II, police said. ^ Shortly after police hustled OkuzaW the emperor’s balcony, a second man set off a smoke bomb and snaked away Into the mass humanity, leaving behind a trail of pamphlets urging the aboli tion of the monarchy. He was not caught. LAST ATTEMPT The last attempt on Hirohito’s life was in 1933. A would-be assassin was arrested and ex ecuted (or the attempt on the then crown prince. Today’s Incident took place during one of Hirohito’s rare public appearances. * ★ ♦ The emperor, forbidden to the view of Japanese until post-World War II reforms directed by the late Gen. Douglas Mae Arthur,- had stepped onto a balcony of his new $36-miIlion palace to renew the New Year’s appearances he halted five years ago when work on Uie palace was started. Standing with the 67-year-old OkuzaU said he fired the jiteel I consisted of two smoke candles ball, similar to those used In designed to billow up when lit. Japanese pinball machines. It did not reach the balcony. OkuzaU^ told police no one around him appeared to notice his act. They were riiouting the traditional cry of loyalty to the emperor who was waving back. DREW NOTICES Okuzaki decided, he said, to do more. So he shouted “Yamasaki, why don’t you fire a pistol at the emperor?" This time the crowd around him noticed. Police came running. On the balcony Hirohito gave Police said Okuzaki was on their list of “dangepus persons’’ because of his feelings against the monarchy. ’ They said that during his im prisonment he six times flled lawsuits for abolition of the monarchy. monarch were ^mpress.^jj^ Incident no notice. He and Nagako^Crown Prince Aklh.to,jg„„red the Crown Princess Michlko^ who is ^0^,^. expecting her third child in the spring. Prince Hitachi, younger son of the emperor, £n d Hirohito’s Hitachi. daughter, Princess 18 YARDS AWAY The crowd and Okuzaki were 18 yards away. ITie^man was quoted as telling police he resorted to a “rash act’’ because he had grievances against them. He ★ ★ * • The steel ball Incident came when Hirohito made the first of eight appearances on the balcony during the* day. Seven more times he came back to receive the adulation of the crowd. Palace spokesmen said 197,870 persons came to the palace to said he was questioned Christ-emperor, mas Day for a traffic violation,! Police said the smoke bomb When the treasury's low, there’s just one pleoe to got Or, Call the Qood Quys atL CBIGKEXDELIQBI 1302 W. Huron ~ Call 682-3800 500 N. Periy ~ Call 334;48S9 Delhery AvaiMtU 0 enneyt iaa*W0 t-ioesT miAiiTV " SEMI-ANNUAL ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY I FOR WOMEN I FOR MEN! 60 ONLY; 100% MONSANTO BLUE "C” NYLON JEWEL NECK SLEEVELESS SHELLS Machine wash and dry. Prints and stripes. Broken sizes. MEN’S ALL WEATHER COATS Zip lined or unlinod. Solids and ploids. Penn Prest finish. BtoIcm sizM 0rtginally$6-now 2.88 Originally $25 to 32.95 ~ now 18.88 M ONLY: V NECK PULL OVER SWEATERS. 75% Mohair/25% Wool. Broken sijes 34 to 40/Creom and Black. Originally $8 - now 5.88 20 ONLY: MEN’S WINTER JACKETS Quilti jined or pile lined. Leather or jNylon shell. Broken sizes and colors. Origlnaliy li^Otto 30.00 » now 13.88 40 ONLY: CARDIOAN SWEATER 25% Wool 75% Mohair. Assorted colors. Broken sizes 34 to 40. Originally $9 - now 6.88 MEN’S COfirON SHORT SLEEVE TURTLE NECK , KNIT SHIRTS. Good size ossortment, s-m-l exlg. Machine woshoble. Good colors,; wonted Styles. Originally 2.99 - now 30 ONLY: LADIES’ BETTER BLOUSES Button down collar style. 65% Docron/35% Cotton. Good color assortment In v^onted pastels. Sizes 32 to 3S. 3.88 350 ONLY: BOYS’ BETTER SHIRTS Originally $5 — now < 1350 01 ■ Choose fr I Pre school Choose from knits, wovens, nylon and royOn blends. Short or long sleeves. Pre school ond school age. 4 to 18. Many one and two of a kind Originally 1.98 to 8.98 - now 1.88 10 ONLY: 100% ACRYLIC ONE PIECE JUMPERS Assorted pastel plaids. Broken sizes. 8 to 16. f OR GiRI.S Originally $11 - now 8.88 GIRLS’KNEE HIGH SOCKS 100% Nylon Stretch. Fit girls 7 to 14. Good color assortment. 100 PAIR ONLY: LADIES’ SPORT SLACKS ^ Choase from wools-coHons-nylons and blende Plaids and solids. Belted-Hip huggers and Flore legs. ^ « Group one — Originally $5 and $8 — now 3.00 Group two — Criginally$10and$Il — now 6.88 Originally $1 - now 66< 300 ONLYi GIRLS’ SWEATERS FOR FINAL CLEAN UP .Long sleeves in cardigons and slip overs. Broken sizes and colors. Originally $4 tO $1 - HOW 2.88 and 3.88 130 ONLY: LADIES’ SKIRTS REDUCED Assorted fabrics Wools, Nylons, Royons, and Cotton Blends. Brokenifzetond styles. P OO " Originally $9 and $9-now 5.00 OriginallySIOandSIt ' now 7.88 I FOR THE HOME too SKEINS ONLY: KNITTING YARNS. Dork colors. 4-oz. size. 100% Wool 60 ONLY: WOMEN’S COATS Lolest styles. Fitttsd and straight. Self trim and Fur trims. Broken sizes. Many one-ot-o-kind. ^ O Originally $30-$40-$50-now 20.88 •0 31.88 Originally 1.19 - now 88' 300 YARDS BETTER FASHION FABRICS Choose from 100% arnel Irlcote troppe prints. Dressy juttoh Solid ond patterns of rayon and acetate. ' 1.44 Originally 1.19 and 1.98 - now 25 ONLY: LADIES’ BEHER JACKETS Corduroy, Nyfont, Wools and Blends. Values. Originally$24to$35-now 23.88 30 ONLY: 6Vz FOOT SCOTCH PINE ARTIFICIAL CHRISTMAS TREES. These are futi large size trees. Sold in Original cartons. 120 PIECES OF FASHION JEWELRY Pins, Eorrings, NecklOCes and Bracelets. Metols and assorted sets. Originally $3 - now 1.00 Originally $2 - now 1.22 Originally 16.99 - now 8.88 12 ONLY: REDUCED FOR FAST CLEAR UP. Ironstone dinnerwore sets. Assorted patterns. Large plates and cups. 7.88 Originally 9.98 and 10.98 — now LADIES HAND BARS: ~ ‘ . Corwoi and PloMie Jn Mfral or box look. Block or Brown. Originally 5.99 - now 2.88 20 ONLYl ARTIFICIAL CENTER PIECES Piostic but life like. Easy clean. O OQ 0riginally$8to$Il-now O.op to 7.88 20 ONLY: LADIES’QIRDLES Fwfa#fHon*d lenflih. White Oflly-size S-M-L Assorted fabrics. ^ _ Originally $5 - now OeOO S ONLYl TABLE MODEL CLOCK RADIOS High Impoet plcwltc cases, with alortn. 24 38 0i!|ginaU]^$3l - noia , IWONLYtLAOItS’ANOONTEFULUKNOTH ' NYLON TMOCTILIPS. 1 Bfaek and pllik^snly. Broken tlies 32 to 40. lace trims. Proportioned jeng^ ^ ^ MiiMW88 m-W , * 2.88 500 YARDICF BITTER DRAPlHf AND UPHOLSTERY FABRICS ' . Reduced. Solid*, ffartil*, prints. 45" ond 54" Wide, Machine woshoble. 1.44 OrighinHy 1.81 to S.SI a yard - now nm HWKOiBnK tiior No Money Down. Terrific Savings The Month of Specials 90 Days For Cash . If you buy nowl Gibson NO-FROST Side-by-Side 2-DOOR REFRIGERATOR- FREEZER 358«» NcrHee end 5-Y.er Pretntifve Wew nnl, iecludmll 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH ... or, • IS Monthly with No Money Down! LESS THAN 32 INCHES WIDE - and nmch lower, too, thenk* to Gibson euper-•afe RH22 ineulation and mini-thin wall deeim! Other deluxe features: Two Freeser Baskets-Removable Freexer Door Racks-Cantilever Refrigerator Freeier Baskets—Reipovable -- , . ^ . Shelves adjustable to any height you wish — 24.5 qt. Poreelain Crisper — IbVa-Ib. Porcelain Meat Chest - Butter & Cheese Compartments - and more! CHOICE OF AVOCADO GREEN OR COPPERTONE 1ma|(in«! A huge, full-length No-l roat Freezer with almost 2(K)-lb. Capacity . . . PLUS a big No-irost Refrigerator ... all in one compact cabinet that requires - no more flbor space than most ordinary refrigerators! This GIBSON is it. And can be yours'right now at our LOWEST PRICE EVER for a de-luxe side-by-side 2-Door! Big 16.8 cu. ft. Capacity — 21.9 eq. ft. Shelf Area! But hurry — they’ll sell fast. Be Prepared—For Winter With A NEW cooiJduroK HUMIDIFIER Big Pictnre 19” PortcAle TV (Diag.) Delivered—Serviced Warranted 90 Days Same as Cash 184 Sq.In. Rect. Picture 139“ free Delivery, Service and Warranty! Only $7.35 monthly or, 90 Days Same as Cash The family .favorite because it rolls anywhere easily for viewing — yet delivers full-size rectangular pictures- Has famed Zenith quality FM speaker — Handcrafted chassis — 3 IF stages. Humidify your home beautifully with this furniture-styled Coolerator Humidifier. It has the rich look of walnut in a thick, textured vinyl finish that is both washable and mar-resistant. Enjoy more comfort with less heat and protect your home and furnishings with this handsome humidifier. e Evaporates op to 16 gallont a dqr e Automitio Humidistat • Two-$peed Fan : e Automatic Shut-Otf • Removable Vaporizar-Filtor e Water Level Indlaator • Operating and Refill Signal Lighta • “Angla-Aire” Disekarge Also Available 1 Speed $59.95 -Deluxe litonatic EMc Dryer $ Full adjustable beat regulation for any fabric, including permanent press. Easy clean lint filter. Large capacity. Gas Model $144 No Money Down — 90 Days for Cadi 1969-RCA COLOR TV Here It h New Big Screen 18”(Di.*.) Portable Color NOW ONLY »359‘»5 DELIVERED - SERVICED - GUARANTEED EASY TERMS - 90 DAYS FQR CASH this 18-inch In any popularity contest, (diag.) portable wins in a landslide. Look at lhe«e outstanding qualifications: true po^ able Convenience - net weighs less than W pounds than some 14-inch models); big 180 square inch picture; vivid, trueHo-life color picture; plus an easy-oii-the-budget price tag that’s unequalled anywhere! 51 W. HURON OPEN MON., THURS. and FRI. TILL 9,:0Q t V % f. %< X Ifc * 'A * A'; #1.... - .. , 9 • * * * 4 '-ftV;'^*'*'^'''''••' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JANUARY 2. 1969 Mamed Man Could Write This Alone if By DICK WEST ^ WASHINGTON (UPI) - One "of the traditional year-end features on television is a pro-' gram of reviews, forecasts and analyses by a team of network correspondents who have key assignments at home and abroad. Most readers probably aren’t aware of this, but a lot of teamwork also goes into the •production of this column, w ★ w A column as broad, deep, encompassing and comprehensive as Ibis one is never ^e work of a single man. Not even a married man can do it alone. I have a team of field observers ndio supply me with background information, keen insights and pe n et ra ti n g analyses. All I do Is weave ft together into a rich tapestry of enlightenment. ’ Once a year I bring the team in from key posts around the world for a brainstorming session.'At such times we try to anticipate some of the trends and developments that will take / shape in the coming year. In case you missed the afprementioned television program, you might find our discussion a worthy substitute: "Let’s hear first from Randall PlimsoU, who has been observing President-elect Nixon. Randy, based on what you have seen of the incoming ad-, ministration thus far, what do you believe the new president’s first act will be?’* “I believe his first act will be to get warm. It'a iwually pretty cold at that outdoor inauguration ceremony." '» "Thanks, Randy. Ibat’s a very interesting pbservation, ahd it seems to tie in with the general feeling that Nixon will take a pragmatic approach to the presidency." •NOT HALT-FROZEN’ "Yes. He is pragmatic enough to realize he can’t run the country half-frozen." “A good point, Randy. Now let’s hear from Gregory Piltdown, who has been observing the Paris peace talks. How does the situation look to you, Greg?” ★ ★ e "More trouble ahead, I’m afraid. After the negotiators finally agree on the shape of the ccmference table, they may have trouble finding the table. Iliere pren’t many square tables with only two sides." w ★ ★ “You’ve given us something to think about, Greg. Also .standing by is Fletcher Mishms^, our economic observer. What’s the outlook for 1969, Fletch?" FRANC ANSWER "Internationally, the big question is whether De Gaulle will devalue the franc or whether France will devalue De Gaulle." "Good thinking, Fletch. This should be enough stuff to keep the column going for the next six months." FREE 10 DAY HOME TRIAL ONiCOLOR TV 90-MYSEimeE No gwottwoik wfion you buy Color at HlBhloiMl. Tiy color IV In ymr homo for 10 days at ouroKponso, Bo mho yew are Mtioflod. SAVE! UMiiUU. QOUn IV GOMBNUTION TV wMi hMI mud A«MM nAYCaiwTy — liiilMf InWml QlrtMwt UHtjnmi'. <475 miTiiinr gHBiT SAVE m MM 23” CflUB IV COMUMHOII ^’^593, REQ.IHY smiiM S'iT/ NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY MNTIAC MAU miUAM RD,, 60iRIR II.IZAMnil LK. RD. • OMLY ft tt • f flMIIE nt-ISSI OAKIAND MALL IN TROY iti* • « 1« f ><• PANA SPECIAL Now! Your favorite Dana spray colognes at savings A giri can novar hovt anough of thoia unforgalobla Dano fra-groncasi Tabu, AmbuA 20 Carats. Spray, 2 oz. la mm mm la/D REVLON SAViNSS REVLON ANTI-PERSPIRANT and DEODORANT Regular 4.00 Save 1.00 *.. REVLON SILICARE PROTECTIVE LOTION for Hands and Body Regular 2.50 $|50 Save 1.00. REVLON CLEAN and CLEAR Rinse Off Cleaning Lotion Regular 3.00 Save 1.00,,.. Mk Regular 2.50 Save 1,00,,,. REVLON SEHINQ GEL ^ New Protein Ricji Formula $|50 REVLON INTIMATE SPRAY COLOGNE 2 fluid oz. $450 Regular 3.25 Save 75c.... REVLON ETERNA **21» CREAM Exclusive Formula Regular 15,00 $1000 Save 5.00,,,, CHRISTIAN DIOR COLOGNE with Atomizer • Miss Dior • Oiorissime e g.gg Valus ULTRA-FEMININE SKIN TRIO 3 ways to lovelier skin from Helena Rubenstelm 4 oz. face cream or moisturizing emulsion, reg. 8.00 5.00 WIND & WEATHER BEAUH AIDS by Tussy combats roughness and chapped skin. Now half price. $2.00 LOTION, 12 fl. oz..T .00 $4.00 LOTION, 24 oz. with pump...............2.00 $2.00 CREAM, 8 oz.........T .25 PLAY IT COOL. a a AND STAY DRY! Shulton's Dry for that dry-as-a-desert,- oll-day-securo feeling. Anti-perspirdnt spray, reg. 2.50... T .25 Roll-on or cream, reg. 1.00 ... .50 Beauty Bath, 4 oz., reg. 2.50.. T .25 DOROTHY GRAY SPECIALS! Now for Ipvelier skin, night dnd day. Dry skin cleanser, reg. 3.00 2.00 Moisturizing hand cr., reg. 2.50 T .50 BONNE BELL rlng real estate taxes to meet the teachers’ payroll. Eight per cent of the teachers are to be paid their December salaries immediately. The others will receive their hack pay before the end of the current school year. NO DATE SET No new date has been set for an election to resubmit the levy because school officials remain cautious about voter reaction. But It was reported some school board mem- bers wish to bring the Issue to a vote in February. School Supt. Woodrow Zinser met Monday with the school board to discuss its campaign strategy aind research. Besides the 12 mill additional levy, the administrators also are concerned this year about the renewal of a 7-miU operating levy, now In effect. The operating levy whose funds have kept the schools open for Ute last two years comes up tor another vote In November. JANIIABY WIHTHTO SALI’ Hurry to Sears... for the biggest, the best selection! We know that this is an event many people wait for all year, so we’ve planned tarefully for this big sale. We’ve included fine percales and muslins in all>cotton or luxurious PERMA-PREST® fabrics. To help you create the mood you want, we’ve chosen gay prints that bloom all over ,.. stripes and patterns ... dreamy pastels in a rainbow of glowing colors, including white. Don’t wait... .-...A.....:. :..-.........come in,today.an.d„8aye!......_.... _.....; White Sheets in Cotton or Perma-Prest PERMA-PREST® Muslin 2.79 Twin, Flat or Fitted .... 2.26 3.79 Full, Flat or Fitted .... 3.26 1.79 Pillowcaaei.....1-56 pr. PERMA-PREST® Percale 3.19 Twin, Flat or Fitted .... 2.!>.'> 4.19 Full, Flat or Fitted..3.55 2.19 Pillowcasea.......1.88 pr. 7.50 Queen, Flat or Fitted . . , 6.50 9.98 King, Flat or Fitted . . . 8.98 3.29 King I’illowcaees, 2.99 pr. Cotton Muslin 1.99 Twin, Flat or Fitted . .. 1-50 2.29 Full, Flat or tilled - . . L70 . 1.09 Pillowcase*..........83c pr. Cotton Percale 2.39 Twin, Flat or Fitted .... 1-82 2.69 Full, Flat or" Fitted .... 2.07 1.39 PlUowcaee* ........ pr. l.Ol 4.99 Queen, Flat or Fitted . . 3.99 6.99 King, Flat or Fitted . . . 6.47 2.19 King Pillowcase*...pr.1.99 Fine Percale in Full Color Pastel Percale 3-19 Twin, Flat or Fitted .... 2.68 3.69 Full, Flat or Fitted.2.98 1.99 Pillowcase*...... 1.58 pr. Duo-Tone Stripe 3.49 Twin, Flat or Fitted . . . 2.98 4.49 Full, f'lat or Fitted.3.98 2.69 Pillowcase*......2.33 pr. Twilight Flower 3.49 Twin, Flat or Fitted .... 2.98 4.49 F'ull, Flat or Fitted .... 3.98 2.69 Pillowcase*..........2.33 pj". 7.49 Queen, Flat or Fitted . . . 6.78 9.98 King, Flat or Fitted . . . 8.98 3.49 King Pillowcases .... 3.28 pr. Plaid 3.49 Twin. Flat or Fitted • • • 2.98 4.49 Full, Flat or Fitted . . . 3.98 2.69 Pillowcase*...... 2.33 pr. Petal Rose Muslin 2.98 Twin, Flat or Fitted.. 2.S1 3.98 Full, Flat or Fitted . . 3.51 1.98 Pilloweatet.....1.78 pr. Colorful and Wrinkle-free Perma-Prest Ice Cream Pastels 4.29 Twin, Flat or Fitted .... 3.74 5.59 Full, Flat or Fitted....4.74 3.29 Pillowcases .......2.78 pr. 8.49 Queen, Flat or Fitted,... 7.88 10.98 King, Flat or Fitted . . . 9.88 3.98 King Pillowcases.....3.48 pr. F rench Bouquet 5.49 Twin, Flat or Fitted .... 476 6.49 Full, Flat or Fitted .... 5.76 3.98 Pillowcases......., pr. 3.76 9.49 Queen, Flat or Fitted. . . 8.67 11.98 King, Flat or Fitted .. . 10.87 4.89 King Pillowcases . . . pr, 4.47 Wildflower Daisy 5.49 Twin, Flat or Fitted .... 4.76 6.49 Full, Flat or.Fitted=..... 5.76 3.98 Pillowcases.......pr. 3.76 Kismet Stripes 5.49 Twin, Flat or Fitted ..... 476 6.49 Full. Hat or Fitted____S.76 3.98 Pillowcases ^ pr. 3.76 CHARGE IT ^ les Quick and Convenient at Sears Sears Domestics (not at Grosse Pointe) Once-a-Year Pre-Inventory Carpet Sale Sculptured Carpet ... casual 100% nylon 044 tJ H.M. UWI1% IN. 444 “Vainnoni” .., a solid lex-tiUed eariiet made of oasy-caro nylon pilot In 6 decor-Bior ctmrs. Outdoor Carpet . exceptionally durabla 099 Om.Y4. Textured Carpet ... all-nylon pile Soil-hiding Tweed ... durable nylon pile Care-free Acrylic ... luxuriously carefree Patterned Plush ... lavish 100% nylon tnOirtslaneag Valaa MVIIT% Rag. Ml H.Ti. tAVItl% RSI.MI C99 0*1. Y4. wn»% Rag.1.H 61^.. UV[»% Rt|.l.4l “Holiday” ... ideal for basement, sunporch or den. Polypropylene, the miracle fiber. 6 hues. “Super NylsurP’... deeply-etched scroll pattern for contemporary or clastic decor. lay I active home*. Easy-to-care for nylon in 6 lovely ht^ “Ghalel’’ . . . amasingly easy to clean. Textured acrylic pile comes in 10 decorator colon. “Baybrook” ... an elegant design in thick nylon pile, for wall-to-wsll luxury. 13 hues. w Phone Sear* for Shop-at-Home Service A Sesrs decorator consultant will call at ywtr conyenitnee, show you taiiirdes, free estimates, exjterl advice. Of course, there's no obligation. , ' NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan ^ Stori Floor Covsring Dspt. bpea Maadayv iFttisti Sstarday * i* Trnifl^, |fad«aafc|i'-T *• ao^tmix anp Dowhtown Pontiac, d FE 5-4171 GLOBE furniture OFF... JANUUY ILEARANGE We have taken a large selection of odds and ends from our warehouse and floor sample stock. You con take V2 off our ticket pricel Mae., Thurt., Fit. *HI 9 Two*., WatL, 4 Quality and Service for 22 Vaora in Detroit GLOBE Furniture Cu. 2135 DIXIE at Telegrap! Budgat Taima Availahia 334-4934 90 Oeys Some AiCesb THE PONTIAC PllESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1909_ Europe Cautious of Revamp Despite Money Mart Crises BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! LONDON (AP) - After tne most threatening jtiT of financial upheaval since those dail; postwar times when cigarettes were worth pnore tnan monev, Western Europe is still moving with extreme caution toward reforming the international monetary system. A U.S. congressional subcommittee headed by Rep. Henry Reuss, a Wisconsin Democrat, has urged the U.3. j,ovemmnt to take the lead in changing the system But the inn v.e conservatism of some European monetary officials, couploj with their governments, stolid ddfense of their own Interests, could block reform. * * The Reuss commi lee favored more flexible exchange rates, which might avoid confrontations of the type played out between France and Germany at the November finance ministers’ meeting In Bonn. Paul McCracken, president-elect Nixon’s choice as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, is also reported to lean toward this solution, if necessary. * *. * But an Associated Press survey found no support in Europe for flexible rates, although officials said this 'dea and others are under study. With all its faults, the Europeans generally agree the present system has worked better than any other, REDUCED FIGURE French policy still backs kn Increase in the price of gold and a return to the 19th century gold standard. But sincr**he hemorrhage of some $3 billion of gold^ from French reserves last year,' the French have cut a much reduced figure on the world mone-l tary stage and won no major adherents. In at least three countries—Belgium, Italy and Britain—officials said they do not expect Charles de Gaulle to renew his attack on the U.S. dollar by boosting gold. Once Nixon Is settled In the White House, Western Eruope may be ready to join In a gener-i ai realignment that would change the relative values jt the dollar, the German mark, the French franc and other currencies to ease the strains of the system. Officials are keeping their fingers crossed that the system won’t be blown apart by another crisis in the meantime. OPPOSED BY BLOC The Organization for Econom Ic Cooperation and Development, the Paris-based ?l-nation group composed of the non-Communist world’s major trading countries, has come out against major changes in the monetary system. The OECD economists who write its surveys said in December that more cooperation among governments under the old rules is the real need. That means more squeeze for deficit countries like Britain and the United States to get back into trading balance by exporting more. It also means pat sur plus countries such as Germany must cooperate by buying more. ★ But the OECD unwittingly put Its finger on the trouble with the present system. In order to shift it back into balance, British and U.S. squeeze measures will cut down world trade—slowing dmm its growth by one-third in 1969, the OECD experts estimated. TOus, a system designed to promote trade is being held together by measures which do exactly the opposite. A plan to combat huge flows of money which endanger currencies, put forward by Guido Carli, governor of the Italian National Bank, is the only idea that seems to be catching on in Europe. It Is more an extension of the old swap system that any-thiiig new. SPECIAL AGREEhfENT In the 1960s, Western governments arranged a network of credit lines to protect each other’s currency from “hot money’’ flows. As speculators pulled out money, central bankers swapped it back—but only by special agreement among countries. The new network, still under study, would be automatic and would work out of a central pool of about $5 billion. The British feel the United States, has wasted energy worrying about De Gaulle when Washington could have used its political leverage on West Germany to upvalue its strong currency. That could have avoided last November’s crisis, caused partly by the refusal of both France and Gerniany to change currency values. * W A The British, having suffered a devaluation, feel that other countries should be more willing to do tbe same when the situation demands it. As the world’s heaviest debtor, Britain is in no position to force its monetary ideas on anyone. But officials feel that the most immediately stabilizing factor would be a speedy activation of the new special drawing rights to expand monetary reserves by creating credit, as good as gold. SOME WANT MORE Some officials want as much as $5 billion worth of these credits to be created each year-more than twice the amount envisaged. They are due to be activated in the middle of 1969. Most outspoken of all have been the West Germans who hold the trumps in Europe’s largest reserves and trading surplus. -------- ★.....★' It appeared from German statements that if anyone pays the price for change it could be the franc, the dollar, the pound —but not the West German mark. ’ BECKWnH-EVlNS Aliul Jiinry Caipit ClearuN Compiets Caiwl- beckwitn-evans continues YEARLY POLICY OF OFFERING FINEST CARPEnHS DURING TNE JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE. cimiE IN AND SEE THIS REMARKABLE CARPETING AM SAVE! Pad-lifstallation SmcIpI itlMtad proupi of NYLON PIU CARPETS. SerPlI pbf. tama and pluahaa with Iwxwiy appaal. COMPLETE 5 » ineludeti Carpat-Rubbarcraft Pad-lnatallation iq- Yd. Decaying algae on a lake sur-1 face use up the free oxygen in the water, causing other forms of life to die. xf ILAMENT NYLON PILE LOOP 12 m\\ ofMcial grouping of good gudllty filomont ny-lono. Thoto corpoU will woor lot* boHor than fho low-prico moy Indicoto. S 359 •q. yd. SPACE DYED NYLDN PILE TWEED Hoovywoight conflnuout fil* omont nylon pilo twood •poco dyod for oxtro boouty. y||. 399 NYLON pile PLUSH Hoovywoight pluth. Awoll-oblo in bronio gold, ontiqud gold ond ooft gold. Pricod at loti loco dton doolort Sl|a ytfs ooid. OLEFIN PILE LOOP YWEED 4 toloro voiVioin. Hoovywoight Horculon^ Otofln pilo. Roeontly diocontinuod. tq. yd. HEAT SET NYLON PILE TWIST Donto, tightly twiitod nylon pilo. Good looking toxturo. Choico of 7 lino coloro. Soto •q. yd. LUXURY SMOOTH PLUSH PUIN Doop pilo thick and donio. luxury ploin pluoh, long color lino. Corpot hot o high luitor built in. Comporo ot $10.98. Solo pricod ot 799 sq.yd. HIQH LUSTER NYLON PILE PLUSH Thii fin# corpot hot tho high oppooroheo of o fino volvot. 10 luiciouo docorotor colon. sq. yd. 601 NYLON PILE An wnuiuol hoovywoight 501 nylon pilo. Cortiflod 10 yoort prorotqid woor guor-entoo. 3 ^Hcod ot tq. yd. THICK NYLON PILE TEXTURE Sovorol corvod quolitiot. 4 color«. Comporo ot $5.98 to $6.98. Tho90 oro hoovywoight brokon lot Itom*. Pricod ot $3.98 for our Joni^ory tnvontery dooronco. 399 tq. yd. Remnants Priced to Clear Siia I2>a4 11117-S ii>a-4 tua-a miaa IUI-1 ttiia-ii taia-i iiati-T lUII-t init-t mta-s »>tt,a ii«ta-( i2it-a iiiii-a 12(13-4 12x11-3 12(13-3 12(23-1 12(11-3 12(12-1 12(11-1 I2(IM 12(12-1 12(3-2 12(13-1 12(11-3 12(1-3 12(IM 12(11-1 12(8-1 12(11-1 12(3-3 12(1-13 Itam 3«aca4a Carvta Mm( araan Twial OaM (Hokaa Caraal Malan Kilchan Carpat ■alga CarvaP PvaeaPo Kitahaa Carpat Craan HanPam EaiaraM Craan RanCaai Yallaw RanPaai Craan Slue Pvaaapn RanPain aint Carvad OaM Pluth Caapkarry Pluak Craan CarvaC Piirpli Pluak Craan Twist PvaDads Caerad , Capri Craan Cnraad ■Ian Pluah Awsndn Unp OH lakHt Musli Orpngn Rnndam ■lup Crtnn CaninitreinI Crania Twaad Martini nuth Anatdt Rnndsin Ratpkarry Rluah Rntiiun RnM Carpal Kit Oaaia Crtnn Rnndnm Mndium llun Randani Oman Unp Rtign Shag Cold Ptuah Avssade Huth Aniinua Iranas Uap Rrssn nuth WhHu nuth Rrangu Raaduai Comp, Sava Siia 112.N 33 Jl ll(S-3 2M.08 113.33 1S(1S-8 I28.M 11.31 12(12-1 1N.88 13.31 12x1M 228.00 113.IS 12x29-1 195.00 •4.11 12(131 00.00 44.0$ 12x21-0 214.00. 140.08 11(13-3 150.?0 33.3S 12x21-1 1U.N •1.08 12x25-0 240.10 120.01 12x13-9 100.N 33.3S 12x12-0 1I0.N 100.08 12x11-0 100.N 133.3S 12x14-8 00.00 SSJS 12x12-2 1I0.H 80JI 12(14-3 100.N 180.05 120.00 10.9$ 0x9 100.H II3.3S 12(18-1 13I.N 10.1$ 12(1-1 1MJ0 S3JS 12(11-4 3H.N M.08 12(13-3 214.00 133.3S 12(11-1 1H.N 110.0$ 12x10-2 210.00 133.3S Uxll-0 101.N H.S$ 12x11-0 105.M 34.3s 12x11-0 120.N r$0.i$ 12x1-2 no.oo 80.05 1211-1 las.N $0.0$ 12x0-0 210.H 12S.SS 12xM 110.H 50.0$ 12x11-1 195.N 10.0$ 12x14-0 107.00 SS.IS 12x1M 100.00 10.0$ 12(13-3 130.N 11.9$ 12(13-3 190.N $4.0$ 11(19-1 I2S.H $4.0$ latMi 133.M S4.SS Htm Said Random Rrana Random Yallaw Random Capri Craan Rdadam Rlun Crtnn Shag Olivt Craan Twaad Rlua Oarvtd Capa Cad Craan KH Carpal Craan and Cald Loop MatHni Twial Mttdtw Cald Kit Carpal Rlua Oratn Kit Carpal OaM noth Orangt Shag Rtiga Raadom Rtootds Ctrvtd ■alga Uap Rlua Rathraam Carpal Craan Cnrvtd Rad Rtndsm Cnitdnn Cnrvtd Rvaeadt Rluih Rad Kil Carpal Cald Twaad Avaeadd Ortta Random Groan lathmom Carpal Avocado Carvtd Rad Oarvtd Candy Stripn Crown and Clack Kit Carpal Craan Shag Craan Loop Avacada Random Clue and White Kit Carpal Saanith Oliva Rlush Capa Cad Rlua Kit Carpal Saiga Random Geld Random Comp. I2I.M I4I.H IIP.M 2S4.H 2I1.N 31g.H 24g.gg 340.00 383.03 433.H 113.30 11I.N 3N.N 113.14 333.11 3N.M 31.03 34.N 111. N 134.00 112. H 2at.ia 130.33 111.33 133.33 133.33 113.33 33.33 34.33 33.33 33.H 1H.33 133.33 233.33 243.30 340.33 223.H 333.33 SlTO H.II 14.33 33.13 113.13 113.33 111.13 141.11 131.91 133.H tn.33 133.31 33.31 113.33 11.33 113.33 121.33 44.11 33.33 31.31 43.33 34.13 113.13 3I.M 19.13 33.33 13.33 33.93 33.33 43.13 33.33 33.33 13.33 33.11 1M.IB 143.33 MI.II I4I.M I33JI Open Sunday 12 to 5 P.M.; Open Monday 'til 9 P.M. BeGfewJtK?Cvcxrts FINE FLOOR COVERINGS 27 S. TELEGRAPH - TEL-NURON SHDPPING CENTER FE 4-9544 __ Convenient Credit Always Available ■ ■ ■ Call for In-Home Service $3.98 to $5.95 Sport Shirts >2.99 and «3.99 Premium cottons, many imports. Also Perma-Press Dacrbn/cottons. Checks, plaids, solids, neats. Regular and button down collars. $12.95 to $35 Outer Jackets «9.98 to *24.98 Fine Wools. Quality Cottons. Rugged Corduroys. Some with hoods. Hip lengths, suburbans, sur-coats. Many with pile linings. A rousing selection. $8.95 to $15.95 Sweaters *5.9910*9.99 All Wool. Wool/Mohairs. Elegant Shetlands. Orion acrylic. Lambswools. Cardigans. Pullovers. Newest style necks and patterned weaves. giO' Save on Furnishings $10.95 Fur Felt Hats. Entire Stock ...........$7.99 each 2 fpr $15.00 $5.00 Men's Pajamas. Entire Stock ............2 pairs $7.75 75F Ban-Lon* Stretch Anklet Hose....... ......6 pairs $3.50 $1.00 Knee-Hi Nylon Stretch Hose .............6 pairs $5.00 6 for $6 Boxer Shorts! Cotton T-Shirts ............ .6 for $5.25 6 for $5 Cotton-knit Briefs! Athletic Shirts ...6 for $4.25 Contempora,ry Neckwear Reduced from $1.50.......3 for $3,p50 Reduced from $2.50.........3 for $5.00 Charge II Ar No Down PaymunI W Many moniht to pay '4 m '' ' Pontioc Molly T«i«groph of Elizob4th Lokc Rd. Phona 682-1010 17-19 S. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Division of Thomot Jowolry Co.. Inc. (9m OiifpUutjg 332-4231 MANY MONTHS TO PAY - SAVE TO 1/3 BEDROOM FURNITURE ^CC Modern, Colonial, Provin-cial by Bassett/ Broyhill and reg. to other famous makers. 9.95 Up to 1/ DININGROOM 73 OFF, FURNITURE reg. to Modern, Colonial, Provincial $349.95 CHAIRS OFF Swivel Rockers, Lounge teg. to Chairs, Reclining Chairs $149.95 OFF WALL ACCESSORIES Reduced Modern, Colonial, Provincial OPEN MON., THURSDAY and FRIDAY ’TIL 9 P.M. FREE DELIVERY FOUR COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS Quantitiss Limited Many one-of-a-kimi items FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED NO MAIL or PHOIS ORDERS PLEASE SOFAS up to Modern, Colonial, Provincial by such famous manufacturers os Kroehler, Broyhill, etc. Vi OFF DINETTES Modern, Colonial, Provincial reg. to $299.95 up to !4ofF reg. to 249.95 LAMPS Table lamps^ floor lamps, / 3 OFF pole_ lamps. Modern, Colonial, ProviitQial. reg. to $49.95 HIDE-AWAY OEDS i7’“ Dual-Purposi Furniturt /3 OFF A solo day, a comfortobl9 foll- b«d with inneripring mattfiiiS by f0 1249.95 MANY OTHER ITEAAS THROUGHOUT THE STORE ALSO SALE PRICED f- r,: SKIER’S Special NMMMttf I—miyi»d>ci««iew4i UMIcmI PtifM Onliis HART ’I /MERCURY METAL SKI PACKAGE i A l T ia.UIIINUII POLES and TIES # IBUPOO RELEASE TYPE BINDmiS ^ -}_ -4*- ^ • BININNQS INSTALLED to FIT BOOT • NON-WAXINQ POLY-TYPE BASE • FULL FAOTORY WARRANn • ONE YEAR QUARAIITEE Complete Set 99" nSgffi^ai PhnauNi R ENddlaNaR OvmWIMV vf'-' SAVEONCASUALBAGS IN FAVORITE STTIES g97 ChooM from a colkpcHon ^ smart slylM flt tWs pries. Dons .In brownopbkicklaaehsfwllksvlnyl. t,-i> • • f'T ?tIttMVRON CENTER - PONTIAC MAUL THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1969 sMm i ' m JANUARY CLEARANCE Hundrsds of Hord^o-Match Bargains from Our Famous Makors in • DRESSES • SUITS • COATS • JACKETS • SLACKS • SNRIS • SWEATERS • BRAS • GHUilS • UHGERIE* ROBES •OLOUSES • WARM SLEEPWEAR • BAGS • WARM GLOVES* LEATHER and SUEDE JACKETS ’A.V./1, NoHon's laadlns manufadurara ... many you ssawWiijr_lssaits. ,,• ArtsMUs issl Is nsl RniaH • U|Hsri«MrimissaiB '‘•-Istsns inNnnsi' • WssliisIssBy ssebdM me ■Wssliiset • iwir^ . RSfUilNSSlSI Smart Styling, top quality . $0711 and economical! Sfcanwiato stop by for s' ileiiieintfsHon todsy. Ho sWasBcn sf ewisl SAWYER DELUXE SUDE PROJBCYOR WiMiEaay Edit Tray OMplata REmOYE CONTROL OF FOCUS, SUDE CIUIIGE, NRO REVERSE Airoquipt Airto-Foeiit matffmAr puassoLow ‘ —---- Slide Projector OHAROErr-W DAYS SAME AS BUN! THE CAMERA MART TehHuroH Shopping Center 65 S. Telegraph - FE 4-9567 Sale. Dress shirts. Dur most famous label. EUAS BROTHERS BIG BOY 29 S. Taloraph Aeross from Tal-Huron Silver Lake' Rd. and Dixie Highway ANNOUNCING!! A New Service!! Custom Made Draperies and Slipcovers, ^Hundreds of Samples to Choose From. Excellent WorkmmMp and Service. Whites. Colors. Deep tones. Button-downs. Spread collars. Regular cuffs. Convertible cuffs. French cuffs. Dacron/cotton. Reg. *7.50 & *7. Now«4.99 J ■ Call for Appointmant 3 for *14.75 Hurry. OSMUN’S Oori Open Every I (12 MHO A F^O IM the Tei'TvMive Mdi (TMlinph A12 MHe) t'TH 9... PhOM 3M-IMBS ■ TM Hate eeator SI .1 j Fj. ' 'i ^ ^ if i * ^ ■ 'r. Tlicy can be downright heartl^aking. What good is it to find a |125 cashmere topcoat for $99.90 if you can’t find it in your size? That’s the difference between a sale and an Osmun’s sale. ' i , ,• j same overwhelmmg assortment td famous>brand men’s clothing ^ou always find on our racks. Names like Eagle, Petrocelli, D’Angelo, Ratner, Ronald Bascombe, Martinelli, Conference Naturals, Phoeni^ St. Stanley lacker, Esquire, and French Shriner, \ \ So if you find a $110.00 suit on sale for $89.90, there’s a better chance you’ll find one in your size. See? Sales can be wonderful. Come to purs, , * ; , ; j'f. /'i.'*.\ i... Baby Is of Christening Celebration AP Wlnphtit By SHIRLEY GRAY This^ia the way some ofjhe world’s women celebri-Hek will appear 20 years from now, according to pqrtrait artist Birney hettkk. From left afe Lynda Bird Robb, pictured at 45; Jacqueline Onassis, 60; Princess Grace, 60; Sophia Loren, ^ and Elizabeth Taylor, 57. Lettick was commissioned by the Ladies Home Jounal to illus- trate a feature on graceful aging for its January issue. Compare the ladies with current pictures, shown below, before heading for your mirror. Mary Eliubeth, tbe firstborn cbikt irf State Rep. and Mrs. William #. Hampton, was chrii^ned recently at a Sunday ceremony in Pontiac’s First Presbyterian Church. f''s " Mary Elizabeth's mother is the formitr Betsy Bradley. The baby, bom Sept. 17, sailed through the formalities with nary a squall, her mother reports. Both sets of grandparents were thera, of course — Mr. and Mrs. James Bradley of Crest Drive and the Verne C. Hamptons of Brookside Drive, Bloomfield Township. Also there were two great-grandmothers, both on young Mrs. Hampton’s side — Mrs. Allyne Kitnmins of Florence Street and- Mrs. Charles Bradley of East Iroquois Road. LYWA ROBB JACKIE ONASSIS PRINCESS GRACE SOPHIA LOREN <*-<- LIZ TAYLOR Author to Play Lead for Stage Prerm^ “ThO’Second Coming of Beft” which has its world premiere this evening at Meddow Bro<^ Theatre will, feature autbor-notor Ronald Chudley in the title rolai Ourt^ time is 8:15 p.m. . ’■ '★ it C»Wley’s new tragi-comedy deals with a mhtt who stumbles Wright at Workshop Attending tbe University of Pacific’s Hpilday-!n-Mexico Painting Workshop is li^axwell Wrifdit of Scotch, I^e., The class, an annual event during the Christmas-New Year’s period, was held fids year in Guaymas. ^ ABIGAIL VAN BUREN. ^ : lJ^^ABBYrIamawidDW,aii:^.I. lioe in the same imttr^nant bidldin^ with a very fin»:. gsntlerasii, aad,»wt’ve become wwy'fBodlffrinids. He is UMfitid but be ban » separation fr«8l hif wife. He pays her a big alimony, but she Won’t give hun a divorce unless he gives her a very large settlement, which he doesn’t want to do as he figures he may outlive her. (She’s 81 and he’s 84.) ^ I am not ever entirely at ease with this man as I am afraid his wife might sue me and I have a pretty nice savings myself. She’s very clever and I have heard that she still' watches him very close. He takes me out to dinner, and I have him in for meals, and maybe we watch a little television. We both enjoy the companionship. I think you get the picture, but I’m not looking for trouble. CAREFUL ★ ★ w DEAR CAREFUL: Ask your lawyer how much “companionship” the law allows a man in your neighbor’s circumstances. I think I get the picture, «h, but ff'^ aren't cirefiil,. you could get ithefirame. <»' to. ■A' . DEAR ABBY: As a Chaplain in Viet-.(Akm, I wmfld like to hay something to wives and |drl friends who bave nM -over here: If you havg a “DEAR JOHN” type of letter to write, please DON’T. Yesterday I saw two meif who received “Dear Johns” and I can tell you It wasn’t a vf!ry pretty sight. I Just sndle and say nothing, ;but It has gotten'to the point where I. fed like a b^ming'idtot, pretending to> believe all that stuff. ★ w ★ My fiosband has 1^ a loner aU his life, and this woman’s husband is the first really close friend he has ever had, and I hate to disturb the relationship, s. ★ a ★ A toy workshop will be held by the University of Minnesota Women’s Club Friday, at the Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. Robert Cunningham. The program will be under direction of Mrs. Robert Kenning of Birmini^bun. " Cohostesses for the salad luncheon will be Mesdames: John Costello, Arnold l^wson, HaroldNielsen and A. L. Maimstrom. There from out of town were Rep. Hampton’s sister and her husband, Mr, and Mrs. George Kuehn, of Ann Arbor. * ★ ★ The Hamptons ii^e planning to slip away fw a cpuple of days 4 ' * * “They wanted it to be very quiet,” ha sidd. “They didn’t want any publicity or ceremony/’ Robinson said Secret l^ervlce agents! whiaked the young couple away from New York shortly after their Dec. .22 wedding and had them down here. They left to spend New Year’s Day with his parents In Hioenizville. Pa- *Tve known the Elsenhower family for many years and some months ago I happened to see David and I told him about the club,” Robinson said. The cottage has two bedrooms, a living rO(»n and a kitchen where Robinson said Julie cooked their meals. ★ *' * Robinson said Secret Service agents assigned to members President-elect Nixon’s family set up housekeeping in a garage.adjacent to the cottage. “I don’t know how many there were,” he said, "but they were here all the time." During the KVday stay, Robinson said the couple “swam and walked the b^ch and played golf.” P ftoblpson said the newlyweds left the cottage for Christmas dinner at Nixon’s > new Key Biscayne, Fla., home, a trip to the Bahamas the following day and to attend church Sunday in West Palm Beach. He is the grandson of former President^ Dwight p. Eisenhower and she is the daughter of President-elect Nixon. Announcing the Redder Sale on Telegraph Ro£|d It’s that wonderful time of the year when we have our wonder* ful sale and this year, because it’s “bed-der” than ever, weVe called it a *'Bedder Sale!” Come see for yourself what 114 bedrooms on sale look like. You’ll want to buy one even if you don’t need it. WbeR it comes to bedrooms... these buys are bedder. Many are floor models and one-of-a-kind, so hurry Importsd contemporary drottsr, twin mirrors, chest and headboard. Reg. $599 — Sale $299 Lone high chest, oiled walnut. Reg. $179 — Sale $89 American of Martinsville Girl's Bedroom Set, Spanish styled in pewter, includes double dresser, mirror, chest and twin latice headboord. Reg. $459 — Sale $229 Williams Bach chest, hutch, desk and chair. Colonial Maple. Reg. $289 - Sale $144 Solid cherry Bach chest, hutch, corner desk, corner hutch and extra hutch. Reg. $489 — Sale $245 Williams oak Bach chest, hutch, corner desk end chair. Reg. $225 — Sate $117 The Better Bedroom People on Telegraph Road house of bedrooms 1716 S. Tiligraiili M., BiNRifiiM, litwttR Miracii MRi «mI Onkanl Lafca M. STORE HOURS: MONDAY * SATURDAY 9 TO 9 • CAIJ. 334-459$ dlWMlbi - ■ t i * / 4^ "'i * .1/... Mr. OMKl Mrg. THE PONTUC PRESS, THURSDAY^ JANUARY im •J VJCKm LYNN LANDSPARGER Ngorng Drtuf ' • anntmncg > the betrothal and June wms of their daughter, Vickie Lynn, to John S: Kerm. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. M«t E. Kerns of Lake Angelus., '■ Miss Landsparger is a graduate of Michigan State Vnwersity. GRAND RAPIDS (A Edward Kenneth Saylea was born la IMS and Us ta^ r. Kenneth brother, •Edward, tvas born eight minutes and for ihtfome Hove Wedding at Home tax deduotlcm purposes — one year later. Eighteen-year-oM Mrs. Del bert Sayles of Grand Rtydds gave Urth to (he twins at n;5S p.m. IViesds^ and U;03 a.m WednMday, at a Grand Rapids hospital. ^ w ★ ‘Tm awfully proud,'* the Sl< year«Ud father said. *‘I mt a tax exemptkm for one and for the second, I guess I just got the thrill of having a New Year’s baby. Taxpayers are entitled to MM exemption on federal income taxes for children bom during a calendar year. The father, who works in i Grand Rapids factory, ad mltted,” I wasn’t r e a 11 j lt.\ ,, _____________Mi far, I need ev( double. I have a bassinette and diapers and thUgs for one baby," ha aald. . Sr ‘★'.'<1* The first dilld weighed five pounds, four ounces and the second four pounds, nine ounces. The twins sind their mother were reported In good coiUltion. The ieoimie has one other (diUd, Shawn Allen, v4x> will be two years dd In March. boCKHOLM. SWEDEN A Swedish Woman gave Urth Wednesdi^ ' to quadraplets, three boys and a girl. The condition of the children deterkwated during ttie night, they were put Into incubators. The mother, Mrs. Ulla Britt prepared fw I Adrienne Edith Hicks and ’ Officer Candidate Edward ; Welling Erricksm HI, USA I spoke vows Saturday In tlm I home of her parents, Mr, and ! Mrs. Arthur E. Hicks of West 14 I Mile Road,' West Bloomfield j Township. ; The bride chose a pink wool ^A-Iine dress for the early af-Iteraoon ceremony, She carried a bouquet’of wMte carnations Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Zalac Jr. were honor attendants. . The bridegroom is the scm of Mr, and Mrs. Edward Er-rickson of Phoenix, Ariz. Pianist Changes .Concert Program Eugene.Istonin will perform the B^thoven Piano Concerto No..:,4 with die Detroit Symphony tonii^t and Saturday radier tiian the originally programmed Brahms Second Piano Concerto. Also, the Sibelius Symphony No. t will be played in place of the Beethoven Symphony No. 4r which has been rescheduled f« performances on February 20 and 21. Istomin requested the change in the concerto. Cut Kraut Quickly You will And that an adjustable kraut cutter is fast and easy to use when slicing cucumb^ for pickles and to cut com for canning and freezing. was really happy, said -'This is Numt kind of knocked m( said. Aiom Loses Her Influence Mom is a apparel rare made the time the purchase is made. ★ ★ ★ SI, had bMB flvan hormone Waatmmts ' for hi-fertility by Prof. Carl Gemaell of Uppaala. Hie treatment ^ quently results in multiple births. . The Janaaons have no btlaW children. ^ MAZAMBIQUB One of the quadruplets bora to Clara Matanguane on Dec. 19 on New Ymut’s Eve, it was reported today. * ♦ * The baby boy was believed to have died U sapticemia, a tope of blood poisoning. Anottiw boy 1 In sorious condition, mi the remaining glri and bto were said to be in aatisfoctoiy condition at Uourenco Marques Genera Hos|dtal. Mrs. Matanguane is a IS^mar-old African housewife. Youn Men’s Apparel Manufac turers Association. Sons researched said mothers held sway 69 per cent of the timj in ages six to 12, 39 per cent from ages 13 to 15, and 18 per cent for 16 and 17-year-olds. OUTSIDE Other influences, in order ^ of significance; Friends and older boys, advertising and store i, their own ideas, influence of idols such as televisfon; movie or othir entertainment or sports peraonaiities. r 1 ' ' ' ■ BISHOP SEWIND CUSSES ‘ JPTiifer Term 1969 Waferford Township Sehool Oistriot Regialratien wiU be held in the library ef Watarfwd tmiiihip High School, 1415 Cra'scent Lake Rd. ’ on Jamuory 6 and 7 from 7dX) to 8:00 P.M. All Olaaeaa Rafia Hia Waak af Jaiwaiy ISIh m.. ,£iS! Jlme .SSiSSL JflUD jjgg 1 M 7- 9:30 MoioA 8 $10.00 1 M 7- 9:30 Schookrofl 8 10.00 1 T 7- 9:30 Donelwn 8 10.00 1 W 7- 9:30 Sandburg 8 10.00 1 W 7- 9:30 Monteirii 8 10.00 1 TH 7- 9:30 Mason 8 10.00 1 M '1- 3:30 Drayton Plolns 8 10.00 T 9-11:30 CketokaeHilU 8 10.00 TH 1- 3:30 Oraylonnaiio • laoo Opaalnia An AvaUaMa ta tha FollawiaE OteeaMt II M 7- 9:30 Crescent Lake 8 STaoQ II T 7- 9:30 Manley 8 * 10.00 II T 7- 9:30 williams Lake 8 10.00 IV M 7- 9:30 Cherokee Hills 8 12.00 V W 7- 9:30 Crory 10 14.00 V TH 7- 9:30 Crory 10 14.00 Adv. Fitting M 7- 9:30 Crory ■ 15.00 Adv. Fitting W 9-l l;3d Drayton Plains 8 lioe . Trims and Detail T 7- 9:30 Cherokee Hills 8 12.00 Sportswear 1 TH 7- 9:30 Crory 8 12.00 Taaa Dlaasaa Start tha FirtI Waak bi Fabiwaiy Teen 1“ TorTH 4-5:30 Crory Senieilsr 10.00 Teen If TorTH, 4-5J0 Crory Semester 10.00 Far AMiRi NMl tafonaatiae OaMeamiat Maaaero Cal 8I44I18 -RallaRRagiainMaM^i" ■ J ■ y SEMMNNIUL Amuofivuc FLORSHEIM Swiwctod Stylos 16" - 17" Rigularly 11.11 to 11.11 ★ Winthrop, Sibley Hu^ Puppiesf . (discontinuod stylos) 6^ » 10" RsgHisrty 1MI to 11.11 fInmmmmWQH (discontimiod stylos) Rad Cross, Soeialitss, Sandler, Hush Puppies* Buskens, Miss Wondaifiri 4" 1.10*» SegWaily IMS fa 1I.N FLORSHBM SHOM ftr witw, aiinwirtwwrf for Wowiib DtooonNiHMil oiyioo 15*" Special Group for Children RED GOOSE, HUSH PUPnES* Rogulsitp I.N to 10.M YOUNGIMLE, MISS SMOLER 2” 5" Sibley’s semi-annual sale is famous all over the Pontiac area because of the wonderful volue)^ in famous brand shoes. Bring the entire family and save many dollars during this groat eventi MICHIGAN’S URGEST R.0RSHEIM DEALER MIRACU MILE SHOmilG OEim»--TEUOIttPH AT SQIMRE LAKE ROAD J HHS SEMI-ANNUAL OEARANa SALE FOR WOMEN ROADRUNNER WOOL KNIT SHIFTS WITH ZIP FRONT Pure wool knit with a smart and convenient zippered front, contrasting stitching down the front and oround the two patch pockets. Orange, peoch, or royal; in sizes 8-18. ^6-99 WOOL BALAAACAAN COATS WITH PILE ZIP LINER Classic style; the bolmacoan, here in on osortment of blue or celery checked wools — all with 0 versatile, season-spanning pile lining that zips in, zips out. Sizes 8-18. .... $44 \ FAMOUS A4AKER SEPARATES: FUR-RUND SKIRTS. SWEATERS Charming casuals by a fomous maker. Fur-blend sweaters and skirts (some novelty skirts included), in light and dark shodes. Sweaters,' sizes 36-40; skirts, sizes 10-16. Eafh............ $11.99 $129 $«4 BITTiR MINK-TRIAAMID COATS in niortcd stylet; tlztt 8-16 BITTIR UNTRIMMID COATS in asTOrtsd stylM; sizes 5-T3, S-I6 > .«... MINK-TRIMMID COATS In luxurious woolt; sizes 8-18.............. .$89 LARGS GROUP OF CAR COATS, corduroy, cotton suede, pile .... f.. .24.90-84.90 FALL AND WINTER DRISSBS. a huge group; sizes 5-15, 8-18 .... . ." 10.99-29.99 IMPORTIO FISHERMAN KNIT SWEATERS, turtle end mock, sizes 36-40 ... .10.99 IMPORTED TURTLENECK SWEATERS, fist-knit, zip beck, sIzM 36-40 .9.99 PINS WOOL CAR COATS WITH ALL-WOOL LINING ' OouDly-Wormiwool on the out-sida, wool on die inside. This sole group features solid ahodw orid Chacks; In camel, blOFk/whito. Sizes 8-18. Priced for a x c i t i n g lovings now, a^ .,.. $39.90 I '\i. EMBROIDERED JUNIORORDUP> eklrta. btoiim, slMi 7-!| FAMOVi-M)Uln iM> in -m A. S Clw .'l... .t .‘*#*>*1 ».»* FAMOUS-MAKER PANTY GIMHil frt wMta, eelan^ dMe i.M-L a».99 to. 12.9#. LOUNGiWIAR, nylon flaaM or quitt louniaMiMr; many colon, sIim GOWNS AND PAjAMAf, f)«^ and nylon; In aeioHad elzei and eolort .. 1.99 to T.99 ! I SLIPS AND HALF. SLIPS, nylon slips and half allp% many colon, t|aae 4i^;2.99 to 1,99 | HAND BAGS, an excellent assortment of fin# frond.lags; many.cakwu.. .1.99 -to 1.99 J ‘■S'’ i| f tsU/ y ft#* l Owr Store is Open Tuesday and 'mt Wednesday to 5:30; Monday, Thursday, Friday and m to 9 P.M. - Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake ..(■ IV THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 196» Lone Survivor of Mass Murder Will Wed AP WinpiMM Corazon Amurao, 25, lone living witness to the 1966 massacre of eight fellow nurses in Chicago by Richard Speck, will wed a childhood friend, Alberto Atienza, 22, shown with her in her home at San Luis, Batangas, The Philippines. The wedding will take place Sunday in San Luis. The couple has been engaged 14 months. SAN LUIS, PhilHptms UR -Cktrazon Amurao, Iona survivor of fho 1B66 Chicago massacre of eight student nurses, may return to the United States after! she marries her childhood iweotheart. i fiance, Alberto Atienza, Mid today he will take the ,'bar ocamlnation hr ManUa late next year and thm may go to the United S t a t e s for postgraduate study. He said his wife might apply for a Job in a U.8. fa^ital, preferably in Washington, D. C. ★ ★ ★ "But we haven’t made any definite decisions,” Atienza Mid. "Ail these are plans.” The couple will many Sunday in a local Roman Catholic church, 80 miles south of Manila, “I’m not sure, I don’t know.” said the 25-year-old bride-to-be when asked if she was nervous or how she felt with her wedding approaching. FORGETTING ORDEAL “She is beginning to forget,” said Atienza, referring to Miss Amurao’s ordeal two years ago !n a dormltoiy near the South Chicago Community Hospital, a w A ' On July' 14, 1968, she hid I under a while Richard Speck choked and stabbed to death her eight roommates, aU student nurses. She later identified him in court and he was convicted and sentenced to death.. A * ★ After tine tripi. Miss Amurao returned home, worked as a nurse at Manila’s Far Eastern University, then was elected a member of the San Luis Town Council for a four-year term. She said she would pufsue both her professional and political careers after marriage. Allow Free Swish When washing delicate items, such as swimsuits, elasticized lace or crocheted articles, always use a full tub of water for both wash and rinse even for the smallest load. ’This will minimize pulling, wrinkling and stretching. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Tatu of Kenilworth Street, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Leon-da Raye, to Roger L. Cox^ He is the son of Mrs. Ruth Davidson of Day-ton, Ohio, and the late Hugh Cox. The pair are students at Olivet Naza-rene College. Fine Furniture Since 191^ SPECIAL SELLING! ITALIAN PROVINCIAL OCCASIONAL TABLES Unique tables of authentic Italian Provincial design in our "Romano" 6roup featuring smooth lines gracefully drawn, tapered legs enhanced wjth interesting carving. Each will offset and enrich today's interior colors. Exceptional savings! Specially Priced Bunching table — perfect in pairs — has handsomely carved trestle style ^ | ftC/f legs. Measures 20Lx20Wxl6’/2H. SfllC With MarbI* Top 59.50 Distinctive End Table with one drawer and book or magazine space. Au- ^ | e/'o thentic hardware. 26Lx21 Wx21H. o3l0 Commode Table with two drawers, richly carved legs. 26Lx21 Wx21H. Sale *63 End Toble with drawer, and book* ^ i ae'yf shelf measures 25Lxl 5Wx21H. dale Octagon shaped Chalrslde Table with regal carving on tvro doors. 28U24Wx20H. Sale •99’* Drum Table In hexagon sl^ape with one door and rich carv Measures 20U20Wx21H. one door and rich carving details. c! i axers^o 21H. dale •TV CLOSED THURSDAY, JANUARY2 FORINVfNTORY ., * Opottf ridoy, Jem. 3*-9 AM. Opon Friday and Monday " ^ f l680$.Tal*BrophW.$.ofOwhwUakaRd. lvonlngs'til9 I / ■ ^moPcwWnofiontoi^SIdtaf^^^ INTERIOR DECORATING CONSULTATION- BUDGET TERMS mv- Knit 5oito (mjdj T?mAeA > Regular to $125 ^39 .. «79 Wiwte/o CooJtA Regular to $125 »49. *99 Regular to $290 *109. *219 Fu/v T/uimedj Cools Regular to $200 $99 „ $159 Regular to $475 $169$369 • ■SpOhJiA (im/v SKIRTS-SWEATERS-SLACKS TOPS Regular to $24 *6 to *18 CoaujqI (uviVmAa VmA&A Regular to $26 Regular to $55 Regularto$125 *10 to *19 *21 to *35 *38 to *79 Cojv CocdA Regularto$75 *30 to *59 WealJm Cofth Regular to^$60 »19 to M9 Fu/o STOLES - CAPES - JACKETS Regular to $2200 *299 to *1699 values to $21 LeiHUG/ were to $45 $2590 -Andmik were to $35 $2190 VelJAO'VebA were $25 $1590 “Towiv S-Count/Uj (dress) ’ were $20 $1190 pMt EditUHt were to $20 $1190 (casuals) were to $1 7 $^90 CoAujOih “Ve ToiiHi ojicl mi Tmpe/2e/ were to $15 $790 Shoes in Pontiac and Oakland Mali Only r Alvin's of Pontiac, Rochester, Oakland AAall / ■ m ■■'ia ^ ■ THE PONTIAC PllESS.^ THURSDAY, JANUARY g. 1060 for What You Desire " ByMAHYFEELBY PMndtmit in Mowy Muagement Prar F«tley: I’ve that Trust, departments o( banks wtll take care ^9 Car Coats ........"Ut*” *22 *• *39 Knit Suits........*34 *• *49 Winter Coats ... *34 >° *44 All-Weather Coats .HL'” *10 *° *26 $36 Better Dresses... 7” 24” Topcoats ...... ."ifi,'" *59 "■ *119 Sport Shirts ..... "*S"’ 3'* 5” Outerwear.....*14 •• *69 Jackets and Suburban Coats Dress Slacks....*8 «> *17 Men’s Suits............"|f5o° *56 •<> *123 Sport Coats..............*28 "> *63 Selected Group Sweaters ..............*7 <° *35 Dress Shirts.........................1nM°3'* Cardigans, V-Necks, Turtlenecks 3 for 11.50. Selected group, regular and button down PRE-TEEN Selected Group Selected Group Skirts and Slacks . *4 ” *7 Dresses and Jumpers *6 •• *15 Selected Group Outenvear.......... *14 '• *24 Blouses and Tops . *3 •• *5 CHILDREN Boys’ and Girle* Snowsuits ......”?nT*11 ° *20 Girls’ Sweaters..........*4 «• *6 Giris’ Boys’ Coat and Coat Sets 12*°27*° d Dresses ........ "$»'° *4 •<> *11 M ^ Giris’’ Outerwear.........*12 "> *22 Parkas and Ski Styles Boys’ Sweaters ............*5 *» *9 Boys' Clfiwlft 8eg. to,8R ip Omrifl ■ ■ a a I a a e I a I ■ i V I Girls’ Jumpers ....... *$t,'‘*6 *° *10 Girls’ Blouses and Tops . 2** •> *4 Corduroy Slacks... 3** 5*' Boys’ Coat aad Coat Sots "‘S'* *13 *°*16 Sizes 4 tel Boys’ , ^ Sport Coats ...; .°%'**10 «• *14|: Sizes 4 to 12 BLOOMFliiO MIRACLE MILE Telegraph at Square Uko Road t '.*S I', ■ f ^ /J f ' s, The ' Louis A, Mitzelfelds of '' Rochester announce the engagement of their daughter. Northern Michigan • ..University senior, Jane Ann, to Ronald L. Paschal. The son of the Elmer Paschals of Utica is a senior at Eastern Michigan University. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THimSDAY. JANUARY 2. 196B Concert Date Is Postponed .^ii^^eTnenl^z. 14KT. GOLD OVERLAY Rose* of delicately h.ind-carxed genuine ivory, with finely veined^'leavcs in HKt. yellow gold overlay. See onr beautiful selection of this fine quality jewelry today. Lo«/-M(yo Jmefm Bloomfield, Miracle Mile A concert under the direction of James Frazier scheduled to be given in Ford Auditorium Sunday evening, haji been postponed. It was to have featured a requiem honoring the late Dr. Martin Luther King. ♦ ★ ★ The symphotv and the concert sponsor organization, the Second Baptist Church of Detroit, hope to reschedule the perfMTnance for later In the season, which date will be announced as soon as known. ★ ★ ★ It was decided to postpone the concert because many of the participants, particularly members of school and church choruses, had the flu or severe colds. Depends on Eater // Sou/" Food Has Many Meanings By JUNE ELERT “Soull’ has reached a zenith In popular usage In late years ha^ng .acquir^ a specie slg nlficance associated wltit com mon events —• like the “soul brother" signs Negro businessmen hang In their windows during riots. It seems to imply kinship' /y or brotherhood. ^ In her new cookbodc, “Soul JUNE Food Cookery,” Inez Yeargan Kaiser says, “There is a SPIRIT connected with the dishes that calls up a feeling of nostalgia, pleasure and anticipation.” ★ ★ ★ This reminds me of a dish my mother used to nuike. She called it “stovies.” Potatoes were sliced and laid in a shallow roasting pan. Water was added and salt and pepper. It cooked for hours on top of the wo^ stove in the kitchen, filling the downstairs fiat with warmth and a tantalizing aroma. Our enjoyment was unspoiled by the absence of meat, milk, vegetables, salad, dessert, or any other of the yitamin-rich essentials of today. Our stomachs were full. 'Diat’s soul food to me. for good measure a vitamin pill once a day. ★ ' ★ ★ . Mrs. Kaiser's recipes, in large part, are not too unfamil-liar. Some havp a more ethnic quality and a few are particularly Negro in their association. The ingredients are Southern, but no longer exclusively so: turnip, mustard and collard greens, salt pork, yams, chard, kale, hominy, grits, blackeye peas, bacon drippings, com meal, ham hocks, pigs’ knuckles, are some. ★ ★ ★ Then there are recipes for neckbones, okra, pig tails, ox tails, chitterlings, tripe, pig backbone, hog jowl, pigs’ feet and catfish stew, to name most of them. a ■ ★ ♦ A few of these items I haven’t tast^. I made ox tail soup once. Bacon drippings were a staple shortening in my kitchen not so long ago — make excellent pie crust. Beet tops we always use — they cook up just like spinach and are most interesting to look at with their little red veins all through the dark green of the leaves. I don't know' anyone who doesn’t like com bread, including my own three northern kids. I’m going to try cooking vegetables with salt pork and bacon drippings. Maybe the meat flavoring will increase th^ potato-chip generation’s willing-ness to eat these in greater variety. Cora, green beans and spinach can get pretty monotonous. ★ ★ ★ I wonder, when my kids are grown, what will soul food be to them? I think I’ll go htnne and try to fix some' of those “stovies" for dinner tonight. I can hear them now. “Yeah, Mom, but what are we gonna have to eat?” Quality Training hy LOPEZ PABLO’S School of Beauty DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-0222 JUUARD’S Semi-Annual Cleafaiibci: Outstanding group of ^omen’s Qualify Fashion ^ ;> Footwear • Bags Boutique • Children’s Shoes Reduced 25% 50% BLOOMFIELD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER (Cortiar Mopl* vnd Telagraph) MA 6-2566 Charge AccounU, of Cour$o *We*ve Grown Big by Staying Small* Nostalgia is there. There was pleasure and anticipation, seasoning and savor. Kinship is with large brotherhood who struggled through the depression by this and other means. CHANGED NOW At our house we don’t make a meal of potatoes any more. Instead we eat meat, milk, vegetables, salad, dessert and. See, sew EIGHT beautiful versions of our 1969 basic skim-mer — the shape that expresses fashion’s feeling for a softer, yet clear-cut line. Printed Pattern 4882; NEW Half Sizes 12%, 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%. Misses’ 8, 10, 12, J4, 16. Yardages in pattern. SDOT-FIVE CENTS in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing I and special handling. Send to I Anne Adams care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. IflOll. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Short on time? MORE quick, easy-sew styles in our NEW Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. Plus free pattern coupon. 50c New! INSTANT SEWING Book. Save hours — cut, fit, sew modern, expert way. Over 500 pictures. Only $1. Bums now save 40% in onr tad/UjovL tlwe. DRESS STYLES CASUAL STYLES 2.99 Fabulom buys! See cutout, dosed styles for drees or casual wear. New shapes, toes and heels. Most sizes and colors. Burry for best selections! k .>THE J^L 1'^NPNlpb at EUzabedi Ldm Road SALE! the best of hcers These are the girdles designed by the people who understand what kind of clothes you wear dhd exoctly how you wont to look in them. Start the New Year with a beautiful pew figure, and save money at the some time. 806 Perfect pantie girdle for belted fashions. Hi-riser waistband is smoothed over with powernet. Won't roll down. Self-reinforced panels. Nylon and Lycra® spondex. Four sfoys. White. S,M,L,XL Reg. $13.50 NOW $10.79 XXL Reg. $15.00 NOW $11.99 805 (Not jhown) Average leg. White. S,M,L,XL Reg. 12.50 NOW $9.99 1590 Zip into a new figure with this slimming, super-smoothing 15” girdle. Fits S’/z" above the waist. White. 26-34 Reg. $16.50 NOW $12.99 885 Contour long leg pontie girdle (or o smooth fluid line. Light weight of nylon and Lycra® spondex with fan shaped loca panel. White. S,M,L,XL Reg. $9.00 NOW $7.19 875 (Not shown) Average leg. White. S,M,L,XL Reg. $8.00 NOW $6.39 OTHER GIRDLES ON SALE • SARONG • YOUTHCRAFT • GOSSARD MAIDENFORM and PLAYTEX BRAS Odds and Ends famous make GIRDLES & BRAS up to 1/2 Q^f Bobette Shop 16 N. Saginaw Downtown Park Free FE 2-6921 MicUgan Bankard, Bobatte Clu$rgm, Midwaat Bank Card n V /t|T Ijtliiuii/ uou' m04it ffhi lUdtJuMUfi) m .1*. ^ • 0 WITTNAUER I.ON(;iNKS.WriTNAlltl« PRODUCT A watch is so much mi^re than a timepiece. It's a beautiful accent, a fashionable jewel, a trustworthy companion. Wittnauer knows a watch's many roles, and crafts' them accordingly. Here are a few fi^m our Wittnauer collection of diamond watches and gold vvatches for women. (A) Two-diamond case, with matching bracelet, $69.95. (B) Tailored 14K gold case, with strap, $75. (C) High fashion gold case, with tapered bracelet, $49.95. (D> Four-diamond case, with dainty bracelet $85, (E) Six-diamond case, with tapered mesh bracelet $99.50 (i) Classic 14K gold case, with bracelet $120. Other fine Wittnauer watches are priced from $29.95. ■ Pentiae Mail—T«l-Tw«lva Mall—Woodward fid John R—Uiilvanal City Moll—Wondorlond— Wostbom—Michigan 6 Shoffar—Savon OMnd^Now Cantor—Grand Ropldt, Downtoorn ond Woodland Moll TIIK I'OM'IAC I'UKSH. TlUJllSDAV, JAN UAH V 2, lU»iu B-~“T Plan Dinner for Couple •^Mr. and Mrs. Paul Poli of Poll Road, Bran-dJon T ovmship, announce tfte engagement of their daughter, Patricia Ann, to Thomas Mitchell Shu-bert. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shubert of Sashabaio Road, Brandon »Township. The couple are students at Central Michigan University. The engagement of their daughter, Joanne Louise, to Pfc. William N. Benedict Jr., USA, of Ft. Bragg, N.C., is announced by the Hoyt E. Moshiers of Oxford. Miss Moshier’s fiance is the son of the senior Mr. and Mrs. William N. Benedict of Oxford. The bride-elect is a freshman at Ferris State College. A recent family gathering was the setting for the engagement announcement by Mr. and Mrs. Max N. Beamish, Hartline Street, Avon Township, of their daughter, Carol Ann, to Larry E. Hiltz. He is the son of Mrs. Ida M. Hiltz of Springhill Street and J. R. Hiltz of Petrolia Street, West Bloomfield Township. The engagement of their daughter, VickiM., to Johnny L. Dyer is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Enoch Huckabay of East Hopkins Street. Miss Huckabay’s fiance is the son of the Fred W. Dyers of Stanley Street. Feb. 14 vows are planned. The engagement of their daughter, Cathy Carol-Zae, to Charles David Moldenhauer is announced by the Julius M. Nureks of Grant Street, Avon Township. Miss Nurek’s fiance is the son of Fred C. Moldenhauer of Simpson Street, Avon Township and the late Mrs. Moldenhauer. The couple, students at Ferris State College, will wed in March. A family dinner at First Federal Savings of Oakland, Sunday', will mark the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Hedges of Walce Drive, West Bloomfield Township. The couple was married Jan. 6, 1919, in New Philadelphia, Ohio. * * ★ The party will be hosted by their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Hedges of Watkins Lake. •tsieroAumbar ItMi • Mattmlly OanNanbi •turgleal Naaa • AnMa WfM aiii Kna* ■raoas • laoroNlae ■aHsaOaivioal OaNara and Caivloal Tfaetion ate. \ «Ovor» bed Tablat - Walktrt - Patient LIHs ~ Commadas -Shower Chairs - ato. FOR RENT OR SALE, Prescriptions FREE DELIVERY 4390 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 674-0466 or 674-4455 It’s Time Now To Bring The New Year In . . . To Make All Our New Year's Resolutions ... And To Organize For 1969 . . . Wiggs Has Many Specials Now For All Your Kitchen Organization Open A Alhett tel 'p ,, FABULOUS, FAMOUS LABa WOOL ||||||| UNTRIMMED COATS Reg. $45 to $55 WW FUR TRIMMED & IHITRIMMED . GENUINE LEATHER $ OR SUEDE COATS Reg. $46 to $120 39 UP MAGMFICENT, FUR UVISHED WINTER COATS 1 • MINK • OPOSSUM • WOLF ' 1 • CWNCHILLETTE&MORE ' litiMMtoSSSO B9 up A. JohiMon Brothers “Atlirna” dinnerwsra from Etigland. White with > sculptured pattern. Open stock. 45-pc, service for 8 now specially priced. Reg. 23.95.?...........................Now 19.95 B. **Moon & Star” hand fashioned glassware from the original old molds. Ruby red slightly higher. In green, blue, amber or amethyst goblets and sherbets specially priced. Reg. 3.0U.............Now 2.50 C. Noritake "White Princess'* china in pure white. AS-pc. sets, service for 8..................45.95 D. Ceramic canister sets now 20% off. This charming set is made in the shape of old fashioned stores. From.........................................6.00 E. Salton bun warmer comes in a variety of fabric covers . . . gold interiors with walnut-like exteriors ... They work electrically and are priced from 9.95 F. West Bend Country Inn in avocado green or golden harvest. It has an aluminum base to distribute heat evenly with a scratch resistant Teflon interior for especially fine cooking. Pieces start at. . 9.95 C. Salton Hotray for keei>ing foods warm at the table. They are made with radiant heat panels that actually suspend the food as it comes from the stove .. . Food won’t dry out or keep cooking ... It will stsy the same as it was when finished for hours ... Many different siies in stock priced from ... 6.95 H. Delightful laiy-Susails for table serving. Just stack your dishes on top snd swivel around to serve each person easily. From...........................7.95 TNI PONTiAO MALL, Ttl«|r«ph at Eiitabath Lakt Rdt., MIRACLE MILE, toiNh Ttlatra|ih at Squara Laka Rdt., OAKLAND MALL, Watt 14 Milt Rd. at 1-18 BUY! SELL! TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS JL. Special Sale Wiggs offers many fine current china patterns and crystal styles along with cookware at 20% to 50% off. This is your opportunity to replenish your own pattern or to start a new one. Our Christmas decorations are marked down to 50% PONTIAC 24 Wcfti Huron la Downtown Pontiac FE4>1234 Daily 'til SiSO Cfcinag Cryalal, iHP%tar» mud £l7ian sIHon FurtUturm BLOOMFIELD HILLS WIQQS 4U80 Telegrenh R»»«I . At l.*ng l.eke lf«eif 644-7S70 Men., Thurs., Frt. 'lU • Chinu, Cryslaf, Ci/tMir* » smel CempleM PsiritilitM ft !■ < - TIIK PONTIAC PUKSS. THURSDAY. JAXUARV 1000 ______ [VMim-! •on, Paul Vaith, tin , January la t ' Made to. Order =|j,rr' ”ir ;,- !i 200 SAMPLES ^ to choose from ARDEN SHOPS The Pontioc Moll 682-1191 is un-| cream doesn't stain, should you accidentally get some on your « « •iHi r>iu »««., - National - Skl.'chapped and win#urned skin. », GraiitparenW of the Month, time to get out parkas.lBring a small tube from home, m Mrs. CharJIoa P. Hunt'sW pants and boote once again.!which you can keep in parka Ip^ Road and the latelBut in addition to clothing and'pocket or purse ~ to use as (equipment, don’t overlook car-j needed. The lube Ing for your skirt properly dur- breakable, and the ing this active outdoor season. While skiing Is fun, over-ex , posure to wintry weather can cause windburp.. sunburn and chapped sUn Just as painful as the summer varieties. An excellent preventive is a good first aid cream, rubbed liberally on exposed parts of face and hands. For continued protection, apply again before retiring. * ★ ★ It is also a good idea to' take along a first aid mini-kit before setting out on a ski weekend. The kits are small enough to pop into the side pocket of your weekend case, and although pniniature, contain all the basics * ♦ ★ I— adhesive tape, sterile gauze tlie antiseptic cream soothes pads, antiseptic cream and and heals the tiny network of adhesive bandages — to treat skin breaks that make up minor mishaps that may occur. Poll/s Pointers GREAT SAVINGS on YOUR FAMILY SHOES IN OUR BIG JANUARY CLEARANCE ForWOHEN: AMERICilN GIRL »#**.nd»6** IMTURALIZER Valuet to $20.00 HUSH PUTIES ♦r* VulueM to $13.00 WOMEN'S DANIEL QREEN and WELLCO SUPPERS $088^^^$388 Values to $5.99 For MEN: PEDWMS *n" Valuf* to $15.00 Portage Sllp-Ons Vatuetfo- $20,00 Men’s Long Wing Brogue ♦18** Valuet to $21.00 "TH£ SHOE SALE YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR‘ Store Hours: Men., Thur., Fri., Sat 9 to 9 Tues., Wed. 9 to 6 honor SECURITY CHARGE • MICHIGAN BANKARD ALL SALES FINAL - NO PHONE ORDERS MRS. JOHN R. GIBBENS JR. Marcia A. Olds, John GIbbens Jr. Wed in Japan The Holy Catholic Church In Hakata, Japan, was the setting for Christmas Eve vows of Marcia Ann Olds and Spec. 5 John Robert GIbbens Jr., USA. