and captured last personal letter {root Preisdent Johnson saying efforts would be made to stop Cambodia’s chief of state, violations of Cambodian territory by U.S. and South Vietnamese troops. Sihanouk described the men as already treed. He said they “will be dtuvered to Ufe Australian Embassy.” Australia handles American diplomatic affairs In Cambodia. said the United States had of the conditions he had set •f the men, particularly a A formula which might permit the eaHy release of the 82 captive crewmen of the U S. intelligence ship Pueblo appears to have been found to the secret talks between die United States and North* Kofca at Panmiuhjom, the' New York Times said today. tile Seoul newspaper Kyunghyang Shinmoon reported that U S. and North Korean representatives met at Pan-munjom today* to discuss procedural matters In connection with the return of die Americans held by North Korea since last Jan. 23. IkA&Jjie Times and the Seoul paper tadicated'that release of the Pueblo’s crew was only a matter of time. Officials in, .Washington maintained silence, but no official denial was issued as has been the case with similar reports earlier. til Berlin today, four Americans left for home after two weeks of unsuccessful attempts to visit the crew of the Pueblo in Nor^i Korea. * * * Robert Ayling, Charles Daniels, and attorneys Hugh Cline and Carl McAfee, all of Virginia, left by plane. Ayling, whose son Charles is a member of the Pueblo crew held captive in North Korea almost a year, said last night the. group was still hoping for some last minute word from the North Koreans. , WORD NEVER CAME It apparently never came. The group had sought North Korean visas, first in Moscow and then fqp the past week in Berlin. In South Vietnam, the Vietcong today proposed a series of battlefield meetings with U.S. officials to arrange the release of American prisoners from Communist captivity. . In a Liberation Radio broadcast, the Communists set the first session for Christmas Day, So miles northwest of Saigon, to discuss the possible release of three captured U.S. servicemen. i> NO U.S. REPLY The broadcast said the Americans should reply by radio, most likely by the Armed Forces Network heard across South Vietnam. There was no immediate comment from U.S. officials. The Vietcong said they planned to fred “a number” of U.S. and South VWt* namese prisoners to mark the eighth anniversary of their National Liberation Front (NLF) tomorrow. ★ ★ ★ Diplomats said the Vietcong might be trying to gain official recognition from the United States and South Vietnam, withheld at the Paris talks. The Cong gave no details as to how they planned to release the prisoners once the details were ironed out. SHOPPING DAYS TIL CHRISTMAS “This i« definitely a more efficient operation and has' decreased our work UWMAESlWf Opm BvtpyMNiflit thrtff CDrttffHis -Mf. Pontiac Postal Employs Keep Up With Christmas Mail Resum e ^ Bombing - N. Viet PARIS (UPD — North Vietnam said today the United States has threatened to resume bombing North Vietnam if tbe National Liberation Front (Vietcong) unleashes a new offensive in the south. The itarto Vietnamese statement was released following a meeting between Ambassador Cyrus R.- Vance, the No. 2 U. $. negotiator, and Col, Ha Van Lati^ his North Vietnamese counterpart. . The North Vietnamese communique quoted the Americans1 as saying that if Car Death Ends City Man's Wait A Pontiac* man was killed in a traffic accident last night while waiting in In car to pick up his daughter from a draco at Madison Junior Hip School, John Mellema, 08, of 2381 University was dead op arrival at Pontiac General Hospital following the 9 p.m. crash. Melinda was sitting in his dar cii the shoulder of North Perry near Kenilworth when 41 was rammed from behind by an autd driven by Allen A. Slade, 20, qf 731 Robinwood. Slade was being held in the Oakland County Jail, today while police sought a warrant charging him with manslaughter. DRINKING, POLICE SAID Police said that Slade had been drinking mid refused to make a statement about the accident. Mellema was waiting off the roadway until traffic 1n the driveway to the Icbool cleared. His daughter, Jan, a ninth grader, was attending a teen club Christmas dimce. Mellema was pinned in his car by the Impact. Police estimated that Slade was traveling 60 to 70 miles an hour in a 50-mile zone. A witness told police that she feter glade's car swerve when a youngster ran Across the road. Police said that there were no skid marks, however. Samuel Green, Jr., 53, Of 356 Joalyn, the' driver of another car in front of Mellema, was injured in the chain crash. He was treated and released from the hospital. Oakland Toll in ’68 Utt Year to Otto 152 the Vietcong resumes its attacks on Saigon, “This would create a situation in which it would be impossible to carry on serious negotiations (in Paris) and maintain thebombing halt.” Smith Vietnamese military officials said this week the Communists were masking up to 30,000 men fOra new offensive qn Saigon and predicted another enemy effort to capture Da Nang. kfilitary reports fipm Saigon today reported continued shelling of U S. camps guardlng Saigdn atuTa series of battles on the defensive fringes of the South Vietnamese capital-The United States protested sharply against previous Vietcong attacks on South Vietnamese cities as a violation of the agreement by which President Johnson totdod the bombing of Norm Vietnam O&'Ifov. 1. It also protested ConummUt military activity in the demOhmiaiil zone. Thomas,Socialist Ffagbearer, Dies huntiM&On, iffe 'fclfiMr Norman Thomas,. Six times Socialist candidate for ntement and throughout his life a prodder of the American conscience, died today, He was M. The announcement was made at the Hufiire Farm NOrisIng Home here by Mrs, Margaret Gottsegen, director of mirndgl g& He waft epoved to the nursing home a year ago from the Huntington Hospital, where he was a patient after suffering a stroke. • »««J. , Thomas lost his every race for public office, but lived tome the acceptance of many M the . ideal' he Butinptoned. He rah against'every president from Herbert;. 'Hoove? to Harry Si. Truman and criticized every one since. The peak of Us career id a candidate came in 1M2, during the Jteat depression, when he polled 900,000 yptes — enough to make Democrat Frwklta D. Roosevelt take notice. Ransom Payoff MIAMI, FIs. (AP) — A ransom payoff for kidnapod coed Barbara Jane Mackle was broken up here today, the FBI said, when a policeman chased a suspicious car pear Miami’s baysida And recovered a suitcase stuffed with 8500,009. Also in the car, abandoned by two persons near doWntowh Miami, was a skindiving suit, apparently used in picking up of the money from Btecayne Bay, the FBI said. A source close to the millionaire land-developing family said to Atlanta earlier that Barbara- Jane, kidnaped Tuesday morqing, was alive and unbanped. FBI aim1*, county nod city police swarmed into the area where -Deputy P. S- Self found the money in the abandoned car, GIRL’S SAFETY FIRST “My concern and the fefeitv’s concern, is for- the girl’s safety,” said Fred Fox, assistant special ageht In charge of the Miami FBI office. For said the fugitives abandoned a blue Volyo.with Massachusetts license tags when Deputy Self nbticed the car “where It shouldn’t have been.” , #S‘( A&f •• * Fleeing the car, one fugitive carried a carbine. suitcase. - \ Asked if the ifei knew abbut the ransom payoff to advance, Fox sail, “We’d prefer not to go into that.” The Judge In January Pontiac Div. Nevada H-Bomb Test Packs a Heavy Jolt PAHUTE MESA, Nev. (AP) - One of the mightiest nuclear blasts fired to the United States jarred the Nevada desert toto upheaval today and sent shock waves rippling for hundreds of miles., The 8:30 a.m. hydrogen type blast-much protested by some scientists, labor leaders and pacifist groups, even though it was deep underground—hftd the force of a million tons of TNT. St * * Newsmen, watching by television from a control point 12 miles away, felt the ground beneath titym rise like a bouncing boat and ftsw oceanlike swells be-(Continued (to Pag* A-2, Col. 2) Pontiac Motor Division announced today that it wuT introduce a new car next month, that, “goes one performance step farther'* in the popular muscle car Raid, ft field and market Pontiac opened up five years ago With the GTO.1 The new model, to be naftied The Judge, la specially designed to offer a unique combination of added performance, excellent handling characteristics and a very distinctive appearance, Pontiac officials said. e e e ' It will have as the standard power train a 366-horsepower, V-8 Ram Air engine with 400 cubic-inch displacement, 10.78:1 compression ratio and four-barrel Quadra-jrt carburetlon, coupled with a fully synchronised three-spaed, heavy-duty manual transmission floor-mounted control with a Hurst T-hsndle. A 3.58:1 sxle ratio will be standard as will dual exhausts. Available as a hardtop coupe or a convertible, The Judge will be easily functional Ram* Air hood scoop*. A three-color slash stripe will be featured on the upper edge of the front fender riamtog back to the door. “The Judge” dscsls on toe front fender and Ram Air decals on the sides of toe hood scoops will provide Identification. a At the rear will be a 60-foch floating deck air toll with The Judge emblem on the upper right-hand surface. To complete Its distinction, the first production units will be painted a bright red including the Endura energyabsorbing front bumper. As a companion to Pontiac’s GTO, The Judge will ride on a 112-inch wheelbase and the Wide Track will be 60 Inches both front and rear. ST *. Bucket seats, driver-oriented Instrumentation, a shallow-dish, vinyl-cushioned steering wheel and an upper-level ventilation system will highlight Hie Judge’s interior feature^ A complete, list of. options and 'accessories also will bo mods available far The Judge which will bo available to Pontiac dealerships fete next month. Prices ( Also win be announced in Januaiy. ... Pontiac’s RAm Air IV engine rated It 370 horsepower is optional and Includia functional hood seoopa. Avnllabli transmissions will be both a close-ratio, four-speed manual and the three speed Turbo HydrA-matic. A hood-mounted tachometer, a rally gauge cluster and power front disc brakes also will be offered. BLACK GRILLE The front wiU be distinguished by a black grille, exposed head lamps and NAPA, Calif. (AP) - A man newly sued for'divorce shot and killed six of his children early today, set their home afire and then fatally shot himself, police reported. Yule Mail Fjpfys Smoothly in City holiday here Is It’s less than | week before Christmas, ind Pontiac postal employes ire ex-perkndng what la perhape their smooth-" season ever.. plenty of mill to be processed, one official said, “But we are managing to kaep up with It without hav, tog to hire Christmas assistants.” ir e a There has tken no huge rush of Christmas mail. and Pontiac postal officials attribute the decline mainly to an operational change to sectional processing used for the first time this year. Last year the Pontiac office received mail sorted according to states, from eight fecal offices to northern Oakland County. After reaching the Pontiac of-sectioned again according to owup lor out-of-state delivery. Banal processing. these eight 1 is sent di-in Royal he has never seen the mail volume low as this season. load here,” lAid Clarence Smith, assistant supertotsndom in dhatyje of mafi. “But it doesn’t totally eXplrtn the rea- I/wm. son for this year’s decraaM to volume.” M ra*rr unras Clyde 8mlth, customer rotations repre- The volume is about 0.4 per cert fewer sentatlve and Clarence’s brother, said than last year, according to Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson. The Pontiac office processed approxl-.mately 6.6 million pieces of mall last year between Dec. 1-15. This year the figure is 8.5 million, Clarence Smith said. (Continued on Page A-6, Col. 1) Rain Is to Change to Snow Tonight Occasional rain Is expected to continue tonight with showers changing to mow or snow flurries add temperatures turning colder. The weatherman predicts toe mercury will drop to 27 to 83 tonight and continue In the low 30s tomorrow. Sr * * Pertly cloudy and a little warmer' Is the forecast for Saturday. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 80 today, 50 tonight and 40 tomorrow. * * * A dismal 30 was the low recording to downtown Pontiac, prior to 8 a.m. today. The thermometer reading was 30 at 2 p.m. Christmas Series Starts Appearing In today’s Press Is the first article in s five-part Christmas series about the prophets, theme inspired social critics of old who held a vision of a coming nteftsiah. Read the first installment of this absorbing series by Associated Press religion writer George Cornell on page D-9. Strato Lounger Chairs...... Maple and Walnut Tea Carts 5-Pc. Dinette............. 42" round tabl. and 4 .wiv.1 chairil . * Serta Hide-a-Beds ........ Colonial Sofaand Chair. • 4. HARVEY FURNITURE ;-A— THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER *19, 1968 Illinois Welfare Agency Is Scene of Bloodbath News CARLINVILLE, 111. UPt —• .A father of 10 children opened fire on a welfare agency Christinas party for his family yesterday, police said, killing four persons, including his estranged wife, and wounding four of his children. He then fled, shot himself and died hours Authorities said Sherman Kline, 38, pulled out two pistols while gifts were being opened fa the offices of the Illinois Department of Child and Family Services and began firing. Killed were the wife, Lorraine, 33; two social workers, Frank Wildgrube, 24, and Boqnie Albracty, 23, both of Carlinvllle; and' a receptionist, Ann Keppler, 25, of BenU.HL Two of the children, Michael, 14, and Diane, 8, were In critical condition in a Springfield hospital, while the ether two Yule Mail Flow Threatened Flu Still Taking Toll By The Associated Press The nation's. influenza epidemic continued to claim victims throughout the Country today, slowing down the nation’s business and threatening to delay the Christmas mail. Resident Johnson has been hospitalized with flu in Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland since yesterday. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey wa$ reported still recuperating from the diesease in Phoenix, Ariz. ★ * V.. In Washington, Postmaster Gen. Marvin W. Watson said absenteeism among postal workers because of the flu City Men Face Host of Charges Charges ranging from driving without ■ license to carrying a concealed weapon Ad violating state narcotics laws were being considered against two men arrested by Pontiac police early today. Bobby D. Evans, 25, of 342 Ferry and fttanley Derrickson, 22, of 298 Prospect we being held in Oakland County Jail while the case is investigated. ' ' *' *TT* They were arrested ihortly after 1 a.m. when police stopped their car after seeing It weave on Bagley near Fisher. Evans, the driver, could hardly stand up when he got out of the car, police r. He had no operator's license. gfrf* lit, ★ jvFd the front seat, "between Evans and Iprrickson, police Mid they found a brass blackjack. A stalght razor was found in Derrlckson’s back pocket, they added. According to police, Derrickson tried to toss away a plastic bottle, believed to contain bwbituato capsules, and eight packets filled with a substance appearing to be marijuana. The capsules and en-velopes are to be examined by the State Police laboratory in East Lansing. could slow down the delivery of holiday mail. Aid in New York City, where an estimated 300,000 persons were suffering from the disease, a cold wave and a strike by truck drivers who deliver fuel oil threatened to add even more names to the sick rolls. 107 DEAD IN GOTHAM City Health Commissioner Edward O’Rouke said 107 New Yorkers died of the flu last week. In the Detroit sues, all of Highland Park's 13,000 pupils started Christmas vacation ewly yesterday as the Hong Kong flu claimed wore victims. Three •more Michigan colleges also were shut down, bringing the total to eight. In addition to Highland Parte Community College, Adrian, Albion and Jackion Community Colleges announced they would cancel classes because of A number of i unusually gnat i Absenteeism among teachers and pupils in Detroit schools was about twice the normal rate, according to a school board spokesman; * ■ * ' —v • Nevada H-Bomb Test hacks a Heavy Jolt (Continued From Page One) tween them and ground zero M? a few seconds. The TV monitor flickered out momentarily as the ground rippled. DEEP IN SHAFT ! thb blast was at the bottom of a 4,600-foot shaft drilled into 6,200-foot-high Pahute Mesa 105 miles north of Las Vegas. A cloud, presumably dust, shot skyward after the picture.was restored. ★ W ★ The ground action lasted five or six seconds and caused no damage at the control center. Tall buildings swayed perceptibly in Las JVegas, as they have in previous large shots. , The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Cloudy today, windy and milder with occasional rain or showers changing to snow or snow flurries. High 40 to 48. Cloudy tonight, windy and turning colder with rain or showers changing to snow or snow flurries. Low 27 to 33. Cloudy Friday, windy and colder with occasional snow or snow flurries. Locally heavy snow squalls likely near Lake Michigan. High 29 to 33. Saturday’s outlook] Portly cloudy and a little warmer. Winds east to southeast 19 to 28 miles per hour becoming southerly 15 to 30 miles and gusty this afternoon southwesterly tonight. Precipitation probabilities: 80 per cent today, 50 per 40 per cent Friday, locally higher near Lake Michigan. LowmI ttmptriturt prtCMlno At ( 1.(11.: Wind Velocity IS LowMt ••ma«rttur* Mm ttmiMratur* Wulhtr: Sunny 5,cC?. irSur* HHUiMt and LdWMt TampcralurM TMa Data m It Yaara in 1*57 -a in euacAu WfAiTHfO Nutrias U«'»J W-’f'V" . •4 f-a 4* wfOtoata NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain and Mowers are forecast for tonight along the middle Atlai^'Chlud.'Th^ wnl be Mowers, in the upper Great Lakes and along the Pacific Const. (Mow is forecast in the Rocktet and through the upper Midwest. It will be milder in Me Southeast Ad colder elsewhere: ~ Browning Automatic Finds Ready Buyer "We hove always received excellent results iron our Press Want Ads, and, this om was no ex-MpMSr* Mr. M. C. •HwiSE® PRESS WANT ADS ore the almost communications i who wrat to do I Tried oril lately? RHOI 332-8181 ■ or 334*4981 Custody Denied, Birniinghom jn Cruelty Case# § to wounded youngsters, Gene, 13 and Judy, 10, were in serious condition id a CarlinviUe hospital. ADMITTED SHOOTINGS After the shooting, Kline drove some 60 miles to the home of a brother near O’Fallon, Mo. , Vernon Kline said his brother ran Into some nearby wood6, ha heard a shot and called police. Officers found Shengum Kline with a bullet wound in his head. He died later at" a hospital A * A spokesman for the welfare agency said he believed Kline was upset because he thought the agency had "come between himself and his fondly.” Ray Unterbrink, an administrator for the agency, was the first person to arrive at the Scene of the bloodbath. COVERED WITH BLOOD There were ornaments knocked from the Christmas tree, toy autos and a checkers set covered with blood. There was a partially eaten apple, a kdlypop. Police Chief Robert Stratton said Kline preyiously had threatened social worker Wildgrube with a gun, firing it into the fl6or at Ms feet, then slugging him. Stratton said Kline was sentenced to two years for jthis incident but was released , after serving only a few months of his sentence. * ★ St. Louis County police reported they had arrested Kline in May for abducting one of his children and assaulting a police officer. Kline, who separated from his wife in May, was reported to be i {dumber for a 8t. Louis firm. Hotel Fir^ Kills 5 in Cleveland f CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) - At least five persons — ,and possibly more — perished today in_a fire theft raged through a four-story hotel near the heart of tfie downtown area. . It was fMred that more bodies might be found when firemen reach other rooms of the A&A Hotel, an aged brick structure.' Rooms in the hotel rent for one dollar a night. | One resident who gof put, John Peter^ 40, told newsmen he awoke about ) am to find his mattress on fire. MATCH DROPPED Peters said he might have dropped a match or cigarette Wednesday night before retiring for the evening. Peters said he and .another resident grabbed a bucket, tried unsuccessfully to put out the fire, then started alerting other residents. Peters was burned on the wrist. No other injuries were reported among the survlvora. Fire officials said It- was thought M1 residents had been evacuated. Then the bodies were found. A Clarkston woman, found guilty of cruelty to children in October, wA denied custody of four of five children yesterday by Oakland Couiity Probate Judge Norman R. Barnard. Barnard ruled that he couldn't return the children to Mrs. Florence Lewis, SI, a divorcee, because of her conviction. She and Paul Maczko, 57, 0052 Orton-ville, Independence Township for whom Me kept bouse, were found guilty by a jury of chaining two of her bora in a garage In September 1907. Each was placed on-two years probation. Judge Barnard gave immediate custody'of three of the children to their father, Richard, 82, of Duluth, Minn., Ad kept jurisdiction over the second oldest boy until some behavior problems are straightened out. „> " Jr ./'* • * *• Court officials said that Mrs. Lewis’ youngest child, a 3-year-old, was not involved in the custody case and will stay . with the mother. Lewis, who has driven some to,000 miles In the last two years to attend the court hearings, is engaged to marry a librarian at the Duluth federal laboratory where be works. Snag Isn't Likely to Delay Apoll.o\8 CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (APj -IThe,, lengthy Apollo 8 countdown hit lulfirst ; technical snag today, but it ms a minor one and was not expected to affect Saturday’s planned, blast-off of thrM astronauts toward A orbit around the ihoon. The problem cropped up a the launch crew prepared to pipe supercold liquid hydrogen ptd the three fuel cells that will produce electricity for Ajpolku 8. A valve In the pumping system did not respond Ad had to be replaced. • Or * - J A spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said the problem delayed the fueling operation about four hours. He noted, however, that several aspects of the countdown, which started Sunday, were ahead of schedule and there yas plenty ofiime to make up for time lost because of the faulty valve. The spokesman said the launch team, expected to catch up during a planned built-in hold of more than five hours, scheduled thjz1aftapQon before the so-called terminal countdown starts at 9:51 , p.m. This is one of six such periods worked into the countdown to handle such contingencies. BIRMINGHAM For the last M years, two kindly women have been on AD night or day, hi any weather, to go to the aid of injured, lost or cruelly Mrs. KarT Kocher and Mrs. Gladys OU to Go by Book In Handljpg Nude The case el the Oakland University student who stripped to read pbetry in his last class appearance before graduation has been sent to the student conduct committee. OU. ChAceJtor I>. B. * Varner has ,re-quested a recommendation from the borofoittep, which irE then he taken up by die university senate. Lee Elbinger reportedly appeared in die nude dunng a 15-minute lecture last week on poet William Butler Yeats and his concept of "personal freedom.” An* report of die incident aroused Sate SM. Robert Buber, R-Troy, who has since demanded an investigation of moraia on die OU campus. ‘MUST FOLLOW PROCEDURES’ Varner,; while taking, note of the considerable public concern over die matter and promising “appropriate adtioh,” pointed out, “The university must follow judicial procedures . . . and we will extend fully the rights,of due process ...” OU officials have pointed out that Elbinger has apparently completed A class assignments necessary for graduation. His final grades are not yet known. The student reportedly left for India immediately after completion of class The Student Conduct Committee, made up of six faculty members and three Itiidents, meets 2 p.m. Monday in the conference room, Wilson HA. “1 icts Two School Districts Set Holiday Closing : Students of the Pontiac and Waterford Tbwnship school districts (Al begin Christmas vacations at the close of school tomorrow. (Basses in both districts will resume Jan. 2. | Carl operate ingham Humane They have tributions to meet years. Since they first care of “poor and in 1954, they have * enough funds to “We don’t want a small one,” said Mrs. Mi's. Carl finds thousand dogs and RELY ON OTHER): They rely on the the kindness stray or lost a proper home can “Sometimes it is them to private we can find a home, It costs 93 a day but have shelter, Me added. ★ * ★ Donations go for the feeding of the animals, and a goes , to the veterinarian for Kocher said. She explained that as soon as adog is found it is taken to a nearby .veterinarian’s office for shots in the event that it has not already received them, or in some Cases, for the care of injuries,; /. NO PRICE TAG There is no price for the animals* but the ladies do accept a donation. ■ “We don’t want to deprive a dog or a cM Irdm a good home simply because a family or individual cA’t afford it," Mrs. Kocher said, “we accept what the family wiMes to give.” “Sometimes people call us'sayin* they can’t afford to feed their dog for various reasons and would like us to find a new home for It," said Mrs. Cart, a native of Birmingham, England, pilifttl® * “In that case we feed them until the people can do so again,” she added. Mrs. Carl has lived in the United States since 1912* She said she and Mrs. Kocher are known in the area Ad when people find a lost dog they sometimes report it to them to see if they can locate the owner. It either of the ladies receive a call About a lost, Injured or stray animal she generally will go Appidt it up herself if Me, cA’t persuade the CAer to keep it .until she finds a home for it. ,a/or this reason thoy are seeking enough funds to buy a vehicle to transport them in InsteA of a car, which, they Cars Are Looted in Waterford Waterford Township police received several complaints yesterday of thefts from automobiles in parking lots. Two of the thefts occurred between 10 p.m. and midnight in the parking lot of a restaurant at 006 W. Huron, Waterford Township, police said. * * * Martin Malatln, 995 N. Cass Lake, Waterford Township reported the loss of ■bout $56 in merchandise taken from his car, and Richard Heymann of 80 Ottawa, Pontiac reported the theft of items totaling about ftt. Mrs. Ramona P. Jedd of 2861 Rossmoor Circle, Bloomfield Township, reported 0107.07 worth of merchandise was takA Iram the trunk of her cw white it was jMrited in the Pontiac Mall parking -toL« • . *. * * . The theft accurred between the hours of *3 and 7:9 p.m., police said. HARVEY’S FURNITURE SALE £ ( i now oi Hop In (he car, sic the furniture you want, look ' . • follow these instructions and your savings and satis* faction are assured. Tho sale Is on. All that’s missing is you^ji »to 50% off our NORMAL LOW PRICES THE.. PONTIAC PRESS, THUESDAY, DECEMBER 19. 1968 A—8 Canadians Halt Indian Protest MASSBNA, NX;(AP) -,A band of Mohawk Indians held Aff Canadian police for About two hours Wdnesday. before taking a defeat. Stfll unresolved, however, was a dispute over a treaty made in 1794. “There will be no blockage Thursday " Ernest Benedict, thb craggy-faced, bta&halred chief of the Indians on Cornwall Island sadd after a demonstration at the international bridge «n the island left 48 of his tribesmen in Jail. * * , “It is not the Indian way to be arrested,” Benedict said. Wednesday, Canadian police waded through a wan of angry Mphawks and 29 automobiles to clear the passageway between the United States and Canada. Indian men, women and children threw their bodies in front of tow trucks sent to dear the automobiles. There were no injuries. SOUGHT CALM , **I tried to keep everyone calm on both sides,” Benedict said, his arms folded on the long kitchen table he sometimes uses fur meetings with other tribal “Blit it seemed too much to me. We were there Mr a purpose.” - ------- * * * The Indians, members of the St. Regis Reservation that is bisected by the Csnadian-Ameri-can border, are angered be- cause they say they are being forced to pay Canadian duties traveling on the bridge to and from .the American and Cana* dian sections of the reservation This, they say, is a violation of tie Jay Treaty of 1794, a trea-engineered by John Jay, chief Justice of the United States and signed by the United States and Canada. !< The treaty guaranteed the Mohawks the tfcAb) travel unhampered between both countries. •. -' ■' The treaty was reaffirmed between ibe two countries in Ghent, Belgium, after the War of 1812, Canada, however, which did not become .a nation until 1857, never ratified die document. Canadian- taw specifies that legislative action must be taken before a treaty hats the force of law.' -* ■ ., * * • * Some residents of die herder area say the Indian discontent goes much deeper. For example, says a minister who lives nearby, even though the Indians—who often intermarry and have families on both sides of the border—frequently cross the Midge, they are still stopped, asked if they are immigrants and made to obtain a slip of paper; widi their status on It. . % H VICTIMS OF ERROR Benedict, in an open, letter to the .Canadian people and government, said, “We have be- come, victims of a great error on the part of your govern-Mdfc’*- Benedlct said ids people were receiving support, both monetary and moral* from other Indian tames in the United States and Canada. The arrested, including the sister hf one of the fenders, Mrs. Hickel Hits Land WASHINGTON (AP) - President-elect Nixon’s secretary of the interior, Alaska Gov. Walter J. Hickel, says the federal government has been wrong in placing large amounts of public land aside tor strictly conservation use. “Just. to withdraw an area Mr conservation purposes—a vast area—and lock It up for na reason ... and not make it available to the public is wrong, in my opinion,” Hickel told a news conference Wednesday. Hickel, who told newsmen that be bad putJds large real estate holdings Into an Irrevocable trust upon becoming governor two years ago, Indicated he might reverse a decision by his predecessor, Stewart Udall, withdrew the Arctic Gone Range in Alaska from public Kohn Tintea Horn, were taken tip Cornwall jail, where they were to wait, pending the arrival of bail money, until hnarhuga Friday. : Bail was set at $200 for 47 of the arrested and at 81,000 for Mrs. Horn, who was charged with carrying a knife concealed beneath her clothing. ; How of SIMMS . . .“Reserve Yoor HOME MOVIE SOUND System for Christmas A 131:1 1 8c HCWELL id aA FOR . HTSIEILIF Check Pages A-12 and A43 in Today's Press FOR SIMMS BETTER CHRISTMAS BUYS at SIMMS BETTER DISCOUNT PRICES .... $o turn to our extra pages of CHRISTMAS DISCOUNT BUYS at SIMMS! Simms Bros.-98 M Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St The action was intended only to be temporary, Hickel said. ‘GREAT JOB* Both public and private power companies came in for praise from the incoming secretary. “Public power has done a great Job for the whole United States” as has privately-owned power companies, he said. But “I do think that private power in some areas has been hamstrung.” Touching on. .the ,large oil fields being developed in Ids own state, Hickel said “The United States has found great He skid imports of foreign oil, while necessary In some areas, should be tightly controlled. “Just to absolutely opep the gates ... . to imports would be disastrous, in my opinion,” he said- NOW YOU CAN TAKE MOVIES THAT TALK... 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Remco Baby Walk V Run Doll Shop Simms $9.99 Biller—now only Remcos famous doll that walks and runs at the push-of-a-buttort control purse. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw Sj; 5" Next to the White Towsr Controversy Raging Are Missile Sites Safe? By L. GARY THORNE Assistant City editor—Suburban “Well, there goes the neighborhood ...” This may not just be unbecoming levity, but a vital concern for those dated to have Sentinel antiballistic missile silos in their back yards. To date, three local areas have the dubious distinction of being considered for missile pads. They are Pontiac and Avon townships and Troy. A fourth area, in Orion Township may become a related radar site. Controversy has developed over the relative safety"of the nuclear warheads on the business end of the projected defensive-type Spartan and Sprint missiles housed on the Sentinel bases. INVITING DISASTER? Some members of the scientific community are of the opinion that to have warheads rated at “several megatons” sitting close to urban areas is to invite disaster. They are particularly uneasy because of the potential for an accident. The Army stiuids on its record, noting that in 20 years it’s never blown anyone up by accident, which no doubt is a point in its favor. But why the controversy over these particular missiles? At various points across the country, the Pontiac area included, there are missile installations. In Commerce Township is a nonnuclear air defense missile site. MUST be ready It is assumed that a defensive weapon must be more ready to respond to an attack than an offensive instrument which more or less can be armed at a country’s leisure, namely just before it's going to be used. The argument is, of course, that if you’re going to have a missile lying around, it is far better for safety that said missile be as far from being armed as is practical. * A a Ddbate over the safety of the Spartans and Sprints has caused some politicos, like Sen. Hart, to revive their interest in sacking the entire ABM program. The $&-billion Sentinel program is calculated to provied a “thin” shield against a missile attack by a relatively unsophisticated nuclear power, like Red China. A so-called complete Russian-proof shield would cost 940 billion and upward. CAN’T BE COMPLETE Defense Department spokesmen have said no shield can really be complete-complete — to employ missile talk, since, the U.S. and Russia are capable of blowing each other off the globe via missiles regardless of defenses. Hence, the question is whether ABM systems are sOch a good idea. * * * In any event, it is still an open question if local opposition can shoot down missile bases here. The natural compromise, of course, is to okay the ABM sites, but locate them in back yards where there aren't quite as many children playing. Shelby to Seek New Plans for Proposed Fire Station SHELBY TOWNSHIP - The Township Board has made its first move In several months on the controversial question of construction of additional facilities for the township fire department. After a recent two-hour discussion the board approved a motion offered by Trustees Robert Seidel and Jack Jenkins to ask the architect, Louis Berkllch and Associates of Rochester, for a new set of plans on the proposed main fire station. '■ A A A in addition, Seidel apd Jenkins, both elected to the board In November, were appointed to the fire committee, which is responsible for recommending plans for future construction. The long-standing controversy began shortly after voters approved a $900,000 bond issue in August 1967 for the purpose of building and equipping new fire facilities. Farmington Twp. Airing Set on Need for Sanitary Sewer FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP-A public hearing to establish the necessity of sanitary .sewers for a portion of Sunny-dale Street has been set for Jan. 27 at 7:30 p.m. ★ * A Also at the recent township board meeting, the board held until Jan. 19 consideration and review of objections for establishing the Sprlngland Sewer District so board members could get more Information as to the wishes of the majority of the residents. Several attended the meeting to protest against the sewers. In other business, the board decided to advance $700 to a township patrolman so he can buy a police dog. The money Will be deducted from his salary over a 5 three-year period. He must pay for the upkeep of the dog. A * * Detroit Bank and Trust Co. will be reimbursed $3,955—partial cost or installing its sewer lateral. The bank branch at Grand River and Middlebelt built a lateral off the arm running down the ' Grand River median before the rest of the system was built. The township is now using the lateral In the system serving that district so the bank is being paid hsck the amount based on a unit cost. Hungry Thief Takes Home the Bacon—Plus WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -A seemingly hungry thief took the frozen meats — along with other items totaling $435 — from the home of Richard Cotter, 57S Drake, yesterday, police reported. Taken, in addition to the meat, were u sewing machine, two watches and an electric typewriter. a a ’ a Cotter’s daughter, Karen, told West Bloomfield police she came home around 8:80 p.m. and thought she heard someone. g^| went to the back of the house reportedly found the back door open i house empty. According to Seidel, the board ran into a snag because of a tax limitation of 2t4 mills to provide for firemen. The money was not available, hi explained, to hire enough men to staff the proposed buildings, which include a main station and three substations. The board then decided to consider plans for a main station alone, but balked at the $400,000 price tag on a proposal presented last spring by the fire committee. ★ A A a The committee declined to submit f another proposal and the whole question has been held in abeyance since. Seidel said discussions with members of the fire committee after his election to the board this fall had demonstrated the need for a “really detailed” survey of the proposal by the board. SPACE ANALYZED "Jack (Jenkins) and I attempted to put together an analytical report to economize on space in the main station and yet keep from cutting down on the facilities which would be available,” the trustee said. The lengthy discussion, in which the proposed station was considered room by room, resulted in paring floor space from about 9,600 square feet to 8,000. Savings in cost to the township will be determined after the architect draws up formal plans. Seidel, however, would like to go further in attempting to plan for the . future. AAA "I’d like to make some attempt to project the drainage, water and building development in Shelby Township in the next 25 years,” he commented, "so we could dtermine at what point valuation will be increased enough so that we can hire additional firemen. "This meeting, however, was a real improvement. There was a real spirit of cooperation, and a recognition that we have to get moving on this thing now.” EXPLAINS REQUEST-Attorpey Robert Childs, repre- r«ti« mM/M* senting developer Dan S. Holefca of Rochester, gives details commission last night. Commissioners are (from left) Joseph of a rezoning request before' the Avon Township planning M. Arthur Sr., Jack Fetterly and C. Richard Clauson. Apartment Zoning Hearing Is Postponed by Avon Twp.)s By TOM GRAY AVON TOWNSHIP - One of two major public hearings on rezoning questions to be held before the township planning commission fizzled last night. Some 40 residents had jammed the commission room in the Township Hall, but nearly half left when the commission agreed, at petitioner’s request, to postpone the hearing, scheduled to consider a proposed 788-unit apartment development on a 78.8-acre parcel southwest of Avon and Liveronis. A A A Attorney Robert E. Childs, representing property owner Fred Ettinger, requested the postponement to allow a definite determination of the extent of the flood plain of the Clinton River in the area. Recently, apartment rezoning requests in the township, have been drawing fire from home owners. NO INFORMATION YET Childs said he has been unable to contact David Snyder of the Oakland County Drain Commission to obtain information about the flood plain: THE PONTIAC PRESS hsUm THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 A—4 recommended approval of the proposal by the Township Board. Home owners in the area objected to one portion of the request, which involves a 21-acre parcel presently zoned for single-family residential use. CHANGES ASKED The petitioner, Dan S. Holefca, 825 Mead, Rochester, asked that one acre be "The only map of the flood plain thaU changed to B-l for a gasoline station, we have is from an old geodetic survey, Childs explained, "and if that map is accurate, it would be useless to request a rezoning in this area. We’d have water in those apartments.” AAA The second hearing, involving a proposed development southeast of Walton and Adams to Include a motel, conference center and apartment development, took place, and the commission four acres to B-2 to permit a motel, conference center and possibly specialty shops, and 16 acres to RM for apartments. Frank Lanesey, president of the Spr-inghill Homeowners’ Association, siad the home owners had met with Holefca and Childs, his attorney, and agreed to the RM and B-l changes. AAA However, Lanesey said, the home School Reading Plans Told WEST BLOOMFIELD .TOWNSHIP S* An audiovisual report on the school district's reading program was given by Donald Liebau, director of reading and audiovisual services, at the.recent-board of education meeting. Using closed-circuit television, he showed what was happening in the reading centers at the different schools. AAA He described current plans under development, including the compilation of a guide to reading services in West Bloomfield, a handbook for the professional staff and formation of a districtwide developmental reading program committee. Standardization of diagnostic testing services offered by Reading Consultants, development of a summer reading program at all school levels and involvement in federal programs to provide in-serviee education in reading for the staff are also being worked-on. $12,000 BUDGET NEEDED Immediately needed is a minimum reading budget of $12,000, according to Liebau. The money will help maintain the current elementary program and provide the new secondary reading programs with minimal amounts of material. A a" A Suggested future needs include development of an elementary reading center in the Green School annex to serve as an in-service and resource Lapeer Names •a*.