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Dean H. Olds of Pioneer Street and Mr. and Mrs. John R. Gibbens of Woodbine Drive. ★ ★ ★ The bride selected a white satin gown with puffed sleeves, scoop neck and high-rise waist encircled with a satin ribbon. Her shoulder-length illusion veil was capped with a petal clusster, accented with seed pearls. ★ * ★ The newlyweds greeted guests in the non-commissioned officers’ quarters. They expect to return to the States in August. DEAR POLLY — We have « good use for men’s worn-out T-shirts. Place them upside down in your round wash basket, pull the bottom edge of the shirt around the top of the basket and you have a perfect basket liner. — T. K-POLLY’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY - I was told never to use soap in a fish aquarium. What do you use to clean away the water line from goldfish bowls and to clean the whole bowl? — MRS. J. T. DEAR POLLY and Bernice — f have had good results removing unpleasant odors from suticases by putting moth flakes inside and keeping the bag closed up for abmit 10 days. Air it outside later. This has worked for mildew odor. — ANNE I. ★ ♦ * DEAR POLLY - Do tell Bernice who has a smoke smell in her luggage to try spraying the lining with deodorant and then leave the bag closed for a few days. I had a musty smell in a leather grip and tried a number of things before discovering this idea, which worked for me. Reports on Courts for Sixty Years JACKSON, Miss, m - After six decades, Mrs. Clara Sims has finally put down her stenographer’s pad and retired. “Miss Clara,” as she is fondly known by everyone in the Hinds County courthouse, served for i60 years as court reporter in I the courts of Hinds county and .Mississippi. For the past 17 jyrtars she worked for Circuit (judge M. M. McGowan. Miss J packs sun-bright jersey prints to go the southern route now and make a vivid spring showing. These welj-mannered packable travelers are sleek acetate jersey with elongated collars and waist-whittling belts. A. Convertible v-ne'Ck with wide buckle belt: turquoise or green with white; 5-13P sizes. B. Dress with buccaneer sleeve. Purple or turquoise with black/white: 5-13 sizes. 19.00 Nev/ Basket Liners Afterwards 1 put a small piece of perfutried soap in each pocket and left it there. — LOIS WWW DEAR POLLY - Nothing will help Judy’s buckling zipper In her knit top but to rrtmove it i and replace It. Be careful not to stretch the knit. The best result is obtained by doing this by hand, the way it is done in many expensive garments. — MRS. C. F. H. * ★ ★ DEAR POLLY - To comb or set your wig or hairpiece, you will find the handle to a regular, short-handled sink plunger fits nicely in the hole of the wig form. Moisten the rim of the plunger and put on a flat surface where the suction holds it tightly. Fasten the wig on the form loosely and you can turn it around as you work. — MYRTLE discounts . on allwatches ELGIN WALTHAM BENRUS from $2495 easycredit MRK JEWBIERS mdOPTIDUNS 1 N. SAGINAW (Corner Pike St.) FE 4-1889 Dr. Chomoy If the children in your family forget to wash their hands before using the globe for geography assignments, wash it occasionally with a sudsy sponge. » MURRAY SISTERS’ BEAUTY STUDIO Rosie Murray to Assist You Shampoo and Style $3.00 FE 5-9409 — 57 W. Huron — By Appointment Only FOR THE FIRST TIME- SPECIAL SALE n Pure Latex Foam Famous Platinum Mattress and Foundation Set • Magnificent quilted damask cover • Purest sleeping substance known • Luxurious comfort for years and years • Gentle support for every contour • Non-ollergenic, dust free, odor free SAVE *40 Has Always baan 159.50 Now for the Firtt Time *119“ a Twin siza 39"x75" • Full siza 54"x75" • Twin extra long 39"x80" a Full extra long 54"x80" Save ^501 Queen Size 60''x80" Regular 229.50. Now only $]795o SAVE *701 KING SIZE 76"x80" With 2 twin box •pringt. Regular 329.50, Now »259*» OUR FLOOR SAMPLE SALE CONTINUES with these tremendous First of Year Savingsl Globe Sofa R«g. $295 Country Fronch Glob* Sofo^in hondtomo onliquo gold fobrie. Slightly ioilod — y«t wonderful voluo. ^ w ^49 FRENCH SOFA and CHAIR Hondwm* gold wing arm >ofo with ax^o*^ corvid froma. Harmonizing wing hair in gold with rad accent. Reg. $615 Globe Sofa Delicately carved frame with blue green fabric 2 bolsters. Italian Provincial. Rog. $535 DREXEL BEDRCX^M Full liza cone haodboord bed, desk vonity with ■sapordta mirror. Empire bench. Cherry wood. , M 49 DANISH RECLINER Solid walnut iro'me Donith-intpired tilt bock racliner choir. .■s *79’'’ CROUPS OF CHAIRS 1/2 OTFI Reg. 69.50 Ladies' chair in green/gold fabric 34“ Reg. 127.50 EHtre/green choir on casters.... 63" Reg. 179.50 Globe Ladies' Choir, _ deeply tufted................>89 ’ Reg. 1^95.00.chair in blue plastic ... 97" ^3 HITCHCOCK Bl lEDROOAA Genuine Hitchcock full siza headboard, dresier with gilt and block mirror. Ivory decor-oted. 'f Reg. $345 n99 Group of D^orator . Pictures 50% oR Reg. $15 to $40 Now $7.50 to $20 Our New Home, Woodward Ave., l^loomfield HilU \ * 1$ Now Under CoHstruction > , LEWIS FURNITURE CO DESIGNERS FOR HOME AND BUSINESS INTERIORS $. Saginow St. ot Orchard Lak| Ave.—Pontiac, Michigan 335-D174 THE PONTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAY. JANUARY 2, 1069 SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Mr. and Mrs. Merne E. LaFave of 'Proy announce the engagement of their daughter, Susan Kay, to James Alec Nazarko. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Alek Nazarko of Dearborn. Susan, a senior at Michigan State University, and her fiance, will wed June 14. Marilyn A. Sison of Lincoln Street, an alumna of the University of Santo Tomas, Philippines, and Wayne Weiss will wed Feb. 1. Their parents are the Luis E. Sisons of Roxas City, Philippines and Mr. and Mrs. George E. Weiss of Milford. Dear Eunice Farmer: My husband t>ought me a beautiful new sewing machine for Christmas and gave it to me a month ago so I have had time to use it a little. I could cry. I just don't like it as well as the one I traded in, what would you suggest I do In order to be at ease with it as I was with my old one? Mrs. B. K. Dear Mrsj B. K.: This is often what happens when we replace anything we have used for years and become completely familiar with. I would suggest that anyone with a hew machine practice as much as possible on straight sewing before making a garment with it. In other words, make some quick project such as new curtains, bed spreads, or anything you have thought of that would require straight sewing. When you become used to handling the speed, simple mechanisms, etc., it will be much easier to adjust to the detailed stitching you use for making clothes. Unfortunately, a new sewing machine will not automatically make you a better seamstress. My own machine which I wouldn’t part with for anything, is about 20 years old. Even more Interesting might be the fact that many of the work rooms in the top designer houses in Europe still use the old fashioned treadle marines I’m sure you’ll love your new sewing machine, but yoftpwvill have to get used to It and all its gadgets first! Rummage Dress Has Other Uses Watch rummage sales for| Little girls’ dresses or women’s large size dresses of nightgowns may be made from washable cloth that have ® for yourself. fine pleated all-around skirts. Usually these axe worn under if the color is a pretty floral print or a solid color, a pair of pillow cases the arms, but there is so much may be hishioned from just the material in the skirts. skirt of one dress. SALE! 20 to 50% OFF Great Savings! 5895 Dixie Hwy, (Independence Common*) Phone 623-0048^% Open Mon. and Fri. 'til 9 p.m. I • FINE OUALiTTfABRICS ^ • SEWING NOTIONS • CUSTOM DRAPERIES Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Mattingly of Mae Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Patricia Lou, to Kenneth Robert Blinn. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Blinn of Rochester, Pa. Midsummer vows are planned. TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. Lewis Dorrles, Breese, 111., is this week’s Tailor Trix pressing board winner for sending this suggestion. If you suddenly find the neckline of your dress was cut too low and you don’t have enough fabric for a roll collar (this could also be for ready made dresses), use a small 22-inch square nylon neckline scarf in either a matching or contrasting color as a fill-in. Fold scarf in half, forming a triangle. The center fold is then folded over again to a depth of five inches, making four thicknesses of material. The small triangle of double material below this strip of bias is cut off. Pin and baste the strip in several places to hold It together. Pin the center of the scarf to the center front of the dress Ithe two cut edges and the one folded edge) on the wrong side of the dress. Continue to_pin in place until you come to within oie inch of the center back on both sides. The scarf will sjretch as ybu pin and will form a lovely roll collar. The finished ends of the scarf that are left over at the back can be tied in a double knot over the top of the zipper to add back interest. The softness of the material makes it very comfortable and it is so economical that it can be replaced when it shows signs of wear or soil. This is a great way to change the entire effect on any dress and works so much better than trying to keep a loose scarf in place. Pastor and Mrs. Warren H. Lawrence Sr. of Ditmar Avenue announce the betrothal of their daughter, Dolores Cecilia, to Julius Carroll IV. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Carroll HI of Flushing, N.Y. He is a student at Queens-borough College, Flushing, June 14 vows are planned. As Long os You'Aro Ooidg to Buy a New Dinette for the Holidays *.. Why Not Buy One From Pontiac's Only Dinette Store? You May Save $40 or Morel Truly Early American ... Plastic Top Pine Dining Room Table and 4 Chairs Pine pedestal base table is 42"x 42" round ond opens to 54" with 1 12" leaf. Usuolly sells for $259.95. *199“ house erf dinettes 1672 S. Telegraiih 2124 Call 834-21 Heurti StlO *111 • Daily Sunday til I Add a little lemon juice tO| your regular cleansing cream and your hand lotion. Keep both* BUY! SELL! TRADE! PONTIAC press want ADS! Dear Eunice Farmer: I made a coat this fall, using very thick loosely woven fabric. It was so Irritating when I tried to pin anything because the pins would slip Into the fabric or simply fall out before 1 could replace them with stitching. How in Ae world does one pin fabrics of this type? Mrs. T. M. B. Dear Mrs. T. M. B.; I am familiar with this problem since many of our students have used this type of fabric and I know exactly what you mean. We have suggested, and Incidentally, It does work beau-They're Engaged^^’ that you buy some of the long pins with large heads on ' 'the ends. I don’t Imow what they are actually used for except for’decorative purposes. ’They are at least 2 to 2Vz inches long and I think this will solve your problem. Keep a small box of them handy for times when you are working with heavier fabrics. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Dowdy of Grafton Road, Orjon' Township announce the engagement of their daughter, Jennifer, to Gordon James Erickson Jr. He is the son of the senior Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J. Erickson of Meinrad Street. February vows are planned. j LANEBRiANT UNTRIMMED COATS $58 Regularly $70 to $100 Shown is just one of a coot collector's choice I These ore the classic and avant-garde fashion silhouettes you'll be seeing for seasons to come — fit-flare, A-line, action-pleat, side-line and close-fit cuts. Imported and Americon woolens ond worsteds in the colorful new timely tweeds, novelty polterns and solids that ore so important now. Reotly beautiful buysl Sins 38 fo 52 14Kte26Vfi V V ,, LiV,* / 4 , ^ i . ‘ Pontiac Moll ■V ! Dear Eunice Farmer: I made some slacks out of the wonderful polyester knit that doesn’t require pressing but they look like a sack on me. I have pressed the front crease in at least a dozen times and every time I wear them, there is no sign of a crease at all. I can’t imagine that ready-made slacks of this fabrjp would be so popular if they always look so baggy. Have you an answer? Mrs. H. C. C. Dear Mrs. H. C. C.: I have checked on some of the more expensive slacks made of heavy polyester knit and found that the front crease is machine stitched in place. In other words, fold and baste your slacks where you desire the crease. Next, machine stitch about one-eighth of an inch from the fold, carefully hold the slacks firmly in place so that this stitching doesn’t stretch the crease This stitching will give the effect of a pressed crease and i think you will be happier with your slacks. Semi-Annual QualiCraft 8.99-9.99 dress styles 4.98 5.99 to 7.99 casuals Priced for plentiful pickingl Dreit itylei In many heel heights, daytime or ploytlme caiuoli with the fun look. eiemrmmcm: mmn§ stiftea ’ tJtrt.4.97 THE PONTWC MALL ’’. ’ Tela*ra*h ■( KU»b«tk Like Reed ANNOUNCING... SET SALE sawe 1847 ROGERS BROS? Stainless 25-pCe Basic Sets 25-pi9C8 Servic8for4 50-piece Service for 8 75-piece Service for 12 REG. $19.95 $ 39.90 $ 59.85 50-piece Service for 8 75-piece Service for 12 $49.90 $104.85 SALE $14.96 $29.92 '$44.88 $37.42 $78.63 Tailor a aarvlea to your apodfle natda. Buy 1, Z or 3 Baale Sala to bulM a aarvlea fSr 4,1, or 12 paopla. SALBKNDSnBRUAIIYS,lBBe.25pc.BaaleSattncludaaBlaaapaom.4ptaeaforlit,4 ptaea knIvaab4SataAfailBb 4 aoup apoona,.! tablaapoon. Stainless by International aTradamarkaef .fflL, IntamatlonalSIlwar Company AAOIV fGOAA E RY WARD Poiitiac MaU ' iijf* * ‘ii UMI * i j|JMich., was a cri'lquotwl in Broadcasting maga-------- iwt^ka ,jne as saying, VThe most charl- Sieir news divisions. But now jtl convention coverage is that it ,18 iie news divisions that are ati was handled very poorly. Either it was first shown May 21, Agri- him. I for that. overloaded with the canter of conflict. < At least eii^t investigations of talevlslQn news coverage are dtlm* under way or planned. Uort are a dirwt result of tele* vision’s coverage of the Demo« cratic National Convention andefgn Commerce Committee, in the tumultuous demonstrations In Chicago last August. ★ we The clamor raised by the pub. Be, members of Congress and the Federal Communications Commission is seen by the industry as threatening in a subtle way to put the freedom of broadcast journalism in jeopardy. How serious Is the threat? NEW LAW UNUKELY Few people in the indust^ really believe that Congress will pass any new law restricting broadcasting’s freedom of the press, or that the Federal Ccnnmunications Conunission is likely to impose any new regulations. “I doubt that any restrictions will be enacted,” said Elmer Lower, president of ABC News. The threat is more subtle than that, stemming from the fact that broadcasting is a licensed industry. ★ ★ ★ “lliere is a psychological intimidation if they (newsmen) know in advance they will be called to answer,” said Robert JdacNeil, a formn- NBC newsman and now a correspondent for the British' Broadcasting Corp. He was in this country to produce a program for the Pub-Uc Broadcast Laboratory ^ on ,bias in televisipn netwoilt neM. He also is the author of “The People Machine,” an examination of television news. j One result of televislm de-' fense against these attacks, 'said, MacNeU, is that ‘‘it tends to’ throw up a bit of a smokescreen to hide its well-documented shortcomings.” TV EXECS GRILLED The President's , on prime and. Violence, impa-nelM after ^ assassiOalloo of SM "Robert' I*. iCennei^ has. been’ questianing televisiofl executives about violence In both news and entertidnment jho-granu. ., Hie House Investigations sub-cemmittee is collecting material on televisicm’s coverage of the Democratic convention in pre-paraticHi for hearings next year. One committee member. Rep. it was biased or it was handled with such extraordinary incompetence to give that impression.” ★ * * The House Interstate and For- whose tH^vince broadcasting falls, is said to be preparing a report on the convention coverage. The Senate Communications subcommittee is planning hearings on the fairness doctrine and on the relationship between certalit that news coverage hill of CBS In airing the film. Whenirepo^ted by television threatens!Television is partly responsible dustry Is so pewerfiil that be taken up. . ....... .. ... •HUNDREDS OF COMPLAINTS’ The FCC, noting that it had received “hundreds of com- ________...............___________, plaints,” asked the networks in the public is not dissatisfied ^ ^ ® * * culture Secretary Orville L. derstandable step for him to the problems of our society. Freeman denounced it as a dis-|conclude that televisipn! * * * ' twtion. 'threatens Wm. television has| The outcome Of the public Many in television argue that **®*^®*"® ®f what disaffection would simply gird up its loins and ignore some of the criUbs and establish a reputation for not being amenable to pressure September to explain tlieir cov-l with television but with what , television reports. erage. In addition. a f^eral grand jury in Chicago and the attorney of Illinois are cmduct general taig Investigations.' ★ w w AnoUier investigation is that of the agricultural subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee. It is looMng into the CBS documentary “Hunger in America.” FBI agents on loan to the subcommittee questioned television and crime and vio- sources of the documentary and lence in American life. It seems reportedly probed the ‘motive” SEWIH6 MACHINE Si in TIP-TOP SHAPElfor WINTER In with the I SINGER 7-Point g Home Tune-Up $475 ONLY Call SINGER today. WeUI come to your home and tune up any make or model sewing machine! L Adjust, balance tensions. ^ 2. Adjust fabric handling mechanism. 3. De-lint threadhandling mechanism. 4. Adjust belt tension. 5. Check wiring for safety. 6. Lubricate machine. 7. inspect, -^lubricate motor. SALE City Owned Lend Pontiac, Michigan The City of Pontiac will receive sealed bids for the purchase of the site of the former incinerator building and former Parks end Recreation storage orea, consisting of approximately 6.49 acres at the southwest corner of Featherstone and East Boulevard, extending along the new route of Clinton River. The City reserves the right to a Water Main Easement on the property. The bids will be received until 2:00 P.M., Monday, January 27, 1969 at the office of the Ci^ Clerk, 450 Wide Track Drive, East, Pontiac, Michigan at which time and place all bids will be publicjy opened and read aloud. Metes and Bounds description. Plats and description of water main easement of the property ore available at the office of the Department of Planning and Urban Renewal, Room 206 City Hall, ond may be obtained at no cost. Bidders will be required to submit a preliminory site development plan of the proposed use and an estimate of time When construction will start and be finished. A ten per cent (10%) Good Faith deposit is required with each bid. The unsuccessful bidders deposit will be returned after the determination of the successful bidder. The bids will be reviewed by the City Commission of the City of Pontiac and oc-ceptance will be based on the highest and best use allowed by the present zoning consistent with the future development of the City of Pontiac. The City reserves the right' to accept or reject ony or all bids, and to split or allocate frontage satisfactory to the bidders. Floyd D; Smith Purchosing Agent Vublltiwd In Tht Ponllu Prn* Dnc. 11, mi and Jan. 1, 1, ), 4, (, 7, I, v, and ifc m* VIEWER IS SHAKEN’ c a 11 intervention transference.” » (forecast. However, one possible, A. William Bleum, a professor j and partial, solution is working of broadcast journalism at its way toward the U. S Syracuse University and a Supreme Court. This is ajower r^lmSlTTo'^ “ Reuven Frank, president of former editor of the quarterly]court decision that the FCC’s NBC News, writing in TV Guide, says what the viewer “has seen on television has shaken him physically and morally, made him fear for his safety, his siiyings, his children, his status. The world a s of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, says: “I think the reason why we’re in such a nervous state in fairness doctrine rules are unconstitutional. The decision also suggested that broadcasting have the same constitutional our society is . that we’ve been | rights to freedom of the press exposed to too much reality fori as newspapers and magazines, too long too intensively.! Suggests MacNeil: “This in- now has in journalism. * * * “If the reaction to Chicago tends to make television more timid than bold, that would be the pity.” The famous cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde National Park, Colo., were occupied by Indians from about A.D. 1 to the 13th century. PRAYER’S YEAR-END , CLEARANCE SAIEF SAVE NOW - ON ALL YOON APPLIANCE NEEDS LIKE THIS COMPLETELY FROST FREE REFRIGERATOR With giant zero degree freezer that holds up to 145 lbs. of frozen foods and refrigerator rolls out for easy cleaning or this ELEaRIC P-7 SELFCLEANING OVEN Range, with two ovens, rotis-serie, lighted cook-top, meat_. ... thermometer . . PLUS MUCH^||'J AAORE... 10 to 15 PER CENT OFF, ON ALL CARPET & FURNITURE DURING THIS YEAR END SALE (jUMls ITSELF fejC Irrrr tan Bin 0 UPSWaHUI n 4-0526 , V,' 4 k MIUlMRlCillMIMrlW NCE SALE WE’RE STARTING THE NEW YEAR OFF WITH A BANG! OPEN m ^ « EVERY YARD OF CARPETING IN OUR GIANT INVENTORY is now priced to sovo you more than over Bofore! In order to clear out all remaining 1968 stock, every salesman has been ordered to give you the kind of deal that con literolly save you a fortune. You'll see every color. Every texture. Every style you can possibly name. And, everything is FIRST QUALITYI Shop today. PRICES WILL NEVER BE LOWER! E?i - daiw 9T09 Em no In m fe inM w 1BI» tBittM! »» f J * - Sunday ® m SCROLL PATTERN KODEL BEAUTY-GLO NYLON PLUSH HEAVY RANDOM-SHEAR NYLON MuHi-Ltvsl CUMULOFT LOOP ■ TMi Mipwter naw UitS •( «». tirtt ttahib •eW and wM, IMm nariiing Satan. Man, colon. FISST QUAU7YI 5e74 S« •oWmimI Huffy It Mn Ilk* «nitfli«n — but •etuofly eswts to iMiu. Tbu dump nybn pllu cufRM bi 20 MMft cutmu. FIRST QUAllTYI Hii8 kuudiwiwuly utylud cuipNlfis NNiItu ufiy mom l*ok bigur, debur. Thu kuouy duty nyAun pEu wW mho you yoon of woor. Uimy oolom. FIttT QUAUTYI ** *^.l *fl* "wtbby* lyh ffirt !■ y uffn Xumuluff* odon pdo tomoo tit o mhbmo •f mIm. FIMTQtM^TYi 3.57 5.58 » ■ 4.24 » MRMY W AT*ki^^ nttS AMP STYL —— i tstsw^ snU —------------- Hi-U Mylon I 2.32 ^ Space-Dyed Tweed | Plush Mylon Textured Mylon Carved Mylon Shag Mylon Scroll Polyester Hylon Twist Sheared Model KodoiShag HUNDREDS OF COLORS & STYLES! THIS IS ONLY A PARTIAL LIST EXTRA-THICK NYLON PLUSH Thu fhkkMt, doooot/t, iMot lumideue fiylun piutk-cut pu* yWVu mm >eeeul OECORATOR-STYLEO FLORAL 3.06^ ZA'I’X 3.38^ 3.98^ 3.86 4.5812 5.29:1 .till cKoof oa MV. ooHn hooM. mAy PATIimS. rWSTOUALITYI HEAVY TRI-LEVEL ACHYLIC low aoolH* oci^ 1^ now, ihmn m ooitacW, oMi on, Sotor. natrouMiYvi it'tth4<«Mea»0ani5tl Candy-Stripe Sottart ta, mo, -oetaeleh San m tamM, . Main, op Iota • itaiiolin ana nia, ■ I a wlaa Mewy comnOo FN Tka k.av, n|mo |rita tana, la i____ oaitat, H tala, waiUnallaoi. riUT OUAUTVI 4^93 ^ m 5e79 % 1 6e93 % # 3e94 % SHOP WITH NO MONEY DOWNI TAK 3 YEARS TO PAYI WRVAcp/ ?«n1t In •alep’ & & titg ■ 3127 IIUKOil kQAP ONE MILE WEST OF TELEQRAPH No MO •WUeW, Your •n. gjo THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1069 D&jfhs in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Alan P. Scribntr . ■ *<■' service for Alttn P. Scribner, Pontiac and Mrs. JohH Hanner stepsons, William Dodds of of Lapeer; a son, Arnold of Pon- Birmingham and James Dodds ,3«T.v» -------.,tlac; 10 grandchildren; 14 great- 12, -of 280 Nelson will be 1:38 grandchildren; and three great-ni Saturday at the Huntoon great-grandchildren. Mrs. George Ball 'udfsral Hbme with burial in WhKd Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mb'. Scribner, an employe of Podtiac Motor Division, died yedterday- SirvlvlDg are his wife, Sharon; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Palmer Scribner; two children, Tammy and Andrea, both at home; two brothers, Robert of Waterford Township and Jerry of Pontiac; and two sisters. Edward H. Sommer • Service and burial for former Poidiac resident Edward H. SotBmer, 82, of Kensington, Mcfe will be tomorrow in Chieago. died yesterday in Kens- inj^. m. Sommer moved from Chjgago to Pontiac in 1928 when the GMC Truck & Coach Division was built on South BoiSevard. He retired a s su*perintendent of coach assembly in 1950. In recent years he has made his h«ne in Maryland. Surviving are two sons, Wilbur of Pontiac and Donald of Maryland; two daughters, Mrs. Bruce Hubbard of Pontiac and Mrs. John Blang of Hinsdale, 111.; 12 grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. Mrs. Service for Mrs. Harry .W (Niha H.) Taylor, 82, of 11 Boston will be 1 p.m. Saturday at “Donelson-Johns Funeral Mrs. of Detroit a sister, Mrs. Paul B. Bell of Birmingham; and 16 grandchildren. Memorials may be made to Camp Oakland, Oxford. BIRMINGHAM —• Service for former resident Mrs. George (Elizabeth) Ball, 76, of Vassar will be 1 p.m. Saturday at Chapel of the Flowers at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by Clark Funeral Home of Vassar, followed by burial. Mrs. Ball a member of Embury Methodist C h u r c h ,i ,ic was Birmingham, died yesterday in!salesman. Saginaw. i Surviving is a sister. M. Aline Surviving are her husband; a Harbison of Birmingham, son, Henry, of Vassar; a daughter Mrs. Ada J. Folster of, James P. Mosele Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; a - brother; a sister; and four! PONTIAC TbWNSHIP — Service for James P. Mosele, infant son of Mr. and Mrs W. Dale Harbison BIRMINGHAM - Service for W. Dale Harbison, 70, of 711 Forest will be 1 p.m. Saturday at Manley Bailey Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mr. Harbison died yesterday. He was a retired advertising grandchildren. Mrs. Frank G. Dennis ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Frank G: (Edna L.) Dennis, 63, of 516^ Ludlow, will be 10 am. tomorrow at Memorial Chapel, with Norman Mosele, 3830 Baldwin will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at White Chapel M e m o r 1 a Cemetery, Troy, with burial by Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home Pixley, Pontiac. burial The child died Tuesday. Saturday in Hopewell Cemetery, Surviving besides his parents Parkersburg, W. Va. are his grandparents, Mrs. Mrs. Dennis died yesterday. {Matilda Litchfield of Milan, Surviving besides her husband;Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. *Donald are a son, Marlin D. apd a Harry of Union Lake, and a daughter, Mrs, William brother, Shawn, at home. Breedlove, both of Parkersburg,! Charles Riley Vfl ' two sistGFSj two’ * brothers’’including, Emu’sell of WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Rochester; and three Service for Charles Riley, 76, of grandchildren. 9715 Mandon will be 11 a.m. Memorials may be made to tomorrow at Elton Black the Michigan Cancer Founda- Funeral Home with burial In Harry W. jaylor tion. Parkview Memorial Gardens, Livonia. A retired punch press operator, Mr. Riley died Tues-,day. -------------- - ...... Wallace (Virginia M.)| Surviving are his wife, Home with burial in Eastlawn Dodds, 69, of 550 N. GlenhurstIsabel, daughters, Mrs. Ceffletery, Lake Orion. ' i - . ~ -----------■ - - Mrs. Wallace Dodds BIRMINGHAM - Service for 1UMK3 wiui i/uuua, U5I, VI oov iv. 'J*'-*"—*'*'^3061; lOUF oaugmers, mis. ;effletery. Lake Orion. ' will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Bell p^ank Buffa of Roseville, Irma Jjrs. Taylor died yesterday, chapel of the William, R-Rothwell of Detroit, Elaine lhe»was a member of BethaenyjHamilton Co., with burial in Q^gy of Union Lake and Mrs. Slja^WaS a iiiciixiiL/vt v» i naiiim-uii v/v., wiui i a i BafSist Church, Order o f woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Eag|{epi Star Chapter 228 and Mrs. Dodds died Tuesday. She thel5wihite Shrine. Surviving are two daughters, Mrg Donald Richardson of Livenia and Mrs. Roy Barrett of Lronard; a son, Ilaymond Hatlxweil of Madison Heights; eight, grandchildren;, and nine greiH^andchildren. 1, Mrs. Andy Toycich Former Pontiac resident Mrs. Andy (Anna) Toycich, 83, of Taylor died yesterday. Arrangements are pending at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Surviving are two s«is, Adam Psenak and Andrew Psenak, botft of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrsi Robert Schneider o f Ta^r; four grandchildren; was a member of Kirk in the Hills, the Village Women’s Club and Orchard Lake Country Club. Surviving are a son, William Weeks of California; two step-,------ daughters, Mrs. Ralph Cotton of|67, of 4080 England Beach Road Denver, Colo, and Mrs. Norman!will be 1 p.m. Saturday at Gray William Lewis of Milford; sister; 12 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Robert Schneider WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Service for Robert Schneider, Goeckel of Birmingham; two Sihanouk Puts Hippies Down Richardson-Bird Funeral Home Milford with burial in White Lake Cemetery. A retired tool and die maker, Mr. Schneider died Tuesday. Surviving are his wife. Pearl; two sisters and a brother. William F. Whitcomb Sr. TROY Service for former resident William F. Whitcomb, SAIGON (AP) — Cambodia’s 77_ gf i^rgo, Fla., will be 1 p.m. ievto great-grandchildren; and!movie-making, jazz-loving ru-ggturday at Price Funeral brother. Prince Norodom Sihanouk, burial in White ^ ’ has put down the hippie move- ^bape 1 Memorial Cemetery. George E. Walton service for (Sleorge E. Walton, 40, pt 273 Fisher will be 2 p.m. Sui^y in Eutaw, Ala. Burial wilf follow in Eutaw. A Masonic Hout of Sorrow will be conducted at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the “Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. His body may be viewed at *3 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mk. Walton, an einploye of;_^jj.jance Poi^ac Motor Division, died Tu^day. He was a member of the" Franklin Road church of ChiSst and Most Worshipful Mt. Sinfi Grand Lodge, Ancient ment. Answering a young lady who wrote from England asking for a visa, Sihanouk said: “I was strongly surprised by your letter of Sept. 8 implying that I could have any interest whatever in ‘hippies.’ Be assured that we are completely indifferent to the location of this Western ‘movement’ to which you attach such universal im- ★ ★ ★ “Insofar as your visit to Cambodia is concerned, it is not the status of Graveside services will be by lOOF Lodge 563, Femdale. A member of Elmwood United Methodist Church, Aywi Township, Mr. Whitcomb died Monday. He was a retired machine operator at Ford Motor Co. Surviving are a son, William F. Jr. of Troy; three stepdaughters, Mrs. Aldo Cairo of Troy, Mrs. Robert Clark of Garden City and Miss Roberta Garriot of Detroit; a sister and brother; two grandchildren; nine stepgrandchildren and one i n d whoever he may be, propooes or list^s. Mrs. Clifton Williams Mb's. Clifton (Mary B) VUHams, 59, of 5150 Cheyenne, iVaterford Township, died this noinlng. Her body is at Sparks-IrQfin Funeral Home. A^s. Herman Bahling (Sfe-TONVILLE - Service for drK Herman (Della) Bahling, I5,ajif 330 Sherman, will be 1:30 ).i^ Saturday ht Carmen’s Fu-leml Home, Brown City, with >u&l in Imlay City Cemetery. MN. Bahling died yesterday.^ Surviving are ‘"~ -drsi Charles E ‘hippie’ which you “step great-grandchild yourself that could not to live as a parasite in our society which is fighting for its survival.” Cambodia’s offiiial news agency published the letter. Biofra Asks Nigerians for Limited Truce two daughters, Hampshire of Homney Adviser Gets Court Post UMUAHIA, Biafra (AP) -The leader of secessionist Biafra, Lt. Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, has called for a limited truce in the Nigerian civil war to allow delivery of relief supplies , and posslMy open the way for peace. '"Oilikwu proposed in a New Year’s Eve broadcast that federal Nigeria and the breakaway east^ re#en join in a ceasefire and , negotiations without precemditions. ' ■ < ; 'S- r ■ ' it it LANSING (AP)-GoV. George j • ^ :jfimey found a soot for «n-l|r member of his outgo ng de?plte the Ministration , today, naming war, there is still« ^We arw^ degal adviser, Robert J. Dan- “great mutual »‘*vajitage ^ to a vacancy on the 12-tween Nigerians and BlMrans. mber State Court of Appeals. Peace talks, he said, could cov' __nhof, 43, a west Michigan d|ve and t Romney aWe for years, succeeds Judge Irnnas Giles Kavanagh in the lS^-a>year Appeals Court Kavanagh was elected to la State Supreme Court Nov. 5. er many subjects including economic relations ‘tend even the p<^bility of a commenwealth arrangement,” " Ojukwu said flie federal forces have gained no «utitory aince September. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 61 reported incidents and made eight arrests the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Rape—1 ^ Vandalisms—3 Burglaries—8 Larcenies—9 Auto thefts—1 Disorderly persons—4 Assaults—3 Shopliftings—2 Traffic offenses—18 Property damage accidents^ Injury accidents—4 THROUGH ALL OF 1969^ snu HIVKm 0 0 • PACKER FOODS WALL TO WALL LOW PRICES! NOTICE To the QuallfM Elactori of Avon Town' ”iSotlco li horoby alvon, thof a Chart^ ilactlon will ba haM In tha To^ihlp of Avon, Oakland County. Stata of MIchlaan, for tka Propoaad CJIy of RKhaitar Hlllt at All Praclneta w»Wn-aaW Yownjhlp of Avon on Monday. MarOh 10. IW. for tf» Purpoir of '’ Approval of fha Propoaad Chartar and ffia irtaetina of tha followlnp Offlearti savin Xounenman. Ona City Clark.,Ona City TraSaUiy. _ . . Nominating patitlent ahatl ba fllad not ^ra January 15, m* and not ottor 4:00 KMi on January 31, 1000 at tha Avon TiwvnahiP Clofk'o Oftfoa. 4» Pina Straat. Pina Straat, Roi^ar, MWlgn, ba-twaan S:M A.M. and liW P.M.. mnday* thru FrWiy. . . ^ THBUMA 0. tPKNCRRo w. f.w..t...jr Hijlo January,! 0, lOao Chai^ CommIMIon PropoiM Clbf of Rochaifar Hill With Backs Attached FRESH FRTHI LEGS •r BREASTS Prices tWeetive Tfcre Sefordey, Jei! 4,1H9, iWgfcli fieierwd fo limit QaMitht I fWoH to Woll^ ■ LOW PRICES iN EVERY DEPARTMENT Chocolate 16-ox. Pkg. NABKCDOREOS 42* 3/»1 33' KMJia TomO FIDDLE FADDLE Sophie Moo PEANUT BRiniE S-oz. Pkg. 11-ez Box instant 2-lb. Box InotonO KAVA COFFEE .Bordens YOGURT Kiddie Cereal (AP 'N CRUNCH HERSHEY'S CHOCOLATE 63* 66< 22< 38< Mtadowdalw Thick SLICED BACON m Slictd Into Chops QUAMBt PORK low 9 to 12 Cheei 67 U.S.D.A. Choica Beef CHUCK STEAK 581 Center Blade Ciit Variety Lunch MeoN iCKRICH SMORCAS PAC. . Hygredi Michigan Grade 1 BALL PARK FRANKS . . . . Prtdictd BOINLESSBHPSTIW. . . U'S.D.A. Grade "A" SMALL YOUNG TURKEYS . Comolot White L Dark Meet BONELESS TURKEY ROLLS • U.S.e>. Choln BOHEUSS BEEF ROAST Relied C GTIed 0^ 99* 73>t iW- Mi W fm 1-lb. Pack Under 1Q-lb. 4-ex Jer E-ex. CM. Lady Betty White Cnrichad Flour GOLD MEDAL Pioneer Brand PURE SUGAR GIANT BREAD 5>-49< Contadina ’•t/r"-JO* uvi-oi. ^ Kc Margorino .. KRAFT PARKAY 1^22* Hunts TOMATO PASTE ‘*!4* Sara Lee Fresm POUNDCAKE Ar66< Hunts With Onions TOMATO SAUCE Wt.*0[n 15^ Nobioce Premium ISAIIINB Wishbone Itelien SALAD DRESSING 'Lr44‘. New Crop Florida JUKE ORANGES 5^58 U.S. No. 1 Florida GRAPEFRUIT 5»58‘ U.S. No. 1 Apples MdNTOSH 3 lb. eoc B«g m m Green Giant SWEET PEAS. . Green Giant ^ nibletscorn. . Tomato HUNTS CATSUP. Tomato HUNTS PASTE. EVi-ez, Con 7-oz. • Can 14-ez. . EtI. 15* 15* 18* 24' Ceffe# _ CHOCK FULL O NUTS. Whipped Margarine Spoeiol Label BLUE BONNET. . . . . Soft Morgorino FLEISHAAAHS............. FANTASTIK CLEANER For Laundry LIQUID WISK. 5060 Dixio Hwy. shopping centir Of 700 Pontiae Trail WALLED LAKE THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1969 Car Owner Had Better Idea. SPANISH SETS UHKSrniGES aAok mniniEiiE! Mi vt EvwyMmgiwAUCTJON-PitlCJSD at: AUCTION CENTER ATLANTA (UPI) - Virlyn Motes decided he'd hid raough troubles with his 1967 j^ord so he burled it in his front lawn New Year's Day while several grim Ford representatives looked on. j "Now I ask you, where is Mrt Ford’s better idea?" said the suburban Atlanta cos-metics salesman in a formal note announcing the burial. ★ ★ * V Motes, 40, decided to bury the car Just after he had a new motor installed at a cost .of 1898 last November. It was the last straw, he said, when the company reftised to guarantee the new motor indefinitely. > So, shortly after 2 p.m. Wednesday, up roll^ A bulldoser rented 'at $25 an hour which ffilped out an 8 ^t wide, 20 foot long, “car deep” hole in mtes’ lawn. least two area Ford representatives stared. Motes pushed ‘ the gear lever into reverse and carefully backed the car down a dirt embankment into the hole, stopping it in the graveslte and slipping out. He placed a large plastic drop cloth on the vehicle and tap^ on its windshield the car’s bill of sale. ★ w w 6988 HIOHUND RD. Oonvaaimt Oredtt > OKN DAILY til 9 P.M. - «4-$t«9 MANY SMILES The Motes opened the door of the dark green Galaxie for the last time, solemnly. Mated himself behind the wheel while at Some SO spectators looked on in the freezing weather, many smiling. From the grave he told a television crew: “I did this for safety. The Ford Motor Co. won’t guarantee me that this new engine I’ve had put in the car won’t lock up. It’s a hazard and I don’t think the car should be on the road.’’ John Schamerhorn, regional public relations representative for Ford, said Motes had not maintained the car according to its warranty when the first engine locked and that it would be impossible to guarantee any piece of equipment under unknown future use. All Stores Closed Today, (New Years)* Sale StartsTomorrow 10 AM! Tremendous savings now bn Ortho’s finest quality mattresses and box springs! Hurry for the most fantastic bargains in the nation! Our best selling King gives you stretch-out size and new budget-stretching savings! Mattress and matching box springs are a huge 6-ft. wide and 7-ft. long. Save now at our incredibly low January Clearance price! Only at Ortho: super-sleeping space, super-quilted comfort at a super-low price! Luxuriously quilted mattress and matching dual box springs are 6-ft. wide, 7-ft. long. Stretch-out sleeping at big savingsl $ 86 EASY CREDIT TERMS $ 118 The **Super” Queen Solve yoor space problems and your bud- ^j^preblem! Richly quilted 80" Sze mattress and matching box spring for less than the cost of a"com-panaUe i " I mattress alonel ’98 Ortho-Flex’’ King Really regal! Giant 7-ft. long, 6-ft. wide, lav. Builte ‘ ................. ishly quilted and button-free mattress and two matching box springs for blissful sleeping! 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GLENWOOD PLAZA North Perry at Glenwood V \ a- ’‘A - A:, • - THE PONTIAC PRISS. THURSDAY. JANUARY 2. 1969 Low ___U.8. combat , iia Vfetnam dropped laat t6 m the loweet total in naiong Vfetnameie government average forces were the highest in 13:namese weeks. claim. * ★ ★ * ★ ★ The two commands reported The weekly casualty report 2,135 Vletcong and North Vlet<|covered Christmas cease-i^es proclaimed by the allies and the Nixon to Undergo dufine Checkup LOS ANGBUSS (AP) Pres- He said USC mlstakes-a rash Identeleet Mosn gets, Ug'Brst of second-half fumbles and in- the differ- flvv^gh phj^cal «(inninati(n terceptions—made In 14 mmithg today. A sp(A;es- ence. min described it as a mitlne chedkop! Nixon is seeing Dr. John Lon fren of Long l^adh, hir long ttne pmnoDu physician, for an . examhiatton expected to last - about 2t4 hours. Lungren trav-V ded wiOi the . f during ttie campaign and said '' then the candidate’s health was exceOeht. , - -k Press assistant Ronald L. Zieg-ler add the visit to Lungreii 'i. was routine. He said Nixon has f such a diedtup about once '“year. ,.»■ Nbron was to drop in latm* at ^ a hincheoo honoring Lt. Gov. - Robert H. Findi of Cd^onda, I who is to be his seoretary of . beatth, education and wdfare. 4 WELCOME HOME • ; ' Tonight, the president-elect , and his wife vrill go to Anaheim ; fOr vHiat is billed as a welcmne ‘ home to his native Orange ' County. Tliat Is being held at ; the anna of the Anaheim Con-' ventien Center, and it apparent-' fy will anoount to< a . testimonial ■ rally. ‘ > Football fan Nixon went to the ,) Rose Bowl in Pasadena Wednes- <>■ day, watched OUo State Udver------------------------- ) sity. defeat the University dp Later, the Nixons, the Wilkin Southern California, and said ’ boU) were great teams. , “A great game,*' Nixon said. The score: Ohio State 27, USC 16. "They were a little tetter, just a little, a little stronger in the line," Nixon said of Ohio State’s Buckeyes. MAINTAINS NEUTRAUTY But Nixon maintained his neutrality. “I’m happy because Ohio State is happy,” he said. “I’m sad because Southern California is sad." Nixon had a football analyst at his side, former Oklahoma coach Bud Wilkinson, a friend and political ally. Their wives sat beside them. ★ ★ * At halftime, as Nixon and his party walked across the field from the (Hiio State to the Southern California stands, Mrs. Nixon posed for photographs with the Rose Bowl oueen. “Two queens," Nixon said, smiling. He traveled to and from the Rose Bowl by Marine helicop- run by Southern California’s been killed. O.J. SimpSon was a classic. tel Vletcong. U.S. headquarters said till American tdl last week was the lowest since the week of Oct. 20-26 when 103 died. MORE WOUNDED The number of wounded last week increased over the previous week, however. Spokesmen said 1,021 Ainericans were wounded last week, with 429 of them hospital ij»d, while in the previous week the total was 838. ★ ★ ★ South Vietnamese head quarters reported that 279 government military persmmel were killed last week^' a sharp rise over the 202 rej^rted for in the previous seven-day period. The toll was the highest since the week ending Oct. 5 when 322 South Vietnamese were reported killed in action. •k ★ ★ Another 901 South Vietnamese were wounded last week, and 37 were listed as missing. * w ★ The figure of 2,135 enemy killed was certain to rise as it does evey week when more reports are received. The sum- MANILA (AP) - The ____________________Philippine foreign secretary, mary today said the total of Carlos R. Romulo, said today it 2,118 enemy killed, which was creased to 2,236. ★ ★ ★ The report raised to 30,543 the United States maintain^ bases in the islands. ★ ★ * “In the face of changing needs,” Romulo said, the presence of U.S. military bases in to chat about the game with reported, it said the ^encan „istence of firemen «i duty for his landing, wounded m that period total , , defense treaties might and i^d an ^yard touchdown ^,327, and 429,848 enemy have ^tulid tfb^S ter, landing on a golf course be- number of Americans killed in side the Radium. Badk at the action in Vietnam since Jan. 1, Century Plaza Hotel, he stopped 1961, U.S. headquarters to chat about the game with reported. It said the American uiu;ry uie niAuua, me nuivm- Tcxas is the Only state recog- — .. sons and Finch had dinner at a nized as an independent repub- sary to shorten the life of tnese Japanese restaurant in the ho- Uc by Congress before its ad- agreements or do away with ■ ■ mission to the'Union. *’•— ““ ' 'Model T Efficiency' 1st Automat Closes Its Doors PHILADELPHIA (AP) —iCustomers open the Am^irlca’s first Automat, which play doors to get at the it^S has served breakfast, lunch, din- they want by dropping in coins ner and a mess of nickel coffee and twisting knobs. ^ The original Automat, Its mechanical equipment Imported breaks to some 50 million cus tomers in 66 yeqrs, is a victim of modern times. ----- ■ • , ,, . Horn and Hardart Baking Co. from Germany, was a tourist at- iopened the original coin-operat-- -ed restaurant in 1902 to provide from historic Independence Hail clean and efficient food service AP wirtphol* Serving one of the last slices of pie END OF AN ERA to go through the window In the nation’s first Automat restaurant in Philadelphia, is Ralph MacNeil, an official of Horn & Hardart, which closed the restaurant this week. The closing was blamed on its present-day inefficiency and slowness. Filipino Questions Need of U.S. Defense Bases new “shall continue and friendly." might be necessary some day to previously reported for the do away with the mutual deweek of Dec. 15-21 had now in- fense treaties under which the be found to be “inflexible. ♦ ★ “It may then be found neces- It ? them as expeditiously as we can,” he cteclared. ' ® ' ■ *. ★ A veteran diplomat who Is heading the foreign office for the second, time, Romulo also has served as president of the U.N. General Assembly and as ambassador to Washington. He succeeded Narciso Ramos, who retired. Romulo spoke at a ceremony marking his return to the foreign office. ★ * * He called for the Philippines to abandon its “small nation thinking” and said relations with allies—including the United States, Britain and Australia— to be correct It folded last weekend because :it was a museum piece, inefficl 'ent and slow, in a computerized .'world. : “We took this step most reluc jtantly from the standpoint ol nostalgia,” said Nelsoo G. Ha ris, the new H&H president “We have to be realistic. The Automat in Us existing form meets the requirements of this space age about as well as a Model T alongside the ApoUo i8.” * * ★ At the peak of its popularity before and after World War II the business founded in 1888 by Joseph V. Horn and Frank Har dart operated 32 Automats. Now there are two left in Philadelphia, and eight in New York City. UNECONOMICAL’ “They are not really automat ic,” sdid Harris. “And definitely uneconomical to maintain and staff.” Fresh food must be placed into tije slotted compartments by ji^le behind the equipmoit Fire Kills Man NKON’S 'TWO QUEENS’-President-elect Nixflo stands between his wife Pat and Pamda Anicich, queen of the Tournamoit of Roses, during the halftime intermission AP Wircphola of the Rose Bowl game in Pasadena, Calif., yesterday. “Two queens” is how he described them. TAWAS CITY (AP) - A New Year’s Eve fire destroyed a house in nearby Alabaster Township, killing- Duncan McDonald. Police said McDonald was in his 70s or 80s and lived alone. Shirts Jieg. S4 and So Sellert 2 for »5 Sweaters $10-$15 Values »5 Penn-Press Pants $8 and $9 Valuer »5 eW’S MEN’S & BOYS’ WEAR Conveniently located in downtown Pontiac 73 N. SAGINAW traction, situated two blocks It was used years ago as a setting for movies. Songs were written about it, and It vrak tho butt of many jokes. ★ ★ ★ Comedian Jimmy Duranth gdt big laughs when he said, “J put a slug in a slot at the Automat and what do you think cam# out?—the manager." ; ; .*< OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 11- COUPON SALE Thurtday, January 2 thru Monday, Jano^^.^*^ iMjQiBirRWSRr OurKeg- 18c Ea 7»*l Thurt., Fri., Sat., ,Sun. and Mon. CDCC NO PURCHASE rKCC NECESSARY DRAWING FERRUARY 22, 1969 WINNER WILL BE NOTIFIED WESTINQHOUSE Communicator TR-2, two-way radio transceiver. Equipped with communicators plus AM radio. MOTOROU PORTABLE TV SET. Operates on UHF or VHF channels, power pack battery or car radio battery. MOTOROU PORTABLE STEREO. Handsome Solid State X219 stereo phonograph produces clear, like-real sounds. Stdp in. Pick Up Coupons at tho Drivo-ln, No Pur- »Top in, ricK up chaso Roquirod. Namo...................................... •. • Addrtss.................................... City...................State................ Phono No................... 2ip.............. y ^rii GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY STREET A) bLtr/AOOD THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 11-6 aDTi Eliminates Middle-of-Week Holidays Michigan Man Devises a New Calendar ANN ARBOR (UPI) — Anyjholidays fall In the middle of way you look at it, the the week. Gr^cxian and Julian calen-j With all due respects to Julius dan are messing up modem! Caesar, whose Julian calendar industry and the private lives of was instituted in 46 B.C., and millions of Americans — when'the refined Gregorian calendar. named after Pope Gregory XIII, Charles H. Single of Ann Arbor thinks it is time for a change, Single, a computer engineer, has come up with a calendar — i ^.. ' ■ ■T BURPiUBED PARENTS - Helen and " acquainted with flieir new g Obmos, NX, boiqiltM yeoti^- Tvefed sbortty « complete nt^said^hity km Mn, Mffler vtts pregnmt. AP Wlrtulwl* Mrs. Miller left a New Year’s party because she wasn’t feeling well — a gall bladder aUack, she thollidiL “Everyone was surprised," she said at the hospital where the delivery was made, “EspeciaUy my husband.” The Milto have been marriod for. years and have no other children. 'aided by his computer — which has all holidays falling on the last day or the first day of the W66k. Single calls it the “13 by 28 plus 1 calendar.” The calendar has 13 months, each with 28 days, with an extra day in the normal year and two extra days on leap year. ^The cedendar is universal for each month, storting on Tuesdays. . Surprisingly, the Single calendar would cause little change in traditional holidays celebrated. Good Friday And Easter would be on their same day and date with the new calendar. Because the Single calendar has only 364 days, the cwnputer engineer has added "wild card day," called New Year’s Day. It is not a regular day nor does it have a date. It is a 24 hour respite between Dec. 28 and Jan. 1. In Leap Year thtere would be two such days, designated like “X" instead of a regular date. - ' Under the Single calendar, every legal holiday would result in a three day weekend. Because of the, improved business efficiency achieved by the new calendar, an atUithma] hdiday, “’"New Yesir’s Eve, Dec. 28, is proposed. This gtyes it a minimum of five days off between Christmas and Jan. 1 on . Leap Year if wotild be aix days. Name Brand Discounts REMINGTON ADDER Our Reg. 88.88 3 Days Only FiGUREMATIC ADDER 56.66 Our Reg. 68.88 3 Days Only Great Remington “102” adds, subtraeU, multipliei, sub-totals, toatals — even prints noh-idd nuntberi. Snith-Corona “708" lightweight portable adds, tub-DlUma electric dates, subtracts larger number from smaller! Li^t, strong, quiet, hi-impact-resistant! Save over 111 I tracta, multipliea 7 colUms electrically, totals 8 cola. Hat tramparent tear-off atrip, streamline snap-on cover, retractable handle. Save over $12 now! CORONET elecirh: 12’’ Wide CaiTiage TYPDNRIP SALE Our Reg. 134.74 ■. 116.66 3 Days Only Deluxe portable “12". Of- Deluxe portable “12”. Of fice-sise 88 keyboard, quick set margins, vitiyl-clad tteel flight cate! Huge savings. ELECTRIC 10’’ Wide . TYPEWRITER SAU Our Reg. 116.74 f HT TT 3 Days Only Super portable: full 88 keyboard, quick-set margins, tabs; flight-style metal/vinyl carry case! Get it at Mvingsl enwo i wi < \ ■1 , Dgily 10^10 \da Suncfoy 11*6 Jkau, ffviGir" Chtvuu^ wf SKIRTS, SLACKS, SWEATERS GIRLS' s 2-3 WOAAEN'S and |S ond^C Come aee onr febnlom eleannee of nnart aeparatea .. ^ beautiful fashions and fabries . . . tagged at a fraction of their usual price! Styles for all the girls, mom too! Gtrk’ stdrlsi A-Uum; box, knife, inverted ;tlealt; panel-fronts... some eulottet... tome bonded ... Cnrlon<^ aerylice, cottoni; 4-14 in group. Girle’ aiaekst A variety of fabries and styies in dark colors, sites 3-6X and 7-1^ marked down for happy winter savingsl Girls* iswoMoiat Cardigans, pnllovars, crew, tnrtle necks, loiuc and abort doeves,oaqp«areal Mostly dark eolota,3 sienad. Wools, aotylioe...some bonded. Maiqr odors. 6-M> 'r WonBan*a, swaalanst Flaa-gaaga aerylies, bnlldea ... fnlMisiibionod Blipons, cardigans, fisbonnaa styles, imports! Maiqr odors, 34401 jR«mmiA0rfy0mean**Ckarg0lf*JQuan*UU$LbHited /I AAAN-SIZE SAVINGS! OurReg. 7.97 to 10.97 3 Day* Only 488(0^88 6,88 Try these for aiasci men — then walk home with sav* inis of 3.09 and 4.09 ■ pair! Dress oxfords, slipKtn cas-;uau 4,88 . rieh leathera, supple wipe^slean vinyls .. dur^ able^ long-wearing soles. Handsome black^ browns; site 7-11. Get several at clearance savings! MiMKMTC'S MEN’S HUE suns IN ALL WOOL WORSTED Comp, at $3S 34*8 Chargolt • 3 New Styles • Many patterns • Subtle I I colors ' Various sizes Stripes, sharkskins, glen plaids and checks. 3 button na* tnral shoulder. 2-bnu ton widi center vent and 2 button with side vents. Grey. Blue. Olive. Brown. Blue/ r. Reg., Olive. Heather. Short, Long. m] SP0RTC0A1S! BLAZERS! Our Reg, 24,97 3 Day* Only 1999 * Chargolt 100% wool or 55% Aeiilanl^ Aerylie, 45% wool blazers and s^iortcoats for men. Sportcoats are 2-Wtton side or center vent. Blazers are 3 button style. Checks. Solids. Twills. Plaids. Window Panes. Rust. Olive. Blue. Green. Camel. Navy. Black and White glen plaid. Reg. Long. Short. aril, efOnaebeaS Cep. ! W HI-BOY26'^TVSTAND SALEI 30-CUP PARTY PERK sisMJIlia SDpggOnly S Day* Only Our Reg, 9,27 SDayeOnly f' J|.lv 12-TRANSi5lOR RADIO OwJI^. 4.97 SDayoOnly 9.94 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUAItY 2, 196» wp»»n«a pMiiralhcMts li i% n f‘ now ipociolly priced of only 32.90 r. rogulor, pin and bulfondown dross shirts now specially priced ot only 4.79 , All-weather permonent - press raincoats with zip-in pile liners ; (sleeves-and-oll); slash pockets, split raglan models; solids and fancies. ■ A large assortment of regular, pin and Ivy buttondown shirts in cottons, and blends; choose from white, solids or fancy patterns. laiaii ffomous moker pormonont-press outorwoor now specially prieed at only 24.90 fomous maker cotton lisle turtlenecks now specially priced at only 5.99 Year-round D a c r o n/cotton jockets with zip-in pile lining, zip-front with knit collar and c u f f s. Permanent-press in a wide ^nge of colors. Cotton lisle turtlenecks made of very fine cotton lisle in a smart long-sleeve version; in a large assortment of solid shades. tpOltODpH now speciolty priced Ot only 39.90 r Fall and year-round sport doats in two- and three -button models; in a chpice of plaids, checks, solids, and assorted potterns. ploinr*front belt-loop model slocks now specially priced at only 15.90 A large and handsome group of all-worsted reverse twists, all-worsted flannels and fancy pattern plaids ond checks in popular plain-front belt-loop models. FAMOUS MAKIR DRESS SHIRT — Whit* dress shirts in regular, spread and tab collar., styles; French and button euHs ............................5.99 IMPORTED GIFTS — Many imported specialty gift items, a large assortment to choose from; clearance priced from.............3.99* to 14.99 FANCY DRESS SHIRTS — A large assortment of *olid pastels, decp-tooies,',stripes and checks; many cbtlat styles available . ... '.......5.99 TURTLENECK DRESS SHIRTS — For casual or formal wear, many with "French cuffs; in white or solid shades, many fabrics ......5.99 to 13.99 QUALITY HANDKERCHIEFS — Imports and assorted silks in handy 3-packs; now specially priced from .....................1.99 to 4.99 ASSORTED PRESS SHIRTS Many styles, colors and fabrics to choose from; many famous makers included . ,'ii. ... 2,99 to 3.99 WINTER MUFFLERS — Imported mufflers In a large assortment of plaids and solids; clearance priced from .......................1.99 to 3.99 TURTLENECK SPORT SHIRTS — All-wool full-fashioned turtlenecks imported from Italy and England;., assorted solid colors ..............9.99 FINE NECKWEAR — Handsome neckwear in a large assortment of styles, colors and fabrics; clearance priced from .............1.99 to 5.29 ASSORTED KNIT SHIRTS — Turtlenecks, mock-turtles, regular collars and inserts; some imports, many fabrics, colors and styles ... 3.99 to 29.99 HOSE IN MANY LENGTHS—Hose in anklet and over-the-calf lengths; large assortment to choose from, clearance priced from . . . i . .79e te'1.39 ASSORTED SPORT SHIRTS — Regular and button down collar styles, cotton and cotton blends; in solids, stripes, ^>laids and checks 4,99 to 9,99 ASSORTED PAJAMAS — A large assortnjent of fine quality pajamas; long-sleeve, long-leg styles; priced from......................‘. . .3,99-to 10.99 ORLON KNIT TURTLENECKS—Pure Orion knit-shirts with knit cuffs; spaced pencil stripes in a large assortment of colors ......3.99 FINE QUALITY ROBES — A large selection of terry-lined and wool robes now clearance priced from .................................C.99 to 19.99 i;, inSHEflMAN KNIT SWEATERS — Famous maker liM-wOol mock-turtle sweaters; classic fisherman ^Jhtt stylo ..................................13.99 ASSORTS) SWEATERS — V-necks, crew-necks, ' ’ tWttenecks, rnock-turtles and cardigans; most are '-^iwieus makers; in solids Cr fancies 9.99 to 39.99 ,;'MMOUS MAKER OUTERWEAR — Wgpls, pop-\ '-'"'''ilne, nylons, corduroys, wool tweeds aitd-herring-f 'gtpnes; waist lengths and car coats 14.90 to 89.90 ^lltHtD AND UNLINED CLOVES — A large as-s tertment of men's lined and unlined\ gloves; fftrhKt for cold weather driving , . . 3.99 to 7.99 ■D TACS — A laVge assortment of He ‘lacs In many assorted storilt .3.99 BOXER SHORTS — Regular style...... 3/4,49 and 2/3.19; or trim-cut boxer shorts, clearance priced at ............................... UNDERSHIRTS — Regular style undershirts.... 2/2.49 and 3/3.59; or regular T-shirts clearance priced at ...................3/4.39 and 2/3.19 JOHNSTON MURPHY SHOES — Slip-ons, lace-ons, wing-tips, moc-tbe, and pWn-toe styles; large selection i v ..........29.99 WRfCHT ARCH PRESERVER SHOES — Entire stock reduced, choose from grafned or smooth leathers in. many styl4s ....... .2SJ5 to 13.51 ■ Imported wallets and secre-the finest leathers; good selec-' . ..................3,99 to 7.99 LARGE CROUP pp BOSTONIANS — Ch<)0se from wing-tipe brogues, slip-ons, or chukka boot lace-ons ......................21,99 FAMOUS MAKER MATS — Choose from center crease narrow brim, or center creasa>^.wlde brim; many shades to choos# from ..... 12.99 - H-MM ; ^•,4 " i ,‘'4. Substantial markdowns all around our stores: on men’s suits and coats, on sportswear and furnishings,'’on hats and shoes and accessories—thmsan^ of things at exciting savings. And equally significant, a majority of it is famous brand merchandise ° by rnak-ers you know and trust. From the standpoint of selection, from the standpoint of savings, it’s the most rewarding clearance sale of the year! Find famous brands like GGG •.IpUIS ROTH ‘ EAGLE • HART SCHAFFNER & MARX AUSTIN LEEDS • HAM- MONTON PARK • FASHION PARK • FROST & FROST • H. FREEMj^N M STOM^ NATURAL • ALPACUNA • BARRON ANDERSON • MALCOLM KENNETH* BELVEipERE • KINGSWOOD CHARTER CLUB • MONT- CLAIR FALL FABRICS / *.i / ■; ONE- fir TWO-TROU^ER SUITS, N/f-TURAL SHOULDER VESTED SUITS, ZIPCOATS, TOPCOATS, OVERCOATS An extraordinary assortment of clothing —most of it by famous makers—at excellent savings. Virtually anything you're looking for is' here: suits in every im-portont style, color and fabric; outercoats in dress ond casual styles, all in a huge variety, and all from our regular fqll ond winter stocks. Sale priced now . ^ .t ■, 5^.85 to 199.75 SPORT COATS IN FALL AND WINTER FABRICS: A LARflE iSELECTIO^ OF STYLES, SHADES, PATTERNS Foil and year-round sport coats in two-button, three-button, natural shoulder, shaped, and blazer styles; in plaids, checks, solids, assorted patterns. Many ore by nationally known makers. Now— 39.90 to 109.90 DRESS SLACKS IN YEAR-ROUND AND A big group of worsteds, twists,*worsted flannels, fancy jsonts, twills, fresco weaves, homespuns—in ploin*front belt-.; loop cmd beltless Western styles.* Now priced at............15.90 ond 19.90 NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS Lok».ftodd$ I .1. i, i»»^ "*"*"%•**• CAMPBELL’S VEGETABLE or CHICKEN NOODLE CAMPBELL’S Tomato Mi: SOUPS l.»1 IOV4-OZ. Wt. lomaio Soup'^^f^ 11 ^niej, ry 1*. •■, If ' i ^ C VV wp ■ ‘'V '1 MX amiBit^^.; ;.v4’^^•S***'’**^iriiiiil '®* 31 MM I Mirflp^ wttw V /*\l; Whip. ■•1(4 0f»«»"'*. h < U^r ' '• 4s» fJkA * r‘. ^BAMKA 4FISNERIIM Poroh Fillots ^}veBonnef DOLES->L0-0AL FRUIT COCKTAIL 1-Lb. Cans 6-Lb. Box 1'1" IDAHO CRUIKLE CUT .•fr ^z- -ISIIBIII C^-*‘ MICHiOAN BEET , „xi SUGAR vii- '■“« W"' /-’4 .-*v lii iit^ PIPAMILBAIY fOMNLA %1S , ■h'4 * illO' UA 4j£' Ass't. Colors NORTHERN JUMBO TOWELS 25* Roll RED ROSE BLACK TEA BAS 48 ot. S<' f utmm llMMONl;tl'QMMII IKMMrs - “ .7/ M' / ■/ y 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUESDAY. JANUARY ». loeft January dilintor of 4 tMklfh ‘ pNii-dh), l clogged area if — Avon Township voters approved Inpaporation by 47-vote margin, tia - Pontiac City Commission gave llnid. approval to the open housing ar^anoe by a 4-3 vote. February I — War-on-poverty leaders James M. McNeely, executive director of the Oakland County Conunlsslon o n Bconomic Opportunity, and Cvl F. laiFaham, tbs commission's chairman, resigned.- U -> Two elderly women died' In a flveJioar blaze which leveled their home in White Lake Township. ,. U — The West Bloomfield Board of Education fired Schools SupL Dr. Leif Hougen without disclosing their reasons. ' 80 School millagit hikes were defeated in Tr^ and Avondale. 83 — The Pontiac Area Council : established > 15-member task force on race relations. 84 — OaUand Counbr recdved a fS.3-million federal grant '/to help finance constructian ' of the CUntonOakland Interceptor Sewer. 87 — Plana for a $6.44nillion Oakland Cooidy JaU were approved by a committee of the board of si^rvisors. ^ ^ 88 li Tha poidlao Bosad el .ikiucatton decided to pot Human Rescnnces Center elementary school comptex east of City HaU. March I — Pontiac voters nominated candidates fter the aty Commission dection April 18. Nominated were Charles M. Tucker Jr., - T. Warren' Fowler Sr., George Orba, P. tmaster, was confirmed by the Michigan State Attorney General’s office' and the Road Commission. Kennedy was weighmaster for 15 years. 4 ~ A 1667, state law extending terms of incumb^i township officers was declared unconstitutloiud' by OakUmd County Circuit Judge William J. Beer. A Waterford sdiools vote central lomitioii on the fringe of the downtown area, reedved 155 points out of a possible 299. ★ ★ ★ Votiiig was conducted among iW employes, with 19 pofaits going to *a story pideed first, 9 for second, 8 for third and so on throu^ the top 19 stories of the year. Pladiw second with 133 points was the dty’a tair-JioadBg ordinance, vriiicb was approved in an dectioo June 25 by .a 1,419 vote margin — i,SBt «nd 3,193. Ttm drowning of Pontiac PcBce Capt. Donny E. Ash^ and ^ youngsters he was searching for vdien his boat capsized in the Clinton River July 3 was rated third. It received 113 pdnte. Other stories cenddered in the voting and the points they received as as follows:^ a 4--Local resiitti in the Nov. 5 general electtbn, which saw Democrats teAe contrd d a drastically reduced board of supervisors. (96 pointo) ★ -A ★ • 5—Plans of the U.S. Army to build an antiballistic missile base in dther Pontiac or Avon towUshtys or in the city of Troy. (71 pdnte) a 6 —The jniqKwed rcdclelopment of downtown Pontiac as vtniallzed by archr iteet C. Don Davidson of Pmtlac. (79 points) ^ MDLLAGE ELECnONS a 7—Numerous school mlllage elections in the area during the year. (68 prints) « a 8—Hie arrest of.Thcnnas Kennedy, a former wri^unaster srith the Oakland County Road (fommisrion, in connection with toe all^id embeaattement of county funds. (62 po^) a 9-portunity. Department ‘honored Johnny Blake of • Flint for his Oct. 27 rescue of an Orion Township man who was drowning in the Clinton River. November December FOLLOWS FATHER - Lynn D. Allen, 43, won the office pf Oakland County Clerk-Register of Deeds in the November election. His father, Lynn D. Allen Sr., had held the office for 16 years until his death in 1958. In late November, Allen, a Pontiac optometrist, was appointed by the Oakland County Circuit Court bench to take office early to fill the vacancy created by the drowning of his predecessor, John D. Murphy. Allen is a Republican. COUNTY TREASURER-C. Hugh Do-hany, 48, officially assumes his new duties today as a result of winning the office of treasurer in November. He succeeds James E. Seeterlin. Dohany, a Republican, has been the treasurer of Southfield since 1966. He also served as a Southfield charter commissioner, city councilman and council president, and for nine years was on the County Board of Supervisors. ■ ^ 2—The Waterford Townitop Board of education scheduled a special election Dec. 7 on a proposed a 9-mill operating tax hike and $10.8 million bond issue. $—Oakland County voters turned out in record numbers—350,000 strong—for the general election. Republican Congressmen William Broomfield of Royal Oak and Jack McDonald of Redford Township were reelected. Democrat Thomas G. Plunkett b^ Royal Oak was elected county prosecutor in a nip-and-tuck battle with Richard D. Kuhh of Pontiac, and Democrats assumed control of the reapportioned County Board of Supervisors by a 15-12 margin. 11—Patricia Dell, 17, a senior at Pontiac Central High School, was chosen Pontiac’s 1968 Junior Miss. 13— Oakland County’s lame-duck board of supervisors approved a disputed $25-million budget for 1969. 14— The Pontiac Police Department -honored 34 officers and five civilians in its third annual police awards ceremonies. 18— An Orchard Lake man was killed when his private plane erashed in White Lake Township while approaching Oakland-Pontiac Airport. 19— The Pontiac Board of Education okayed, in a split vote, construction of the district’s new 4,5 00-studen't “superschool” on a disputed site on Pontiac State Hospital land as opposed to a site near Bagley and Orchard Lake Avenue. 28—The Oakland County Sheriff’s ' Dec. -■ Township High School senior, was named Waterford’s Junior Miss. , Dec. 7—Waterford School District voters turned down a proposed 9-mill tax hike for operating expenses and a $10.8 million bond issue for construction. Dec. 9—Plans of the Army to locate defensive nuclear missiles in Avon Township, Troy, Pontiac Township and Orion Township became public. Dec. 10-A senior Englisti major at Oakland University delivered a poetry lecture in the nude at the Barn Theatre, then departed for India, saying he planned to study philosophy there. Ponttae ertit Pliat* SALLY’S FIGHT ENDED-Little Sally Harrington, 6-year-old victim of aplastic anemia who reportedly survived more blood transfusions than anyone in the world, died Nov. 11 of an infection. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Harrington, 3991 Perkins, Waterford Township. Dec. 19—Pontiac Motor Division an- a \ ■ nounced plans to introduce a new model, the Judge,-in January.'