*-*' 1 Seven to S#ve in Various Posts LAPEER — The City Commission has appointed health officers and members of the elections commission «Q*bq||rd of tax review. . <* Reappointed to. a one-year term as health 6fficer is Dr. Charles Conaway, * 1243 W. Newark. Assistant health pffi- ' cers will be Ray Gaynier, Lapeer Cophty ■ Sanitarian, and Matthew Dougherty, ; Lapeer police, chief. . s-; - • J A A A’ 'ij Election commissioners, else to serve a ojne-year terms, will be City Manager! • Arnold Whitney, City Assesso? Ray Shur-low and City Attorney Richard J. Bahls. Don Travis, 272 E. Nepessing, was ire- J appointed to a three-year terih on the ,; bosu-d of tax review. The. term of one * member of the three-man board expires • each year. , - » NEW PARK ORDINANCE In other business, ihe commission . okayed a park regulations ordinance,. The ordinance prohibits the dte , of ' minibikes, motorcycles, snowmobQty and . other vehicles in city paries and bans 1 many other activities, including drinking ? alcoholic beverages and damaging picnic ! tables. The commission also heard a complaint from Travis and other residents on.Ehst epessing about a water main break'the night of Dec. 13. The mdin break, the r e s i d e n t s explained, caused an overflow in storm sewers, and resulted in water backing up in basements. TO COVER DAMAGES Commissioners agreed that swifter repairs on the city’s part could have alleviated the problem, and Ttavls was awarded $25 to cover damages. The commission then began preliminary-discussion on a number of future water system projects, and decided to invite bond attorneys to its next meeting (Jan. 6) to discuss possible financing of the projects. owners opposed the change to B-2. He cited plans by the Hilton Motel and Holiday Inn chains to build motels and a conference center within three miles of the AdAms-Walton intersection. Commission member C. Richard Clauson expressed support of all parts of the proposal, noting that engineering groups of which he is a member do not meet at Oakland University because of inadequate conference facilities. "Even with three conference centers, I think a center on the Rochester stde^of the university would be an asset to the township,” Clauson said. The commission voted on the three portions of the proposal separately. The B-l and RM sections were approved unanimously. The B-2 section passed by a 5-2 vote, -with Commissioners William H. Millay and Maurice E. Wlllits opposed. center for the elementary schools; formation of a reading center at the junior high and senior high and creation of a total school testing program. A A- A Also needed are. the hiring of more reading consultants and the release of secondary reading consultants from English classrooms to work full-time on reading programs and afterschool courses in study skills for junior and senior high students. In other recent business, the board approved a job analysis tor the newly created position of director of operations and maintenance. An applicant will probably be recommended to the board by the Jan. 6 board meeting. Applications are now being taken. HANDMADE DOLLHOUSE — Susan Lae (left), Barbara *mhm pim hm Wagner (right) and Nancy Walker, three members of junior patients at Plymouth State Home and Training School in Girl Scout Troop 696 of Bloomfield Towpship, examine fur- Northville. The girls took about six months to make the six-nishings of a dollhouse made by members of the troop for room house. ' jS A ’ ’ ’ • t Girl Scouts Make Dollhouse to Give to State Facility BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - A project which began a year ago will end this weekend, when a handmade dollhouse constructed by junior Girl Scouts Is presented to officials at the Plymouth State Home and Training School - in Northville. Mrs. Robert Walker, 815 Foxhall, leader of Troop 696, which built the six-room miniature residence, said the girls worked about six months, Intermittently, at the various tasks necessary to complete it. Besides making their own tiny bedspreads and fcurtalns, she said, the girls wallpapered some of the interior of the house and painted the rest. They also carved a miniature piano and china cabinet along with more typical items of furniture including chairs and tables and beds. The floors were then carpeted throughout. The most difficult and time-consuming part of the work, Mrs. Walker said, was sanding and staining the wood. The nouse will be useful for recreation tor older girls at the state home, she Traffic Bureau Gets Approval WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP =: The Township Board has approved the establishment of a central traffic bureau to serve the entire 48th Judicial District and has provided for the establishment of branches the court may require. Each jguilty plea entered shall be deemed to have been entered in the political subdivision whose law is violated, according to the resolution. AAA Hie district court will have permanent quarters on the third floor of, the township hall. The board transferred $34,000 receivable from the Farmington Interceptor fund to the building fund to pay for the court construction. $30,000 LOSS The board also announced it will lose up to $30,000 in income as of Jan. 1 when the tri-cities fire department teecheduled to take over the township’s Keego Harbor station under a purchase agreement. * A resolution was confirmed adopting the sanitary sewer assessment roll of $1,255,924 for Herndon’s Walnut Lake Estates. Residents will be charged an initial fee of $2,073 plus $7.22 per front foot. Costs win also include $600 for the lead to the house and from $3-$5 per foot for the pipe from the street to the house. The supervisor was directed to prepare the assessment roll on Interlaken special assessment sewer district 38. The assessment roU is $361,685. The estimated cost will be around $2,900 per housing unit plus the $600 tap in fee and the cost of the pipe from the street to the house. One new member has been appointed to the review board and two old members reappointed. Reappointed were Donald Shank of 2907 Middle Belt and Paul Rabaut of 2274 Locklin. New is Dennis Knight of 5777 Cherry Crest. 6 in Family Escape From House Blaze Two Lapeer County fire departments and a pumper from the State Consei*, vation Department were called out early today to fight a blaze which broke . out at 4:19 a.m. in Arcadia Township. ! A spokesman for the Lapeer County ' Sheriffs Department said the fire at the residence of Wiliam Stover, 1589. Youngs, apparently started in Abasement as toe result of a furnace malfunction. Hie Stovers and their four children escaped without injury from the residence, which was nearly destroyed, the spokesman said. However, an Imlay City fireman, Dale Scrimger, was injured, according to the spokesman, when he fell from an upstairs window of the home. Scrimger was taken to Lapeer County ■ General Hospital, where he was ad- ' mitted for observation. The Imlay City department and toa conservation pumper assisted the IjuBI department, the spokesman said. No damage estimate was available this THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1968 Leader Slate A—3 ssre£ -S£ ranks behind their candidates and vote as a bloc when tin chamber elects Its leadership AP Wlr.phoro many FACES OF CHRISTMAS - Children’s faces show a wide range of holiday emotions as they talk to a department store Santa in a Los Angeles suburb. Buick Plant Five Shuts Sector Today FLINT (AP) '— A. two-alarm fire, discovered when a conveyor belt carried flaming parts out of’an auto bake oven, damaged a section of the Buick plant in Flint tfedM&Iay. Nobody was injured, but officials said 2,600 employes were prevented from going to their jobs today in the assembly section of the big Buick facility. Wgf * ,fc Firemen, using nine .pieces of equipment, fought the blaze for an hour ah<| a half. Fire officials said a spark from one of the conveyor lines apparently ignited paint drippings at the bottom of the oven, and the flames spread into the plant. The oven was used to bake enamel finishes on fenders and hoods. The blaze warped structural beams and conveyor in the plant. The-Democrats took over die House in the Nov. S election, netting three seats for a 57-53 edge over the GOP, and are in to put the . choices in the top leadership jobs unless caucus dissidents refuse to back die party. * % * That had appeared to be distinct possibility until Wednesday’s caucus. Now nearly every-at least outwardly, is content NO EXCUSE’ ASked if he thought any Democrat would refuse to support the caucus date of candidates, one lawmaker said: “I don’t see how they could find any excuse not to," ■ * * * Unless there is an unexpected rebellion, these nominees will And themselves in these jobs next month: of Detroit, • For speaker, the diamber’s presiding officer who earns an extra $5,000 a year, the major- ity caucus picked William Ryan an Irish, GghoUc liberal, former presi- United Auto Workers • For speaker pro tempore, Rep. Stanley Davis of Grand Rapids, a Poland-born, Catholic conservative, law and order advocate and former mayor of Grand Rapids. • Fir associate speaker pro tern, Rep. Matthew McNeely of Detroit, a Negro Baptist with a largely white constituency who starting his third two-year term in the chamber. • For majority floor leader, Rep. George F. Montgomery of Detroit, a 35-year-old former schoolteacher who, like Davis, first made a bid for the speakership in opposition to Ryan. | ber “Polish caucus” of the House, was runneMip in the bitterly fought contest for speaker. Sources said it took three ballots to elect Ryan. On the third, they said, he had 30 votes—one more than the number needed-rcompared with 20 for Davis and five for Rep Albert Horrigan of Flint. LIGHTS LOWERED Davis, backed by the 14-mem- tory over Rep. George Edwards, another Negro lawmaker from Detroit. Ryan — the apparent new House speaker—is a 49-year-old native of Morgantown, W.Va. and a veteran labor negotiator As Democratic House leader in the minority days of 1967-58, he distinguished himself by fighting Republican Gov. George Romney to a standstill over the S3?______ . i tails of the new state income Davis then announced his can-, tax nroernm didacy for the No. 2 House Job,1 P ^ which pays $3,000 extra a year, and was elected, beating Reps. Dominic Jacobetti of Ironwood, Daniel Cooper of Oak Park and Viiicettt Petitpren of Wayne, a a a Ousted during the race for speaker were Davis, Montgomery, Horrigan and Rep. Arthur Law of Pontiac, who did not attend the caucus. NcNeely scored a surprise vic- WELFARE ADVOCATE Ryan, a devout Catholic and a hard worker, is a strong advocate of welfare measures and aid to nonpublic schools. * If elected speaker when the 75th Legislature convenes, he would replace Republican Rep. Robert Waldron of Grosse Pointe, whose party has chosen' him to continue at its helm as House minority leader. COUNTRY SQUIRE SHOP Bloomfield Miracle Milo Telegraph ot Square Ik. Bd. ft enneui ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY " Yule Mail Flow Smooth in City (Continued From Page One) The Smith Brothers have worked at the Pontiac Post Office for over 9) years. In the late 1936s there were about 120 employes including clerks, carriers and custodians; today there are about 398 employes. Clarence, in noting that this Christmas season the regular employes are managing the load, said it is more efficient to use trained personnel and pay them to work the necessary overtime, than to hire new help that would require training. WOULD,BE ‘FIRST’ “If we survive the season without hiring extra help, it will be the first year It has ever happened,” he added. Clarence Said it is anticipated there will be a 6.4 per dent increase in mailing this Christmas Reason and officials are expecting the mail volume to increase suddenly. * * He added that if a deluge of mail does occur, a standby list of applicants for Christmas assistants can be called. “Until then we are sort of playing it by ear,” he said. . .. a a The last day for guaranteed overseas delivery for cards and letters was Dec. 11. Any mail sent from now on cannot be guaranteed to arrive at Its destination before Christmas, Clarence said. Since a six-cent stamp is required for cards this year, he said, individuals who send them^Hfst class (six cents per ounce Hshould be sure to put a return address on the envelope and seal it so that it can be forwarded or returned. MILLERS FALLS SAVINGS DELUXE SHOCK-PROOF „ DRIVER DRILL 'Accelerator' trigger switch gives you eny speed from 0 to 1,000 rpm. Reverses instantly to back out screws end drill bits. Shock-proof protection from electric shock hazard with no grounding necessary. LIFETIME GUARANTEE. No. SP2139. REG. $36.S8 ONLY *29.99 DRILL KIT wRh %" SHOCK-PROOF VARI-SPEED DRILL The complete power kit that turns you into a professional at the touch of the ‘accelerator’ switch. Comes with all the work saving attachments you’ll need. The perfect gift. No. SP2039K. REG. $39.88 ONLY *31.99 ADJUSTABLE MITRE BOX Here’s the ideal gift. , ■ From America’s feeder in Mifre Boxes. No. lBl6. REG. $14.15 ONLY *9.99 Owuuh's fejS LUMBER i BUM. SUPPLY 1CBv5a AUBURN HEIGHTS in SQUIRREL RD. 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Thermostatically controlled. Buffet style.................19.99 REVERSIBLE OVEN BROILER Has chrome plated steel with black plastic end panels, glass deer. Flips ever to belie or broil.. ] 4,99 SPRAY/STEAM/DRY IRON Hoi water window, Thermoicope, 48 iteam vents, Teflon' coated soleplate with tiptoe tip........... ., 19 ^ BUY! SELLI TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS SHOP MON. THRU SAT... TILL »,30 P.M. e TELEGRAPH a SO. LAKE ALL PENNEY STORES WILL CLOSE CHRISTMAS EVE AT 6 P.M.I e 1 (340 GRAND RIVER CHARGE IT1 THE PONTIAC PRESS « West Huron Street Bontiac, Michigan 48056 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 How«d H. rnmuij. a Pretldtnt and PubUiW iau.lbonir Treasurer end Finance Steal*1 Ridhaso m. nmiuLD Treasurer Officer Harry M. Pryale - Pontiac loses one of her valiant citizens in the death of Harry M. Pryale. After a military! turn in Russia dur-[ ing World War I, hej became a leading! figure in civic activi-l ties in this area/ Originally a builder,! he later headed the! Baldwin Rubbei Company which em-| ployed 900 people at! peak. Currently he pryale stands as one of the most generous bepefactors of Oakland University, and in addition to huge financial assistance, Kif gave unstintingly of his time and personal efforts. He stands as one of the pillars in the growth and development of this great institution. During his business career, Harry Pryale was one of the most popular and best liked individuals in the community. Friends greeted him everywhere and on all sides at all times. Over the' last years, he encountered physical disabilities but he remained cheerful and without complaint. No man or woman ever stayed as sweet, gentle and companionable as did Harry M. Pryale through difficult days. He joked and smiled casually at his disabilities. The man stands out command-ingly as a mighty Christian and can walk forward into Eternity as one of the stalwarts of our time and an inspiration to others. Doctors despaired many times but he returned repeatedly from the shadow of'the grave to. consort again with friends, and there never was a whimper or a protest. Yes, a lofty and soaring spirit leaves us here below, and the Great Hereafter will become just a little bit better because of this addition. Truly, God welcomes a nobleman. —H. A. F. Voice of the People: Again, Three Men Follow A Bright Light David Lawrence Says: Nixon Inaugural Facing Trouble Hope for a United Europe Still Flickers Buried in the avalanche of news of more immediacy, has been an item from Western Europe which could eventually prove of no less significance to the future of our shrinking world than the current deadline topics. All three of Britain’s major political parties have accepted invitations to become full members of the Ac-tion Committee for a United States of Europe, the organization founded and led by France’s Jean Monnet with the eventual goal of a single, federal European state. If the British move had oc-* curred }0 years ago, It would haye been front-page news. At that time, Western Europe was groping toward some form of economic and political Integration as the foundation of an eventual united continent. It was to a great extent Britain’s refusal to commit herself in advance to more than a free trade arrangement that blunted that drive, resulting in the division of free Europe into two camps—the six-nation Common Market.dominated by France and West Germany and the looser seven-nation European Free Trade Area led by Britain. ★ ★ ★ The current British move does not in itself reverse 10 years of history. It is on a party, not a government, level. Monnet’s committee is unof-. ficial, although immensely influential. The de Gaulle government, whose negative word has been law in the Common Market, is still stubbornly opposed to inviting Britain into a larger Europe as a full partner. ★ ★ ★ But it is an encouraging Indication that the dream of a united Europe is by no means dead. LAWrEnce UJS. Population Trend Is to the Young In a little over a year the 1970 census will be upon us. Some of what it will reveal about the population of the United States can already be foretold with some confidence. By 1970, for example, it Is already evident that half of all Americans will be 27 years Of age or younger. In 1960, the corresponding figure was almost 29. One significant aspect of this age-shift is that the political destiny of the United States will be increasingly in the hands of the youthful segment of the population. It poses a stern responsibility for the future wellbeing of the Country. 2 California Derm Face Tough Tests By BRUCE8I08SAT NEA Washington Correspondent LOS ANGELES — Both Jess Unruh, long-time California Democratic Assembly leader, and San Francisco’s Mayor Joseph Alloto have to endure, some tough' tests In 1989 before a possible square-off | for their party’s governor-! ship nomina-l tlon Ini 1970. BIOSSAT Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan’s term runs out in the latter year and It is widely assumed he will seek another. The California post Is one of seven big-state governorships presently held by the GOP which will be on the election Mock In 1970. * * ★ ' When it was first learned that Unruh had lost his prized power base as Assembly speaker In consequence of the Republicans’ 41-99 capture of the lower House, .the snap Judgment was that- It could be a severe blow to Unruh’* long-nourished governorship InnfltlilipA* H'"' Now It Is seen by California politician* and observers as more of a mixed blessing. BURDEN IS GONE He probably will not have as easy a time getting money. But the burden of responsibility for guiding Important state legislation will be his no longer, and he will be freer to attack Reagan as the latter struggles to fulfill his promises with the narrowest of legislative margins. Unruh, of course will stump the state heavily In the months ahead, and by mld-1969 he will have put out 8 or 10 position papers on major state issues. * * * His present mood is to lie back a bit and see how Reagan does with his thin grasp on the Legislature. As for Alloto, he and his key aides are Inevitably somewhat staggered at the prominence which has come to him in his one high-paced year in public office — after 27 years of private law practice. l oimni «Hf 4y mom or Mady Santa. Oraat Iraat lor (ha haltdoyal Christmas medallions Colorful foil wrapped candy modolllons lor ootlng or troo* trimming. Shop now I 874 Hard and ftllad candy S3* 1-0. has Srach chocalata l.»» Candy balls or bell* •ig f-aa. bag My candy baUc ar bade. Oraat ChrtataMS traetl Shay taday and caval 3 34 Box of 3 candy chorubs Colorful iall-wrappad charubc ara tun ta aat ar hang an yaur Christmas iraal (aval 344 10 Mark IV cigar* Ml SO Mark Twain dgari 0.7S Washable cotton or rayon pile bath sets in a large assortment of colors and patterns. Savel Colorful rayon/polyostor area rugs Large 27x48", long wearing rayon/polyostor pile rugs are easy to wash end quick to dry. Non-skid becking for added safety. Cheese from three decorator patterns in asserted solid colors. ^ 0 0 Now 2 or 3-pc. both ontdmbles 3.29 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1968 A—7 Accused of Summer Rights Violations Hi. Policemen Indicted PATERSON, N.J. (AP) — Eight policemen have been inflicted by a federal grand jury «i charges of conspiracy to violate and violation of civil rights of Negro residents during racial disorders last summer. Tie indictment said the policemen assaulted one Negro, and broke windows of several business establishments operated by Negroes. k ■ U.S. Ally. David Safe Jr. of New Jersey said the policemen were charged with violating a 1*72 Civil Rights Act, the first such indictments against policemen brought in the state. The Justice Department said they were the first in any section of the country in many years, ★ * ★ “Enough people came forward immediately with enough evidence to warrant presentation to the grand jury,’’ Safe said. ‘POLICE RIOT* A coalition of civil rights groups charged that the police department “rioted against the citizens, uncontrolled by their own authorities,’’ while suppressing the disorders. Paterson, which has a population of 150,000 of which about 40,000 are Puerto Ricans and 0,000 Negroes, was hit by sporadic disorders early ip July. * ★ -k The civil rights coalition E. LeCompte and George Gsell and Patrolmen Philip Bevao-qua, Angelo DeChellis, Carl Gorman, Abraham Hemsey, Joseph D. Gross! and Emil Scar-azzo. A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office said the police- the disturbances that fire-bombing and bode throwing by bands of Puerto Ricans, police attacks against Spanishspeaking citizens were so intense that “Some of the innocent and frightened victims telephoned the governor of Puerto Rico for rescue. The Civil Rights Act the policemen are accused of violating forbids “depriving of any rights, privileges or immunities secured by or protected by the Constitution or laws of the United States’’ to anjf citizen because of Ids race or color. The eight Paterson policemen were identified In the Indictment Wednesday at Sgts. Peter men will not be arrested but will receive notices of the indictment. Re said the arraignment has been scheduled for Jan. 3. jj k *' ‘Sky -4 The maximum penalty tor each count of the six-count indictment is one year in prison and a |1,000 fine. Not all the policemen areTnentibned in every count. Mayor Lawrence F. Kramer and Police^ ckmamisthmer Edward Englehardt were imtniedi-ately.'unavailable for comment on the indictments. ■ DON’T MISS THESE TERRIFIC Year-End Savings! RCA Breathtaking stereo stand! The SKAIUrktednl VLT2I RCA STEREO with FM/AM-FM Stereo Radio Priced From $199.95 The KARLSBERG - Model GL-700 23" diem., 295 eq. in. picture Color TV That fine-tunee itself! $725 Now *599“ mm ALWAYS 30 DAYS DISCOUNT AS CASH Model GL 615 23" diag., 295 eq. in. picture Big-screen color in a Colonial Coneelette. Thrill to unsurpassed color realism on the glare-proof picture tube. MW MM SWEET’S RADIO A APMJAMCI Open Every Evening Until Ohvistmes 422 West Huron, Poetise ’ 1 FE 44677 MaqIc Discover The of Christmas at THE NEW Jumbo 3-quart elec, com popper 2.99 Easy-to-use electric corn popper has glass look-in cover. Unique gift ideall Shop today, savel 4-pc. gleaming glass salad set 2.98 Lovely "presort" design 10* ’'salad bowl, 13K" serving plate, lucite fork and spoon. Savel 4-pc. king sine tray table eat 3.97 Chrome finish ralleh 4.98 THE PONTIAC J*RESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Hits Mid-US; Southwest Chilled By the Associated Press i Winds up to SO miles an houfj Heavy, wind-driven 8now|churned 8 to 14 inches of snow' plastered the nation’s midsec- into traffic-choking drifts, tion, and bitter-cold weather ★ ★ * numbed the Southwest today as| fleavy-snow warnings were in winter swept into the West two,effect for portions of six states days ahead of schedule. from Kansas to Wisconsin. * * * Travelers warnings were out in Near-blizzard conditions prevailed in north-central Kansas and south-central Nebraska Morse's Career Appears Over parts of eight states from the central-plains to Michigan. A snowstorm rumbled through the western Wisconsin city of La Crosse during the night and dumped out 6 inches of snow in little more than two hours. Four inches blanketed Rochester, Minn., in three hours. SCATTERS SNOW The wide-ranging storm scattered snow from Kansas to the I Dakotas and Wisconsin. It flung Packwood Keeping rain from the western Gulf . . | states to the middle Mississippi Margin in Recount an(j Ohio valleys. ! An Arctic cold snap moved in PORTLAND Ore fAP> -behind the storm and P°unded The 24-year Senate career 0fitcmPeratures down "ear zero Wayne Morse Is apparently end-jas far south as northeastern Ar-ed unless a major error is dis-|izona and northwestern New covered in the recount of No-j Mexico. Readings in the middle vember votes in Oregon’s Lane 20s chilled southeastern Arizo-County. na- Sen. Morse is expected in Ore-j * * * gon today, but a spokesman said | A separate blast of polar air he would have no comment until funneled into the Pacific North the recount is ended, possibly1 west, paired up with a storm Friday. j system there and whitened * * * western Washington with 3 to S Lane County is the only re-1 inches of snow. Seattle-Tacoma maining county to be completed International Airport closed Temperatures before dawn ranged from zero at Massena, N.Y., to 74 at Key West Naval Air Station in Florida. it it it Some other reports: Boston 31 clear, New York 34 cloudy, Philadelphia 34 cloudy, Washington 35 partly cloudy, Atlanta 33 partly cloudy, Miami 70 partly cloudy, Detroit 34 drizzle, Chicago 40 rain, Minneapolis-St. Paul 28 mow, St. Louis 50 cloudy, Kansas City 33 cloudy, Dallas 41 clear, Denver 0 clear, Phoenix 33 clear, Los Angeles 49 partly cloudy, San Francisco 49 partly cloudy, Anchorage 17 drizzle, Honolulu 69 rain, Seattle 32 cloudy. down twice for brief periods late Wednesday to permit snow removal crews to clear runways. The snow ranged inland to Nevada and Montana. Rain fell southward into central Califor Frost again nipped sections of the Southeast, but temperatures continued to moderate afttf three straight days of early In the recount. With 50 per cent of Lane County recounted, Morse had gained about 23 votes. .The recount from 35 of the 36 counties showed Republican Robert Packwood leading 370,028 to Morse’s 364,093. Pack-wood ^upset Morse In the November election by 3,445 votes. 61-VOTE GAIN Mbrse had gained 61 votes In morning freezing the recount. The original count gave Pack wood 408,825 votes and Morse 405,380. Morse has hinted that he could challenge the vote in the courts or the Senate. His observers have challenged 39,874 votes and Packwood’s representatives have challenged 34,277. The challenged ballots are aside for possible use later In the courts or the Senate. A scientist predicts that the wristwatch of the 21st century will not only keep time but will permit the wearer to communicate by voice and vision. MERRY PARTY WITH A BIO BUCKET OF CHICKEN. ANY SIZE, LIKEi 14 pieces $3.46 20 pieces $4JB 32 pieces $1.12 This Weekend Call: € IHICKEN DELIOB 1102 - Cel BOO The whole world in-your hands SONY FM/AM/SW Beeeiver with Deluxe Control System , There "are exciting broadcasts you’ll never hear—until you own the Sony TFM-117WB. It’s built to pull them In. And deliver an Incredible output through a large speaker. How good does it sound? Almost as good as most consoles you hear, what’s more, It covers the full FM/AM band, and shortwave 3.9-12mc bands. With 12 transistors, Including the high quality mesa type, automatic frequency control to "lock” the station In, push-button on-off switch, dial light and fine tuning for shortwave. Plus: A full range of Jacks Include recording and FM stereo multiplex with optional STA-110 stereo adapter. Powered by 4 standard batteries. Also operates off house currant Sh optional AC adapter. ete with batteries, earphone and carrying case. Come In for a convincing demonstra- « SONY- Founded 1M5 ^9 Founded IMS Z^naaaM Jewelry Co. 25 N. Saginaw IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPKN KVKNINOt TIL ONRISTMAS SUNDAYS 11-6 P.M. EASY CREDIT TERMS 7-PIECE LIVING ROOM Reg. $349 *249 Warmly ho.ptlabU group af deep comfort includes 76" •ofa and loungo choir with (oft attached pillowback. and thick crown reversible ■eet cuihlem. Cocktail table and 2 and tablet In mapla finish . . . plus 2 Colonial 4-PIECE SALEM MAPLE BEDROOM Reg. 9199 *150 Attractive and practical placet have matching maplatona plastic topi ta protect the finish. You gat the 6-drawer double dresser, framed mirror, 4-drawer 37 0LENW00D AT PERRY . in the Kmart Shopping Cantar ON SALE ONE WEEK ONLY— HURRY There’s Christmas . . IN THE AIR! At First Fsdsral Savings HAMMOND ORGAN —Courtesy Grinnell'e 10 A.M. SATURDAY, DEC. 21 SANTA Arrives At Our Huron Stroot Parking Lot by HELICOPTER Be Here at 10 A.M. and watch Santa as he arrives for his annual Visit greet him as he steps out of his Helicopter, follow him into our lobby where he has free treats for each and every one of you. MOMS... ' AND DADS There is *o treat In i you, too . Woody Mart® will bo. at the Organ of tl hour of Santo's Arrival in First Federal Savings and Loan Association 761W. Huron Street THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Sfote IqO*t ^(VtTCt -tJoiitel (Pjia (Elfriatmaa, §>ag3t Utttj Mttatr from COLOR STEREO THEATRE Instant automatic color, brilliant color tube, non-glare picture shield, quick picture, color purifier. Micromatic record player, solid state FM/AM radio with fM stereo, tuned RF stage on FM, bass and treble control, stereo balance control, 20 watts undistorted music power, two 12" high efficiency bass woofers, two 1000 .cycle horns. Natural walnut finish. $7985° GUARANTEED DELIVERY OF MAGNAVOX FOR CHRISTMAS THE LARGEST SELECTION OF tVlaanaVCXML AT FACTORY-TO-YOU PRICES! ASTRO-SONIC STEREO RADIO-PHONO Imagine this beautiful Magnavox stereo console in your home for Christmasl "The Flamenco" offers stereo FM-AM radio, micromatic record player, 30 watts undistorted music power, two Q O Q 50 12" bass woofers, two 1000-cyde horns. Mediterranean. \J / O WKC IS ffEADQUAKTERS FOR MAGNAVOX 2?5 SQ. IN. SPACE-SAVING COLOR TV This Christmas treat your family to "The Madrid," exciting new color console from Magnavox. With Instant Automatic Color, largest color screen around, Quick-On, brilliant Chromatone Color. /TO050 In warm Mediterranean pecan with swivel casters. O/O With Irotant Automatic Total Romoto Control, 698 JO COMPACT PORTABLE. COLOR TV Magnavox combines big-set performance aqd reliability with the ease of a compact TV in this versatile portable. Has 117 sq. inch screen, dipole antenna. Q90 TILT-DOWN PORTABLE RECORD PLAYER Wherever you go, take along "The Stereo Chorale," rugged automatic portable phonograph. With two 6" oval speakers, solid state stereo amplifier, 45 RPM adaptor and handle. 7990 MOBILE TV WITH ITS OWN CART As you move from room to room in your home "The Gotham" moves along with you on its own matching cart. 172 sq. Inch screen. Dipole Antenna. “j ^ Q90 Can Included MONEY DOWN—90 DAYS SAME AS CASH-UP TO 0 YEARS TO PAY! Park Free in Wkc's Lot at Rear of Store or 1 Hr. in Downtown Mall HAVE TICKET STAMPED AT CASHIER'S OFFICE7 108 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 OPEN 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Dnilv 'Tit Christmas A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19. 1908 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Mrs. Samuel Falca In Dark on Flu ? Here's Straight Story Maria Scorobet, both o f Jimmy #1 home; Water fo r d Township; three ^ grandchildren; a greatgrandchild; and two sisters. Fred H. McGuire Sr. Service’ for former area resident Fred H. McGuire Sr., 85, of San Jose, Calif., will be 1 p.m |father, Albert Hensick of ard S. Sokol, 26, of 6175 iDetroit; and two brothers. jSnow Apple will be 11 a.m. Service for Mrs. Samuel Memorial contributions mayltomorrow at Our Lady of the (Elizabeth) Falca, 64, of 2665 be made to the Tess Henderson I Lakes Church, Waterford Silver Hill, Waterford Township,:Fund at Albion College. Township, with burial in Ottawa will be 11:30 a m. Saturday at , Park Cemetery. The Rosary Donelson-Johns Funeral Home James R. Hodges [will be said at 8 tonight at the with burial in Ferry Mount ___.. . Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Park Cemetery. Word has been received of a ta^ , Mm a mnmhor Af Iba appearance of wool. Trim cut ivy modrl with plain front for the man with the alim build. Popular (hade* in aiaea 30 to 38. $1 lull out modal, 14-44 lsr.tllorl.Tlpr. Men'i CoiuDl Shop Pontiac • The Newest Looks in Knits Make the Best Christmas Gifts test zj.,97 .rs. 397 These sporty mock turtles will please any boy . . . juniors thru teens. Ribbed mock,turtle in PERMA-PREST<® polyester has sporty contrasting stripe oil neck for juniors 6 lea 12. Washable Orion*1 ntock turtle knit with trim on neck und ribbed cuffs and waist in fashion shades for boys 32-42. Boyt' Wear Phone FE 5-4171 Meh’s Net. 144 LW JLtsch Oar best of Ions wearing Dura-' Ion and combed cotton bland. Choice of athletic T shirts,boxer ahoru or briefs. Stretch Crews Reg. t.n 3 pr. S3. Comfortably thick bi-bulk Orion# with *tretch nylon. One »i»« fit* 10- 11. Soil*. Holiday Shopping Honrs-Shop 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday Six button golf sweater is smartly accented with button, trim on sides. Fall cut sleeves are perfect for outdoor action. Easy care acrylic blend in bloc, lime, gold, coral,: black and* brown. S to X-L sixes. Ivy and classic sport shirts with built-in freshness and no-iron qualities. Brawny plaids, stripes and solids in blue, green, gold, rust and brown. Small' to extra large in the group. Sport Shirts * 397 Full Fashioned Men’s Cardigan Sears Downtown Handiwork of a fink _THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 19. 1968 A—11 Nixon Inaugural Wo[i't Be for the Birds WILME'lTifi, m. fAp) # Joej 'Thousands upon thousand* of SaSBsMsS W ¥Br*WR attended those parades,” parations tor the next one. F* for SmO al°hg the So that President-elect Nixon route were littered with them." and hit entourage won’t need] Spectators in stands under the umbrellas Jan. 20, Fink W trees had to raise umbrellas far s t r a t i o n,” Fink recalled. !^Phe^d tried eyeryttiing but bathing worked. Nobody thought wu’d work, either. But the next day every tree around was cov- bird-proofed the inaugural parade route between the White House and the Capitol. * * ★ “Otherwise, the starlings would cause the dignitaries to lose some of their dignity,” observed Fink, 63, of Wilmette in an interview., He and sight workers spent 12 days spraying the . 100 trees along Pennsylvania . Avenue with 2000 gallons of a chemical he invented' 22 years age produces at ids National Bird Control Laboratory. DETERRENT FOR BIRDS “It’s a nonpoisonous chemical which deters birds from landing,” laid Fink. It irritates their feet. His $10,000 contract with the inaugural committee guarantees to»keep starlings away from Pennsylvania Avepue for at least four months. ★ 4r " it ' ‘ ' Until Fink came to the rescue’ the birds used-to disturb inauguration ^festlvUies and parade participants. College Paper 'Obscenity Is Protested GRAND HAVEN (AP) - A three-pronged petition is being circulated in Ottawa County asking the Grand Valley State CoUegdJl^ttd * of Control to take a firm position on the college newspaper, which has allegedly printed obscene litera-tum. ^ .»■ ’ v.' The petition asks the board 4 AdOptguidelines for college-sponsored publications, which would include immediate dis-missal of any student or faculty member who fails to abide by the rules; • Eliminate indecency ' and obscenity from college publications. • Announce publicly a policy on decency in education. ★ . * * The Hudsonville City Commission earlier had passed a resolution commending county officials for initiating the action in which an injunction was served against the. college, halting publication of the paper—the Lanthom. Also, editor James Wasser-man, 21, of Muskegon was arrested and arraigned on a charge of publishing obeeene material. + * * He has been free on $5,000 bond pending a hearing which; was delayed due to the death of j his attorney, Joseph Legatx of! Muskegon. Joseph Legate Jr. j has assumed the case for his] father, bin a court date has not been set. protection, he said “Then in 1953 the Department! of Paries asked us far a demon- This inauguration will be the .first one for which Fink will be on hand to observe the results of his handiwork. “I’m holding final inspection ered with birds except those'jan. 10 so I think I’ll stick trees we’d treated. And the next around for it,” he said. “I was day we got the assignment tor never able to make it to the oth-President Eisenhower’s inaugu- ers, although I was Ways fa-radon.” vited.” f SAT., Dec. 7th thru SAT.. Dee. 2111 Bloomfield Hills A rail breakfast for the whole family A favor for Net child /r»m Santa SATURDAY MORNINGS 9:00 a.m. thru 10:30 a.m. SI.35 per Person Call HQ 4-7764 for Reservations in Bloomfield HiUs WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. $4.68 ptcflfinr pifrRi Cotfi Ni. ND Soft Whiskey: It’s hard to give. Trouble is you're tempted to keep it. (An extra Calvert Extra for yourself may be the answer.) Calvert Extra, the Soft Whiskey, In gift-boxed decanter or gift-wrapped regular bottle, at no extra cost. Christmas Hours: Shop 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday Sifts for Late Santas . . • only S more shopping days until Christmas A—ia THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Tonite Fri. & Sat. Better Sift PARK FREE for 1-MR. in Downtown Parking Rail Evarytima you (hop Simms, you got 1 -hr. fro# parking with any purchase (except an tobacco and beverages). Have ticket stamped at time or purchase. Choice of 2 CREDIT PLANS at SIMMS l You con ge i * can charge eotwaacaw ^First Lighted Mirror-Manicure Cosmetic Case Rayette Mani-Carry Manicure Set f* $30.00 value. Give her the b««t metic case. It ha* 5 prafesiional nail groomer*. A make-up mirror that revert** to magnifying mirror for shadow-free lightng anywhere. Mu* a ipecial compartment for your noil polish and cosmetic*. All in on* great looking travel com. Not a* pictured. Dob Ann Ayro Ladies’ Electric Shaver $4.95 value, lets her whisk off unwanted hair on leg* and underarms gently and comfortably. Petit* styled lady shaver Is delicate pink color and comes with cord. Sperti Electric Sun Lamp $29.95 value, Model P265 Sperti *un lamp gives you a healthy tan all year around. Produces beneficial ultraviolet ray* present In sunshine. Vitamin D known a* the sunshine vitamin . . . activates ultraviolet sterols In the skin converting them to essential vitamin 0. Drugs — Main Floor > Heavy Duty Dual Purpose General Electric Massager $20.81 value. Your deluxe’ massager Is duel purpose device, It ‘may be mounted an tho back of the hand for fingertip massaging or strapped against tho palm for area body General Electric Heat ’n Serve Baby Food Warnin'Qish $10.91 value, General Electric automatic baby food warmer heats food to baby's taste then keeps It worm all through feeding — even after the cord has been removed. Firm suction bottom prevents tipping. Drugs — Main Floor M.