*’^ Dec. 23—Philip 0. Mastin Jr. of Hazel Park and Alexander C. Perinoff of Southfield were nominated for chairman and vice chairman, respectively, of the newly reapportioned County Board of Supervisors by the board’s 15-member Democratic majority. Dec. 30 — John Z. DeLorean, general manager of Pontiac Motor Dvision and a General Motors vice president, called on the auto Industry to design methods of unsnarling urban traffic. Dec. 31—General Motors’ 1968 employe payrolls at the three Pontiac operations totaled $370.6 million, a record and nearly $49 million jump above 1967. AP Wlrtphota CONTROVERSIAL ROUTE-Gov. Romney announced in October the proposed route of 1-696 through six Oakland County cities and one township, (^urt action is still causing a delay in the construction of the east^west freeway proposed to connect 1-94 with 1-96. PT Aisr voR PONTUC-Pontlac’s vacant urtaft renewal Mng a sketch of the area’s possible development Is C. Don PUPf FOB \----- *i.u Davidson of Brutao Leon & Associates, the flm which origi- nated the plah-, land ^Id soon be flUed with activity, •ccorttag to this plan revealed In October to the Area Chamber of Commerce. Hold^ ' FATAL AIR CRASH-rKilled iii this crash in White Lake Township Nov. 17 was Hudson U. Beatty, 48, of 2870 Pine Lake, Orchard Lake, owner of a sales firm In Birmingham. With him in the crash and sevetly injured was Carolyn Klmmel, 25, of 1044 WoOdslee, Troy. The craft went down In the rain in a remote area north of the Oakland-Pontiac Airport whara It was scheduled to land. I "sm THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JANUARY 2. 1909 A rtist Fre^ric Remington lived through, observed «nd recorded, In ^ paintiiigs, drawings and sculptures, the last stages of the “Old West * ' He was born m Canton, New York, in 1861. By the time he died in 1909, he had shared first*hand the adventures and life of action cd soldiers, Indians and cowpokes—-“the wild riders and the vacant Imds." His representations of this world and era are prized today not only for their superb craftsmanship but alro hccauro they show a unique historical record of outstanding livei^ess, accuracy and sympathy. Few artists have equalled Remington in his self-taught ability to document on canvas, or in bronze, the mood and action of the west’s horse and rider. And his goal was a fusion of fine'art and documentary representation. His work is now more sou|^t after by museums and collectors than that of any other American artist. Out in Cody, Wyoming, the \Vhitney Callery of Western Art, a wing of the Buffalo Bill Historical Center, displays a magnificent collection of his w'orks and personal possessions, including the entire contents of his studio at the time of Remington's death. Other museums such as the Amon Carter Museum in Fort Worth and the Thomas Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Okla.,feature Remington’s efforts. Another valuable collection of Remington’s art graces the walls of the famous "21” restaurant in mid•to^vn Manhattan. Originally collected by the late Jack Kriendler, the Remington documentaries are now the devoted interest of his brother, “21” host-owner Peter Kriendler, himself a trustee of the Buffalo Bill Historical Center. Shown on this page are some of Remington s works from the collection. "A Race'with Idaho Robbera‘’—l 890 Thti W ^7 opular tweed colors. RIG. 64.99 . t SAVE 17.291 34tUe PACKAOE Nylon ovei braid rug set with room- 700$ size reversible, 22x3z-ln. scatter end dRi7 e 22x724n. runner REG. 47.17 SAVE 3.11 SQ. YD.I HIGH-LOW TEXTURED ”501“ NYLON CARPET Luxury quality in e heavy nylon loop ^88 pile. Distinctive oak leaf design in _ a hi-low fixture. Decorator colors, rrg. 10,99 DRAPERIES NOVELTY CURTAIN CLOSEOUT See tiers, cafes and swags! So many ^7 styles and cobrs in the group. 24- Gi in., 30-in., or 36-in. long. VALUES TO 4.99 V2 PRICE! DRAPERY CLOSEOUT MANY. MANY COLORS AND FABRICS The drapeiy buy of the seasoni | Lined or unlined in a beautiful selec-. REG. $8-545 tion. SWx63-in. to TWx84-in. DECORATOR PILLOW CLEARANCE Put a bit of color in yoUT room and $7 m save, tool Round, square, fringed! " V Many cobra, fabrics: 3.99-8.99 VALUES SAVE $78! 80 SQ. FT. CAMPER Opens to full 6-ft., 6-in. interbr *244 height! Sleeps 6; folds to 36-in. 20-cu. ft. storage. REG. $322 SAVE $25! FAMILY-SIZE TENT Fiber glass screen windows, door. $AA Tall 7-ft. canter. Resists mildew, OH! sheds rain. Canopy. 108-sq. ft. REG. $89 SAVE $501 7-FT. FRO POOL TABLE FOR ALL-FAMILY PUN %-in. particle board bed and bvei- $170 ers. Wool green cloth. Rubber cudi- I if 7 RIG. $149 bns, reinforced pockets. Compbto. RIG. IRM i)vv\ \IoM)\^ TiHu I'innw lo \,\k k> r \i SATI \{\)\^. '>•.;’<) V.\i. !'<) \\\\ \l)\^ lA Ann\ !n !*,\!, • ' ■ . / ■ \ ■' t ' SAVI 81.95! ntOSTLISS REPRIG. 12.3 eu/f^. r•frigi•r•tQ^fr••Mr !s SlOfl froitUiil F^*»r holdi 120>lb|. food. I Tw With txfr« bonus door sforogo. W®. 24*.f5 'WI%w4P>pftllllM ' ill I I III I .... III.W SAVB 71.951 UPRIGHT PREEZER Gl«nf'21-eu. ft. fmstr holds 740 SlOfl Ibi. foodl Cobinot is just 32-io. wldt. I # w ‘Withtoelcohdkoy.________________21®. 24f.»S SAVE 91.951 ELECTRIC RANGE |0*in. wido, clock controllod ovtn S100 with dsJcyod cook-worm. Has chroma top, Tafion* ovan linors. RI®. 289.95 SAVEA1.95IBIG21CU.pt. CHEST FREEZER WITH BASKET Stores up to 7404bs. food! Adius^ $1 JLO abla cold control, countar^balanead | OO lid and a handy ramovabla basket. RI®. 229.95 SAVI 3I.9SI 3-CYCLI WASHER Handifs giant 18-ib. bads! iRagu- $1 >|Q br cyda, pre-wash and power l*tO Mak! Safety lid, mar-resistant. RE®. 179.95 SAVE SI,9St DELUXE 6AS DitYER Dry with heat or air, with or with- $*1^0 out tumbb dry! Cbthas tumble free- I "S# ly in big 6-cu. ft. drum. REG. 199.95 SAVE A1.95I ELECTRIC RANGE V9ITH "MENU-MATIC OVEN “Menu-Matic" . . . automatic bw ^1^0 oven turndown! Deluxe chrome trim, | oven window, and heat indicators. RE®. 199.95 SAVE 12.95 ZIG-ZAG SEWING HEAD No attachments needed! Makes but-tonholes, mends, dams and morel Foot control and base. REG. 74.95 SAVE 7.11 ON DELUXE STEEL GYM--irS WEATHER RESISTANT 2-in. tubular steel frame with iO ft. ^^88 top bar. Swinging pony, feeteri lawn lu^g, free-standing slide. HEG. 49.99 SAVE 5.821 STEEL GYM Ejtdtbg air^ide, slide, swings chin-' 0^97 pfngi bet. Stiirdy 2-in. tubular frame. Jp"Y JHbwrs of fun outside!, • ‘ RIG.J9.99 THK pdyTIAC PRESS, THUBSDAY, JANUARY A l«ao SraeiAU COMPACT RENUe. 2.3 cu. ft. of storage... ideal for $OQ office, rec. room. Separate frees- OO er. Woodgrein pbstic finish. "Ckwge It" -------------------—------------ SAVE $40! MODERN BEDROOM Four piece set; walnut finish. Double SI^A dresser, mirror, chest, niatching mm W panel bed. A stunning set! 219.99 SAVE $100! COLONIAL BEDROOM Rich looking solid maple; big triple 8000 dresser, beautiful framed mirror, mmmm chest, and matching panel bed. REG. 399.99 SAVE $501 CONTEMPORARY SOFA Beautiful sofa comes in a combina- 8100 tion of blue-greens and green-golds. mmW Walnut wooel trim. RE®« 249.99 SAVE 8301 DELUXE AIRLINE* SOLID STATE STEREO PHONO All transistorised for "instant on"!! yiQBB Automatic record changer turns it- ^ # self off. Speakers separate to 16 ft. rig. 79.95 SAVE $61 LIGHT CANISTER VAC Rolls easily on swivel casters. Has 1088 handy on/off toe switch. It uses neat IO disposable dust bags. REG. 24.99 SAVE 101.951 AM/FM STEREO Solid state, beautiful credensa sty- 8000 ling. 6 speakers, 4-speed changer. ■eiCO Radio gets FM in stereo. REG. 329.95 SAVE 3.11 SQ. YD. ON ACRYLIC PILE HIGH LOW LOOP CARPETING 100 per cent acryKc pile high low EBB bop, medium random sheared ear- O 70. peting in either solids or tweeds. rig. 1.99 VINYL FLOORCOVERING Choose 9,; or 12-foot widths; any QO length—always bys flat. Many pat- mm terns and decorator colors. SO. YD. REG. 1.59 SAVE $151 ROOM-SIZE NYLON RUG 9x 12-foot; continuous filament nylon ^OB8 rugs have foam/mesh back. Tweeds ^m and jewel-tone solids. RE®. 54.99 /VU)MH.()/IA! k’Y STARTS TODAY STARTS TODAY AT ALL STORES OPEN DAILY SATURDAY SUNDAY LIMITED QUANTITIES^WHILE THEY LAST! SAVE $601 CHARLESTON EARLY AMERICAN SOFA Quaint barrel stave wings, rich wood $^1 A trim. Sleepy Hollow back. In aqua, Am. I m gold or Colonial red tweed. rig. 279.99 SAVE $301 MODERN DINETTE Seven piece sets36x48x60-ln. QQBB table, six high back floral pattern- m m ed vinyl chairs. REG. 129.99 SAVE $20! TUFTED RECLINER Tufted back recliner; grained vinyl; 70BB easy-roll ball casters. Avocado or ox- m m blo^ decorator cobrs. RE®. 99.99 SAVE 1.831 WHEELBARROW Big 3 cu. ft. capacity wheelbarrow work, back strain. Wide- saves spread legs—no tipping. L66 REG. 8.49 SAVE 23.11 ON CAST-IRON B-B-Q Cast-iron motorized grill has giant 26x16-in. cooking surface, plus wW handy weather-resistant oak shelf. REG. 89.99 SAVE 11.11 ON LAWN SWEEPER . End raking once and for all! Deluxe 23“ REG. 34.99 bwn sweeper cleans yard. Push-buf ton operation. Folds to store. SAVE 13.11 ON ALUMINUM GRILL Cook for a crowd! Big rustproof grill ^||^88 REG. 89.99 uses just 35 briquets. Roasts, too! SAVE $20! FLORAL QUILTED MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS Sleep surface firmness controlbd by 39^1 REG. 59.99 over coils. Choose full or twin size. Beautiful floral pattern. SAVE $60! TWIN-SIZE SLEEP SET Quilted surface and lifeline flanged. 70BB Sateen floral design. Both mattress " " , and box springs at this bw price. RE®. 139.88 34“ SAVE 2.27! LOVELY PANELING 4x7-ft. sheet in walnut or rich avoca- 082 do finish. Print graining gives it ex- w quisite depth, bster. REG. 5.49 SAVE $7! DISAPPEAR STAIRWAY Easy to instaH folding stairway is 14” Rf». 21.99 SAVE $10! 30 GALLON GAS WATER HEATER DeRvars up to 30.2 gaNons of hot ^ AV5 water per hour at a 100* rise. Glass- lined tank won't rust. lO-yr. guar. rig. 49.95 ^ I ........................ SAVE <1^95! POWER HUMIDIFIER Built-in furnace humidifier has 16,000 80*7 cu. ft. capacity. 24-V transformer, ^m tubing, fittings^ humidistat included. REG. 49.95 SAVE $181 DESK ARM CHAIR Traditionally styled, Naugahyde* upholstery. Welded steel frame. Reg. 20.99 steno chair-14.88 REG. 52.99 SAVE 20.99! TYPEWRITER. CASE Full-size portabb with a rapio paper $BLO advance. Full tab, 88 keys, adjust- 07 able touch. Moulded case. ^ RE®. 89.99 ideal for attic or garage use. Just tug on cord —- it comes to you. SPECIAL! VINYL FOLDING DOOR ^inyi straight. 32xBOin., nybn hinges. In Vinyl bminated to steel panels hangs 3“ SAVE $101 FUNCTIONAL CABINET ''34n-l'* clgtuiknrl DroD-fremt dedc, ^jjBB corppartmeiit that beb, 2 utility wtt white or beige. Easy to eban! "Choige It" drawers am| file drawer. RE®. 44.95 50% OFF! BEST ONE-COAT LATEX For interior wail and trim! It covers ^^7 in one coat, dries fast, deans up easily# WMte, colors; ^:|lil^6.99 SAVE $61 DESK-CHAIR-LAMP SET Great comblnatien for kitehen or as 14LB8 a vanity or> study tabb! ..Smart %rrought Iran grate trim, y ‘ ^ ; RRG. 22.99 SAVE $581 MANUAL ADD MACHINE ADDS. SUBTRACTS. MULTIPLIES Quick, short-stroke action! Works as C^88 , fast «s you can operate bveri Lists .. . 10, tbtab H cobmns. Green, ,• . RR®. 1ia,9f i ol'IvN \ln\l)AV Tlllllj I'l'IDW lOA.A], T< > <»:00 I'M. S \Ti \.\l, Tu|>.M, •SI M)\\ 12 \0(A\ TO 5 AmMICES SAVE 6U95! ELECTRIC RANGE "Menu-Matlc" , . . automatic lew $1^0 oven ti^rndownl Deluxe chroma trim, ’ I4S0 lift-off door. 30 inches. RIG, 19195 SAVE 91.951 ELECTRIC RANGE 30-in. wide, dock-controlled oven $1AQ with delayed cook-warm. Hai l#0 chrome top, Teflon* oven liners. REG. 289.95 SAVE 31.95! 36-IN. GAS RANGE Has electric^ clock, timer and easy- *98 clean porcelain lining and broiler. Low temperature control. REG. 129.95 SAVE 61.95! 6-CYCLE DRYER HAS PERMANENT PRESS CYCLE Dry with heat or air, with or without tumble. Buzzer sounds when no-iron items are dry. Electrical model. REG. 179.95 SAVE 31.95! WRINGER WASHER 12-lb. capacity with "Tini-Tub" $QO for washing delicates! Has 2-in. #0 rollers, lint filter and casters. • REG. 129.95 SAVE 31.95! 18-Lb. WASHER 2 speeds, 3 cycles include wash, *178 pre-wash and ppwer soak. 5-temps, re-circulating lint filter, rpore! r REG. 209.95 SAVE 81.95! ELECTRIC RANGE HAS DELUXE AUTOMATIC OVEN 30-inch model; automatic oven J starts, stops at the time you pre-set. Removable Teflon* oven liners. REG. 259.95 178 SAVE 51.95! UPRIGHT FREEZER Giant 21-cu. fti^freezer holds 740- SI lbs. food. Cabinet is just 32-in. wide. Has door storage. REG. 24195 OUTDOOR NEEDS SAVE S2CH SELMROPEUED IMN.. RiBI- mower ScIssorsJike JeuttIng action is un- Q^88 matched for the daanest mowing! Recoil startar, and 2-HP engine. REG. 114.99 save $201 GAS BBQ GRILL Natural gas grill will give* you ^^ears 49“ of pliawn* with an iRiirnRi finithi THE PONTIAC PRESS. Tin ilSUAV, .JANUAHV 2. 1909 SPICIAL "VIBRA-BEAF* VAC Beats, sweeps and eleansi 9-pc. accessory kit and lift-off tool caddy. I |/|-HP motor; filter. Clmr.^e It 39“ SPECIAL! ZIG-ZAG SEW HEAD Handles any weight fabric! Han- Q^88 dy buttonholer, built-in blind hem- OHI mer and light. Instructions. Charge It SAVE 41.95! 2-SPEED WASHER DOES BIG FAMILY-SIZE LOADS Just set desired cycle and speed— $1 then set timer to start. Regular and | gentle speeds for proper cleaning, reg. 169.95 SAVE $60! GIANT 267-SQ. IN.* MODERN AIRLINE* COLOR TV Picture comes on in seconds, colors stay brilliantly clear. Modern deco-rator designed cabinet. Save now! •Xl-in. diatfonal vltw REG. $398 SAVE 71.95! UPRIGHT FREEZER All frostless! 19-cu. ft. holds up to SAVE $15! UPRIGHT VACUUM 665 lbs. of food! Has a pull-out bas- Revolving brushes trap dirt! Con- 24“ ket; safety light. REG. 289.95 venient on/off toe switch, metal construction. In blue. REG. 39.95 SAVE 41.95! FROSTLESS REFRIG "Side-by-side" refrigerator - freezer *358 needs no defrosting! 224-lb. freezer, meat keeper. REG. 399.9Sv SAVE $6! LIGHT CANNISTER VAC Rglls easily on swivel casters. Has 1088 haMy on/off toe switch. It uses neat | O disposable dust bags. REG. 24.99 AAONTGO/VAERY WARD SAVE $23! STORAGE BUILDING So practical! All steel construction, 66“ double-sliding doors. Big 6x5-ft. size. Take with. REG. 89.99 SAVE $35! 6x7-FT. BUILDING Convenient "slide-fold" doors, gen- ^488 uine plywood floor. Steel construction. Stores everything! REG. 129.99 SAVE $27! 180-AMP ARC WELDER Select any amperage between 30 $00 and 180 amps! Increased duty cycle, OO all needed accessories! REG. $115 SAVE $30! 230-AMP ARC WELDER Exact amperage you need for every AA9! job. Comes with helmet, clamps. C--Y SPECIALI UPRIOHT JIPFY VAC Ideal for light touch-ups'in kitchen, on stairs. Light, yet power- 15“ ful; easy to use and store. CHAIUII SAVE $1Q! SHAMPOO-POLISHER Two-speed operations; scrubs and waxes floors, shampoos rugs. In- 29“ eludes a lO-pc. accessory kit. REG. 39.95 SAVE $15! ZIG-ZAG SEW HEAD Does plain or fancy stitching with no attachments! Buttonholer, forward/ 59" reverse, sews on buttons. REG. $75 SPECIAL! 72-SQ. IN.* TV Compact — weighs just 19 pounds! Clear, bright picture, and top- CHARGE IT *59 mounted speaker. Top quality! SAVE $31! ON OUR OWK DELUXE AM/FM CONSOLE STEREO PHONO AM/FM radio receives FM ste- $' reo. Aux., tape out-put jacks. Walnut, maple, pecan finish. rrg, gigg 168 SPECIAL! STEREO CONSOLETTE Solid state; AM/FM radio re- $100 ceives FM in stereo. Full sound, 4- lOO speed changer. Modern styling. CHARGE SAVE 51.95! AM/FM STEREO Beautiful credenza styling. Just 42 inches long, solid state system, 4-speed automatic changer. Sharp! REG. 249.95 *198 SAVE $200! 295-SQ. IN.* DELUXE AIRLINE* COLOR TV cables aij^electrodes. REG. 12199 Finest authentic cabinetry, deluxe $I?y|ft speaker system. Our best control jwBBt panel, tuning for top performance. •25-in. diagonal tieui REG. 74195 SAVE 11.95! DELUXE HUMIDIFIER Adds up to 16 gals, moisture daily! *68 Two speed fan, tilt-down side vent to fill. A must! REG. 79.95 SAVE $7! TABLE TENNIS TOP 7 and one-half inch table tennis 1(199 top tor fast playing surface. 5x9 | # ft. size has sturdy frame. REG. 26.99 SAVE 5.11! ON VINYL GOLF BAG Sports full-length dividers,^ 3 zip- 12- INK nnavEKHTs pered pockets and travel hood. SAVE $21 ON ELEC. FIREPLACE SAVE $30! AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR OPENER AND CLOSER Automatically opens garage door, AA95 turns on ligM, closes" door from Handsome black cojpr REG. 17.99 991 Just hang on wall. Adds charm and *88 heat to any room, thermostatically controlled. With logs, screen. safety of your car! Just push the button! Easy to install. REG. 129.95 REG. $109 SAVE 25%! CEILING TILE SAVE $3! 6-FT. ALUM. STEP LADDER Beautify your homo now at a tro- 25% mendous saving! Ea$y-to-install ceil- ^ ing tile accents. Lay-In panelf. So handy for household climbing ^99 jobs! Compact, light. 6-ft. size. Nonslip rungs. Easy to store. REG. 12.99 SAVE 2.83! 4x8-FT. PANELS .4x8-ft. pre-finishod Panels. Walnutj ^86 avocado prinf'grained panels — ^ beautiful! SPOITIHt GOOK 4X8-ft. REG. 6.49 RIG. 55.95 SAVE 3.52! INTERIOR LATEX PAINT Guaranteed to cover any color in ^67 one coat. Beautiful colors plus white. ^ Fast clean-up, tool ^ •Al._ RIG. 6.99 SAVE $70! DELUXE POOL TABLE The ultimate in quality! %-in. slate $AAA bed. Rails, side panels of Rosewood li y y Formica®. Solid-lock legs, more! REG. $569 SAVE $31 ON 7 foot QUALITY POOL TABLE Cotton suede cloth, %-in. particle board bed. Built-in bed and leg lev-elers. Plastic walnut veneer finish. 11>' ' U THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JANUARY 2. SAVE AlcnrS MAGIC! SOLID VINYL SELF-STICKING ;riLE No paitt, no adhe$tvo is necessary. ^88 In fix beautiful colors. Package of 9 ^ 9-paek covers one square yard. reg. 4.49 SAVE 71c! FOAM CORE VINYL Choose 9 or 12-ft. widths. Lays flat. 188 Beautiful patterns. Insulated foam N $q. Yrd. cere absorbs noise. REG. 2.59 SAVE 15.111 NYLON RU6S 9xi2-ft. continuous filament nylon with foam mesh backing. Beautiful 39“ twaedi md solids. REG. 54.99 V SAVE UP TO 2.99! CLOSEOUT OF CURTAINS, VALANCES Your Choice Novelty curtain closeput of tiers, cafes, swags. Many styles, colors. 24, 30, 36-in. Valances, $l. *2 REG. TO 4.99 V2 PRICE! DRAPERY CLOSEOUT Lined or unlined draperies in decor- J|_ ator colors and fabrics. Single 63-in. 2 ^***^*^ to 84-in. triples. reg. TO $45 HAIHMRE.aEimiieS SAVE $4! 40 WATT FLUORESCENT FIXTURE Enameled steel fixture has cord, chains, lamp hooks, knockouts. Mount permanently, temporarily. reg. 14.86 10*^ SAVE $f15! IMPACT WRENCH Drives, removes nuts, iolts fast! I/4 E"||99 to %-in. capacity. 1900 - 2100 inv O# pacts per minute. ____________ reG. 74.99 SAVE 4.071 FIREPLACE SCREEN BeauM^I custom screens. Sizes up ^^88 ' to i0"< ABow 3 weeks for delivery, daie# faia fonder 9,95 RM. 27.95 \A4L~ t w SAVE $30! MODERN SEVEN-PIECE DINETTE SET 7-piece dinette,, set has 36x60x72-in. table and six high-backed vinyl chairs. Simulated walnut table top. SAVE $20! 3-PC. WROUGHT IRON SET Wrought-iron round table and two y|Q88 chairs. You can use it almost any- # where! Attractive. REG. 69.99 SAVE $30! 5-PC. WALNUT SET Octagon-shaped table has heat, Q088 stain resistant top. 4 chairs. Walnut O # finish. 4 curved back chairs. REG. 119.99 SAVE 50.11! DELUXE KING-SIZE 3-POSITION VINYL RECLINER 3-way reclining mechanism for solid AA88 comfort! Beautiful in grained avo- gg cadg or black vinyl. Sensational! reg. 149.99 SAVE 20J11! SWIVEL ROCKER Charming biscuit-tufted back, chan- nel seat. It swivels and rocks! Avo- 97 cado,-black vinyl. REG. 79.99 SAVE 20.11! NYLON SWIVEL ROCKER Luxurious biscuit-tufted pillow back, # Q88 swivels and rocks! Green or butter- 07 scotch nylon frieze. REG. 89.99 YOU SAVE /lAOIVKiOAAERY 15% to 60% NOW IN PROGRESS SALE ends SUNDAY, 5 p.m. AT ALL STORES OPEN DAILY SATURDAY SUNDAY LIMITED QUANTITY —WHILE THEY LAST SAVE $3! AUTOMATIC TIMER Protect your home while you're Z99 away! Turns light on-off in a 24-hr. O cycle. Controls your appliances, too! REG. 9.99 SAVE 37c! HINGES, KNOBS, PULLS Now you replace missing cabinet pulls, knobs, hinges and save! See our dLMt wide assortment. White enameled. REG. 59c SAVE 15%! FIREPLACE SCREENS Magnify fireplace beauty with se-lect group of screens and fireplace Off Reg. Prices accessories—save! HOME IMPROVEMENTS SAVE $7! ATTIC STAIRWAY For 84-105-In. ceiling heights. Just 1A99 tug cord. Gives easy access to attic Or garage storage space. REG. 21.99 SAVE $21 ON ELECTRIC FIREPLACE Just hang on wall. Adds warmth and $OQ charm. Thermostatically controlled. OO Plugs in. A beautiful accent. REG. $109 SAVE $30! GARAGE DOOR OPENER Open garage, turn , on light, and door from the safety of your 77 REG. 129.95 SAVE 2.27! LOVELY PRINT GRAINED PANELING Choose natural walnut or rich-look- ^22 lininG give exquisite depth and a rich luster. REG. 5.49 2'x4' ing avocado. Print graining gives it close car. So convenieitti Sife« too. SAVE $1 ON PLASTIC PANELS Beautiful decorator panels of plastic 7^ look so nice and are easy to care “ for! See them now. REG. 3.99 4x7-ft. SAVE $3! 8-FT. STEF LADDER Perfect for household climbing. So 0^9 lightweight, durable, easy to handla. 7 Braced steps. E6sy to store. REG. 12.99 SAVE 7.111 30-lN. ROLLAWAY BED 30-in. wide bed has heavy I-in. angle 4«^gg enamel steal frame. Fine plaid in- «■# nerspring mattress.. „ .REG. 34.99 SAVE TO $12! BETTER BIKES More savings! Better discontinued bikes and floor samples for girls and ^ 7 boys. "W|t| if" colors and styles. REG. 46.99 TO S1.99 BEDROOMS SAVE 40.99! MODERN BEDROOM ^ 4-pc. set: double dresser, mirror, $1*7^ chest and a matching panel bed. In I # 7 a warm walnut finish. REG. 219.99 ■....... 1 .... ..........."""... ..... SAVE 80.99! 4-PC. MODERN SET Includes a 62-in. triple dresser, mir- $^A0 ror, 4-dr. chest and a panel bed. In 4nV7 warm walnut finish. REG. 349.99 SAVE 80.99! SPANISH BEDROOM Exquisite 4-pc. set! Triple dresser, $7AO mirror, chest and a panel bed. Rich %P"¥7‘ pecan finish. REG. 429.99 SAVE 100.99! 4-PIECE COLONIAL BEDROOM SET IN SOLID MAPLE Handsome Early American styling! Triple dresser, framed mirror, 4-dr. A # # chest, bed. Dustproof drawers. reg. 399.99 BEDDING VALUES SAVE 20.1)1! YOUR CHOICE OF FINE MATTRESS OR BOX SPRING A fine value! Sleep surface is controlled by over 400 separate coils for utmost comfort. Full or twin size. reg. 59.99 3V 88 SAVE 30J1I1! MATTRESS OR SPRING Beautifully quilted damask mattress COMB or box spring. Dura-Fresh treated. 97 REG. 89.99 With 10 edge bracers. SAVE TO $20! DISCONTINUED BIKES Big savings on girls and boys' dis- 29^ REG. 39.99 TO 46.99 continued models and floor sample bikes. Many models to choose from SAVE 6.99! 26-INCH BOYS' CHROMED TRIM BIKE Your boy will be proud to cruise on this beauty! Headlight, with chrome bars, trim, comfortable 39” saddle seat. REG. 46.98 SAVE $20! 26-INCH BOYS' ^ GLITTERY ' GOLD" BIKE A real dazzler! Gold color bike takes A A9B you in style! Chrome trim, bars. Stm ^ Sharp! Girls' 26-l»u bike... .39.99 rig. I9«ff OPEN fp)AV;i0:AJl.m)^9:OO P.M .S.A'r'URl)AY A.M. f(f9:0(1'PAj. SEiMiAA ,12 Noon 'iO ,S ,P.M.682-4940 .1 ■ ■' THE J»0JST1AC PKESS, THlfUSDAV, JAXUAliV 2. 19«9 &M AAOIVTGO/VIERY rayya Save now on Wards long-wearing white cotton muslin sheets Long on service, tow in price .. better put your money on these muslin sheets. And when you get Wards sheets, woven a full 134 threads per square inch*, you are assured of quality performance. Fitted bottoms have elastic-end corners for easier bedtViaking, aitd are Sanforized* Better buy a big stack of these economical white sheets in twin size, flat or fitted style for every bed in your home. Regular 2.29 full size muslin sheets 1.69 Regular 1.19 package of 2 pillowcases 89e LOVELY PASTEL OR DEEP-TONE PERCALE SHEETS AT SAVINGS 190-count* combed cotton gives you Reg. 3.29 full size sheets Reg. 1.69 pkg. of 2 cases .2.79 .1.39 FUT OR Finn) REG.2.99 REGULARLY 1.99 TWIN FLAT OR FITTED “CHARGE IT“ AT WARDS PRICE CUT ON SNOW-WHITE 190-COUNT* PERCALE SHEETS Luxuriously smooth sheets are woven of long staple combed cotton for comfort Sat^orized* fitted bottoms. Reg. 2.69 full size sheets Reg. 1.49 pkg. 2 coses 2.19 1.19 TWIN FUT OK FITTiD REG. 2.49 SAVE ON PASTEL PERCALE SHEETS YOU NEVER NEED IRON These 50% polyester, 50% cotton sheets coma out of your dryer or off your line, perfectly smooth. Reg. 5.59 full size sheets 4.49 Reg. 3.29. pkg. of 2 cases REG. 4.29 SAVr ON WHITE PERCALE SHEETS YOU NEVER IRON 50% polyester, 50% cotton sheets dry wrinkle-free on your lines or in your dryer look first-day fresh all week. Regl4.19 full size sheets 3.69 Reg. 3.19 pkg. of 2 cases 1.89 ^69 twin I FUT OR Finn REG. 319 *Thread count stated after washin Save 2.51 on duck feather pillows Tan-0-Quil®-process makes it even more fluffy and resilient. Zip-off cotton outer tick, 20x26" size.** •*Fini«h#«l ti» A49 Each Each REG $7 Bath towel prices cut! ✓ ... It's worth waiting for Wards White Sale to get values like these 2-ply jacquard reversible striped towels or solid-color towels of thick cotton terry, corrie in a bevy of brilliant colors. Reg. 1.39 strlptd or solid hand towoN 99c Reg. 55e striped or solid wosheloth 49e REGULAR 2.29 Bath mats at savings! Save ’3 on reversible 'provincial' print quilt 599 TWIN SIZE REGULARLY 8.99 Why not give your bath the luxury look it deserves, right now while you save? Get Wards machine-wash, iatiXfbaelnd Dacron* poiyister bath mats with plush,]thick pile. Choose a spectrum of solids. Reg. 5.99 oval 34*36” solid both mot.. .3.99 Reg. 8.99 evol 27x48” solid both mot.. .5.99 Reg. 2.99 stondgrd-slio solid lid ...... 1.99 USR YOUR CRRDkT TO SAVE NOW—JUST SAY "CHAROI ITI Oval, 1Sx24® REG. 3.99 Want a bhautiful bad-covar, and a cozy blanket, too? Better get VVards around-the-clock, all-cotton throw quilt, and save while you're at It has gayly ruffled gingham print tdgas, machine-washas-arld-drIaS. Choose frOm popular dacorStor colors. Rog. 10.99 full-sin rovOrsIblo throw quilt 7.99 Price cut on oil-cotton muslin mattress pads 059 .TWIN Sanforized* flat cover has durable double-box quilt, is tape bound. Machine-wash. Reg. 4.29 full size . 3.59 RIG. 3.29 V m. THK PONTIAC PEKSS. THtJRSDAV. JANUARY 2. 10B9 d Packing Lunch Boxes for Hungry Scholars \ • By JANET ODEU> | You might fill one of these food Editor, The Pontiac new thermos containers with ,% <*11 the children aren't back InYurkey Rice Soup, achool today, they will be by! TURKEY RICE SOUP Monday. iUid while that means , . . j, . ” ■ - • • 2 cups cooked, cubed turkey /. that mothers can get back into their normal routine, it also means packing lunches. ‘ , Tliii kind of ,weather ..definitely calls for hot food. It can be soup, stew, baked ' beans or spaghetti. It can be food inrepairaid Just fi»r lunch boxes or leftovers from dinner. New thermos bottles with polypropytene Jackets will keep the ydunfsters’ food hot and cut , down on breakage. These new, ; rust'proof, dent-proof bottles come in three designs and three sizes. All are made by Alladin Industries, Inc. 4 V« cup diced onions V« cup minced parsley Mj cup diced telery ^ cup diced carrots Ml cup rice IMi quarts chicken bouillon Pinch of white pepper Ml teaspoon ground marjoram Ml teaspoon ground rosemary Grated parmesan cheese cheese. Ml cup chopped celery 2 tablespoons chopped nuts soup sprinkled with Yield: About 7 cups. ♦ ★ A If you can wean the small h*y| away from the daily peanut Crisp lettuce butter and Jelly sandwich, theyj 6 slices white bread, buttered Ml cup mayonnaise Salt and pepper to taste 25 minutes or vegetables are until rice and tender. Serve Combine all the ingredients might get to like one of the I Mix together chicken, pickles except the cheese. Heat to boil I following combinations. Icelery, nuts, mayonnaise, salt ing. Cover soup and simmer for a a A land pepper. Assemble Do you vary the kind of bread| sandwiches with chicken filling, you use for sandwiches? Everllettuce and bread. For lunch try two different kinds in one'box, wrap in foil or plastic sandwich? wrap. Makes 3 sandwiches. CHICKEN SALAD SANDWICHES 1 cup chbPP^ cooked chicken cup chopped sweet fresh cucumber pickles Variatiom Add two slices of crisp bacon to each sandwich. CREAM CHEESE OUVE AND NUT SPREAD 1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese, soRened 3 tablespoons milk 14 cup chopped pimlento-stuf-fed olives 14 cup chopped pecans Combine all ingredients and stir until well blended. Use FOR THE LUNOT BOX - A greaa fdchle-shaped lunch kit would advertise to the world you are a pickle lover. But you 'can’t eat the kit — try instesfd a chicken salad sandwich made delightfully spicy by the addition of sweet fresh cucumber pickles. Bit of Lemon Is Nice in Cake Unlike many apple sauce bakes, this one is flavorful with cinnamon but not spicy. It is crusty, crunchy and with the texture of a colonial poundcake. ALL AMERICAN APPLE SAUCE CAKE 14 cup but^ep or margarine 1 cup sugar 1 egg 2 cups sifted all purpose flour .1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 cup apple sauce % cup chopped walnuts 1 teaspoon lemon Juice 14 teaspoon grated lemon rind Cream butter or margarine and sugar until fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, and beat thoroughly. Sift together dry ingredients. Add to batter alternately with the apple sauce. Stir in walnuts, lemon juice and rind. Spoon mixture evenly into a greased and floured 114 quart loaf pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 40 to 45 minutes or until a cake tester comes out dry. Turn out on a cake rack. AAA Sprinkle with cinnamon-sugar or glaze, with confecticmers sugar frosting, made by stirring 114 tablespoons lemon Juice into V« .cup confectioners sugar. How Many? One 5th bottle of dinner wine will give a generous portion for 6 guests . . . more for 4. Store any unused portion in the refrigerator. spread for sandwiches. 114 cups spread. ' ‘ SPANISH OUVE BOLOGNA SPREAD 14 pound bologna, finely chopped Vj cup chopped green pepper Vi cup sliced pimiento-.stuffed olives 14 cup mayonnaise 1 teaspoon prepared mustard 14 teaspoon celery seed Makes shortening, sugar and egg. Blend in molasses. Blend in flour resifted with soda, salt and splce.s. Mix in raisins. Chill dough. \ A A A Shape dough into small balls and roll in additional sugar, if desired. Place on lightly greased baking sheet. AAA Bake In moderately hot oven COUNTRY RAISIN COOKIES—Super Spicy gingersnaps with a twist of raisin are guaranteed pleasure for any lunch box opener. cdmblW aU in^ients and (375 degrees) « /O mix well. Use as a spread to Remove to cooling rack. Makes make sandwiches. Makes 114! about 3 dozen cookies, cups spread. AAA Little packets of raisins are always good to put into lunch boxes. But save a few raisins for these spicy molasses cookies. COUNTRY RAISIN GINGERSNAPS 114 cups seedless raisins Vi cup shortening 1 cup sugar 1 egg Ml cup molasses 2Mi cups sifted flour 2 teaspoons soda 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon ginger 14 teaspoon cinnamon Vi teaspoon cloves Chop raisins. Beat together #I Mich. HOT DOGS GR. 1 SKINLESS Lbs. —w—**f**PBl *^ATOes ASSlXS PORK ROAST lS, 39*^ PORK STEAK JR- 69*^ PORK LIVER "sr 35" BEEF ROAST choice, lb. 50° BEEF HEARTSs:!i 30* TOMATOES S. 25“ LETTUCE 25“ CELERY SS. 25“ OLEO 10“ MELLOW RIPE - _ , BANANAS .5 FARMFresii Gr. A Jumbo SUPEI 0pm Wttkly $>f~FrLf Sat. S-S • MoMtubiaot toMorfiftehaiifo 608 W. HURON STREtT NEAR WEBSTER S THK 1»U»\'TIAC I'HK-SS. I lH HSDAV, JAXUAHV 2, c-n Nobody, But Nobody Serves Just Plain Hamburger i ■ M Hamburgers rate more! Our good beet ts royal In-j But luxury acceHsorlca, can be will make h^burgers for din- with onion can replace the|a delectable hamburger accom- distinguished hamburger (call circle each, a la filet tnignon, American votes than any other deed, and Its excellence means the diamond necklace for the ner an experience In distinctive heat normally generated by the 1 panlment4 Simply rob the bar h Hachls de Boeuf au Truffles with smoked southern bacon, food. In no complicated sauces are ‘Plat'velV inexpensive Hamburg dining. Inevitable mustard. jof its jar of cocktail onions^ ^ bacon strips with wood- are accused or liking little else. ,,r. / • There’s chutney for one. • I'or in iiguing roior ami' Crush and marinate for about j i » ,u u .j k-«ii ..nHi Actually every age group en- f'"' embellishment. Nor a ★ w For a change, try the delecta- flavor contrast, investigate the 15 minutes in French dressing joys hamburgers — with good In our meat-rich land Specialty food shops and dell- ble variety that contains nuts, plump Calamata olives from with imported French freeze a 1-ouncc can of white truffles, browned. Turn and sprinkle top reason — and reasons. have to pad the beef with bread cacy departments of fine stores or the new, from-England, on- Greece, shining in their bath of dried mushroom slices. Serve Sea.son with salt and freshly of each patty with a teaspoon Meat ground from tough cuts crumbs or rice, or extend it .offer an impressive array of ion chutney. virgin olive oil. drained. ground black pepper. of truffles, chopped (iDP. Con- offers exceptional flavor. The with pasta. |superb accompaniments thatl a Hot pickled pepper rings, a Just a little work produces To make the world’s most Shape 3 or 4 patties and en- tlnue broiling until done. i I. fthadds juiciness. And afters grinding, the beef may be broiled, fried, or baked—speedy preparation methods that are easy on the cook. Depending upon family preference (and the scores in the slimming contests), meat with very little fat may be chosen. Butcher-prepared ground beef contains the most; flank steak (sometimes called London broil), the least. * * * To avoid dryness, if you choose flank steak, have a bit of flavorful fat — kidney or beef marrow — ground with It. Shoulder beef (chuck), striking, a happy medium, offers good flavor and a judicious quantity | of fat. ★ ★ ★ Although hamburgers are not | as haute cuisine as Faisan sous Cloche, they have been given the culinary accolade — French acceptance — as evidenced by the hamburger heavens that have sprung up all over Paris. GO HIGH CLASS Just as diamond necklace makes an' inexpensive dress look like a million, so do deluxe accompaniments elevate the status of le petit pate de boeuf. If it is served with a knife and fork — the British manner of tackling a hamburger — it can certainly be considered baronial. Modern Way With Cheese, Wine Told Cheese and wine are perfect partners for entertaining in the modern mode as described in Kraft Foods’ new booklet and dramatically depicted . in a series of party room settings. 'The cover of the booklet is a colorful cheese and wirfe wheel which describes a variety of cheese types and matches them with complementary wines. The booklet, a 4-page guide to serving cheese and wine, is designed in tent-fashion so that the wheel might be used as a centerpiece of a party table. It is handsomely printed in wine and cheese colors — burgundy and orange. HELf»S PLANNING The bake page of the booklet gives detailed plans for staging a cheese and wine tasting gala where a variety of cheese is paired with a sampling of wines. A handy chart takes the mystery out of serving cheese with wine, offering a guide to temperature (cheese should always be served at room temperature), tips on serving delicately flavored cheese with lighter wines, and quantities required per person. ★ ★ The booklet also contains suggestions for cheese boards for all occasions. 'There is a guide to the selection of cheese for party service, as well as a' buying guide for the amount of cheese required for various trays. ★ ★ ★ For a cheese board there should be a variety of shapes, textures and flavors. Tips on cutting and serving are also offered. To guide the selection of wines to serve with cheese, there is a short guide and description of American wines, classifying them into six general categories. •k ir k Readers may obtain a copy of Kraft’s (Theese & Wine booklet by writing The Kraft Kitchens, Room 334, 410 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, lU., 60611. Many Eat Fish on Christmas Eve Fish, an ancient symbol of brlstianity, plays an impor-ant role on Christmas Eve '’hen the long Christian fast of dvent is traditionally cllmaxtrd 'ith a splendid seafood dinner. After attending mid-ight mass, Parisians start Heir holiday celebration with “Revillon'’-* Ught supper f beautifully mounted, cold sal-aon, tu^,< fish moisses and yftws, accompanied by the riest, chilled champagne. THIIS. FRI. m. at Your Wrigley Madlum Sfia a Shampaa e ixtra Lorga SIxa * Lorga Sixa PRELL : PRELL CREST i SCOPE Lipii : Eoncentrate Toothpaste; Mouthwaslj j Vr53<|: ’"‘*07^: M?00^ Pmh Callfcmlo Calavo ^ ^ , Avacadoes Fresh Orange Juice <2i.67C Chiliad MmJow Dala AllOrhidi Hills Bros. Coffee All SHn4i Kills Bros. Coffee r*r ter* Thmt Listerine Lozenges Tkrll».Pali Listerine Toothpaste Hunts Tomato Sauce VM" 59300 court cases hanging and force the cancellation in midyear of the school’s clinic studies course, in which law students get credit for working at the clinic. Among the accomplishments of the program are passage by one Alabama blaze and a father and three daughters in Kentucky- Eli Clayton, 32, a service station employe and four of his childrei died when their home in York, Ala., burned. Mrs. Clayton and three other children escaped. The fire also consumed another house but its occupants all escaped unharmed. LANSING -'In toping ca™p.lgn popped from a fireplace andjHouse Committee sj u d y i n g promises," he said,, the corn-film‘cTreeTmrgMwith^rVolei started a blaze but he learned ways to spend the $335 miUion mittee has been considering Clean Water Bond Issue Gets Study on Spending BARTON MacLANE Detroit Sets New Record for Homicides DBraOlT (AP) - Homicides in Detroit reached a record 413 last year, and police experts said they were convinced the increase was due in part to the expanding gun purchases by residents since the 1967 riot. Last year, more than 12,000 handguns were registered by police, compared with 6,028 in 1966. Alter the July 1967 riots, the gun registrations began increasing imd by the «id of the year totaled 9,988, a 66 per cent increase over 1966. Inspector . Jack l^oemaker, head of the police record bureau, said there are an estimated KO.OOO handguns in Detroit and residents have at least one million firearms. HOMICIDE FIGURES - as a football player in "Quarterback.” ★ w ★ MacLane is survived by his widow, former actress Charlotte Wynters; a son, William; a daughter, Martha; two sisters, Mrs. Ann Yost and Mrs. Rebecca Robbins and two brothers, Oscar and Andrew. Funeral arrangements are pending Metro Airport on Schedule ' V'- Other Unions Cross Hotel Workers^ Lines three of his daughters were m-side and returned. Smith and the three girls died An early mivning fire claimed the lives of three small children in the home of Mr. and Mrs, Sidney Whitebody at Minot, N.D. The couple saved one son when the mother tossed the boy to the father from a second story vdndow. At Winfield, Kan., Delores Elston rdtumed early New Year’s morning from her hospi tal job and found her mother Leona Palmer, 72, and her 6-year-old daughter, Loretta dead of fumes from an unvented gas heating stove. Six other children overcome by the fumes were revived In 1967, the program brought! "The only thing that botherediwe know other programs ar* us,” said Munch, "is that it| being funded. ^ ^ "So you m 10 “»! maior accomplishment with the something's wrong somaplace, tenants’ rights legisiation and he ________________________ suit against utilities companies, forcing them to eliminate or reduce deposits required of low-income customers. The program is now involved in mapping'' out proposed reforms in state welfare laws. VARIED AID In additional, the law clinic represents the poor In cases involving tenants* rights, employe grievances, consumer fraud, extradition, welfare rights and juvenile offenses. I Th* John Fomold Company pro.ontt Ronald Chodloy'i World Promloro THE SECOND COMING OF BERT A contomporory trapl-oomody OPENS TONIGHT AT 8:15 P-M. EVENINOSt Thurtday throuoh Soturday.al 8il S P.M., Sunday at 6i30 P.M. MATINIESi Friday and Saturday at 2:00 P.M. TIchdH Hwlwii'i (•« ••"••I" WZ-OSSW**-*®** Tho John Fomold Company of Oakland University DETROIT (AP)-Detroit Metropolitan Airport maintained Ua flight schedules for all eight airlines Wednesday, despite a strike by 550 hotel and restaurant employes. An official close to the nego-tii^ions said other union members crossed the picket lines rather than shut down the major airport serving the Detroit The number of homicides was metropolitan area. almbst twice as much as the 235 deaths Detrrit had from traffic accidents lasLyear. * •k it Members of Local 705 of the Hotel and Restaurant EmployMi Eighty per cent of the hond-iUnion struck at nddnlght 'TueS-cides last year were committed fuHcd to reach by peopM who'knew their victims, police records show it it It Most were committed during moments of anger, and most were committed in homes or bars, Tte most recent figures show that about 60 per cent of Detroit homicides were committed by Negroes against Negroes. About 11 per cent were committed by blacks against whites Mon., Tuot., Thurs., Frt. Tiyyd9;88 WoAy Sat., Sun. at fitMi48-l:99 on FROM ITS SENSATIONAL: BESERVEDSEATEN6A6EMENT i MOW FOR THE FIRST TIME : .REGULAR PRICES most Joyous cntertalnmenl forite whole family! Ridt MgOM th* •c«uuid*tb* Giaivt PINK SEA SNAULt agreemoit with Host International on a new contract. Negotiations broke off Wednesday, but 'Thomas Tuprn-er, president of the Wayne County AFlrCIO Council, said he planed to meet today with the Wayne County Road Commission, whidj operates Metro, to try to renew talks. INTERVENTION SEEN Mort Furray, president of Local 705, said “I don’t think the road commission is going to allow this dilly-dally much longer,” All snack bars, liquor bars and dining rooms were closed by the strike. Supervisory personnel were keeping open the 209-room International Inn, which Host operates, and were seeing that the regular in-flight meals were provided airlines. it it -k The hotel, and restaurant union also noted that an expired contract with Detroit’s nine hotels would be extended from midnight Tuesday on a day-to-day basis. About 2,000 unicHi members are employed at the hotels Teachers Vow to Stay on Job GIBRALTAR (UPI) Gibraltar teachers, who sparked the longest school strike in Michigan history by Walking out of the classroom Nov, 13 and returning the day aftft. Christmas, now contend thby won’t be budged from their teaching duties. A court order reopened the schools during the Quistmas Inllday in order to qu^y them|l| for state aid. A 180-day period 1^ 4ipatim^idn fr<»n the holidays tifrough June 30 was a requirement for the state funds. Although the court order did not extend beyond the holiday, "the teachers will’ report to Work as usual Jan. 6 unless locked out by the board,” said John Scewc, president of the GitH'altar Federation of Teachers. water pollution bond i s s u e legislation which would give authorized by votws in the Nov. assistance only to communities 5 election says it may propose |^hich have an existing problem two bills for distributicHi of the of water pollution that could be money. Isolved by building sewers and Under consideration is a only to those comtnuniUes that measure that would give $285 will have serious difficulty million of the state funds to financing improvements without local communities to finance 50 state assistance.” per cent of the cost of building ★ ★ ★ sewage treatment plants. | smit said two approaches for ★ k *k giving out the money are under The second messurt would study. The first would provide provide $50 million to local units low interest loans to local units, for assistance in construction of The other would give grants to lateral sewers. I communities with high con- Rep. Raymond J. Smit, R-Ann costs but a low tax Arbor, committee chairman, said earlier this week the $50 million is not enough to finance all lateral sewers needed by 1980 so a system of priorities must be worked out k k k Smit said final recommendations will be submitted to the legislature following a final committee meeting Jan. 7. 12 HORTH SAQINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN 9:48 A.M. SHOW AT 10:00 A.M. Contlnaous-334-4436 PROOF IS REQUIRED “TEMPLEOFEROS” DRIVt-IN THEATtk. 2935 DIXIE HI6HWAV (U.S. 10) I BLOCK N. TELEGRAPH RO, Join the with the ONLY PU8KM1.PULLYU izzoapavi^l Officials Search for Mexican DCS TAMPICO, Mexico (AP) - A search is under way for a chartered Mexican DC3 missing since Tuesday with 22 passengers and four crew members aboard. Airport authorities at Tampico said the plane was carrying employes of the Mexican government oil monopoly, Petroleos iMexicanos, from Reynosa to a ijNew Year’s holiday in Tampico. Radio communication with the I aircraft was lost shortly after it took off from Reynosa, on the DRIVE-IN THEATER OPOVKE RD. KT WALTON ILVO. IN CAR HEATERS buujttw rtjM from th* jWt-Thi* I I to»w|iar-BWi*-\ ««>»***”"*" ^STEVt AS. 'feLILUTT .......... TiMY llriMi CewPieC Cam’Uii ■ Icatt ■atwHhnrwffe T— FIRST RUN '..THE FEMALE Make$L A WOMAN LmAUko MARY POPPINS ADULTS ONLY start Your Now Year Save at CITY SIDE ■ ■ ■ USD A CHOICE RIB STEAKS 39* CHUCK STEAKS 59* I*’- ECKRtCH Sniorgcit Pack 89* lb. CHEF BOY ARDEE Spaghatti and Maat Balls, BaafarenI, Ravioli 59‘ 2-lb. 8-oz. ARMOUR’S 12-01. con ^^Always a basket full of savings’^ Del Monte Whole Kernel Com ' (Cream Style) 1 -lb. can 5/99* . Del Monte TOMATO JUICE 1 Qt. 14 0z. 25' Sur Fine Pork& Bean* 1-lb. 15-oz. Can I9« Velvet PEANUT BUHER 2-Lb. Jar 69* White Cloud TOILET TISSUE Twin Pack 19* BOLD Laundry Detergent 5-lb. 4-02; box 99* 'CIT7 SIDE Michigan BEET SUGAR 39‘ 5-lb. bag OFFER GOOD JAN. 2 - JAN.9 PUFFS Facial Tissue 200 count box 19 ^aaOiMia Limit One with Coupon aaaaaJ Sun. Hr$. 10-9 A 9pon 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUPER SI9E m\MABKET Jwiw 'tffi'ig" mmir' THE yONTIAC P^ESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1969 C-18 Pork Gives Protein to Daily Diet The nutrienti th«t pork provides give homemakers ample reason for Including It In the diet A three ounce serving gives a nioderatoly active man about 33 per cent of his dally protein needs plus 50 per cent of his thiamine needs, U.S. Department of Agriculture nutritionists report. Pork and pork products are highly perishable. Tight store wrappings keep air out. Consequently, It should be re wrapped loosely with waxed paper for home storage so that air will slightly dry the surafce and retard growth of spoilage organisms. It can be stored In the coldest part of the refrigerator If scheduled for use within 1 or 2 days. When freezing, use within 3 to 8 months considering that the smaller pieces like ground pork are in best condition after a ihort storage time. ★ ★ ♦ Ground pork can give a lift to weary menus, especially with a hint of herbs or spices such as nutmeg, fennel or oregano. USDA’s Consumer and Marketing Service suggests: PORK BALLS WITH RAISIN NOODLES Combine 1% pounds ground pork with 1% cups bread cubes, V* cup minced onion; 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon nutmeg and % teas-poon each salt and pepper. Form into 1-inch balls, roll in flour and brown slowly in hot fat. Remove pork balls from fat and make a. gravy from drippings using bouillon for liquid and Worcestershire sauce anq onion salt for seasoning. Sini' mer pork balls in thickened gravy about 20 minutes. Meanwhile, cook spinach noodles in salted water unti' tender. Drain and add plumped raisins. Serve pork balls and gravy over raisin noodles, Jelly Peeks Through Hole Cream cheese pastry tarts are pretty to look at and so good! JELLY TARTS Vt cup (V4 pound stick) butter, at room temperature 1 package (3 ounces) cream cheese, at room temperature % teaspoon vanilla Vk cups sifted regular flour Vi cup (about) red currant jelly m teaspoons sugar mixed with Vz teaspoon cinnamon In a medium mixing bowl cream together the butter cream cheese and vanilla Gradually stir in the flour working it in to form a smooth dough. Cover and chill. Divide into 2 equal portions On a prepared pastry cloth with a prepared stockinet-covered rolling pin, roll out one portion to a thin 12-inch round. (Keep other portion of dough refrigerated.) Using a 2%-inch doughnut cutter (with center removed), cut out rounds; reroll leavings of dough and cut out; there should be 12 rounds altogether. Spread a little less than 1 teaspoon of jelly over each of these rounds, but do not spread to edge. Roll out remaining portion of dough the same way, but this time use the doughnut cutter with the center in to make 12 doughnut shape rounds. Place these on top of the jelly-spread rounds, adding the leftover jelly to the centers. ★ Sprinkle with sugar-cinnamon mixture, but not over jelly centers. Bake in a. 400-degree oven until lightly browned — 15 to 20 minutes. (Cinnamon tops ^ill look very brown.) Makes 2 dozen. Lef Fruit Chill in Wine for Hour inate cubed fresh and d fruit, for example, In Wine, Sauterne or Tawny or one hdUr In a refriger-(Three cups of fruit in %-vine will serve six.) An-trlck is to add a little Sherry to'each dish of iple chunks. you can soak prunes, have bron washed thor-', overnight in Burgundy-cook Ull tender in this Add sugar Just before ing from the fire. AND UD TO 650 TOfvum COUNTRY CLUB Corned Boot FLAT CUT 7S1. 300 Top VoImo Stamps WITH COUPONS tiCLOW COUNTRY CLUB OR Araoar Bocoa ,,»PKG 77* SERVE N* SAVE Sliced Becoa.....'fkS S9* CUT INTO CHOPS Vt Pork Lola.......<..69* Covpong A S C Ar» Worth 200 Strnnpt On A Purnhato 0/ $20 Through $24.92, Coupon! B A C Aro Worth 250 $tompo On A Purehooo Of $25 Through $29.99. Coupon! A, B A C Aro Worth 300 Stomp! On A Purchao Of $30.00 Or VALUABLE COUPON 50 EXTRA "" CENTER CUT RIB U.S. CHOICE Check Steak.....69* BOSTON Fresh Pork ButtSLa59* PfK NIK PAK SKINLESS Wieaers........2 »»KC 99* GLENDALE ROASTED OR Polish SdBsogo.,Li 69* Pork Chops ROAST^RITE BRAND Hon Turkoys 33 to TO 14-LB AVC LB COUNTRY CLUB Cnnnod Homs lO^'T” FULLY COOKED WHOLE SbibI- BobbIbso, PICNIC STYLE GLENDALE FRESH OR SMOKED livor Soosogo2pKc99* LEAN TENDER Snokod Picaics..u 39* U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY BEEF Hum Fresh Pork Roast THIS COUPON WORTH ■ STAMPS ! ON PURCHASES TOTALING I S5 TO S9.99 I Hot IntluAing Boor, Wino Or Clgorotta, At Krogot ■ In Dotrolt An4 Bottom Hithlgan. Coupon Voll4 H Thru Sun., Jan, 5, 1969 B COUPOil A I THIS COUPON WORTH § 100 EXTRAva?:. stamps I ON PURCHASES TOTALING SIO TO S14.99 Not IntluAing Boor, Wino Or Clgorottoo, At Ktogor | Rib Roost U.S. CHOICE BEEF BOSTON ROLL OR CHUCK Boaoloss Roost..L839* 29 In Dotrolt An4 Eaotom Michigan. Coupon Vall4 Thru Sun,, Jan, 5, 1969 B ceypoM B_____________I THIS COUPON WORTH | 150 EXTRAvI^Cc STAMPS ■ ON PURCHASES TOT AUNG ■ SIS TO SI9.99 I Not IneluAing Boor, Wino Or CigOrottO!, At Krogor 1| In Dotrolt And Eagforn Michigan. Coupon Valid B Thru Sun., Jon 5, 1969 B COUPON CHOICE OF GRINDS Maxwell House Coffee 2 PINT 12-OZ BTLS NO DEPOSIT-NO RETURN BOTTLES Vernorf NO DEPOSIT-NO RETURN BOTTLES ^ Pint Pepsi-Cola....................BiS 99* RICH TOMATO FLAVOR u-OZ _ Kroger Catsup-......................." 15« PLAIN - « —a onois Jeno’s Pizza Mix...............25* SWEET TENDER Dol Monto Poo* 1-LB 1-OZ CAN WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE Dol Monto Corn 1-LB 1-OZ CAN SPECIAL LABEL Crisco Shortening 3 -- 00' Philod« Cre Che DEL MONTE CUT Grooa Boobs • ••• (Tan 19* ORCHARD PRIDE OLD FASHIONED Piak Applosoaco ^CAN 10* SPECIAL LABEL PERSONAL SIZE Ivory Soap..48%23* SUN GOLD Soltiao Crockers sotf 19* FROZEN BIRDS EYE DEL MONTE YELLOW CLING Pooches orsl^cVd -L‘*29* CAN Sqaosb...2 12-OZ WT PKGS COOLRISE FLOUR Robia Hood25.‘fc«1** ALL PURPOSE Velvet Flour.. 556* SUPER CLEANER Miracle White ...%*!■* ALBACORE WHITE TUNA <«-OZ wt CAN Breast 0’ Cbickea 29* LADY MYERS STEMS S RIECES Mushrooms Sour death left over? You w add It, initaid of water or ther liquid, to a omfectionera’ tgar frbUmg. 'KROGER LABEL . j_QT JOdllh# Tomato Juice.............. Luri.iguid Detergent 45* Sandwich Or Wiener Buns4 ^ H Frezen Ceoi Whip " 45* Wole Fruit Cecktaii -H 19* 4-OZ WT CAN FRESH BAKED Krogor Brood 4 1 INCLUDING m-LB SANDWICH, PUMPERNICKEL OR 1-LB REG, BISMARCK OR BLACK FOREST RYE EXTRA DRY DEODORANT TOP VALUE "rap value STAMPS #3 STAMPS STAMPS wm^HISCOUPONW SI PURCHASE OF MORE HOME PRIDE batteries Valid Thru Sun., Jon 5, 1969 At Wmnmr Dot. t 00!!, MIC/I. WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY TWO a-GALS KROGER LABEL " ICECREAM Valid Thru Sun., Jon 5, .1969 At Krogor Dot, B Eoot, MIeh. WITH THIS COUPON OH ANY TWO FT CTNS KROGER SALADS Valid Thru Sun,, Jm, 5, 1969 At Krogtr Dot. A Eat. Mich. TOP VALUE STAMPS m--- ! 2-PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS I 2-FKGS FRYER PARTS OR ■ 2-ROASriNGCHICm2 ■ VMliThr»JuH.,4m,S,Jt» lA^lgoaOr Oaf, * WITH THIS COUPON ON J WITH THIS^COUPOH W - J ■ ANY ■ g ! TENDERAY BONELESS ■ FRES-SHORE OR SEA « ■ BEEF ROAST apAK FROZEN SEAFOOD ■ Valid Tfcfv Son,, Jm S, IMf- mI? VoM Tfcra Jva., Af Ktogor Dot, B jfatf, RlQ Af Kiogor Dot, 4 Boat, t Krogor ifot, m "if". luolBnniainnnaiain PRICiS BFFICTIVi THURS. JAH. 2 TmU SUN. JAN. S WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES,^ NONE SOLD TO DEALERS, COPYRIGHT 1968. f HE KROGER CO. THE PONTIAC PKESS, THUKSDAY, JANUARY 2, lOflO ROBIN MALONE ».Pm ' Pm~ ki^fS By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Everyone makes mistakes in bidding and play. One test of a good playo' is his ability to recOvfr ftnm Uiem. East's ace of diamonds took the first trick. South falsecard-ed with the ieight. He had nothing to lose by this since the discarded eight and five were equals. East played the nine of diamonds at trick two and South played the Jack. West was in with the queen and started to think. A ★ ★ While West was thinking, Soufii noticed that he had made a serious mistake. He could have ensured hlS contract by king. He returned to his hand rising with his king of diamonds j^rith the ace of clubs in order to at trick two and gidng cash his 10 of hearts. Dummy UakAMSu 'Hu uuiem Isvam 4'hA HaApI . . lA hearts, He could lose the heart finesse and relax., If East held a third diamond J"®" then West could not hold more than two more and three dia mond tricks and a heart would not beat him. If West had started with five diamonds East would not have another diamond to lead. * ★ ★ Eventually West led the queen of spades. By this time South had worked out a line of play to make up for his carelessness at trick two. He let the queen hold. West continued with the jack and South let that card old also. At this point a club shift by West would h&ve defeated the contract but West played a third spade and South was able to make the hand with a Vienna coup. H«i.^cashed three spades and the king of diamonds and four hearts from dummy. East had to make three discards. The first was a club, the seccmd a heart, the third impossible. He could not afford to throw another club and so let a heart go. ★ ★ * Now South led a heart to dununy’s ace, dropping East’s king and qul^n of clubs were for the last two Q—Th» bidding has bam: WMt NortlNy But SottOl Pm l.N.T, Pass IA Pm 3 ♦ Pm ? You. South, hold: AKJIS4 ♦AKQM Ali*! What do you do now? A—Bid lour ha arts. You ahould have a good play lor this game. ’ TODAY’S QUES-nON Instead of bidding thraa hurts your partner bids two go-trump over your two hearty What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow oejtacrWB.* qURMTUTI ini; srm.Bur CRUCIAL, ACRBSor fiatmjiM fARMLANP rH0A63pe$sm iuPuJrKi/i&, AWE> hfv ATtWlTOH «? 0NWe A ........HBltSWAUOW MIS IWA HOJWA MtAdaus eA6B». .. amp WS start LIKB^UMAM 0C/M(SS«IN6Ta^P OP UKS PRS'ReCOBPBP (W^ss^ses. By Bob Lubbers THE BERRYS By Carl Gruber! THE BETTER HALF DIP you HIDE MV WOOL SHIRT# THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom “Yes, steak prices have gone pp ®g8® "*• I’ve received three marriage prop^s lately from women who can no longer afford them. BERRY'S WORLD—By Jim Berry logical Forecast * * * «aaw^e«ili6.aSSie» ■ •y SYDNKY OMARa For FrlUy ‘HIM wHe ima caetrelt hh aMtIny , ________________atvtpril 1»): Full moon todoy itrouo* homo, ucurity, rotations with Boront. AAoko concession to moto, one cleiio to you. You aeln >eo*l today through tunny disposltton. Stow clear of aitputos. * TAURUS (April 10-IWay »)! Botwo talcing cM on any loumey chock datails, Instructloni. Full moon position today coIncMfS with idtas, Imprasslont. Walt: for tolid hdortnatlon. Don't bo In too much of a hurry. ______ . GEMINI (May 31-Juna »): Handling of money is spottlghtod. Avow carslosmast. OMabi hint from TAURUS mostage. Bo analytical. Koap oye on potsesslona. CAPRICORN (Dec. M-Jon. 19): Fulf moon highlights marriage, partnerships. Study legal complications. You may have to make revisions. Social activity tonight proves gratifying. Coma out of shell. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. It); You get your way through diplomacy. Be kind to one who makes embarrassing remark Emphasis on health, basic tasks. Main tain steady pace. Tonight you can relax nds. highlights appearance,. In your Slg< . . persenallty. You may not teal free to trovol — el --------------------- ■ "—" * ______ . ihould bo no cause tor brooding.! Your poraonal abilities are being appreciated. Know this. UEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Evening favors relaxation, onfortainmont. Avoid trying,to with friei._ PISCES (Fob. IFMarch 20): Full moon highlights romance, creativo endeavors. Don't be afraid of charge. Enter into spirit of exciting evening. Day features vari^, exchange of Ideas. Parsonpl magnetism soars. ★ ★ IP FRIDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you can huiW on protect recently under way. You have fine sense of humor. Display It more often. * 1 GENERAL TENDENCIES: full moon aspects Indicative of merger ot malor forces. (Copyright 1H9, General Features Corp.) ALLEY 001- By V. T. Hamlin ? 16 A MASIC3AK V YOU HEARD i LOOK.CHIEF, SINCE VOU’RE HIM.' OPEN j 60 SURE THIS GUY AIN'T; ITl X A MAGICIAN... CAPTAIN EASY «lysi by NEA “Before you leave for the office, I think you should know —you're wearing my Yves St. Laurent pants!” entenainmeni. »vDiH iiruiHjwi •ceompllih loo much at once. Go with the two. Theatar could provide ~ hllarating oxparlenco. Ont dose to yoi) couW cortfWo socret. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Some friends may unwittingly encourage extravagance. Bast to heed your own counsel. Remember recent resolutions. Avoid scattering your efforts. Sight your goal — head directly for It. . , , LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Emphasis on what .you want to achieve. Realize one phase of ectlvity may be finished. Look to firturo, not past. Your ambitions may axcaed available assets. Bs maturo — organise s program. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be discrert about future plans. Get fresh viewpoint. Travel opportunity Is discussed. Don't tell oil you know. Associate may Inbibej could create emborrassing situation. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dsc 21): Emotions soar. Nothing halfway. Not wise OUT OUR WAY to ploy with tiro In romanco ares. Key is control. If you throw logic sway pr^ will be paid. Bs calm, cool, collected. Almanac Daily By United Press International Today is Thursday, Jan. 2, the second day of 1968 with 363 to follow. The moon is between its first quarter and full phase. The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter. ★ ★ ★ The evening stars are Venus and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1776 Continental soldiers raised the first flag of forces uhder George Washington at Cambridge, Mass. * In 1882 fashion writers noted that Parisian Designer Worth said the flair for spring would be “stuffed birds, worn on the left shoulder.” » w ★ * ^ In 1905 Russian ^rces landed at Port Arthur, Man- 1 churia, surrendered to the | Japanese and ended the last | major military engagement in ' the’Russo-Japanese war. In 1959 Moscow Radio an- | nouiiced a cosmic rocket had | been launched toward the moon. Bv Leslie Turner X FEEL IH ME B0UB9 WE'LL TURN UP ancient KECORP OF KAtUKAK# EPREAPW CULTURE AMONdET PEM ETONE-A6B KIPF RAFF! — EEK & MEEK b? NtA. lac. TM. Me. U.t OH.l Rt Howie Schneider Al9i9>lNU,|iic.T>L^^ NANCY Bv Ernie Bushmiller BOARDING HOUSE First Detroit Baby of'69 Is Early Bird fei W ' DETROIT (AP)—kftx.’ James Thomas of D^oit gave birth to the first bat^ of I960 in the Detroit area at MM a.m. Wednesday In Hospital.. The infmit, gn elght-pouisd, 19-ounce boy, tnt^er Were-'re-iwrted doing ,;T Ihe fafiier is an mOf^ye of Comolidatod Gas Co. lHAT'.^y 6 Ur ONjt |fWA|T‘LLj ^WE MEW With self-X^e'llKee^ he Dl^^lPLlME DON'T O AT j PAlKlTS NEED A LEMGTtAY L\ LEAST < H\6 NEXT Ll^l" OF (?E60LUTI0N$) Af^OUND Y ^ELF-6UT I'M 61V1N6W\Y-^TH£ MEAtIPORTRAIT, GELF a REMlMOEf^:) [PLATTEI?•' “TotiAiNE OWN 4ELF 6ET»?UEy THERE'S A LOT OF FLU IN THIS PART OF TOWN AND WE'RE TRyiNO TO KILL T\^BR/AS TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom Ryan IKINALD DUCK Bv Walt Disney WBLL,! dOT IVOUR WASHI!R HUNNINffl! M THAT DIDN'T take long! --------^-- ■ ' \\ '4 ' ' ' \4' '-vAiff t.x THE PdNTIAC PRESS. THUIiSDAY, JANUAR^jg, foeP MANDAEIN ORANGE FRITTERSU-Any homemaker who wants to “fritter” away some time In the kitchen can da just that— prepare some temptingly deiicious, bite-size Japanese Mandarin Orange Fritters, a tasty companion to a whole variety of meat dishes. This Wonderful recipe can end the traditional Side-Dish-Dilemma that plagues so many cooks. Mandarin Oranges In Fritter Batter If you’ve ever enjoyed fritters In a restaurant, you already know how they complement meats. Ham, Canadian bacon, veal roasts, assorted poultry entrees are greatly enhanced by a fruited side dish. i And a fritter is a much more inventive accompaniment than 8 mere mound of mashed potatoes, a serving of rice, or a helping of noodles. The making ol a fritter is simplicity itself — particularly Japanese Mandarin Orange Fritters — because the canned Mandarin orange segments are already peeled, seedless, and just the right size. For a delicious topping to the fritters and the meat, hry your hand at Mandarin Orange Sauce — a tasty blending of ingredients that will become one of your i favorite meat-topping recipes. ' JAPANESE MANDARIN ORANGE FRITTERS 1 11-oz. can Japanese Mandarin Oranges legg Vi cup milk 1 cup pancake mix OU Drain Mandarin orange segments, then cut them. Blend egg and milk, stir in pancake mix and Mandarin oranges Beat lightly. Drop by teaspoonfuls into the hot oil (about one inch deep). Cook until golden brown, about four minutes. Makes about 20 fritters. Mandarin Orange Sauce 111-oz can Japanese Mandarin Oranges and Syrup 2 tablespoMis butter Vi cup celery 1 tabfespom cornstarch Vi cup wine vinegar H teaspoon Japanese soy sauce Drain Mandarin orange segments, reserving syrup. Melt butteb in skillet and saute celery. Add Mandarin orange syrup and cornstarch, stirring until transparent. Add vinegar, soy sauce and Mandarin segments. Heat. Serve in separate bowl as sauce for fritters. PRONTO CRAB PIZZA - These tasty pull-off pizzas made with Ainska King crab and refrigerated biscuits are ideal after^^Argame refreshments. Biscuits Are Base for Little Fish Pizzas The team won! You’ll be a winner, too, if you serve King Crab Pronto Pizzas when the gang stops by after the game. These tasty little puU-off pizzas that don’t require cutting can be put together in a jiffy. If you wish, do this before the game and refrigerate them to bake later. vrt>iie the crowd is gathering, Just pop the pizzas in a hot oven. ★ ★ ★ ’The pizza cru4 is made with refrigerated «biscuits flattened on a cookie sheet into a rectangle. Over the top goes tomato sauce, a hint of garlic, onion and oregano and two kinds of cheese. The scoring points come, though, in the luscious Alaska King crab that goes over all. Choose either canned or frozen Alaska King Crab for these tasty snactes. Both are completely cooked and tendon-free. You’ll always be on the Winning side when you keep a good supply of this colorful seafood on Alaska King crib ................ ■ « (8-oz.) packages refrigerated, are goldan biscuits r \ . I large pizzas or 20 pull-off pto^ 1 (8-oz.) can tomato sauce with bits HA teaspoons instant minced onion V* teaspoon oregano Vi teaspoon garlic salt 1 cup grated sharp Cheddar chefese 2 slices (3 oz.) Mozzarella --—^eesCrdiced Drain and slice canned crab. Or, defrost, drain and slice frozen crab. With palms of hands, flatten biscuits into 4x3-inch ovals. w ★ ★ On greased baking sheet, arrange 10 biscuits at slight angles to each other in two adjoining rows. Press adjoining edges of biscuits together securely. On anothe^ baking sheet, repeat with remaining 10 biscuits. MAKE SAUCE Combine tomato sauce, onion, oregano and garlic salt. Spread evenly over pizzas to within % inch of edges. Sprinkle with 14 y of this colorful seafood on digege and md for appetizers, salads and Mozzarella cheese, isseroles. Arrange sliced Alaska King king crab PRONTO PIZZA crab evenly over pizzas. Top m oz.) can Alaska King with remaining % cup sharp crab i or % * pound frozen cheese. Bake in 450-degree oven • - — ■ 8 to 10 minutes, or until edges Cheese, Nuts in Sauce Top for Spinach “King’s Spina^ch” is so named because it’s “fit-for-a-king” food. If you can’t win over nonspinach eaters with this recipe, you might as well give up. One word of caution: Don’t overcook the spinach. It should be just tender. Cook it tightly covered over not-too-high heat so that you won’t' need to add water and so the spinach won’t scorch. The cheese sauce, zipped with mustard and lemon juice, is simply delicious; and the crunchy slivered almonds in the sauce lift this dish to culinary splendor. King’s Spinach % cup blanched slivered almonds % teaspoon salad oil ,1 lb. fresh spinach 1 tablespoon butter or margarine 1 tablespoon flour % teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon dry mustard V* cup milk % cup grated process American cheese Few drops Worcestershire 1 teaspoon lemon juice Roast almonds in oil in 300-degree oven 8 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Wash spinach well and cook in covered saucepan with (mly the water that clings to leaves. Meanwhile, melt butter and blend in flour, salt and mustard. Add milk and cook, stirring until sauce is thickened and comes to boil. Add cheese, Worcestershire and lemon juice; cook, stirring over low heat until cheese is melted. Stir in. almonds. i (Serve this sauce over the hot, drained spinach, Smart Moms Figure Way to Feed Teens A reasoo fncpiently givtsn by ienagera-.for sot eatihg reakfast tar that they do not 3ve time,- 'Often ttata means >8t their mothers have been tistrated by a sleepy-head son morning meal. Instead, have learned to prepare w^-breakfasts that ban be f en the run. They take comfort from a finding of the Iowa Breakfast 10 gets out of bed Just in,St tap^?inf 8^mSets Ihw requlrem^^ beat the t^y bell ^ a _ ^ «„t,.rnnn*llv eda- oranne luice: a scrambled Of ughter who has plenty of time long “PPly her make-up and fix fluate they each of the four recommended food groups: fruits and vegetaUest meat (incMi eggs): bread and cereals: and milk. >} _ For a quickie breakfast that MAXWELL HOUSE COf FEE BREAST-O-CHICKEN Chunk Pack TUNA SVz-Oz. Weight Can SCOTT family pack TISSUES 4 roll pack USDA CHOICE BONELESS CHUCK ROAST lb. 8-lb. 1-oz. Only Rag. or low ealorii WAWAIIAH'^ PUHCH » fDixiaBallo Saltine i,iu ’ 'CRACKERS"^'- CAMPBELL’S s Tomato Om, Can 'StSiWBERRY PRESERVES Stokely’t FRUIT COCKTAIL USDA Choice ROUND BONE or ENGLISH CUT ROAST lb. Qrosse Pointa Quality ^BIG and MELLOW PiAS i-ib. Can$ Cana FELICE USOA CHOICE CHUCK ROAST mmn lb. PILLSBUIIY maahed HUNGRY JACK sv*^. POTATOES PILLSBURY Sweet Cream 2-lb,, Pancake Mix pkg. Ooggia Dinnar blade cut DOG FOOD Young Tender Slicejl BEEF LIVER lb. oven-freah POTATO ISVa-OZ. weight can Mb. Loaf U.S. #1 Idaho Fresh Lean Ail Beef HAMBURGER lb. Vac Pack HYGRADE’S CORNED BEEF BRISKET Point Cut Tb. Flat Cut HYGRADE'S Little Link SAUSAGES 69® lb. WEST VIRGINIA Center Cut Smoked PORK CHOPS 99° BAKING POTATOES 5-Lb. Bag lb. BIRDS m Frozen AWAKE 9-oz. Fluid can BLUE BONNET MARGARINE 1-lb. Carton Yellow Quarters CHOOSE Freak, Criap RADISHES or Freak, Criap CARROTS 10*». BIROS EYE Frozen 10*oz. TASTI-FRIES ’Sr Piilsbury Oven I Bisciaits *»»• Oven fleady Rad Ripe Salad TOMATOES 4 Beef, Ohio ken or Turkey BMQ»n NTHES ^ Saaltast-Frash Half 'n Half Qt. Ctn. Pkg. ’ her make-UD and fix quate. ........k..». ... I in twist or a k . i- —t A breakfast that w i 11 hamburger bun; and a glass of 1 the body’s lupply of milk. ’The orange and ,milk can, 1 contain at laait ma koA tern Sab Datosi T FeN Gays - ThHiwtaVi Jm. Z Hnii Wednesday, Jan. 8 n BO longwtay to va their teenagers lit down th the ftunily kr a traditional can even be eaten, arouf^ the edges of other get0ti|-rwady*for< school activities. '' Riohit'|(ts«nNMl To tiiilt Otoiirfltlea ■ 1116 W. HURON ST. .V I y' T,; ^ 1|^.;lt-itei:1v-.