°k£ 14-In. Drill Kit Model U114 Block and Decker Vi-Inch trie drill, accessories Include horizontal drill stand, 1/16, 1/8 and Vi" twist drill bits. Wheel arbor, chuck key and chuck key holder. Industrially listed. Hondtast tool he'll ever own. It drills, polishes, cagOts, routs, sharpens and engraves with cgn-stant torque permanent magnet motor. ; In storage box. Weighs only 9-oz. Guaranteed. Tools — 2nd Floor WEN Electric Sander $14.95 list price, model 310 Electric condor Is lightweight and easy to use an vortical or overhead surfaces. Powered with revolutionary new typo electromagnetic motor. Cast aluminum housing. 18-plec* Indestro locket and tool set has chrome alloy steel hordontd and tampered. Includes sockets, ratchets, extensions, oil factory guaranteed. Comes In a neat carrying cos*. Hardware — 2nd Floor No Time Limit Guarantee Model - U-124 3/8-lnch K5«« Electric Drill Model U-124 Black & Dackar electric drill for fht handyman, has gearing and chuck to, handle bigger, tougher |obs. Double reduction gear system deliveries full torque drilling action. Trigger switch and pin for locking switch Write! on Wood-Mctel or Plettio. BVI Electric Pencil Now you can identify or personalize your possessions. Moke* permanent engraved marking* on wood, metal or plastic. With bpilt In mystery switch <1 when you pick it up. ■ ' - Hardware-2nd Floor purchase on 30-day earn* as cash credit plan on buy* „ urchaso with famous Midwest Bank Card. Ask us far the plan best for you Sunbeam Wtte Model V888 Spray-Steanf and Dry Iron Sunbeqm Vista spray-steom and dry-iron with stainless *B EBD' steel tank, new water level gauge and 28 vent soleplate. J Pink custom grip handle. » ' Lady Sunbeam Vista Model VHD22 Controlled Heat Heir Dryer 94 Lady Sunbeam hair dryer has fashionable, slim silhouette "Mj;}r(KK,gpjfA styling, quick curl attachment with 3 sizes of ebriers, handy A Jm nail dryer and stowaway hose. 1 ▼ Sunbeam Vista 12-Cup VAP75 Staiiiless Steel Percolator Handsomely styled automatic percolator td stainless with strength selector dial and automatic signal light. Appliances — 2nd Floor 2394 Automatic 4-Slice Thermostatically Controlled Manning Bowman Electric Toaster Simms Price Just 11“ Manning Bowman 4-slice automatic toaster has gleaming chrome finish with convenient tide controls. Black'plastic handles and feet and thermostat color control. Toasts 2 or 4 slices at a time. . Appliances — 2nd Floor Sunbeam Vista Model VCI1 Electric Gan Opener-Knife and Scissor Sharpener 1994 It easily op«ns standard size cans and leaves no sharp edges, flip top magnet holds on to lid. With removable hardened steel cutting The Pookot-Sizo Machine Shop Dremel Electric Moto-Tool Kit Sunbeam Vista Model V14-W Electrio Mixmaster Table Mixer Heavy duty mixer with thumb-tip pushbutton beater ejector, removable cord provides easier handling and storage. Sunbeam Vista Model VSDS v Steam or Dry Electric Iron With DuPont Teflon double coaled soleplate, no starch build-up, 28 vent soleplate, up-front fabric control and stainless 94 41 1*04 Chrome Alloy Steel 18-Pi toe Indestro Socket Set Sunbeam Viste Model VHM-1 Mixmaster Hand Mixer Hew sculptured shape, thumb-tip speed control, finely ‘ balance^ design, automatic beater ejector. fr Sunbeam Vista Teflon IIVFP1B8 ^ , Multi-Cooker Electric Fry Dan Teflon cooled for no-stick cooking and no-scour dome cover and removable heat : "MSUw” ■* control Sunbeam Vista Model VEKBM 22 Electric Slicing Ufa > IT4 Safety latch, convenient on/off switch, removable cord and If* easy to us* with It* sure-grip balanced handle. SIMMS - Sunbeam Vista Model VT48 Electric Radiant Controlled Toaster No levers to push, bread towers automatically and M 0/1 silently rises, when toasted to the desired degree. . Chroma finish. Mr JHL . Sunbeam Vista 8-Speed VBL-2 Push Button Electrio Blender 8-spaad push button action, separata on/off switch, cold/heat resistant glass jar and Hk designed for easy iCml General Electric Fin|er Tip Control Electric Can Opener Model ED-11 Opens con* quickly, easily and solely# new styling for any kttchin decor. Holds cans securely, they can't slip or fail Fingertip control, cord storage 6nd easy to clean. N Appliances - 2nd Floor £88 TITO PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 A—18 rPRICISLASHINB SPREE I^GIFTS or for Your Own Use-LOOK at Theso Com*, sav* oh American mad* quality clothing for gift giving or ter your own tis*.. t compar* th* quality and pric* bafor* you buy .. . and you'll find that you do hotter at Simms. Specials ter Tohit* • Fri. and Stef* PARK FREE 1 HR. in Downtown Parking Mall ■ Every time you shop Simms, you g#t 1 hr. free parking with any purchase (except tobacco and beverages). Just have ticket stomped at time of purchase. MenswenissooooMeai CHARGE IT at SIMMS-2 Credit Plans You can charge your purchases at Simms — use our 30-day, same as cash plan, on purchases of $10 to $150, or use your Instant Credit MIDWEST BANK CARD. the 'In Look' qt the Lowest Ever Price ‘Nehru’ Coats •12.95 Value The smart 'Nehru' coat of fortrel and cotton in permanent press finish which never needs ironing. Choice of gold, olive or blue colors with cotton lining in plaid. Sizes small - medium arid large for men. —Basement American Made - First Quality » GIRLS' 3-Way Blue Corduroy Coats ZHMMT LINING Becomes a Jacket ' ■ * $29.98 Vttlue 1 tell Cite ■fin I Tradical coat for tho 3 seasons ... with the lining zipped Out, it becomes a pile-collared lighter weight tailored coot. Then, when it's zipped out, it becomes a quilt nylon ski jacket. It also reverses from blue print to solid blue with front srfteer. 2 slosh pockets, —Main' Floor Clothing Unbelievable - Values to *13.95 Ladies’ Dresses MEN’S ‘BLIZZARD-PRUF’ Snowmobile Suits and Outdoor Activities Compare to *59.95 Super insulated one-piece suits with fun-ilk* collar, wristlets, quilt-type outer shell and 100% Daerofi 88 poly fiberfill . , . It's comfortable, lightweight and gives superior warmth. Ideal ter outdoor sports and*work .". . Naugahyde knee patches for extra wear, Sizes for’ men, choice of 3 colors, <* —Bargain Basement gift Boxed —100% NYLON Tricot Ladies Slip&PantySets is* Gift boxed set of 100% nylon tricot half-slip and panties In choiqi of delicate embroidery or lace trim. Sizes S-M-L —Main Floor Clothing Boy’s Insulated Beats Jersey Lined WATERPROOF Simms Low Price Rubber boots In green or brown outdoor colors — rugged Colander soles for sure traction. 6-eyelet style boots are waterproof and come in sixes 11 to 6. *80 FLEECE LINED INSULATED BOOTS lnSlze*3to6.................. 5” W100% HUMAN HAIR "^8 Ladies’ Wiglets First Qualify American Made - LADIES' Slacks and Sweater* Save More JL^ than Half 2»7 W Emb Your-choice of a big variety of slacks and sweaters in luxury fabrics and blends . .. pick from a selection of styles and colors in slacks 10 to 18 and sweaters 32 to 40. Not every size^in every " A wisp of curls that are styled and restyled to add a touch of glamour for any special occasion. 100% human hair wiglet In its own plastic cose. —Main Floor Wig D*pt. SIMMS,® Americas Made First Quality * ladies' figure Skates 6*® Figure skates of fine split leather uppers and durable steel blades. Ladies' white, in sizes 5 to 10 and men's black.in sizes 8 to 13. -Basement 4-PC. LUXURY SETS’ Gift Towels Attractively packaged towel set has 2 bath towels, 22x45 Inches, 2 washcloths, one solid color, one floral print. Famous 'Cannon' or 'Dundee' brands. Several colors to choose front, 159 M & Deluxe 24-Pc. Towel Set Dundee set hot 6 bath towels, 12 washcloths, 4 kitchen towels, and 2 pot holders. Assorted pastels and florals. $12.95 value. 5*® A^-U THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1998 [Booklet Tells how to Minister to the Gf By JERRY T. BAULCH Associated Press News Features WASHINGTON — This being the season of religious holidays, let’s consider the relation of the men of God to the men of war. I have received a candid new booklet called “Ministry to the Armed Forces,” published hy the General Commission on Chaplains and Armed Forces Personnel. It provides suggestions for ministers and a fast rundown on draft rules and problems faced in the military service. Also it notes that the civilian clergy has largely neglected involvement with the military, except for providing chaplains and counseling Mi such problems as sex, drinking, gambling and swearing. ujjt Thus, it says, most ministers do not tackle |BI 'j nor are they equipped to handle — the task BAULCH of counseling men facing- the draft or about to enter service, of keeping home church links alive with men in service or of offering a helping hand to returning veterans especially tne Negro. There was a day, says the booklet, when church help for men in service “might have been understood mainly, as 'cake and cookies for our boys’," but while such gifts are still welcome, those days are long gone. UNDERSTANDABLE More recently, the booklet notes, there are clergymen whose only role in the military area is to question the morality of military service and the draft for an unpopular war. Such dissent is understandable, it says; but then adds “Their protests dramatize the need for what they themselves hitherto almost totally neglected. Churchmen have missed an important task, one which needs attention for years to come.” To meet this task the author, the Rev. Edward I. Swanson, says clergymen need to bone up on the intricacies of the draft, the choices of military service, the options open to conscientioui objectors, the psychological problems faced on active duty. f ★ ★ Father Swanson, an Episcopal priest who served as an ensign chaplain in the Navy, says this ministry to the armed forces “cannot be delegated to the chaplains, who are but one expression of it.” For example, he says they cannot counsel young people about the draft — “a civilian task — too long neglected.” OBVIOUS SUBJECTS As a sample of Father Swanson's advice, he gives this suggestion for helping a man who may nof be drafted, but has made np his mind to enlist and wants algopd listener; “The counselor need not dwell on drinking, women, gambling and swearing. While not unimportant, these are obvious, and the young man has heard about them already. He can be given encouraging words on handling loneliness, boredom, fear, temptation and foreign travel.” 4 wf yrjs * Father Swanson slys military service is a “major, but by no means, useless intrusion into one's private life” but it need not be disruptive with adequate counseling beforehand. On the plus side, he says, military service “is a unique testing ground” for young men and women to grow physically, mentally and spiritually. “A lad is on his own. Nobody saves him from the consequences of his actions. He is placed among his peers in the most elemental circumstances and tested to see of what stuff he is made.'1 BLUNTLY CANDID But on the other hand, Father Swanson is bluntly candid about the darker aide of military service: “War is brutal, hellish, insane . . . One encounters much that seems stupid and wasteful ... There is loneliness . . . Military life is notorious for Its tedium . . . Though probably not more than three soldiers In 10 engage in combat, all must prepare for it.” ★ * * Father Swanson cautions that “military service raises sensitive religious and ethical Issues, the subjects of deeply held convictions” and that a minister can defeat his purpose in counseling If he tries to Impose his own views on a young man. He adds that the counselor may face a young man “in a black mood, with a bagful of mixed feelings ... His hostility to 'establishments’, including those of the church, may be pronounced.” EXPERIENCES DIFFER No doubt some will take issue with some of Father Swanson's observations, for individual experiences differ. He says, for instance, the draft comes as a surprise to 18-year-olds because they take the attitude “it can't happen to me” until it does. * * * In my contacts with people of this age I find they are acutely aware that they are living with the possibility of being drafted and It’s a major personal consideration. There’s a chapter on how to help the man who considers himself a qualified conscientious objector, to which Father Swanson says; “He will require factual Information on the draft law | he will need to talk over his beliefs and to know his rights and responsibilities. He may need experienced counsel. He may require help in-finding civilian service suitable to his background and abilities. Finally, he may need a friend to help him know his own mind and the course of action which is right for him/’ MANY TIPS Father Swanson gives many tips to ministers for keeping ties with men of their congregation in service. Mainly it’s better writing because “servicemen whom the church has remembered during an absence will not return home with the embittered conviction that cborchpeople ’couldn’t care less’." ' “Except tor draft counseling, little or no training is needed,” Swanson writes. “Hospitality continues to be a major element, and churches need no instruction here. Many shut-ins and invalids art excellent letter writers. What is essential is that those involved be lively, friendly, imaginative and young in outlook.” * * w Father Swanson also urges churches not to neglect the visiting servicemen: “In seaports and metropolitan areas one can always find soldiers, and sailors on the street looking for Something t° do. They have little money and are victimised easily. liost of them waht wholesome entertainment, interesting things 4o do, attractive girls to talk to and dahce with and some Assurance that they are weleofrve.” When soldiers attend off-post churches there is the word t advice: Proselytizing is out of order, “military personnel ex* perience enough exploitation on weekends. They will not talks kindly to mare of the same on Sunday.” The booklet is available tor $l from the General Commission an Chaplains, 122 Maryland'Ave., N.E. Washington, D.C. 20002. Michigan’s Great Selections.... 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" THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968_______ A—15 «** * «»> 9 A +• m A—16 THE PQXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Russia Seen leaning Less an Warsaw Pact WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S.[changes in the level of factory experts say .the Czech expert- output. ence will strengthen the position The Czech invasion already is of Kremlin dissidents who favor I believed to have placed some reducing the yole of the Warsaw strain on the Soviet military Pact nations in Central Europe, budget because it required the Until the move toward politi-l Russians to mobilize some re cal liberalism by the Prague iservists and undertake unex government and the * resulting I pected major troop movements Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia, the prevailing policy in Moscow was to place a great deal of reliance on Warsaw Pact armies in the upkeep of the Soviet defense in Central Europe. ★ * * However, the deviation of the Czech government has put in a better position those Soviet lead ers who have argued since the early 1960s against depending on Eastern European allies in defending that part of the world, the U.S. experts say. “If the Czechs have gone sour, so could others,” one American expert said. BUDGET INCREASE FIGURE MISLEADING The Soviet defense budget announced last week was 17.7 billion rubles. At the official exchange rate a ruble is worth $1.11 . American experts say that the announced figure is misleading because much of the Soviet military spending is disguised in such other categories as science and industry. They estimate the real figure spent on the military in the Soviet Union last year was really closer to $60 billion. ★ ★ * *. The announced defense figures, which represent on their face only a mild Increase over If Moscow does decide to last year is looked on by U.S. strengthen its military posture in Central Europe, it will force an increase in the Soviet defense budget, one U.S. Kremlnologist said officials as a message to the West that Moscow is not gearing up for any major increase in arms spending. And this message, the experts This might drain money from said, is believed designed to other . Russian military pro- avoid propelling NATO Into a grams and such civilian sectors!major effort at boosting the At- as agriculture where the Soviet government has long promised improvements. ★ * * The Kreminologists say any auch policy shift would eventually show up In the Russian “order of battle” In Central Europe and might be signaled by lantic alliance’s forqe levels. ♦ * * “What Russia is interested in now is getting NATO back on the track it was on before the invasion of Czechoslovakia—a track that seemed to be leading toward a weakening of the alliance,” one authority said. Ike's Brother Earl Will Be Buried Friday SCOTTSDALE, Alts- (AP) -Earl Eisenhower, a brother of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, will be interred Friday at Scottsdale following Masonic funeral service. Earl Eisenhower, a former engineer and public relations director, died of a heart attack Wednesday at a Scottsdale hospital. He was 70. He suffered his first attack Monday. * ★ ★ The former president, who is convalescing at the Walter Reed Hospital in Washington from his seventh heart, attack, deeply grieved” by his younger brother’s death. The funeral will be held at Messinger Mortuary with burial at Greenwood Memorial Park! SURVIVORS LISTED He is survived by his wife; son, Earl Jr.; a daughter, Mrs. Kay Morgan, Rockford, 111.; and three brothers, the former president; Milton, a college president, and Edgar, a lawyer. Eisenhower retired in Scottsdale in February 1967, following a brief period in Illinois politics. He was elected 6s an at-large member to the Illinois House of Representatives in 1964. He called it a one-shot po-j litlcal deal and said he did not1 want to return. * * * He graduated from the Uni versity of Washington with a de gree in electrical engineering Eisenhower was associated with the West Penn Power Co., for 25 years. Vietnam Toll Rises Despite J$ff in War SAIGON' Uh — Combat casualties rose on all sides last week in the Vietnam war despite the absence of major sustained ground fighting. The U.S. Command said 222 Americans were killed in action and 1,199 were wounded. The week before 192 Americans were reported killed and 1,110 wounded. Of last week’s wounded, 523 were' hospitalized and 676 did not require hospitalization, an American spokesman said. £ ★ ★ ★ South Vietnamese headquarters reported 190 government soldiers killed and 815 wounded last week. The previous week the toll of government troops was 150 killed and 811 wounded. * * * The two allied commands reported 2,059 enemy killed last week, compared with 1,715 reported last Thursday for the week before. The latter figure was increased today to 2,006 on the basis of reports during the week, and the total of 2,059 is certain to be increased similarly rtext week. Although no major, continuing battles were reported last week, there were a number of bloody engagements scattered across the country as TlJ. forces kept up their operations pied to prevent the Viet* cong from launching another major offensive. U.S. communiques earlier indicated that the chief areas of activity were north of Saigon near the Cambodian border and in the populous coastal lowlands South of Da Nang. * * * The weekly casualty report raised to 30,279 the number of Americans reported killed in action in the Vietnam war. ★ * ★ Since Jan. 1,1961, there have been 190,468 Americans wounded. In that period another 14851 Americans are listed as missing, captured or interned. The U.S. Command also reported today that at least 425,-Vietcong and North Vietnamese have been killed in action since the beginning of GABRIEL BASKETBALL & GOAL SET NOWONLY $ 2 44 LIMIT 2 Our Reg. Low Discount Price is $3.77 Official size ball and goal. Set Include! valve. 25 S. SAGINAW (Next to Grinnell'l at Water St.) messages of good cheer that ring out during this holiday season, we’d like to add our own, wishing you a very merry Christmas. May you find an abundance of the real joys of Christmas filling your heart and home, bringing you peace and contentment We at Grand Blanc were thank fid our fire was no worse than it was. We are open and com-\ pletely restocked. The fire departments that came to our rescue did a superlative job. We9re deeply appreciative! wi6kes Bloomfield Miracle Mile 2211 South Telegraph Rd. Open pally and Saturday 9*8 Friday til 9 SUPPLY CENTER 4101 E. BALDWIN RD. Near the Corner of Holly and Baldwin Rd. X TnrrrrrrTTTrrrTTmTrn»BgrTTTinrnrrmTTrrTTrrrrrrmTnTrrr»TrmTrmTfY^ 11 innn r open mon., ihurs., fri. ’til IIIHMII*!/ PHONE 332-4231 17-19 S. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Now’s the Time to Get the Best Seat in the House! \ BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY King size relaxer with . traditional elegance. Walnut finished hardwood legs. 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Pontiac Mall Tel-Huron C*ntmr THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 HER DAYDREAM — Standing in the courtyard of a Michigan Avenue hotel in Chicago yesterday, Nicole Donnelly, 3, is surrounded by reindeer and Christmas trees sculptured from blocks of ice by the hotel chef. It was enough to start visions of sugarplums dancing in the child’s head. Voice-Prints Set for Three Tied to Plane Bomb Scare counts of grand theft and three counts of illegal use of a credit card. Reuther Ends Foreign Stay I ^ . Parochiaid Study Panel Rapped LOS ANGELES (AP) - Federal authorities arranged Wednesday voice-print analysis tests for three college roommates to determine if they were respon-sibl for a false bomb threat that caused a Detroit-bound airliner to return to Los Angeles International Airport Tuesday. One of the three, Leon D Pearson, 22, was arrested al the airport Tuesday after he arrived too late to catch the plane. The other two youths Danyl N. Landrum, 19, and Henderson D. Cartwright, 19 were arrested as they tried to hitch a ride to the airport by hailing a Pomona police car. The trio — all from Pomona and students at Mount San The called-back American Antonio College—were accused Airlines plane, with 61 passen-of using a stolen credit card gers, resumed its Journey aland were questioned about the most three hours later after a bomb-scare. They were charged search of baggage uncovered no wtyh suspicion of burglary, two|bomb. ZAGREB, Yugoslavia (UPI) — United Auto Workers president Walter Reuther flew home yesterday following a week’s visit to Yugoslavia highlighted by a conference with President Authorities planned to com-jxjt0t pare voice-print patterns of the i * * * youths’ voices with patterns made from a recording of the bomb scare telephone call ARRIVED TOO LATE Police said Pearson arrived too late to catch a flight to Detroit. They said his ticket had been purchased with the stolen credit card. He was arrested by Pomona officers after he exchanged his ticket for one to Chicago. Reuthr, accompanied by his wife and daughter, departed from the Croatian capital of Zagreb, where he held talks with local labor union officials The American union leader arrived in Yugoslavia Dec. 10. While here he also visited the Adriatic coastal cities of and Dubrovnik. Reuther attended a series of discussions with Yugoslav labor leaders, who briefed him on the union stiuatlon in this country. LANSING (AP) - A citizens group that battled last year against proposed state aid to nonpublic schools leveled a blast Wednesday at what it termed “flagrant display of prejudice” by a Joint legislative committee studying the issue. “The majority of this committee has (used) legislative powers to-serve the interests of the parochial school lobby,”1 charged Citizens to Advance Public Education (CAPE), which says it includes some 1,200 members across the state. ■k ★ ★ The legislative committee, headed by Sen. Anthony Stamm, R-Kalamazoo, began its study of aid to private and parochial schools earlier this year after the controversial issue failed to reach the House or Senate floor. Legislators last week named a nine-member citizens advisory committee to help develop ideas for nonpublic schpol aid. CAPE charged that the citizen committee was “noteworthy its distinguished majority of parochial adherence.” CONNECTIONS ATTACKED Mrs. Harriett Phillips of Huntington Woods, a CAFE spokesman, said several members of pie citizens committee had direct connections with organizations that have endorsed the principles of state aid to nonpublic schools. “CAPE cannot help but condemn such flagrant display of prejudice," the organization said. “We wonder what catastrophe in our public schools has to occur before our elected representatives are as aroused to act as they apparently are on behalf of the parochial schools.” CAPE last year Joined such organizations as the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers and numerous public school associations who fought legislation that would have authorized state grants of up. to $150 to parents for each child in non-public schools. The Michigan Association of School Boards hit at religious aspects of the proposal,, a U. S. Supreme Court ruling nst prayer in public schools.” “How can you justify a public school on one side of the street that cannot have prayer and get public money and a parochial school on the other side of the street that can have prayer and still get public money" an organization India exported $293.5 million worth of goods to the United States during 1966-67, more than to any other country. public school aid bin would helpfsava money for Michigan tax-cut Oris number and thereforejpayers. On the other side of what turned into one of the hotly contested issues brought before the Legislature was the powerful Citizens for Educational Freedom (CEF), made up of some 20,000 families and several religious groups. Proponents of the bills tended that an increasing number of nonpublic school pupils are forced, either by parents’ or schools’ financial problems, to transfer to public schools. They said passage of the A.C.E. 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By The Associated Press March 31,1984, that ihe military -with civilian backiqg—moved in to overthrow the government of left-leaning President Joao Goulart. OVERT REPRESSION As the period of overt repression ended and the government Surface calm and spring-taut [aiied produce the results it «... __«... B * hurl nrntniorul vers four chips to the paper industry andi veneer logs. the first week of. January. nona S UCKCl MiIIIUMJ,™ Ui.uau™.,, —" --------------- ------ -•> ltmn fnnHiall fiplric defeated, 5,856 to 1,407, a slate of Ipansion already planned con-,WilUam P. Nicholls, a Copper ^ ^ nl candidates put up by dissident members of the 18,000-member j local, which Hoffa took over in i 1937. I * * ★ I The dissident slate, headed by Andrew R. Provenzino, an unemployed truck driver, had not been expected to make much headway in the Detroit local, which is Hoffa’s power base in the union. A supporter of the 42-year-bldi as far Provenzino, Bernard Jacabus, „ „. . , . was beaten outside the union «med,’ said Elmer L. Jacob- operation by Copper Range in by Copper Radge’s Northern onts Jildings is SM -;-|Hardwood division, headed by “t lOTg -^almort the length of 1 'two football fields — and Nicholls says the plant will be the most modern anywhere in the,country. More than $30,000 of the investiftent went for equipment to minimize pollution. The plant will specialize in so-called dimension lumber (precut parts) for the furniture and other woodworking industries. Product examples are drawer and cabinet doors, chair bottoms and panels cut to specified shapes and sizes. Yule Mail's on Time SAIGON (AP) — The 535,000, “The handling is current and U S. troops in Vietnam were as- in great shape,’’ he said. "The sured yesterday that Christmas officers and men of the postal packages and letters would be service are working 12-hour in their hands by Dec. 25. shifts, seven days a week. By It is going to be a great doing this they are able to keep mail is con- up with the volume of mail.” hall Nov. 11. Jacabus claimed he was beaten twice before the nominations that day for passing out campaign literature. * * ★ There is a legal question of whether Hoffa can hold union office, in view of his five-year sentence for alleged misuse of union funds. That conviction has been appealed. Hoffa entered the federal penitentiary at I^wisburg, Pa., in March W67|FLOW EXAMINED for an eight-year sentence on a son, deputy postal inspector in “Some of the boys have told charge of he U.S. Post Office me that they already have re-Department.* !ceived all the packages and let Jacobson came to Vietnam to ters they anticipated. If the observe mail handling proce-!present flow continues, MILL IS TEST-RUN Ground was broken for the new complex July 18 and its yorized sawmill got pre-Christmas test runs. In addition to sawings, the completed mill will be able to rough plane, rip, edge, glue, trim, shape, resaw, mold, to pattern, finish plane, bend, turn, sand and package for shipment. The $2 million initial in-vestment in the wood fabricating complex raises to almost $200 million Copper Range’s investment fii the Upper Peninsula, where it is the area’s second largest employer Its No. 1 operation here is the White Pine cppper mine, mill and smelter, which employes some 2,500 and has an annual payroll of more than $20 Northern Hardwood also pldns millibn to market so-called bolts, 100 , inches long and seven inches in Its land holdings are spread diameter from its stands of over five counties, Houghton hard maple, yellow birch, ash,1 Ontonagon, Keweenaw, Mar: elm, oak, basswood and aspen, jquette and Baraga. And if it f , ... .. . , ... eim, oaK, Dasswooa anu aspcu. queue anu Daraga. «iiu u » dures at military postal facili-should have no trouble getting Nicho,ls ^ m possibilities should ever run short on trees ties. I Christmas mail in the hands of "Our primary concern was the servicemen by Dec. 22.” for distribution and dispatch of MILLION POUNDS DAILY mail for servicemen in Vietnam .. averaee of of operation to $4 million in the'Peninsula’s land area through the gateways at San ^ arrived year, Including the sale of covered by trees Francisco and Seattle, he said ^ termina, „ a spokes. man said. “Since the hig climb unlimited” and sees the from its own lands it is assured company’s production jumping an at-home abundance, since 80 from $1.8 millibn the first year|per cent of the Uppe land area i conviction for jury tampering. ■■HUH Jacobson said he has exam- toward the Christmas season m a'ined several hundred letters and started in mid-November, the three-day period ending Monday [packages at the big military; daily figure has gradually in-and the results wei-e announced P°stal facility at Saigon’s Tan creased to more than a million today. 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KING SIZE SLEEP SET Luxurious Quilted Button-Free—7 ft. long, 6 ft. wide Mattress and 2 Box Springs HERE’S WHAT YOU GET: * •> King Size Mattress • 2 King Size Fieldcrest • 2 Box Springs Percale Sheets King Size MetalFrame with . 2 King slze pmowcases Casters • King Size Mattress Pad NO PAYMENT TIL MARCH 2 King Size Pillows THE MATTRESS flW, ; SPECIALISTS 33Pjfji! AND SAVE! DELUXE QUILTED 12-PC. KING SIZE SLEEP SET Richly Quilted for Super Comfort - 7 ft. long, 6 ft. wide Deluxe Button-Free Mattress end 2 Deluxe Box Springs HERE'S WHAT YOU GET: 2 King Size Fieldcrest Percale Sheets . 2 King Size Pillowcases 2 King Size Pillows $178 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS EASY CREDIT TERMS DOUBLE BONUS! King or Queen Size QUILTED BEDSPREAD plus King or Queen Size HEADBOARD (not as illustrated) with your purchase of any King or Queen Size Sleep Sett Deluxe King Size Mattress Mg Box Springs Metal Frame 2 Deluxe Box Springs • King Size Metal Frami with Casters • King Size Mattress Pad EASY CREDIT TERMS NO PAYMENTS TIL MARCH 95 1 THE NATIONS _LARGEST MATTRESS GENUINE ORTHO MATTRESSES ARE SOLD ONLY AT ORTHO STOREs\?HA'i^ 229 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS QUIi BEDSPREAD Plus Kina or Quaan Siza HEADBOARD (not at Illustrated) with Your Purchase of Any Kln( or Quaan Size Sleep £AL--------------------- 12-PC. QUEEN SIZE'SLEEP SET Luxurious Quilted Button-Free! CO In. wide, BO in. long Mattress and Box Spring EASY CREDIT TERMS HERE’S WHAT YOU GET: • Quaan Size Mattress • Queen Size Box Spring • Queen Size Metel Frame with Casters _ ____ • Queen Size Mattress Pad iia daymIMTS SI QO - 2 Queen Size Fieldcrest * I /Q DOUBLE BONUSI Beautiful PLASTIC HEADBOARD (not a* illustrated) and METAL FRAME WITH CASTER8 with the Purchase of any Twin or Full 8lza Set! Percale Sheets 2 Queen Size Pillpwcai 2 Queen Size Pillows TIL,MARCH INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS Twin sr Full Size, Quilted Butten-Fna MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING Quilted luxury, finttt quality! Long wearing, deeply cushioned comfort. Attractive extra-heavy cover. EASY CREDIT TERMS FREE DELIVERY and INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS SET-UP NO PAYMENTS *78 TIL MARCH Open Daily 10 am 9 pm • Sat. 10 am-6 pm • Sun. 12-6 pm (Livernois & Grand River closed Sunday) • No Cash Down • Up to 24 Months to Pay! FREE PARKING AT ALL 0RTM0 STORES 2211 S. Telegraph Mirocle Mile Shopping Confer Pontiac Mirocla Mila Stora Only, Opan Sat. Until 9 P.M. WE HONOR DAN BAMKARD Al SECURITY CHARGE Buy Diraet From Tha Mattroea Specialists Far Tho Finest Quality At Roal Savings! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 A|ef ihe Obstacles President-Elect Faces * FEINSILBER ikillin la Vietnam when the new | powers cautiously and shyly, *22, *CPreSident, by the voter’s snub of his BtebejP M. Nixon enters the paramount task must be to strip VWt^Jtouse next month as a.the fighting. The brutality and mtooffiYlpre^ent elected by an wioftskm margin, opposition Confess obscure mandate. Awesome are But the new president can take strength from the national dismay which was a factor in electing him. If there was one clear plea from the people in the trying year of 1968, it was a call -for an end to the violence on American streets and in Vietnam’s jungles It was loud and clear enough to make an incumbent president who loved the office decide to quit it; to mike serious what would otherwise« have been foolish challenges against him, first by an unknown senator, IJugene J. McCarthy, and then by a famous one, Robert F. Kennedy; to make Nixon’s opponent, Hubert H, Humphrey, rpn away from the record of the Administration he Served; and to make Richard M. Nixon the comeback champion of a people A'ho don’t love a loser. ■ And so it was certainly clear enough to allow Nixon to forget that he was the presidential choice of only 43 per cent of the nation and to ignore the lack of a mandate from file “forgotten Americans” to whom he turned for support and from whom he received no greater demand than to be left alone in peace. PEACE FIRST TASK To give them peace will be Nixon’s first task. The president of the Brookings Institution, Kermit Gordon, put < it Ibis way horror of tiie war — made vivid as in no previous war by the immediacy of television- the corrosive and divisive effects of the war on American society; and the budgetary drain of the war which has shortchanged urgent domestic claims — all dictate that ending the war must lead all other tasks on the President's agenda.” Here Nixon is victimized by circumstances. He must make peace dealing with- fhe same diplomacy, the same battlefield stalemate, the same intransigent ally in Saigon, a government created by generals, and the same stub-bom antagonists in ParisLin the same combination which retired Lyndon Johnson and denied him the title of peacemaker. Nixon’s newness in office, his reputation, earned on tiie stump and in Congress, as a militant hnti-Communist his party’s antipathy toward accommodation with communism — these may serve him well. MAY BE POSSIBLE They may make possible a war settlement that would have been unacceptable from a Democratic administration just as Dwight D. Eisenhower could allow tiie Korean War to end on terms that would have been politically intolerable for his Democratic predecessor. At home, if he’s lucky, he will have' the honeymoon to which every new president is entitled — an all-too brteTperiod during which he win get his way and “If there is his legislation with limited ''V ~ j partisan sharpshooting at his expense. Some expert observers I D I if* Fill-fill on 'he Washington scene don’t LDJ IV rUII III think he’ll be allowed any “honeymoon,” even briefly. party when they chose him and gave him a Congress controlled by Democrats, among them some of the men who had admired him least in his two decades of public life. But the likelihood is otherwise. Nixon will probably recall John F. Kennedy’s profitless caution in his approach to a Congress which proceeded to turn its back on his proposals. .. * * * Everett M. Dirksen, the Republican Senate leader, expects to see a “frugal" Nixon. “Mr.' Nixon is basically con- servative,” Dirksen says. “It may be assumed that his recommendations for the balance of the fiscal year and his recommendations for future years will be on the frugal side. In that case, he would have no difficulty whatsoever in coming to an agreement with Congress, because it spent much time in 1968 seeking to secure an expenditure cut of $16 billion in return for the 10 per cent surtax that President Johnson was demanding in order to avoid a gargantuan deficit.” SAME RESTRAINT Bold or otherwise, Nixon faces the same gargantuan restraint. In his first year, he may choose to study and discuss — rather than propose for action to Congress — the dramatic changes he offered in campaign speeches. ★ it ★ His tax credit idea — into make it profitable for to .hire the untrained and to build plants’in the slums — is a revenue-reducing scheme. Tax credits are a backdoor tax cut. .