#:'i! |;v..; te Wsf' ! '<* ll ' 5 Mb. CANS Peas & Carrots |oj{jj^'* Cut French Styte i Green Beans Green Beans Your Choice of Flavors 24^ ^ - 1-q<-t4-bi. • can ^ drance • cherry ^jjrope^eJ^^^ Idhacc’nSanbcrn , 2-lb. ' : Can Choice pf grind “ $119 Schafer’s Big ’*C” BREAD 5 Mb. 4-cz. leaves Califernia Whale TOMATOES c „ 1-lb. 4-ifcli Pkg. MacDonald’s Big “C” MILK I 1 I King Size BOLD 2* Va-gal. Cartons S-lb. Blade Cut CHOCK BOAST lb. 33*^ BEEF LIVER M.irt Kinc LARGE BOLOGNA Chunk or siided FRANKS RING BOLOGNA M A roUSN SAUSAGE |h, ||i| RED HOTS LAMB & VEAL LOVERS! We carry a complete selection of both lamb and veal -TRY SOME!! Jiaft iiracle qt. lAlkSii Jar IIh-$129 ^ 99^ 32 48 Q 1 Michigan CES Seta’s Super Mkt. Is TreeSweet Pure Florida Orange Juice c I 5-lb. BAG 49' PiRsbury Flour BAG 49< Betty Crocker - your choiceju Cake Mixes Queen Mary Fine Quality nn Nylons 3 pair for Sis**** s-ib. $■! 04 Tide 4 WlrtphaM NO DECEPTION HERE-Ohlo State’s ■ophomore quarterback Rex Kern mak^s no attempt to conceal his Most Valuable Player trophy from the Rose Bowl the %ay he hid the football from Southern Cal’s defense yesterday in guiding OSlTs 27-16 victory. PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Ohio State football Coach Woody Hayes beads for Vietnam on Friday with the Hallooal Collegiate football championship firmly^ entrenched In his capable hands, It will be the fourth goodwill Jaunt for i the veteran Buckeye mentor who scored his third Rose Bowl victory New Year’s Day—an impressive 27-16 decision over Southern California. 1110 outcome left^ little doubt that the No. l*ranked Buckeyes were as good as their press clippings. But Hayes heralded the victory as his most precious iii a Rose Bowl clash. GREA’TEST WIN ’ ‘”11118 is my greatest bowl victory’; the Jubilant Hayes said afterwards. "After all, both teams were unbeaten.’’ The dean of Big Ten coaches wasn’t ready to call his sophomore-laden club hb best ever In an illustrious 18-year career.' "I still consider my 1954 team my greatest,’’ he said, “^e had four great backs that year". > Aspiring Southern California, the nation’s second-ranked team, stunned the Bucks by opening a KM) lead in the second quarter. ★ ★ ★ • Brilliant 0' J,. Simpson led the first Trojan thrust by gathering in three passes from Steve Sogge for 53 yards. A THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1969 D—1 Kansas' Extra Man MIAMI (AP) - A 12tb man e did not make it, we would still be In a very nod defensive position:^’ ^^msas buUt its 14-7 lead with a first iwtod touchdown scored by Mike Reeves it the end of a nine-play, 45-yard drtoe. Penn State tlpd it in the second quarter oirw 47-ySrd drive climaxed by Charlie Pitean’s 18-yard run Into the end xone. M,8» fourth period, 6onnie Sbanklin reamed a punt 46-yards to the State 8. Riggins gained seven and then ^ dove the ■ gnal yard. ; In .the winning dressing rooto, SfotisflCS Ptokno said he never gave a thought ,OOWf OTOTIsnCS ^Ing for a. tie after State’s touchdown^ ^ ......n ato in the jGator BqwI, said Pawifno, jj”'** „ . ^ ......•.>, Vmw swit («to in the 4Jator BqwI. ---- . I made up’my mind ypu • owl to win.. I nevM tijought of aityping ut two points.’’ Asked who called the, wln.nlng )iicbdown ptoy, Bid, “Rufkhart called it. laajpwed. “Coach Paterpo called the .144?; kjin lav You got to beUeve me. He i too S&ttotSocred«*««•*:. .; ■.. , r' gp||| stout Buckeye defense stiffened on the three and Ron Ayala booted a'21-yard field goal. Minutes later, Simpson, two-time All-American and Helsmatr lYophy winner, electrified the 102,063 fans by breaking off left tackle and cutting back to the right On a q>ectacular 80-yard touchdown gallop. The faithful Buckeye followers didn’t have long to wait for an CHilO comeback. Quarterback Rex Kem, a superb iteld general, directed the Bucks on a 18-play, 69-yard march with fullback Jim Otis cracking the final yard for the score. PALL BEHIND “After we fell behind 10-0, I told the guys in the huddle that we better get roUing and quit messing around,’’ Kem said. With only 72 secmids remaining in the half, Kern completed three passes for 38 yards and set up the first ’of two field goals by Jim R^man. Tile 26-yard three-pointer with three seconds' left evened the count at intermission. “Getting that field goal was a big psychological advantage for us,” Hayes said. “I felt we would win even after we got behind. I knew we would move the ball better”. ★ The veteran coach singled out his defensive unit as the big factor in the victory. “Our defense in the second half was fabulous. It was about as good as our best effort earlier when we beat Purdue 13-0.” isimpswi, who ripped through the Bucks for 137 yards in 18 first half trips, was limited to only 34 in 10 carries.in the second period. “0. J. broke the big one in the first half but we did a good job stopping him later. He is a tremendous player,” Hayes said. 'The alert Ohio defense, which has been the key many times in a perfect 10-0 season, recovered two fumbles that led to touchdowns end picked off two of Sogge's aerials.. POOR PUNT A poor punt of only 28 yards by John Young gave Ohio g0(^ field position late in the third quarter. In a typical Hayes’ ’grindtog drive, the Bucks marched 54 . yards to 11 plays without benefit of a " single pass. \l^en the drive stalled on the Trojans’ eight, Roman kicked a 25-yard field goal for a 13-10 lead. On the second play after the ensuing kickoff, Sogge fumbled after being belted by Bill Urbanik and ipiddle guard Vic Stottlemeyer recovered on the 21. Five plays later, Kem hit Lee Hayden with a four-yard touchdown pass. “If I had to pick the biggest single play of the game, Sogge’s fumble was it,” Hayes said. Moments later, Ohio iced it when linebacker Mark Stier jarred Simpson loose from the ball after 0. J. had caught a Sogge pass. Thiv time halfback Mike Polaski was in the right spot covering the ball on the Trojan 16. On the next play, Kem found halfback Roy Gillian all alone over the middle on a 16-yard TD strike and Ohio stormed out to a 27-10 advantage. The losers scored their final touchdown in the final minute in the game’s only controversial play. ★ ★ ★ Sogge hit I end Sam Dickerson in the %nd zone m a 19-yard pitch. Both Dickerson and Polaski battled for the ball, and it looked like a possible interception. “I still don’t know what happened on that one. That’s the first time I ever saw, a touchdown called with the ball on the ground,” Hayes said. Southern Cal actually outgained Ohio to total offense with 366 yards to the Bucks’ 361. Simpson’s 171 net fell 24 yards short of eclipsing the Rose Bowl record of 194 set by Iowa’s Bob Jeter against California in 1959. But Otis and Hayden, a pair of workhorses, gained 101 and 90 yards, respectively, fw the victors and Kern, who ran for 35, completed nine of 15 for 101. Rose Bowl Statistics AP wimriMM FLIPPING A BUCPIYE - Unebacker Jim Snow (55) and mil, Scott 5-14, Sogga SmilW* Wj „ T, ^ Pass raMivIng-^hle SSata, .Ollllsn 44S, Haydsn M, Zalina 1-5, Whitt, I-t7, Jankowski 1-i , Southtrn California, Simpiwi l-is, DIckarson > 3-50, Ltwronea 3-14, KiaTn 4-31, Chandlay. 1-y. .... ' Passlno-Ohlo Slalt, JCdrn W5-t0i-0. Soufhaiw Ctllfomii, Sogga IKW-IIM, Simpson 0-24-1. Pistons Get Gambee iSiBfSOIT (UPl) — ^ The Detroit ' Hiltons Wednesday announced they had traded rookie center Rich Niemann to the Milwaukee Bucks , for veteran^ •>4bmerd Dave Gainbec. (Itohbee, «n ll veteran of Hatioftal, Basketball ,^Au()dalton play, bad avenged , lU ' pototo to hl> career. BgEAK AWAY wHh AUDETTE roNTIAC Your Famous Detroit Area Pontiac Dealer! 1969 PONTIAC 1969 CATALINA 2-Doer Itardtep, Hydramatic transmission, power stodring, power disc broket, foil decor- mouldings, deluxe wheel covers, deluxe steering wheel, custom pedal, trim, plott^ 8.55x15 tires. All safety feo-tures. $308900 1968 TUMPIST 2-DOOK V-8 engine, 350 cu. in., Turbo Hydramatic transmission, power steering, full decor mouldings, doluxo wheol covort, conceolod windshield wipers, deluxe steering wheel, wood groin insfrumont panel, custom podol, trim, piotos. 1969 PiRiBIRD a-DOOR HARRYRP Automatic transmission, special poinV.deluxe steering wheel, deluxe wheel- covert, console. "' : ^2787®® $2678 00 HIGHEST TRADE-IN PRICESI CALL 642-8600 CREDIT OK'D BY PHONE USE YOUR PRESENT CAR AS DOWN payment I ididi ' If ■■NwMf ■ ■ (MO MAPLt RD., (ISMIlsKdO (Aorsss framSart Mrpoit) W-ttOO. Meast TVS Wa« 3 MImitil M.t ol Wood*ot4,2Vi MlnulM iMrt of |.75.pul<(.Town Buywi AecsylW ; V * * Jx.'A, '''''-v';;' rf'vW;-' I . V THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JANUART 2, 1900 -----------------y-nr v>l . ^ V < V , & ««#s»f 5# ■' ’ CWITROVERSIM. SCORE Southern Califmnia was credited with a touchdown on this play late in the Rose Bowl game yesterday, a decision th«t was h<^ disputed OSU coach Woody Hayes* At left, Southern Cal’s Sam Didimon (U) and OSH halfback Mike Polaski (IS) go up together for St as Md aona pass intended for Dickerson. Polaski appears to have the ball T"*' ....... ............. 'm -w AP WiraphaM (top right), but officials ruled Dickerson had possessi(Hi and gave the CJali-fomians a touchdown. “Hayes’ opinion, after viewing these pictures, was that it was an incomplete p^. The play did not affect the outcome. OSU w(m> 27-16. {Hazork^cks Upset Georgia Coach Lauds Arkansas Defense 'tifk -T'’J 25. S MEW ORLEANS. La.-(AP) CStrkansas’s disparaged defenders stototiw show in the Sugar Bond, whidi had hoped for an oqiiodve offensivo duel betweoi the Razoibacks and Georgia. “AH 11 defensive men played a great game,” Coach Frank Broyles said. “Our defense was something dse.” IhO ddkndef^ critldzed all fell whoa the offensive team drew flia' Ffeadits^ swept the Razwbacks to a 16-2 ewquest Georgia in the Sugar Bowl HUednes^. “They stopped us every time we had an opportiiidty ,to do something,” said Coach Vince Dooley, vdio said he was surprised at the wiqr the Arkansas defenders played. ^*How did th^ give up that many p(dnts dining the season?” , ^ DEFENSE TTGHTENS St The Razinrbadm yielded 187 fDoiiits last faUihid the defense d^’t allow iilything out of Georgia, wbidi kept from being blanM by scoring on a safety whoi Arkansas' BUI Burnett was tackled in the end eooe.. , ^ ' f# Arkansas recovered five Georgia fumbles and pkked off tinea passes, and Dooley credited the Razorbacks with causing tiie 39idIdog bobMes. » “Arkansas gave us a good, sound licking,” Dooley said. “They evidently wanted the game worse than we did.’ The loss was the first of tim season for Georgia, ranked fourth natiomdly, and the^Bull dogs’ p(dnt total was their sn^est ever in five campaigns under Doo%. ' J ★ ir it Arkansas’ offense didn’t ex- actly tear up the tdece, either, |ing its reputatim as me of the with Bill Montgomery tossing a 27-yard touchdown pass to Omck JNcus for the only touchdown in the 35th annual football classic watched by 82,113. The Razorbacks^ finishing the season with a m^l reoxd and hopitif to advfeme above thikr ninth place mtionany ranking, got tiieir other pidnts out of kicker Bob White. White bit m field goals of 34, 24 and 31 yards to clinch the victory for ArkaQsos. ★ ★ ★ This iwas one of the real great natimal victories in the 11 years I’ve been at Arkansas,” Bri^l^i said. “It was the greatest team effort I’ve beeii associated vdth.” ★ ★ ★", Dicus, a sticky-fingered sophomore, was named the n^ valuable player for his catches country’s toughest leagues. “Maybe we better take a hard lock at ourselves in the conference,” he said. “Something may be faappmiing that we ou^t to know about — maybe ;;it’s a trend.” 0..*- * * % Dooley said that schods are Umited.to 40 football grants ayear, vtidle Southwest Cmfer-'^ieiu» teams give out SO. Arkan- sas tied for the Soutiiwest title. However, Broyles said he thinks the fact that none of the Arkansas players had bbm to a bowl may have helped fire up the Razorbacka “We tud the psydiolo^al 1^-vantage,” Broyles said. “Georgia had been to thrpe straight bowl games, and we didn’t have a iKW who bad ever played In a bowl gluhe before.” The coaches also toik a dif- was wrong because we lost,” i^her, literally pickM the h^-Dooley said. “If we had wim it aided Vol defeme apart. » Without once calling a pass. Street directed Tesas 80 yards Sophomore Flanker Hero for Razorbacks Nm bRLEANS (AP^ - Sev era! Arkansas football players were outstanding in Wednes-...r j day’s Sugar Bowl, but Razor- ®®J^***^ i*^bacl^ flanker Chuck Dicus stood yards to keep the Razorbacks jj little taller than the rest, rolling, I Kcus, a ' 171-pound sopho- SEC iOEPUTATTON i more, caught 12 passes for 169 Dooley said the whipping suf-iVards and the game’s only fered by his Southeastern Con-lhHJchdown as the Razorbacks ference diamplons-r’plus thrash-jaP*®!. previously / undefeated Ings handed to Alabama and G«®rgis 16-2. Tmmessee in other bowls—may k # ★ be a sign that the SEC is los-| “iMeus has be«v mceptional in every ball game,” said Arkansas Coach Prank Broyles Mrs. King Falls HOBART, Tasmania (AP) — Kerry , Melville of Australia, defeated Billie Jeah King ofi Long Beach, Calif., Wimbledm', “He’s a fine receiver and he’s tough to get down when he gets, the baP under his arm.” BIG PlAYS No. 20 (Dicus) i^l^rhart . . X |US," said Gemgia Coach Vince champion, W. 64, in a yg final round match of tiia _j_„g.. * > women’s singles in the*^*^’ Taismania tennis championship Wednesday. I Dicus' touchdown catch was a ,27-yard fingertip grab. He also made a diving catch of a 35- ABRUI^ IIALT pm BULLOOCMleorw tMll earifer Bead jrikBSOR Is doubled up Ste Janing defeoelvi ^UoH et linebacker Puwdl Iroitt Arkansas durfaig the early of yesterday’s feigar Bowl game at ■%'f ] ‘1^ f - * .A ^ I ifiwivimw New OiiiMuis. The Bididogs’' fullhaik was. limited to short yardage 00 tiia pity- Arkansas posted a 1^2 win over the prevkMsIy undefeated Georgiaiis. yard pass to spark Arkansu’ drive toward a second quarter field goal and a 10-2 halftime lead. ★ ★ ★ He’s unbelievable,” raid quarterback Bill Montgomery.'. “He’s been doing a great job ail year.” Dicus got behind All-American safety Jake Scott on the touchdown pass. “Scott has tremendous speed,” said Montgomery, “hut we felt like we might be able to beat Mm inside.” “Georgia has ‘he best secoidr ary we’ve played against,” said IKcus. “No doubt, Scott is an All-American.” MVP LAUDED Everymie in the Arkamas dressing romu praised the likable, g^-loflklng Dicus, nam^d the most vpluable player in the game. ★ ★ ★ I’d hate to be playing against ' Mm the next two years,” said AU-Amerl?an guard Jim .Barnes. Barnes also offered a theevy on why ke Razorbacks, rankt-d ninth in the pre-bowl ratings, had defeated Georgia, ranked fourth. “I have never been associated with a bunch of boys like tMs,' said Brmes, “They’re given up more and sacrificed more ‘ban any group fve ever seen. ‘That’s why we went 9-1 this year and why we won out there today,” he said. TRAININGRULB “We didn’t come to New Orleans tmtil Sunday night and everybody has been in thefr rooms at 10 p.m.,” he said- *T went down on Bourbon Stre# for one hour Monday afternoon but nobody’s bemi down tiiere at night.” it it * Broyles and the RazorbaMto, co-champions of the Southwestern Conference, €njoyed»a piiy-choiogkal advantage over Girar-gia, (tampions of tite Southeas-tem Ocmfiuence. “WeH'e been the underdogs for 35 (te^,!* be said. “Georgte had been to tivee straight games We don’t^have • bogr who had ever played in a bowl game before. First downs Rushing ysrdago Passing yardaga Return yardaga Passes Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized Arkansas ...... Georgia Ark—Dicus 27 (White kick) Geo—Safety Burnett zone Ark—FG Whit# 34 Ark-FG White 24 Ark-FG Whit# 31 A-42,113. > ferent approach to the game, with Dooley bringing his team to New Orleans a week ago and allowing the BuUdogs to mix pleasure with practice. Arkansas didn’t arrive in town until Sunday, making their final prep-arati(H)s at home. Fifth-Rankwcl Twxas Amastwt 513 Yardi in Cotton Bowl DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Texas used the lance and the sledgehammer with equal deadliness in executing bewildered Tennessee 30-13 Wednesday In the 33rd aniiual Cotton Bowl classic. The “lance” was an especially concocted aerial from quarterback James Street to swift and elusive -Charles “Cotton” Speyrer. The first strike went for a 7S-yard touchdown. The second bomb—also Street to Speyrer—and run covered 79 yards for a score. The “sledgehammer” was the brutal, ground-trembling runs of Texas’ flying foursome. Street, All-American Chris Gilbert, Koy and Steve Wor-ster galloped for 250 yards and three touchdowns through the physically wMpped Volunteer line. \OLS AWED Tennesoee was rather awed by the devastation. “I have never seen a back-field ap balanced as theirs,” said Vol All-America guard Chalres Rosenfielder. “Texas is one of the better, if not the best team I have played against in my three varsity seasons.” Tennessee Capt. Dick Hams said, “Their execution killed us. You couldn’t tell what was happening. He (Street) did a great job. He knew what to do.” , ★ ★ ★ Street, whose only claim to fame at Texas until tMs season AP Wlrephele SIX POINTS FOR TEXAS - Halfback 'Ted Koy (24) of Texas darts past Tennessee’s Bill Young (right) after outrunning the Volunteers’ Mike Jones (40) Wednesday for a 10-yard scoring run in the Cotton Bowl’s second quartor. The favored Longhorns blasted Tennessee, 36-13. j 'White Jersey' Cursie DALLAS, Tex. (AP) —| "I thought we needed some- Tennessee defensive safety Bill thing to pick us up and he might Young says it wasn’t the curseibe it,” Dickey said. But it didn’t of the white jersey that caused work. “They got those two tile Volunteers’36-13 loss to Tex-bombs and that’s what killed as in the Cotton Bowl Wednes-day. The curse .was more in the form of orange jersey No. 88 worn by Charles Speyrer, vdio “Obviously, everything we did; was that he was a good baseball! snugged touchdown ptumes of 78 would have been ri^t.” Sugar Bowl Summary 13 40 75 155 117 TO 41 17-3V-1 11-31-3 10-34 10-37 2 5 31 25 ......... 0 10 0 4-14 0 2 0 0-2 pan (ram Montgomery teckletf In end Johnion 12-45i Ar- Rushlng—Geergla, . kanm, Burnett 2M1. _______ Passing—Georgia, Cevan, 7-22-1—103 CIS, Han»^ 2-0-2-14) Arkansas, tgomary 17-37-1—105. Receiving—Caorgla, Whlttamora Lawrence 3-$4» Arkansas, Dicus 12-)0?i Peacock 3-15. Norway Ace Paces Field on Ski Jump GERMANY (AP) *- Bjoem Wfrkola of Norway scored 241.2 points We^esday and tmk Ms second successive victory In the Gmman-Au^an four-MU ski jumping competition. Wirkola, who wim tiui first event in the meet Sunday at Obertsdorf, Germany, was followed in this comp^tion by Anatoli Seglanov of the Soviet Union and Frantisek Ridval irf Czechoslovakia. Vladimir Belousev of the Soviet Uniim, was fourth. About 20,000 persons watdied the conqietiUon under douify skies uid in gusty winds that hampered the jumpers at timn. Wirkola had Jumps of 300 feet, 4 inches and 303-5, Ridval jumped 310 on his first try tor a MU reewd. the mark was equalled |iy Hejnz Schmidt of East Germany on Ms second jump. '-l, NHL Standings Ft*, ap M .. W « r 4MU It in 13 plays in the first period with Wtorster, a sophomore, bulling across from 14 yards out. STINGS TENNESSEE Then Street stung the Vols with a totally unexpected play from the Texas 22. Operating from the Longhorns’ unique “Wishbone-T” or “Y” formation. Street faked beautifully drawing the Tennessee secondary in a step. He lofted a shot to sophomore Speyrer, a 168-poimd gadfly split end who caught the ball, faged defensive back Jimmy Weatherford out of positi(»i and roared home. Speyrer was the only receiver out on the play. It was the first time Texas had used it ,off the triple-option I kinda thought we might Mt tint bomb,” said Texas Coadi DarreU Royal In the third quarter, Street and Speyrer teamed up on almost the exact carbon copy— (Hily one ykrd longer. Street, named the game’s most vMuable offensive jUayer, hit 7 of 13 passes for 200 yards. Speyrer snared five of the passes for 161 yards. Fifth-ranked Texas roUed up a massive 513 yards in total offense—279 on tiie grtxmd and 284 in the air. The other toudidowns came on Koy’s nine-yard run and Gilbert’s five-yard dash. Gilbert, only major coUege player ever to gain 1,000 yards in each of his varslt]^ seasons finished the day with n yards in 13 carries—three yards less than WfM'ster, Texas linebacker Tom Cemp-beU, who intercepted two VoJ passes, was named tlto oustand-Ing defensive player. Cotton Bowl Summary MwitTMl . BOttan ... ChlCM* ,. Toronto .. Now York Dotralt ... poklond . u» Anpok FtiliaSolaM Mhmoooto PUtttwrBh Montrool 15 10 10 40 li» * g Tewoeir'* 4, PittiBur 11 U . 7 17 . *21 722 70 lit 74 M 72 77 II 111 17 m iron 3 potrolt 4, Minnoeetf 3 OM* Bontoo ichoMM CBIctfle 4, Dotrolt I tronw 7, * ' ■ Toronto 7, Oakio^ St. Uiwli 0, Lot AnqolM a No Onivj It. Utito at OiklonO ^ Only aontoo odioBuloS. and TOyards toMsidrefheLnng* horns to thefr nsurivay vietory. On that first pass, th^ just sucked us in,” Young said. “We were in zone coverage and they just kept running, running, running. So we started moving up COLOR JINX on them and that’s when they Mt us.” Tennessee has worn wMte Jerseys three times in post World War n games and lost every time. Speyrer’a first touchdown bomb came in the first quarter and gave the Longhorns a two-touchdown lead. nien in the third quarter, Speyrer broke loose again, this time beating defensive back Jim Weaifiliibrd in a man-to-man FIrW.down* RiWhlnB yarOogo PMilng yardaga Ratum - ----- TW^' Twim TOMIMtoa Toxm 8 r 172 1 ' :. e-*e /t .................-ifiljA* Tax—Worttar 14 ran (Foliar kick) T«t-ii»oyror 7» pom from Stroof (kick miMi T#*--j5«f 7 nm (Pofiar kick) . J*5r®**7* • run (tp^or poM I Tani^Kroi* iy peu froM'' icott (Krom- "TlS^ifyror (Bradloy run) Tonn—Rrlea 1 foiiod; 77 POM from stroot COTTON BOWL INOiVIOUHL wiansis bombs and that’s us.” “He just told me to hold onto the ball and move it,” Scott said. ‘TU have to admit I really felt the pressure when | first got in there. I bad no l^lea I’d ha pfeying thtd iMii^^ lliecaii^ I knew ft would bo t tough game. But then our pass defense settled down and 1 felt mudi' better. When he told me I ‘was going in, I just hcqied I couM do the job.” J “They had great executhm,” said Dickey. “Our people pMyed good baU but they wera ^car-rying that baU through us'and over us. But we’ll be back.’* e ★ ★ Vol defensive coach Doug Knotts said the main prlem was simply “Their defense was better than our offense. We had to leave our backs in to-, help pass protect.” e ★ ★ On sidelining Wyche, Dunn said: “Bubba wasn’t playing cov«-agr. “They just got behind bad. He hadn’t thrown any in us on that one,” he said. “We may have been placing a Uttle too mu(di pressure on Jim,” said V(dunteer offensive coach Jimmy Dunn. “He’d been skdc with the flu and I’m not surp he was completely recovered.” FaUlng behind 200 early In the sec(Mid quarter, Tennessee coach Doug Dickey felt he needed somethhig to shake up his team. His method was to pull starting quarterback Bubba Wyche and insert Bcibby Scott, a sophomore who had seen only spare action aU season. terceptions, but are weren’t doing anything. Thefr touchdowns weren’t flukes. They Were driving it down our throats. We bad to do something.” Seals' Chief Scout Dies TORONTO (UPI) - 'Bob Wilson, 66, Oakland Seals diief scout and director of player development, died Wedn^ay at his Havelock, Ont., home following a lengthy illneiM. I . ' ^ 'AN WlropBotP BBCOMNO POINTS—Given a second dtance when Kansu used 12 men to stop th^ first conversion attempti Penn State’s Nittmqr Uons puUed out a 15-14 Orange Bowl vletifry ^ an undefeated season last night on Bob Caofobell’s (88) rtashing phwga for two pblnte. Gwfrd GftaHte (90) thwarted the defensive e^e of tba Jayhafrks* John Book long cnoogb for Canq^ to nislwbfecift into ttw and 1000. ,/, /' \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY,,JANUARY 2, I960 WWT A SNOWMOBILE— THAT’S EASY TO START-EVERYTIME? NO raoiLIMI SKI-DOO itarts (aslar, aaalar. Evan our non-alaotrlo alart modala purr Into •ctlon with naxi to no allort. And 8KI-DOO la lust at almpla to ataar. It manauvara around anything. And thanka to unlqua llght-footad action, it won’t bog down — avan In waial-hlgh anowl Coma and tea all tha naw (aaturaa that makt 8KI*D00 tha moat dapandCbla anow-moblla avar built. SK1-D0(r69 HAKES Finim PBOBLEN Tr«(i* l/$'k PHICI0 PROM *M8** . fM/W KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICHIQAN Phonal FE 4-1662 anil FE 4-0T84 l|S /tmucjm It’s Here... Full Yiew Cut-A-Way Of The\ 1969 Camaro .. .OnDisplay Matthewa-Kargraavas Chevy-Land invites everyone to come in and see the inner workings of the 1969 Camaro. You will see and actual 1969 Camaro cut in half right down the middle so that every part, working and non-working, are visible to the human eye. We are sure you'll be interested. By the way . . . bring the whole family with you. You Can 1969 Camaro IncludM: 8 cylinder, automafie trantmiasion, radio and haatar, whttawall tiraa, seat baits, head Feats, back up iights, harness; tida view mirror. Buy During Our and Save Special Showing! Savings *•"••• S.ti.tootion MATTHfWS HAlHiUl AVIS 631 WING CUPPED — Detroit Red Wings’ Pete Stemkowski (19) is halted by Chitrago defenseman Gilles Marotte (2) after getting away a shot (puck lower right) in the first Detroiters Fall, 4-1 period of their game in Chicago last night. No. 20 is Blawk Hawks’ Doug Jarrett, who has moved behind his goalie, Denis DeJordy, to lend a hand. Chicago won, 4-1. Hawks' Hull Catches Howe By the Associated Press In toe showdown at the top of toe National Hockey League’s scoring race, Bobby Hull, broken jaw and all, drew even with Gordie Howe. Hull scored his 24th goal of the season Wednesday night and Chicago defeated Detroit 4-1. Howe, who had taken over toe scoring lead the night before, was shat out and Hull’s goal enabled him to tie the Detroit jtar for the scoring lead. Each has 50 points. In other games Wednesday, Toronto pattered Oakland 7-3 and ’ Los Apgeles battled St. Louis’ West IMvision leaders to a 04) draw. On New Year’s Eve, Detroit dropped Minnesota 6-3 and Montreal slipped by Pittsburgh 4-3. Hull suffered his cracked jaw the last time the Black Hawks faced toe Red Wings and aggravated it against Toronto. He missed one game and then came back with a helmet and cross bar protecting his jaw and has scored in botn games since returning. , Pit Martin had two goals for the Havrics, including the tiebreaker with 30 seconds left in the second period. Norm Ullman scored a pair of goals for Torontq and the Leafs rip^ Oakland, scoring three goals in each of the last two periods. Ullman’s 17th of the season broke a tie in the recond period and he added No. 18 in the third. Larry Mickey had a goal and two assists for the Leafs, who remained tied with Chicago. Both clubs moved past idle New York into third place in the NHL’s East Division. ’The St. Louis-Lo3 Angules match featured outstanding goali tending by veteran Blues goalie Jacques Plante, who turned away 31 shots, and Kin^ goalie Gerry Desjardins, who had 26 saves. It was the second time Plante had blanked the Kings this sea son and it was nis fifth shutojt of the campaign, giving the former Montreal star the league lead in that depai'tment. RERT-MH $4 ,«r lall. Mill. 11 1969 CImy H only per plus le M' "k* Min. 1 Uayt V-8, outomatic tron»mi»tion, pow«r ttRBf-IfiQ, whitcwoll tirRi, ro^io ond h«QlRr, vin^ tall. . 1“ Coll (or Oatatls CA.R. Rental A Laate, Inc. WyitiMof IMIlM»-ll.rtrti«ot Chovy-UiK tn OaklanC at Can FI Mill ^ontlac__________________ Sit* 7SO/77S-I4 20.00 2.19 000/025-14 22.00 2.3S 050/OSS-14 24.00 2.SS S70/77S-IS 20.00 2.21 710/015-15 22.00 2.35 345/155-15 24.00 2.54 055/900-15 25.00 2.01 Plus 1.81 F.E.T. 650/700-13 WhHawalls WINTERIZE FAMOUS FISK ABSORBERS ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TYPE BIG $5 86 £ACH 3 DAYS ONIY! EACH, IN PAIRS Plus tnitaliation Your shocks should be reploted every 20,000 miles 236l IN DOWNTOWN TONTIAC re!NT, sell, trade--use PcimAC PRESS WANT ADS! NBA Standings ■••Mni DIviiion WM . LmI Pet. ■•MM i.ltimor* ...... 31 to • .737 — Phllan.lphla .... 34 to .733 I Bolton ......... 33 13 .437 Now York ....... 33 17 .3*3 3 Clnclnnofl ..... 33 13 .3*3 3'.k Detroit ........ 14 33 .349 13 Mllwauko* ....... to 30 .230 10 WuMm DIvillMI Los Angoln . . 30 13 .700 — Atlanta ......., 33 13 .303 4W Chicago ........ 17 33 .433 II San Franclico ..17 33 .433 11 San Dtkgo ...... 14 23 .431 I) Soattio ........ 14 30 .333 15 Phoonix ......... I 31 J50 1»V3 Tw4doy‘t Rtoullt Cincinnati 114, Boston 112 Detroit 137, Lot Angtloi 107 New York 121. BaltTmor* 110 Philadelphia 130, Mllwaukaa 107 Only gamat tchadulad Wadnaiday't Ratulta Boston 03. Phoenix 07 San Francisco 104, Cincinnati 101 Only gamas scheduled Tailay't Ooniaa Atlanta at Chicago Boston at San Diego Cincinnati vs. Mllwaukaa at Madison, WIs. Only gamat tchadulad Prtday's Oamaa Atlanta at Detroit Phoanix at Mllwaukaa Boston at San Francitea Baltimore at Cincinnati Lot AiMtlas at Philadelphia Only games tchadulad ABA Standings ■aslani DlvtsISB Minnesota ..... 30 11 .445 — Kentucky ...... 15 17 .449 5’A Indiana ....... 15 19 .441 6<^ Miami ......... 13 17 .433 4. White) . . . and you con move them from room to room'whenever you with 1 SHELVES 8’^4”...$3.75 9’W’...$4.95 8”X48”...$5.95 16"x36”...$5.95 10'W’...$7.50 IRACKETS 6'’ a.......66c 8^* •■§•••• aTOo i0»........74o, t2** a a a a a * •T90 14*'....Y..94o For Fun or Commercial ICE FISHING Fi«« plant and instrue-tiont. Easy to build with Upton All-Weather panels, complete K.D. moterialt and hardware. *19»» 4’xr Paaali Only $UI ta. FRCM Ngw-I (^mstrong DEVON CU8HIONTONB* TILE MaiBialaae •urfaea Mb itcfi miBino 39* Jt Marbleizod fused plastic surface hat the rich metallic accents. An oieeeotttecii file that previdet totiifid-conditioned luxury. AAANY STYLES NOW IN STOCK emnlil'lU HAG6ERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. do-it-yoi/imslf FRIDAY NITC ^ , gqgByimm.eeiiMfc-F4.iM»teapjfc-.iRMa|ajB'tBiiiip4B. NEADauAirrpRi THE I’OXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JAXUAHV 2, 1»«J9 There Is plenty of snow avail-•b|e at Michigan winter sports resorts this week. Here is the way the ski centers line up. WJMTERN MICHIGAN 12. siof«s Well Covered^Rested Pfeps ResuiTie Cage Action rhere la plenty of snow avail- c»nnon«burB, oremi sapidi-io u. ». | lily I Cannoniburg, Orand Rapldi~IO It. i Carouitl Mountain. Holland-16, 6. Cryilal Mountain, Thomotonvllla - 17 4], ^ y » I I a y , Kalamaioo aacallant •ItallnB, tobogganing Orand Havan SKI Bo**l~5. 3, Mount Monctlono—MoncolonA, 94, |, ‘ ' . 4-11 5. Blg-M, Manlitaa_H.30, Mownliln, Sovna FalU~36, 3. Nuba^ Nob. Harlwr S^ringi' Boyna Pando. BocKlord—•■i,. a. Schuat Mountain, Mancalona - 70.30, 7. .K—.. ------- ,5 w«,i>w9» avsuwfiiairit nnani.«iQi Shanty Craak, Ballaira-1( EASTERN MICHIGAN Mott Mountain, naar Farwall—13-IS, 4, 12. " ii«r«r r«r wvii —| s-13i «. P nnaclat SKI Report, Gaylord-17-14, _ Bit'll Apple Mountal' Skyline Ski Club, Grayling—17, 4. Au Sable Ski Raiorl—1014, a. GIFT FOR DAD Sylvan Knob, Gaylord—l-IO, 7. Snoiaanaka Mountain, Claro-17-14, 4. Ogemaw Hill, Waal Branch-6, 4. SharWan Valley, Lawlilon~o4, 4. MIo Mountain, Mlo-17-14, 3. Olaago Ski Club, Gaylord-S-», 6. v-iwut %#ayiwTSj'—w'siwr m* Bear Mountatn, Grayling—aO-Mr 4. ..— ---a .- - -• Mount Marla, Hubbard LaHo~~ia2l. Fonro Ski Rasort, near Comlna—16, 4. TImbtrllna Ski Park, at MIo—12 baia. 4-5 new. PONTIAC ABBA .. Grampian—AH ilopat optn 110-12 Inch base. Vary ifootA ikflnOt with Titans Ready for League Foe Prep Calendar Close Race Forecast for Big 10 Quintets Drive a ttWe* ^ (only a few mlnutet from yeur home to Shelton) save a lot (that short drivo to Sholten con sovo you big money on a now Pontiac, luick or Opol). shelt:on Full Slate on Tap in Area Loop BASK PrMay it Norlhai Central at Bay City Cantral .................iar ihiii Saginaw at Flint Norlharn Pllnl . ^ Flint southwaaiern at Saginaw Arthur <,j,ase Saturday and It way _____ ____ Jng. Ml. Holly—All ilopas In use with IS-Inch base and 1-7 Inchai naw anow. Ikl- new tnow on 17-Inch baaa. Alpine Vallay-Four chalrllfte In operation with lO-is Inch baaa and akllng vary good. TAKIS THI LIRINQI outJ 0F| jDItlFTINQI l&LL OYER- PONTIAC Buffalo Clavaland Quabac Rochaatar ■ASTBRN DIVISION W L T PtI. It II 3 a 16 14 3 17 15 4 3 II IS 6 waatam Dlvialon OP OA IT* 103 171 130 100 177 113 116 CHICAGO (AP) — The Big over outsiders with Illinois, the Ten opens Us basketball cham-!only unbeaten outfit, leading the with a 9-0 record and looks as if it will be a topsy-lranked eighth nationally. { Pontiac Catholic's well-rested j RjdiSrTunion "“""vonu^snSJanion -tiftvy affair. i Illinois took the Miami Classic Titans mark an end to the holl-!,y®*','‘/*Vj'y^|®''^,^*'‘,('j^^^," l Illinois and Northwestern, rat- over the weekend and North-day break tomorrow night when ■g I" Bl’rmlngham saahoim ”0 than a darkhorse western boosted its record to they entertain Femdale St.| Plymouth tt uvoni* Frankim status before the season began, 8-1 by winning the Gator Bowl Jamds in a Northwest Catholic M»!^y * «r • y t oya a . become title timber based trophy. League contest. Lady’oi'sofrowi”* *' on non-conference play. Wisconsin proved worthy as The game is one of three on EaaV'lI*%liin5w'*ArihuV''“Hiii Purdue, Ohio State and a contender by dumping No. the Northwest slate, and it’s one T^h „ r„„.i o.i, Wisconsin remain other hot con- 3 Kentucky 69-65 in Chicago of a handful on a slim high shrin.” ^ tenders. Stadium Tuesday to book a M school schedule. DL''*La'sa'lPa* \\'^BkmXham*'B?oihar NON LEAGUE ENDS mark, Ohio State enters the Utle A full round of play is on tap * chaitaa at south Lyon ! The Big Ten wound up non- ^credentials while LlMnla c'hurch"ll at Watarford Moll , league actlOH with 8 60-29 edge Saluntoy PONTIAC - BUICK - OPEL Ml Mila South of Downtown Rochaitgr , 855 Rochester Road, Rochester 651 -5500 FROM Fa J. POOLE The Authentic FRANKLIN HEATER Beauty... Comfort.,. Convenienco 19 6 6 44 15 14 II U 9 II 4 34 179 73 95 103 103 113 IDS 140 I irg no t«cra9. An Ariana Sno-Thra j 1 ceati Iota nwia then a tnow J al. It ahwld. It doat much] I. 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OVER 35 YEARS OF l DISTINGUISHED INSURANCE __________SERVICE______^ In the Sourtheastern Michigan Association, the Saginaw Valley conference moves back on the floor and there are several games of the non-league variety to spice the schedule. WOLL ON ROAD While tlie Titans (4-1) are playing host to St. James (3-2), Waterford Our Lady of Lakes (1-4) journeys to Royal Oak St. Mary (3-2t and Detroit St. Rita (0-5) visits Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows (1-4). League-leading Orchard Lake St. Mary (6-0) is idle until Tuesday when the Eaglets entertain Waterford OLL. TOUGH TEST Southfield (6-1), winner of the Northwest Suburban Christmas tournament, gets its stiffest test of the young season in a home encounter against defending Femdale (3-0) Ferndale, Southfield and Lakt Laalanau FRIDAY I Flint Northwastern at Pontiac Northarni Bimnlngham Staholm at Barklay Warran Couslno at Oak Park { Royal Oak Kimball at Farrdala | Wallad Laka at Rosovllla Bloomfield HItIa Andover at Bloomfield Hills Lahsar , Southfield at Hazel Park Saturday j Quadrangular at Northvllla syvimmino Friday Bloomfield Hills Lahser at Utica Midland at Pontiac Central COLLEGE BASKETBALL tonight Western Michigan at Loyola FRIDAY Alpena at Highland Lakes (Smart JHS) SATURDAY Alpena at Auburn Hills (Hazel Park) Central Michigan at Eastern IllUiois Orchard Ridge a t Highland Laktl (Smart JHS) towa at Michigan Northwestern at Michigan State Oakland University at Olivet University of Detroit at Marquette Western Michigan at Toledo Oklahoma Star to Miss Bowl? Bob Warmack Ailing, Backup QB Colled Iowa and Purdue each has 6-3. Michigan, off a 6-3 record, also must be given early consideration. The others look like spoilers — Indiana with 4-5, Michigan State 4-4, and Minnesota 6-4. AAA In afternoon games Saturday^ Iowa is at Michigan and Purdue is at Wisconsin for a television attraction. At night. Minnesota is at Illinois, Ohio State at Indiana and Northwestern at Michigan State. Sandy Koufax Wed to Actor's Daughter Queen Honors Games Stars HONOLULU (AP) - The Hula Bowl, to be played here Saturday, received another blow to its South team ranks when Oklahoma quarterback Bob Warmack came up lame Tuesday night in the Sooners’ 28-27 LONDON (AP) - England’s! loss to Southern Methodist in five gold medal winners in the the Bluebonnet Bowl. jOlympic games in Mexico last Warmack suffered a knee In- October were awarded Medals jury in the second quarter and of the British Empire by Queen Can Ba Inatallad Anywhara Norizontai or Vartieal Vanting FOR FMMLY ROOM, VACABON HOME, PORCH OR PATIO, HEATHR, C00MH6 IMt Price *129” should it put him out of action FJirabeth Wednesday. LOS ANGELES for the Hula football classic, the a a a South’s lone quarterback will be They are David Hemery. hur , , . Ronnie Johnson of Oklahoma dler; Bob Braithwaite, marks sidered one of the city s most el-gjgjg ^ man: Chris Finnegan, boxer un-igible bachelors, has been taken j^jj^gon arrived Tuesday as and yachtsmen Rodney Pattison pressive in reeling off four wiiu out of circulation by the 23-,^f. gnd Iain MacDonald-Smith. Royal Oak Kimball shared the championship last season, but rner Los Angeles Dodger pitclj the present campaign doesn t jpg gpo Sandy Koufax, long con- ^'^ppjg Includes • Boot • Screen Orate I" ttova Pipa and RIbow $2.29 Each shape up as another deadlock Kimball (4-0) has been year-old daughter of actor Richard Widmark. Koufax, 32, and Ann Widmark were marrieid New Year’s Day at the Wldmarks’ home In West Los Angeles. Judge Lester Roth conducted the orivate ceremo- ficials. New York Yacht Grabs Race Honor Guardian Premium SNOW TIRES in a row and the Knights will entertain Berkley (2-4) tomorrow. The other SEMA game finds Hazel Park (4-1) at Birmingham Seaholm (2-1). In a quick rematch, Farmington (3-4) has a date at North Farmington (5-1). The two met'ny. in the Northwest Suburban! Koufax was forced to retire j tournament and North Farm-1from baseball in 1366 because of| HOBART, Tasmania (AP) ington emerged with an 88-80 an arthritic left elbow. Thej'Tho crew of the Ondine, first decision. southpaw pitcher set majorj yacht to cross the finish line in In Saginaw Valley Conference league records by pitching four , the recent Sydney-to-Hobart games, Saginaw is at Flint | no-hit, no-run games during his race, will be represented at Northern, Flint Central is at career. Thursday’s cup presentation Bay City Central and Flint' Miss Widmark is a graduate ceremonies after all. Southwestern is at Saginaw,of Sarah Lawrence College in; a A A Ann Haydon Jones, former British Wightman Cup star but now a touring tennis pro, also was awarded the Medal while Gerald Micklem, outstanding golf amateur, was made a Companion of the British Empire. V I B IMNtSD LUMBKR & HARPWARB BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! WHITEWALLS - 4-Ply Nylon 7.35x14-18.60 plus 2.06 7.75x14-20.50 plus 2.19 F.E.T. 8.25x14 - 21.50 ulus 2.36 F.E.T. 8.55x14 - 23.50 olus 2.56 F.E.T. SNOW TIRES-Retreads for 7,75x14 Whitowalls Plus 430 F.E.T. and Reeappable Tires KING TIRE CENTER FE3<7068 31 WEST MONTCALM, PONTIAC, MICH. HUDQUSRTEKS FOR UNIROYAL, TIBER PAW AND WIDE OVAL TIAES Arthur Hill. A non-leaguer finds Alpena at Bay City Handy. Pontiac Central returns to the court Tuesday at Midland. MOTT WINLESS Waterford Mott, 0-4 in the old year, will be hoping to get something going in the New Year in a home encounter against Livonia Churchill. Elsewhere, Novi is at Dearborn Annapolis, Roeper is on a swing north to play Leland Bronxville, N.Y., and has been: ^jgc Hilton, an engineer living with her parents. [aboard the 73-foot ketch owned by Huey Long of New York, speat New Year’s Eve ashore WMlMiday't Coligga Footbill Rttultt By Tno Associated Pratt Rata Baiwl Ohio State 27, Southern California 16 Cotton Bowl Texsi 36, Tennessee 13 Sugar Bowl Arkansas 16, Georgia 7 Oranga Bowl Penn State 15, Kansas 14 Tuesday's Results Bluebonnatt Bowl Southern Methodist 28, Oklahoma 37 and was not aboard when the craft started back to Sydney Wednesday morning. Instructions were left for him to attend the ceremonies and rejoin the! crew at Sydney. I INViNTORY SJU.EI ■vnrniiiw inw8t aaii full fi^tured, haniicrafted feHSm all new 1969 GWrZy Consolette ‘PortablB Solld-Stato Slstso. Special Ceita»4Be«e 4-sga^ .racsid choagar. Ilia High RIaa, 235X *99“ tomorrow and St. Mary of Lake J PRE-FINISHED Leelanau Saturday, Chelsea is at South Lyonf, Milford is at Fenton and De LaSalle visits Birmingham Brother Rice. Rec Officials Needed Volleyball officials are needed to work men’s and women’s games for the Waterford Township Recreation Department. Interested persons should contact the recreatiwi office at 674-0376. PANELING ■tPaillFASEUIWI Co! Sp Light and Dark Sheet HAPPY IW YEAR MUSTANG MACH I ford XL SporWRoot START THE NEW YEAR OUT RIGHT WITH A NEW '69 FORD t , UVE Up to’IJNO wi *68 Demos with BIG Trade-In Allowances p. .¥ , „ ^...............^ ‘UmSRUTSAVIIESoiiM’WFORDS J., ..I'-.. *#...' ^ " 'Pc- ' ' • L * . I'll ; •« <-(’> ‘ ’ ’ MeAuliffe ‘ ' OAKI ANO AVE. SUSPENDED 19 »pgr tq. ft. CEILING TILE MMST8DN0 DOVES Wat 25c NOW 20' WHITE TILE ■ 9'/2 BAm- R09M VANITIES 39” j SPECIAL 4x8 Cupboard Stock ares>Te>Lo9a Cloan, Lone-Burning Fira LOgt FORMICA COHimEB TWS *3^1 TILEBOARD DOORS (••end.) 3*? J %" BIRCH i (reg.) 9.95 4x1 Sheets For nioliom and Batin Avocado Loco (Other oolora in atock) FREE DELIVERY I OKN DAtLV 8iS0-8»»0, SAT. »TH. S J ALLEN iJUMBn COa 7S74 HltMUMD RD. AT WIUUUSS LAKE RD. On# Mile Watt ef FeottacAlraort f . ^ NOW you cut BUY ZEHItH COLOR foratlewEBi.a.... PoHaMtMMialMMO S299« Ohaek Our Priooa Bafora You Buy! ALL-CITY TELEVISION SSeSOic^rdLaUltJ. I Sylvt^n Slu»p|»iny^Centar | NOW, f nnraw *>' ‘’'"S - Id’*' s 4S50 M. WoftMud'^ ** t PHonaMI '>-‘**'1 , rp ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSbAf, JANUARY 2, 1669 —^ - I Stars Have Big Year in 1968 JANUARY Jan. II — Pontiac, diver MickI King - finishes eighth in voting for U.S. Female Athlete of the Year. Jan, 13 Annual Inter-Scholastic Ski Rao» at Mt. Holly won by West j. Bloomfield’s boys and Waterford Towmhip’s girls’teams. Jan. 30 Hm Wood of Bloomfield Hills gitna U.S. Men’s Figure Skating title at niiladdphia. Jan. 20 Walled Lake wins Fenton Wrestling Invitational. Jan. 21 — Bob Gajda of Forest Lake and Ted Kroll of Franklin Hills CC tie for third place in the Grand Bahama Open Gk>lf 'Burney. * ★ ★ Jan. 30 — Pro Gene Bone of Bay Pointe Golf Onb scores ftiit hole-in-one of his career In the first> round of the PGA Senior-Jniiior Yonmament at Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. Jan. 81 — Harold Couzens elected president of Pontiac Sports, Inc. FEBRUARY Feb. 1 — Former Troy High School star “Bud" Acton, an all-time scoring star at Hillsdale College, joimi the San Diego Rockets of the National Basketball Association. Feb. 2 —Ken Mathews rolls 300 game in Hurcm Bowl Midnight League. Feb. 9 — Orchard Lake St. Mary completes first unbeaten league hoop seasoil in 24 years* with a 71-64 triumph, the 20(Mh basketball win in . coaching career of the Rev. John Rakoczy. . Feb. 10 — Bill Hdlis of Pontiac retains 1iis state Golden Gloves 165-pound open clsM title at Grand Rapids. Feb. 13 — liSke Orion gains spot in state Class A weekly cage ratings for the first time in Its history, ranking 10th with a lOrl recwd; Pontiac Northern avenges earlier loss to PCH, 80-71, and Kettering sweeps series from WTHS, 63-55. Feb. 14 — Speedskater Terry McDermott from Birmingham captures silver medal in the 500-meter race at the Winter Olympics with :40.5 timing at Grenoble, FYance. Feb. 17 —.Bloomfield Hills teen-ager Tto Wood'places second for silver 'm^al in men’s figure skating at Winter Olyinpics when Canadian judge incwrectly ids score too low. Feb. 17 — West Bloomfield boys’ team and Waterford Township girls’ squad capture state high school regional skiing titles at Mt. Holly. Feb. 18 — Grace Laster of PonUac takes lead In Women’s State Bowling Tournament handicap singles event with 700 score. Feb. 23 — Pontiac Central- senior eager Frank Russell breaks school scoring record with 42-point spree in 78-49 conquest at Flint Southwestern. Feb. 26 — Bob Chiunberlain, 19-year-old Uniem Lake bowler, grabs second place spot bt the American Bowling Congress regular ^-Events category with 1894 total. Fb. 28 — Birmingham stages reception honoring Olympic medalists Terry McDermott and Hm Wood. MARCH Mar. 1—Tim Wood of Bloomfield Hills places second in the men’s world figure skating championships a t Geneva, Switzerland. Mar. 2—Defending state champion Pontiac Northern wins Class A regional wrestling tournament. Mar. 9—Rich Amann of Bloomfield Hills Lahser wins state Qasis B 100-yard butterfly title; Bill Green, 112-pounder from Ppen bowUng tourney with 727 actual and 746 handicap. Nov. 26 — Pontiac stock car racer Joy Fab* wins Flat Rock point championship. Nov. 29 — Pontiac Swim C2ub honors' Micki King for diving achievements. DEICEMBER Dec. 1 — A total of 510 bowlers qualify for Pontiac Open semifinals. Dec. 3 — PCH dunks PNH swimmers, 71-34. Dec. 4 — Pontiac’s Manley Farnsworth wins Pontiac Press Big Buck contest with 248pounder. Dec. 6 — Glen Lenhoff scores 41 to pace OCC Auburn Hills to 93-90 double overtime win over Delta. Dec. 8 — Oxford beats Marysville, 3833, ending 27-game losing streak. Dec. 13 — Troy routs favored Lake Orion, 72-36; OCC Orchard Ridge advances to finals of Coneik'dia Tourney with 10237 win over host school. Dec; 14 — Glen Oaks CC tops Orchard Ridge^ 100-67, to win Concordia tourney. Dec. 15 — David Grove’s 719 handicap series leads Pontiac ()pen semifinals. Dec. 17 — OL St. Mary’s Tim Megge scores 51 points in 80-45 win over St. Francis de Sales. Dec. 20 — Tom Carson, former Oakland County prep basketoall Coach of the Year collapses and dies at Birmingham Groves High School following overtime victory, the team’s first victory of the season. Dec. 20 — OCC Aubtirn Hills whips Highland Lakes, 10878. Dec. 21 — Clarkston’s Dan Fife scores 23 to lead Michigan past Bradley, 95-93, in consolation game of Kentucky tourney. Dec. 22 — Steve Oliseck wins Pontiac Open bowling tourney with' record 745 handicap series; Joe Prey’s 663 takes actuals diyision. Dec. 23 — Series’ total points record falls as Pontiac Central tops PNH, 88 84. LARRY BISKNER Top Prep Vanltor GENE BOLDON Takes Post at OU MIKE SOUCHAK Alidiiga& PGA CSiamjrio'i FRANK JORANKO County Football Coach of Year BILL BOLUS State GMdea Glove Ghomp STEVE 0U8ECK JR. Pontiac Opaa BowUag Champ "f i' TIIR PONTIAC PRESS. THITRSDAV, JANUARY 2. 1009 Auto Racing f ARCA — Benny Parsons. t Atlanta 500 — *CaIe Yar- ’ borough. * Canadian-American — Dennis Hultne. Carolina 500 — Donnie Allison. Charlotte 500 - Charlie Glotzbach. Charlotte 600 ( 382.5 miles, rain) — Buddy Baker. Daytona 500 — Yarborough. Daytona 24 Hours — Porsche, ■' 5 drivers. Dixie 500 — Lee Roy ^ ’Yarborough. Firecracker 400 — Yarborough. “ Indianapolis 500 —Bobby Unset* ' NASCAR — Grand Touring: Tiny Lund. Stocks: David Pearson. Sportsman. Joe Thurman. Modified — ’Bugs Stevens. Riverside 500 — Dan Gurney. Road America 500 — Chuck Parsons. Rockingham, N. C. 500 — Richard Petty, r SCCA - Dr. Lou SeU. s Sebring 12 Hours — Jo Siffert and Hans Hermann. Southern 500 — Yarborough. USAC — Bobby Unset. I* Stocks: A. J. Foyt. Sprints: i Larry Dickson. U.S. Road — ’Mark Donohue. World Formula I — Graham Hill. Baseball World Series — Detroit Tigers. American League — Detroit. ' National League —’St. Louis Cardinals. " Leading batters — American: !*Carl Yastrzemski. Boston Red !Sox, .301. National: Pete Rose, fCinclnnati Reds, .335. Home Runs — American: Frank Howard, Washington Senators, 44. National: Willie McCovey, San Franqisco Giants, 36. Runs batted in — American: Ken Harrelson, Red Sox, 109. National: McCovey, 105. DENNY McLAIN , Pitches 31 Victories ^. Leading pitchers .•^^^'^erican: Denny McLain, Tigers, 31. National: Juan Marichal, Giants, 26. Earned runs — American: Luis Tiant, Cleveland Indians, 1.60. National: Bob Qibson, Cardinals, irJ.12. f ’, International — Toledo Mud ^ Hens. Playoff: Jacksonville i Mets. ' Pacific Coast — Eastern: Tulsa Oilers. Western: Spokane Indians. Playoff: Tulsa. Texas — Western: El Paso ' Sun Kings. Eastern: Arkansas Travelers. Playoff: El Paso. ^uthern — Asheville Tourists. Eastern — Pittsfield Red Sox. Playoff: Reading Phillies. COLLEGE AAWU — Washington State. . Atlantic — North Carolina State." Big Eight — ’Oklahoma State. Big Sky — Weber State. Big Ten — Minnesota. East — Harvard. American — Ohio. *., Mid-Atlantic Temple. : » — Alabama. Southern — East Carolina. Southwest — ’Texas. «« Western AC — Brigham «v»Vounf. World Series - Southern '^Cailtomla. Yankee Connecticut. If ‘ ‘ Basketball AAU — Armed Forces. ’ Women: ’Nashville Business College. ABA — Pltteburgh Pipers. ..: NBA — Boston Celtics. \ COLLEGE ! ■ AAWU - *UCLA. Atlantic — ’North Carolina. Big Eight — Kansas SUte. Big Sl^ — Weber State. Professional Sports Champions of 1968 Big Te/i — Iowa and Ohio State tied. Ivy — Columbia and Princeton tied. Mid-American — Bowling Green. Mid-Atlantic — LaSalle. Mis.souri Valley — ’Louisville. NCAA-’UCLA. NIT — Dayton. Southeast — Kentucky. Southern —Davidson. Southwest — TCU. Western AC — New Mexico. West Coast AC — Santa Clara. Yankee — Massachusetts and Rhode Island tied. Bowling ABC — Classic Singles: Dave Davis, Phoenix. Doubles: Bill Tucker, Los Angeles and Don Johnson, Kokomo, Ind. All Events: Jim Stefanich, Joliet, 111. Team: Bowl-Rite, Joliet. Regular Singles: Wayne Kowalski, Revere, Mass. Doubles: Richard Stark and Walt Roy, Glenwood Springs, Colo, All Events: Vince Mazzanti, Philadelphia. Team: Dave's Auto Supply., Philadelphia. WIBC — Singles: Norma Parks. Raytown, Mo. Doubles: Mary Lou Graham and Pauline Stickler, Miami, Fla. Team: Hudepohl, Cincinnati. All Events: Susie Reichley, Waco, Tex. Boxing Heavyweight — Jimmy Ellis, Louisville, (WBA) and Joe Frazier, Philadelphia. Light Heavyweight — Bob Foster, Washington, D.C. Middleweight — Nino Benvenuti, Italy. Welterweight — ’Curtis Cokes, Dallas. Lightweight — Teo Cruz, Dominican Republic. Featherweight — Shozo Sal-jyo, Japan. Bantamweight — Lionel Rose, Australia. Flyweight — ’Chartchal Chionoi, Thailand. Football AAWU — ’Southern California. Atlantic — North Carolina State. Big Eight — Kansas and ’Oklahoma tied. Big Ten — Ohio State. Ivy—Harvard and ’Yale tied. Mid-American — ’Ohio. Mid-Atlantic — Delaware. Missouri Valley — Memphis State. Southeast — Georgia. Southern — Richmond. Southwest — Arkansas and ’Texas tied. Western AC — ’Wyoming. Yankee — Connecticut and New Hampshire tied. Golf Jack Alcan — ’Gav Brewer. American Classic -Nicklaus. Atlainta — Bob Lunn. Australian Open — Nicklaus. Azalea — SJpve Reid. British Opifo—Gary Player. Buick — Tom Weiskopf. Canadian — Bob Charles. Citrus — Dan Sikes. Cleveland — Dave Stockton. Colonial — Bill Casper. Crosby — John Pott. Doral — Gardner Dickinson. Greensboro — Casper. Hartford — Casper. 1 Haig — Bob Dickson. Havvaiian — Lee Trevino. Hope — Arnold Palmer. Houston — Roberto d e Vicenzo. Indianapolis — Casper. Jacksonville — Tony Jacklin. Kaiser — Kermit Zarley. Kemper — Palmer. Los Angeles — Casper. Lucky — Casper. Masters — Bob Goalby. ' Memphis — Lunn. ' Milwaukee — Stockton. Minnesota — Dan Sikes? Nelson — Miller Barber. New Orleans — George Archer. Pensacola — Archer. PGA — Julius Boros. Teapa: Archer and Bobby Nichols. Philadelphia — Bob Murphy. Phoeiiix — George Knudson. San Diego -r Weiskopf. Sahara — Juan Hodriguez. Thunderbird — Murphy. Tournament of Champions Doh January. Tucson —Knudson. U.S. Open — Trevino. Amateur: Bruce Fleisher. Westchester — Boros. , Western — ’Nicklaus,. •> World Series — Player. WOMEN, ■ , ,• • Curtis Cup U.S;, U.S. Open — Mrs. Susie M a X w e 11 Burning. Amateur: Mrs. JoAnne Garner. LPGA — Sandra Post. Big Eight — Colorado. Big Ten — Indiana. East — Harvard. Missouri Valley — North Texas State. NCAA - Florida. Mid-Atlantic — Temple. Pacific Eight — Stanford. Southeastern — Florida. Southwest — Texas. Yankee Rhode Island. Ice Hockey Stanley Cup — Montreal Canadiens. National League — East: Montreal. West: Philadelphia Flyers. Leading Scorer — Stan Mikita, Chicago Black Hawks, 87 points. American League — East: Herihey Bears, West: Rochester Americans, Playoff; Rochester. Western — Portland Buckaroos. Playoff: Seattle Totems, Central — Northern: Tulsa Oilers. Southern: Oklahoma City Blazers. Playoff — Tulsa. COLLEGE Big Ten — Michigan State. NCAA — Denver. -fife ,* Olympic Winners in Mexico City COLLEGE GOLF Atlantic — Wake Forest. BASKETBALL ’United States BOXING Light Flyweight — Francisco Rodriguez, Venezuela. Flyweight — Ricardo Delgado, Mexico. Bantamweight — Valery Sokolov,-Soviet Union. Featherweight — Antonia Roldan, Mexico. Lightweight — Ronnie Harris, U.S. Light Welterweight — ’Jerzy Kulei, Poland. Welterweight — Manfred Wolke, East Germany. Light Middleweight — ’Boris Lagutin, Soviet Union. Middleweight — Christoper Finnegan, Britain. Light Heavyweight — Dan Pozdniak, Soviet Union. Heavyweight — George Foreman, U S. CANOEING Mihaly Kayak Singles Hesz, Hungary. Kayak Pairs — Soviet Union. Kayak Fours — ’Norway. Canadian Singles — Tibor Tatai, Hungary. Canadian Pairs — Rumania. Women’s Kayak Singles — Ludmilla Pinaeva, Soviet Union. Women’s Kayak Pairs — West Germany. EQUESTRIAN Jumping — Bill Steinkraus, U.S. Dressage — Ivan Kizimov, Soviet Union. Team Dressage — West Germany. Three Day — Jean Guyon, France. Team Three-Day — Britain. FENCING Foil — Ion Drimba, Rumania. Saber — Jerzy Pawlowski, Poland. Epee — Gyozo K u 1 c S S’ r , Hungary. Women’s Foil — E 1 e n e Novikova, Soviet Union. Team Foil — France. Team Saber — ’Soviet Union. Team Epee — Hungary. Women’s Team Foil — Soviet Union. FIELD HOCKEY Pakistan GYMNASTICS (MEN) Team — ’Japan. All-Around — Sawao Kato, Japan. Floor Exercise — Kato. Side Horse—’Miroslav Cerar, Ydgo.slavia. Flying Rings — Ak'lnorl Nakayama, Japan. Long Hgrse — Mikhail Vornin, S^et Union. Parallel Bars — Nakayama. Horizontal Bar — Nakayama and Voronin tied. Team — Soviet Union. GYMNAS’nCS (WOMEN) Team — ’Soviet Union. All Around — ’Vera Caslav-ska, Czechoslovakia. Long Horse — ’Miss Casla-vska. , I Uneven Parallel Bars — Miss Caslavska. Balance Beam — Natalia Kutchinskaya, Soviet Union. Floor Exercise — Miss ^Caslavska and Larissa Petrik, Soviet Union, tied. MODERN PENTATHLON Team — Hungary. » Individual — Bjoern Ferm, Sweden. ROWING CYCLING 1.000- Meter Time Trial — Pierre Trentin, France. Team Time Trial — ’Netherlands. Scratch Sprint — Daniel Morelon, France. Tandem — France. 4.000- Meter Pursuit — France. Road Race — Pier Franco Vianelli, Italy. Single Sculls — Jan Wienese, Netherlands. Double Sculls—’Soviet Union. Pairs Without Coxswain — East Germany. Pairs With Coxswain — Italy. Fours Without Coxswain — East Germany. Fours With Cosxwain — New Zealand. Eights — West Germany. SHOO-nNC Free Rifle —’Gary Anderson, U. S. Small Bore Rifle, Prone — Jan Kurka, Czechoslovakia. Small Bore Rifle, Three Positions — Bernd Klinger, West Germany. Free Pistol — Grigory Hosykh, Soviet Union. Rapid Fire Pistol — Jozef Zapedski, Poland. Trap — John Braithwaite, Britain. Skeet — Yevgeny Petrove, Soviet Union. SOCCER ’Hungary. SWIMMING (MEN) 100-Meter Freestyle — Mike Wenden, Australia. 200 — Wenden. 400 — Mike Burton, U.S. 1,500 — Burton. 100 Breaststroke — Don McKenzie, U.S. 200 Breaststroke — Felipe Munoz. Mexico. 100 Butterfly — Doug Russell, U.S. 200 Butterfly — Carl Robie, U.S. 100 Backstroke — Roland Matthes, East Germany. 200 Backstroke — Matthes. 400 Freestyle Relay — U. S. (Mark Spitz, Zachary Zorn, Stephen Reyrch, Ken Walsh). 200 Individual Medley — Charles Hickcox, U. S. 400 Individual Medley — Hickcox. • 800 Freestyle Relay — U. S. (John Nelson, Reyrch, Spitz, Don Schollander). 400 Medley Relay — U. S. (Hickcox, McKenzie, Russell, Walsh). Springboard Dive — Bernie Wrightson, U. S. Platform Dive — Klaus Dibasi, Italy. SWIMMING (WOMEN) 100-Meter Freestyle — Jan Henne, U. S. 200 — Debbie Meyer, U.S. ■ 400 — Debbie Meyer. 800 — Debbie Meyer. 400 Freestyle Relay — U. S. (Jane B a r k m a n , Linda Gustavson, Sue Pedersen, Jan Henne). 400 Medley Relay — U. S. (Kaye Hall, Elbe Daniel, Catharine Ball, Sue Pedersen). 100 Breaststroke — Djurdjica Bjedov. Yugoslavia. 200 Breaststroke — Sharon Wichman, U. S. 100 Butterfly — Lynette McClements, Australia. 200 Butterfly — Ada Kok, Holland. 100 Backstroke — Kaye Hall, U. S. 200 Backstroke — Pokey Watson, U. S. 200 Individual * Medley — Claudia Kolb, U. S. 400 Individual Medley — Claudia Kolb. Springboard Dive — Sue Gossick, U. S. Platform Dive — Milena Duchkova, Czechoslovakia. TRACK AND FIELD (MEN) 100-Meter Dash — Jim Hines, U. S. 200 — Tommie Smith, U. S. 400 — Lee Evans, U. S. 800 — Ralph D 0 u b e 11, Australia. 1,500 — Klpchoge Keino, Kenya. 5.000 — Mohamed Gammoudl, Tunisia. 10.000 — Naftali T e m u , Kenya. , ^ Marathon — Mamo Wolde, Ethiopia. 400 Relay - U. S. (Charlie Greene, Mel Pender, Ronnie Smith, Hines). 1,600 Relay — U. S. (Vincent Matthews) Ronald Freeman, Larry James, Evans). no High Hurdles - Willie Davenport, U. S. 400 Hurdles — David Hemery, Britain. 3,000 Steeplechase — Amos Biwott, Kenya. 20 Kilometer Walk — Vladimir Golubnichly, Soviet Union. 50 Walk — Christoph Hohne, East Germany. Long Jump — Bob Beamon, U. S. lYiple Jump — Victor Saneev, Soviet Union. High Jump — Richard Fosbury, U. S. Pole Vault —Bob Seagren, U.S. Shot Put — Randy Matson, U.S. Discus — ’Al Oerter, U.S. Javelin — Janis Lusis, Soviet Union. Hammer — Gyula Zsivotzky, Hungary. Decathlon — Bill Toomey, U.S. TRACK AND FIELD " (WOMEN) 100-Meter Dash — ’Wyomia Tyus, U. S. 200 — Irene Kirzenstein, Poland. 400 — Colette Besson, France. 800 — Madeline Manning, U.S. 80 Hurdles — Maureen Caird, Australia. 400 Relay — U. S. (Barbara Ferrell, Mrs. Margaret Bailes, Mildrette Netter, Wyomia Tyus). Long Jump — VI o r i c a Viscopoleanu, Rumania. High Jump — Milena Rezkova, Czechoslovakia. Shot Put — Margarita Gum-mel. East Germany. Discus — Lia M a n o 1 i u , Rumania. Javelin — Angela Nemeth, Hungary. Pentathlon — Ingrid Becker, West Germany. VOLLEY BALL Men — Japan. Women — ’Japan. WATER POLO Yugoslavia. WEIGHTLIFTING Bantamweight — Mohammad Nassiri, Iran. Featherweight — ’Yoshinobu Miyake, Japan. Lightweight — ’Waldemar Baszanowski, Poland. Middleweight — Victor Kurentsov, Soviet Union. Light Heavyweight — Boris Selitsky, Soviet Union. Middle Heavyweight—’Kaarlo Kangasniemi, Finland. Heavyweight — ’Leonid Zhabotinski, Soviet Union. Racing Forward American Derby Pass. Aqueduct — Damascus. Arlington Classic — Exclusive Native. Futurity: Strong Strong. Lasple; Process Shot. , Belmont Stakes — Stage Door Johnny. Futurity: Top Knight. Brooklyn — Damascus. Californian — Dr. Fager. Champagne — Top Knight. Flamingo — Wise Exchange. Florida Derby — Forward Pa.ss, Garden State — Beau Brum- Mid American — ’Miami, Oxford,Ohio. Mid-Atlantic — ’BucknttU. NCAA — Indiana. ^ Southeast — Florida. .Southern — ’East Carolina. Southwest — Texas. Western AC — ’Utah. Tennis WREI^LING Free-Style Flyweight — Shigeo Nakata, Japan. Bantamweight — ’ Y o j i r o Uetake, Japan. Featherweight — M a s a a k i Kaneko, Japan. Lightweight — A b d o 11 a h Movahed, Iran. Welterweight — Mahmud Atalay, Turkey. Middleweight — Boris Gurevich, Soviet Union. Light Heavyweight — Ahmet Avku, Turkey. Heavyweight — Alexander Medved, Soviet Union. Greco-Roman Flyweight — Peter Kirov, Bulgaria. Bantamweight — Janos Varga, Hungary. Featherweight — Roman Ruvia, Soviet Union. Featherweight — M u n e j 1 Munemura, Japan. Welterweight — Rudolf Vesper, East Germany. Middleweight — Lothar Metz, East Germany. Light Heavyweight — Boy an Radev, Bulgaria. Heavyweight — ’Istvan Koz-ma, Hungary. YACH-nNO 5,5 Meter — Sweden. Dragon — U. S. Finn — Soviet Union. Flying Dutchman — Britain. Star - U. S. ’Retained title Gardenia — Gallant Bloom. Gulfstream — Gentleman James. Hawthorne Gold Cup — No Double. Jersey Derby — Out of the Day. Jockey Club Gold Cup — Quicken Tree. Kentucky Derby — Forward Pass. Lindheimer Handicap — War Censor. ^ Man o’ War — Czar Alexander. Matron — Gallant Bloom. Pimlico-Laurel Futurity' — King Emperor. Preakness — Forward Pass. Quarter Horse Futurity — Three Oh’s. Santa Anita Derby — Alley Fighter. Handicap; Mr. Right. Sapling — Reviewer. Selima — Shuvee. Strub Stakes — Most Host. Suburban — Dr. Fager. Travers — Chompion. United Nations — Dr. Fager. Vosburgh — Dr. Fager. Washington International — Sir Ivor. Washington Park Handicap — Dr. Fager. Widener — Sette Bello. Woodward — Mr. Right. Horse of the Year — Dr. Fager. National Singles — Lt. Arthur Ashe, Richmond, Va. Women; Mrs. Margaret Smith Court, Australia. Doubles; Stan Smith and Bobby Lutz, Pasadena. National Open — Ashe. Women: Virginia Wade, England. Doubles: Smith and Lutz. National Indoor: Cliff Richey, Dallas. Women: ’Mrs. Billie Jean King, Long Beach, Calif. Wimbledon — Rod Laver, Australia. Women; ’Mrs. King. Wightman Cup — Britain. COLLEGE Atlantic — South Carolina and ’North Carolina tied. Big Eight — ’Oklahoma. Big Sky — ’Idaho. B'g Ten — ’Michigan. East ~ Harvard, Princeton and Penn tied. MidAmerican — ’Toledo. Mid-Atlantic — ’Swarthmore. Southeast — Florida. Southern — ’Davidson. Southwest — ’Rice. Western AC — New Mexico. Yankee — Massachusetts. Track AAU — Indoor: Pacific Coast Club. Outdoor: ’Southern California Striders. AAU INDOOR 60 Yards—’Bill Gaines, Santa Clara Valley Youth Village. 60 Yards Hurdles — Earl McCullouch, Southern Californ- Harness Racing Cane Pace — Rum Customer. Dexter Trot — Nevele Pride. Empire Pace — Romulus Hanover. Futurities — Westbury: Dyan. Yonkers: Nevele Pride. Hambletonian — Nevele Pride. Hilltop Trot — Flamboyant. International Trot — ’Roque-pine, France. Pace: Cardinal King, Little Brown Jug — Rum Customer. Messenger — Rum Customer. Realization Pace — Best of All. Sheppard Pace — Hammerin Hank. United Nations Trot — Earl Laird. Swimming AAU — Indoor: Indiana. Women: Santa Clara Swim Club. Outdoor: Men and Women — Santa Clara S.C. COLLEGE Atlantic — ’North Carolina State. Big Eight — Kansas. Big Sky — ’Montana. Big Ten — ’Indiana. East - ’Yale. Ivy — ’Yale. Top Winter Olympics mM BOBSLEDDING Two-man — Italy. Four-man — Italy. FIGURE SKATING Men — Wolfgang Schwarz, Austria. Women — Peggy Fleming, U.S. Pairs — Ludmila Beloussova and Oleg Protopopov, Soviet Russia. ICE HOCKEY Soviet Union. SKIING (ALPINE) Men’s Downhill — Jean Claude Killy, France. Slalom — Killy. Giant Slalom — Killy. Women’s Downhill — Olga Pall, Austria. Slalom — Marielle Goitschel, France. Giant Slalom -r- Nancy Greene, Canada. NORDIC Combined — Franz Keller, West Germany. 15-Kilometer Cross Country — Harald Groenningen, Norway. 30 — Franco Nones, Italy. 50 — Ole Ellefsaeter, Norway. 40 Relay — Norway. 70-Meter Jump — Jiri Raska, Czechoslovakia. 90 — Vladimir Beloussov, Soviet Russia. Biathlon - Magnar Solberg, Norway. Biathlon Relay — Soviet Russia. Women’s 5-Kilometer Cross Country — Toini Gustafsson, Sweden. 10 — Toini Gustafsson. 15 Relay — Norway. 600 — Martin McGrady, Santa Clara VYV. 1,000 — Tom Van Ruden, Pacific CC. One Mile — Preston Davis, Pacific CC. Three Miles — George Young, •Unattached. Mile Walk - Ron Laird, New York A.C. Long Jump — ’Bob Beamon, U. of Texas, El Paso. High Jump — Valentin Gavrilov, Soviet Union. Triple Jump — Charles Craig, Pacific CC. ' Pole Vault — Dennis Phillips, Oregon State. / Shot Put — George Woods, Pacific CC. 35-Pound Weight—’Ed Burke, S. C. Striders. COLLEGE Atlantic — ’Maryland. Big Eight — Kansas. Big Sky — ’Idaho State. Big Ten—Indoor; ’Wisconsin. Outdoor: Minnesota. Heptagonal — Indoor: ’Army. Outdoor; Yale. IC4A — Indoor and Outdoor: ’Villanova. Mid-American — Western Michigan. Mid-Atlantic - ’St. Joseph’s. NCAA — Indoor: Villanova. Outdoor; Southern California. Southeast —’Tennessee. Southern — Indoor and Outdoor : • Wiiliam and Mary. Southwest — Texas. Yankee — New Hampshire. ’Retained Title SPEED SKATING 500 Meters — Erhard Keller, West Germany. 1.500 — Cornells Verkerfc, Holland. 5.000 — F. Anton Maler, Norway. 10.000 Johnny Hoeglin, Sweden. Women’s 500 — Ludmll| Titova, Soviet Union, „ 1,000 — Carolina Geljssen,' „ Holland. 1.500 — Kaija Mustonen. Finland. 3.000 — Johanna Sc hut, Holland. TOBOGGANING Luge Sihglea — Manfred 'til Schmid, Austria. Doubles — East Women Italy. (i r I The following are top prices covering saies of localiy grown J' , produce by growers and sold by * ttbcni in wholesale package lots. Quotations are fumishMl by the Mart Starts 1969 With Rally Peace Talk Lull Persists in '69 NEW YORK (AP) The start and, without the benefit of I Another factor was that the < Detroit Bureau of Markets as of gtodj market started 1969 with a any particular news. Briers exchanges return^ to a full Mondmt* Icrackling rally. Prices were saw the market as responding five-day week, although trading Produc9 substantially higher early to normal reinvestment demand hours were shortened to lour « [this afternoon. I* CWtr, Asal. east Slat, Dtllcleut, ^iilan. bu. lai, Oailcleui, faC bu. lai, Janathan. bu. AIWNM. Mclntoih. bu. fiMiblai. Nartbarn Spy, bu. ViaiTABLIS Tabitt Shape, Other mess on Wall Issues at a Standstill street is a fear ithat the confidence of the PARIS (AP) — The long lull public is being Is Wall Street Trying ‘ Publics Confidence? By JOHN CUNNIFF i Because of antiquated work depositories most d the stock AP Buaineas Analyst methods, a shortage of skilled held by memter firms for their NEW YORK - Underlying clerical help and a desire to customers. Whereas race these many qf the moves by both take on as much business as certificates were raced about governnient and stock market possible regardless of ability to town hy m^sengers^ whe^^^ officials to clear • - — - up the paper of 60 stocks at noon was up 1.3 sold in September, some ana- one factor of uncertainty. tu. ^ ^ Ibban/'Krtv' *3 00 358.6 With industrials up 3.2, lysts said, and a technical rally Prices advanced on the Amer- ^ lost the results "" .............. 5 » rails up .2 and utilities up .2. was to be expected even if the lean Stock Exchange. National f/" would be dis- a.ooj Gains of fractions to 1 or 2 market sags later because of General warrants was the vol-i ,, ^ ‘‘‘ , ^ .astrous for the exchange com- Cibba^, Red ^bu.' Cabbaoe, .......... CUNMKe . standard Varltty, bu. Carrott, Ctll»-Pak, I dt...... tamed, t SlerraSirw bu‘. loo points predominated in the list.!uncertainties over high interest ume leader as it gained a frac Horwradlah, PK. bakt. Leeki. 'll bctia. 'Onion. SO.Ib. bag .................. 3.00 Pardey. Root, di. bcha.............. 2 00 Parsnips, W bu. .......... 3 3S lUi The market rose from the rates and tight money. tion. _______aaib bag ....................05 Potatoes, l&lb bag ................ 1.05 Radishes, Black, w bu.............. 3.so {quash. Acorn, bu .............. 2.00! Squash, Buttercup, bu. ............ 3.00 Squash, Butternut, bu. ........... 3.00> iMuash. Hubbard, vs-bo............ 2.00' Turnips, topped, bu.............. 3.001 r LRTTUCe-SALAO BRBBnS Calory, Cabbage, ds. Lettuce, Bibb, Hothouse. S-lb. bskt. Lettuce, Leal, Hothouse, lo-lb. bskt. 2.73 The New York Stock Exchange !_NEW VOR K(AP) - New York Stocki Sales Net S3.30 Exchange selected noon prices: (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 2.75; ___iGetlyOII .72e 17 89 89 + % sales Net ^ Poultry and Eggs DBTROIT Bees DETROIT (AP)-(USDAt-Eag prices jWid^r^doien by first receivers (Includ- DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—tUSOA}— Prices paM per pound for No. 1 ‘.Iva poultry: Heavy type bens 10-22; heavy type roasters 25-27; broilers and fryers whites W-21; duckling 36. cHicAeo Bees .CHICAGO (API — Chicago Mercantile Exchange —. Butter about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score ,AA 66W; H A 66'A; 90 B Whi 09 C 60V;; Cars 90 B 66/k 336 + 66 16 2466 24'.6 2466 + 61 89 3666 36 3666 -I- 66 34 39 3866 3866 — 17'A " 103 9064 89>A 90'* -I- V* 8 4S'A 45 559 5366 53 5366 -I- 66 54 38'A 3766 38'A + 248 55'A 5364 55V4 -H66 24 35'* 34>* 35 + V4 32 3966 3866 39'* + V6 141 65 54 54% 49% + % 8 48% 48% 48% - 205 ir% 17'/4 17% -f '/^ 233 31'/* 31»» 31'% + '% 95 57% 56% 57 + '% 66 65% 643% ^3/4 _ Vi 23 34% 34'% 34>% V X20 36'% 35% 35% 54 68% 68 68 — V% 54 18% 18'% 18«% 7 29% 29’% 29'% + '% 11 30 29% 30 + '/4 16 45% 45'% 45% 124 17% 17’% 17V4 — 28 451% 44% 45'% +1 14 240'% 239% 240 ~ American Stocks Arnertcan Stock j cessnaA I’.ao CF| Sfl .00 Ches Ohio NEW YOR K(AP) Exchanga salecled noon prices: Sales M« (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 3 33'* 3166 3166 - It 375 20 1966 19'A -H'* IS 2966 20'* 2966 -i- ■ 3766 37'A “ Aarolat .SOa Air West Am Pair ,70e ArkLGat 1.70 Asamera Oil AssdOil A G AtlasCorp wt Bernes Eng BrazilUPw I Brit Pet .57* Campbl Chib Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creola 2.60a Data Cont Dtxllyn Carp Dynalactrn EquItCp .OSo Fod Resrees Ftimont Oil Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield Ct Basn Pet Gut Am Cp HoernerW .02 Husky 0 .30* Hycon Mfg Hydromell Imper Oil 2a ' Itram Corp Kaiser Ind McCrory wt Mkh Sug .10 ■ Midwest Fin Mohwk Date Molybden Neltner Bros NewPark Mn - . - . 37'* 663 25'* 24'* 25'* -fl’A 212 966 *'* 9'6 • 599 566 12 35'A 107 10 100 2866 ■ V* S6l -t- '* -I- '* 1766 18 -F V6 108 2066 20 20H -F V6 57 10<* 9'* 10'* — V6 16 156* 15H 1566 — '* 40 13<* 13 13 — V6 9 39 3866 3866 ..... 1666 16H 1666 . 2866 -Fm 116 1766 1666 1766 -FI 65 76* 76* 71* -F 'A 20 11'* 11'A 11'* -F '* in l.f Cities Sve )2 Clark Eq ClavEIIII 1.92 Coca Col 1.20 CoIgPal 1.20 CollinRad .80 Colointst 1.60 CBS 1.40b ColuGas 1.52 ComSoiv .90a ComwEd 2J0 Comsat Con Edit 1.80 ConElecInd 1 Con Foods EV 11 -r* II -A* 11 'AE T '/■ C/ut Prttvi* 1 9 23V6 22’* 22'i -F .66 ^“natG 1 76 7 11V* 11'* 11'* -F 'aIcotIpw? 1 90 GG YG YG t/. '-□nSI'Wr I .VU + '% 12% 13 25 13 12% 13 80 llVa ll’/4 H’% + % 50 10% lO'/a 10% + % 51 24'% 24% 24<% 2 25% 25% 25% + % 18 25% 25^4 25 25 14% 14'/4 14% + % 97 17’/» 15'% 17 — '% 2 78 78 78 + '% 25 10‘% 10 1d'/a -f 1% n 19% 19% 19% ............. 3 15'/4 15 16 5 9% 9% 9% 26 8^1 39 69% 58'% 42 35 33% 3 16% 15% 55 14% 29 15 + ’% 69'/* -f1% 34% +1% 15^/e + % 13% 13% - % 14% 14% 15 13'/4 13'% 13V4 20 78‘ 75'% 78 +2 13 37’% 37 37'% + '% Ormand Ind RtC Group Saxon Indust Scurry Rain Statham Inst syntax cp .40 Technico .40b Wn Nuciaar 17 22% 21% 22% 41 Copyrighttd by Tha Associated Press 1959 ContAIrL Cont Can 2.^ Cont Cp .80a Cont Mot .40 Cont Oil 3 Cont Tel .58 Control Data Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a Cowles .50 CrouseHIn lb CfowCol l.Sit Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20 Cudahy Co Curtiss Wr 1 Dan Riv 1.20 DaycoCp 1.50 Day PL 1.52 Deera Co 2 Del Mnte 1.10 OaltaAir .40 DenRGr 1.10 DetEdls 1.40 Det Steel .50 DiaSham 1.40 Disney ,30b DowChm 2.40 Stocks of Local Interest DukeVw 1.40 iduPont 5.50a Figures after decimal points are eiflhthslSUSM^ *^^ OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Dyna Am .40 S Quotations from tha NASD are r«p>^ .resentative inter-detler prices of ap- East Air 50 proximately 11 a.m. inter-dealer markets E Kodak .88a change throughout ttie day. Prices do EatonVa i.40 .not inctuda retail markup^ markdown or, Ebasco Ind 2 ^commission. | EG&G .10 Eld AskadiEtect Spec ,AMT Corp. .................. 5.5 Associated Truck ........... 12.5 Braun Engineering ......... 29.2 Clflzent utilities ......... 29.2 Detrax Chamicat ........... 18.0 "diamond Crystal ........... 34.4 Kelly Strvices 34.4 'Mohawk Rubbar Co. ......... 37.0 iafran Printing .............23.2 icrlpto ........ ... 8.2 Wyandotta Chamlcai ......... 3i.2 55 1IP^4 10% 10% + % 7 35% 36% 35% + % 33 31% 31'% 31% 19 31% 31'% 31% + % 10 37'% 353% 36% 7 33% 33% 33% — '% 2 78'% 78'% 78'% 23 22 22'% 21% — '% 18 20'% 20 20'% + '% 27 393,4 38% 39'% + '% 32 44% 43% 44% + % 47 71% 7T% 71'% + 3^ 45 55'% 55% 55'% +1’% 17 43'% 43'4 43’t — 3* 203 52'% 51% 51% + % 18 34% 34'.'* 34'% 20 52% 52'% 52% + '% 29 22% 22'% 22% — '% 2 73’% 73^' 73 2 55% 55% 55% + % 4 45'% 45’% 45»% — '/4 26 40'% 39'% 40'% +1 175 57’% 55% 57% +1% 48 45V* 44% 45 -f '% 157 80 79 79 -f ’% 24 33'/4 32’% 33V4 + % 16 42% 42’/4 42'% + Va 83 72'% 71% 72'% +1 15 49% 49'% 49'% — % 7 58% 58% 58'/4 + % 1 48% 48% 48% + '% 13 53% 53'% 53% -> % 20 30% 30’% 30% + '% 20 30'% 29% 30'% +1'% 28 48% 48 48 -- % 16 54 53 53% +1 54 33% 33'% 33'% — '% 17 45'% 45 45 + '% 9 48'% 48'% 48% 4- ’% 30 3235 32'% 32% 38 447% 44% 44% '% 20 23% 23% 23'% 49 58 58 58 — % 36 51 50 60% +1 3 27% 27'% 27% + '% 12 79'% 79 79'% + ’% 78 25’% 25% 25% — »% 102 147'% 145'% 147'% +3'% 50 42% 42'% 423% + % 2 287 287 287 — *% 3 17% 17 17% + % 5 34 34 34 + '% 56 37'% 357'a 37'% -f % 15 75 74% 75 + '% 7 57% 57»% 57'% -f »/4 43 25 24% 25 + % 32 32% 32 Sr/2 + % —D— 14 26'* 26H 26'* — '* 7 5066 50 SO — H' 1 3466 3464 3464 + '* 37 56'A 55'* 56 -FI 7 356* 35 35'A - 'A 21 376* 37'* 37'A — '* 16 236A 23'* 23'* — 'A 20 2«'* 216* 2('/i -F '* 3 24'* 246* 246* — I* 30 3S6'. 3S6* 3566 4 84'* |4 84 —1 13 7764 77'A 7766 — *6 156 42 4164 42 -F '* 3 3*'* 3864 38’4 -F ’*[ 29 1656'. 164'* 164’* — '* )2 3066 30'/. 306* -F '*! , , „ 130 28’* 2766 276* — 641Omerk I.Olt Jewel Co 1.40 JohnMan 2.40 Johnjhn ,60a JonLogan .80 Jones L 2.70 Jotlens .60 Joy Mfg 1.40 Kaiser A1 1 Kan GE 1.36 Katy Ind KayserRo .60 Kennecott 2 Kerr Me 1.50 KImbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.60 Kresge SS .34 Kroger 1.30 Lear Siegler LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind Lehmn l.39g LibOFrd 2.80 Libb McN L Ligg My 2.50 Ling TV/ i.33 Litton 1.89t LIvIngstn Oil LockhdA 2.20 Loews Thee LoneS Cam i LoneSGa 1.12 Macke Co .30 Macy RH 1 MadFd 3.66e MagmaC 3.60 Magnavox i Marathn 1.40 Marcor ,25g Mar Mid 1.60 MartinM 1.10 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 2a Maytag wi McDonnD .40 McadCp 1.90 Melv Sh 1.10 Merck 1.80a MGM 1.20 Microdot MIdSoUH .88 MInnMM 1.45 MInnPLt l.io MObilOil 2.20 Mohaico 1 Monsan 1.80 MontDUt 1.68 Mont Pw 1.56 Motorola 1 MtSITT 1.24 NatAIrlln .30 Nat Bisc 2.10 Nat Can .60 NatCash 1.20 N Dairy 1.60 Nat, Diet 1.80 Nat Fuel 1.68 Nat GenI .20 Nat Gyps 2 Natind .46f NLead 3.25e Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .80 NEngEI 1.48 Newmnt 2.60 Nlag MP l.io NorfolkWst 6 NoAmRock 2 NoNGas 2.60 Nor Pac 2.60 NoStaPw 1.60 Northrop i NwstAIrl .80 NwtBanc 2.30 Nofton 1.50 Nort Simon Norwich .80 OccldenfP ib OhIoEdls 1.42 iklaGE 1.08 JklaNOs 1.12 OlinMat 1.20 13.4 30.0 30.0 19.0 35.4 35.4 38.0 24.2 32.2 . , nOCK AVERAGES CMtiglWt by Tlw AtMciatod Prou 3* IS IS 60 fijl E.II* UIH. Styki Spe EIPasoNG EltraCp 1.10 Enter El 1.80 Ethyl Cp .72 EvansP .60b Evertharp FaIrchC .SOe Fairch Hiller Fanitael Inc FedDStr .95 Filtrol 1.40 Firestne 1.60 FitChrt 1.68t Flintkote 1 Fla Pow 1.52 Noon Thur«. 'Prav. Day waak AM Month Age 'Yaar Am 1W-69. Nigh 1M8-a9 ' iMr 1M7 Hl^ .1*67 Lo :i aasi-JssiiEffiS'.'? SS:| iliJ IS;! ffilfS # 467.1 fSI.t 148 S 3.3.0, fL S3t.l 217.4 160.4 368.8'% 435.6 f6$.6 135.1 299.1' 483.2 m.t 4IJ.4 fh.4 159.1 ,342.6, 136,5 292J|oac Cp 1.50 I GAP Corp ,40 GamSko 1.30 pOW JONEI AVBRAMt ...... -fTQCKI -V'....:iGenOvnem' 1 10 Tndua............... , 848.86+6.211 Gan Tlae 2.60 M Rail* ................... 271.63+0.21 Qen FM 2M 15 Utlintao ............. 136.is-0.32l$anf5llli AO 'rtt ................J42.I6+1.12 GanMol 4.30a OPubOf."LJO'' ... -4.0l+0.08 f Tt® lS ..... 47,72+0.08 Gah fira )b _ ..... 74.27+0.14 OMatcO 1.60 ,.RIe WttlltlM ....... 78.».^AI Ga Pacific 1b iREoilrUlf ........Ml.fl..........'Oarbar 1.10 -E- 155 28’A 28 28'A + '* 137 74'4 73'* 74'* + '/» 18 40'A 40'* 40'A — 'A 19 6(P4 59*6 60 + 'A 53 49'* 4I'A 49'* +144 2 28'A 28'A 28’A + H 267 25'* 254* 25'* - V* 7 44'* 4446 4444 + 'A 72 10244 102’* 102’A + 'A 16 36'* 36'* 3644 — '* 8 53'* Sr* 53’* + 46 64 ^646 2546 26 +1 97 8444 I3<* 0446 +1'* 121 23 22H 2244 +1'A 37 3r/e 31'* 31'* -F % 24 54'* 5346 54'* + 'A 47 3546 35 35 - 'A 26 48 47'A 47'/e +14* 31 59'* 5946 5846 + 'A 43 364* 35'* 35'* —1 13 31 3046 31 + 44 5 42'A 42 42 + 'A 11 68'* 6746 68'* + 44 12 38 3V/, 38 — 'A 9 23 22’A 23 + '* 59 534* 53 5346 + 46 14 344'. 34 34'* + W 123 44'* 43'* 44'* + Vj 56 39'* 39 39'A + 46 64 62'* 6t<* 62 +44 44 31'* 3046 30'* — '* 2 35'* 35’* 3$'* 15 4644 46'A 46’* + 46 112 85 84V* 84'* +1 4{ 82 IH* |2 + '* ,2 Hit ^ fed 44 M7* 3046 IMi 46 64 40<* »'* M . + '* 12 34 3T* 34 - 46 11 55 54<* 5444 + 44 13 85V6 85 8546 + )6 21 36'* 3544 '■ Otis Elev _ Outbd Mar 1 Owanslll 1A5 PacGEI 1.50 PacLtg 1.60 Pac Pet .25e PaePwL 1.20 PacTAT 1.20 PinASul 1.50 Pan Am .40 Panh EP 1.60 ParkeDavIt i PennCan 2.40 PennDIx ,60b Panney Jc 1 PaPwLf 1.54 PanniUn .80 PepsiCo .80 Partect Film Pfliard lAOa PhelpsD 1.80 Phlla El 1.64 PhllMorr 1.80 PhlllPat 2.60 PItnayB ).20 a Polaroid .32 PPG Ind n Proclr G 2.40 PubSCol 1.06 Pubikind .75t Puab Sup .41 RCA I RalilOnP .60 RanMInc .82 Raythaon .SO Reading. Co RalchCh .40b Rtpubsil 2.50 Raylon 1.40 Rakall .30b RaynAAat .80 RaynTeb 2.2o 27'A 27'A 27'A — V6 86 2346 2346 2346 + 'A _J_ 74 49'% 48'% 49'% + '% 15 88>% 87% 88 + % 20 106'% 1053% to5% — % 3 56 55% 553% _ 1/4 15 77 76% 77 -f '% 5 36'% 36 36 — Va 6 35% 35% 353% 4. ^ —K— 43 39Va 39 39’% + Va 1 28% 263% 38% 18 27% 27% 27% 9 393% 39% 39'/a + '% 93 50% 50% 50% + % 4 1233/4 1223% 123% +13% 4 72% 723% 723% — ’/t 3 44’% 43% 433% — »% 36 39'/a 39'% 39’% — Va 26 34% 34% 34% —L— 1701 26% 25% 253/4 — Va 3 20% 20>/2 20'/a 165 14'/a 14% 143% + '% 15 24'% 24 24»% 10 59% 59 59’% — '% 125 17% 16% 17'% + Va 32 47 46’% 47 +1 44 97V4 95'% 963% +1% 55 73’/a 72’^a 72’% + '% 138 13'/4 12’% 13’% + % 47 483« 47% 48 + % 98 49% 483% 493^ + ^ 33 253% 25% 25% — '/g 44 25'% 24^9 25 + '/S 16 29'/a 283% 29’% + '% 4 48 48 48 + '% 15 32% 32 32'% +1 —M— 2 29'% 29’% 29’% + '% 9 38'% 3734 3fl 25 34’/a 33% 34'.^ + »% 8 80'^7 79^/t 80'/a +1 103 56'% 56 56 + '% 45 54'% 53% 53'% ^ ’'t 85 52'% 51% 513% _ a% 5 40% 40'/a 405's + '% 42 28% 27% 28 — ’/a 18 40 39'% 39’% — % 48 60'% 60 60'% + '/% 21 30% 30% 303'9 45 49% 48% 493% ~ 1% 6 49'/a 49 49'/a -- V® 4 58% 58'/4 58<% — % 59 90'/4 90^ 90'/4 + »/4 37 44'% 42A 27 45'* 45'* 4516 + 'A 3 29V6 2616 26V6 - ’* 289 4516 44'* 4516 +1'* 62 59'* 58'A 58'* — '* 42 24 23'* 23'/i + '* 61 73'* 73 73 — 1A 78 47'* 47 .7'* + 'A 38 1616 16'* 16'6 10 29'* 28'A 29'* + '/e 7 76'* 7516 76'* + '* 30 221* 22'* 2216 6 108 107*6 107*6 — ’* 35 42*6 42'* 42*6 + '* 13 58'* 58*6 58*6 — 16 3 6016 60*6 6016 + '* 25 30’* 29*', 30'6 + '* 55 53'* 51'* 51'* —216 22 85*6 85'A 85'* — '* 1 70'* 70'* 70'* + 'A 8 43 42% 42'/. — '* 11 45% 45'* 45'* — 16 18 46 45 45 —1'* —0— 365 48'* 42% 48’* +1'* 35 29% 29*6 29% + ’*| '1 23*6 2316 23% + 'A I 3 23% 23'A 23% 59 44’A 43% 43'6 + % 3 33'A 33 33 + 'A 30 52% 52 52 20 37'A 36*6 36'/6 50 72'* 72’A 72’* +1 ----P— 15 37'6 37% 37'6 - 'A 39 30 291', JO + 'A 50 25% 24% 25'A + 'A to 23'A 23 23'A + '* 32 23'6 23 23'/t + ’/6 5 34% 34'6 34'* + '* 113 29% 29% 29% + % 13 37'A 37 37'A — '* 15 29% 29’* 29'* \ 207 6S'A 64 65 +1% 13 33% 33'A 33% + "S'" -""p’ 20 41'* 41% 41% — '* 51 43 42% 42% + % 56 69'* 68'* 69'* +i'A 36 85% 85'* 85% + '/• 9 58'A 58 58'A + 'A 192 45% 45'A 45'* — '* 27 35% 35'* 35% + •'* 169 33'* 32'* 32'* 51 368<* 267 268'*' +1 110 46'* 45% 45% — % ■ “ 56% 57% +1% Varlen Asso Vendo Co .60 VaEIPw 1.08 —w- WarLam 1.10 WasWat 1.24 Wasin AIrL 1 Wn Banc 1.20 WnUTel 1,40 WestgEI 1.80 Wayerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.60 Whie Mol 2 WInnDIx 1.S6 Woolworth 1 XaroxCp 1.60 YngstSht 1.80 ZanithR 1.20a Copyrighted oy Tha Associated Press 1969 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends in the foregoing table are annual disbursenoents based on the last quarterly or stml-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are Identified in the following footnotes. a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate glus stock dividend, c—Liquidating divl-end. d—Declared or paid In 19W plus stock dividend, e—Paid last year. I—Payable In stock during 1969. estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-distribution date, g—Declared or paid so for this year, h—Declared or paid alter stock dividend or split up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulativa Issue with dividends In arrears, n—New issue, p— Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred the withdrawal of North Vietnamese forces from the South Car Headrest Requirement to Hike Costs the time millions of Americans!*" " persons in the southwest corner were turning on television sets' pey are Spec. 4 James W. building. Deputies found to watch the annual bowl ^igham, Ocala, Fla.; Spef). 4 several broken bottles, broken games. VC FIRE Within a few minutes about 10 enemy shells burst on the U.S. DETROIT (AP) ^omas N. Jones, Lynnville,! chairs, and a knife with a seven-Ind., and Pfc. Donald G. Smith, inch blade. . j Authorities reported the per-They were preceded by Maj.jsons wounded by gunshots were t^fn Lr n Special Forces officer who ico Yrlas, 28; Carlos Roses, 23; Spr nf Tuesday from five Raymond DeLeon, 35; Daniel lot Aiv rSrv imprisonment. He left Carmoice, 22. and Fred Teney- U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division 60 early today. irieuq, 30, all of Saginaw, miles north of Saigon was hit by n. , e stock dividend, t—Paid in stock during 1961, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ex-dlstrlbution date, z—Salas In full. cld—Called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex dividend and sales in full, x-dis—Ex dlstribu-flon. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without war- i the SeCOnd Straight VPar rants. ww-WIth warrants. wd-When dis- ocvwiu auaigiii ycdi. tributad, wi—Whan issued, nd—Next day! ★ ★ ★ delivery. I v|—In bankruptcy or receivership orj federal government ordered them, but individual buyers will pay for the headrests being installed on all 1969 cars. Of the Big Three automakers, only Chrysler Corp. dealers are in doubt about how much the headrests will add to car prices, as the sticker costs go up for The about 65 mortar rounds, Casual- Federal safety standards re- Fire Kills Boy in Royal Oak f SuccessTuhfnvestfhg * years ago I put $250,000 into 38 issues. Often I read advice from you and others that A pi^olio should be confined to considerably fewer issues for ad- mmm By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — I Just returned from a visit to the Hawaiian Islands. I •ROYAL OAK (AP) - A 10- ““c** impressed and month-old boy was asphyxiated there is a great future , ---------------- ------- in his crib while his parents buslnesswlse. What do you equate watching. Now I don’t being reorganized under the Bankruptcy'll,”. a”*nair "rtf'Vr^if'"®«of'WCrC at 8 New Year’s Eve ®i Inter-Island' Resorts,'give over two hour® a Yveek W Act, or securities assumed by such com- qUirC inai a pair Or tront SCBt' , , ... 16,1 aa'an in„^a4nA_4+ ai-i._ .. i. , • 1.. , panies. tn-Foreign Issue subiect to In- Ug-A i,. inqtallpH nn nil P^rty and, according to fire of- *® investment. Aloha, keeping abreast of. my stocks. terest eouallzation lax, icMS ue insiaiieu on ail L. , , , i. r.. , _T'M i».,i4 on _—4 i_ 4. ficials, faulty (Christmas tree^""®’ ilsn t 30 per cent ®pprecuitlon in wiring started a house blaze. I, ^ ~ this situation 30 months a fairly good Tepord? * * * j*®s in the .amount you are will-;Could I have done bCfter ^Wlth I Douglas Hannaford died de-to pay for growth. I fewer Issues?—AJB. * Both General Motors and the attempts by an older! Gross revenues have moved A — I would s«y for that fion^ofTe®T?J'asL^rW,^w! “« Motor Co., which have i"'®’*'®'’ police up consistently since 1958, but particular 30 mooth® your "'BSYanca®** been Installing the headrests 7'i'e older boy, James Han-earnings have been somewhat record was excellent. The Dow oaMtii. meal1^'*”'*"'^”^ the start of the model "^i*^**’sai<* h® saw flames erratic. In 1967 InteMslandjIndustrials moved up cent •»,750,7i3,6i).D6 n.»/'*i>»,78/.«jyear, Will DOW add the\$16 to $18 the living room but Was,earned 46 cents a share on $9.1 and Standard and Pooi^‘* 425 pushed back by intense heat million gross revenues. Results! Industrials gained 27 tn^iCCht lh cars built after Jan. 1 minimize the possibility Treasury Position _______ „ ________,607,73»,66S.1J cost Tefal dtfat X-368,516,86*,304.9S 146,959456495.69 Gold Aiaata 1S,156,964.t90.91 12,4M,«B,4n.79 x-inciudai 638,326.201.19 debt not aub-(act to itatutory limit. B(^D AVBRAOBS Campitad tn Tha Aiiaclatad Frau 26 tl 19 It II Ra»8 ■Ml. Ulll. Fgq. L.YO, iSilo 864 Mia 19,1 78.6 63.9 16.2 71.3 09.1 71.6 63.9 15.9 78.4 09.1 71.4 65.0 87.4 79.1 11.6 79,6 55.3 16.1 ■!^;3 t9'.5" 794’ 664 91.0 01,4 90.2 02,3 63.8 05.0 78.3 11.0 70.4 73.0 95.6 m9 92.5 19.4 64.6 06.1 71.0 09.1 71.4 Naf change Noon Thuri. Fray. Day Thgudat'i IN DivMind* to the sticker price. American Motors will not adjust its prices now because it included the headrest costs in Its prices from the beginning of the tnddel year. ADDED COST Chrysler, meanwhile, has when he tried to reach thejfor 1968 could reach 55 cents to baby’s room. i*® ®«Pts O" bver $io milUop After carrying another broth-|gross. Plans call for col er, Mwin, 3, to safety, James structlon to begin this spring onB.vw». — ».vtui4u.B ..™» ,rcsort hotel to be capital gains but not dividend pulled the infant from his crib. 1970 at a cost of [Sharek the 30-month period; ,.Your record, however, wfe® bdow that of an average of three growth funds — inciueftng their $8 million. I am sure yotf list inAsehts a are traded on the falrl;^ :iirp®d sprSad ’ V Honolulu Exchange and com-|sctlon, but whether you would mand a multiple of 60 times have picked from the . top ot e|timated 1968 results. your list had you confined The New Year increase in Charles Benvevaiis, 64, of 41: Your firsthand observations yourself to 10 to 15 Issues 1* 1968 added about $23 per car to S. Edith, told Pontiac police last should hi of value In deciding difficult to say. Because your an added: models News in Brief Ciava El Ilium IRRBOULAR OppMhalmar Fq . .50 Mj'nci^s beginning last Jan. 2. (Copyright, 1960) handle it. some brokers have sale was made, now they retailed to deliver in five days, imain In vaults. Ownership * * * jehanges are recorded b y Several have been forced to automated bookkeeping.-^ curtail business, some have [NOTICEABLE MOVE been forced to close offices and ^ noticeable of what dismiss workers, other have exchange says are 25 moves found it necessary to merge, correct the paper jam has and some are refusing the un-Xgen the elimination o f profitable orders of small in- trading so as to give vestors. ^ clerical help time to catch up On top of all these troubles^ However, the exchange now have conrie serious prob ems^f^g,^ with regulatory agencies of 'hej^^g^gy closings has become It has been two weeks since Imunity and severely damaging _ . - ,,cauo. U.S. negotiator Cyrus R. Vance+0 business, the dollar, the bal-|government. P« r'1 ® «''*y eroded and that the midweek last bargained with Col. Ha Van ance of payments and to Ameri-1 regarding the use and misuse of to be accepted Lau of North Vietnam over the can prestige in internationali“inside” information. gj,gther holiday, shape of the conference table finance. [a PRIME EXAMPLE i ★ * ★ and other issues delaying the; The money that pours intoj The predicament of the Mates' With the return to the five-parley. ithe market from independent j^^tual Fund, considered by day week, even though the daily .TO „ - , ... . nnd institutional investors is of--gasures to be among the gong wilt sound 90 minutes U.S. officials said the mam fered with faith that their busi- ” Tucc^ssLl ol !Se past Lrlier than the old 3:30 p.m. Net '*'®/.®“^® ness will be transacted safely, yggr has helped undermine closing, there are misgivings ?3lV>r4'*^r Mafrs has been among%ecurities men. iH^luding ?4* ^ '^ = i?'sworthBuLr h^ k ^ forced to suspend redemptions the Securities and Exchange - - - 50 - of its shares. iCommission. Thieu ^ H«w®v®'^' *h® inability to Earlier in the year this fund’s The big question is whether or if if ^ handle commitments has j.ggg^d was so good that\itn°t the brokerage firms have The Americans are anxious became buried in orders a^ade enough headway in the get on with the four-oartvi®^ some brokerage houses that ^gg forced to decline newest year, both in elimmating ^ J proposed by PresLl”?:*®?!^ ‘l® business. But now it is caughtwork and i"/Pp*}'"* t/eir dent Johnson and are less con- * cerried than their South Vietnamese partners about prestige enterprise, such as commercial'“■gggg"'Yhy”value of its own;volume, to resume a five-day shdFGs * * [INCREASING IMPACT The stock exchange, seriouslyj in a year-end statement. recGfd cong’s National Liberation Front York Stock Exchange president, has taken an almost dictatorial volume “will be felt In in-as anything more than a sub-commented in a y e e r - e n d stance in order to bring about creasing measure on the New meeting with newsmen, no remedies. Potentially one of its York Stock Exchange and other other business promises five- most successful moves has been securities markets.” day delivery on erders of such the Central Certificate Service, j But Haack, who has devoted '"® magnitude. ; This service places in central most of his first year in office ■ ~ to innovations and modernizing, also states that a solution to the problem of volunie remains the primary task of the industry. ★ ★ ★ Whether or not the Industry is up to the task may be answered in the next few weeks. The exchange is confident that it will be. / ' / I THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUAEt 2, 1069 8 Heads AP Top-10 Story List Editors Pick Top JO 1. Apollo 8 moon ihot 2. Robert Kennedy aisaiilnated S. Martin Luther King astaisinated 4. LBJ announces be won’t run for reelectlon 5. Presidential election, campaign 8. Czechoslovakia occupied by Russia 7. Vietnam War continues; peace talks start 8. USS Pueblo captured by North Korea, crew later freed 9. Heart ta’ansplant operations 10. Riots bi Negro areas, black militancy By the Associated PTess . | grieved along with the Kennedy The Apollo 8 moon shot was i family as they once again ap-voted the top story of 1968 in a peared, self-controlled, through Christmas Eve repoliing of AP member editors. A previous poll completed before the dramatic flight around the moon had selected the assassinations of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as the No. 1 and No. 2 stories of the year. ★ ★ ★ The new balloting dropped the two asassination stories down a notch to second and third place, as well as suggesting a high place for the rev lease of the crewmen of the USS Pueblo. As with the Apollo 8 story, the release of the Pueblo crewmen occurred after the first poll. Originally, the capture of the ship and its crew by the North Koreans had placed seventh in the list of the 10 top stories. it it it days of public grief. Sen. Kennedy’s body lay in state at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York, then went by slow Sen. Robert Kennedy Lies Mortally Wounded train to Washington for burial in Arlington Cemetery, hear the grave of his brother. KING SLAYING Youth Given Prison Term Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., 39, Nobel Prize winner for peace and American architect of nonviolence in the fight for civil Lights, was shot and killed in Memphis on April 4. He was in Memphis to lead a march in support of striking sanitation workers, 90 per cent of whom are Negroes. King had stepped onto the balcony of his room at the Lorraine Hotel and was shot in the neck, presumably with a high-powered rifle from a flophouse across the street. He was rush- Sen. Kennedy, 42, was trying died within the hour. had announced a major policy (supporters, and Gov. Lester Thousands Mourn Death Of Martin Luther King Jr. statement on Vietnam for TV Maddox of Georgia were late-announcers on the Democratic on and radio March 31. He reviewed administration policy and offered to meet North Vietnam at the bargaining table. TTien, having given no prior clue of what he was about to say, he added a major surprise — the statement that he would not run for reelection as President. Johnson said he did not want “an aura of political campaigning’’ around his domestic side. The Democrats picked Humphrey and he chose Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine as vice presidential candidate. Meanwhile, George C. Wallace, former governor of Alabama, had formed a third party, the American Independent Party, and as impressive-size crowds gathered to hear him, all over the country, people who at first had con- and foreign moves during thejsidered him merely regional coming months. He said he began to take him seriously as wanted to spend time only on a contender. for the presidency this year. On June 4' he won the California Democratic primary. After a victory statement, shortly past midnight, he and bis wife, Ethel, pregnant with their 11th child, walked through a back passageway in the it it it Before King became the nation’s civil rights leader in mid-1950s, most efforts on behalf of Negro rights were being made in the courts. King founded the Southern Ambassador Hotel in Angeles to meet newsmen. DIED IN HOSPITAL Kennedy was shot, a 22-caliber bullet piercing his brain, and died 25 hours later in Good Smaritan Hospital, where he had been operated on for three and a half hours. Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, 24, brought to America from Jordan at 13, was grabbed at the scene and later charged with murder. His trial, postponed twice, is set for Jan, 7. The world was sickened and The Top 10 Stories of the Year and Top 10 Newsmakers of the Year selections are made in strict accordance with ballots returned by editors of Associated Press meniber newspaper and radio and TV stations. Editors annually are asked to vote for the new stories of grea^ est impact, import and use during the year and to name 10 top news-making person^ alities. SeiectiMis do not necessarily indicate support for policies carried out in stories chosen or support of the actions of persons chosen. TTiey merely identify 1968’s top news stories and individuals who made the most news in their respective fields. Los Christian Leadership Conference. made equal treatment his goal and nonviolent protest his method. He led the boycott of the segregated Montgomery buses, civil disobedience of what he considered unfair laws marches and sit-ins, made “We Shall Overcome” the themesong of his people. LOSS MOURNED Both whites and blacks, who had looked to him for reconciliation between the races mourned his loss. Immediate anger led to violence in 40 cities across the country on the night of his death, with 4,000 National Guardsmen called into the nation’s capital, where the riot was largest. James Earl Ray. 40, was found in England, using a false Canadian passport, brought back to Memphis, charged with King’s murder and will be tried on March 3. •ir it it Other big stories of the year and the way they were ranked; 3. LBJ announces that he won’t run for re-election; 4. Presidential election, campaign; 5.^ Czechoslovakia occupied by" Russia; 6. Vietnam War continues, peace talks start; 7. USS Pueblo and crew captured by North Korea; 8. Heart transplant operations; 9. Riots in Negor areas, black militancy; 10. Jacqueline Kennedy weds Aristotle Onassis his duties as President, not on partisan politics. it it it Hats were flying In and out of the ring during the election year, until Richard M. Nixon — who kept his cool throughout won, in a presidential contest nearly as close as the one he lost to John F. Kennedy eight years ago, Michigan Gov. George Romeny withdrew two weeks before the first primary becoming the first candidate to withdraw on the basis of popularity-measuring polls. HHH CANDIDACY After LBJ’s withdrawal as his party’s certain standard bearer Vice President Hubert H Humphrey declared his candidacy. Sen. Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota was already in, as a dove, and getting backing from young people. New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller said repeatedly he’d answer a draft, felt the draft April 30 and declared. ★ New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, who won his party’s primary in California, was shot and killed. Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy said at that time and again during the Democratic convention that family responsibilities prevented him from running in his brother’s stead. Gov. Ronald Regan o f California tossed his hat into the ring at the GOP convention. But the nod went to Nixon, who chose as his running mate Maryland Gov. Spiro T. Agnew, who said “It came as a bolt out of the blue.” LATE-ANNOUNCERS Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, with backing ★ ★ ★ When the votes were counted, Waiiace carried five states, all Southern. Main issue of the campaign was Vietnam. Cause celebre of the campaign was what a presidential commission later termed a “police riot” in the streets of Chicago during the Democratic convention and Sen. Abraham ' Ribicoff o f Connecticut at the time called two weeks since the war began. There was a lull in fighting in July and August and another lull in October. President Johnson announced a complete bombing halt of North Vietnam on Oct. 31. Peace talks started May 10 have been some 100 such amazing operations. There has been criticism of the idea and there have not been as many donors as patients who could have used a heart transplant. The heart of a ram was put into a man in A Waterford Township youth has been sentenced to S to 10 years In the,, state prison at Jackson In connection with the abduction and assault of a 15-year-old girl at gunpoint in October. ’The prison term was ordered for Michael B. Lemon, 19, of 3864 Iris, by Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C Ziem on Tuesday. ★ ★ ★ Lemon, who is married, was arrested Oct. 8 and charged with kidnaping, rape and gross indecency. He was permitted to enter a guilty plea on Nov. 26 to one lesser offense of assault with Intent to rape. A conviction on either the kidnaping or rape charge could have led to a sentence of life imprisemment. , DESCRIBED BY GIRL Lemon was taken Into'custody by Waterford Township police after the junior high school girl gave them a description of her abductor, his car and two let ters of his license plate number. She told police she had been threatened with a gun and then driven to a field near her home and raped. Lemon was questioned about several other attempted abductions in the area, but no charges were brought against him other than those involving the teen-ager. between the United States and i Houston In June when no North Vienam but nothing much human donor was available; the happened. After much palaver man died during the operation, and a South Vietnam boycott,| Of the first 99 heart expanded talks, adding South ^transplants, nine are alive more Vietnam and the N a t i on a Ijthan three months after the Liberation Front, started in operation. Dr. Denton Cooley of December. I Baylor University has done * * * I more heart transplants than Problems Included N o r t h|anybody else. Dr. Christiaan Vietnam not talking to South| Barnard of South Africa did the Vietnam and South Vietnam not first one, in 1967, and his second Blind Spaniel Object of Hunt in Waterford recognizing the NLF. The USS Pueblo, a Navy Intelligence ship off the coast of North Korea, was boarded by four North Korea patrol boats on Jan. 22 and taken into the port of Womsan. The Defense Department said the ship was Gestapo tactics. Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley angrily shouted back at Ribicoff. TRAILED IN POLLS Humphrey trailed far behind Nixon in polls until just before the election, when he pulled dramatically close to Nixon’s lead. Nixon carried 32 states, for 302 electoral votes; HHH carried 13 states, got 191 electoral votes. In Czechoslovakia, for 229 days there had been, an ex-periement without precedent — democracy within Communism — free press, public discussion, travel abroad. ★ ★ 'The Czechs had basked in It' outside the 12-mile limit. DETAILS UNCLEAR still but the Warsaw Pact countries ^ ® desire to study the latest in had feared their citizens would want it too. Warsaw Pact President Lyndon B. Johnson, from some one-time Kennedy maneuvers began in Czechoslovakia June 20 as a show of muscle. Talks July 29 seemed to leave Czech liberalization with a green light. But then came rumors of Soviet troop movements near the Polish-Czech border and on Aug. 20, 100,000 Soviet troops and 1,000 tanks invaded Czechoslovakia. It was„liberalization nyet; “normalization” da. CZECHS RESIST Czechs showed a spirit of resistance. For five days, young people fought with Molotov cocktails. In October anti-Soviet demonstrators clashed with patient of last Jan. 2, is alive. During 1968, the civil rights movement, ,\vhich turned from nonviolence toward violence four years ago, shifted again. There were riots, including one in Cleveland in July which was believed to be the first organized Negro ambush „ against police, and part of the Details of the capture were ^ black. But it was a year of fewer deaths and less property damage than previous years. WHAT WAS HAPPENING? What was happening? Some thought the cities had bettered sluia conditions from which the riots had sprung. Others saw more of an answer in a change in emphasis among Negroes --a drawing together, a spirit of community to get tiings done for Negroes by Negroes. It was a year of Increasing expressions o( militancy, the militant Black Panthers lost most of their leaders but electronic surveillancejmembership grew; a year of hardware. rejection of white help; African Aft§r 1967, with its one human hair styles, and the word black heart transplant, in 1968 there'in place of Negro. unclear. Russia turned down a U.S request for help in getting the Pueblo and its 82 crewmen back. The capture came after more than a year of stepped-up pressure by North Korea against South Korea and two days after an attempt to assassinate South Korea’s President. ★ ★ ★ Speculation ranged from North Korea’s testing U.S. readiness to resist an offensive or attempting to divert the U.S. and South Korea from Vietnam Duchess, a blind cocker spaniel apparently wandered away from home early New Year’s Day, according to her owners, Mr. and Mrs. Russell GrinneU of 6716 Hatchery Road Waterford Township. GrinneU suspects the dog got out when a guest at the couple’s New Year’s Eve party left a gate slightly ajar. it it it “She stumbles into everything and we’re afraid she’ll walk in to a moving car without seeing it,” Mrs. GrinneU said. The dog has no tags (m since it never leaves the home except on leash. Neighbors, who aided in the search, found no trace of Duchess. They suspect someone picked her up and took her home. Anyone with information concerning the blonde-colored fairly straight-haired dog, is urged to contact the GrinneUs. Pontiac Man Held in Reported Rape Burglar Takes Firearms, Supplies From Area Home A burglar who broke Into Si Oakland County sheriff s Pontiac Township home yester-l deputies said the glass portion day took a small arsenal ofiof a door was broken to gain guns and ammunition and entry, and that the bedrooms enough food and drink to were ransacked. celebrate long into the new year. More than $1,800 of goods, police. On Nov. 7 Soviet flags “'eluding eight guns, were burned Prague by crowds in rounds of ammunition, 70 bot- tles of liquor-atid assorted foods A “nornializallon" agreement''™™ » «n> elgned by Cech lenders '™™ Aug. 21 and censorship was _ , back. ’The country’s Communist of Harry Anderson, 3131 N. Party head, Alexander Dubcek, who had initiated the reforms, and who tried to officiate their 68th Anniversary rescinding as painlessly as ' possible for his people was “neutralized” of power by a trlmvirate placed above him, in late November. ★ ★ ★ ’Hie Vietnam War, placed No. of Marriage for Mormon Leader Anderson reported that the thief emptied his freezer of steaks, bacon, roast, pies, juice and vegatables. UQUOR, FIREARMS The liquor, he said, bore labels from the Virgin Islands, Bahamas and Florida. Various types of pistols and rifles were among the guns reported missing. Also reported missing were a television, stereo, typewriter, sewing machine, watch, drill and 14 silver dollars. A 20-year-old Pontiac man was arrested early this morning on charges of statutory rape and gross indecency, city police reported. Perry Kingsley, 98 E Howard, reportedly enticed a 14-year-old Pontiac girl off the street into his apartment where an alleged attack occurred. The victim told police the suspect^ approached her on the street wMe she was walking home, put his arm around her and told her some people upstairs would like to see her. The girl told police she knew the suspect. Death Notices MOSELE, JAMES PORTER; December 31, 1968 ; 383 0 Baldwin; beloved Infant son d! Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mosele; beloved Infant grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Harry and “Mrs. Doath\Nbi|ces % .'MatOda Utcbfleldi da if brother of Shawn Graveside larvloa will ba M Friday, January 8, at 11 a.i: at White Chapel Camet< Baby Mosele will lie In ftita at the Purlsey-Gllbert Funeral vs 1* Home. SCRIBNER. ALAN P.; January 1,1969 ; 280 Nelson Street; ag$ 22; beloved husband of Sl^oR Scribner; beloved son of Palmer and Dorris Scrtbnei^ dear father of Tasuny and Andrea Scribneir dear brother of Mrs. Donah} (Lola) Beleck Sr., Mrs. Velma Garcia, Jerry and Robert Scribner. Funeral service wlH be held Saturday, January 4, at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntooa Funeral Home with Rev. Harvey Hofner officiating. Interment in White ChapM Cemetery. Mr. Scribner will lie in state at the funeral home. RILEY, CHARLES; December 31, 1968 ; 9715 Mandon, White Lake Tovmship; age 7 6; beloved husband of Mabel Riley;.dear father of Mrs. Frank Buffa, Mrs. William Lewis, Irma Rothwell and Elaine Gray; dear brother of Mrs. Frank Kilroy; also survived by 12 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, January 3, at 11 a.m. at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Interment in Parkview Memorial Gardens. Mr. Riley will lie in state at the Rineral home. SCHNEIDER, ROBERT; December 31, 1968; 408 0 England Beach Road, White Lake Township; age 67; beloved husband of Pearl Schneider; dear brother of Mrs. Ruskin Lamb, Mrs. Fred Stuckey and Alfred Schneider. Funeral service will be held Saturday, January 4, at 1 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Interment in White Lake Cemetery. Mr. Schneider will lie in state at the funeral home. TOYCICH, ANNA; January 1, 1969 ; 26004 Fourth Street, Taylor (formerly of Pontiac); age 83; dear mother of Mrs. Robert (Eliz) Schneider, Adam and Andrew Psenak; dear sister of Andy Benja; also survived by four grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Voorhees-Siple Fungal Home. WALTON, GEORGE E.; December 31, 1968 ; 273 Fisher Street; age 40; dear father of Venola and Doreea Lynn Walton; dear brother of Mrs. Venola Walton, Mrs. Madelyn McCalpin, Mattie G. English, Mrs. Bessie M. Wiiliams, Mrs. Susie Jones Eubanks, Jerry and Grant Walton Jr. Masonic Hour of Sorrow will be Friday, at 8 p.m. at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Sunday, January 5, at 2 p.m. in Eutaw, Alabama. Mr. Walton will lie in state at the funeral home after 3 p.m. Friday. WILLIAMS, MARY B.; January 2, 1969 ; 5150 Cheyenne Street; age 59. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Holiday in Town Proves ^Washout POINT ARENA, Calif. (AP) This coastal town of 3,000 got Nixon's The Ont-By A Plurality In Tfiree-Way Presidential Race SAL’T LAKE CTTY (AP) -1 In the APs top 10 stories since Today is the 68th wedding anni-1965, in 1968 w|»s ranked sixth, versary of Mormon Church Soon after the year began the President David 0. McKay and Vietcong attacked Saigon. his wife. — w»ov« w,...... u,-— t,— ’The Tet (lunar new year) of- McKay, 96-year-old president jjggg ^ fensive Jan. 30-March 5 was the of the Church of Jesus Christ w vvwks collapsed and 150.000 Vletcong’s biggest of the war. Latter-Day Saints, gallons of water coursed down In the four weeks ending Feb. Emma Ray Riggs in the Salt j .sq gnti. 24, 1,829 American servicemen Lake Mormon Temple In 1901. Wednesday, were killed, more than the 1,636 * * ★ ★ * ★ killed during the first five years The couple has six living chll- a spokesman for the privately of U.S. Involvement in the war. dren, foUr ions and two daugh- owned system said th e30-yaer-tMrnnnniKnD nvAn ***■*' descen-1 old wooden tank buTst Under 1 5 RECORD FOR pEAu dents. ' |million .pounds pressure after Two weeks in „ May set They expected visits today:the lowest metal hoop parted, another record, for the highest from family members and close Damage from wetting and toll of American dead in any associates. I silting was minor. WARREN PLUMBING & HEATING WHOLESALER OPENS BRANCH IN OXFORD January 6, 1969 will mark the opening of fho H. L Claeys Cr Co. Broneh in Oxford, Michigan. Gonorol Manager A. J. McArter announced tno purchoso of fho formor Oxford Wholosolo Supply, lost July, ond sinco then hove been remods|tling, stocking dnd making gonorol proporotions nocoslory for tho opening on Jon. 6. H ... L. Claeys Moin Offices, Showroom ond Wore* house ore locotod ot 31239 Mound Rd., Worrtn, Mich., where they hove boon active sinco 1922. Company wheltMloi itrleMy IP tho Lieonsad Maitar PlMmboPt and Hatting ^^ontraetori, and it matt tcHva and Well iHppUta. 0>iford Address 795 S. Upttr Rd. 625-2666 Warren Address 31239 Mound Rd. 264.2561 TAYLOR, NINA HAUXWELL; January J, 1969; 11 Boston; age 82; dear mother of Mrs. Donald (Myrtle) Richardson, Mrs. Roy (Bernice) Barrett and Raymond Hauxwell; also survived by eight grandchildren and nine great-g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, January 4, at 1 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Eastlawn Cemetery. Mrs. Taylor will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) I" THl POyTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1069 Ir: oi>f Adft, .....VRmiH nCilVID lY S P.M. . AM^UILItHIOTHI rOUOWINO DAY.. ...M •n*n ihwW b* mimhM 1fcw*K>W»l»i •» M lotar {W« H»» Aw Mfwiitf |wWlY •>») tlm«k M will l» MMiM^ (ha to lantott. Tlia riaw aHimwt aa ia> •IxwdtillHy fci* a«ia« eHiar Jliaa ta tba thaMat iMi* jaMlaa al nt lint tawmaa al Iba aJaatotoa-maatWhMlI hoi Inaa iaal J??luCata.LaRaRa. nm, and lunch oniv. oosltlon,. 'fVdroom BABYSITTER,. MY l«MR. J™*cahf ?SuS«*Tu.t M ?.llSbto: Vobir’ yaar's. Oraytwt ^alnraVs-lSoo. ' ____________ wllh adaguata factllflas g^ WOMAN TO DO oHIea work, typa of wagea for right paraon. Can ar-' ------------------- • r^^^fbr knowladga of Invantoryl own trinsportatlon. FE 0.3947 altari also care for tamporary taml.ln- “ ----- • ygii^ wlfa_,_7_ a.m. to 3:30 p.m., I mant and goixl fringe banallts. range of fringa banallls. QUBlIfled Start tha Naw Yaar In the exciting parsons should contact, Dana Sd .................. who have ---------.. ------------ control procadurot, and production ________________, , tchfduling. Appticanti should have IaBY SITTER, IN MY homanivfl_ ________________________________________ al least 1 year’s axparlanea, in In or out, 3 children 2 school igs. MATURE PERSON, tor child care, these areas. Disposition offers an' 493-4971 altar a p.m. light houstkeaping, S days, attractive salary and. .a comMatglBABY sTtter WANfio to'livaln. Ralarancaa. Excallant salary. Vic-. 332-9573. nity Oakland University. 431.4172. work normally dona In or offica, Must ba high graduate. 4129 Highland Rd. WOMAN ^OR Hlghtani REPAIR I NO - tr* "'oIvlM TELEPHONE SOLICITORS, FULL ® or part lime. Work Irom ouri -J office. Salary plus commlnlon.| VP* “'i Call Mr. Bahn, 482-9470. ich«"|T AX CONSULTANT, exparly^ece ' necessary. Call altar 4 p.m, FE k-2297. t'lwna^, pl'yji}}'''’*' Moli^PemolE 8-A: WaTtPIsTwAnTBD FOR DAY ESTATE EXPLOSION" I !" **'S We have e future lor you In the 55Si.5*o«.2 *• "■ °‘’*'y'‘* •"'* Real Estata field that will wield you _ ___L _______ taarnlngs unlimited. We will consider WANTED FOUNTAIN HELP, full,full or Perl lima men provided you and part time, paid vacations,!meet our qualifications. w*,.wll holldaya, and birthdays. S. S.: teach you this exciting Held If Kreiges, 223 W. Maple. BIrm- necessary. Bonus arrangamenl._____________ r-^- I WARREN STOUT. REALTOR i home than wages, ti? baby"’sli*w*hh' MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE i 3 children. FE 2-7732. U50 N^Opdyke Rd._________FE 5-BI45 I AGGRESSIVE VOUNO’ SALESMAN . to cover vest retail territory on corhmission basis, for the sporting goods trade. Wa are manufacturers representatives lor e number ol manufeclures of line sporting floods products. We have opening or a few proven salesmen, tervlew by appi only^33S-3505 automation field. THE CROSS COMPANY 17801 E. 14 Milt Rd. Fraser, Mich. 48024 293-3000 Ext. 274 An Equel Opportunity Employer Holpital, ionliac Press Malllno Rgoih, and our many friends, itnghbors and relatives. Mrs. Marla Nichols and Children, Tom, Larry, Sue and Mika Electronic Technicians CONTROL DATA CORP. Needs Technical school graduates, or military equivalent with 0-3 yaars axparlanea, aa alactronlc technicians. Solid stato experience to essential. Current openinga In the checkout, quality assurance. In engineering areas. Soma trainee positions svallabis. Contact Gena Schulte, Rochastar Division, Contra. Data Corp. 1480 N. Rochester Rd., Rochester, Mich. 451-0810. An equal opportunity Employer. _ EARN tSbO A MONTH, and up, Service Station Attendant. No ax-parlenct needed. Paid Vacation, Closed Sundays, Holldavs, and evenings. 424-3887 or 424-2080. Schulte, Rochester DIvlalon, Con-trot Data Corp. 1410 N. Rochastor Rd., Rochester, Mkh. 451-8810. An equal opportunMy Employer.___ PORTER Used car dealer. Many benefits. Blue Cross. Vacalldn. Steady employment. Call Bob Martin. SUBURBAN OLDS 140 S. Woodward 447-5111 PORTER. FULL TIME mutt have referoncts, excellent working condition, paid vacation. Apply Sherman Drugs, 15 Mila and Lasher, Birmingham.___________ PART-TIME DISHWASHER, avtn-Ings, no axparlanea necessary. Inquire 2005 W. Maple Rd. Troy or 549-4920. RETIREES DAYS OR nights, for doorman, apply manager. Campus Theatre. BAKERY SALESWOMAN, 5-day weak, no evenings or Sundays, good pay, Anderson Bakery, 124 w. 14 Mile, Birmingham. Ml A71I4._ BOOKKEEPING EXPERIENCE OVER 30, relerance. 9-5. L9a Drugs, 4390 pixit Hwy. Drayton Plains. BEAUTICIAN, GOOD PAY^iood hours lor rollabla operator. Call FE 4-2878. » COUNTER GIRL FOR Dry Cleaning Plant. wlll train If necessary. Ap- ply Douglas Cleantrs, Woodward, Birmingham. “9% CASHIER-TYPING, answering phones, 5 day waak, call Mias Gerald. Ml 4-7200. JEiiMimmiits “AVON CALLING" FOR SERVICE IN YOUR HOME. FE 44)439. ' hall fob RENT. RECBPTK3NS, Mattings, partial. FB M314 aft. A .al:— mir^ SmJ CTaasTflcatlen' ia^A lie.— wt do our bast. Read ciassiflcat' flwn tea or'call Dabt Aid. to W. Huron larving Oakland County. Homa calls by appointments Help Wanted Male __________ WELL DRESSED MEN, 1 part and 1 full time, earn money for spare time, learn and train for top positions, with Alcoa. 391 1700. tS PER HOUR, axperlenced duct Installer and service man, time and W for ovtrtime. O'Brien Heat-Ing, FE ^29I9■_____________ A MANAGER'S TRAINEE UM par month while training. If you qualify, call FE 2-0219 or FE 2-2119, for completa datalla. Ago 21 to SO. TRY IT! OTHER FOLKS DO... Other folks moke money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS . If you haven't ... try one. Hundreds of 'others do... doilyl It pays... Birmingham. Approximately hours per week at $2.50 per hour. An equal opportunity employer. Call 444-3400. Lt. Kalbtlelsch._ Saolnaw ' EXPERIENCED TAILOR, for men's ROUTE SALESMAN, PONTIAC and aaginew, aai x.ioi9 - CASHIER DAYS OR nights, must ba 18 years old, apply In person, manager of Campus theatre. _ CLEANING GIRL FULL time. Glenn _______________________________Acres. 1255 W. Silver Bell Rd., RfTIPFFC I P°"***®- _________________ niilinccd 'child CARE, HOUSEKEEPER, 9-4, Active men are wanted to aarve as 5 days, own transportation. 473-4845 school crossing guards at various or 482-4429 locations and schools In tha City of MAIDS, FULL TIME, DAYS ond afternoons. Apply Housekeeping, Crittenton Hospital, Rochester. MEDICAL ASSISTANT .FOR doctor office, axparlancod. 482-0000.______ Hel|Mltfonted M. or F. ARE YOU REALLY living? Or lust oxlstlng? Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE 474-0343. _ I APPLICATIONS now being taken tor cashlert and concession help, .................. " I V a -1 n ARE YOU IN A Ritt? Call Foley. YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-0343. ARE YOU READY for the future? Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-0343. _ _ BREAKFAST ANO'~SHORT ordVr cooks. Excellent working conditions, top wages. Blue Cross. Apply Harvey's Colonial House, 5894 Dixie Hwy., Waterford. BOOKKEEPER ALWAYS LEADS ALWAYS seoo per month If you meet our minimum requirement!. ATTENTION!! St ~a.il.>., .lit,; ____ wallet and contents. Reply Pontiac! EXPERIENCED BODY MAN Press Box C-2, Pontiac. LOST: TWO GERMAN SHEPHERD dogs, reward. 474-1101, 474-0478. LOST: GERMAN POLICE dog, female, black with black and brown face, 3 years old, answers to "LUV" Pontiac License G-1755. Reward. 338-0103. LOST: VICINITY OF Clintonvilla and Mann Rds., black, white Baagla Cocker pup, chllds pat, 474-2044. ________________________ LOST MALE COLLIE, vicinity of University and Paddock. Child's pat. 335^772. LOST: BRITTANY SPANIEL, orange and white, Birmingham area Reward, 444-3953. LOST: (MAN'S GOLDEN watch, aligator band, vie. of Pontiac Mall, reward. Warren 772-5132. Auto Mechanic Auto and truck mechanics. Need 5 Permanent position In residential cessablt by I-7S and 14 mile road. An old established dealership In brand new facilities. Excallant fringa benefits, plenty of surplus business. Earnings unlimited. Con tact service manager, B11 McCullough. BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Mapit Rd. Troy, Mich Phone 442-7000 for Buick Bump shop. Lots of work, apply In parson to John Rustalllo, Body Shop ot 840 Oakland only Earn $400 to $1000 per month Exparlancad and ouallllad service station mechanic with management ability, must have own tools. 424- 3087 or 424-2000._______________ GAS STATION ATtENDENT, ax- Krlenced, mechanically Inclined :al raferencas, full or part time Gulf, Telegraph at Maple. GAS STATION. HELP wanted. Standard Service. Telegraph and Maple. GAS STATION ATTENDANT reliable, steady. 482-0410 attar i p.m. GRILL MAN AND ASSISTANT TD THE MANAGER vicinity, permanent with national . company,' free hospital and life Insurance, salt end family, " ' ............ Calient pension plan. Supervisory opportunity for qualified man, write Famous Foods Corporation, Sit 14 St., Detroit or call TY 7-5550, Mr. White, we will arrange an appointment at your convenience, experience not necessary but you must ba 21. Equal Opportunity Employer -RAPIDLY EXPANDING COMPANY NEEDS SALESMEN In rapidly expanding Industry. Phona 402-M70 Mr. Bahn Real Estate Classes Applications are now being taken tor Instruction classes in preparation for the real estate sale.smen's examination. Classes will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Contact Mr. Vf-iderhsrr at von Realty 3401 W. Huron or phone 482-5800.________ SEMI-TIRED MAN for laundry attendant, 4 p.m. to 11:30 p.m., Rochester area. 651-9802. For evening shift. Excellent wages and benefits. Good opportunity for ii-Dw,rc~T¥4Tir>ij AAsijArcb~iii advancement. Apply at Big Boy SERVICE STATION MANAGER, six Restaurant. Telegraph 8, Huron. 1 days. Excellent salary, benefits to ing home. Call Heritage Nursing Home. 447-4500. cook; light CLEANING, $75' weeks experienceds for 2 small children, other help, and benefits Live in# own room. References. 341-7153 N.W. Detroit. COOKS, CURB GIRLS waitresses, days and evenings. Super Chief, , 33^-^ST. COMBINED DISHWASHER AND .Salad Girl, full time, uniforms and meals ^rnlshed, paid Blue Cross, Westerner Beef Buffet, 4106 W Maple Rd., Birmingham. a2d*4767. COOK DRUG CLERKS MATURE, nfngs, Lake Center Drug, Orchard Lake Rd., Pontiac. DELICATESSEN COUNTER CLERK Company benefits, 40 hour week. Apply Delicatessan C/0 Montgomery ward's, Pontiac Mall. HUNDRED HEAD thoroughbred horse farm needs regular competent blacksmith services, one full day a weak. Must have experience In shoeing thoroughbred race horses. Redbob Forms, 1955 Ray Rd., Oxford, Mich. 428-1798. Needed at Oncel AUTO. BILLER New car dealership Rochester Area Soma Aufo axparlanea prafarrad, But Not Nacessaryl Call Mr. Derkaez For appointment__________451-5500 NEEDED AS SOON AS potslble - A Mature Lady for baby sitting and uwwim\i.li trv .... evDAkicinw di aus chndrar?*’’prSel-''*son?eoi^^^ Hv* *'**' experience In new Car yvE* F?ND IT NECESSARY TO In! fn O^TBaldvdn FE^-3154 * ''" dealership desired. Excellent working c^R^EASE -OUR PRESENT FULL —-----------------------------'conditions, good benefits. Send TIME STAFF I NURSES AIDES resume to. I F^nurslng horn. ll Pontiac. FE J^TIAC^PRESS B0)^C-4 \ N-jRil^DTsrEXPlR^^ENCED or BLOOD DONORS “ " I will train, all shifts, must have URGENTLY NEEDED °vr salespeople All RH Positive 87 50 OUR COMMISSION SCHEDULE Inn,Hr. . . *V® IS QUITE LIBERAL AND THERE 2805 W. Mapl. Rd Tra; oTjIto* glll.'S" ® ' _4M0._________________________I MICHIGAN COMMUNITY RN SUPERVISOR, 11 to 7 shm, ex-' BLOOD CENTER WE'RE ANTICIPATING A ce'lent salary and working con- In Pontiac FE 4-9947 RECORD YEAR IN 1969, SHARE IT ditlons. Mrs. Hyry, Avon Center, 1342 Wide Track Dr., w. WITH US Hospital, 651*9381_ Mon., FrI. 9*4 i ,| R E L I A B L E WOM A N FOR_________Tuts., Weo., Thurs. 10-5 i FOR A CONFIDENTIAL IN- COUPLE WANTED FWLiTllSi TERVIEW CALL DICK BRYAN, FE work, taking care ot 5 horses and 4-0921. mowing lawn, no farm work, I -------- furnished and sajary:| KAMPSEN REALTY INC. CLEANING WOMAN Must have own car, top pay for right gal, full time, some — .—- Ai; RH Neg. with positive weekends. Nursing Home. EM 3* PART-TIME SALAD GIRL, evenings, factors il2i. rio expcirnce necessary. Inquire A-nea.. B-neo.. AB-neo housawork^ 335-1679._ RETIREES Active Women are wanted to serve school crossing guards apartment __________ .. .k,—. »______ retorences required. 4 70 - 2 239',' various locations and schools in | the City of Birmingham. Ap- .................. proximately ten hours per week at $2.50 per hour. An_ equal " Kalbtlelsch. RECEPTIONIST Lika meeting people, attractive, well-groomed, pleasant voice, to handle phone and some general office work. Part time, 9 to 12 or 4 to 9. 482-8311. '3'SHWASHER wanted, morning shift, gwd working conditions, all fringe benefits, apply in person, T*rrjt^'s_Coontry Squire. 1474 W. Maple, Troy. EVENING _ PART-TIME WORK EARN OVER $200 PER MO. Local cleaning contractor now hir- _ Ing men and women who are'OR WILL TRAIN — FREE CLASSES available to work 5 hours a night,! tNe need help at our UNION LAKE ' week af office building! ®ffTe - 8800 Commerce Rd Also 107nw. Huron_______m-m 1 GOOD MAN OVER 40 for short trips surrounding Pontiac. Man we want Is worth up to $16,^ in year, plus ragutar cash bonus. Air mail G.B. Dickerson, P ra s .. Southwestern Petroleum Corp., Ft. Worth, Texas 76101.____ REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCl offee at our office at 3 3 0 0 0 ______________ _ _____ NORTHWESTERN HWY. naar RECEPTIONIST TO ANSWER phone in busy drug store, paid vacation,i ® C. SCHUETT LI 7-6560 excellent working condition. 3711 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 5 eves. _ ____ ________ located on Woodward Ave. tetweeni Birm>ngnam and Pontiac. experienced, dependable, man over DRUG STORE CLERKS, over 3 25 with local references. Bloom-j years, experienced p r e f e r r e d__________ feild Hills Pure, Square Lake atj evenings 5-10 p.m., and weekends SALES HELF^ Birm-; employed elsewhere. Apply daily—Northland Bldg. Main- tenance. 7600 Fenkel, Detroit or, cail 864-4811 between 12:30 p.m. SALESMAN 10 a.m. to 3 IMMEDIATE OPENING, for a young man, willing to learn the vending business. Must be neat and Kunctual hours 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., londay thru Friday. Paid Blue Cross and life Insurance. Ml 7-2050 or apply at 2975 W. Maple corner of Coolldge, Troy. ________ JANITORS, FULL OR part time, ianitorlal lobs open In the af-farnoon, Rochastar area. If you are Interested In Immediate work call Mr. Ford In Detroit at 875-7575. ADULTS, PART TIME, billiard raom and recreation sale. Must be personable. Apply In person, 12 noon to mid-nIght, 1442 S Telegraph, Walker's Cue Club._________ ADULTS, FULL TIME, billiard room and recreation sale. Must be personable. Apply In person, 12 noon to MId-nIght, 1442 S Telegraph. Walker's Cue Club. ARBY'S ROAST BEEF has openings for part-time counterman hours available 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. It a.m. to 5 p.m. Call Mr. Garry at 335-5675 between 9 to 11 a.m. or 2 to 4 p.m.___________________ AUTO BUMPER AUTO PAINTER MECHANIC ^loaf. Mana^r,'Wanted for progressive WlUson-Crissman Body Shop, N. Woodward, Royal Oak, JANITOR Part time Good working conditions. Paid Holidays. Transportation necessary. Janet Davis Cleaners. 647-3009 JANITORS PART-TIME MORNING LATHE MILL, AND shaper hands; surface ID and OD grinder hands. Steady 58 hour weak, all fringes. 334-4523. LABORERS, N O EXPERIENCE necessary; C02 MIg Welders, exp. nee., education no barrier, re quirements Include good work performance and reliability, axc. benefits provided: Steady Employment Good starting salary with opportunity for advancement Fair management policies Paid vacations, holidays and In turance Apply at: G 8. W Engineering Inc. 2501 Williams Dr„ Pontiac, Mich. 48055. An Equal Opportunity Employer TELEVISION TECHNICIAN RCA Has Immediate openings for qualified television technician. Applicant's with electronics schooling, military or vocational may apply RCA offers an outstanding benefit program Including company paid hospitalization, surgical m a I o r medical Insurance plan for you and your family, paid vacations, plus 9 palp holidays, for Personal Interview, visit our branch. Mon.-Sat., 9-5 or call 335-4118. 4895 Highland Rd. An Equal Opportunity Employar TRAINEES No txperienco necessary. Call Brltannlca. 338-9405 AUTOMOBILE SALESMEN NEEDED! -demo furnished -hospitalization —retirement plan —paid VACATION -REPUTABLE COMPANY —OPPORTUNITY TO ADVANCE —MOVING TO NEW FACILITIES TRAINING PROVIDED IF INEXPERIENCED It's quick, simple and productive. Just look around home, garage and^’ HUNTER DODGE your home, garage basement and list the many items that you no longer use. Hundreds of renders ore searching The Press's classified columns daily for {ust such articles. Perhaps the piggy bank itself would bring more than the change that It holds I Try it I YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID I Phone 332-8181 pSri BENCH ASSEMBLERS BENCH HANDS MACHINE BLDRS. JIG & FIXTURE BLDRS. TOOL MAKERS RADIO DRILL OPRS. LABORERS MACHINE HANDS dealership, good working difions, lots of benefits. Call FE 5-9436 Or apply in person. OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland MAN OVER 38 for factory work, simple arithmetic required, mechanical axparlanea desirable. Apply 217 Central, half block off S _^gjnaw St., Pontiac.___________ MECHANICALLY INCLINED, APPLY in person, Owen and Mowrey Inc., 289 Oakland, Milford._____ TEMPORARY Factory Jobs Light factory work. Press operators. Misc. labor of all kinds needed at once. Every Day Pay Day Report ready to work 4 a.m.-4 p.m. These Jobs Are Free We are an Equal Opportunity Employer And not an Employment Agency. EMPLOYERS car' Temp. Service, Inc. con- CLAWSON. 45 South Main REDFORD 26117 Grand River FERNDALE 2320 Hilton Rd. CENTERLINE _ 8541 E. 10 Mile TV TECHNICIAN FULL OR PART TIME experience in color preferred, top wages, paid vacation, apply In person 422 W. Huron, Sweet's Radio and Ap-pliance Inc. _____________ paFtTime.' Lea" bruoJ,'"4390''Dixie' ''"ng‘"’cond‘ifion, pald^vaMhons.^day: ""ffi" ‘^'1^ Is J«5sjn(L J-o®' Hwy.___ _ _ or night position available. Apply! ccta^-Jc '^RK RtAL DISHWASHERS FOR PRIVATE Sherman Drugs, 15 Mile andI CLUB, paid vacation, holidays,I Lasher, Birmingham. ^ck time. Blue Cross. Apply ti4 SHIRT FINISHER, good salary, and Orchard Lake, Pontiac.________insurance program. Birmingham EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, NO ^253 Woodward, If vou'n Income, 4101. nights, Sundays or holidays. Maple- Telegraph area. 642-5836.______ EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, Holly Elias Bros. Big Boy Restaurants NEEDS: Waitresses Curb Girls Tel-a-tray Operators For evening shifts. Apply at Telegraph & Huron and Dixie Hwy. 8$ Silver Lake Rd. EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR Here's your opportunity f o unlimited earnings in top professional field. Call Jim Steminger, 334-2471, Snelting & Snelling MECHANICS Can and trucks, also helpers. Ap. ply KEEGO SALES 8. SERVICE 3088 Orchard Laka Rd., Kaego Harbor. 482-3408. MOTEL PORTER, OVER 25, da- pendable, 338-404L___________ CLERK, over 25, MOTEL DESK dependable, 338-4041 ______ MILITARY EXEMPT FULL TIME help, position ss warehouseman-office trainee, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Excellent opportunity with national „ , ,, . ... firm for someone genuinely In-jNBlp Wonted rSmOle WE NEED TWO USED CAR CLEAN UP PORTERS, EXPERIENCED: Cdhtbct Richard, Grimaldi Imported Cars. 900 Oakland. WANTED: MEN 45 to 55 yean old for porter work. Day and evening shifts. Apply after 4 p.m. Big Boy Restaurant. 2490 Dixie'Hwy. YOUNG MAN, EXPERIENCED, to work with painting contractor. 473-2872. YEAR AROUND employment, large horse breeding and training farm. Opportunity to learn. Men for general care of horses and stables. Modern living quarters, available for single men. Redbob Fams, 1955 Ray Rd., Oxford, Mich. 428-1798. terested In his future. Call 852-1811 or apply In perran at Cadillac , coOK, FULL time, end part time 2364 Auburn Rd., Tenula's Restaurant opposite Pon. tiac General Hospital, corner Huron and Johnson. In person. Needed at Once! Young Aggressive Auto SolesmenI To fill our new car sales stall, who intends to earn top wages, hospllallzetion, profit sharing, fringe benefits Including Demo and BonusI Apply In person only, to Mr. Burmelster, GRIMALDI eUlCK-OPEL, Pontiac, 210 Days or nights, both shifts open, exc. rates and benefits. Apply: ARTCO INC. . 3020 Indianwood Rd.. Lake Orion PLASTERING, REPAIR, residential Guarantaad!^ Orchard Laka. BEAUTICIANS, GUARANTEED salary or good commission, all benefits, 887-9220 or 887-5875. EXPERIENCED COOK wanted for some preparing and some short order. Apply In person, Richardson Dairy, 7350 Highland Rd. Ask for manager or Mr. Richardson. EXP ERIENCED BOOKKEE'pEr; full time for busy office, apply 1015 W. Maple, Walled Lake. 4420. SWITCHBOARD OPERATORS, perienced part-time. Applicants must be able and willing to rotate shifts, work week-ends, and holidays. $2.18 per hr. plus shift differential. Apply In person, Pon-tlac General Personnel Dept. Stenos — Secretary Typist — Key Punch General Office Work STOCK MARKER High School graduate, age 18 to 22, ful Itime work In Birmingham. Ml 6-7101 for Interview. BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP 245 W, Maple_______Birmingham FREE CLASSES Men or women wanted. Earn while you learn. We have 8 offices, 200 salespeople who can't be wrong. Call today. MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 HOUSEPARENTS AT Flint YMCA Boys Farm, salary, apartment, meals. Blue Cj;os5._Call^^8021. IS YOUR INCOME Adequate?'Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE OR 4-8343. so In company school. $10,008 ,808 first year. Call 489-8740 RAY REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCED TYPIST, must ba fast, accurate, and dependable. Excellent starting salary. Write Pontiac Press Box C-14, giving TED'S Pontiac Mall Immediate opening for a grill cook. Excellent working hours. Na Sundays or holidays Hospitalization, llto Insurance and sick pay benefits. Apply In parson only. STENOS JOB WITH A future. Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-03M. LABORAT(3RY TECHNOLOGIST fo'r progressive 40 bed accredited hospital. Soma "on call" Salary 8-9000. Liberal personnel policy. Call J. Crary, Administrator, Hubbard Hospital, Bad Axe, Mich. LIMOUSINE DRivE'RS 'wantedT'Must be 25 and older. $150 a week. FE 2-9KS or FE 2-9144.____________ LABORATORY TECHNICIAN. College uegree or equivalent training In Chemistry, Biology, Biochemistry preferred. Oakland Unlver-sity, 336-7211, ext. 2380 or 2345. NEED SOMEONE telephones and make appointments. Call after 4 p.m. FE 8-2297.________ PART TIME WAITRESS, barmaid and bartender. 332-7111, 473 West Kennett, Charlie Brown Sing Long_______ Salespeople REAL ESTATE Beautiful Spacious OFFICE Your Own Business Cards YOUR OWN DESK YOUR OWN PHONE LIBERAL COMMISSIONS Call Mr. Hackett HACKETT REALTY 363-7700 363-6703 363-5477 FULL TIME LPN, Glen Acres 1255 _ W. Sliver Bell/ Pontiac. i ^2 3055 GENERAL STORE, MAT Ull”E ------------------ reliable woman, sales and cash register experience preferred would consider training the right gal, full or part time available. Union Lake Drugs, 8050 Cooley Lake Rd., Union Lake. 363-4134. Temporary Work AMERICAN GIRL 725 S. Adams, B'ham. GRILL COOK Opening for a grill cook on the night shift. Willing to train, top rate of pay during training period. Free Blue Cross and Life Insurance. Vacation and holiday pay. Apply in person only. TED'S BLOOMFIH.D HILLS GIRLS — DO YOU anloy meeting the public? A short week with convenient hours, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. or 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.? If you are young, attractive, enthusiastic and have your own transportation, you can bacoma a PHDTOMATE In your area. PHDTOMATE UNIFORMS provided size 7-12, open Interview call Miss Gee, 14038 W. McNIehols, 1-273-1724. TEMPORARY Factory Jobs Light factory work, press operators, misc. labor of all kinds. Needed at once. Every Doy Pay Day Report ready to work 4 a.m.