* * + And Nixon promised — one of the few absolutely specific promises of his campaign — to allow the income tax surcharge to die on June 30. He may not be able to live up to the promise. ‘ Whether or not Vietnam warfare continues, Nixon will be in no position in his first year or two to give up federal revenue. His budget promises to be almost as unbalanced as those of his predecessor even if revenue comes in at-dhe current rate. ★ * * Nixon’s immediate legislative need will be for dramatic proposals dealing with the problem of crime. As much as any identifiable issue, crime elected him. He cannot afford vulnerability on this issue when he seeks relection in four years. Yet if the “crime problem were not hard, it would not exist. The new president will probably put great initial stress on reforming the structure o f government. NO-STRINGS GRANTS? Here he may see to curb the government’s size — always a Republican hope. He may seek also to fulfill a campaign pledge by funneling through the states — perhaps through no-strings-attached “block grants” to tiie states, about which Republicans been to sweep more and more authority toward Washington,” he said during the campaign. ★ ★ * “Too many of the decisions that would better have been made in Seattle or St. Louis have wound up on the president’s desk. I plan a streamlined federal system, with a return to the states, cities and communities o f> decision-making powers rightfully theirs.” Yet when all this is said, it remains to be said that nobody yet knows whether Nixon will speak frequently much of the|m0Ve to the right or left when money Washington now spends I he assumes the presidency, on social welfare programs. i Maybe Nixon himself does not “For years now, the trend has know. OPEN 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. DAILY/TIL CHRISTMAS ^KC’S Fine Christmas Diamonds At Savings! Look Over These Fabulous Diamond Buys on Jan. 20 His Startling Vow Washington «jpij - Far Lyndon Baines ' Johnson, .the onset of the new year means a farewell to power and a return from the Potomac to the Pedernales. After more than 30 years in the vortex 6/ politics In Washington and five years at the pinnacle in the White House, he is heading back to the red soil Texas country from which he came. * ★ ★ • When he turns over the reins of tiie presidency to Republican Richard. M. Nixon on Jan. 20, Johnson will have fulfilled the astonishing announcement he made last March 31. In a1 nationwide television address* he first revealed he had decided to limit the bombing of North Vietnam and commit the United States to exploratory peace talks with the Communists. Then the ever-un-predictable Texan reshaped the entire world picture with 20 words: RESHAPED PICTURE “I shall not seek, and I will not accent, ..the nomination of my party for another term as your president.” ■ yr * * In the hope of bringing national unity and furthering the search for peace he made his decision stick even though the Democratic party lost the White House in the November election. It was a remarkable decision from the standpoint both of the private man and of the public president. LOST SUPPORT In essence, it meant that four years after the greatest landslide presidential victory in history Johnson had lost such popular support that his choice was to bow out as an unpopular leader rather than Intensify American disunity. It meant that a man who had been a powerful and proud political leader had found he could best serve the American people by giving up that leadership. Prospector Files Moon Land Claim WINNEMUCCA, Nev. (AP) — A prospector has filed claim to 10,009 square miles on themoon to create a “new utopia" he calls*“moonshine valley.” O. C. (Charlie) Norris filed his claim Tuesday with Humboldt County Recorder J.L. Germain. The property surrounds1 whatever point man first sets foot on the lunar surface. “I can’t see where it would harm, anyone, so I recorded this one,” Germain said. “If the polls are accurate, Nixon’s was a loveless victory. But in winning he won a certain admiration that had eluded him before. He was the come - from - the - canvas fighter who had been so far down, in 1962, When he ran for governor and was rejected by the voters of his native California, that he moved to New York and won over his party by nursing its wounds after the Goldwater disaster of 1964. A CAUTIOUS APPROACH? It might be that in power at last, Nixon will approach his Uimon/L -Spedjftcujfo/t/ Diamond Solitaire with Matching in-70s Wedding Ring............................... *11/ Gant's While Gold Dlomond IfllOS Ring...................................... IVI SS........................................ 8000 Oval Diamond Solitaire with a -ynjoi Matching Wedding Ring..................... dLfr Marqulie Diamond Ring with -OOCM Matching Wedding Ring..................... vJOJ Emerald Solitaire with Matching , ~7(~\05 Wedding Ring.............................. | /SrV* 2 Diamond Solitaire with 4 Diamond $ 01 095 Matching Wedding Ring............. ....... O I A Diamond Solitaire with Matching r\r\ a aa Wedding Ring.............................. Diamond Solitaire with Matching At rnt Diamond Wedding Ring...................... A IO Diamond Solitaire with Matching r\ A Ann Diamond Wedding Ring..................... A UU Diamond Solitaire with Matching 1*7095 Wedding Ring............................... 1/7 Diamond Solitaire with Matching , Q 095 Wedding Ring............................... 107 J NO MONEY DOWN as Little as nf Weeklyl Surprise her with a new Diamond for Christmas Day ... imagine the thrill she'll get with an exquisite style in Diamond Solitaire, Marquise cut, Emerald Cut or in the Bridal sets. And WKC -has marked down the entire diamond ring inventory by 16 and in some cases even more. Come, See and Save This Christmas at WKC. iA/KC's lot ot Rear HR. in Downtown ive Ticket Stamped Coshier's Office. Bsrag 108 N. SAGINAW FE 3-71J 4 A HOW WILL YOU KNOW YOU’RE GETTING AN UNBEATABLE DEAL? Ptte SHOP AT CARPET CENTER ISST! CARPET YQUR HOME FOR THE HOUDAYSI You'll i carpet styles ot priest that we believe defy comparison onywherel But prove it to yourself. Shop around first. Thon com# to Carpot Contort Not only will you havo moro to choose from — but you'll find tho groatest values in our pHco-cutting history! ■ i Mott Stylos in 18-Foot Widths! Fowsr Seam*! A Heater Job! Sk Shop oil 31210. Hws" OPEN DAILY .9 to* SUNDAY 1H° 6 CLASSIC NYLOr HI-LO SFICIAU Thl. I. th. kind *f car* ..ting jrw'w dll .... 1.0- .4 nytan pil«. Chttot. tram many SHjCMUUjmrf tan olta. ChMM EmitiStt Mmtl.mln. nSST SMUTYI Mir FUIFFY PLUSH SFKIAll Th. .Mi. tar bWiwm. Th. Hah ttytal piutW- sjZzz&t ** FIRST eUUTYI 'SHOP TODAY! FOR THOUSANDS INSTALLATI9N FOR THE HOLIDAYS MMMHTEED! | CARVED |,NYLON 12 COLORS 473* 1 HEAVY | TEXTURE 16 Colors 459;tJ COMMERCIAL | TWEED Vory Spseial FLORAL 1 NYLON Many Patterns 586J SCROLL | POLYESTER First Quality 594» I “KODEL” | SHAG 41 Colors 793;j & NO MONET DOWN• TAKE UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAYI THIS IS ONLY A PARTIAL LIST! HUNDREDS OF UNADVERTISED BARGAINSI CARPET CENTER ROAD OV TKLIGRAPH SPECIAL! SHW-PROOF J™™ his Sq. MANY COLORS kIndS ° SPfc'Al fll°m»nt nrb„CO"i,ilnu?ut Jou.et.old .toln^vv °f i «*te iron _ r w»or» / A—22 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 ■»' All items on sole while quentltles last. Now. shop until midnight at Yankee: 9 A.M. until midnight weekdays; 10 A.M. until 9 P.M. Sundays Door and wall mirrors to reflect your home decor Decorative and useful, for your home or for gifts. Distortion free, Venetian style. Seamed edge mounting, and the clips are included to mount it easily on any door. 16” round wall mlrror...1.87 14x20" wall mlrror.......2.79 24.88 fireplace ensemble, save! Gleaming polished brass frame surrounds the black mesh 38x31 inch screen, with oval filigree bottom rail. In addition, there's a 1 handsome black pok^r, and a brush to complete the ensemble at $5 savings now! 7-pc. black/brass fireplace ensemble...29.88 Dramatic mirror curio cabinets Decorative wall accent that lets you display your figurines and cherished keepsakes la an effective manner. Style shown is from a complete collection, Including scalloped frames, tortlse-tone and maple frames, even clock or picture combinations. Priced to 29.88 at Yankee nowl 12 ounce size, to convenient for everyday use & Informal entertaining. It's a good, time to stock up at Yankee savings! 6/49m Your choice: 4 oz. whisky sour; 1 oz. cordial: 4 1/2 oz. cocktail; 7 oz. on-the-rocks; 5 1/2 oz. champagne; 10 oz. beer goblet or 10 1/2 oz. goblet; 4 oz. wine Heavy square-base tumblers In attractive pebbletone finish. Popular 12 ounce •or 16 ounce size, both at one low price now Come save at Yankeel For all your tidbits and Christmas candy. Attractive gold color pebbletone finish. Set includes 4 six inch bowls and gleaming brass-finish rack. It folds! 2-tler utility table New and deluxe, a 2-tler utility table that folds for storage! Use as TV or stereo table, extratoble for porties. Walnut finish top. Special purchase! HMntoitsIty lamp Swivel arm lets you direct light exactly where needed. Comes complete and reody to plug In, uses GE bulb for replacement. %........4--v. 19.88 adjustable pedestal stool Adjusts from 24" counter boight to 30" bar height. Revolving foam-cushion poof- Black frame with avocado, block oMangerlne, O Copyright Northgoto Advertising CP. 19M THE PONTIAC ffRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 A—28 Sal* begins Thursday, Dae. 19 at 9 A.Mj •nds Saturday. Dae. 21 at midnight. All items on tala while quantities last. Now. shop unfil midnight! Open 9 AM. until midnight weekdays; 10 A.M. until 9 P.M. Sundays! WARING 8-push-button blender In decorator colors Schick foetal free cosmetics Beauty salon with beautifying mist Cleanses, softens, purifies, stimulates your skin. 3 temperature set tings. #60 with $9 value of Coty cosmetics bonus! Warlng's model CC8 chops cole-slaw In 2 seconds; grates cheese in 15 spcondsl Has a speed for every recipe need. It gives'your seafood salads, exotic cocktails, chip dips a masterful flalrl Heat resistant 5-cup glass cfoverleaf con- ’ talner feeds food Into whirlpool action blades for efficient blending. In avocado, horvest, cinnamon, white at Yankee I DAZEY Rag# 8.97 automatic oloctrlc can oponor A touch of power pierce lever opens sardine tins, to . ham cansl Magnetic lid lifter; cord storage, table brace. 1 yr. guar. Rag# 11.97 can oponor knlf# sharpener combo Automatically open any size can with (tower pierce and looting cutter wheel. Sharpen knives on precise honing wheel. Hdndy Household Worksavers From SHETLAND YOUR CHOICI iper vac, with 2/3 hp triple mere guar. CV300 Selectro shaver Regular 33.97 quick even trims sideburns charge cordless shaver Selecto dial adjusts height of 3 thinner, sharper shaving heads to 4 shaving positions, plus trim position. #CV300. Copyright Northgat. Aetvortlilng Co. SUNBEAM 11.97 cordless toothbrush buy fe Save $4 at Yonkeel 1*00 gentle owerful strokes op and per minuta da 0 batter job hand brushing. Positive in stand. Wall mount. 11.88 dipper type electric shaver 097 7* F.aturet 11 degr.. angle scissor-llke shaving action and automatic comb action rollers that set up board and guide whiskers Into proper shaving position. Model 444-2 THB PONTIiffil>ttESS USDA MSPiCTED \ WfmHm zmmm rwnnn ^ 5 USU CHOICE I W«U Trimmed Short Cut mus79* TTT Grapefruit .“10 U.S. NO. 1—GENUINE | IDAHO 10-Lb. PotatoesBae PILUBURY CAKE Pink, All Col.rt ntfllHUTMC imatoes Fruit Cocktaili Potato Chips gMkii»-oilv«*: . ' m «Awt Olives Kosher Dills ' 4 Sweet Midget Piokles M Cranberry Sauce - 4 Campbell'.• 1 "t jf1 *, 'n Tomato Juice : Cocktail Juice jjfifi layonnaise 1-Lfc.. IJ-ez. Wt. Asparagus Spoors iBWIWUtal Lemon Juice BvttwfiaM'. ' Sweet Potatoes Pili.bury 1 Fleer ».Hy Crocks Pie Cruet Stick* -OaWrt , !*tlift* ||fM Angel Flake Coconut y«M ® x 4*; ' /Ipj Bla to. Foundation, who collaborated wan him on his most recent book,;tml than# teaspoon. Or If you do not have 6t MrrttdFridayMt&ito wiSq*jp»dw ; JL'ai* those, a teaspoon will do. Visit Our Wide Awake SLEEP SHOP And Sava The Belter Bedroom People on Telegraph Road house of bedrooms 1711S. Ttlsgraph Rd., Bloomfield, Between Miracle Mils and Orchard Lake Rd. STORE HOURSi MONDAY - SATURDAY 9 TO 9 • CALL 334*4593 ■ 4 9 sjgp ' S i ’. ... i ®fm 1 ^ f . By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am a 47-year-old eligible man who is very; much in-' tferested in- a beautiful 2d-year-dki model She has two children and her divorce tfqr which I atn paying) is now pending. ' 1 bought her a new car and have spent ever $2,boo on clothes for her and her children ttf the last six months. She says she will, marry me when her divorce is final, but in the meantime, I don’t see fitifeh of her! She sees me every Monday night, but on Tuesdays she sees an old boyfriend she says she is letting down easy. On Wednesdays she has to go out With her boss. On Thursday she goes out with the girls. On Friday she stays home and does her laundry, and the weekends she lets her husband come over (against the orders of his lawyer) because he misses the kids. My friends say I am being taken for a ride. Am I? LAKE FOREST DEAR LAKE: Not only are you being taken for a ride, you’ll be lucky if you aren’t killed in the traffic. is home a lot, and now I don’t want to be Mtxjjjp in the house with him. He begged me not to tell his son, but I feel so uncomfortable around the old man now I wish he would move. But what excuse can I give my husband? Should I tell him the truth? Papa Joe could afford to live alone if he wanted to, and he has other children he could live with. Please a d v i se me soon- FRIGHTENED DEAR FRIGHTENED: Tell Papa Joe that he has one week to tell his son that he is moving out, and if he doesn't, you will be forced to tell him that you no longer want his father living there. And, why. * * * CONFIDENTIAL TO "STILL LOOKING’’ IN THE HILLS OF BEVERLY: I agree, a man should be particular, but looking for a long time doesn’t necessarily insure the best choice. Many a butterfly flits over all the flowers, only to land on a weed. a a ★ For Abby's booklet, "How to Have A Lovely Wedding,’’ send $1.00 to Abby, C-0 The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, r.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Women; THE PONTIAC PRESS Thursday, DECEMBER 19, 19(18 B—1 . Los Angeles County Supervisor Ernest Debs, V f *rwir.pho*o left, poses pith Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Trumbo in Los Trumbo, holding newly-adopted Maria, 10 months AngelfS after court approval for adoption of their old, and- fythi, £1. Seated: Allen, 6; David, 4; 10th child. L.eft to right; stahdvng: Debs; Mr. Trttm- Stephen, Mffyotf, t'Jhe’s David’s twin); Toni, 8, bo, Holding Patrice, 2; Michael, 3; Mrs. Joann andjtkn,!/. .; ' 5 -■! ■' ’ f .M. »’£ ■ Californians Adopt Tenth Details of Rite 1Undecided' About FutureP/a^s for Famous Pair Are Still Secret LOR/UfGELES (AP) - "It's anything butquiet around our house," says Joann Tjptabo, but noisy or not she and her hwibanljpecil, Have just adopted their “Wa. decided when we were first married that we wanted 10 children.- It wasn’t physically possible, so We’ve adopted them. W« just wish we hadn’t to Wed Again FoHoyvjng Tp* Other UnsuccessfuI Tlies 1m SANTA BARBARA, Calif. d home with me, the spray brush became 1 work, she is canvas fit t she puts the on it on the easel. Outdoor Jogging Aids Many Ways If you love tee outdoors, Jog-ling is tee ideal wap to lose ims up lots of calories,'fir ns you all over (especially hips and thighs) and speeds your circulation, thereby Don’t be jnst .a beautician . .'be a . highly trained Hairstylist by th«? famous instructor LOPEZ. PABLO’S School of Beauty toe. 4823 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 3 Anniversaries Commemorated NEW YORK UR - It was a Alice Helmke, and Mrs. Anna triple anniversary at the Grote. Evangelical Lutheran Church ofi the Redeemer in New York* City’s Queens Village. The celebration marked the 45th anniversary of the founding of the church, the 30th anniversary of the ordination of the Rev. J. Edward Vesper, pastor, and his 30th yen; with the church in that post. | Helping to cut tee cake were three founders‘of the church, Mrs. Angelina LaPasta, Mrs. When buying a man’s suit, always look for buttonholes that have closely - stitched, firm White stylized flowers are scattered on leaf green cotton for a suit from Arthur Doucette’s Resort 1968-69 collection for Paul Pomes. Tucked into the navy linen weskit is a silk polka dot scarf of navy and white. CANOE Now aboard...! full cargo of Canoe. Breezy refreshen anytime. Cologne—$5, $8.50, $14, $24 Deodorant-$2 Soap—$2, $3.75 Tafo-$2.50 8 GREAT STORES Serving Craaitr Omklmmd Cmnnty WUh Stmrm Ini NNTIAO »WATERFORD go-anywhera lootwear in the style of today... designed to load a variety of lives. In forward-stepping colon meticulously antiqued with deep, rich wior tones. Wits Capon an nady for tea ictus nowl Jaunty footwea WIDTHS B-C-D 110" SIZES 12% »o 4 THIS STYLE AVAILABLE IN WOMEN’S $1 5" SIZES S TO 10. AA to C. W* Honor Security Charge Michigan Bankard STORE HOURS 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday From the Workshop of Pearce . . fpG^iAetttjDuA The essence of Christmas is reflected in the traditional giving of Poinsettias. This year we have several very special new, red, a twin new varieties of pink and white. Each one bets been grown under controlled conditions in our greenhouses for lasting quality. $50010 $1500 EXECUTIVE PLANTER An excellent selection for the Bossl A brushed brass planter by Planter, Inc. filled with live greens and sparked with imitation Holly and red Christmas babbles. Perfect for his desk or bookr $10°9 flowers may be PRESTIGE CENTERPIECE Tiffin crystal flower flogter centerpiece bowl. Artfully arranged red carnations and beautiful snowdrift pompoms carry out the Christmas colors. A crystal fawn is the center of attention. Twisted tapers light up this yuletide beauty. An outstanding value. $2500 Flower orders delivered anywhere in the world thru our special service. Phone FE 2-0127 . FLORAL COMPANY 559 Orchard Lake Ave. \ Two Deliveries Daily, to Detroit Birmingham and Intermediate Points! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 First, Use Lemony Lime 'Lemons and limes can be we Jnost welcome of holiday guests* mteir brightness and warmth fwmbine easily with traditional JChtistmas greenery. Festive jdecoratlons couldn’t be easier to •nake — and the variations are virtually endless. Shop for basic styrofoam the shapes at STEP UP TO AN AMERICAN AIRLINES STEWARDESS CAREER Suddenly your world becomes anywhere between the Atlantic and the Pacific... Canada and Mexico.. v traveling, meeting Interesting people. Every day Is different You'll fly only about 77 hours a month. Between flights thera's new-found leisure time to expand your personal interests. The world is yours to discover with special off-hour* and free vacation per month with Periodic increases up to $724 per month, plus generous expense allowance. But most Important is the challenge, responsibility and opportunity to grow as an Individual In a professional career. If you qualify, arrange now for a private interview in your area. American Airlines your hobby or shop. Rings, pryaraids pedestals <01 lend themselves to lemon and lime magic. ik ;w : Collect as many of pretty plastic squeeze lemons and Jimes as you cm — the ones that contain lemon and lime juices for table use when you buy them. . dr . ★. ★ Thin wire and an assortment of artificial greens — like lemon leaves and tatafood — complete your materials, except for a few sprigs of artificial mistletoe and some miniature pine cones. ; 1 # »1| ★ , ' Twist the wtr#, around the necks o! the plastic Lemons and limes, leaving enough to anchor the fruit securely when you trick them into toe Styrofoam base. craft container -—I— can be transformed into the base of a tree. Or leftover gold quay paint can turn your whole arrangement into an elegant decoration for more formal settings. ★ dr ★ Unusually attractive 3-D Christmas tree ornaments result from halving lemons or limes and inserting a regular ornament holder through the “squirt hole.” dr ‘ ★ dr Twist $ bit of velvet ribbon so it covers the cap threads, Charming miniature scenes made from tiny birds, flowers, snowmen or angels can be held in place with florist’s day. Let lemon and lime decorations help you set your Christmas mood this year. pi in the empty spaces with greenery, adding mistletoe and pine cones for accent Odds and ends can be put to good use. An empty whipped topping Need About Half Anti-Freeze in Engine Coolant Car engines run best when warm, yet need a cooling system because gasoline combustion engines produce tremendous heat. Only about % of the fuel’s heat energy utilized. ★ * * Half the waste heat escapes through the exhaust, the other through the cooling BJ’s tern. The correct concentration of antifreeze-coolant is therefore vital to the best operation of toe car’s cooling system. Most codling systems give the best performance with 33 to 65 per cent of antifreeze in the coolant; 50 per cent gives hear maximum protection for both winter and summer. Two Couples Announce Wedding Plans An April 18 wedding is planned by Vickie Alma Schreiber and Terry William Atwell. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs. Charles Schreiber of East Columbia Street and the late Mr. Schreiber. Her fiance is the son of the Alvin Atwells of Moore Street. April 12 vows are planned b|PJlobbie Kay Cummings and Thomas R. Springett. Parents of the betrothed couple are Mr. and Mrs. Gordon E. Cummings of West Avon Circle and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence G. Springett of Harding Road, both of Avon Totimship. The long sleeved worsted wool shift has a Spanish accent. It was put there by Preston Smith, designing for Pab, Ltd. and you’ll love the way he freely translates the charm of a stylized Mosaic print with its un-traditional overtones of hounds-tooth checks. The narrow leather belt fastens above the natural waistline to give new shaping to the shift. Nothing left unsaid here — except Ole! take an inside look! Vantage HAS NOTHING TO HIDE Why buy a pin-lever watch when y6u ran pet a folly jeweled watch by Vantage at the same low price? Vantage la aa trouble-free as a watch can be. Take an Inside look and you’ll take Vantage. 