-4 p.m. These Jobs Are Free We are an Equal Opportunity Employer And not an Employnrrent Agency EMPLOYERS Temp. Service, Inc. Pharmacist Part time. Employee benefits Include: purchase discount, vacation pay and paid holidays. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's Pontiac Mall ,fnt|S2fn^.?|WELL ESTABLISHED Mlchlgar Ilnfments opening, for 2 salesmen one for local, one for out, of state, servicing, and selling a popular trading stamp program to; all types of reTall trade. G(K>d pay,| permanent future for those who quality. Reply In person only atj Main office, between 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. Lee Liebroder i Holden Red Stamps I 22040 Schoolcraft at Rockdale Detroit, Mich. 48223 I Should You MAKE AN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE NOW IS THE TIME Michigan Bell ■ Employment Agencies ADMITTING CLERK, NICE location axc. benefits, $318, call Kathy King, 332-9157. Assoclatas Personnel. Administrative Trainees $550 UP Excellent opportunities for young' men with top-notch companies.: Math oriented. Fee paid. | International Personnel ! 1860 S. Woodward B'ham. 642-8266 Soles Help Male-Female 8-A Sales Help Male-Female 8-A: CLAWSON REDFORD FERNDALE CENTERLINE 45 South Main 24117 Grand River 2328 Hilton Rd. _____8541 E. 18 Mile tNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY. M..D. Specialist Poqtlac area, needs receptionist, experienced preferred but willing to train. 5 days week. Weekends free. Send replies to Pontiac Press, Box C-5, Pontiac. WAITRESSES, 18 OR OVER, midnight shifts. Apply 575 South Hunter Blvd., Birmingham. 444-9757. Help Wanted M. or F. 8 Help Wanted M. or F. 8 all winter work. BRIDGEPORT MILL OPERATOR EXPERIMfNTAL SHEET METAL ZYGLO AND SHIPPING AND RECEIVING Benaflti'^ Include life Insurance, Blue Cross, liberal vacation, pension plan and advancement. ' McGREGOR MFG. CORP. 2785 W. Maple Rd. ' Troy Ml 4-3548 A HOSTESS AND ASS'T TO MANAGER Excellent opportunity (or young lady Interested In a career In restaurant supervision. Previous waitress experience preferred. We will train. Age 23 to 48. Apply of: BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 8, Huron PORTER For day or evening shift. Apply at Elias Big Boy Restaurant. Dixie Hwy. & Sliver Lake Rd. full time LADY OVER 25, we are expanding, openings for full time 1st or second shift. Earn while you learn, fringe benefits, piqasant surroundings, rotates Sunday 'and ho 11 d a y t, Apply In own handwriting, high school grad and must be able to SPELL. No canvassing. 12 So. Mill St„ Pontlac/ Mich. 48058. Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male BOVS, MORNING SHIFT, also dishwashers. Apply 575 S. Hiihler Blvd., Birminpham. 444-97S7. Carpenters Experienced Roughers Apartment projects In Pontiac araa, call 473^1291, days.. An equal ppportuqlty amployar._ CAREER OPENING t, man n*4d^ for new positions with .«M asMbltohod firm. 1750 month to itdrt with bonafits such as Company^ car, Inturanca, raflrafnaot and bdnusas. Call 674-$589, 8:80 a.mi.-f2 nodn Friday only. iROO, CL«(iK, adoitTIwaiv ofhar •WMiiM MO, avory third Sun. IlM. Mllli Pharmacy. Ml 4-S040. RAILROAD SWITCHMEN Outdoor work-various shifts and rest days. Minimum height 5'6". Experience not necessary — will train. Rate $3.4B per hour. Company benefits include free medical, surgical and hospital benefits, plus life insurance, paid holidays and vacations. Good retirement progrom. Apply in person at: Yard Office .Johnson Avenue and Roiiroad Pontiac, Mich. Between the Hours of B A.M. and 4 P.M. Mon. Thru Fri. GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD An Equal Opportunity Employer BENDIX A leader in the growing Numerical Control Industry has immediate openings fori ELECTRONIC TECHNICIANS 2 year grods. of Electronic Trode School. ^ CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVES Trade School plus experience; witling to trovel; possible relocation.' PRODUCT ENGINEERS BSEE-up to 5 yeo^ experience in logic design JUNIOR PROGRAMMERS BS in Math, Physics ol* Engineering; knowledge of Fortran. These positions offer steady, yeor-rouod employment in 0 dynamic industry; full range of employe benefits included. Coll for appointment John Steinmeyer, 272-3710, Ext. 217 Industrial Ckmtrols Division An tquil qtui Opporfunify emplayar ENROLL NOW In Our Winter Training Course CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE ENROLLMENT OF ITS 1969 .. . “TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN." Fundamental Salesmanship Preparation for Board Exams Real Estate Law* Appraising THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS STARTING FEB. 3RD. CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY CO., 377 S. TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 to 9 P.M. FpR INFORMATION ON ENROLLMENT PLEASE CONTACT MR. iJACK RALPH FE 8-7161 - W! A N T FAST R E S U L T ^ S ? , USB PRESS W A N T A D S 332 8 1 8 1 IiRUNI i TRAINItl, If-tt, •«-Mart, no ox^lonco nte., Mlory, UM Coll IP^ itr ond to worK up to ■-.KHpor, lomo *xp It, ....... iOOKK gonoroi M0 to itirt. Coll IPS 3J4-«JU bPAPTSMBlOriONfit ‘^hlgh ocliool or opllocit^ I’’*"]"#' •KC. otort njt oolorv ond bonot to. coil ______ DRIVER $7,000 TO START Phono Jock Porks, 134-24fl. Inoll-Ino ond SnolllnB, 'ihrgh school groduotoo, oldctricol or yri Pil PAID Will troln If you doilro to work wHh pooplo. ......... Adorns A Adotnt 447-MSO Doctor. hovo PH PAID OPPIcriMANAOeR Will troln, ooporlonco not nocos- sary. Ariama It Adimt M7U80 GAL FRIDAY This Is your chonco. tor citemont, vorloty ond fun — will train. WSO. Phillis Pogo 334-2471 Snolllni_____________________ BaCfRIDAY, typing, shorthond, no oxpl^nco noc., solary to $4,400 ner vr. Call IPS 334-4S71 IMMEDIATE PLACEMENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE POR 100 MEN AND 45 WOMEN Snelling & Snelling 334-2471____________ iNVENfoRT Control clerk. ofllco oxporlonct roquirod,. .salary to $425 a nsonth. Call IPS 334-4S71. KEY PUNCH Hava kay punch training? callent location and no axparlanca naedad. $303. Kay Roy, 334-2471 Snalling A Snalling, W«rk WantBd Molt THE PONTIAC PREsSS, THURSDAY, JANUARY a, 1969 small, roofing, additions. ® roc •"“"ions, garagas. 11 Mirtini and! PocoraHa|^ U^efittrtag psnsling, j... ........ ......spacious. JW'rs, lltonsod contractor. S4S ^CARPE¥fRY““ In tor lor ran Kllchons, basamanls, baths, ..*II?I _ lormico ••>yr vwiiiMM il|B, roloranoss. 473-1375. y*' R>E iTf“E R NJJPS work ot all kinds. Qarogs additions, roc. rooms, S t a t a Ooar?'’l“® workmanship, W$:|!Wj_Dlck Lynch. Work Wonted Female 12 ^•1 ironing. ONE day sarvico, Mrs, McCowan, FE 4-3847. SlSCRiTARI^AL WORK. ParsonoTliod Aoctalorlal Ssirvico, 332-4117. gilding Services-Suppliei 13 START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT WITH THE RIGHT BUILDING MATERIAL PRICES AT M, A. BENSON, LUMBER CO. AS IT HAS BEEN FOR OVER 47 YEARS "OCK SALT per 100 lbs ....$ 2 00 Calcium Chloride, per 100 lbs. $ 3.30 4x7 pre-flnlshed mahogany panel-l-iH ..$3.20 Wonttd Root letote\ 24-A January Sale Prices Now on ell clock fabrici, up to So pet. otf. Hava your old turnltura w ‘’wfl ff^iro*" for'ija! asilmata. Com'l, Upholatary. Tranipertotion 25 DRIVE NEW CADILLAC East, gas allowanca. FE 5-SIS*. homo - Wonted HeuiehoM Ooodr?? I PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. ' FE 5-7*32 HIGhist PRICES PAlb POR good furniture end eppliencee. Or whet have you? B & B AUaiON - ^ - hroudh yc ^•11 ui for an appreliel. VON REALTY REALTOR 3401 W. HURON 4I5-SM2, It buoy 442-5*00 CHRISTMA*~?|fi|.ONT FOR MY >, hi MLS W* DIkla Hwy. OR 3-2717 WILL BUY 6h sell your turnltura. Tyler's Auction, 4»5* Highland Road. 473-SS34 Wonted MiicellaneoMS 30 COPPER, BRASS, RADIATORS, oanaralort. C. Dlxtgn, OR 3-504*. Wonted Money 31 COINS, ALL U.S. AND Canadian silver coins, we else buy coin collections end accumulations. North Wood Coin Co. 23450 Woodward Ave,, Pleasant Rldga, Michigan. 547.7*15 ____ dhare Living Quarters 33 pre-fIniRhed mahogany panel- ....... .......... .........$ 3.65 Aluminum combination storm doors „ (P,fa. hung standard sizes only*2’4.*5 Basketball pack boards only * — $ 7.S0 MANAGER TRAINEE $5,500 TO START Phone Jim Stelnlnger, 334-2471, Credit AdvIsOrt SnelIIng A Snelling. 1Wxl4 wide, flberglas Insulation 140' roll....................... $ 4,79 Celling tile close-out per sq. ft $ .05 25 boxes 12x12 per sq. It. 30 boxes at 12x12Vi .. ....* .08 Cross ties, each .. ...... $3 so M. A. BENSON COMPANY Lumber and Builders Supplies 549 N. Saginaw PHONE: 334-2521 OPEN 8 to 5 — Saturdays to 12 A6ALE COLLEGE GPAD wanted to thare large taka apartment with same, 06^3782. MALE COLLEGE GRADUATE Will share his apartment on Lake Orion youno man $75 utllltiet IncI MY 3-1009, Wonted Real Estate 36 Manager trainees, fee paid, 21 up, no exp. nac., $4800 to start. Call IPS 334-W71. &FFICE manager and Trainee, lee paid, 21-30, no axp. nac., $7200 to start. Call IPS 334-1*71. IaLES trainees, 2I-30, soma college, $4,000 to start plus com-mTislon and car. Call IPS 334-4*71. SECRETARY Exctllant hour! and fringa baneflls are the key to this exciting |ob. $433. Lynn Tddd, fB44U71, Snelling and Snalling. IhTpPING clerk trainees, age $470. Can ItENO, fee paid. Good typing end shorthand, salary, $4,000 par yr. Call IPS ;U4-I*71. fbUNO TYPIST, nac. .......... NO experience Interesting work, deal with Eubllc, axe. starting salary and snefits. Call IPS 334-4*71. 16-A END WORRIES With A Payday Payment Let Debt-Aldr professional credit 1 MILLION M A SYNDICATE Having unllmitad fund* fo Invasl In ----............. -^ tha Raal psfaia flaid has tmpioyi to acqulra . .. thalr agtnt rasldantlal hotna. Commarclal proparty, land contracts acraaga. May wa suggast that btlora you lift your prqparty you contact Von Raally tor a cash sala, Tha lyndlcala wants properly now. If you have to move test or do not Ilk# prospects going through your FAMILY: a nica homa, liavs cash or largo down 'paymant for your home.Tkganf, 474-4104, FOR 'auicK ’ CASfT"smart paopla ' It pays to call — Apant ■■ CASH 4|»artnwnH, Unfarnl^ed IS .......... stovg, rafrigarstor . ufllltlaa furnlshM. S32.io par «*k., inquirs TtoliarbacS's *Au(o Pariah jaldwin Avs.^ call 31*::^. BIDRO&M LOWfeR, Wast Side. Stove, refrigerator, utlllllas and ^rapa Includad, $200 par mo. 401- "smaLl Ab'OMl and~6ath, uppsr, ' ranga and ralrlg.,_ prlvata Sale Haiieae ___________4f 2 BEDROOM RANCH . NIca locaflen, largo IWIm room, utiiny raom, gsrtgt find carport. ATTRACTIVE HOME j badroom^jsw living room and “'TTattley’ realty haatRd, . ... sniranca on Putnam $1., $lo month. Raply Pontiac Prass Box C-Ts. Pontiac Michigan. _ _ r ROOMS, B'ATH, oaraM, matura worklngj^pla mly. 402-4105. "room VP'PBC 014d"pfus dawiil. 5 room lowar. $150 plus dtp. Hast jsnd hot watar turn. 402-0417. _ “AMEmCAN^ERltAGE APARTMENTS jayalleble toon. 473-5141. Garden Court Apartments unit For you Interest In lend conireci cash to your mortgsgejiM bedroom apli., 17-2 bedroom opts., SISLOCK & KENT. INC. ™no carpeting balance. Sale Heueee 4f GOOD CREDIT? t all thtls naaofd on this 5 ranch with full bttamtnl, 2 lus That' room car gartga, naw fufntca, carpeting. Ownera_agtnt, 474-1 HAROLD R l^NKSr Realty WESTWIND MANOR SUB. «?.. CpMMiaCi _.3^1 I BEDROSm RASKhTTSIi ecres, 2Vi III# bath, finithad baiamani and racraation room, 2 firaplacat. carpatad and draparlat Wcludad I32,*00 cash to morlgaea. OR 3 _5I34.___________ __________ 3 BEDROOM Cloting cotta of approximately $aOo will movo qualified vataran into this brand naw Sbtdroom ranch In tha country ntar Clarkston. Homs Is complota with Iniulalsd windows, larga kltchsn-dlnlng ares, both with double vanity, hardwood floors, gas hast and Immaditia pottasslon. Call noW for appt. — $I4,*00, VA farms. MENZIES REAL EStATE from SI4S 9jjg m.l. Man, Uom $145] Office: 425-5405 Carpatad 02xf45' corner lof wlthfn walking distance to Union Lake shopping I26f500, mortgage terms. Everett Cummings, Reoltor 2SS3 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3200 343-71*1 i/es. 425-2424 309 Pontiac Stele Bank Bldg. 33*^5 1301 *2*4 , Agent. HAVE A purchaser WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT 474-14*$ INVESTOR WANTS HOMES — any condition, any location. Top dollar, _4234104._______________________ INVESTOR WISHES OR dtsTrat f buy acraaga, farm land or com merclel zone proparty. S37-*000. INVESTOR WANTS HOUSES oi apartment, Pontiac, Waterford area, land contract. 473-7*S4. LOTS WANTED AND DRAPES Stove, refrigerator, sir conditioning, garbage dliposal, hot water heal. IW Blocks from Pontiac Motor* l*1-1*S W. KENNETT ROAD FE 1-2734 __ 35*-5420 CLARKSTON CORNERS All elec. apt*. Beautiful — secluded -- no children. No Rtts. 105 Washington W. Clarkston or cell 434-1224. embassy" WEST SPACIOUS I- and 2-bedroom, S150 and $170. Mrs. Schultz. 474-0S4*. I to^J p.m. only. ' “ NEW APARTMENTS and 3 bedroom apartments, SI40 ^p. No children or pets allowed. Fireplace, carpeting, draperies, sir. Itloning, stove, refrigerator fur- ____id, plus all utllltlas except electricity. Call after 5 p.m. 474-3W. so ft. or longer, any location. Cash buyers. YORK 674-0363 LOTS—WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate cloting. REAL VALUE REALTY? 642-4220 counselors prov^e you with confidential money management service that has helped thousands solve their bill problems. Getting a big loan Is not the answer. You can't borrow yourself out of debt! Get the help you've been looking discussing your problems; Home Calls by Appointment DEBT-AID, Inc. 10 W. Huron FE 3-0181 Licensed 8. Bonded Serving Oakland County Cenvalescent-Narslng 21 PRIVATE HOME FOR elderly ladles,_ convalescing with nursing care. Call 4*3-8754, 425-2472. -r y- -r..v ^ M^ing and Trucking 22 y f ) ps A PRICE TO SUIT YOU. Hmvu mnrt ^ X L X JL. Dollars has been made available to us to purchase and assume land contracts, mortgages or t homes, lots or acreage outright. We will give you casn for your equIW. Our appraiser Is awaiting your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty 5440 Highland Rd. (M-5*) MLS Open »-* 474-2234 1 to 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdykt FE 54145 Urgently need for Immedlatg talel Pontiac Dally 'til 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH For homes anyplace In Oikland county. Money In 24 hours. Instructiens-Scheols 10 ATTENTION WOLVERINE SCHOOL Mich. Oldest Trade School ’•NIGHT SCHOOL 1400 W. FORT, DETROIT WO 34)4*2 A PRICE TO SUIT YOU. Heavy and light hauling basements and oarages cleaned end odd lobs. Call'WE BUY Painting and Decorating 23 4713 Dixie Hwy. WE TRADE FE 8-7174 1702 S. Te*egrapn ACREAGE, LOTS WANTED INTERIOR AND exterior painting,! In Oakland County. Immedlata also paper hanging, free estimates, cash. Private. 1-54M927, days. — RAY PAYS CASH FOR Homes ALL CASH iN 24 HRS. We accept 30 day listings Guaranteed sale 3 BEDROOM Brick an SCHRAM OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS 2 bedroom with full basement, aluminum siding, city sewer and water near schools. Closing cost only on FHA, quick possession. BUYING-SELLING-LOOKING-TELL IT TO 260,000 People With A Pontiac Press WANT AD Phone 332-8181 Large, tpaeleui 5 bgdtsgm, bgttt W, newly decoratM ttireughput. ROYER OXFORD OFPICi 2 FAMILY DUPLEX On Jotlyn In the Orion area, lot with lake privllagt.. badroomt on ooch ildo. Lai-gg utility oraot. Live on on# aldo —, . .. .. . for rant out th# other to pay your ^manti. Ttrmt tV*ult. Aik 3 APARTMENT INCOME walking dittanca of atort*. $l2,68o lull pries lltla . .. Tea with terms to suit. Needs little work, but tho right man can turn this Into a monoy makar. Ask tor 210 E. WE BUILD-TRADE PHONE: 628-2548 ROYER REALTY, INC. OXFORD OFFICE 123 8. Lapoor Rd. Lauinger 4'/2 ACRES 6 room housa plus car garaga. new Community Collaga and new shopping centar. This ona going fast at $25,500, terms. STISON LAKE RHODES INDIANWOOD LAKE, largo 4 bedroom home, IVk baths, living room with fireplace and wall to wall carpet, full besement, 2 car garage, 305' lake frontage. Scenic locatTon. Only $*3,500. Call today for details. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 8-2304 258 W/ Walton FE 5-4712 MULTIPLE LISTItCG SERVICE 10-1/5 acres on lake, $8,000. It acres on lake, $12JM0. 8-3/S oerM on lake, 110,080. MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE 3 level Capo Cod overlooking Isk*. 4 bedrooms, living room, 2 baths, kitchen, game room, carpatad. $27,500. Maka offar. WHITE LAKE AREA Not lakt front. 3Vk acraa ranch stylt, oldtr homa, breazaway, 2 car garage. 3 bedroom, llvlno room 20xa with natural atona fireplaca, kltchan 10x10, bathroom and full basament. Raducad for Immedlata sala from $23,400 to $21,*00. Terms. List With SCHRAM And Call the Von OPEN EVES. AND SUN. JOSLYN AVE. FE 5*471 4713 Dlxla Hwy. REALTOR MLS Serving Pontiac Area for 20 years RETIREE AND WIFE deilrat smaller home with basement In Waterford or Clarkston area. Agent. 474-4104.___________________ SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVE NINGS. FE 4-700.':. TRANSFERRED COUPLE WITH $5000 down desires 3bedroom home In Waterford area. Agent OR TRANSFERRED EXECUTIVE with ell cash wants 3 bedroom home In Pontiac, would like possession at soon as possible. Agent 474-4104. WANTED LOTS ACREAGE HOUSES In the Clarkston ares Clarkston Real Estate S854 S. Main Apartments, Furnished 37 Floor Sanding AA-l — B4K SNOWPLOWING, 2 trucks, reliable 33S-0044, 338-8445, _ 0^^332-5024. ___________________ ANYTIME DAY OR night. Commercial or residential. 338-0211. BEDROOM, 4 ROOM, Very pleasant, Drayton-Watertord area, utilities pal::, garage, lake privileges, no children, no pets ^50. 4^4-3^ after 4.__________ ' ROOMS adults. BY JOURNEYMEN Hornet, attics, basamants, garagas and any type concrete work. ' No Job to bio or to small." You get estimate — we're on the lob. MIRACLE MODERNIZATION 335-1218 SaRPENTRY .AND CEMENT work, free astlmatas. 052-5252,____________ HEINRICH, TUISKU, HIBBLIN, INC. Wa are looking for work, all phases of rtmodeling, no lob too imatl or too large. Spaclallzlng In rc»m additions, rK. roomt, kitchen remodeling, aluminum patio encioturaa. Wa do all, work oursalvat. Phona day or night, ni----------1-.. . .. VVt 9«tTWae f-fWIIW MVV W* 3*27, 349-57I4 or 34W144. Ing, roofing, gutter. FE 4-51 INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens paneling, 40 yeara experience, FE R. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing. FE 5-05*2, Floor Tiling CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING, LI-noleum, formlaca, tile. Carpeting. 741 N. Perry. 338-4120. Home Repair ALL AROUND home repair, free estimate*, OR 3-2835._________________ ’ Lumber TALBOTT LUMBER Gl*s$ service, wood or aluminum. Buljdlni^^ and Hardward Moving, Storage CLARKSTON ROOFING. SNOW PLOWING. 673-9297 673-9297 A 8. R SNOW PLOWING, light hauling, residential, commercial, 24 hr. service. Rochester, 651-1674 or 651-6536. Tree Trimming Service A-1 TREE SERVICE, stumps removed free If we take down the tree, tree estimates. 334-904*. EXPERT TREE SERVICE and stump removal. 473-74*1, aft. 4 p.m. _______________________________ SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving Trucking specialists. FE 4-4844. '^KITCHENS, MODIFIED OR Modarnized" Formica counter topi end cabinets, Ull 2-1024.________________________________________________ Carpeting CARPET INSTALLATION. ALSO good buys carpet. 423-1285.___ Cement Work BLOCK AND CEMENT work. Pon-Mac. 3*1-1173.____________ BRICK FRONTS, STONE Work. Chimney rtpalr. Povt, MY 3-8014. COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL i residential. Bloek and cement OUlNN'r<:5NST. CO. 334-7477 or 391-2471 FIRE PLACES. EX C ELLEN workmanship. Written guarantee. EM 3-487*. Dreiimaktng, Tailoring ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT dretsoe, tgathor coots. 0S2-*533. Tetty JO'S drossmiklno,^ tlons bhd woddlnet. 47447M. altera. Driven Training APPROVED AUTO DRIVING iChOOl, FE 8-*444. Free tietiw pickup. Drywall dry wall, old and new ... Ql— _8uT*nta^. Bry_wALU new and repair. UL 3 6rV ifeALL w6rK, COMPLiifir ' 425-2S4i Eaveitrauglilng M & S 9UTTER CO. . LICENSBD-iDNDED Compiala aavattrouihino laralco Free att. 473-4U4, *73-5442 Piano Tuning PIANO TUNING REPAIRING _ OSCAR SCHMIDT________ Painting and Decorating v-i painting Work guaranteed. Free estimates. 482-0420 A-l PAINTING AND paper HANGING THOMPSON________ FE 4-8344 A-O.K. painting. Quality free estimates. 4*3-1207. work. QUALITY WORK ASSURED Paint- ing; Papering. Wall Washing. 473-2872 or 474-1*4*. Pinstering Service PLASTERING, NEW )™jk „ » fret estimates. 343-5407. patching. Plumbing & Heating CONDRA PLUMBING & HEATING Sewer, water lines — FE 8-0443.__ L PLUMBING AND HEATING, let George do It. 473-0377. GAS FURNACE, average ..... ASH Sales. 425-1501 er 674-4341. $5*5. Restaurants BIG BOV DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT Silver Lake — Telegraph et Huron. Reding AA HOT TAR^Inj L. J. Price, FE 2-lir Installed by HOT TAR BUILT-UF fpoflne. estimates. Robert Price Roofing „334±024i_..^^ NEVy rDofs - SgerdarinI Sarvica tVPINO, SHORTHAND, Notary, mimeographing, 312-4117. BEDROOM. INQUIRE at 208 N _Joh^son._____________________ ROOMS AND BATH, close f< downtown, prefer 1 men. 332-4244. EXECUTIVE 3 OR 4 bedrooms. Immediate occupancy, excellent condition, Rochester wl-07S6. UTICA, 3 BEDROOMS, family room, r/i baths, $225 mo., includes all utilities. 549-0853. ■ Rent Reams 42 I ROOM IN MY HOME, kitchen privileges, reasonable. Drayton area. 674-2660, before 3 p.m. ATTRACTIVE FURNISHED ROOMS for men, Pontiac area, $12 per wk., OR 3-453* or EM 3-2S44. ATTRACTIVE ROOM FOR girl or lady, home privileges. 338-7120 or 332-537*. LOVELY ROOM FOR professional man. 543 W. Huron. FE 3-7111 nice SLEEPING ROOM, for man only. 482-8778 after 5:30 p.m. SLEEPING ROOM, private bath and entrance, prefer women, 20 Norton sleeping ROOA4, CLOSE In Mall 334-2182. VERY ATTRACTIVE ROOM for refined Gentleman. OR 3-753*. Reems with Beard 43 HOME cooked PRIVATE ROOMS, FOR men, Ir nice clean, west side home Shower. Good Southern Cooking. FE 8-3338._________________________ ROOM, BOARD and laundry for unemployable persons, 3 excellent or 5182. 2 ROOMS. YEAR-Round cabin, on Watkins Lake, paneled, utilities furnished, adults, no pets, $135 mo. Security deposit and lease. 473-807*. 3 ROOMS, CLOSE TO Downtdwn for working girl or couple. 451-1728, R(X>MS AND BATH, In country, adults, 428-2013. 3 BEDROOM, UTILITIES and parking turn. Idaal for Working girls. FE 2-3484. I ROOM APARTMENT newly decorated newly furnished. 1 Infant welcome, utilities Includsd, from $30 a week deposit from $75. S3. Mechanic St. Drayton Plains. AND 4 ROOMS, newly decorated, new furniture, from $30 a week, from $75 deposit, 1 Infant welcome. Call between 10 e.m. and 8 p.m. _____________ __________________ 335-2136 A PRICE TO SUIT you. HOBvy snd 5 poftAAt*' Awn pTatu iTtiTifiiiw Baserrtents «nd ^JND utilities light hauling. garages cleaned and ooo loos. l: anytime, free estimates. 334-904*. HAULING AND RUBBISH. Namt your price. Anytime. FE 8-00*5. REASONABLE LIGHT HAULING OF ANY KIND. Odd lobs. FE 4-2347. LIGHT HAULING OF ANY KIND. odd lobs. FE 4-2347. LIGHT HAULING and MOVING, of any kind, reas. 334-8*87. LIGHT HAULING. BASEM^NtS garages cleaned. 474-1242. LIGHT AND HEAVV TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and gravel and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. __________ NEW PICK-UP TRUCK, will help move or deliver anything, also short trips, FE 4-2>74. days.________ ^^Truck ^wtol_ Trucks to Rent Vi-Ton Pickups 1'/k-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD. _ FE 4-0441 ^ Pe 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday Wall Cltanors BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANE Wain cleaned. Rear _Satnffctlan itw. Inaured. PB f-1431. guerenti Wall Drilling 2" WELL DRILLING, POINTS changed end pump* serviced, UL M83f. _____________ 3 ROOM u¥pER $135 FE 4-4404 3 ROOMS AND BATH, small baby welcome, $35 per week. $100 dep. Inquire 273 Baldwin Ave. Phone 338-4054. CLEAN, CARPETED, GOOD lOCB-tlon, for working couple, FE 8-8*24. EFFICIENCY APARTMENT WESTSIDE, all utilities paid, tec. dep., 338-4380. EFFICIENCY 2-ROOM, all Utilities furnishsd, good condition, from *50 deposit, rent $23.50 a weak. 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. call 334-3005.______________ LARGE APARTMENT, washer and dryer and telephone, private home. Black, no pets. Send replies to Pontiac Press Box C-l _____ LAKE ORION, MODERli rooms end bath, MY 3-1B0* LOVELY 1 BEDROOM. Baby welcome, dep. Ret. 332-S82r_ Rent Stores 46 LARGE AREA, PLENTY of parking, reas. rates by the year. MICHEALS REALTY 627-3840 627-2825 Rent Office Space 47 SEPARATE OFFICES Open onto foyer. 3 office SPACES, HEAT, turn.. 4540 Dixie, OR 3-1355. light AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OF Rochestar'a finest and newest office and commercial center. Medical suites, general offict suites and commercial spaces. Plenty ot free parking. Phone 451-5553 or 451-45741 BRICK Beautiful 3-b*droom, lamlly room, den or office, dining room. Full basement, 2-car attached garage. Will contract or use equity on down. S2*,500. UNDERWOOD 625-2615 625-3125 Eves, or Sun. BY OWNER, NEAR Pontiac Motor area, 2 bedroom house, full base-mant, land contract, FE 2-3457. Y OWNER NORTH and, bedroom, garaoa, land contract ------ $3,000 $9,900, down. 338-1042. BY OWNER GOLP Manor house, bedrooms — family room — baths — gas heat — garage — many extras. Priced to sell fast, 363-3951. _________________________ Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 CHEAPER THAN RENTING! 5-room ranch, full basement, gas heat, full payment only $84.00 par month. Cali: YORK WE BUY WE TRADE FE 8-7176 OR 4-0343 1702 S._Jelegraph__4713 Dixie Hwy OlOSE TO SCHOOLS AND FISHER BODY a 3 bedroom ranch with wall to wall carpeting In living room and new floor In kitchen, "0" down will move you In. *15,000 FHA CALL RAY TODAY 474-4101 RAY P-33 DIXIE LAKE FRONT . Almost an acre — attractive bedroom ranch homa with 2 car attached garage and Income apartment to rant. Garden and fruit. Immediate possession. Hur* ryl El wood Realty. 682-2410. Lease RENTING INDIVIDUAL OFFICES OR suites available on busy M-5*. Exctllent parking end sign facilities. Call Joe Anderson, 482-9000 or inquire 388) Highland Rd., Pontiac. PRIVATE OFFICE WITH reception room. WILLIS ,M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 724 RIker Bldg. FE 4-5181 Eves, and Sundays_____________M2-2073 Rent Business Property 47-A SOXSiy BUILDING WITH LOTS of parking. W. Huron. FE 3-7948. 3441 SQ. FT., building 40x91, parking, zoned M-1. 1400 mo. 10 day possession. Located at 1300 Crescent Lk. Rd. OR 4-3547. Apartments, Unfttrnished 38 1 BEDROOM DUPLEX. Adults. $110 _mo. 420-1800. _______ 2 area. BEDROOM yyiTH garagt, Oxford aria, call after 5 p.m. OA 0-1430. Want Ads ARE FAMOUS FOR 'ACTION" Apartments, Unfurnisiied 38 Apartments, Untarnished 38 $78 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance $10 Depbsit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEOROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. or come to 2*0 W. Kannttl Near Baldwlr, REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 IRWIN NORTH SIDE This Is on* of th* finest homes In the north end of Pontiac. 3-bedroom brIcK bungalow, with carpeting, breezewav and attached garage situated on 2 loti. RANCHES COLONIALS TRI-LEVELS 3 and 4 Bedrooms 1, l'/2 and 2'/2 Baths Priced from $14,300 to *30,800 plus lot. Have a naw home built on your lot or ours. Financing available. j. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 363-4604 10735 Highland Rd. (M-5*) ST. MIKE'S In thia 3 bedroom brick, ran^ living room, formal dinine raem, kltchan. 2 car garag* *M a fnnt terrac*. Built for graciMa ilvlh^ Terms or trad*. UNIOI^LAKE PRIVILEGES - Go with this 3-b*droom aluminum ranch, full basement, hot water heat, plus 1W baths, large custom kitchen, separate dining area, $23,500 total price. 10 per cent down. Don't welt on this onel USE YOUR ;LOT — ** down payment on this new 3-l^room aluminum ranch with full baia-mant, thermo window* ineni, iiterinv With screens. Only *1S,*50 eomplM* on your lot or will build on aur lot. %ALT()R.. ’IJLIV nWT* ^ 62$*411$ Op«i> Daily M, tat. M PONTIAC-WATERFORD AREA Brick ranch horn*. FIraplac* In living room, dining room hai glass pansisd door wall te outside, kitchen with bulif-lns, } bedrooms, 2 baths. 2 car garag* on > s big, big lot. Term* or trade. BIG SILVER LAKE Prlvilagas. 1 bedroom trt-lovol brick and *tumliwm< living roim, dining room, knctian and family room wtth^ialac*. m Batha, tinlsMa,^*mr i ear gorago. Terms er trad*. AVON REALTY )L -'.i THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2. 19HD ifAUTIFUlLY lANDSCAPED lOT SriKS'*'’ ****** 4-rAom liom* In , " Ml on* floor, firaploc* In L your ifMifIMlIon*, |1,n0 Down on lond Contract * #004 tfontr homo In Huron irSmit ^iy.o* mm to odd w, Mmmunny «y*C ontranco, Sjlehm with all colordd bullt-mi, dInInB room with balcony, lunkon family room with flropldco, 4 badroomi ai^ SVS tethi. Walkout biaomont and ga* noai. Still llm* to choot* your own color* If In-loroiiod. FHA OR 61 SPECIAL Somoon* It patting up an oxcollant Mlua In ihlt 4-bodfOom S bath horn* and all In axeollont condition. Hat gat haat and S«ar garag*. Extra raar ftncod lot for gardtn or play. 343 S. Jotila St. Only SI4,«I0 on FHA with S4Si down pkit cotta or eottt only to Gl votorin. JOHN KINZLER, Rcoltor Dlxlo Hwy. S3S-M3S •*p|o Llttlng Sorvico Opon t-y FE 5-8183 STRUBLE WE TRADE ' JUST LISTED Hoar Orchard L*k* Country Club • On a tacludtd tlraat It thit L bad room, fully carpofod ranch with auch faaturat at; two nrapltcat, laMNMf II KIrCMIl Witfl troV# 9fNl WATERFORD AREA Thrao-badroom ranch bungalow. Carpoted living and dining araa. Kllthen. Lsrga family room, Batamont. Gat HA heat. At, tachad 3-car garagt. Extraa. Excallant ntlghMrhood. Early poatatilon. EAST SIDE RANCH Thraa-badroom bungalow. Lt and dining araa. Kitchen, baiamant. Racreatlon room. Gas HA heal. Newly decoratad. Va cant. Easy farms. WEST SIDE Four-badroom two-story oldor homo. Living ond dining rooms KItchon. Full basomont. Gas HA haat. Attached gorag*. Easy FHA ttrmi. Ev*. coll Mr. ALTON 473-4130 Nicholie 8, Harger Co. Sm W. Huron SL____ FE 5-8113 "BUD // I thb tar only SlldM. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP Hop* I* a S^adroom •• aluminum !sa«rB!isr,:«s;.is woaWMif. hiring slate eotPollnB fhfpughput . e bath plus % bath in maatar oodroom, atov# i nfHgarator and aulomatl dithwathar. Alta Includes gat hot wator heat and alum, aform wln-| ;towt and daort. All this on your l« tar only il»,7M. We can or-' rang# any kind of financing. taaftar mls ns Highland Rd. (M-Stl Naxt to Franks Nursery i 674-3175 I NORTHERN HIGH AREA S-bedroom ranch home, attached ^car garage. Sparkling whit* aluminum siding, custom built In 1(44. oxcollant condition. Carpeting and drapes, largo fomlly room, kitchen and full dining room combination. Dishwasher, stove, washer and dryer. Full basement, dandy racreatlon room, odditlenal guest bodroonn, m baths, oat heat, large lot, loox ISO. t^lona tanclng, double ^cklop driveway. Value priced, SSSJOIMXL terms. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION North End 3-bedroom, IVIhstary hpim, large unfinished upstairs. Frushour REALTOR • WE TRADE WATERFORD AREA READY PdR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY in this dandy 3 • bedroom with cerpotod living room, I'-Vcar jarago. soiling for S13,SOO. SEE IT TODAY. BRICK RANCHER SHARP 3-BEDROOM, has wall to wall carpeting, ovorslied swear garage, fenced yard and large lot. tlS,^ Is fh* price, end w* will taka YOUR HOME IN ON TRADE. START 1969' RIGHT BY BECOMING THE PROUD OWNER of this brand new 3-bedroom brick ranch with family room, firoploca, lovely bath, plus W bath, 2-car attached garag*, located b a t w a a n Clarkston and Drayton Plains ond soiling tor S2t,900. Wo will buy your homo and — YOU CAN MOVE IN — NO WAITINO. MLS 674-4161 674-2245 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RO. Sab Hvvm 49 INCOME-LAKE ORION 3-famlly Ineoma in axeallant eon-dltlon, full basamant, gas haat. Baraga, lake trontago, Tand eon-tract farms. Call; YORK WE BUY F6 1-7174 1703 S, Tilagraph WE TRADE OR 4-0343 4713 Dixie Hwy. BRIAN WE TRADE DOCTOR ...??? LAWYER ...??? DENTIST ...??? Or any pretasslonsi man. Wa Invito your Inspection of this lake front summer or year around home on Oakland Lake lust N. of Pontiac. Footuros 3 bedrooms, filcluro window In living room with Ireplact, large kitchen. In the basement you'll ontortain with bar and extra kitchen and another fireplace. Also has 3-car garaga and Blum, siding, neat as a pm. Listed exclusively and priced reesonably. BIG But not too big to tit your pocket-book. A smell down payment and and only $97.23 per month will move you Into this 3-badraom, 2T FOR THE MONEY AT only”23,900. DO YOU WANT IT SOLDI OR JUST USTED3 Tired of waiting and hoping? Wo need more P™P*ity tar y reesoni WE'RE OUT - and we're out for a reasoni WE SELL ITI For action In your transaction call ' u ,i»'L3“»'l*l«l.“ta>Paoples-Emerv Butler, Donna Gooden, Ken Hell, Bob Hermll, Olela Howard, Dick Biyan, Leo Kampsen, Ellaan Moyer, Elalna Smith, Lao Bogart or 6ava Bradley. FE 4-0921 673-0989 1071 W. HURON ST. AFTER 8 P.M. CALL IF YOU LIKE EXTRAS silver Lake Estates has a 9-month-old, 3-bedroom brick home, family room with fireplace, V/t baths, I'.'i-car garage, dining area with doorwall to large patio, kitchen with built-ins, garbage disposal, dishwasher, conveniently designed, large utility room with water softener. This home is carpeted throughout. Priced low for this area, $34,9M. WE TRADE. WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT 2- bedroom home, carpeted throughout, even kitchen. Cozy and convanlant, stairs lead Into water area with lovely dock end raft. 116-car garage, a bargain you won't get next summtr at $22,900. CALL TODAY about our guarantaa program. OXFORD AREA 3- bcdroom home built Ilka a brick, large living room, kitchen and util room, 2-car garage on a 200' deep lot. Price $15,100. FHA or ' terms. CALL TODAY. Bill Eostham, Realtor WATERFORD PLAZA 5920 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) MLS 674-3126 335-7900 ARRO #11 » ONLY $850 DOWN PLUS Cp^S will move you Into this oil brick family home. 3 bed-rpoms, 2 taWs, full basement, and a 2 car garage should do for ' starters, while the fenced yard, gas haat, paved street, city water and aaimrs leaves little more to bo desired. CALL NOWll #U SOLID COMFORT I CITY RANCHER located In the northern part of city with aasy acceu to all schools and shopping centers. Drapes, carpeting, and aluminum storms are Included, and BEST OF ALL—you can *37 WEST SIDE FOUR BEDROOMS and 2 full baths are Included In this brick "English Tudor" home. 3 fireplaces, formal dining room, carpeting, drapes, gas heat, 2 car garage and full basement, are lust a tew of The many additional extras to be found In this lovely custom-atyled hpitie. Priced at lust 127,500 you can't afford NOT to own Itl CALL NOWll TOO MUCH MONTH LEFT AT THE END OP THE m6neyt Than batter Invastlgat# this 5 room bungalow. Located on the east side, with full basement, gas heat, and a dining noom. Priced to sell on Gl terms at only $7,300 totti priCB/ witli NOTHING DOWN, |ust doting cbi^t to pa^. Moko your oppointfnont NOW 11 *9* . THETRI TO BUYI In the Village of Sylvan Lake, this S bedroom brick trl-iKT and has a family room, V/t baths, carpeting tavel I* only S vaai anddrapas. situated on a fenced and landtcaped lot with lake orlvll^f oh Sylvan Lake. Ve^ reasonably pricad'for a lovely home Ilk* niTs In this particular area. CALL NOW for appointment I NEW MODELS OXPORO/ORION RANCHER: 3 bedrooms, 1W baths, family room with fireplace, custom-built kitchen, full basement, sealed-glass windows, 3 car atlachad garagt, and many extra features. M-24, lust north of DralHier Jtd. (between Orion and Oxford) OPEN SAT. Ii SUN. 1-S p.m. and athar times by appolntmsnt. KEYLON RANCHfR AND TRI-LEVEL: 3 bedrooms, 1lwf OflPL tlWJrVp II the additional customized features • HOMES. Corner ot West Huron A SUN. 2-5 p.m. or by appointment. CUiaKSTOlI ■ ■ «»#n UNION LAKE 343-41/1 ^ PONTIAC S. mEGRAPH Margaret E. McCullough REALTOR Jack was nimble. Jack was quick He bought from ARRO And had his Pick. UNION LAKE FRONT This (s a gorgeous lake front lot with trees and a hill down to the lake. Incidentally there Is e 2-bedroom cottage with living room, dining room, kitchen and glassed-in front porch with gas heat, that goes with It. Call for details. SPACIOUS CORNER LOT ! In Elizabeth Lake estates. City} water, lake privileges. Call for details. We also have several other choice building sites. PHONE: 682-2211 5135 CasS'Ellzabeth Road MLS__________________Opan Dally Mi H>6 ZERO DOWN For this cute 2-bedroom bungalow In West Bloomflald Township, lake privileges, large family room dona In knotty pine, private beach tacllltlas, aluminum storm* and screens, full price $12,900, nothing down to GIs. R-33 A PEACEFUL SETTING Tht horn* for antertainlngl This 3-bedroom ranch home in Waterford Is priced to sell at $34,950. It has a lovely finished recreation room, lust right tor those holiday parties. Large fenced lot, attached 2-car garage, lake privileges, formal I dining room, carpet and drapes' included. Conventional terms or land contract terms available. Call now for details. YOU CAN TRADE. R-14 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 3-bedroom brick ranch home, full basement and recreation room, attached 2'6-ca? garage, paved street end drive, large lot, gas heat, aluminum storms and acroans, most furniture — freezer end stove are included. Vacant, so call now lor your appointment. FHA terms avallabla. 1 MILLION Dollars have been made available to us to purchase and assuma land contracts, mortgages or buy homes, lots or acreage outright. We will give you cash for your equity. Our appraiser Is awaiting your call. R-38 P|0PLE WHO SHOP AT McCullough "Don't know ANY BETTER" and a Better Buy Is hard to be found than this Z-bedroom Brick Ranch home,, with 1V4 baths, 2-car garage, alum, storms and screens, paved street and drive, large fenced suburban tot for Term* or will trad*. R-10 MODELS Stvaral recently completed homes. In the Waterford, White Lake and Commerce areas, are available for. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Included «ra trHevels, colonials, and ranches, and various designs, priced from $15,990 call now for an appointment to see a new home, for the coming new year, we will duplicate these homes on your lot, easy terms or let's trade your present home In, on a new home for the family. McCullough Realty, Inc. 5440 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) 474-2236_______ REALTOR • NsLsrNI4.lM.TM.I«ILLaAaR "Let’s find some art where we can tell whether or not the pictures are upside down! ’ ’ Sale Housei 49 A&G $22,900 COMPLETE Sole Houses 49 O'NOL why NOT TRADE? Solo Houses 49 PONTIAC OFFERS an oldtr hem* that has baan c o m p 19 I a y redecoretad and^ T*'*'”**!*®.?*!..!!' Side. Has J bedroemi, lull base-mant, new furnace, new wit.no, Sole Forms S6 9-ROOM HOUSO AND large barn, garaga, part ally turnlihad, ClarkiTon •re*. tondIMon, many axtrai. $48,900 -112.000 down — Sheldon $25 MS7, 104' FRONTAGE, Orchard Lak* Rd. In Keege Harbor zoned lor llohl msnulacturlng. 133' Ifonlao*. Dixie Hwy. In Watorlord, commercl*!. K. L. TEMPLETON, Reoltor 2339 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 4820900 187000 'square feet commercial building. Ideally located In city Sales, menutecturlng, warehousing, zone Induilrlel. by ovfner, FE 4. 9587. ____________ 1969 SPECIAL X^^nr lIS!?*, )5'hA. ’* *'1' CALL RAY TODAY 474-4101 RAY ___________P-33 ROYER HOLLY OFFICE Start the New Year Right This cut* 3 bedroom brick ranch will be lust right this year and lor many years to come. Loaded with features that make It a onc*-in-a llletim* opportunity, l I '6 x I 8 carpeted living room, 12x9 kitchen dining room combination with sliding glass door leading to pello. Lots at closets and cupboards, 7x12 utility room with washer, dryar and water softener. Extra tibarglaa Insulation. Gas foretd air haat. City water and sewer. Attractively landscaped corner lot lust 4 blocks from shopping, schools and churches In th* Village of Holly. Can be bought on FHA or Gl for $18,900. Pleasure and Profit You can llv* In this 2 story Colonial home In the Village of Holly tor almost nothing. It contains two Mwdroam apartmenls. One of which Is now rented. Both apartments lust redecorated. Separate gas furnaces end utilities (or each apartment. Next to village park lust 2 blocks from shopping and churches. Could easily be converted into a 5 or 4 bedroom single lamlly horn* with over 2,000 tq. ft. of living area. 2 water jind sewer. $23,950 on land contract. WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. p OFFICE BUILDING with apartment, Holly Branch Holly Plazaj square feet total, wjfh 80' AUBURN HEIGHTS Corner location In Ih* Haights, Ideal lor many purposas, good protesalonal service location. Sii* 95 X 184. Terms on short term contract. ; ___ WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 1450 N. Opdyk# Rd. ___FE 54145 BLOOMFIELD HILLS Idtal corner lot ot approx. 24,534 sq ft., zoned 0-1, suitable tor doctors' clinic, lawyers' ofMcss, etc. 115 ft. frontage on E. Long Lake, Rd., 202 ft. on side road. Ottered at less than $5 per sq. (t. Terms. DOWNTOWN BLDG. Containing 10,400 sq. ft. with several offices. Bldo-condition, offices air conditioned, oas heat. Off street parking, storage bldgs. Suitable for many comm'l businesses. Terms. KEEGO HARBOR BUILDING in fast growing area, 8000 sq. ft. masonry bldg, with brick front, in excellent condition. Divided Into 4 units, tenants pay own heat and utilities. Will show net Income of over $11,000. Blacktop parking on 3 sides. $125,000, terms. Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0464 Ofllce Open Evenings 8, Sunday 1-4 50 home. 1. Hot water heat 2. Full wall to wall carpst 3. Storms'and screens 4. Wood windows 5. Deluxe kitchen 4. Storm doors 7. 1'6 baths 8. Ceramic tile 9. Estate size tot Included 10. Full 5(7 long basement ANDERSON & GILFORD Building & Realty 3881 Highland Rd. (M-59) 482-9 'Brand new 4-bedroom colonial with aj|M£nnie PrODartv 's floor plan sh# wlli leva. Excellent “ v, west suburban location. It features! ; large foyer, living room, formal 8 UNIT COMPLETELY furnished $21,90 STOUTS Best Buys Today VON jONLY $600 DOWN- FHA OR Gl A nest and clean well taken care of home. May be your* on Gl or FHA terms. This lovely home has 3 bedrooms, full basement, gas heat, garage, city water end sewer. Located In Pontiac on e lovely fenced tot. Only $14,200. Watkins-Pontiac Estates MUST SELL — Owner has moved. 7-room, 3-bedroom, alum, sided ranch, 1V!i baths, large contemporary living room and dining room with beamed ceilings and fireplace, extra large paneled family room, 3-car attached garage. Over 2,000 sq. ft. ot living area. On a well landscaped fenced yard which — in Itself is 100x180 ft. Don't miss this one-time buy. Plus closing costs for this attractive 3-bedroom bungalow with gas heat all on 1 floor. Good looking carpeted living room. Quick possession. Newly decorated Inside and out. LITTLE JEWEL- INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP B E AUTIFUL 3-BEOROOM RANCH — Avallabla on FHA terms, ITils home has all th* extras. Including bullt-lns, carpeting, full walk-out basement and 2-car attached oarage. Full price $24,000. BEAUTIFUL STARTER 2-BEDROOM RANCH I n North Pontiac, a real equity gainer tor young married couple who tike to save. No money down on Gl or FHA Terms. CROSS Realty 8i Investment Co. We pay cash tor used homes. 674-3105 MLS dining room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with eating area. */3 bath down and 2 full ceramic baths up. Double garage. blacKTop drive and Immediate possession. $36,900. Why not trade?, BROKERS 6-32. apartment building. Pontiac westj side. A-1 investment. $13,000 down, land contract terms. NATIONAL BUSINESS I FE 3-7841: IRWIN LARGE FAMILY HOME: Located on West SMt of Town. This spacious horn* offers 4 bedrooms, 1'/6 baths and sleeping porch up. Living room, full dining room, kltcTton and family room on first floor. Full basement. Gas heat. Call for additional details. WEST SIDE: Lovely 3-bedroom brick home — Tastefully decorated — Suited for children — The excellent plus features I n this home defy description — Must be seen to be appreciated. Call on this and other west side property. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN 8. SONS 313 West Huron — Since 1925 FE 5-9444 After 5 p.m, FE 4-8542 First offering and can be, purchased on Land Contract. I Vacant tor your Immediate! possession. Includes 4 rooms and! bath and utility. Carpeting and' drapes. Only $1500 down, see It today) LARGE FAMILY WANTED- Who would like a five-bedroom bargain in the Auburn Heights area. Features cheerful large family kitchen with loads ot counter and cupboard araa. Includes 5 rooms and bath on MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR l BEDROOMS, $100 DOWN, plus costs on FHA. 8 rooms and bath and ideal for the large family. Close to schools and stores. North side and ready to start out the new year. Gas heat, full basement. Just $12,200. See this on* nowl HOME PLU$ INCOME 4 rooms and bath for owner, 3 rooms and bath to rant. Now renting for $135 monthly. Close to Pontiac Gentral and State Hospitals. New gas furnace, new roof and ready for you at a bargain price' of $12,500. Make your — pointment to see It now. WEST SIDE ALUMINUM doll house In A-1 repair. 12x18 carpeted living room, tiled bath, full besement Yard completely anchor fenced. Paved drive plus tots more. $14,950 with easy terms. 414 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 FE 2-0262 THIS IS HOUSE SENSEI No need to pay a fantastic price for choice Sylvan Lake front property, on Garland, because we have |ust takan one In trad* for only $28,900. It's a beautifully kept, larg* family hem* with 3 bedrooms, separata dining room, nice kttchan and what a vitw of th* lak* from th* attractive living room. You may want to trad* yours for this on*. Why not call OR ^3222 to see It today? 10-42 SH-hhh We Found a Sleeperl Owner will sacrifice tor $27,900 a lovely well-kept home In Elizabeth Lake Estates. Beautiful corner tot w!th tall mature trees. 4 large bedrooms, two up, 2 down. 2 baths, family room, plus completely finished aSK FOR FREE catai or basement recreation room. Charm- PARTRiOGE REAL ESTATE aS ** Tomorrow" kitchen. toso West Huron St„ Pontiac Attached 2-car garage. This one is 334-3581 965-6759 sharp — "plus." Don't hesitate, call open nites til 9 now. 15-55. ,---jc-----r:----------------,, Loke Property 51 1 UNIT BRICK APARTMENT! complex lovely lake view and lake privileges, mint condition. Only $150,000. Land contract. Call EM 3-7700. HACKETT REALTY, Union Lake, Mich. Partriedge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" MEDICAL BUILDING INCOME PROPERTY This medical building would make a very good Investment tor a high Income bracket Investor who could utilize tax shelter end equity growth. Price Is $200,000 with $58,000 down. Is In a very good area, located In the Heart ot the growing Metropolitan area. No. 14-4484-1P. commercial frontage 45M Eliza^th ^ke Rd., $35,000 terms. 682-9^ ' OFFICE BUILDING Nearly new brick and block building for 1 or 3 office facilities. Basement, small apartment, at- ... _. .. _________Tei ' ' Immediate possession. In the Village of Rochester MILTON WEAVER INC. Realtors 110 W. University 651-1141 Monty to loan •]'. (llcansadJAonay !s§ft4)K),„^ , LOANS:< I2S TO $1,000 ....UNITY LOAN 10 E. LAWRENCE __ $25 to 11,000 Insurad P*?""*"* f BAXTER I. LIVINOSTONt* ' Finance C*. . 401 Pontiac Slat# Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 ^ Mortgogo looni _ for THE PAST 42 YEARS Voss & Bucknor, Inc. 1408 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. have been loaning 51000 to $5000 to home owneri on 1st #nd 2nd mortgages ter f*PF''')r!P',, Ino, addltioita, conaollastlng bllll, etc. into on* small monthly pay. ment. Betore you borrow on yeuf home le* or phone u* at: 334-3267 43 Swops 4 YEAR OLD German' Short _H*lr, male, will sell or swap. Call OR *■ 0304 or Eves., EM 3-7M4. ... IRONRITE T RONER. airs, 4 rli a n t'lzt ii * Ice tlahlgg shanty jr_?j ROYER GOODRICH OFFICE ORTONVILLE 2.700 sq. ft. commercial building In downtown Ortonvlll* now housing 2 stares. Excellent location near Post Office. Suitable for S end 10c start, drug store, offices, antique shop or what have you. Excellent terms on land contract. Immediate occupancy. SWAP BY MAIL .<• " Mall list ot Item* you wish to trade and $1 service cherojO Jo Swap, Box 4273, Auburn Height*, Mich. 48057. Slate Lie. , Sale Heutehold 6tt4« W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO FAV 3 ROOMS' BRAND NEW FURNITUR? $297 . $2.50 per week LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-4841 Acres of Free Parking Eves. 'Ill 9; Sat, 'til 4. EZ term*, 1 NEW SOFA, $49; New dinette sets, from $39; spring and mattress seta, $39; Countryside Living, 1084 Oakland Ave. 334-1509.____ (Brano new $289 Cash, terms, I a y - * w » y . Pearson's Furniture, 440 Auburn - FE 4-7BB1.____________ 4-PlECE BEDROOMS, brand new, $97. Little Joe's Bargain House, 1441 Baldwin, FE 2-4842.___ 4 PfECE BEDROOM Suite, walnut, $75. Call 473-0505 after 5 p.m. _ 5“»IECE BEDROOM suit*, plu* mattress and Innersprlng*. $100. 343-4759.__________________ S4.95 .®7e •*. . 7c **. IBIO me, TXT R®* Floor Shop—2255 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Mall" 1" TV, REFRIGERATOR, electefe stove, $20 each, washer, dryer, $9$ , both, 689-9403._____' ’JT- 9x12 Linoleum Rugs Solid Vinyl Til* ......... Vinyl Asbestos til* ..... Inlaid Tile, 9x9 Royer Realty ment with gas heat. $4000 down VON REALTY ’ " ' 3401 W. Huron WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 1450 N, Opdyk* Rd. FE 5-8145 CLARK LET'S TRADE Would you be Interested In trading the Equity In your present home for a luxurious dream home which we have lust listed? Excellent neighborhood, lak* privileges. Extra nice two bedrooms, 2 full baths. Basement completely finished can be used as a 3rd btdroom or family room, lerg* lot, 216-car garage, gas forced air heat, Waterford Schools. Pric* $19,950. Don't Oatay. Ctos* to avarything. 12-41 COUNTRY ELEGANCE Just listed this 3- or 4-bedroom home near Hatchary Road and Dixie Highway. Designed tor comfort. A very adequate floor plan, automatic gas heat, carpeted living room and dining room. Finished basement, family room and stone fireplace and more. Price Is only $20,900 and we will trade. Make your appointment now. 7-43 THINK CAREFULLY, BUT THINK FAST Asking $14,500 G.I. or F.H.A. terms. You can be the on* to take advantage of this down payment. This handsome brick bungalow home located on a lovely corner tot fenced and landscaped. In one of our best neighborhoods, 3 badreoms, living room, dining room, finished family room In basement, twe^iar garage. Call today for an appobitmant. 12-38 WANTED-LARGE FAMILY Who would Ilk* * tour-bedroom bargain only 1 block from Gtneral Hospital. Other features Include large living room end dining room spacious kitchen, utility room or main floor. Basement. Located or extra large lot with gas yard light and 2-car garage. Priced at only $13,900. $450 down on FHA loan or nothing down on VA loan to qualified Veteran. 13-25 WATKINS LAKE.PRIVILEGES 2-bedroom log year round living Good neighborhood. Priced at lust $9/000 on land contract, $60.00 per month. 10-^ NEW HOMES AVAILABLE NOW If you are "cost conscious" — you should know about the tremendous special offering of new homes available to you for Immediate occupancy. Your new home can hav* the smart appeal ot a modern ranch or th* traditional elaganc* of a stately colonial or why not consider the popular trl-leval, all priced within your budget. Visit our new homes at LAKE A N G E L U S LAKE VIEW ESTATES, right off Cltnienvill* Road, onto Costa Masta Open Daily 1-5 p.m., and FOX BAY, right off williams Lak* Rood onto Perry Drive, left to Fox Bay Drive, Open Saturday end Sunday 1-5 p.m. You'll discover how well they're built and easy to maintain. You'll be proud as punch to own on*. Call your O'NEIL REALTY represen tativ* today I RAY O'NEIL REALTY Business Opporti^i^i^ 25c CAR WASH 434-22U 59 , City 0 LAKE FRONT HOMES, I show* New and Used. 'down. J. L. Dally Co. EM 3-7114 COMMERCE-UNION LAKE 51-A Northern Property 60' LAKE FRONT LOTS Swan Lake, Mt. Pleasant area, 115 miles north. Only 4 left $2,958 with 28 per cant down. 4 prlvllegad lots, $1,880 with 28 par cent down. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 391-2808_________________343-5948 54 Lots—Acreage Area, grocery store, $9000 down plus stock. Includes 2500 sq. ft. building 12 years old. Lat us show you. GREENHOUSE 3828 sq. ft. of Metal and Glass Greenhouse, flower showroom, walk-in refrigerator, 816 acres of land, part zoned commercial, 50 fruit trees, 5 room living quarters or Main Corner, terms. BATEMAN INVESTMENT 8. COMMERCIAL CO ^ * w la- e. 377 S. Telegraph Rd. ^development or home sites. Some: ooo ni.Ai nice building lots. Check with us. 4-1 o*5o*t04 I H REAL ESTATE, 628-2678 OR j weekdays after 5, Sat. & Sun. — 6ZKJ^0._________________I CALL 334-8109 _ ^UNTRY LIVING ACREAGE - ANY ONE? Choice large or small acreages, _ for i Wa* never better prestige HI-HILL VILLAGE Near 1-75 end Beadow Brook 1-3 acre lots — from $3500 Brochure on request. LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3677 LAPEER RD. S. 391-3300 BUYING OR SELLING? We are SPECIALISTS in the sale or trade of businesses. We guarantee fast, courteous and CONFIDENTIAL service. List of satisfied clients furnished upon request. WARDEN REALTY CLARKSTON SCHOOL ARE A ,|3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 482-3920 120x128' building sites with trees, LAWN MAINTENANCE BUSINESS, lake privileges, rolling terrain. Financing and plans avallabla tor new construction, $3000 terms. PINE LAKE AREA, 100x150' sites $4400 terms. Perc test available on all lots. 473-3488 SYLVAN 482-2300 HOWARD T. Partricige "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" KEATING Sole Houieg 49 Sale Heuiei 49 “ESTABLISHED 1930" A HAPPY NEW YEAR Can truly b* your* In this Immaculat* brick and aluminum ranch home In topnotch location In Utica, city sewers, water, curb', gutter, b acktppped street end sidewalks, are but a law of th# advantage*, gleaming oajc floors, 3 bedrooms, massive kitchen with bullt-lns. and unique French doors leading to th* (ancad back yard, basamant, solid cement drive and 2'/j-car garage, tasy FHA terms. CLARKSTON QUAD LEVEL A tfuly well constructed brick and aluminum home In Ideal location near Spring Hill Country Club end on blacktop atreet. Oak floors, plastered walls. Insulated windows with merble sills, 1V7 baths, 18x22 family room with fireplace and 2-c*r garag*. UNION LAKE AR^A Starter home for only $8,950 with 11,500 down, a nice clean 2-badroom horn*, property zoned commercial, a good futura InveMmant. LET US SELL YOUR HOME A geed realtor can save you money end incentwnlenc**, w* take tri^ and hav* all financing at our finger llpt. Call U*-«a not obligated, DORRIS & SONS REALTORS 2536 DIXIE HWY. MLS OR 4-0324 LAKE PRIVILEGE8; 5-raom modern brick home near on* of Oakland Co.'s better lakes. Ideal for winter and summer sports, features 3 bedrooms, ceramic til* bath, full basamant, carpeted 13 x 24 ft. recreation room, gas heat, large kitchen, all carpeting, drapes, curtains, Included, well landscaped lot, garage. Priced to sell at 121,500. "NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL" COMMERCIAL ZONED; 5-room 116-story brick on 120 ft. frontage, living room with brick fireplace, hardwood floors, plastered walls, full basement with recreation room, 1 16 - c e r garaga. Ideal for protesstonat service building. Selling on reasonable contract terms. Price $24,W. BOY, SELL, OR TRADE CLARK REAL ESTATE 1342 W. HURON ST. 4$2-l850 OPEN 9-9 M.L.S. A&G Value Wonder How com* this big 1200 square toot house costs lass than most t.OOo square toot houses? Call Andarson and Gilford and find outi Open Anytime For You BY APPOINTMENT ANDERSON 8. GILFORD Building & Realty 38*1 Highland Rd. (M-59 ) 482-9000 Sale Ho»m 49 Sale Hotteet 49 MSS REALTORS & BUILDERS “SINCE'‘ 1939 GIS WANT TO MOVE IN A HUR^? bedroom horn* clos* In and vat a IHtl* out, Larg* tot to tinker In. Larg* ovorslzad cor-Onty *8500*Vow'n ^o'^g'i*" ®* *®®" •* I* approved. ANTIQUE LOVERS Eyan It you don't buy this lovoly I badreom brick homo you will in '•K'*. t*'™- clock on th# mantle ot th* natural firaplac* In th# living room, It Indeed ohtlqu*. Gun lovers Will lov* wandering tlireuM th* bodroom with th* SI*!*! ill®'* K®'®**'- on display. This DSJif5..*L*® c*’’ W^O*' •tot water radtent hart all on a largo 100x150 tot. In a vary hlco naighborhood, Pric# $24,900.00. 332-0552 332-4810 109 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD ACROSS FROM THE "IMALL" TRADE YOUR PRESENT HOME FOOD CARRY-OUT FOR LEASE Very completely equipped for big volume. Ideal for chicken, ribs, etc Lease fixtures with purchase option Birmingham for $335 mo. Clean modern bldg. $275 544-7959 mo. Here's the easiest and quickest way to get Into a profitable business. Immediate possession. ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE HEAL ESTATE 1858 West Huron St., Pontiac 334-3581 965-8759 Open nites tll 9 1968 ZIG ZAG /-SEWING MACHINE /,r ZIg Zag Sewing Machine, / must be sold, built-in rontrols,'" makes button holes, ^^ercasts, blind hem stitches, sews/ with ong or two needles. Tow balance $34.00 portable or $^.00 cabinet or terms of $5.00 pe/ month. Cell Capitol Sewing Cre^t Manager til 9 p.m., If toll, call/ollect. 563-^00 New sewing /machines, doe* fancy stitching, makas buttonhoIe*,„e»c, Sold tor $1/4.58, balanc* only $31.40 or pay $08 par week. Cell day or night, 338-2544, Imperial._____ 19^ SINGER CABINET ZIG/ZAG Sewing machine, used, sewk on buttons, makes tnet. tohholes, monograms, overcasts, blind hem* dresses, no attachment* needed, part* .anil servica guaranteed. FUM price $58.80 or payments of $5.10 per month. For free home demonsfre. tion, no obligation, call Capitol. Sewing Credit Manager til 9 g.m. If toll, call collect. 563-8200 A — PLENTY DF USED washer* stoves, refrigerators, and tr*d*4n furniture bargains. Little Joe's Trade-In store, Baldwin at Walton Bird. FE 2-4842._______________ A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN * 8 PC. living rm. group (sofa chair. 3 beautiful tables, 2 lampsi 8 pc, -bedroom (double dresser, chest, bed. mattress, springs, lamps.) 4-pltc* bunk bed — 5 piece dinette. Any Item Soldh#eparately All for $398 ... *10 monthly KAY FURNITURE Next to K Mart In Glenwood Center ABC WAREHOUSES 8. STORAGE 48825 VAN DYKE 739-1010 FOR DEVELOPMENT 113 ACRES, WATERFORD TWP. Approximately V6 mile frontage on Nelsey Rd. the same on Lotus Lake. Lake frontage can be used for recreational purposes, not zoned for mobile homes. $1750 per acre. IN DAVISBURG Exc. site for Blacksmith shop. In conjunction with feed and seed business. If Interested contact 444-1234, Birmingham. Your Counselor, Mr. Llnebau^. C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT 313-625-3298 OR 434-9825 ______Evening Cells Welcome __ ■ home Very L.l;crative. WANT TO SELL YOUR BUSINESS? Definitely, Realtor Partridge Is the bird to see. 1050 Huron, Pontiar, 334-3581. Partriedge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" BEER 8. WINE DISTRIBUTORSHIP Owner retiring. Details in personal interview only. Requires $100,000 down, plus stock of approx. $140,000. ORION - 3 ACRES? nSw area. Park? $2,000 per acre. .MARINA Lake St. Clair area. Show Room — A0V 4 AftAta service buildings — hydraulic cradle hoist — 80 wells, can be expanded. 3 boat franchises, property business for sale, formation GREEN ACRES 1449 S. Lapeer Rd. Attention Housewives Highest prices tbr used furnitur# . and appliances. Ask for Mr. Grant \ at Wyman’S Furniture FE 5-1501.’**• AAA-l 1968 USED SINGER Genuine Singer sewing machine with touch and sew features-for zig-zag. buttonholes, blind hems, monograms. Deluxe model comes complete with walnut cabinet, nothing to buy later. Full pile*. $48.95. Free lessons and piMing shears with purchase. Call Midwest Appliance, 9-9 dally, ^4-3312., , . pri Joe's, 1441 Baldwin, FE J-484B. - -BRONZE OR CHROME OlNBTfit sala,. BRAND NEW. Larg* and smalt size (round, droj>-l*af, r*c> 1-, $- I ■ sets, $24.95 up. tangular) tablas In 3-. (L and 7-PC. RHODES INDIANWOOD SHORES — Large homesites. Reasonable. Call today for details. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR ROCHESTER AREA - S acres. $12,580 NIX REALTOR. 451-0221, 852-5375. SUBURBAN LAND, SAAALL or large, call Underwood Real Ettate, 425-2415 or 425-3125 eves, or Sunday!. VACANT 40 ACRES OF gantly roll Ing land, partly weeded, plus old orchard, near Fowltrvlllt, priced reduced, 110,080 down. HOWELL Town & Country Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONEi 313-685-1585 WHERE WILL YOU BE IN 1979? PERHAPS A LITTLE DIFFICULT TO SAY, BUT ()NB THING IS CERTAIN, THERE WILL BE MORE PEOPLE, MORE CARS. LESS AVAILABLE LAND. . 5 ACRES — For Country Home and qulat living. $4,995. Terms. 1V6 ecret, 225'x330' eld barn, goo< roads, $3,190. 1216 ACRES — Hardwood trees, pond site, pleasant, I9,95(L $1300 Hewn. 14 ACRES. Mostly weeded, lust little north ot Ortanvllle, 11,175, » per cent down. 35 ACRES tor seclusion among pin* traas, nice high hill and spring* tor building a pend, m,375, I3,m dewn. Com* out, w* are open 7 dayi • week. The feltction is exeellant. * C. PANGUS, Realtors .. 7 DAYI A WEEK 530 M-tS Ortanvllle CALL COLLECT 437-211$ Mt# fnnMi ' 80 to 800 ACRES iBjowar .MWitoaii. DaH Bf«m mdAwalSv* II IT^^"m13v Mata Haad- GB. No phon* “III for No. 14-5704 BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 styles, trundle bods, triple trundle bads and bunk beds complete. $49.50 and up. Peerser/a Furniture, 440 Auburn, FE 4»7$8I< and COAL AND OIL haaters — Coal furnace. Taylor's, 402 University Drive. - ASK FOR FREE CATALOG ■ PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac 334-3581 945-8759 ______open nites tn 9^__ Sole Load Ceatracti 60 1 MILLION Dollars has been mad* avallabt* to us to purchase end assume land contracts, mortgaBes or buy homes, lots or acreage outright. W* will give you cash for your equity. Our appreltdr Is awaiting your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently naadad. Sat us bator* you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyk* Rd. FE 54145 ____Opan Eve*. *tll I p.m. CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS H. J. Van Walt 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355 LARpE OR. SAAALL land contri...,, tuick cloaiMi. Raaaoqabia^sitounl. arl.Gjrral*, MA 4-5400 or nights bM 3-4084, QUICK CASH FOR tand contracts. Clark Raal Estate. 4I3-SI50, rat. FE 4-4I13, Mr. Clark SELL YOUR CONTRACT NOW. Calls art coming In ragularly from Investors wishing to purchase land ^tracts. Soma accapting low dls^nts. If you hav* a land con-h-aef to sail - laav* if with ui. Wioted Ceiitr«cH»iyH|. t/M 1 TO 50 .LAND CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor 15» M- ____Fi HIM U5|5 JtEffl’- IMiirii CLEARANCE 40" e be c I r I c rang*, $14,95/ automatic washer $39.95/ etactrlc clothes dryer, $39.95; ReynoMs water sofetner, $49.95. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3445 Auburn ,Rd. FE 4-3571 “CUSHIONS-CUSHrONS Custom made for Danish, Colonial and Contemporary chair* land sofas. 20 to SO per cent off on selactad group of fabrlci. tl5-17plL Cem'l. Upholstery._____ Complete Line of Repossessed '•* Household Appliances Goodyeor Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr„ Wetl Pontlec ) ________Friday 'tll 9 p.m. i ■ ' CHROME DINETTES, teW #• Tsi. Little Joe's,0441 Baldwin. FI 3-4543. ELECTRIC STOVE, 135/ OAS aWV*, $35/ Refrigerator with teg trmwi GENERAL with push cert, FE 3-304$. ELECTRIC /wdiAih cert, $15, 147 t. Shirley, V HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL cocktell tabta, 3 tabta lamR^AC (1) 9'x13' rug included. ■ 7-pl*c*. bedroom sutta wllh doi/Mp dresser, chest, fuU-itia bMi. t^. Innersprlng maHr*i*.juid IfWtfIbMe FURNITURE CO. ''T.r IT B. HURON Ft iHW KIRBY SWEEPER * Kirby Service 6 Supply 3417 OlSciE HWV OteSiil / Sol« HowhIicM OtMli 6S CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE Furnifuri, ttfrioi, Coler T.V.'i new Lt^T INLAV-A-WAY Lov«ly »oft with Mr, *nd Mri. Chilri, llPWrM r»y§rtlbl# eiahWnl, 1» yr. ouirjhjji on eon-■irucllon, Mid for iaw, bolonco duo UK coih or tit monthly. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THORSDAY, JANUARY 2. 1969 TX— ABr combination ontartatnmant icturo, record Color conli radio, IIic^ duo’isab caih or tid rnontli- conlor, n" ilcturo, AM-PM itoroo, r,dlo, auro, roeond ehansar, dTa-Inond noodio, told for .1*49, hol- ly. Mapio bunk bod aat, eomplota with mollroiHt. raMo and laddor, told for aU4- ^..................... |10 monthly, walnut conMio itoroe. AM-PM radio, a •poakoni, j>|ayi all olio record!. Sold for llff, balance dqa 1141 cash or 111) monthly. Modorn sofa and matching chair. ilDPorod rovorilblo cuihlona, Mid for IIK, balance duo 1125 cash or git monthly. 13" Colonial Coler T.V., all chan-noi, 2 yr, guarantao on pictura tubs, sold for 1559, balance duo 1423 cosh or III monthly. ipanish aota and matching chair, deluxe cushions, self docked, Hid for 1419, balanca duo 1290 cash or 115 monthly. Medltorranaan stereo console, AM, PM stereo, radio, I spoakars, solid •late, diamond naadia plays all tlio racordo, Mid for 5279, balance due 9205 cash or 110 monthly. celllornia modarn sofa and matching chair, zipperod revarilble cushions, sold for 1319, balanca dua 5195 cash or SIO monthly. Charcoal bedroom suite, double dresser, mirror 4 drawer chest, bonces* *’*d> mettress end box tprlnp, sold for 5259, balance due 5224 cash or 515 monihly. Colonlel sofa and matching chair, deluke reversible cushions sold for 5349, balance due 5237 cash or 515 monthly, IS" color portable with stand, walnut grained cabinet, sold tor 5379, balance due 5297 cash or 515 monthly. SV5' sterM conHie, AM-PM, radio, s speakers, plays all size records remote speaker provisions, walnut Ftr Slit MlictllimiBt iftailis,-',,. ■■ Call 335-170f fgjtgsy", Pijatoi -list; JW-’ coIdY? M heater In minutes Ideal tor garage, basement, cottage, from 599 112 VY. University Dr. 551-7010 .......C^ntowp Rochester Si'.IS"; ks!S!i*a';; a ••no blasted Swan design, t7$yi, O. A, Thompson, 7MS M-S9 Vy. PROM wall to WALL7‘no~sbirat r .'.iST «'••"•<< yyifh Riue k“*lhe. Rent electric shampooer *'•HudMn's Hardware, 41 E. witon, firfNACii," Niw OR USBO. Gas 3M-W55 ''•*' Installation i|wrtln Ot94 cash or 510 monthly. / 1 piece to^tlonel, z I p o o r o d rtverilblo CUshtens, sold lor 5329, balance jdue 5195 cash or 512 monthly/ Wsinuf bedroom suite, metlress, box eprlng, double dresser, mirror, 4 drawer chest end bookcase bed. Sold tor 5239, balance dua 5155 dash or 510 monthly. / HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE dOI'ElIz. Loko Rd. 335-9203 (Neir Tologroph Rd.) pRle PUPPIES, PART boxtr, lomalo. 512-13^, Mtweon 5 ond 9. SSU'GBRMAN SHEPHERD, BTock I Labrador mixed, SIO each. 552- 9354. CTviNG rooms, BRAND now. about w price, Little Joe's, 1451 Baldwin, FE 2-5842. ________________ Camps, desk, miscellaneous Items. 335-9151 or 335-3573.____ ReW furniture — Living room, bedroom, end dinettes. 20-40 par cent off. Tyler's Auction, 5959 lend Rd. 573-9534. Open 9-9. 6lTvE green Naugehyde, Slnri-niohs hIde-e-bed. Also a dresser crib. Antique white. OR Ind 0948. PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 540 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7881. PLASTIC WALL TILE IS^Outlet________1075 JV. _Huron REFRIGERATOR 125, APARTMENT gas stovt $30, 21" TV set, misc., 5. Harris, FE 5-2754._______ SINGER Deluxe Model-Portable Zlg Zagger, In sturdy carrying case. Repossessed. Pay Off: $38 CASH Or Payments of $5 Per Mo. 5 year guerentM * UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 1515 Dixie Hwy. FE 4-0905 SPICE BRCWN DAVENTORT end chair, reosoneble. Ml 7-0254. iOFAS - UPHOLSTERED at half the price of new. Cell 335-17M. Com*! Uphelttery, SAVE PLENTY TODAY On ell 1951 floor samples of rsnoes, refrigerators, washers end TVs. Little Joe's Bargsin House Baldwin at Walton Blvd. FE 2-5S42 SINGER Automatic Zlg Zag Sewing Machine — sews single* or double needle, designs, overcasts, buttonholes, etc.—Modern cabinet. Take over payments of: $7 Per Month for 8 Mos. or $56 Cash Balance still Under Guarantee Universal Sewing Center 2515 Dixie Hwy._________FE 4-0905 Yv. SET. EXCELLENT Condition, S4t, washer end dryer refrigerator, G. Harris, FE 5-2755. WASHER PARTS 3212 Dixie Hwy. USED COLOR T.V. SETS, 1199.95 SWEET'S .RAblO AND APPLIANCE, INC. 422 w. Huron ______________334-5577 Ahti^ues 65-A t CHINA CUPBOARDS Y-Knot An-flQues, Devlsburg, 534-W91.___ Custom antique~1efinishing. Speelellzliig In fumlturp reflnlshing Ond reppirt of oil types. 3534351 Mon-Set. Hi-Fi, TV & Radios 66 21" USED TV ........... .. $29 95 Walton TV, PE 2-2257 Opon 94 515 E Walton, corner of Joslyr. new Evinrude SKaeters ............ h.p., to 25 h.p. twin cylinder engines, either tSVj" or aovj"! track. Try the new Evinrude Bob-i cat with e 19 h.p. or 23 h.p. engine. Take e demonstration run! on the new Snowflake mini snowmobile. It's smell enough to fit In a station wagon, yet large enough fir two pooplo and up to 40 m.p.h. Take M-59 tp W. Highland, right to Hickory RIdgo Rd. to Demode Rd., left end foltow signs to Dawson's SALES TIPSICO LAKE. Phono 525-2179. h.p. Diablo Rougt, CRUISE-OUT, INC. 53 E. Walton FE B-4402 ____Dally 9-4,_Cjosed Sundays_ NEW YEAR' SPECIAL 18 h.p. elec, start Snowmobile $825 Up While They Last. MG SALES & SERVICE 4557 Dixie Hwy._Drayton 573-545S POLARIS GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC booutlos, stud sorvico. UL 2-1557. PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 540 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7M1. PLUMBING BARGAINS, FREE standing toilet, 522.95 : 30-gallon Mater, 549.95 f 3-plece bath sots. 559.95) laundry troy, trim, 519.95) Shower Stolls with trim, 539.95) 2-bowl sink, 52.95) lavs., 52.95) tubs, 520 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. Baldwin. FE 4-1514. 541 RUMMaGE SALE. 2672 Sunderland off Williams Lake Rd. Mon.-FrI. SUMP PUMPS SOLD, rented 'end repaired. Cane's, FE 1-5542. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2578 Orchard Lake. 58^ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture. Appliances TWO LAMP 4 foot fluorescent lights, Ideal for work benches, shops, $19.95 value 810.90 marred. Call at Factory Showroom. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk., FE 4-8442. - 10. USED AND NEW Office desks, chairs, typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, file cabinets. Forbes Printing and Office Supply, 4500 Dixie Hwy., Drayton, OR 3-9757. VANITORY CABINETS, exquisite 1959 models, marble tops, gold faucets, made to your designs. $29.95 end up. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk. FE 44452 -55. WASHED WIPING RAGS, at low at 24C per lb. 25 lb. boxes to 3M lb. belot. Band saw, exc. condition. Coin Changer) Smith Corona ole& typewriter. New 5 hp, 3 phpso olr comprottor, 5550. Now and used steel, angles, channel, beams, plate, pipe. Used metal garage doors. Ideal for ilgnt, temp, sheds, etc. boulevard supply 500 S. Blvd. E. 333-7)41 Hond^Tool^^ AIR COMPRESSORS, lubrication equipment, hydraulic lacks, steam cleaners. Welding equipment, etc. Pontiac Motor Parts, 10 15 University Drive. FE 2-0)05. BEEBEE BROTHERS ALL steel 2 ton winch with telescoping boom on rubber. OR 3-5068.__________ LIKE NEW (ROCKWELL) 15" floor model drill press, told for 8230, price 5175, Teel Sump Pump, 250 GPH, $15. 524-1330. SEMI-TRAILERS, several sizes, priced to sell. 5,000 lb. Hl-low, exc. condition, 51100. Blvd. Supply. 50o S. Blvd. E. 333-7151. WANTED ONE GOOD used, Foley saw flllnp machine. FE 5-1302. Mvsicol Goods 71 ALTO TENOR AND C meldoy tax) clarinet, 535) trumpet, 5)9,- trombone, $19) several upright pianos, $25 end UP) 1 player piano, works §aod; I player piano as It) H. R. mith Moving, 10 5. Jesse. 11 INCH RCA COLORED TV. Good condition, will deliver, eef up and . guarantee. $150. 423-1154. COLOR TV SERVICE Johnton'l TV, FE 1-4555 ___45 E. Weiton near Baldwin COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE ^Joe's Bargain Houoe. FE 2-5142. /^tiUFACrURERS CLOSH-dljT~ STEREO WALNUT CONSOLE 4-Spaekert Diamond needles BSR 4 speed changer $89 universal** ^^mis^dKie hwy Dally 114 *~”°* Set, n-4 •COTCH RECORDING TAPE ouentlty discount price. Pontiac fTEREbrTYEARTljTDr Excenint ^Mndltlon, 8150. 152-2735.___ TV'S FOR SALE, r“e e 10 n e b I e SegeiTwp AAofel,_m S. Woodward. tv WAREHOUSE SAL#' oporv 'to public, entire InventoiY of Zenith, JCA, and Motorola TV'5, color TV's, a™ stereos must b# eold, ovory Item discounted, scratched sate priced accordingly, no reatoneblp offer refused, terms, sale today end tomorrow 104, Hllf Appllenca, 2414 Crooks '^*'***" CallldBO end WSJtWTica............■eeior""¥v, _mi|or repifra, sss-tlSO. npedlflB MhctllailEBat 67 linoleum RUGI, II.« BA. rim"® III* • .......... le iP. *'•" ponollng. Cheap. I*!® Tile, PE 54957/1071 W. rile, FE 54957: r- 549.S0. Celeulttort S99.Ml f,i*jl TON ' pickup, t cylinder, 83M. 582-2455. 1952 CHfVY tANDBliA dump truck', 1952 CHEVROLET W ten pick-up 8550, dealer. 330-9237. _____ 1943”’ FORD “V. ‘ton ,P I c k'- u p , spotless ................... 88M Dealer 330-9330 1964 FORD F:660 15 ft. 3 ton Iniuleled von, with excellent condition, one owner, only— $1795 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 8. RochitJer Rd. 551-7000 195i“OOOGB HAL9l“t6ir>lckup, rune good, seme rust, 8550. 574- 3715. _________________ 1955 CHEWTton, V|, 4 liotd 3.W0 lb. Tm qete. 1957 FORD 1 ton steko 4 tpeed Fftlyi Cari______ ISi OPEL KAODBTT, 1947 Spo;t Coupe, n,oeo milei. leaving for Oermpny Mutt sell. After^ 5 p.m. or wtekendt eat I 5lt-2K*i___ Nmt 104 Um4 Cm 181 i LLOYD BRIDGES TRAvKLAND ____tOlO W.Meple,jWelled_Lk. f955 FORD PICKUP, KOi. W3522. 1945 CHEVlbLSf”Tf”ton pick-up, short box, no nwney down. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-1004___or _ _FE 3-7854 1945'CHEVY PICKUI*, V4, reiT nice '/>-ton, 81095 GRIMALDI IM PORTE^D^CARS. ^1^54421, 1955 EL CAMINO 395, Hurst 4 speed posltrectlon, 51,450. 574-3847 New and __ 1945 BUICK ILBCTRA 2M, 4dOOr hardtop, air conditioning, full power, 8100 down end emoll nrionthly pavmanti, _ LUCKY AUTO 1940 W, Wide Track • FE 4-1004 _or__EBJ:)9*4 1955 BUICK ELECtRA 225 nerdtop. Full power, tit dofvn, paymente 114.93. Full price 8IW5. Call Mr. Perks, credit meneper.-at Ml 4- "harold turner ford 454 5. Woodward_Blrmlnghem SHELTON 1947 BUICK Special Wagon, eulometic, V-8, power iteerina, brakes, this beautiful car It Ilka new with balance ot new car war-renty. Left 199 down, 30 months lo pay, PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL 055 5. Rochester Rd._ML?M0 SHELTON Suburban Olds 5t Ch#yy InWolB hardtaB M foretw^ MH«a M Bulck 111 hfrdtop/j^ 17 Cutreti fporf C«up# . sOiJraS, ireury PerMonp.. Air. iM.-vis)i»,oS;rAiF-— pgr — lar^, ppM Holldty Herdlep ^ fiSirifee Dj0'je'pMr; • isisirMaLlK.TAit«RS.M.e)i “I don’t need a raincoat, Mom. I sprayed my clothes with that deodorant that keeps a person dry!" Travel Trailers 88 OAKLAND CAMPER Midwest covert end sleepers. All steel frame. Tour-e-home campers. Lynx covert end tieepert. Parts and accessories. Baldwin at Colgate 33V0534 Michigon's Finest Selection 40 units In stock, travel trailers, pick-up cemper, motor homes, bodge trucks. Del-Ray, Champion, Camp-Four. 5 year, bank financing. Buy the tlnest end save 81. LLOYD BRIDGES TRAVELAND 1010 W. Maple 425-1572 Welled Lake HllrtBrcYclBt____________95 Motorcycle 'Sale SPECIAl PRICES ON ALL MODELS Anderson Sales & Service 1445 S. TELEGRAPH FE 3-7102 SUZUKI cycle's, 50 CC to 500 CC, Rupp end Wildcat minl-biket, cycle accessories. Take M-59 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Ro left t • • ------- ---- SALE 2179. 1966 CHEVY Vz Ton Pickup, with west coast mirrors, dark green finish, A-) condllloni $119S John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcolm FE 5-4101___ __ ______LI 3-2030 1945 CHEVROLET Vj Ton pick-up, owner lust like new, no money down 55 Delta Hard 291 Holldey 91 Luxury Sedan. Air 54 91 Holiday Hardtop ... S Plymouth Adoor, eir .. Pontiac 4RDS-J EE PS-BROMCOB Ready to go VYith SNOW PLOWS FROM $795 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm FE 45101 ___ LI 32030 Rademacher CHEVY-OLDS On US 10 at MIS CLARKSTON Over 75 other cars to select from! 1963 CHEVY Impale 2-doOi hardtope V4a sytomafiCy powar •teerlng. Only .. ...... $795 1966 TEMPEST Custom 4-door# V-8r automatic/ power steering, Only .. $1W3 1965 FORD Country Sedan, K passenger wagon, V4, automatic, power steering, brakes .$1395 1968 PONTIAC Cateitna 3-door, hardtop, V-8, automatic, power steering, brekes, in warranty $2595 la Mon, brakes, low — - 800, 547-5401. 1955 DODGE, 2-D66r hardtop, sS, 4-tpeod, good condition, OIOOO. Coll 5240129. ________ MILOSCH CHRYSLEB-PLYMOUTH 1957 Dodge Polara 2-d#«r herdtoB, red with black Interior, eutp., double power, radio, whlteweflli $1,995. 477 M-24, Lake Orion. MY 2-2041. 959 DODGE CORONET, 381 high performance, take over peymenfs, Owner's In flnsnctel trouble. 524 I ouy 5E give It 243f ■ free Orchard Lake 1950 FORD, 2 Door, V-S, automatic excellent transportation, 8129, Buy Here — Pay Here, Marvel Molori, 251 Oakland, FE 34079. 1950 FORD WAGON, runt good. M. Sava Auto___ FE 3327* CHECK THESE NEW CAR TRADES 1950 CHEVELLE Malibu 2-door, hardtop, with V-8, automatic, power steering, brakes, vinyl roof, air conditioning ..........$2595 1957 CHEVY Impalt 2-door hardtop, with V-B, automatic, power steering, brekee, air conditioning, Only — $2095 1957 PONTIAC Firebird, 2-door hardtop, with V-8, slick shift, Only ..........................81895 1964 PLYMOUTH 4door, with V-8, autemefic power etsering. Only .... ...................... ms 1944 OLDS 98 4Door Hardttop, automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater. Only ...........$1095 AL HANDUTE Chevrolet Bulck Dn M24 in Lake Drion MY 2-2411 Aato Insurance-Muriwe 104 Auto Insurance CAN YOU QUALIFY? $19.30 Quarterly for liability. Full aSirt^rTy. “ " ‘"‘’“l 1964 CHEVY SS, 327. 4spe«l, ANDERSON & ASSOCIATES I condition, $900. 3347393.__^ 1044 Jqslyn__________FE 43535 1554 CHEVY 5 STICK, 5600. 523 1954 CHEVY BEL AIR 4door 5575. dealer____________________338-9235 good Foreign Cars 105 1954 RENAULT DAUPHINB. 4 door, black with red Interior. 30 miles per gal. Full price $379.12, weekly payments $3.12. Call King, 681-0602. / 1965 MG midget, wire wheels, good condition, reas. 674-0149. 1965 VW Bus $895 BILL FDX CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester_________^«51;900® 1955 V.W. 1300 SEDAN, get heater, like new, 51095. 524-1330.__ 1954 OPEL STATION wagon, 20,000 miles, good cond., 5550. 051-3325. 1956 OPEL KAODETT.wIth bluo In- terior, blue finish. Only $895 GRIAAALOl IMPORTED CARS. FE 5-9421^___________________ 11,000 miles. 1958 AUSTIN AMERICA, 1700 miles, warranty, radio, front wheel drive, disc brakes, auto. 51,850 or bast offer. FE 5-5908.________________ 1958 AUSTIN AMERICAN, 4,000 miles, full warranty. AM-FM radio, rear speaker, front wheel drive, eute., 30 m.p.g. 51,895. 335-3538. IT'S NEVER TDD CDLD TD GET A HDT DEAL Bill Gelling VW 1963 VW Sedan Golf blue with whit# leatherette Interior, radio, whitewalls, mechanically excellent. $795 1963 VW Sedan Peart White, red leatherette Interior. European model. $775 1962 VW Sedan Diamond Chercoel, optional leatherette Interior. AM-FM radio, new rubber. $595 1963 VW Wagon Deluxe, sliding rbof, AM-FM radio. 9 passenger. $895 Bill Gelling VW Inc. Off Maple Rd. (15 Mile Rd.) Across From Btrz Airport Troy Ml 2-5900 TDP QUALITY NEW AND USED IMPORTED CARS & JEEPS ARE FOUND AT GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND AVENUE AUTOBAHN YOUR VW CENTER the greeter Bleomfleld-Pentleo FE 8-4531 1155. 1964 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 327 speed with extre goodies. OR 3877. 1944 CHEVY IMPALA 2-do hardtop, V8, double power, white with red Interior. RONEY'S AUTO, _131_Baldwln_Aye. FEJ-4909.__________ 1964 CHEVY IMPALA wagon, with V-8, automatic, powtr sttaring. and brakes, 9 passenger. Only 5895. GRiMALDI imported CARS. FE >?TO- 1964 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR 4door, 5700, dealer. 338-9237._________ 1954 CORVAIR, MONZA, 4 speed, excellent condition, 5545, Buy 1955 CHEVY II, dark green, radio and heater, new whitewall tires, 5 stick, sharp $595. 581-0473 or 582. 5351. 1955 CORVAIR MONZA 4-door hardtop, auto., radio, heater, whitewalls, like new inside and out. RONEY'S AUTO, 131 BeldSWn Ave. FE 44909. 1955 oo CHEVELLE HARDTOP, automatic, original owner, tharp, 51,300. FE 48M2. after 5:30 p,m. 1965 CHEVY CAPRICE ______________ hardtop, 395 engine, auto transmission, take over payments 0-5:30, 197 S. Seginiw 1955 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 2 door hardtop, beige, power steering and brakes, air cond., new tires, new battery, exc. cond., 51550. Cell 332. 7477. 1965 CHEVY SPORT VAN station wagon, 3 sealer, radio, beater, automatic, ready tor any job. 51)55 full price, lust 588 down, $45.55 per month. One year warranty. John McAuliffe Ford 530 Oakland Avt. FE 5-4101 1955 CORVETTE with two tops, speed, air condition. Call Phil Strom at 5241572 LLOYD BRIDGES TRAVELAND ____1010 yy. Maple, waiied Lk. 1957 CAMARO, 2 DOOR hardtop, gold, vinyl roof, bucket laats, automatic console, power steering and brakes, tilt steering wheeL posltrectlon. Ilka new, 51^5. Call 332-7477. 1967 Chevelle Malibu Sport Coupe with V-8, automatic, power itaar. Ing, radio, heater, whitewalls, India Ivory finish. $1995 Matthews- Hargreaves 531 Oakland Ava. _FE 44 1967 Chevy BelAIr 2-door with 5 cyl. automatic, radio, heater, balance of ngty j;ar war renty. Only — ' $1495 FLAHNERY FORD (Formerly Beattie Ford) WATERFORD 523-090e 1957 CORV¥ffr*T27 wffh rally srA)&£^r?MiarfED°"c'XR*“?i 5-9421.____________ 1955 CORVEtte—427 with wQe oyels. 4speed, only 53995. GRIMALDI IMPORTED CARS. ,FE 5-9421. m : . .""559l ' 1955 Ford Custom, 4-door. automatic^ power, radio, heater .......599* 1965 Plymouth Fury III, 4d«or, hardtop, V-5, automatic, powar wbitewellt .................51091 1944 Plymouth Fury II, itotlOR wagon, 8, automatic, r e d 1 q ^ heater ................. 1955 Plymouth Convartlble, _ automatic, power, redtOf heater .................. 0 10, 51M 1957 Ford 500, 4-door, V-O, e.utometlc, power, whitewelli ... reora, .51295 wter, SII9S natlc, sisa 1951 Chevy Nova, II, automatic, power, whitewalft —......515M AND MANY MORE NEW '68 DODGES, CHARGERS, CORONETS, AND DARTS. AT USED CAR PRICES. ALL '69'/2 REDUCED TOOll ' SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS (TELL US IF WE'RE WRONG) 855 Oakland Pontiac SHELTON 1953 FORD Gelaxle 500 with V-S, automatic, power and It In nlc# shape. No Money down, low monihly payments, cell your credit In to — Shelton Pontlee. PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL S55 S. Rochester Rd. » 55I-55W T-BIRD C0NVE¥TIBL¥, full power real sharp. S109S, GRIMALDI IMPORTED CARS. FI 1965 FORD FALCON future. Week with red Interior, 2-door hardtw, automatic, only $795 GRIMALDI IMPORTED CARS FE 5-9421.___, 1955 MUSTANG CONVERTIBlC ■ RED e-cyUnder, 3-spetd, FB S4IM. After S. ________ 1965 FORD 4-Door with V4, automatic, showroom new condition throughout! $995 1965 CHEVY Impala Convertible with V-5, etlck ihift. Solid red finish. Only. $995 _ TAYLOR CHEVY-OLDS _ Walled Lake________MA 448S1 1965 FOR'P COUNTRY Sedan Autometic, radio and heater. No down, paymente of 56.44, Full price 5795. Cell Mr. Perks, criidli manager et Ml 47500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 454 S. Woodward _ Birmingham 1965 MUSTANG Hardtop with V-5, eutometlc, only— $795 BILL FOX CHEVROLET *• Rochester Rd. 551.7000 1945 FORD FAlftLANE 2-da«r hordtop, burgundy finish, blocN Interior, V-S, #ufometle, pmmr steering, only 5095. GRIAMLOI IMPORTED (5aRS. FB MTO;_____ 1965 FORD FAIRLANB SK COUPB. S8irs‘.*ajrai,ijr“fji ‘'’"'“"SCbFTtf'”' PONTIAC: East of Birmingham In fh# Motor Mail, #«r0#s Alrjort ___ 1965 FALCON STATtOlif w##«.«,6 •utomatic, lr#nonyli»lfln, In rffWi tine condition, ^tolf ^•.Siw.ij ROSE RAMBLBR.JEiK ^nMfli L«k», lM_3-4t»r 642- new FiNANtSe i»UV.'1f .yjg'.ti^» SSTtny'^emdlfjfiftf^ ' LUCKY AUTOi 1940 W. WW# TWOB ^ ^ i FI 6.100* #r . >01117' The PONTIAC PRESS, THUHSDAV, JANUARY 2, 10«l) MARMADUKE ^ By Anderson and Leeming SURE-SAFE-SOLID Moor, ledon, 128 h.p. 6 cylinder. Radio, heater, fdetory ruft profing. All safety equipment. Delivered on the rood. ' All Taxes (Excise ond Sales) DELIVERED $1999.80 Village Rammer ' 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 $1395 FLANNERY FORD (Form«rly Btatll* Ford) WATERFORD______*a^00 \»M COUNTRY SQUIRE 10 PaiMngcr Station Wag Full price UI95. Call Mr. Parks, cradit manaoar at Ml 4-7SW. HAROLD TURNER FORD 444 S. Woodward Blrmlnghkm Fine Selection '68 Continental Trades Now at . Reduced prices Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 W. Mapla Ml 4-3300 1941 FORD TORRINO 6T, taka over payments, 303 angina, auto., good condition, call after 5, 451-1449. ^ WE'LL GO TO THE MOON TO MAKE A DEAL ' AT HAUPT PONTIAC so STOP OUT And look at our out-of-the-world pick on our USED CARS! Astronauts Will Love These Select Cars 1968 TEMPEST Custom Convertible ............ <1995 ™““P®' 7’000 miles .'. ’.. $2595 1968 OLDS 98 4-door Luxury car, full power, air cond....... J319S 1967 BONNEVILLE VIsto, full power, air conditioning ........$2495 1967 BONNEVILLE 2-2041._ BHELTON 1964 PONTIAC LeMans 2le — An essay oo the special world and perception of the American Negro (62) C — Country Carnival 7:00(2) C - Truth or Consequences (7) C — News — Reynolds (56) World We Live In — A survey of meterological and glaciological studies being conducted In Antarctica (62) R C — Movie: “Running Target” (1956) Doris Dowling, Arthur Franz, Richard Reeves 7:30 (2) R C — (Special) Mark Twain Tonight — Hal Holbrook portrays the great American humorist in a one-man show first telecast in 1967. Various anecdotes and readings from Samuel Clemens works are offered. Color TV RCA-ZENITH LOWEST PRICES BEST SERVICES CONDON'S TV Sales and Service 730 W. Huron FE 4-9736 T2Va"RCA 15 21 "Muntz $299s 21" Emonon 21" Motorola 21" Sylvania 14" Porti3>>lo 21” RCA $39*r 24” Motorola ^49*^ 24” ACfiiirar f39«i 27" Muntz* $59^ 30-DAY EXCHANOC FRIVILCQC , PI WALTON TV 818 E. Walton Jfvd. .. ^, Comor Joilyn V' Optn 91* 4 ^4) C — Daniel Boone — A sly old sea captain’s friendship for Israel reaps danger for the Boones. (7) C - Ugliest Girl In Town - Tim’s mas-Bsquerade might b e unmasked after h e ’ • discovered to have great potential as a male mod model. (9) R — Movie: "Out of the Past’ (1M7) Robert Mitchem, Kirk Douglas, Jane Greer, Rhonda Fleming, Richard Webb (50) C — Password (56) Ivory Tower 8:00 (7) C — -Flying Nun — The nuns meet an qvtction notice with an appeal that brings the landlord, poor as a churchmouse, to their door with bag and (50) C-Pay Cards (56) NET Festival - The worics of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas and his vitality are told with films, stills, interviews and recordings. 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (4) C — Ironside — A painting in a gift shop leads Ironside to take a new look at an old murder case, (7) C — Bewitched — Samantha is goaded into hiring a maid by her meddlesome mother - in -law. Sam is faced with firing her before she’s a witness to witchcraft. (50) R C-Hazel (62) R C - Movie: "The Gypsy and the Gentleman” (English, 1957) Melina Mercouri, Keith Mitchell, Patrick McGoohan 9:00 (2) R C — Movie: “Splendor in the Grass” (1961) High school sweethearts are torn between their love for each other and the rigid morality of their parents. Natalie Wood, Waryen Beatty (7) C — Hiat Girl — Ann unintentionally causes a marital crisis for a window washer whose jealous ^_wif| thinks Ann is a femme fatale. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) Vietnam Dialogue — Reporter David Schoe-nbrun dissents on issues pertaining to the Vietnam war.' 9:30 (4) C — Dragnet — Old-time Los Angeles police officers discover a need to change their attitudes — especially toward minority groups. (7) C — Journey to the Unknown — A young woman who is resting at a lonely seaside is plagued at night by the shadowy figure of a man. (9) C—Telescope—American architect - designer Buckminster Fuller is visited at^ his home on Bear Island, off the Maine coast. 10:00 (4) C — Dean Martin — Guests are George Gk*el, singers Frank Sinatra Jr. and Fran Jeffries and comics, Dom DeLuise and Gene Baylos. (9) Horse Race (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) Free Play 10:30 (7) R C-T.H.E. Cat (50) C — Les Crane — The case of convicted murderer Richard Speck is discuss^. (62) Star Perfwmance 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C-News, Weather, Sports (62) R — Movler ''The' Fuzzy Pink Ni^tgown’’ (1957) Jane Russell, Keenan Wynn, flkiph Meeker 11:36 (2) A — Movie: 1. C — "The First Travelling Saleslady” (1956) Ginger Rogers, Carol Channing, Barry Nelson; 2. “The TV Features Tonight NEGRO PEOPLE, 6:30 p.m. (56) MARK TWAIN TONIGHT, 7:30 p.m. (2) NET FESTIVAL, 8 p.m. (56) VIETNAM DIALOGUE, 9 p.m. (56) DRAGNET, 9:30 p.iQ-(4) Tomorrow NEGRO PEOPLE, 5:45 p.m. (56) Naked Kiss” (116 4 ) Constance Tower, Anthony Eisley (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: “Who Was Maddox?” (English, 1964) Bernard Lee, Jack Watling, Suzanne Lloyd (50) R — Movie: “Mad at the World” (1953) Keefe Brasselle, Frank Lovejoy 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R—Texan (9) C — Perry’s Probe ttbo (7) News 3:00 (2) R-Naked City 4;06 (2) C - News, Weather FRIDAY MORNING 1:20 (2) TV Chapel 5:25 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:30 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:00 (2) C —.Gospel-Singing Jubilee 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Classroom 6:45 (7) C-Bat Fink 7:06 (4) C-Today . (7) C — Morping Show 7:26 (9) Warm Up 7:30 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports - (9) C — Bonnie Prudden 6:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R — Movie: “Once Upon a Time” (1944) Cary Grant, Janet Blair, James Gleason, Ted Donaldsm Driver Injured, Then Arrested A Conwnerce Township man who was charged with driving without a license is in fair condition today following an auto accident in which four people were injured. ★ ★ ★ John R. Meinnis, 31, of 321 Longspur was charged b y Oakland County sheriff’s deputies after an accident in Commerce Towrtdiip yesterday. He is at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. The car McInnls was driving on Commerce Road at Newton Road collided head-m "With one driven by John E. Guilds, 20, of ,1664 LaSalle, Highland Township. Guilds is in fair condition at PiMitiac General Hospital. Two other passengers in his car were treated for Injuries and released. ' As many as 55,006 building fires In the U.S. in an average year are caused by children playing with matches. ^ g) R C -!lVlendly ,Giant for (9) CTiez Helena liOO (2) C-Merv Griffin (4) C — Steve Allen • (9) C — Bozo the Clown , 16:66 (4) Snap Judgment (0) Holiday Film 16:21 (4) C-News 16:36 (2) R C —Beverly Hill-billies (4) C — ConcMitration (7) C - Dick COvett (0) C — Pinocchio 11:66 (2) RC-Andy Griffith (4) G — Persimlity (9) C — Wizard of Oz 11:36 (2) R-Dlck Van Dyke (4) C — Hollywood Squares (9) Take 'Thirty (?0) RC-Kimba FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:66 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R — Bewitched (9) Lunch with Bozo (50) C — Alvin 12:25 (2) C —Fashions 12:30 (2) C — Search Tomorrow (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C '— Funny You Should Know (9) Bill Kennedy’s Hollywood (50) R — Movie: “Too Young to Know” (1945) Whirlwind courtship spell trouble for marriage of two young people. Joan Leslie, Robert Hutton 12:55 (4) C-News 1:06 (2) C — Love of life (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Johnny One-Eye” (1950) Wounded racketeer is hunted by both the police and his partner. Pat O’Brien, Wayne Morris 1:25 (2) C - News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our laves (7) C — Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) C - Guiding Ught (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) c — General Hospital (6) R — Real McCoys (50) R — Topper (56) What’s in a Word 3:36 (2) C —Edge of Night (A) C — You Don’t Say (7) c — One Life to Live (9) Lively Spot (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Innovation 4:66 (2) C—Linkletter Show (A) C — Donald O’Connor — Guests include Janet Leigh and Mickey Rooney. (7) c — Dark 9iadows (56) Continental Comment 4:25 (2) C - News 4:36 (2) C — Mike Dou^as (7) R - Movie: “It Came ' from Beneath the Sea” (1955) New atomic submarine encounters a horrible undersea monster. Kenneth Tobey, Faith Dcmiergue, Harry Lauter (9) C-Magic Shoppe (56) R — Little Rascals (56) TV Kindergarten (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:66 (9) R C — Batman (50) Munsters (56) Misterogers • (62) R — Robin Hood 5:36 (4) C-efeorge Pierrot — "Spanish Jouiiiey” (9) R C-Gilligan’s Island (SO) rC—Supowaa (56) Friendly Glaiilt' (62) R — Leava It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Negro Pec^Ie -Panel discusses Negro’s future role in concluding part of this series. Radio Programs- TONItHT ■ ' WCAR# N8WSf oton 1^1 WPONf Newi# Plionf OpTflKm WHI*I. OOK ■»*«> 4iii-wja, ipwtt • 4,10-WWJ, T«»*v In atvwn* Xjlf.*^Bu{ln»*» Bnrwnntni-oiii o»v# w* Trnvnar t-a-WJB, Lowiii Them*»< AUfOKOpt . rtlB-WW,l. N • w • > 1^' *«wreasJS"*'’- •tW-WJR, N«m. DinwwlM Mlnon- •iM-WJR, WowWindWBUri fiW-WHBI, Tem Coiwiwn Bnem , IlilB-WJil. NMi RBcut Inoirf tltW-WJR, Nrm llA'i-WJR, Uwrtt Rinat tliW-WJR, AWUc Tlir JleilB WWJ, OvarntBlrt lllt»~WXYZ, NttM, JMl D:v- miiC RRiaav RwawiHi .ibk! N&MiOm # liMMWJR. Mwk H«a WW4, N«M . OMt RurtM [dwarBi WJBkI Nawi, Mare Ava^ JalHi •ilB-JWRdN, Irtna 4tlB-WWJ> Mama CarlaoB •t»~WJR, EunniiMa liM Ha .JW» - - > -I41L „ . Nam, jftrt'Oavli lil|-WiR, MmiM HaO »tS-WJR, Nam WHRi, uncia jay Mark RicMrBt litl~Ww4, Aik Yawr Naigh. WJBi..q*««.Ha<»aa NkWfc JahMiv Ran#- UtW-WJ^ Nawi. KalaMa-WHFl?yim Zinaar * ,-■ RRIOAV ArrRRNOON liW-WJR. Nawt Rarm WWJ. Nawi, gWlMl^te O^'t Tour ttCt^SfruU , fOConpuMB 4aiaursime)a MlMwntiBl UHodiBpoAaB lABuUlleW ASpMditflBudar ttUfigy ■lOliwrTfM ttlMni liCartata MOriaaiUdeoia iTXiighix nMNUrtaiM dwalUnm ttMina^ AnwBit SBodyBliNMar 66 nSMBBrn HCemUktowa (peaSx) Onnttt M EooanlilB fr&MMnwaB nOntapaf 33 AanBMiA 3 Mink HMI •i«»>WCAII. I ;cw; IB Ml •iW-WWJ, Nawailma ItlMWRON, Lwn tf Ataiar •i»-WaON, RBI AiwalaM 36MoBtMnki STMandaahM DOWN 1—.bak* tBonajr-. makm'ahociM SShaWt 4Riak 5 Hawaiian tFlowari ^ •Oompariaon leilBiWKrina 11 Lain la Cook’s mnfaB aOAcookdow ihiswitii battar 83"InlanM^ author a4_^lobatar 3SDmSrt nomad 26 Slgnlfinnt pMntina couna SaSnuOi pastriea 33 Miator (8p.) 36Famiinina nieknama AOStaarmof thaUaditim ranian JSOfdMPOpa AS Ant 460i^pcNNMai ATBmployor ASAfinoanrivar SOGobpalnnafl UOraupofa aort SSOlri'snama AS Spanish commander M 59 48 ■ &4 56 67 ar Intrepid-but Sick-Writer Goes Out on Limb Again X iook/at TV Bouquets on 60 61 62 68 61 2 By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — It’s damn fool time again. Being of unsound mind due to having a touch of the Hong Kong flu, and while under the influence of aspirin, I intrepidly prophesy what’ll happen in the great year of crises coming up. Because there wiil be crises within crises in ’69. However, peace will be completely achieved in Vietnam —but not until the second half of the year ... An important medical cure of stupendous proportions will be ready or almost ready for offleial announcement. 'W ★ ★ The amusement world’ll be shocked when Barbra Stre^mA doesn’t get an Oscar — not that she isn’t great, but simply because it’s her first time at bat. It’ll be Joanne Woodward (“Rachel, Rachel”) and Walter Matthau (“Odd Couple”) or Peter O’Toole (“Lion In Winter”) . . . Barbra’s fans will threaten to bum down the hall (This aspirin is really working) . . “Oliver” will make a stuiH-ising stand . . . Sammy Davis will switch in ’69 to Caesars Palace . . . Jill O’Hara (“Promises, Promises”) and Jennifer O’Hara ("Fig Leaves Are Falling”) will become the Redgrave Sisters of Broadway . . . Lesley Gore’ll get a nwmentous buildup as a super club singer starting at the Plaza Persian Room tomorrow . . . Beautiful blonde Cheryl Miller of the Daktari ’TV show will break out with a night club act offering “good music.” Hie Copacabana will not move despite all the mmors. (“The building is not coming down and I will be here for 26 more years,” says Bossman Julia PodeU) . . . The fancy restaurants will dr<^ their bar against women in formal evening pants. (’Ilie Plaza and 21 already have bnt Gene Cavallero of the Colony says “No pants! No pants and no turtlenecks.”) It will be revealed that TaUnlah Bankhead left V* of her residual estate as well as $10,600 in cash — to Jesse L«vy, the retired Navy Lt. Conunander who was her confidante and drinking companion. She “never spent money like a ' crazy woman” for she left a co-op apt. valued at $75,000 and 1100,000 Rantman Kodak stocks. She turned down $30,000 to (Is a Y^w Pag just before her death; she died a millionairess. •*’ Sr ★ ★ 'Riere’ll be a famous wedding in 1969 and also a famous pregnancy. ’Ilieie’ll be a tragedy with Russia involved. Richard Nfxoa’s headaches will be migraine compared to Mayor Lintbay’s. These forecasts of mine are always uncannily accurate. Just a year ago, fix* example, I fearlessly forecast that in 1968, “beards and long hair will lose their popularity.” *■ w ★ By CYNTHIA LOWRY APJobvisiaa-Radla Wrltor * NEW YORK-You might Sly with a certain degree ^ truth that If you’ve seen one Rose Parade, you’ve seen them all— the slow-movlpg floats wlUi their mUUoris of flowers, tbs pretty sndling glrls,^ the prtjud bands and horses, the jarring commercial flavor of an occasional entry or TV stara in eon* spicuous 8^8. It matters not at ail,, because watching Pasadena’s annual day in the national sun, followed by marathon football viewing, has become an established New Year’s Day tradition. * ♦ ★ This year,^ it seemed, the floats were more beautiful and more elaborate than ever. CBS imce again had Bess Myerson and Mike Douglas carefully handling the descriptions and flie credits. Betty White, who over the years had done NBC’s Rose Parade commentary so i^n she can confi* dently depart from the program notes, had Raymond Burr sharing the assignment: They worked together nicely and of ten engaged in funny, sponta neous banter. ALL-DAY GAMES Then began the really serious viewing of the day that continued without pause until close to 11 p m. — the college football games. CBS moved directly to Dallas and the Cotton Bowl, NBC to New Orleans and the Sugar Bowl. ■A W ★ For the occasional football viewer, though, the big game is the Rose Bowl, since it is part of the tradition. ’This year, if one listened to NBCT sports announc ers Curt Gowdy and Kyle Rote [the program should reallv have been called “'The O.J. Simpson Show.” ★ ♦ ★ - . The University of Southern;| California’s great running star did make an 80-yard run but the afternoon wsas claimed by Ohio State. ‘ ^ The half-time entertainment by the “two universities was impressive and both bands per-fix-med with the ix*ecision of the June Taylor Dancers. If ail those games were not enough, NBC carried the viewers on to Miami for the Orange Bowl. By that time there must have been a lot of tired eyes across the country, which was a shame since it was ttie most exciting game of the lot, with Penn State winning in the last 15 seconds. Both networks have plenty of practice covering parses and football games and both do unL fwmly excellent jobs. ★ w ★ From the occasional football viewer, however, comes «ie complaint: Occasionally a pity-ar ba wrtthing in agony on iba field after a progfinn cuts awav for • cix^ of quteli; commrtvwli, returning vHhira file pli^r is eboiit to be fi« Burned. Nobody bothers to Inform the vast and ooncemsd audience about the condHlon of the injured player. Novr, with the hdidays be-btaid, television can st|p ha] Uito second season handful ot new shows r the ^opouts — storting when NBC’s “My Friend Topy replaces Uie Phyllis DIUer show THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Brigitte Bardot, refused admission to a London cafe because she wore trousers, snapped, “What do I do with them —take them off?” (She got no answer) . . . Authoress Jackie Sesann (“Valley of the Dolls”) got a lOOG advance for the British rights to her next book, “Tie Love Machine” . . . Johnny Canum, who seldom gets to the Broadway shows, went to “Promises, Promises.” Tony Bennett said at the Ginger Man he’ll bring tee Robert Famon orchestra from London for his February, concert' at- Lincoln Center . . . Singer Bobby G«ddsbwo’s -birthday gtft frwn United Artists Records this month’ll be a gold-colored Cadillac ... “Funny Girl,” which cost $7,500,000, is expected to gross more than $75,000,000 — Ava Gardner’s escort at Sheiteerd’s: Avco-Embassy exec Bob Zarem. Margaret Whiting, who opens at the Rainboy Grill today, did- a awies wite her stater Barbara in tee eady days of TV. She says "I tell people we were the sisters who came after the Andrews, but More the Gabors.” WISH PD SAID THAT: The best time to give advice to your children ia vteile they’re still young emuidi to think you know what you’re talking about. , REaHBMra:iUED QUOTE: "Liquor may not cure a cold, no remecty talta more effectively." EARL’S PBAltLS: Pat Cooper telb of visiUng a friend ttt.a Las Vegas hospital. "Th^ do things differently out tbm,” be reporta, "—the rtiart at the foot of tee bed gives tee odds on the patient.” p * * Joe E. Lewis, In tee louhge of Kenny’s Steak Pub, called out, "Dna meet ttmel,” so tee plantat playnd a souk again. "1 didta’t mean you,” Joe E. toul him, v—I meant tea bar-tanderl" ... That’s earl, brotiMr. RuMIllwri Hue SyWlMK lay Police Station Is Hit by Bomb JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) -The Fifth Precinct police station was Wt by a bomb Wednesday in tee second attack on tea station in little more than a month. Tie bonte shattered a window but injured no one. Since the building was sprayed with mactitoe gun bullets from a moving car Nov. 29, all windows and glass doors at the modem station house have been reinforced with plywood shields, which prevented the broken glass from flying into tee station, police said. Three persons, who identified themselvM as Black Panther party monbers, stand indicted on various charges stemmtaig from tee machine gun attack. No one was shot during that incident. I PLUMBING^ i DISCOUNTS f» ; 3-PiKeMTHSn j Frma {toileto ~ FiREniMtoLofi ! tummam - VANmES mNETiUKS TUB Enoiosww EXnui SPEOMUI SIMS iaxN w I lauaAirWtiraiiAIMN........A H w‘ ifiaMPUMBIMj 841 Baldwin Ft4>1l1f«rH8«l8 •pm Hmk tak M Mb WaA.mAMtum.'nfMli « mmLaMRjakSBWBJRMSumAl 30% - 40% • 00% Off 8 *ontiae Music & Soiiiiii! S If II West Huran mont Mt-llN ■ ■HEaBWBBBBBEBBBWWWaWWWBBWMBM TENUTA’S RESTAURAMT FIHE FAMILY IHMIIQ - OABIIY-OUT AVAILABU FISH SPECIAL-ALL DAY FRIDAY QOMPLETI TINOER QOLOftN FRIID FISH Dimmit ODME IM> SIT DOWN, EAT ALL YOU CAN! _________ CORNER OF HURON AND JOHNSON (Actocc fa>iwjgiitigc_Gwncwlj 8-9639 AiM !Bk In The 1968 Aasoelatad PZess Aw»d Campe-tition, WPON News Beeeived Mora Aw^ Than Any Odiw Michigan Rodin Slatloul ifvmmattmmmmLmmm ir IIST REOUUUILY lOMDULlO NiWt FMOftAH Yk BUT NEWS DOOUMBinUlY ir IIST niBUO AFFAIHS i DISOUttIM tSMIS For eomplote mnn of OakluMl County, the the world ... Lieun every hoar oa the hoar le wrOWl m 01UHUHM uaoiy, uw ______iMea every hoar oa the hoar feetooL eomplala AWARD-WlNNlNt; NEWS, UMlia ' .y ; i, \ THE PONTIAC PEESS. THUR$DAV, JANUjARY 2. 1069 1968, the International Press In-stttute said in a year-end leport. The IPI, which has a mem- ires5 to Ponder Is to Aid GIs, Vets By JERRY T. BAULCH Associated Press Newsleatures WASHINGTON-With the new Congress firing up for , business, It won’t take Jong for the members to introduce = stacks of bins on behalf of veterans, of men and women in sprviea snd th^ families. And some will seek to i^anga the draft system. As usual, i!. few wifi become laws. Tba big proposals to be considered for ‘ active-duty pele include an overhaul of their pay system, dental care for dependents . and extension of medical cai^ for dependents bf men killed in. Vietnam for one year after ' their deaths: There wonH be as much legislation for Vetetans as in the past year, but an important proposal would Increase the dependoicy and indemnity compensation for dependents of men who die ' of service-connected causes. They got no raise when Congress upped Die rates for servicemen and most pensions. * * ★ No i^se is in sight for those who are staying under the old pre-1960 VA pension plan and haven’t shifted to the new BAULCH NEW LOOK AT GI LOANS Since ttm temporary authority for guaranteeing veterans’ •’ hrane loans at 6^4 per cent expires next October, Congress will have to take n look. There is talk of raising it to a more realistie 7 per cent. Another proposal in this area would raise the present limit nn direct loans—in areas where con-vmitiona] loans are not available—from the present $17,500 " to about $20,000 or $22,000 in view of the increase in housing costs. CSongreas will try to wrap up the legislation fw turning 'over to the Veterans Administration all—or almost all-veterans and national cem^eries. A plan will te offered to ‘ untangle the complicated laws that permit men going to ■dHxd under the GI bill to also accept education grants and loans under some federal programs but not others; ’ There win be an effort to expand the VA’s contact service-people who advise veterans at the hometown level. This is liiinited now to one or two offices in each state, f . And a fight wUl be made to get ftw long-range rehabilitation oi aging hospitals-^ow at midpoint—back on track after a dra^c budgebidnch cutback this year. This is design^ to provide newer facUties and to make more beds available in this biggest program run by the VA. rtmMm proposals y ^ The Pentagon is expected to push for broad help to sur-vivoiv of active duty and retired military men, including . proposfds: bl|;atte survivor annuities to match those paid civil Ipttilte; bJlscsceaSe Servicemen’s Group Life Insurance coverage 'from tiie present $10,000 limit to $20,000 to those who want < it regardless of raidc fa $30,660 proposal got nowhere last yew). • Revise servicemen’s protection plan so the government idll-pmt mmre of the costs. ' nllave the govtinment offer life insurance to retirees. The plan to c(Mitinue medical care for dependents of military men killed in Vietnam is sponsored by Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, D^.C., diairman of the House Armed Itervices committee, so it should have a chance to get aimroval. Families of men killed in actim are now left out in the cold medically, including hospitalized wives or children and expectant mothers. * ^ ★ Another pet of Rivers’ is the bill to extend dental care to dependents, but that could get snagged on protests that it costs too much. ‘ ’Ihe most momentous change on tap for active duty people is the overhaul of their pay system, based on the Huimell report for having a straight salary system rather tiian pay allowances. It may take wee^"w months for this to get wrapped up for Congress to consider. It would mean..A raise fen* all, but again costs will be the big question mark. " DOWN 'THE DRAIN >. About two dozen bills for servicemen and veterans went down the drain when the 90th Congress adjourned, but many will be reintroduced. !>' %Rep. Thaddeus Dulski, D-N.Y., chairman of the House o' Post Office Committee, already has said he will try again to . get free mail service for all servicemen instead of just those in combat areas. The House passed this last year but the 8«Mte killed it. ■ f ffj*' ★ ★ ★ One bill introduced late in the session by Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., may come up again. It would give the civilian husbands of women in service the same status as the wives of ‘ I men in service. ' -K, Unless her husband is in fact a dependent the woman . In service can’t get him free medical care or PX privileges and she doesn’t get the added housing allowance or separation imd dislocation allowances. ' * ★ ★ The retired people will try again to get their pay changes - basod on current military pay scales—as it once was— 'rather, thm on rises in the cost of living index. President-:: Jilect Nix to U7a with relatives when their husbands are sent to places as Vietnam. Odd B1^ and Pieces « 'tihoold there be Job training for officers about to leave 4orlrlca who feel their combat-oriented careers did not pre-'jpare tiiem tor the civilian world? That’s one of several questions on which the Defense 'I9h|»rtinent is asking service comment in a re-stu(|y of Pcbjact Transition, which so far has been limited to enlisted pm wltiiout dviliaa skills. After deciding to have soldiers with special medical iprobleMi wtiar extra dog tags calling attention to their 8,$a tiwlMtite ahfea Ipgr Jangle and give away ambush twtnd ppiroa. Row tiie soldicni wfl get itiaide cases SiltiQa tbetii^. bershlp of more than 1,560 pub*' Ushers, editors and jourai^Usts on five continents, said In a survey signed by acting director Anthony Brock-* w w ★ “Ironically in human rights year, the people’s right to Infor. hiation, which is what press freedom means, has again suffered losses. * ★ ★ “Apart from more dramatic encroachments on liberty of the press such as arrest of Journalists, expulsion of correspemdents and closure newspa|wrs~and there have been ms^—there has been a widespread whittlihg away of the press’ ability to fulfill Its role, springing largely from- lack of appreciation of what the function of the free press should be.’’ ★ ★ ★ Czechoslovakia proved “how vital press freedom is to other human freedoms,’’ the survey said. LATIN AMERICA CITED But virtually no area of the World escapes criticism. “In no less than 14 out of 27 South American countries 4md islands south of the United States-Mexi-co border, press freedom is either nonexistent, subject to restrictions which make it difficult for journalists to fulfirtheir role, or limited by the use of pressures.’’ The effects of violence on the press, and vice versa, are studied in several countries. -*r *• * In the United States the survey referred to what it called “a disquieting development ... Despite disproof of any direct connection, it has been felt that the media, by publicizing violence and (particularly in the case of television) by being present dur ing it, in some measure incite the violence they report.’’ ir ■k -k It added that following the Chicago Democratic convention-time riots, during- which 34 newsmen were injured, “public opinion polls found wide support for the police action and little for the newsmen, who it was apparently felt were as much to blame for what happened as those who struck them.’’ READERS DON’T TRUST Surveys made it appear that newspapers were no longer trusted by their readers “who felt that they lie, manufacture news and sensationalize what they do report.” ★ ★ ★ The report said a similar reaction has been noted in West Germany following charges that “certain papers manipulate the news to achieve the effect the publishers wish.” ■k -k * Apart from the United States in Germany, France/ Britain and Brazil “the media have found themselves both blamed as the real instigators of violence and, sometimes in clashes with police, the object of It.” In Britain the press suffers from the low priority accorded to it in the minds of legislators, the report said. reporting restricted It criticised the Criminal Justice Act, which restricts the reporting of court evidence in some circumstances. “nie press which represents the public is still at a disadvantage compared with the institutions representing the state.” k k k Tile survey said there are some hopeful signs in Portugal. “Articles, criticism and cartoons have recently appeared which would have been unthinkable earlier last year.” k k k But it said the situation in Spain “is just the opposite.” It called Greece ^‘the saddest case among Euri^an countries with a free press tradition.” ONE OF THE IRONIES On the situation in the developing nations, it commented: “One of the ironies of our time is that it is precisely in the Third World where good communication is most necessary that conditions for the press are often at their worst.” kkk The survey called upon countries to adopt a draft convention for protection ' of Journalists, prepared by the International Federation of Editors and the International Commission of Jurists. kkk But it admitted that it is der batable what protection if could give In such a case as that of Anthony Grey, the Reuters cor respondent held by the Cnnmu-nist Chinese in Peking since July 21, 1967. 'The siu-vey deplored “ibis beartless use of a journalist as a pawn in a political game.” ■ I ■. Wii—P ..—-— ^ Sean it Open,Evening* W 9m PM. - Thunday, Friday, Saturday and Monday Cosmetic Case* Regular 14.99... 11.97 21” Weekender Regular 15.99 i •. 12.77 27” Pullman Regular 22.99.. .18.37 Two Suiter ^ Hegttlar 21.99 , .17.57 Companion Case Regular 16.99 .. 13.57 Featherlite Luggage SAVE Featherlite is fashion luggage. Beautifully styled grained vinyl covering with Texon® backing, lined with quilted acetate. DraWbolt lock, aluminum valance. Choose Mist Blue, Lipstick Red, Avocado Green or Melon Gold. Luggage Dept. Lowest Prices of the Season Use Yoi|p Convenient Sears Charge versatile car coats Wars $11 to III 1299 „ The versatilet are at Sean at the lowest prices of the season. Car coats that go anywhere. In fashion shades and texturei. Popular aises. imtriiohied coats WarsItltolTI 24^9 .. 4999 Choose from a wide assortment of woolens, wooi-blends and other popular fabrics, in designs and colors to compliment every outfit. Women'i CooM (not at Orom Points, WyandeHs) lavish fur-trims Wars $54.11 to $141 to Fnr trim eoati id • ■ale prioel Inelntiw tome with Itucnrioog mink trim. Fur ProdueU haheted to Show Country of Qrifiin Sale Ends Saturday women 8 warm waterproof boots color-cued nylon tights Reg. 7.99 497 take along a great han&ag Wonderfnlly warm boot is 9** hi|ti> to keep yonr feet and ankles warm; c^;n. Slately waterproof to keep them dry. rushed nylon uppers are durable and reaiiient with ribbed rubber soles. Toany nylon fleece lining. In beigo and green, sizes 5-9. Wom.n'1 Sho.1 (Not at Grotw Point.) Open Monday, Tknnday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, TWoaday. ____________ Wednoaday9to5tS0 teSfiBSiSSsiSlu Chill chaaing tights wrap up the winter leg scene. In patterns and solids. Girls* and children’s, sixes. 2JI Womon’t . . . 2.37 He«l«y OnS. (Mt ot 0mm Point.) Rtj a Vinyl’s all done up "in dressy and casual take alongs, in pouches, top handled • envelope and vanities. The great looks in fashion shades. ’ Foihlon AccNorlM (not at Grom Points)' decorative wake-ups Rof.2.MtoMI 197. 497 A. Petite electric all reg. 2.99............ B. Magic Touch ele< alarm, reg. 4.99,. C. Lighted dial alar reg. 6.99............ -)»wtlrg0.pt. (nt Grom Point., Wyoi Pontiac u^lPliijpe FE 54171 III „V , * ■ 1^,^4'f Pontiac Presa Photos by Ron Unternahrer The Cold Means Fun Time At Pontiac's Murphy Park A Roaring Fire Helps To Fight Off The Breeze Freezing Weather Continues in Area The weatherman continued to give the Pontiac area the cold shoulder as temperatures again plunged toward the zero mark. A low of 10 above was recorded at 2 a.m. today. Temperatures are expected to dive to five to 10 above again tonight. ★ ★ ★ Skies will be partly cloudy with possible snow flurries tonight through Saturday. High temperature will continue in the low 20s. Because of the weather, 10 school' districts in the northern Lower Peninsula plan to extend Christmas and New Year vacations through the weekend instead of resuming classes as scheduled. KEPT FROM CL^SS School officials'* said that slippery driving and snow-clogged roads would keep students out of class at Gaylord, Ellsworth, Vanderbilt, F a i r y i e w, Wolverine, Johannesberg, Inland Lakes, Mio and Kaleva. t Swirling snow kept a Coast Guard ^helic(^ter from returning to Traverse City from Manitou Island in Lake Superior. Hie helicopter was dispatched there to deliver supplies to a lighthouse. The weatherman said Lower Michigan would have snow flurries, mainly along Lake Michigan, that would diminish to occasional flurries today. There’s a chance of some light snow in Lower Michigan tonight. The low in Lower Michigan will range from five below zero to seven above. There’s a chance of snow flurries in the UppervPeninsula today, with lows tonight ranging from zero to 12 above. WORST ROAD CONDITIONS The worst road conditions due to snow were reported today in western and northern Lower Michigan, and the east (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) Tf»« W»ath9r U. I. WMtiMr BurMU PorMfil Frigid P$9» >1 VOL. 120 — NO. 283 PONtlAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1909 ★ UM.T.gW«grr,ONAt ,V'' Detroit Antipoverty Setup Full of Abuses, Says U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal investigators have discovered that hundreds of high School graduates—and even some college student.s—have collected government paychecks under Detroit antipoverty programs set up to provide jobs and training for high school dropouts. In a report to Congress, the General Accounting Office cited this as one of “a number of discrepancies” it found in examining Neighborhood Youth Corps programs in Detroit, where slums were scarred by a major riot in 1967. The 82-page report also distlosed that: • Inadequate screening allowed some youths to receive federal assistance even though their families did not meet the antipoverty program’s low-income criteria*. • Antipoverty ofifcials made little or no attempt to follow up on the progress of youths who completed training, and thus had no way to gauge the programs’ effectiveness. • Sponsoring organizations indirectly used federal funds to help pay the local share of the programs’ cost, and local sponsors paid only half their required 10 per cent. • The “weaknesses cited went undetected for months because federal officials assigned to insure compliance with antipoverty program requirements "were performing very little monitoring of the NYC sponsor activities in Detroit. The Associated Press reported last April 10 that GAO investigators were delving into operations of the poverty fighting efforts in Detroit, one of two cities in the nation who.se central an-tipoverly agency is an arm of city government rather than an independent nonprofit corporation. The other is Chicago, The GAO report centered on 16 neighborhood Youth Corps programs spon.sored in fiscal 1966 and 1967 by one of three organizations—the Mayor’s Committee for Human Resources Development, the city board of education and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit. More than half the $15.7 million in federal funds involved went to the first group, headed by Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh. Slayer of 4 Kills Himself WESTERNVILLE, N. Y. (iP) - Ralph MacLachlan, a former mental patient, who shot and killed his' estranged wife and three other persons in a rampage last night, put a bullet through his head today as ofifeers closed in, police reported. MacLachlan’s wife Anita, 33, was shot as she and members of her family sat in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Turke, in this central New York village. Her sister, Mrs. Jane Ringrose, 35, and Mrs. Ringrose’s 12-year-old daughter, Barbara, were killed at the same time. The other four occupants of the house were wounded before MacLachlan left. Related Picture, Page A-2 Missing Girl, 17, Is Found Slain Police said MacLachlan then ran to the next-door home of Mrs. James Pepper, apparently to try to get the Pepper automobile Mrs. Pepper’s 10-year-old son, James Jr., was fatally wounded. Mrs. Pepper was critically wounded. volleys of shots were exchanged befttl^i^ MacLachlan shot himself to death. No motive was established im-mediately, but officers said MacLachlan and his wife had been separated for about two weeks.. MacLachlan, 37, was a 6-foot-2 out-doorsman. He worked in Oneida, N. Y. The wounded: Cynthia Ringrose, 11, Robert Ringrose, 36, and Perry Turke, 68, were in critical condition. Czech Reshuffle R^ulfs in No Shift 2 HIDE IN CLOSET Another attempt ' to remove t h e helicopter, with five crewmen, was planned today. i * * * ' %;S Detroit Edison Co. reported that about 800 customers in Columbiaville in Lapeer County were without electricity temporarily when winds and ice attacked power lines, .j-j SNOW FLURRIES HOLLYWOOD i/P) - The pretty 17' ycarcld daughter of an actress and a novelist, home on Christmas vacation from college, was found slain late yes-I'l’day at the bottom of a, thickly wooded ravine. Dark-haired Marina Elizabeth llabe, daughter of Hans Habe of Zurich, Switzerland, and Eloise Hardt, was last seen when she left on a date Sunday night. “She was definitely murdered,” said Sheriff’s Lt. Norman Hamilton who was at the scene when the body was recovered. However, he said the cause "of death would not be announced until after a coroner’s autopsy. Witjnesses said Two of the Pepper children saved their lives by hiding in a closet. MacLachlan. officers said, stole a Jeep fr'om a service station and began a flight into the rough country of the Adirondack mountains that sit just above Westernville. Turke’s 62-year-old wife, like the rest of the injured, was shot more than once. She, however, was not listed as critical. The Turkes, the Peppers and the MacLachlans lived side by side in the rolling, snowy hills of Westernville, their homes separated by small fields. The officers involved in the Remsen shootout said MacLachlan never uttered a word. Early today the blue Jeep was spotted by state troopers Dominick DePaola Jr., and Thomas Buck and they gave chase. MacLachlan fir'ed three shots through the windshield of the troopers’ automobile, then retreated inside a tractor sales house in the hamlet of Remsen, 10 miles east of Westernville. Soviet Ships at Aden VOLLEYS EXCHANGED ' DePaola and Buck were reinforced and ADEN, South Yemen (AP) — Two Soviet Navy ships, the missile carrier Gnevniy and the destroyer Vdohnoveniy, arrived today in Aden harbor for a five-day visit, the second by the Soviet Navy since South Yemen won independence a year ago. PRAGUE (AI^^— Czechoslovakia’s most sweeping government change since the August invasion left the occupied nation today with familiar leaders still in control and still pledged to press ahead with stalled reform programs. Premier Oldrich Cernik’s new fedejal government, announced yesterday, contained no unexpected members. There was no indication that the wholesale reshuffle involved in setting up the new federal system would lead, under Soviet pressure, to a purge of progressives. ★ * ★ Diplomatic observers said the new lineup made no basic shift in the balance between progressives and conservatives. There were two additions to the Cabinet’s senior ranks. Jan Marko, 48, a relatively unknown engineer and economic specialist, was named foreign minister. He succeeds Jiri Hajek, who resigned Sept. 19 under Soviet pressure after denouncing the invasion at the United Nations. The other new man is Jan Tabacek, also an engineer, named foreign trade minister. there were no visible marks on the body. “A lot of detectives have some ideas on this,” he said, “and we want to hold off until we can investigate them . . . It’s important that this body be properly examined.” County Shortchanged, Says Commission ALARM SOUNDED Road Tax Rebate Too Slim No arrests were made, but Sheriff’s Lt. Harold White said ,30 alarm had been issued for a car, seen near the girl’s home early yesterday morning. He said the male driver tried to molest a womaiV. The girl’s home in the Hollywood hills is located about fou? miles from the ravine where Marina Was found. A search party found Marina’s body about 30 feet down a slope. Searchers went there after a woman walking on Mulholland Drive reported finding a purse. In it Were Marina’s compact, credit cards arid a small amount of By JEAN SAILE Oakland County is being shortchanged under the state’s formula for disbursing state gas and weight taxes, according to the Oakland County Ifload Commission. The hardest hit of all are the rural local roads which receive the least of all on a per-mile basis — $611.25 in 1966, the most recent comprehensive figure the commission has. ★ * * maintenance and construction on trunklines. ONLY $10,4 MILLION money. Sheriff’s Lt. White said the girl had been dead since early Monday morning. As the second highest contributor in the state, thd county as a whole (rural and incorporated) was refunded only 39.9 per cent of the amount its residents paid in state? taxes when they bought gas or license pllates for their cars. Under the state formula in effect since 1951, the county should be receiving 54 per cent. The balance is supposed to go to the State Highway Department for Instead in 1966 county residents contributed $26.2 million and got back only $10.4 million. The situation is getting no better. Why is this particular county taking a shellacking? “It just works out that way,” according to two County Road (Commission officials, Sol Lomerson, t|^e newly elected chairman, and Paul Vab Roekel, chief highway engineer. Are our state legislators aiware that Oakland County’s roads, admittedly in poor eondition, are on the short end of the slick as far as road funds are concerned? “We don’t think so.” “It didn’t seem politic to bring the matter up last summer when we were asking voters for an extra mill and now we’d rather wait and s^k legislative relief through the new Coi^jty Board of Supervisors,” said the con*fnission officials. Has Oakland County been shortdianged ever since 1951? GRADUALLY WORSE “Yes. But the payments have gradually worsened.” Why? “The formula is based on a people-per- (Continued on Page A-4, Col. 1) Irt* Today's Press Congress Reform-Minded s;Yeqr-€ncf Review A^c8(psute look at the top area stories of 196B ist-presented PAGES C-Z, C4. Tax Overhaul Is Likely A Solitary Skater Pits His Skill Against Ice And The Law Of Gravity WASHINGTON (f) — The tax-free status of charitable institutions and the exemption from capital gains taxes enjoyed by heirs ^re due for careful scrutiny in the new Congres, informed sources say. These two areas are designated for special study as part of a look at tax reforms that sources say Congress will undertake regardless of what Richard M. Nixon does with recommendations of the Johnson administration. The controversial 27.5 per cent oil depletion allowance, however, is not scheduled for review, sources said last night. President Johnson said Tuesday in San Antonio, Tex., he is making available to Congress and the incoming ad- ministration a package of tax reform proposals developed by the Treasury Department. NO RECOMMENDATIONS Johnson added, however, he had not examined the proposals and is making no recommendation concerning them. The initiative, accordingly, is left to the Republican administration that will take over Jan. 20. Sources close to Rep. Wilbur iS. Mills, D-Ark., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committe where all tax legislation originates, said Mils! avoided receiving any advance information on the Treasury proposals, apparently prefering they go first to the Nixon administration. _______«ad(»e-of.$«6k ;' Am mm.......... ....m ' H'' g........... IhiMf Newi .., «>»»«*BMl’ ‘A I ' ''I THE PONTIAC PRESS. TIllTRSDAV. JANIIAHV 2. lt)«0 END OF THE BATTLE—Attendants load the body of Ralph MacLachlan into an ambulance near Westernville, N.Y., this morning. MacLachlan shot and killed his wife and three oUiers last night, wounding four more persons. Police say Israeli Planes Raid Jordan By the Associated Press Israeli warplanes attacked Arab positions in Jordan today to silence guns which had fired on an army patrol, an Israeli army spokesman reported. The spokesman said the planes roared b low over the Jordan River near Beit Yosef, 10 miles south of the Sea of Galilee. ★ ★ ★ No further details of the attack were available immediately. The army also said it intercepted and drove back a band of saboteurs who had crossed from Jordan into Israel near Massada, just south of Galilee last night. The spokesman said Israeli troops found an assault rifle and a bag of antipersonnel mines in a search of the area. A Jordanian army spokesman said six Israeli Mirage jets attacked the Ziglab dam in the northern Jordan Valley with napalm, rockets and machine gun fire today, but, he said, the raiders were turned back by antiaircraft fire. The spokesman also said Israeli tanks HEUCOPTER ATTACK A Chilling End to '68 December Snowy, Icy Oakland County residents were treated to a white Christmas, thanks to a two-inch snowfall Dec. 23 followed by below-freezing temperatures. ,And the balance of the month challenged the skills of commuters as they made their way through a maze of sleet-and-snow-slicked streets and freeways. * ★ * ' The amount of precipitation for the month, however, fell short in rainfall and exceeded the previoua December’s snowfall. Rainfall for last month totaled 1.90 inches with the snowfall 8.5 inches as compared to the December 1967 accumulation (d 2.90 inches of rain and six inches of snow. Neither year challenged the record snowfall of December 1966, when 16 inches carpeted the Oakland County area. GLOOMYSKIES I, Skies during the month were mostly gloomy, as only 11 days of sunshine were charted. This was two more days of sunshine than the area received during Decern, ber 1967. Rain dampened the spirits of shoppers and partygoers on nine days during the month, much of it turning into sleet by the below freeing temperatures. ★ ★ ★ Temperatures ran the gamut during December, with a high of 48 reached Dec. 3 and a low of minus-two Dec. 31. This compared to the previous December’s high of 60 and low of four below zero. Mean reading for the month was 25.84 degrees, 4.36 degrees colder than Dec. 1967. Greek Airliner Forced fo Cairo ATHENS IJFi — A Greek government spokesman said a lone Greek gunman hijacked an Olympic Airways DC6 plane en route to Athens from Crete today and forced it to land in Cairo, Earlier, an Athens airport source said the pilot of the plane had reported two Arab gunmen were forcing him to fly to Cairo. ★ ★ ★ r|ie Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Variable cloudiness and cold tonight and Friday Wifli periods of snow flurries. Highs today 19 to 24, lows tonight five^to 10. High Friday 26 to 25; Saturday's outlook; a little colder with snow flurries. Winds westerly 10 to 18 miles per hour, becoming variable tonight. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: 20 today, tonight, and 30 Friday. Rut a government spokesman said an unidentified Greek had entered the plane’s cockpit brandishing a pistol and ordered the pilot to fly to the Egyptian capital. The plane carried 102 persons, loannis Georgakis, chairman of the airline, took a Boeing 707 jet to Cairo to bring the passengers back to Athens. ONASSIS OWNER Today In Pontiac Lowest temperatura preceding 8 e.m At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity, 5 m.p.h Direction, North Sun stti Thursday at 5:13 p.m. Sun rises Friday at 8:02 a.m. Moon sets Friday at 8:22 a.m. Moon rlMs Thursday at 3:45 p.m. 10 Ona Ytar Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest ..................... Mean temperature Weather—Partly sunny Downtown Temperatures 10 a.m........13 Wednesday In Pontiac ... .. . recorded downtown) Highest temperatura Lowest temperatura Wednesday' Alpena 16 Fscanaba 16 Flint 13 Gd. Rapids 15 Houghton 9 HouQhton L. 15 Jackson 10 Lansing 15 Marquette 14 MDskegon 16 s Temperature Chart Mean tempdrsture . Weather—>/3 inch snow Nlihsst and tewest TemperaturH Thll D»f» in »l V..n « In 117* 12 In U7» Oscoda Pellston 17 Saginaw 14 Traverse C. 18 Albuquerque 46 Atlanta 34 Bismarck 6 Boston 34 Chicago 9 Cincinnati 21 0 Detroit 13 Fort Worth 44 39 8 Jacksonville 64 32 5 Kansas City 26 17 t Los Anqeies 81 53 5 Miami Bch, 74 56 10 MIIWcr>'^ .. 2 3 10 New Orleans 47 42 13 New York 37 13 11 Omaha 14 9 15 Phoenix 12 Pittsburgh 11 St. Louis 21 Tamoa 19 S. Lake City 28 19 4 S. Francisco 54 45 12 S, S. Marie 10 17 6 Seattle 43 38 11 Washington 39 18 Thei airline is owned by Aristotle Onas-sis, who interupted a New Year’s holiday with his wife, the former Jacqueline Kennedy, and her children on the island of Skorpios to fly to Athens. This was the second time an Olympic Airways airliner had been hijacked and the second such incident in the Mediterranean in recent months. 71 39 14 12 22 14 62 44 27 Supervisors to Be Sworn In Data from U S. WEATHER BUREAU - ESSA rtfMrw UnHi fiidof I OR[ CAST Tampcratwrti Morning Showort IHIHI flurries 1 n< I lsSf#*ddi Fd^ipifdfisn N*t lndicotdd*» Consult Local Foroeost AR Wircphot. ' NATIONAL WEATHER-Rain is predicted across much of the Gulf Coast mkMI in4 oVff dw otntral Mississippi Vailey tcmlght. Snow is expected over ••brfiBi aortbam Ntw BngUmd. Bitter cold temperatures will continue to grip the Wtioa*i midsectloB with continued chilly readings over much of the remainder of dwoMiiiirv. The new 27-man Oakland County Board of Supervisors will be sworn into office in special ceremonies at 7:30 tonight at the County Courthouse auditorium. County Clerk Lynn D. Allen will administer the oath of office. * * * The first official meeting of the new board has been called for 10 a.m. Jan. 9. It is expected to be an all-day meeting since members will elect officers and set up new bylaws permitting committee structure changes. Philip 0. Mastin of Hazel Park is the Democratic nominee for chairman of the board and Alexander C. Perinoff of Southfield is its vice chairman nominee. ★ ★ ♦ Republicans so far have failed to nominate any candidates for board offices. It appears doubtful that any action will be taken the first day on pay for newly elected officials. What could happen is that Democrats will put through the board their suggestion to appcdnt a blue-ribbon citizens’ advisory committee for that purpose. Senate Ratification of N-Pact Unlikely Before LBJ Leaves Birmingham Traffic Light Is Slated at Hunter, Forest AP WIr.photo MacLadhlan killed himself as they exchanged fire with him. Police (right) examine the snowplow on a Jeep that MacLachlan used as a shield. McCormack Confident He'll Stay as Speaker opened fire on plantations in the Menshia area this morning. There were no casualties in either of the attacks, he said, but a house near the dam and some plantations were damaged. Jordan reported earlier that armed Israeli helicopters struck at Jordanian forces in the southerfij^desert yesterday and that a Jordanian soldier was killed,. A Jordanian spokesman in Amman said that five Israeli helicopters crossed the frontier with a jet fighter escort and machine - gunned Jordanians near the frontier village of Gharandal, 40 miles north of the port of Aqaba. In addition to the soldier killed, two civilians were wounded in the attack, the spokesman said. ★ A ★ The attack was reported less than 12 hours after the U. N. Security Council condemned Israel for a commando raid Saturday. WASHINGTON ()P) - Backers of John W. McCormack claim more than enough votes to assure the Massachusetts congressman of retaining his job of speaker of the House. McCormack, however, despite stating in advance of today’s Democratic House caucus that “I am not worried,” apparently was not shrugging off the late-blooming challenge to his seven-year reign by Arizona’s Morris K. Udali. ★ ★ ★ The 77-year-old speaker reportedly made some concessions to the liberal-moderate bloc backing the 46-year-old Udall during a meeting Tuesday with representatives of the Democratic Study Group (DSG). The DSG, which claims 140 liberal-moderate members, wants a louder voice in shaping party policies and less emphasis on seniority in determining key assignments. BACKING FROM SOUTH McCormack counts a solid base of 90 votes from the South. But h i s lieutenants, busy counting noses since Udall made his challenge last week, claim 180 pledged votes. This is far more than the 122 needed. Selection of a nominee for speaker by the Democrats virtually assures election by the whole House when the 91st Congress convenes Friday since the Democrats hold a 243-192 majority and voting on the Speaker traditionally follows party lines. A A iA The McCormack-Udall contest matches in interest — and probable outcome — a battle for the No. 2 Democratic spot in the Senate. Although there is far less at stake immediately in the Senate, a bid by Massachusetts’ Edward M. Kepnedy to grab the whip job from Louisiana’s Russell B. Long is regarded as a first step by Kennedy toward a possible 1972 run for the Whfte House. ! Freezing Weather Continues in Area (Continued From Page One) and west sections of Upper Michigan, State Police said. The cold wave which broke out of the northwest early in the week and drove temperatures to their lowest marks of the season throughout the midcontinent completed a cross-country sweep and dropped the mercury near or below zero in the Northeast. ★ ★ ★ A hard freeze hit Georgia and Alabama and frost nipped northern Florida. ' j The U.S. Weather Bureau expected temperatures to dip to zero or below in portions of 30 states from the northern Rockies to New England and southward to North Carolina. > Biting winds drove the bitter cold onto the Eastern Seaboard. Heavy squalls along the eastern shores of Lakes Erie and Ontario dumped deep snows into portions of upstate New York, Pennsylvania and New* England. Escapes Death TRAVi^E aTY (AP) - An Acme man was reported In good condition Wednesday after nar-i rowly escaping being decapitated. Police said William Mosher, was riding^ a snowmobile along a snowmobile 1 trail in Acme Tuesday night when he ran into a string of barbed wire which had been placed across the trail. Mosher suffered severe cuts on the head and neck and was hospitalized at Traverse City. An investigation was ordered. 4 WASHINGTON (tf) - Action on the nuclear nonproliferation treaty is the major task facing the new Senate, but chances for ratification before President Johnson leaves office appear slim. Failure by the Senate to ratify the' treaty, intended to curb the spread of nuclear weapons, before Jan. 20 would be a major disappointment for Johnson. ★ ★ ★ He repeatedly called for quick Senate action before Congress adjourned last October and as late as early December was still thinking of calling the Senate into special session to consider the treaty. Senate Republican leader Everett Dirksen of Illinois has left up to Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Mon- tana the decision on when to bring up the treaty. Dirksen said in an interview he is willing to take it up as soon as organ-ization matters have been cleared away after tomorrow’s convening of Congress. Mansfield has promised Johnson to act quickly. However, Sens. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., and Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., have prepared an attack on the Senate’s Rule 22 which requires two-thirds approval of those voting to choke off a filibuster. ★ ★ ★ Dirksen said that his biennial argument over changing the Senate’s rules BIRMINGHAM - A traffic light will! be installed soon in the southbound lanes of Hunter Boulevard (U.S. 10) at Forest, the State Highway Department has announced. The stop-and-go signal will operate in connection with a new traffic pattern at the Forest crossover, which has become a hazardous Intersection, according to department officials. ★ ★ ★ Earlier Story, Page B-13 at the start of each new Congress could consume a week if no agreement Is reached. The Senate will swear in its new members tomorrow. 'There is doubt that it will reconvene after a joint session of Congress Monday to canvass the presidential election returns. 'Thus the battle over the rules is not likely to get under way until next Tuesday. By briefly Interrupting southbound traffic on Hunter, the light will permit eastbound traffic on Forest to cross four lanes of Hunter and enter a new left-turn lane built in the median strip. The lane leads to a new crossover about 200 feet south of the former Forest crossover, which has been closed. From the new crossover, traffic will ttirn north on Hunter to Forest. NEW PA-TTERN LONG DEBATE POSSIBLE Beyond that, moreover, lies opposition to the treaty’s terms that may spawn lengthy debate which could preclude a ratification vote before President-elect Nixon takes office. Sen. George D. Aiken, R-Vt., has asked for additional hearings by the Senate Foreign Relations committee, which already has approved the treaty. Aiken says he wants to make sure that the passage of peaceful nuclear information along to nonnuclear countries will not result in subsidizing future operations by oil combines. The treaty, as hammered out by the Geneva disarmament conference and approved by the U.N. General Assembly last Spring becomes effective when signed by the United States, Russia and 40 other nations. By signing, nations who possess nuclear weaponry would agree not to give have-not nations nuclear arms or any help developing them and have-nots would agree not to seek arms or knowhow. The new pattern, department officials said, will permit larger numbers of vehicles to make left turns from Hunter ,without interfering with through traffic. H. H. Cooper, department traffic and safety engineer, said the signal was necessary because gaps in the traffic stream on Hunter were too short to let vehicles on Forest cross the boulevard with “adequate safety.” The traffic light will be synchronized with other signals on Hunter. <3osts will be shared by the department and the City of Birmingham. ' BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The Birmingham Power Squadron will conduct a series of boating classes in this school district beginning Jan. 15 at 7:30 p.m. The classes, to be held weekly on Wednesday evenings, will take place at East Hills Junior High School, 2800 Kensington, Bloomfield Township, and-; will continue for 12 weeks. The Power Squadron course covers a| nautical subjects applicable to outboard •' and inboard boating and sailing, and wil include lectures and demonstrations. There is no charge for the classes^ which are open to the public. 19%-39% OFF on DH ROOMS During Harvey’s ’69 SALE REG. SALE 5-Pe. Mopl* Dinatt* 42" ^ _ ............................. 159.95 129> Franch Provincial 8-Pc. dining sot. China, tabla, _ .. ondsixchaira................. 499.95 349i S-Pc. (olid pin* with •■tar finiih.. Tabla with 2 _ _ _ loavai. Oroliatmithtpiality 489.95 399i 5-Pe. 42" round table, 4»wivalchain................. 139.95 99t 5-Pc. oval table, 4 ____ cathedral chairs........ 89.95 69i Fine furniture for mvery room.., to suit every budget and every taste. HARVEY FURNITURE 4405 Highland Rd. (M39) comar PonHae Loin Road Open Dally Till 9 • Tarmt Availabla • Air Conditionod rilK I’ON'I’IACmHKSS. rHI'USDAV. JANHAHV 2. l!K;!t Steel Ball Flung at Hirohito TOKYO (UPI) - An ex-con vict rose In a crow(J of 14,000 persons shouting “banzai” to The man was quoted as telling police he resorted to a “rash act” because he had grievances against them. He said he was questioned Christmas Day for a traffic violation. ★ ★ ★ Okuzaki said he fired the steel ball, similar to those used in Japanese pinball machines. It did not reach the balcony. Okuzaki told j)olice no ofie around him appeared to notice his act. They were shouting the traditional cry of loyalty to the emperor who was waving back. DREW NOTICES Okuzaki decide, he said, to do more. So he shouted, “Yamazaki, why don’t you fire a pistol at the emperor?” This time the crowd around him noticed. Police came running. On the balcony Hlrohlto gave the incident no notice. He and his family also ignored the smoke bomb. ★ ♦ ★ The steel ball incident came when Hlrohlto made the first of eight appearances on the balcony during the day. Seven more times he came back to receive the adulation of the crowd. Palace spokesmen said 197,870 persons came to the palace to cheer the emperor. ★ ★ ★ Police said the smoke bomb consisted of two smoke candles designed to billow up when lit. Police said Okuzaki was on their list of “dangerous persons” because of hi.s feelings against the monarchy. They said that during his Imprisonment he ,slx times filed lawsuits for abcilitlon of the monarchy. Until 1840, the Green River In Wyoming was known as Prairie Hen River. When the treasury’s low, there’s just one place to got Or, Call the Good Guys at: (p) CBICKENOELIBBT 1302 W. Huron - Call 682-3800 500 N. Perry - Call 334-4959 Delivery Availi^le ft ennew ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ 50 ONLY: 100% MONSANTO BLUE ”C” NYLON JEWEL NECK SLEEVELESS SHELLS Mochlna wash and dry. Prltlls and stripes. Broken sizes. Originally $6 - now 2.88 40 ONLY: V NECK PULL OVER SWEATERS. 75% Mohair/25% Wool, Brokon sizes 34 to 40/Cream ond Black. Originally $8 - now 5.88 40 ONLY: CARDIGAN SWEATER 25% Wool 75% Mohair, Assorted colors. Broken sizes 34 to 40,* Originally $9 - now 6.88 30 ONLY: LADIES’ BETTER BLOUSES Button down collor style. 55% DoCron/35% Cotton. Good color assortment in wanted postels. Sizes 32 to 38. Originally $5 — now 3.88 10 ONLY: 100% ACRYLIC ONE PIECE JUMPERS Assorted pastel plaids. Broken sizes. 8 to 16. Originally $11 — now 8.88 100 PAIR ONLY: LADIES’ SPORT SLACKS Choose from wools-cottons-nylons and blends. Plaids and solids. Belted-Hip buggers and Flare legs. Qroup one - Originally $5 and $6 - now 3.88 Group two - 0riginally$10and$11 - now 6.88 130 ONLY: LADIES’ SKIRTS REDUCED Assorted fabrics Woois, Nylons, Royons, and Colton Blends, Broken sizes and styles. Originally $8 and $9 — now 5.88 1 Originally $10 and $11 -t now 7.88 so ONLYfWpiNEN’S COATS Latest styles. Fitted and straight. Self trim ond Fur trims. Broken sizes. Mony one-of-a-kind. Originally $30-$40-$50 - nOw 20.88 to 31.88 25 ONLY: LADIES’ BETTER JACKETS -.Corduroy, Nylons, Wools and Blends. Values. 23.88 Originally $24 to $35 - now 120 PIECES OF FASHION JEWELRY Pins, Earrings, Necklaces Ond Bracelets. Metals and assorted sets. Originally $3 - now 1.88 Originally $2-now 1.22 LADIES HAND BAGS: Canvds ond Piastic in barrel or box look. Block or Brown. ■ ' ‘ t' Originally8.19-now 2.88 ttONLYiUOtll'lilROLIS rh»parlfan«d Iwtgth, Whilt oifly. $tu S-M-i. Assorted fabrics. Originally $5 - how 3.88 100 ONLYi LAaitI' aAPONTE fulI LlNOtH NYLON miOITT SLIPS. I Black and amk only. Broken iImi 32 to 40 Lace trims. Proportioned lengtl,. ^ ^ 0Htlnillyi8-««w ,2.88 SEMI-ANNUAL FOR MENI MEN’S ALL WEATHER COATS Zip lined or unlined. Solids and plaids. Penn Prest finish. Broken sizes ond colors. 1 Q* Q Q Originally$25to32.95 - now lOaOO 20 ONLY: MEN’S WINTER JACKETS Quilt lined or pile lined. Leather orNylon shell. Broken sizes and colors. Originally 15.98 to 30.00 — now 13.88 MEN’S COTTON SHORT SLEEVE TURTLE NECK KNIT SHIRTS. ' Good size assortment, ^-m-l exl<). M achine washable. Good colors, wanted styles. Originally 2.99 - now 1.44 Originally 1.98 to 3.98 - now FOR GfRtS GIRLS’KNEE HIGH SOCKS 100% Nylon Stretch. Fit girls 7 to 14. Good color assortfnent. Originally $1 - now 66 300 ONLY; GIRLS’ SWEATERS FOR FINAL CLEAN UP Long sleeves In cardigons and slip overs. Broken sizes and colors. A A Originally $4 to $7 - now 2.00 and 3.88 IFOTW mrnrnmmmmiimmmmmmmmmmmm 100 SKEINS ONLY: KNITTING YARNS. Dark colors. 4-oz. size. 100% Wool Originally 1.19 - now 88' 300 YARDS BETTER FASHION FABRICS Choose from t00% arnel tricate frappe prints. Dressy juttah solid and patterns of T6yon and ocetate. Originally 1.19 anlir1.98 - now 1.44 I 30 ONLY: 6V2 FOOT SCOTCH PINE ARTIFICIAL CHRISTMAS TREES. I These are full large size t(ees. Sold in Original cartons. Originally 16.99 - now 8.88 12 ONLY: REDUCED FOR FAST GLEAN UP. Ironstone dinnerware sets. Assorted patterns, large ftlates ond cups. Originally 9.98 and 10.98 - nowt 7.88 20 ONLY: ARTIFICIAL CENTER PIECES Plastic but life like. Easy clean. Originally $6 to $11 - now 3.88 r to 7.88 ■ 1 3 ONLY: TABLE MODEL CLOCK RADIOS High Impoct plaitie cases, with alorm. Originally $38 - now 24.88 BOS YARDS DP DlTTlD DRAPERY AND UPHOLSTERY FABRIOS Reduced. Solidi, florals, prints. 45" ond 54" Wide. Machine woshoble Origiitglly taSS to 3a9S a yard now 1.44 OPEN IIL 9 P.M. MON. THRU SAT., MIRACLE MIU CENTER, BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP H0U5EKEEPIN(i m 350 ONLY: BOYS’ BETTER SHIRTS i Choose trofD knits, wovens. nylon and rayon blends, Short or long sleeve Pre school and school oge. 4 to 18. Many one and two of a kind. The Month' of Specials No Money Down •.. 90 Days For Cash Terrific Savings ... If you buy now! GiUson 1- FROST Side-by-Side 2- DOOR REFRIGERATOR. FREEZER 358»» hprrdy llrUv^rr, I-Year Eiuirrt «nare than most ordinary refrigerator*! Thi* (.IBSON i* it. And can he yours'right now at our LOW-KST PRICK EVER for a deluxe side-hy-side 2-Door! Rig 16.8 cu. ft. Capacity — 21.0 *q. ft. Shelf Area! But hurry — they’ll sell fast. I.Ess THAN 32 INCHES WIDE — and much lower, too, thank* lo Gibson Buner- ui)pr- safe KR22 in*ulation and mini-thin wall detign! Other deluxe feaiiirr.; Tuo -Ercezer Baskets—Removable Freezer Door Rack*—Cantilever Refrigenilar Slielve* adj[ii*table to any height you wl»h —'24.5 qt Porcelain Grisper — 10',z-Ib. Porcelain Meat Chest — Butter & Cheese Compartments — and more! CHOICE OF AVOCADO GREEN OR COPPERTONE Be Prepared—For Winter With A NEW Big Picture Portable TV (Diag.) 184Sq.In. $~| QQ88 Rect. Picture Free Delivery, Service and Warranty! Only $7..3.5 monthly or, 90 Day.s Same as Cash The family favorite because it rolls anywhere easily for viewing — yet delivers full-size rectangular picture.*. Has famed Zenith quality EM speaker — Handcrafted chassis — 3 IF stages. ,j. roOLKH A FOR HUMIDIFIER Now Only ^ Delivered—Serviced Warranted 90 Days Same ri.s Cash Humidify your home beautifully with this furniture-styled Coolerator Humidifier. It has the rich look of walnut in a thick, textured vinyl fiiiifh tliat is l>o;li washable and mar-re.dstanf. Enjoy more comfort with le.-s heat and i)rolect your liome and furnisliings witli tliis liand.some iiuniidifier. . Evaporates up to 16 gallons a Jay • Automatic Humidistat • Two-Speed Fan • Automatic Shut-Off • Removable Vaporizer-Filter . Water Level Indicator . Operating and Refill Signal Lights . “Angle-Aire” Discharge A1m> Avtiilahlt* 1 S3*).93 -Deluxe Automatic Electric Dryer ‘129 Full adjui^lablf licat regiilalitui lor any fabric, including perinaneivt itres.s. Easy clean lint filter. Larjje capacity. Gas Model $144 So Money Dou'tt — 90 Days for Ctash 1969-RCA COLOR TV Here It Is New Big Screen 18”(Ui.R.) Portable Color NOW ONLY 35995 DELIVERED-SERVICED-CDAKANTEED EASY TERMS-90 DAYS FOR CASH In any popularity contest, this lU-inch (dlug.) portable wins in a landslide. Look at tiieite outstanding qualifications: true portable convenience — set weighs less than 60 pound* (less than (tome 14-inch modeis); big 180 square inch picture; vivid, irue-to-life color picture; plus an ea^y-on-the-biidget price log that’s unequalled anywhere! FREE: Roll Around Stand A $20.00 Value /^OOOD HOUSEKEEPING OF PONTIAC 51 W. HURON FE4-15SS OPEN MON., THURS. and FRI. TILL 9:00 mium THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, I960 VICKIE LYNN LANDSPARGER Mr. and Mrs. George Landsparger of Neome Drive announce the betrothal and June vows of ^heir daughter, Vickie Lynn, to John S.>>f(erns. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Kerns of Lake Angelas. Miss Landsparger is a graduate of Michigan State University. Multiple Births Around the Wdrid “GRAND RAPIDS Iff) — “So far, I need everything,Jansson, Edward Kenneth Sayles wasidouble. I have a bassinette and'hormone ‘'"‘"idiapers and things for one........... brother, Kenneth Edward, was. born eight minutes and — for ®®*d' income tax deduction purposes * ★ * — one year later. The first child weighed^ jOjye Eighteen-year-old Mrs, Del-bert Sayles of Grand Rapidsf*’««®"‘^ Have Wedding at Home 1 Adrienne Edith Hicks and ^Officer Candidate Edward ^Welling Errickson III, USA ;epoke vows Saturday in the ^hotne of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Hicks of West 14 Mile Road, West Bloomfield Township. ' The bride chose a pink wool _A-line dress for the early aD Wnoon ceremony. She carried MRS. EDWARD W. ERRICKSON m a bouquet of white carnations. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Zalac Jr. were honor attendants. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Er rickson of Phoenix, Ariz. gave birth to the twins at 11:55 p.m. Tuesday and 12:03 a.m Wednesday, at a Grand Rapids hospital. ^ ★ * ‘Tm awfully proud,” the 21-year-old father said. ‘T get a tax exemption for one and for the second, I guess 1 just got the thrill of having a New Year’s baby. Taxpayers are entitled to a $600 exemption on federal income taxes for children born during a calendar year. The father, who works In a Grand Rapids factory, admitted,” I wasft’t really prepared for it. “When they brought out one I was really happy. When they said ‘This is Number Two,’ it kind of knocked me over,” he said. ounces. The twins and their mother were reported in good condition. WWW The couple has one other child, Shawn Allen, who will be two years old in March. ^ S’TOCKHOLM, SWEDEN A Swedish woman gave birth Wednesday t o quadruplets, three boys and a girl. The con-ditidh of the children deteriorated during the night, and they were put Into incubators. The mother, Mrs. Ulla Britt 32, hadYteen given treatmemr for iu fertility by Prof. (Ml Gemzell of Uppsala. The treatment frequently results In multiple births. The Janssons have no other children. MAZAMBIQUE One of the quadruplets bom to Clara Matanguane on Dec. 13 died on New Year’s Eve, It was reported today. WWW The baby boy was believed to have died of septicemia, a type of blood poisoning. Another boy was reported in serious con dition, but the remaining girl and boy were said to be In satisfactory condition at Lourenco Marques General Hospital. Mrs. Matanguane Is a 32-year-old African housewife. Pianist Changes Concert Program Eugene Istomin will perform the Beethoven Piano (Concerto No. 4 with the Detroit Symphony tonight and Saturday rather than the originally programmed Brahms Second Piano Concerto. Also, the Sibelius Symphony No. 1 will be played in place of the Beethoven Symphony No. 4, which has been rescheduled for performances on February 20 and 21. Istomin requested the change in the concerto. Cut Kraut Quickly You will find that an adjustable kraut cutter is fast and easy to use when slicing cucumbers for pickles and to cut corn for canning and freezing. , Adorn Loses Her Influence Mom is a bigger influence in a boys’ clothing selection than she thinks since about three out of every four purchases of boys apparel are made either directly by the mother or with the mother’s being present at the time the purchase is made. WWW This fact comes from a nationwide study by the Boys’ and Youn Men’s Apparel Manufacturers Association. Sons researched said mothers held sway 69 per cent of the time in ages six to 12, 39 per cent from ages 13 to 15, and 18 per cent for 16 and 17-year-olds. OUTSIDE Other influences, in order of significance: Friends and older boys, advertising and store displays, their own ideas, influence of idols such a s television, movie or other entertainment or sports personalities. BISHOP SEWING CLASSES < Winter Term 1969 Waterford Township School District Rwgiitration will b* hold in th* Library of Wotorford Township High School, 1415 Croscont Loko Rd. on Jamuory 6 and 7 from 7:00 to 8:00 P.M. All ClasMS Baiin the Week of Januaiy 13th No. I M M T W W TH M T TH 7- 9=30 7- 9:30 7- 9,30 7- 9:30 7- 9:30 7- 9:30 1- 3:30 9-11:30 1- 3:30 Sriiool Mason Schoolcraft Oonelson Sandburg Monlelth Mason Droylon Plains Cherokee Hills Drayton Plains Openings Are Available in the Following Classes; II IV V V Adv. Fitting Adv. Fitting Trims ond Detail Sportsweor I TH 7- 9.30 7- 9:30 7- 9:30 7- 9:30 7- 9:30 7- 9:30 7- 9:30 9-11:30 7- 9:30 7- 9:30 Crescent Lake Manley Willioms Lake Cherokee Hills Crory Crory Crory Drayton Plains Cherokee Hills Crory Jl^gjks 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 .6 8 8 8 8 10 10 8 8 8 8 Cost $10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10 00 10.00 $10.00 10.00 10.00 12.00 14.00 14.00 15.00 15.00 12.00 12.00 Teen Classes Start the First Week in February Teen I T or TH 4-5:30 Crory Teen II T or TH 4-5:30 Crory Semester 10.00 Semester 10.00 For Additional taiformation Genoeming Clattat Call 8744176 —No Mail Registrations— IheM pregntn ore piewnted by the Waterford Tommship Baaid of EduenHen and ora antirely financed thiwigh fees. at Sibley's ... mracle mile SEMI-ANNUAL ^ . SHOE SALE UtRRRSRnmniFOR MBN FLORSHEIM Selected Styles 16*“ - 17“" Reguleriy 19.96 to 29.95 ★ Winthrop, Sibley Hush Puppies® (discontinued styles) 6““ to 10»“ Regularly 19.99 to 19.99 FiRSiisnaniFOB WOMENtnwniRRRnnni (discontinued styles) Red Cross, Socialites, Cabbies Nogulorly 1099 14.N to 1S.N I ^ Wr Sandler, Hush Puppies® Buskens, Miss Wonderful 4” 1.10” Regularly 1I.N to 18.IS FLORSHEIM SHOES for women, dUeontlnutd elylee for Woman, DlKOntlnutd itylas Regularly 1I.SS to 21.H 15““ Special Group for Children . RED GOOSE, HUSH PUPPIES® Rsgularly 6.99 to 10.99 99 YOUHGDALE, MSS SAWLER 2““ to 5 Sibley's semi-annual salo is famous all over tho Pontiac area because of tho wonderful values in famous brand shoes. Bring tho ontiro family and save many dollars during this groat event! MICHIGAN'S URGEST FLORSHEIM DEALER Urm Your Socurity Or Michigon Banka rd CKorgo Account s s jyeeenemuMtHm MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING GENTER-TELEGRAPH At SQUARE UKE ROAD SEIMI-ANNUAl CLEAR/Wa WOMEN WOOL BALMACAAN COATS WITH PILE ZIP LINER Classic style: the balmacaan, here in on osortment of blue or celery checked wools — oil with 0 versatile, season-spanning pile lining thot zips in, zips out. Sizes 8-18.$44 FINE WOOL CAR COATS WITH ALL-WOOL LINING Doubly-warm: wool on the outside, wool on the inside. This sole group' features solid shades and checks; in cornel, grey, and block/white. Sizes 8-18. Priced for exciting savings now, of....$39.90 BETTER MINK-TRIMMED COATS in assorted styles; Sizes 8-16....$129 BETTER UNTRIMMEO COATS in assorted styles; sizes 5-13, 8-16..$«4 MINK-TRIMMED COATS in luxurious wools; sizes 8-18.......... . .$89 LARGE GROUP OF CAR C^ATS, corduroy, cotton suede, pile.24.90-34.90 FALL AND WINTER DREblS, a huge group; sizes 5-15, 8-18 ..10.99.29.99 IMPORTED FISHERMAN KNIT SWEATERS, turtle and mock, sizes 3|6-40-10.99 IMPORTED TURTLENECK SWEATERS, flat-knit, rip back, sizes 36-4D.9.99 ROVkDRUNNER WOOL KNIT FAMOUS MAKER SHIFTS WITH ZIP FRONT SEPARATES: FUR-BLEND Pure wool knit with o smart - SWEATERS and convenient zippiered front, Chorming casuals by a famous contrasting stitching down the sweaters and , . T j *. skirts (some novelty skirts in- front and around the two eluded), in light and dark patch pockets. Orange, peach, shades. Sweaters, sizes or royol; in sizes.8-18. $16.99 36-40; skirts, sizes 10-16. Each............... $11.99 EMBROIDERED (UNIOR GROUP: shifts, skirts, blouses, sizes 7-13.6.99-15.99 FAMOUS-MAKER BRAS In sizes 32.36; A, R, C cups.....S.49 and 8.99 FAMOU8.MAKIR PANTY GIRDUS In white, colors, sizes S-M-U.5.99.7.99 LOUNOlWEAR, nylon fleece or quilt loungawaari'meny colors, sizes ..7.99 to 12.99 GOWNS AND PAJAMAS, fleece and nylon; In aay/fted alzes and colon .. i.99 to 7.99 SLIPS AND HALF SUPS, nylon slips and half tllpt, many colors, sizes . .2.99 to S.99 HAND BAGS, an excellent aseortmant of fine hand bags; many color* . . .B.99 to 1.99 i I Ou** Pontiac Mall Store Is Open Tuesday and Wednesday to 5:30; Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday to 9 P.M. — Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Roads Mr.THJniFi. Cfiarles P, Hunt of Voorhels Road announce the birth of a son, Paul Velth, on Dec. 12. CrandMrents of the infant are Mri. Charles P. Hunt of Chippewa Road and the late Mr. Hunt. Mrs. Percy Hunt of Oneida Road is the great grandmother. !HLm Til Made to Order Draperies 200 SAMPLES to choose from. ARDEN SHOPS The Pontiac Moll 682-1191 epared January Is National S k 1 Month, time to. get out parkas, ski pants, and boots once again. But in aadltlon to clothing and equipment, don't overlook caring for your skin properly during this active outdoor season. While skiing is fun, over-exposure to wintry weather can cause windbum, sunburn and chapped skin Just Is painful as the sumrtier varieties. An excellent preventive iis a good first aid cream, rubbed liberally on expraed parts of face and hands. For continued protection, apply again before retiring. * ★ ★ The antiseptic cream soothes and heals the tiny network of skin breaks that make up chapped and windburned skin. Bring a small tube from home, which you can keep in parka pocket or purse ~ to use' as needed. The tube is unbreakable, and the cream doesn't stain, should you accidentally get some on your clothing. ★ a a It is also a good idea to take along a first aid mini-kit before setting out on a ski weekend. The kits are small enough to pop Into the side pocket of your weekend case, and although miniature, contain all the basics — adhesive tape, sterile gauze pads, antiseptic cream and adhesive bandages — to treat minor mishaps that may occur. GREAT SAVINGS on YOUR FAMILY SHOES IN OUR BIG JANUARY CLEARANCE K PONTIAC PUKSM. Till H.SDAV. .lAM AHV 2. 1000 - w •’rnmofT- Polly's Pointers New Basket Liners DEAR POLLY - Wt have a| good use for men's worn-out T-shlrts. Place them upside down in your round wash basket, puli the bottom edge of the shirt around the top of the basket and you have a perfect basket liner. - T. K. MRS. JOHN R. GIBBENS JR. For WOMEN-. AMERICM m »i*».m*e** NATUliMJZER Pitfues M $20.00 HUSH PUPPIES hormN: PEDWIIK Value* to $iS.OO Valuet'to $20.00 M0it’s Uitt^wing irofue Value* to $21.00 Vnlue* to $13.00 "THE SHOE SALE YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR" Stors Hours: MM., Thur., Fri., Sat9to9 Tues., Wed. 9 to 6 WE HONOR SECURITY CHARGE • MICHIGAN BANKARD ALL SALES FINAL - NO PHONE ORDERS Marica A. Olds, John Gibbons Jr. Wed in Japan The Holy Catholic Church in Hakata, Japan, was the setting for Christmas Eve vows of Marcia Ann Olds and Spec. 5 John Robert Gibbens Jr., USA. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Dean H. Olds of Pioneer Street and Mr. and Mrs. John R. Gibbens of Woodbine Drive. * * * The bride selected a white satin gown with puffed sleeves,i scoop neck and high-rise waist! encircled with a satin ribbon. Her shoulder-length illusion veil was capped with a petal ctusster, accented with seed pearls. ★ ★ ★ The newlyweds greeted guests in the non-commlssicmed officers’ quarters. They expect to return to the States in August POLLY'S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY - I was told never to use soap in a fish aquarium. What do you use to clean away the water line from goldfish bowls and to clean the whole bowl? — MRS. J. T. | DEAR POLLY and Bernice — j I have had good results removing unpleasant odors from! suticases by putting moth flakes inside and keeping the bag closed up for about 10 days. Air it outside later. This has worked for mildew odor. — ANNE I. * ★ ★ * DEAR POLLY ~ Do tell Bernice who has a smoke smell in her luggage to try spraying the lining with deodorant and then leave the bag closed for a few days. I had a musty smell in a leather grip and tried a number of things before discovering this idea, which worked for me. Afterwards I put a small piece of perfumed soap in each pocket and left it there. — LOIS * ★ w DEAR POLLY - Nothing will help Judy's buckling zipper in her knit top but to remove it and replace It. Be careful not to stretch the knit. The best result Is obtained by doing this by hand, the way it Is done in many expensive garments. — MRS. C. F. M. * ★ ♦ DEAR POLLY - To comb or set your wig or hairpiece, you will find the handle to a regular, short-handled sink plunger fits nicely in the hole of the wig form. Moisten the rim of the plunger and put on a flat surface where the suction holds it tightly. Fasten the wig on the form loosely and you can turn it around as you work. — MYRTLE DISCOUNTS \ ©n ' ALL WATCHES WALTHAM BENRUS from »24” EASY CREDIT nWK JEWELERS and OPTIOIANS 1 N. SAGINAW (Corner Fike St.) FE 4-1889 Or. Chemey If the children in your family forget to wash their hands before using the globe for geography assignments, wash it occasionally with a sudsy sponge. FE 5-9409 MURRAY SISTERS’ BEAUTY STUDIO Rosie Murray to Assist You Shampoo and Style $3.00 — 57 W. Huron — By Appointment Only Reports on Courts for Sixty Years JACKSON, Miss, m — After six decades, Mrs. Clara Sims has finally put down her stenog rapher's pad and retired. “Miss Clara,” as she is fondly known by everyone in the Hinds County courthouse, served for 60 years as court reporter in the courts of Hinds county and Mississippi. For the past 17 years she worked for Circuit Judge M. M. McGowan. Miss J packs sun-bright jersey prints to go the southern route now end ftiake a vivid spring shdwing. These well-mannered packable travelers pre sleek acetate ' jersey with elongated collars and waist-whittling belts. A. Convertible v-neck with e wide buckle belt; turquoise or green with white: 5-13P sizes. 6. Dress with buccaneer sleeve Purple or turquoise with FOR THEIIHST TIME-SPECIAL SUE Koylon Foam Pure Latex Famous Platinum Mattress and Foundation Set • Magnificerit quilted damask cover • Purest sleeping substance known • Luxurious comfort for years and years • Gentle support for every contour • Non-ollergenic, dust free, odor free SAVE *40 Ha* Always b**n 159.50 Now for the First Time *119” • Twin siza 39"x75" e Full siza 54"x75“ e Twin axtra long 39"x80“ • Full axtra long 54"x80" Save ^50! Queen Size 60''x80'' Ragular 229.50. Now only $]795o , SAVE *70! KING SIZE 76"x80" With 2 twin box springs. Ragular 329.50, Now ' $25950 OUR FLOOR SAMPLE SALE CONTINUES with thele tremendous First of year Savings! black/white: 5-13 si|es. 19.00 Globe Sofa Reg. $295 Country Frtnch Globe Sofa In handsome antique gold tobric. Slightly soiled — yet wonderful value. R»g. $295 FRENCH SOFA and CHAIR Hondsom# gold yving arm sofa With exposed corved frame. Harmonizing wing choir in gold with red accent. Rag. $615 ‘495 Globe Sofa Delicotaly corvad froma with blua graen fabric. 7 bol-stars. Italion Provincial. Rag. $535 ‘388 DREXEL BEDROOAA Full size cone heodboord bed, desk vonity with separate mirror. Empire bench. Cherry wood. Rag. $399 ‘149 Jacobsoh's j-Af' 336 Welt Maple Birmingham Thumluy uiid Friduy 'til 9 DANISH RECLINER Solid walnut frome Donish-Insplrad lilt back recliner choir. ;s ‘79“’ GROUPS OF CHAIRS 1/2 OFF! Reg. 69.50 Ladies' chair in green/gold fabric 34” Reg. 127.50 Blue/green chair on casters.... 63” Reg. 179.50 Globe Ladies' Chair, deeply tufted....................89^* Reg. 195.00 Swivel chair in blue plastic ..... 97*» HITCHCOCK BEDROOM Genulna Hitchcock full sita headboard, dresser with gilt ond block mirror. Ivory decor-Died. S, ‘199 Group of Deeorotor Pictures 50% Off Rag. $15 to $40 Now $7.50 to $20 Our New Hornet Woodward Ave., Bloomfield HiU§ la Now Under Construction LEWIS FURNITURE CO. DESIGNERS FOR HOME AND BUSINESS INTERIORS S. Saginaw St. ot Orchard Loka Ava. ~ Pentiue, Michigan 335*1174 ‘‘5’ lirf: THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUHSDAV. JANITAUV l». I'.Mil) MMOVEILfiifiEt OKING for CARPET? THEN BE SURE TO VISIT (Mtttfott’fi There*s a Good Reason! 139 Roneo Rd. Tel. 651-4612-3 In Rochester Mon., Tuoi., Wod., Thure, 9:30 »o 5:30 Fri.TII9:00-Sat Til 5:00 Legislative Inertia Keeps N-Pact on Sidell shop at Robert Hall forexciting clothing vaiues for the entire famiiyi WASHINGTON (UPI) When President Johnson sent the nuclear nonproliferation treaty to the Senate last July, heralding it as the greatest disarmament step In history, few had any reason to believe ratification would be anything but prompt and routine. There was practically no controversy. Only marginal op position had developed, mostly from a small group of rigorous anti-Cpmmunists — and even that was not as noisy as usual. Only two years before, the Senate had passed a resolution 84 to 0 urging Johnson to negotiate the treaty he was now submitting. ★ ★ ★ But somewhere along the way the treaty, designed to discourage more countries from acquiring the bomb, has become trapped in a whirlpool of legislative inertia caused by the presidential election and the transfer of power to a new ad ministration. ★ ★ ★ Almost no one opposes it. But it has not been ratified and no one can say for certain when it will be. unlimited subsidy abroad. to Industry 1 AMERICA’S LARGE^TPAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN BOTH STORES OPEH SUNDAY NOON TO 6 P.M. PONTIAC 200 North Sooinaw Fno Porklii^ CLARKSTON 6460DW* Highway JuHN.hrWollo^Hill For Abovo AiwegeSIwomd txcMiiional Voluo, Vtsil Our •igMMir»Sbooot1M51 ONnAUMrarBSOOVanDyhu EMBARRASSING The Senate is in the embarrassing position of holding up for six months a treaty it requested. And the ad ministration is trying to explain the delay to the allies whose arms had been twisted for support at Geneva. Foreign signators to the pact may have difficulty understanding why. ★ ★ ★ When hearings were conducted last summer, few members of the Senate Foreign ONLY 3 OPPONENTS But only three senators in dicated they would vote against the treaty on Its merits. They contended the Soviet attitude toward such treaties in the past has been to disregard them Whenever the Kremlin’s self-interest dictates. Compared to the intense controversy over the 1963 nuclear test ban treaty, which barred atmospheric nuclear explosions, the nonproliferation treaty has virtually escaped concerted opposition. ★ ★ ★ Why, then, hasn’t it been ratified? For one thing, it was sent to Capitol Hill in midsummer to adjournment - minded Con gress which was having difficulty keeping its members in town because of the coming election. LACKED THRUST Chairman J. William Fulbright of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was in Arkansas battling for his political life. No one else seem ed able to give it the necessary thrust and the treaty foundered in committee until the Senate recessed for the August political conventions. Then came the Soviet in-V a s i 0 n of Czechoslovakia, frosting East West relations and causing many treaty supporters to call for a delay in ratification until the crisis had passed. Among these was Republican presidential candidate Richard but M. Nixon. Senate leaders decided not to risk defeat of the pact by embroiling it i n partisan politics, so the Senate adjourned in October without acting. Johnson threatened to call the Senate back in special session never did. Senate Democratic leader Mika Mansfield persuaded him that, even if it passed, the pact would be tainted in the eyes of U.S. allies unless there was a firm endorsement from Nixon. Now, Senate leaders have all but abandoned hopes o f ratification before Nixon fs||k augurated Jan. 20 because tgf session-opening problems that clog the legislative machine^ almost as badly as at a(f joumment. * ★ ★ Soqie believe It may be sprin before a vote is taken. OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN. 11-6 FRI., SAT., SUN. Oivition of Rib S. S. Krttgo Compony wifli Storot Ihrowghoul Iho Unittd Sloloi, C«nod« and f uorlo Rico I Building Needs At Savings upyamRwrffym For the Holiday With Fine NEW LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON FINE QUALin PANELIN6 Gordon R. Hayden. Essex Junction, Vt. and Lynne L, Caverly, 5803 Strathdon 'ay. Theodora J. Jancha, Holt, Mich, and Janice R. Thompson, Union Lake. Michael A. Case, Birmingham and Carlan E. Eddy, Birmingham. Guy G. Gauthier, Union Lake and Judy K. Fridlington, 4100 Cass Elizabeth 'Road. Ronald R. Sutton, 42 ParOkeet Hill and Judith A. Barker, Royal Oak. Richard P. Catcher, Rochester and Mary A. Douglas, Rochester. Harvey E. Dean, 294 Oakland Hi-lo Relations Committee lodged any Dorothy M. Bergeron, 608 was _ J*5k M. Sabat, 3277 Alco and Marilyn Marriage Licenses Gerald W. Rldgway, Davisburg, Mich, and Connie L. Estes, Davisburg, Mich. major objection. There ^ , ■’ , . R Smith, Drayton Plains some grumbling that the treaty! t-xarao F. Morales. 625 E. Columbia ,, , ,, ,, .■' and Marla A. Garcia, 625 E. Colum- was worth less than the paper it bia. u r .1. Harm Lester, Davenport, Vs. and was written on because of the Shiney a. LaPlante, Troy, the infant IAEA others contended it would perpetuate and expand the unwant^ U.S. role of the free world’s protector. And some questioned whether the treaty’s requirement of peaceful nuclear sharing would force the nation to provide an David A. Derusha, Rochester and Heather G. Goode, Berkley. Jon D. Hackett, Union Lake and Elaine G. Walker, Lincoln Park. Henry J. Y. Moss Jr^ Orion end Rocio F. Haynes, Orion. Jerry W, Kendrlclc Farmington and Farmington. Diane E. McLean, Farmington. John K. Featnerstone Jr., 817 Orlando and Lynn C. Adams, 1029 Clover-lawn. Gary R, Arnold, Union Lake and Cheryl A. Hewitt, Union Lake. Randall A. Pike, Ft, Belvoir, Va. and Doris J. Zuck, 701 Fourth. Annouiieiiigthe 5% Diamond Passbook that keeps your monqr handy. And your checking free. 4»x7' 4»x8» CHERRYNUT i 2.98 3.66 BUHERNUT 2.98 3.66 YORKTOWN WALNUT 4.96 EMERALD 4.96 SANDSTONE 4.44 4-96 VINYL WALNUT 4.98 5.6T CINNAMON BIRCH 5.68 6.35 NATURAL BIRCH 5.68 6.35 TRADITIONAL CHERRY 6.27 IMPERIAL CHERRY % 6.27 HARVEST PECAN 6.27 SPECIAL! UNFINISHED UUAN Mahogany Paneling 4’x7’ Panels 4’x8’ Panels 2i22 2i66 12'’WHITE CEILING TILES Discount Price each Charge Jt A sound-absorbinp;. smooth-eurfaced, easy-:g to-install reilin$( tile, adds to tb« value, jig oppearanro and romfort of your home. 9'< each 4’x8’ Plastic Finished Paneling Ideal for Bathroom^ Kitchen and playroom. 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BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD BANK Mmbir Fi4«il Depoilt Intwnm Cwptnilee 8 17 SNOW FENCE 'aced Insulation ...and a stapler! Not one of do-it-yourself projects that needa an engineer! Just you Foil. Faced Fiber Glass in^ation ... and a stapler can build lasting year-round comfort nenung and cooling bills! Stop in today eo that yott can'etah en. into your home, cut hi _______________„__________ joying its ‘‘all-weather-comfort,” money-saving benefits now! 4^F00T HIGH 50-ft 4 AOS Roll 6-Foot Post, Each 1 44 Free Use of Heavy Dufy Stapler for Ihsulation j^Smott Depotit^ KMART DISCOUNT PRICES 2” Thick II 3”Thigk II 16 0.C, 11 Reg. $3.97 . II 3.67 lOOsqeft. 10 sq.ft. 16 O.C. Reg. 4.97 4.37 GARAGE DOOR OPENER Two coded signals from a solid state all silicon transistorized transmitter gives you fully controlled protection a|;binst unwanted operation. CHAIN DRIVE SCREW DRIVE M. IW MU UEMW6HAM. MICH.. E. MUrU-ADAMS • MARTIN-BATES • W. MAPLE-LAHSER • W000WARD-8ENNAVILLE • WOODWARD-MAPLE > WIXOM RD, WIXOM . ASSETS OVER I100.000.0M 11f|95 19Q95 ■ ■ gg Includes ■ tmM Includes g g gg installation Ri Hg gg Installation Inttallation Free Includes: Dooivunit, radio control 90 days service and 1 year ftoo ports! • Opens, closes and locks your garage door. • Automatically lights your garage. • Triple Depth safety provided by slip clutch inofatef e»rtk«rAt«edk OVAPnOrfsl* avS*a4Ri««So> instant reverse switch, circuit breaker. • Requires only over highest rise of door • Portable transmitter smaller than a pack of 7-miiiute cigarettes. • Opens any width garage door. ^.^Qp^rates year around in all kinds of weather. GLENWOOD PLAZA North Perry at Glenwood Jb im I'lIK, ro\'I'IA( I'HKSS. I IU HSDAN . JAM AH^' 2. 15M5!> Steer SUPER MARKET 1249 BALDWIN AVE. JUST ONE BLOCK OFF COLUMBIA AVE. fHI HOMB PF . . . PER SAVINfiS l)vl Monte Sale Beef Sal MIX or MATCH ... Sweet Peas Peas & Carrots Cut Green Beans Whole Kernel CORN Cream Style CORN French Style Green Beans 5 Mb. CANS 89 S 5 1-lb. 4-oz. loaves Schafer’s Big ’’C” BREAD Blade Cut CHUCK ROAST lb. 99° California Whole TOMATOES 25° MacDonald’s Big “C” MILK BEEF LIVER ib. 33*^ 79 Meat King URGE BOLOGNA Chunk or slided FRANKS RING BOLOGNA POLISH SAUSAGE Ik RED HOTS USDA CHOICE 49 C UMB t VEIL LOVERS! •1 We carry a complete selection of both lamb and veal -TRY SOME!! CHUCK STEAK F/togejto FcxhIa TreeSweet Pure Florida 5 | Orange Juice 89° Birds Eye .if rench Fries 1 Qc Reg. or Crinkle cut ■ ^ Gorton’s Fish Sticks Mb. pkg. 59*^ Betty Crocker - your choice^ Cake Mixes Sweet Spread Pure Grape Jam 2-lb. AQC Jar Queen Mary Fine Quality 04 QQ Nylons 3 pair for 1 Blue Ribbon Bleach 'is'- 39' !«?*,«“ 5-ib. $104 Tide <•«*• 1 Gelatin-All Flavors Jell-0 3-oz. 1 f|c Pkg. Ill Manor House COFFEE 3-lb. CAN $|49 BARGAINS in U.S. No. 1 Michigan POTATOES Indian RiVer Seedless Pink Grapefruit Vine Ripe Tomafoet 48 Size 5 for 39' California Calinda PEACHES Sliced or Halves 14^oz. XQ Can 60-ct. Pkg. Charmin NAPKINS Richeledu Catsup 14-oz. Bottle Sefa’s Super Mkf. Is Proud To Announce The WINNERS Of Our Grand Opening Celebration RCA COLOR TELEVfflON Mrs. Joseph Romeo - Pontiac YEAR’S SUPPLY OF MILK Mrs. Vandaguff - Pontiac YEAR’S SUPPLY OF BREAD Sherry Hampton - Pontiac The Following People Are Transistor Radio Winners: We Reserve Right to Limit Quantities I Daniel B. White Vernon Gaines I Mrs. Douglas Edwards I Colleen Dodd I Jan Bacon I Mrs. Gladys Brown Johnny R. Hamilton I C. Gidcumb I Thelma Smith I Mrs. Leo Allen I Mrs. Frank Tol ' William R. Bone R. Koch Mrs. Ron Hayward Mrs. Ethel Cornell Mrs. Frank Schmidt Violet E. Wagner Mrs. Ernest Strogeaski Dorothy Davis Emma K. Grubbs Elmer Htffers Mrs. Margaret Kenney Mrs. Esther Rice Charley Walton Ernest Leten lb.' Yellow Cooking Onions 3-lb. bag 29 SEFA’S SUPER MKT. 1249 DALDWIN AVENUE-PONTIAC ofpcomSsmji^^ lssu6$ Generally Higher lop prlc^ ioo*Uy grown and sold by Mdtigb lots, i^hed t>y the Markets as of Mart Starts '69 Vigorously Peace Talk Lull Persists'in '69 index lYwk Stock Exchange showed a sizable gain. MLit ' > 1 Motors, aerospace issues, Jjf- ..........*1S electronics, nonferrous metals, ‘ '^ t®*»“cos and I j;»| building materials were gener- * *1 ally higher! Basiness Analyst NEW YORK - Underlying many of the moves by both government and stock market officials to clear up the paper mess on Wall , - . - , . , issuBK ui Lj «jiuiiu9iiii Street is a fear tlon. iteration of a straight five-day isswws wi w ^ Gains of a point or so were week was regarded as bullish fidence of the scored by Texaco, Reynolds To- by those who saw the former _ yjje long lull public is being bacco, U.S. Smelting. Control schedule as interrupting the , pegoUatlons to get the Viet-lgorely, danger-Data, Sperry Rand, Zenith, » Table Shape, Other Issues at a Standstill NEW YORK (AP) — The 118,700 shares, down 1V« at 54, stead of 3;30 p.m.) instead of stock market began 1969 in a later paring the loss to a frac-! closing one day a week. The res fairly vigorous manner early " ’ * "■ today, with stocks generally higher and trading active. Gains outnumbered losses by, , _______ „ a raUo of about 8 to 3. The New Data, Sperry Rand, Zenith, trading trend and causing un-L^^ gg|ng again'pusly tried. Boeing and Chrysler Rinvestment by institutions and individuals was one reason ascribed for the market's strength. This was a seasonal rose Vi to 8% on a block of 15,400 factor which had little weight iii.shares. Asamera Oil gained % the losing weeks which ended at 24Vi on 10,200 shares. Consoli-f8| Steels, mail order-retails and the 1968 trading year. | dated Oil & Gas rose 2 while Air L::,;:::::;:;::::;:. rS druas were mixed. At the same time, the market west rose more than a point. RflSSi. w b?' "t .*:»I Lubrlzol took the lead for ac-|began with the New Year early Asamera Oil expanded its iniUal *SW'p*'«• tivUy when it sold on a block of,closings every day (at 2 p.m. ln-!galn to more than a point. 1.IS:____1_________________________—----------------------------------------------------------------------—-------------— .........2.1# .........loo ce^ainty. !persisted into the new year with 1 Should this Ampri^n R^ic tthLeJ I Hanoi Standing fast on Its last [confidence be American Stock Exchai^e. J proposal and the United States io$t the results Great American Industries j cmiH, Vietnam rtehatinB ..... , ..ttlH siPlb bag .... eataiouL S#.lb bag ... «. Acorn, bu. , Suttarcup, bu. M.,2.00 iquain, Buttarnut, bu. ..i....... 2.00 math, Nubbara, w«o. ........ 2.00 Turnipi, toppaO. bu.............. 3.00 LarrucB-tALAe dkitKi Lottuca. Lior, 01.50 nnauM, o-io. «k<. 2.75 letboulO. 10-lb. bskt. 2.75 Pottitry and Eggs^ ' DBTaoiT aaas DiTROIT (Aei-rtUSDAIrCOO The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - Naw York Stock Exchanga salecled morning prlcts; saMt Nat (hd!.) High Uw Laii cr 1| isia 03 03 -- 1014 20 ACF Ind 2.40 Ad Minis .30 Address 1.40 K-r».r«ro# sa. dw2w» W a'vimt Modiupi . . AlcanAlu 1.10 Mtaoit ---- " rnoiT (AP)—(usDA)-wund for No. J.Jlv< ilegCp lOs AllegLud 2.40 Allagpw 1.28 AllladCh 1.20 AllladStr 1.40 Allis Chaim Alcoa 1.00 AMBAC .60 BBtaeit papLrav « DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)— Pricas paid Bar pound for No. V Jiva poultry: r Haauy typo bans 21|2i haayy Wi Nastari tS-27> brollara and fryers whit l»-3)r ’ CHicAOO loas * CHlCAte MP, if C aovk; cars *0 ■ 66M) iff > ,ff. *'egg Htaody to (Inn; whoiasiio buying Whoiesalo buying prlitoa.^um aaft; lUKi 10-33. Livestock OETRSIT (AP)-(U$OA5-C«tle 1,200) trading on olouohtar «aa« uneven, few aariy salH, avoraga to high choic steady;, (star tradit oholod very baitart Staady; cows Scare*, mostt hensrs, eauwa idta chojed a^s n:stni.soi gond m.oo-osjw; utility ^ itow 'dilO; not Snough sales to test ^^eatord 1501 Jilgh^^holi ff.0044.(0; ehoteS 30.00^1 - sRiep 6007 aeafttred. loads Oiid iota dSor and Prlnn^ ffrllO tb wooltd aiaiiflhtar lambs 26.0b27.00. tlya;. 1-2 Jb'*m2i« ff/ *».21-ff» largWar 1.25 rlsiMy 1.20 irunswick ucyEr 1.30 luM Co .00 ulova .80b junk Ramo „ I Burl Ind 1.40 ^1* 3,500; ealvai non*; aariy IrMlng bu*’’’®''#*)* ’ ataarS and halfars modafatoly active, strong to 25 higher, lato trade alaars slow, , If7^;*w^2j42^1bi If.: 20'S 20'.i 20Vi + - 41 32W 52'A S2H + n n 34 33'/i 34 -f Vi 36 27'4 27 27 -I- 'A 14 24 23H 24 + 'h 4 6IVk 61Va 61Vi -f 'A 7 24»i 241A 24VA — Ml 41 36H 36 36'A -I- Vi 27 3f ^ 3f .. 5 30 »H M -h M If nVi 73V4 nV4 — M 1 ff) ,- AmOrlcan Stock Ekehango Iblltf^nobn prices: LOW Last chf. 3FA M'A - li 136 ia l| lI'A -I 5 2f1i ff/4 + 'A 11% 1)'/4 IIVj .. II'A 107/1 10?i — 'A S3 24% 24% 24% — V4 5 26V4 26 26% + /4 14'/4 .... 37 17% 17% 17Vj ....... 1 71 78 78 . . 13 lO’A 10 lO'/j + 1/4 11 30 17% 17Vi — % 10 16 157/s ISr/s — % 4 7'A 714 714 .... S2 15% 15'A 151A — % 37 13% 13% 12% — % 35 06% 3% 78%-1% 26 38% 38% 38%-% 26 251% 34vS 35% -t- % C# .40- 78 60% 67 67% -1% icl^ 8. ^ ihli by ThS Asiociited Press 1768 .M Hyeoh «fg xri! 2* iSS&§m NewPOrfc Mn ilC Group 8sx«n Indus! curry Rain tielhcm Inst Syntax Cp Technica wn Nui' Coayrioi iStoeks of Local Interest Cert-teed .80 CMsnaA 1.10 CFI Sti .80 Ches Ohio 4 ChIMil SIP p ChIPneu 1.00 Chris Craft 1 Chrysler 2 CITFIn 1.80 Citias Sve 2 Clark Eq 1.20 ClevEIIII 1.72 Coca Col 1.20 COIgPel 1.20 CollInRad .80 Colointst 1.60 CBS 1.40b ColuGas 1.52 CofnSolv .90e ComwEd 2.20 70 87% 87% . 45 45 45 . . . ^ 353 53% 53 53 30 37Vi 37% 371i + % 38 53Vi 53% 53% .. 3 34% 34% 34% -I- % 6 37 38% 38% — % 72 66 65 6514 +1% 13 14% 14% 14% — % 2 57% 57% 57% ... 2 57% 57% 57% + % 10 43% 42% 43Vi + V» I 52% 52% 52% — % 17 117% IITIA 117% — % 6 23% 23% 23% HI 7% 7% 7% + 'A 20 48% 48% 41% — % 21 32% 32’/! 32% — Mi 4 12I'A 12B’/! 128’/! +l'/i —B— 13 40 37% 40 + ’A 7 34'A 34% 34’A - % 1 76 76 76 6 52 51’A 52 -I- JS 4 37’/i 37’A 37’A — ’A 1 70% 70'A 70% -I- % 3 47% 49% 47% -j- % 5 41% 41% 4IVi 4- ’A 66 17% 17'4 17% + ’A 71 31% 31’/i 31'A —’A 47 57% 57'A 57% + % 31 65% 65 65% H- ’A 7 34% 34>4 34’A — ’A xl 36 35% 35% -I- A + 'A II 42'A 42’A 42’A 3 71% 71% 71% 1 47% 47% 47% + % 4 68% ff% 68% + 'A 1 48Vi 48% 41% + ■' 53’A 53’A 5»'A lllborl wl Harris Ini 1 HfCtaMng .70 Horcinc i.20e HtwPtck .20 Hon Electrn Holldyinn .35 HOIIySin 1.20 Bomesika .40 oneywl 1.10 Idaai Basic 1' Cp Am .... Cp 1.40 IngarRand 2 Ing Rend wl Inland S1I 2 IkSt I.SO 2.60 larv 1.00 liner .50 IntNick 1.20a Int Pap 1.50 Int TST .75 lowaPSv 1.20 I PL Inc JswOlCo 1.40 JohnMen 2.40 JohnJhn ,60a Jontogan .80 JonH L 2.70 Jostans .60 Kaiser Al 1 Kety Ind KsyserRo .60 Kannecott 2 K#rrMe 1.50 KImbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.60 Krasgess .34 Krogar 1.30 Ltar Slegler CohElecInd 1 Con Foods 1 ConNetG 1.76 ConsPwr 1.70 CentAirL .50 Coni Can 2.20 Cont Cp .lOe Coot Mot .40 Cent oil 3 Cont Tel .61 Contro Data Corn Pd 1.70 Coi’.CW 2.50a Cowles .50 ^ CrdUseHIn lb CrowCol 1.51t Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20 &"r 1 Dan Riv 1.20 DaycoCp 1.60 Oeare Co 2 DelMnte 1.10 DaltaAIr .40 DetEdis 1.40 OllShem 1.40 Disney .30b DdWChm 2.40 duPont 5.50e Duq Lt 1.66 Dyne Am .40 East Air .50 E Kodak .11* EatonYa 1.40 Ebasco Ind 2 E6GG .10 Elect Spec “PasoNG 1 tra Cp 1.10 6 30% 30'A 30'A 15’ 30'A 27% 30'A 13 i48'A fl’A 4ijA 3i% li' +1' ElPasoh ptra Cp imer El 1.10 FflrchC .500 Falreh Hiller Fensteel Inc Faddars .ao FMOStr .75 Fflfrol 1.40 f* . 53'A 53 35 33'A 33’A 13 45 45 7 4I'A 4I'A 4i'A + 'A 14 32% 32% 32% 7 44% 44% 44% 6 23% 23% 23% + Vi 37 61 68 61 — % 11 60'/i 60'A 60'A -t- % 2 27% 27’A 27% + ’A 7 77'A 77 77 ... 5i 26’A 26 26'A ... 21 145’A 145’A 1«'A +1 ^ 27 mt 42'A 42’A + % 1 m »7 207 - % 2 17’A 17 17’A + 'A 5 34 34 34 +% 44 37 36% 37 -I- 'A 7 75'A 74% 75’A — % 6 57% 57'A 57% -H 7 24% 24% 24% 4- 15 32'A 32 32’A + 'A _D— 10 26% 26% 26% - % 2 50 50 50 - % 7 55% 55'A 55% + % 3 35% 35'A 35'A 6 37Vi 37'A 37Ji _ 11 20% 21% 21% + % 15 35% 35% |5% 2 I4'A l4Vl l4’A 7 77% 77’A 77'A — % 141 42 42 42 t % 1 31% 38% 31% + 'A 8 165% 145’A 165'A + 'A 6 30% 30’A 30% + A 48 28’A 2I’A 28'A — _E— 57 27'A 27 27'A V 38 74’A 73'A 74 -t- % 15 40'A ,40'A 40'A 4 60 57% »7A 35 47'A 4I’A 47'A +1'A 2 2I'A 28'A 2I’A + % 137 im 25’A 25% + 'A 1 44'A 44’/j 44'/! 22 102’A 102'A 102'/! 7 36'A 36’A 36'A 18 25% 25% 25% + % —F. 72 14% 83'A 14 +Hi 73 23 22V* 23 , +1% 14 3)'A 31’A 31’A + 'A 3 53% 50% 11 35% 35% 35% + 'A 15 47% 47V4 47% +1% -- 57% S|% 57% -t- 84% II’A ^ 30r/e soil 16% -7 41 . « . 4|.. t % A II 25% 2S’A 25’A — % 60 50'A 50 50Vi + VA —H— 3 TI'A 78'A 98’A 1 47% 47% 47% + ’/* 7 72 72 72 -I- 1A 1 37’A J7VA arA - Vi 11 53'A 53'A S3'A ..... 4 82% 12% 12% —1 7 17% 17% 17% + 'i — 'A 16 23’A 22% 23'A + 'A 76 37'A 31% 37 15 37% 37% 37% + 'A 25 5I’A 58'/* 58’/* 1 27'A 27’A 27'/* — 'A 27 23% 23% 23'A + 'A 72 4I'A 48’A 48’A — 'A 11 88'A 17% II’A + % 10' 106'/* 106 106’/* — A + Vl 90 29% 29% 29% -V % 3 37'A 37 3714 - 'A, 13 29’A 29'A 29% + '/il 170 65 64 65 +l%i 12 33% 33’* 33'A + 'A 13 47 46’A 46’A - '/* 16 31'A 31% 31'/i + '/a 30 57'A 56’/* 57’ 4 +1 | 9 51% 51'/*\ 51% + % I*®' 23 68'A 67% 67% -1% 16 75'A 74’A 75 - 'A 61 S2'A 51’A 52'/* + 'A 14 3iVi 31 31 - '/* 17 44’A 43% 44’A + 'A 40 75'A 75% 75'A f '/* 4 44Vi 44 4#'/! + Vi 190 lITVi 114’A 117A 52% — lA 17 60 59’A 59% + Vi 40 43'/* 42'/* 43 45 66*. 64'/* 44% + 'A 45 15 15 15 - '/* 65 84 83 84 + 'A 37 36'/* 35'A 34 -V 'A 2 34 34 34 14 82% 82% 82AA -1- 19 32'A 32% 32Vi 44 62% 61% 42’A +2 115 43% 43 43% + 'A 3 38% '38% 38% + *i x25 55'A 54% S4’A — 'A _v~ 14 33'/. 33'A 33% 3 32 32 32 ...... 18 29 28% 29 -I- 'A —W—X—-Y—Z— 79 58% 57’A 57% — 1 24% 24% 24% + 3 42 42 42 + 'A 16 41'A 41'A 41'A 36 43 42% 43 + 'A 40 49'A 68'A 49 . _ 35 85% 85'/. 85% + 'A 9 58'A 58 58’/* -I- 'A 141 45’A 45'A 4S'A 5 35% 35'A 35% + 'A 139 33'A 32'A 32% — 'A 24 268 267 267 33 46'/. 46% 44’/! 39 57% 54% 57% +1% Varlan Asso Vando Co .40 VaEIPw 1.08 WarLam 1.10 WasWal 1.24 Wistn AIrL 1 Wn Banc 1.20 WnUTel 1.40 WastgEI 1.80 and South Vietnam debating whether to accept it. It has been two weeks since U.S. negotiator Cyrus R. Vance last bargained with Col. Ha Van Lau of North Vietnam over the shape of the conference table and other issues delaying the parley. ★ ★ ★ U.S. officials said the main diplomatic activity on their side at the moment is in Saigon, where U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker has been talking with President Nguyen Van Thieu. ★ ★ ★ The Americans are anxious CUNNIFF would be disastrous for the exchange com-ipunity and severely damaging to business, the dollar, the balance of payments and to American prestige in international finance. The money that pours into the market from independent and institutional investors is offered with faith that their business will be transacted safely, efficiently and accurately. Much of this money comes from abroad. Because of antiquated work | depositories most of the stockl methods, a shortage of skilled 1 held, by member, firms for their! clerical held and a desire to customers. Whereas once these take on as much business as certificates were raced about possible regardless of ability to town by messengers whenever a handle it, some brokers have sale was made, now they retailed to deliver in five days. I main in vaults. Ownership ♦ ★ ★ changes are recorded b y Several have been forced to automated bookkeeping, curtail business, some have|j^oTICEiABLE MOVE been forced to close offices and dismiss workers, other have found it necessary to merge, and some are refusing the unprofitable orders of small investors. ♦ ★ ★ On top of all these troubles have come serious problems with regulatory agencies of the government, particularly regarding the use and misuse of inside” information. A PRIME EXAMPLE The predicament-of the Mates Mutual Fund, considered by The most noticeable of what the exchange says are 25 moves to correct the paper jam has been the elimination o f Wednesday trading so as to give clerical help time to catch up on back work. However, the exchange now feels that the value of Wednesday closings has become eroded and that the midweek beak has come to be accepted as another holiday. ★ ★ ★ With the return to the five-day week, even though the daily some measures to be among the gong will sound 90 minutes most successful of the pastlearlier than the old 3:30 p.m. year, has helped undermine!closing, there are misgivings confidence. Mates has been'among securities men, bicluding forced to suspend redemptions the Securities and Exchange However, the inability to handle commitments has !of its shares. White Mot 2 WInnDIx 1.54 Woolworth 1 XeroxCp 1.60 YngdSht 1.10 Copyrighted by The Associate Press 1949 Seles figures are unoHiclal. Unless otherwise noted, rates Of divl dends In the foregoing table are ennuxi disbursements based on the lest quarterly or semi-annual declaration. SpKirt or extra dividends or P«V™hts net designated as regular are identified In the lollowing footnotes. a—Also extra or extras. plus stock dividend. c-Uquidatlng dividend. d—Declared or paid In 1947 plus stock dividend. e-Decler^ or paid so far this year. f-Payable In stock during 1947, estimated cash value on exAllvIdend or ex-dlstrlbuflon date., g-Pald tost year h-Oeclared or paid attar itock dlwtod or plit up. k—Declared or paid toil yoaib an accumulative Issue with arrears, n—New issue, p—^old tW1» yOOr, dividend omitted, deferred or no aettan taken af tost dividend m^lng. r-Dj dared orlMlId In M4f plui stock dividend. I—Paid In stock during lf4l, estimated cash value on ex-dlvIdend or ex-distrlbu-tlon date. z—Salat In full. _ , cld—Called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex dividend and tales In full, x-dis—Ex distribution. xr-Ex rights. xw-Wtthout vtor-rents, ww—With warrants, wd—Whon districted. wl—When Issued, nd—Next day delivery. v|—In bankruptcy or receivership or get on with the four-party conference proposed by President Johnson and are less con cemed than their South Vietnamese partners about prestige items. But Saigon is vigorously opposed to anything that looks like recognition of the Viet-cong’s Natimial Liberation Front as anything more than' a subordinate of North Vietnam. HOPE EXPRESSED W. Averell Harriman, the head of the U.S. delegation, expressed hope that the deadlock ffill be broken by the time President-elect Nixon takes office Jan. 20 so “we can at least leave the new administration with talks that have started.” * * * In a New Year’s interview, Harriman said the Johnson administration’s effort in 1968 “started on the road toward peace” and presents an opportunity to its successor. ★ ★ * Although he warned of tough negotiations ahead and would predict no timetable for the outcome, Harriman voiced hope that the Paris sessions would bring an end of the fighting in 1969. ★ ★ “If there is good will—and I am inclined to think there is the necessary setting here in Paris to make progress in the coming months—I for one would hope that the fighting could stop during the year,” he said. NO PROJECTION “I am not making that as a projection,” he added. “It is a hope that all of us have that a substantial number of American troops can be withdrawn early in the year and during the course of the year, as a result of the withdrawal of North Vietnamese forces from the South.” Earlier in the year this fund’s 1, . , . record was so good that it resulted In a bookkeeping snafuj^ i„\rders and to at some brokerage houses that^^^^ Commission. The big question is whether or not the brokerage firms have made enough headway in the new!past year, both in eliminating might be considered scandal^ caught old work and in upgrading their if it occurred in a related enterprise, such as commercial banking. TOUGH COMMITMENT That commitment is a tough one. As Robert Haack, New York Stock Exchange president, commented in a year-end meeting with newsmen, no other business promises five-day delivery on orders of such magnitude. in a situation where it cannot assess the value of its own shares. ★ ★ ★ The stock exchange, seriously concerned about the paper jam, has taken an almost dictatorial stance in order to bring about remedies. Potentially one of its most successful moves has been the Central Certificate Service. This service places in central VC End Cease-Fire With Minor Clashes SAIGON (AP) — The Viet-ties and damage were light, offi-cong’s 72-hour cease-fire for the cers reported. t facilities to handle larger volume, to resume a five-day week. INCREASING IMPACT In a year-end statement, Haack concedes that record volume “will be felt in increasing measure on the New York Stock Exchange and other securities markets.” But Haack, who has devoted most of his first year in office to innovations and modernizing, also states that a solution to the problem of volume remains the primary task of the industry. ★ ★ ★ Whether or not the industry is up to the task may be answered in the next few weeks. The exchange is confident that it will be. New Year ended early today, and two American bases were shelled shortly afterward. The barrages did little damage but caused some casualties, U.S. headquarters said. No significant ground action was reported although American and South Vietnamese troops were patrolling up and down the country. ★ ★ ★ Since the U.S. and South Vietnamese commands did not de- 21-year-old American soldiers freed by the Viet Cong on Newjamong the 700 to 800 persons dare a New Year’s truce this! Year’s Day were eating hartily in the Roost Party Hall, depu* year, there was no question of; and preparing for a quick re-'ties said. Car Headrest Requirement to Hike Costs DETROIT (AP) - The federal government ordered them, but individual buyers will pay for the headrests being insured on all 1969 cars. * Of the Big Three automakers only Chrysler Corp. dealers are ;i«u*^toirV“VuW-,in doubt about how much the f««V'JCri!^2tfDrto““* ‘"' headrests will add to car prices !as the sticker costs go up for ' the second straight year. I ★ ★ ★ Federal safety standards re- WASH.NGTON (AP, - Th. cto ^st 8 pair of front seat tlon of th* Treaiury_ D«c. 27f ItW com* hcfid fCSts bc installed OH all Icars built after Jan. 1 to the possibility Treasury Position torcft •qu«llz«tlon tax ................... ROYAL 6^K (AP) - A 10- month-old boy was asphyxiated in his crib while his parents were at a New Year’s Eye party and, according to fire of-” ^ i caw built after Jan. 1 to ftolals. faulty Christmas tree D.P0..1, the possibiUty of!’‘‘Wng started a house blaze. 19,750,713,411.06 71,377,4p9,767.21 rUhinlash Iniurle^'V “ . . Withdr.w.i.^fi.«i^tor^^^07,739,645.13 ^ * ! Do«g>f HOnnaford dicd dc- ........-............. Both General Motors and the SPHe attempts .by an old er Vietcong gunners also op^ed up on U.S. Navy river boats moving South Vietnamese troops along a Mekong Delta canal. Ten Navy meYi were wounded, and South Vietnamese casualties were described as “light.” Enemy casualties were not known. * ★ ★ North of Saigon at the U.S. 24th Evacuation Hospital, three Gunman Hits 6 in Saginaw SAGINAW (AP) - Sheriff’s deputies searched^ today for a gunman who reportedly wounded six persons at a New Year’s Eve party early Wednesday and then fled. The shooting caused chaos any violations. A U.S. spokesman said the war “went on at about the same level—it wasn’t as bad as it has been and it wasn’t as good as it could be.” ★ ★ ★ The Viet Cong cease-fire ended at 1 a.m. Saigon time—about the time millions of Americans were turning on television sets to watch the annual games. VC nRE Within a few minutes about lj), enemy shells burst on the U.S.l Marine airfield at Marble Mountain, near Da Nang. A few hours later an artillery base of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division 60 miles north of Saigon was hit by about 65 mortar rounds. Casual- turn home. A spokesman said the three would complete their preliminary debriefings today and would probably be aboard an evacuation flight to the United States' early Friday. FREED GIs They are l^c. 4 ★ ★ ★ All six persons were reported in good condition. In addition, one other person was struck id the head with a bottle. Deputies were investigating reports that the shooting was part of a fight involving other persons in the southwest corner James W. the building. Deputies found bowl Ocala, Fla.; Spec. 4 several broken bottles, broken Thomas N. Jones, Lynnville, chairs, and a knife with a seven-Ind., and Pfc. Donald G. Smith,! inch blade. Akron, Pa. Authorities reported the per- They were preceded by Maj.Isons wounded by-gunshots were James Rowe, of McAllen, Tex.,jAnestacia Teneyriqiie, 30; Ram-the Special Forces officer wholico Yrlas, 28; Carloijloses, 23; escap^ Tuesday from five j Raymond DeLeon, 35 ; Daniel years of imprisonment. He leftjCarmoice, 22, and Fred Tency- Fire Kills Boy in Royal Oak ^‘to,364,»M'»o,9i 1Z434,0#8,4I2.79 Ford Motor Co.. which have •’‘■dthfer to revive him, police early today. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — 1 Just returned from a visit to the Hawaiian Islands. I was very much impressed and feel diere is a great future there bnsinesswise. What do yon think, of Inter*l8land Resorts! Ltd. as an investment? Aloha. C.M. A — The crux of this situation lies in the amount you are willing to pay for growth. Gross revenues have moved Irieuq, 30, all of Saginaw. i # «» # li if years ago I put £230,000 into 38 issues. Often I read advice from yon and others dut a pintfolio should be condned to con-BiderhUy fawer issues for ad- 2|uate watching. Now I dop’t ve ov«r two Honrs a week to keb^g abreast Of tty stocks. Isn’t 30 per cent a^rbclation in 30 ttittths a fairly §ood record? Could I have dottb better with fewer Issues?—A.E; A — I would say for that RfIchCh .40b IffuilStl 2.50 Rfvlun 1.40 KiinA/M .90 ifynTjiB 2.20 RolnSM .47g iobr Cp .16 lovCCpto Jl l?gfW te.”." SiJMLd wl tociu«.r».'2r3!i been Slinr the headrests said. The older boy. James Han-earnings have somewhat to .Miutery limit. I.|IV!)^- J‘.r! fhw mnrfAiihaford, 14, In 1967 Inter-Island ....... — ...... (Since me sian oi me moaci;. ._________ ^ 4# oKom ™ to t B< CgmgllM I Iw y# Tito_____________ - - !8lli ''ml. UNI, BOA. L^i. lUonth Ytof A| ffiir 71.5 71.4 il 81.4 .... .... f#.2 12.3 II SI i ¥. Crash is Fatal year, will now add the 116 to $18 ihe living cost to the sticker price. Amtt-ican Motors will not adjust its prices' flow because it included the Madrest costs in its in’ices from the bejdnning of the model year. ADDED COST Chrysler, meanwhile, ha s been instailUng the headrests on most of its cars at an added cost of $26.40 on mpst models room but was pushed back by intense heat when he tried to reach the baby’s room. After canying another brother, Edwin, 3, to safetyi Jamea ran back to the burning house, ^bn^ a bedroom window and ^'pulled the infant from bis crib. 165 24% 24 ,. , 10 42% 43 43% - *1 44 50'/* 49’/* 49% - ’/• 4 25*! 24% 25% + % 55 19'/* 18% 19 11 51 50% SO'/i — '/• 7 82’/» gi'/4 81% - 'A 44 41'/! 41’,! 41% + '! - . . , 781 u'^ fr' 13% +i%!to*‘®Ieted in the summer of 1970 at a cost Of $8 milliott. IHiafWs are traded on the Honolulu Exchange and command a multiple of 60 times estimated 1068 results and Standard and Poor’s 425 Industrials gained 27 p» cent in ihi 30-month period. Your howeyir, ^ below that of an average, of three grosrih funds — ineludbig tbrir capital gains but not divide distribu^s.’ I am sure your list presents a fairly Iffoad spread In fnice action! but whether you would have picked from the top of your Hst had you confined Your firsthand observations yoursrif to 10 to 16 issues is S. Edith, told Pontiac police last should be of value in deciding'difficult to asy. Because your night that someone brcriie into whether you are willing to payisystem ha$ Worked well for you, his house and stole a television j that kind of premium for the stick with It, but ! would not shotgun, stereo and cleaner, valued at $415. vacuum! shares. D — About twe and a half recomiftend It tb most readers. (Copyright, 1969)