17 JEWELS $1 A 95 aelacuon ladles. I USE YOUR MICHIGAN BANKARD OR SECURITY CHARGE Louz-Mo’i/ Jmdm BLOOMFIELDMIRACLE MILE Great annual SALE of Every After 5 HOLIDAY GLAMOR r DRESS Today! Our Entire Stock: Di*asticallv Reduced % Regularly 816 to 846 SIZES 5 to 20 FOR JUNIORS • JR. PETITES • MISSES • velvets • CREPES A • SEQUINS A • BROCADES • A GALAXY OF COLORS _ - W' 27 CHEAT STOKES IN DETROIT PONTIAC • FEINT • SAGINAW • GRAND RAPIDS • OHIO • ILLINOIS THE PONTIAC MALL Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Ids., NURACLE MIL South Telegraph at Sqeere lake ltd*., OAKLAND MALL Wert 14 Mile ltd. at 1-75 I B-*4 THE POXfrIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Schooldf Nursing Coeducational After 77 Years ST. PAUL, Minn. - Withj the enrollment of two men, the; Arthur B. Ancker Memorial school of Nursing has gone' coeducational for the first time In its 77-year history. | ★ ★ ★ Officials of the school, at St. Paul-Ramsey Hospital, hope, that the entrance as freshman student nurses of Myron Moen and Richard Boyd will start a trend. “We would like to havej more young men enroll," saidj Mrs. Ruth C. Smith, associate; director of nursing education. * ★ * So far, the only problem of the two males in a class with 86 women, plus an all-feminine corps of upper classmen, has been uniforms. They are wear-j ing their own clothes until the arrival of new outfits — white! pants and blue-and-white-striped overblouses. And they hope] they’ll get only pins and not caps pt the capping exercises at! the end of. the year. DIANNE E. BAILEY ACCUTRON Checked FREE with our special timing equipment Lou.-Mo'o vJ euiefie/ut Bloomfield Miraolo Milt Polly's Pointers Renovate Old Ruler ' DEAR POLLY — To refinish household objects that are an engraved or indented type nonabsorbent. — MARION ruler so you can again read the| DEAR POLLY — Does numbers and see the lines, just anyone have the directions for paint the entire ruler and then weaving with a spool that has quickly wipe off the paint. .|six nails on top? One was given The excess paint will stay in I to my granddaughter and we the inside parts. Use a con- cannot figure out how to use it, There is a hole through the spool. We would appreciate any ideas on how to use this MRS. M. R. Gala for Girls Who Plan to Enter Wellesley Area girls, interested in attending Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass., will be en tertained at a “Coke” party Monday from 2 to 4 p m. in the home of Mrs. Raymond Husband of Birmingham. ★ a * Undergraduates home for the Christmas vacation will also attend along with three girls already accepted as freshmen for next yfar on the college’: early decision plan. They are: Susan Pryor and Jane Strauss of Groves High School and Melanie Tobin of Seaholm High School. ★ * ★ Mrs. James M. Edgar of Birmingham is cochairman with Mrs. Husband of Acquaintanceship. for the Birmingham Wellesley Club. She will serve as cohostess at the party. Any girl not already contacted may attend by calling Mrs. Edgar. trasting color and you will have a like-new ruler and no more guesswork. This method can be used on flower pots or any other etaere-Lumbar Balts • Maternity Garments •Surgloal Nose • Ankle Wrist and Knaa Braces a SaoreNiae Balts • Cervical Collars and Oerviaal Traction ate. "FITTED ACCORDING TO TOUR 00CT0RS ORDERS”. FEMALE FITTEBS, HOMI FITTINO AVAILABLE. CALL FOR AF-POIKTMEKT. Also a oemplete eonvalesoent aids department featuringi Wheel Chain-Hospital Beds-Crutches-Canes-Over- bad Tables - Walkers - Fatiant Lifts Shower Ohalrs-ate. FOR RENT OR SALE mp 674-0 Prescriptions FREE DELIVERY 4390 Dixit Hwy. Drayton Plains 674-0466 or 674-4455 DEAR POLLY - I found it hard to get my two young children, to brush their teeth and was discussing this with a friend, who had the same trouble. She found" the following solution: She made a chart, marking off two spaces for each day for one month. Every time a child brushes, he puts a star in the space. Those having the most stars at the end of the month win a small prize. Tooth brushing is no longer a-dreaded chore at our house but a fun game. — DARLENE The Ultimate Convenience The new range has its own hot water tap. The manufacturer says this provides instant hot water needed to make today’s convenience foods worthy of their name. At the touch of a finger on the pushbutton dispenser, 1S 5 degree water is released. * * * Pressing the lip of a cup or pan against the trigger below the tap also starts the hot water flow, allowing one-hand operation. A company spokesman said many of today’s convenience foods, which represent about 70 per cent of all purchased groceries, require hot water to start or finish the cooking. To remove gum from shoes or clothing, put the article in a plastic bag and place in the deep freeze. After the gum is frozen, it may easily be scarped off. LOOKING for CARPET? THEN BE SURE TO VISIT (Sltnlmt’if lillagf (Earpet There's a Good Reason!■ 139 Romeo Rd. Tel. 661-4612-3 In Roch.it.r Must iso date tofa& A beautiful lamp is often just the accent piece needed to complete your room’s decor. This classic Stiffel lamp in distressed old brass with green parchment shade is a handsome complement for the Early English Tudor chair, Spanish table and contemporary . sofa. Line available locally. Cotton Tote Bags Make Welcome Gifts Every woman needs a little something to carry a lot of things in,, and a roomy cotton! tote bag is the answer. | Make one for yourself to find! out how easy it is, and then! stitch up several for gifts or bazaar items, suggests the National Cotton Council. * ★ * All it takes is a yard-length of any bright, colorful cotton fabric; some cotton cording for a drawstring; and bits of fringe, trimming. Cut an oblong 15 inches wide and 36 inches long for the bag. Fold the fabric in half, right sides together, and seam on each side. To give the bag a squared-off base, make an verted tuck at the bottom. With the bag inside out, fold the bbt-tom up one inch and stitch in place for the tuck. CASING To make a casing for the drawstring, turn the open end of ths bag under about two inches and hem. Then make another row of stitching an inch higher to slip the drawstring cord through. ★ * ★ There are dozens of ways to decorate the cotton carry-all bag. For example, you can add simple flower design to bright yellow cotton duck bag by appliquing on red petals green leaves cut from fabric scraps. Sew in a big white button for the flower center. Or applique the bag with a design appropriate to its use Mark a shoe tote, for instance with a shoe applique cut from contrasting cloth. Appliques are easy to add with a zigzag machine stitch. On printed cotton totes, keep trims simple. Circle the bag with a. single row of thick cotton rick-rack. Choose washable cotton trirhs so the bag can be popped in MM washer with other houseMf cottons to keep it lodktag fQn and bright. Washable Rugs Save Cleaning Is Jimmy’s tracked-in dirt and slush creating havoc with your floors and carpets? Relief is at hand! You can’t change kids, or the weather, but you can protect your floors with door-way-placed cotton throw, rugs. h W. ★ Since they must withstand frequent laundering, the American Institute of Laundering suggests that you look for the “washable" designation on hang tags. LANE BFQfANT BE ALL HOURS PRETTY in our embroidery-trimmed quilt of light weight nylon tricot with Kodel polyester fill and acetate lining. Snap it on, early or late, in sapphire, coral or pinkl *14 Your Special Sizes 38 to 52 Order by mall ar phone, 602-7500. Add 33c for delivery plus 10c for C.O.D.'s and 4% fax. The Pontiac Mall From $49.88 Don’t panic. You can still pick up one of Bernard"t exclusive falls in any one of the popular shades. And remember, our Gift Certificates make peat gifl-tivint. 100% Human Hair. Lifetime Guarantee. tAHiBJuL WIG SALON fk 7 LOCATIONS IN GREATER DETROIT 20350 Wait 7 Mila 161 Watt 9 Mila WaaHtnd Shopping Canter Urania Mall Macomb Mali Oakland Mall Balia Vitta Mall SECURITY AND MICHIGAN BANKARD ACCEPTED As Long bb You Aro Doing to Buy a Now Dinette for tho Holidays... Why Not Buy One From Pontiac's Only Dinette Store? You May Sava $40 or More! For a Happy Holiday... *1199S •HI Cam* I. and I 1672 S, Telegraph Call 334-2124 NourstltM (HI Dally Sunday til I ARE YOU TIRED OF SKYROCKETING PRICES? LET US HELP YOU L-E-V-E-L OFF CALL FE 5-9409 By Appointment Only SKILLED ARTISTS Prices: SHAMPOO and STYLE $3.00 Longer Hair Extra PERMANENTS $1250 cream $15ftft «p for on Including Styling and Shaping Rosie Murray Will Assist You With Your Appointments MURRAY SISTERS’ BEAUTY STUDIO 57 West Huron Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 B—5 CERTIFICATE BON GARDNER' HOLIDAY GLAMOR Young, Slender Dresses to make the holidays glow. See our eye - catching collection to flatter and beautify your parties. Sketched: Worsted rayon and silk in Aqua or Seafoam Green, with matching motifs. Size 14Vfc*22Vh. “Aztec” Accessories Exotic design of GENUINE COBRA inlay enhanced with gold-marking on BUFFALQ CALF. Fashion colors. , Others, sizes 1216-2416 in luscious, glittering pastels in knits, brocades and lurex lace. from *30 GIFT CERTIFICATE The Four Piece PANT SUIT terchangeablesl Tal-jlN^red jackets + Ej sleek pants + tur-i tleneck sweaters + j slim skills that go ' anywhere 'In fashion and warmth. In Camel, Gold, Brown, Navy or Kelly. Sizes 9-13 and 8-16. from *48 GIVE HER COLORFUL LUGGAGE for her travels or overnight visits. Six nested sizes with zipper closure, lock and key, outside zippered pouch and sturdy handles. •5 •« *7 WARM GIFTS SWEATERS VESTS Orion Acrylic Knit with wooden buttons and detachable belt. S-M-L Gold, Vanilla or Navy. Fisherman Knit with wooden buttons. 100% Wool Long Pullover. Natural only. Sizes 34-40. *io SHE NEVER HAS ENOUGH PANTY HOSE SPECIAL PURCHASE Specially priced for Chriilmai ul Marvelous for gift giving at this low price. Nylon Mesh I in neutral shades, a Short, Med., A Med. Tall V\ and Tall. MR. ANT) MRS. JOHN C. HODGE jUSfhy Grow Old ? Jf *SoS£fiW//V£ ZokHUHA/ During an iifteresting talk with Claire Bohsi,:she mentioned some helpful ideas. Miss Boasi has a B.S. in Home Economics from the University, of Colorado and an M.S. in herits. Nutrition from Hunter College. The important positions she has jf. C. Hodges to Celebrate An open house in their home on Heath Road, Independence Township, will celebrate the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hodge, who Were wed Dec. 21, 1918 Harrisburg, 111. Resident^ of this area since 1928, the Hodges have four children; Mrs. Raymond (Stella) Linson of Shoman Road; Charles of West Strathmore Street; John C. Jr. of Airport Road, and Lloyd E. of Monroe. There are 25 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Hours for the open house are I to 5 p.m. Saturday. Sellers' Wife Gets Divorce LONDON (AP) — Swedish actress Britt Ekland granted an uncontested divorce from British comedian Peter Sellers Wednesday on grounds of cruelty. Sellers, 43, was not in court As far as the calorie count Is! for the 35-mlnute hearing. Miss concerned, you can remove Ekland,. 25, came from your portion before seasoning! Stockholm to attend the food for the family. Use' SeUer8’ tewyer 881(1 the actor regretted the marriage -hgd * A broken down “and as far asit t „, “■- b»ue”» iarrsato * held are varied and impressive, many folks are poorly nourished * * She is enthusiastic about Hie because they are so busy theyl The curvaceous blonde mar-role of fine nutrition in health;do not take time to eat and also in appearance. Claire Boast believes dieters are often guilty of poor nourishment and that the best way to diet is to cut down on quantity rather than variety., I have already reported she 'feels vitamins C and A and calcium and iron are especially Important to the beauty of the skin and hair, as veil as to general well being. She urges you not.to stint on fruit and the green and yellow vegetables, i * * ★ * Many women eat raw vegetables, some because they think , they are more healthful and others because they want to avoid the calories in the! seasoning that goes along with| cooked vegetables. Raw vegetables are often used for in-between meal snacks, too. It is true that cooked vegetables lose some of their! nutrients in the water. Claire Boasi says, “If women get tired of crunching on raw vegetables,' the best solution is to cook them! in a tightly covered, heavy1 aluminum pan which requires1 no water.’’ Today you can get a, skillet which fries without! sticking and without oil. pro- ried Sailers in February, 1964, perly. It is also a welt known J after he divorced his first wife, fact that those who live alone j Miss Ekland was given custody are often deficient in good of their 4-year-old daughter, nutrition because „lt doesn’t Victoria, but the court ordered seem worthwhile to prepare that Sellers be given liberal meals just for themselves. | access to the ^hiiH it* o*: Here* th# gift that pays dividend* ... Show haw much you really care and get the picture* you'd like of ion*, daughter*, niece*, nephew* or grandchildren. Coll today . . . we'll handle all the detail*. GROUP PHOTOS EXTRA! **%*■*•*•»*■ All-Color WEDDING PHOTOS Our Spoclalty! C. R. HASKILL STUDIO 1 University Drive *18#* FE 4-0553 REMINGTON 500 SELEKTRONIC* CORD/CORDLESS SHAVER NEW 78% SHARPER BLADES Clover (having comfort wMi or > without e cord e dial adjuated haada e in deluxe gift caaa. ’ j/A REMINGTON' Sunday IN Kviry Ckrlotmao SHAVER WITH NEW PIZAAZ PACK Only (haver with guard comb* for lag* and underarm* e ON/OFF switch e halo light e she'll adora it. 24 N. Saginaw Pontiac State Bank Bldg. DOWflTOyVN PONTIAC A. "Continental" FRENCH PIMM..........$8.00 "Tri-Partita" FRINCH PURSE ....... 8.00 B. REGISTRAR ■Illfold ................ 8.00 C. "Continental" CLUTCH............... 7.80 D. KEY OARDE.......................... 3.80 Eyaglan Cato m THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Abundance of Cookbooks Out to-Suit All Tastes ‘ By JANET ODELL For anyone who likes to cook, there is no better gift than a new cookbook. If you’re a real cookbook addict, you’ll read them even when you aren’t cooking. New cookbooks come to my desk all the time. Obviously, some are superior; others don’t rate much beyond that first per-usual. But I want to give you a rundown on the volumes I’ve received in the past several months. All are available at area bookshops. a copy, plus 20 cents handling charges. The latest edition costs $5.95. But in it are 19 chapters of recipes, pictures and food tips. More foreign dishes; recipes using convenience foods and many old favorites, as well as hundreds of new ones—all thoroughly tested —make this new edition exciting. Annemarie's Personal Cookbook “Annemarie’s Personal Cook-* *+ * I book” by Annemarie Huste was Better Homes and Gardens!the center of controversy before keeps putting out specialized jit was even written. Annemarie, cookbooks. The two in front of me are “Eat and Stay Slim” and “Jiffy Cooking.” While they’re not hot off the press, they do have appeal for many homemakers. BH&G Cookbook But the big news from Meredith Publishing Company is the publication of the seventh edition of the famous Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook. Thirteen million copies of this book have been sold since the first edition was offered in 1930 for 80 cents 24, is the chef whom Jackie Kennedy Onassis fired last spring. The young German girl has an amazing feeling for food. She’s been cooking since the age of nine and has been chef for a number of celebrities. Her recipes are practical, not too expensive, and written in ar informal manner. Of special in terest are her ideas on prepar ing food for children. Two flour milling companies— General Mills (Betty Crocker) Pie and Pastry '* Cookbook Betty Crocker’s “Pie and Pastry Cookbook” is a goldmine of recipes for the pie lover. Anyone who can read and follow directions should have no trouble becoming a pie expert if she uses this book. From cheese straws for the cocktail party to the fanciest spectacular, the recipes and illustrations are designed to tempt the appetite. Bake-Off Desserts Pillsbury has culled recipes from 18 years of Bake-Offs and filled the “Bake-Off Dessert Cookbook” with 202 of them The recipes make extensive use of convenience foods and few of thorn are run-of-the-mill. This is a book for someone who dotes on the unusual. Soul Food Cookery “Soul Food Cookery” is a slim spiral bound volume I got at the Food Editors Conference. The author, Inez Yeargan Kaiser, to offer practical suggestions about menus, decorations and other details of parties. She gives numerous personal experiences. Cooking for One In contrast is Elinor Parker’s 4th revised edition of “Cooking for One” (Thomas Y. Crowell, New York, $4-95). * ★ * The solitary eater is at a disadvantage in our society. Everything in the grocery store seems geared to the medium or large family. It is the same with most and Pillsbury—have cookbooks *a® there **lk a*)0ut her out in time for Christmas. book. 1 Mrs. Kaiser’s definition of soul cookery does not jibe exactly with what others may think She says that soul food is any food that is well-seasoned and savory and that is difficult to eat without delight, enjoyment and satisfaction. “When you finish a meal of soul food, it is almost impossible not to have a feeling of fullness and well being.” Because the recipes came from people who had to make do with little, the Ingredients are staples. Nearly every meal Included some starchy foods. This book may be ordered from Inez Kaiser & Associates 1108 Citv National Bank Build ing. Kansas Citv, Mo. 64106 Cost is $3.25, plus 35 cents handling charge. All About Parties Ex-Detroiter, Edith Gilbert, has written an interesting and informative book on entertaining, “All About Parties” (Hearthslde Press, New York, $6.95). This might make a welcome gift for a young hostess. Believing that lots of money, a large house or servants are not necessary for successful entertaining, the author proceeds cookbooks which assume one is Consulting editors, Michael Field always serving six. If this is your problem, Miss Parker’s book will . help you. You can get out of the rut of a chop and baked potato every night since her book includes menu suggestions and even appetizing things to do with leftovers. American Cooking For dual appeal to eye and palate, you’ll want “American Cooking,” one of the Time-Life books on Foods of the World. The color photography is superb. and James Beard, are'well known food authorities. I This is a book you leave in the living room. With it comes a small recipe booklet for use in, the kitchen. The latter contains 50 recipes in addition to the 74 in the various chapters. , I Sucaryl Cookbook., j The latest book to arrive is Sara Hervey Watts’ “The Sucaryl Cookbook of Sugar-Free Recipes” (Random House, New York, $5.95). The title speaks for the contents. Shampoo ^ Set *4 By Top Stylists 2 WEEKS ONLY WIGLETS *35 Lighter ahuilt-a $2 more J!a U ferine s 1062 Went Huron J4uron .Stred l*hone ras the night before Christmas, Irresistibly comfortable... (recuna-rocker)* by LA-Z-BOY* ^li*7 torn the piMt of HouseBeautiful magazine 144 OAKLAND Efca a busy Santa (ant rata the relaxing comfort of t La-Z-Bof Redlna-Rocker. Ill anooth rocking leu him dote off and, when he amnia to atretch out to nap, he can raiie the selective footrest lever and recline to any comfort position, even to full bed. The Redina-Rocfcer la “The Magical AIMn-One Chair” ... the perfect Chriitmat gift for Mother or Dad. See as today for your Christmaa gift selection. FURNITURE Convenient Terms—90 Days Same as Cash OPEN EVENINGS ’TIL CHRISTMAS—CAREFUL, FREE DELIVERY Free Parking Lot, Just Around the Corner Along dark Street Most Popular Gift THE SHIRT BLOUSE The tie shirt of acetate crepe with french cuffs in white and colors. Shaped shirt of crepe or satin with French cuffs, pearl links. White and colors. Sizes 30 to 38. Crepe *10 Satin *12 This Christmas THINK SWEATER VESTS Sweater Vests are getting a belted treatment this season . . . it's the now look for the girl on your list. Soft wool in natural only. S. M. L. •1*2' Most Appreciated Gift! Zip-Lined Orion SUEDE JACKET If she's the town ond country type . y . give her a suede jacket with cozy zip-out lining. Chocolate Brown or Taupe. Sizes 10 to 16. *45 Hint From Santa ... PANTS SUIT A timely gift for the girl with bold spirit. The elongated jacket over matching pants in fine wool textures. Camel or her favorite color. Use Your Personal Charge, Security Charge, Michigan Bonkard, Midwest Open Each Night til 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 B—7 kggp *o 4 *jj|[ g wW PAY THE FULL PRICE ON YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS! SAVE;:50% AND MORE! CHOOSE YOUR MEW CHRISTMAS WATCH from These Names SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! LADIES' BENRUS 2 DIAMONDS, Reg- 071.50 ■§* LADIES' GRUEN t Reg.9$9.50.... « LADIES' ELGIN Reg. $39.50...; AM LADIES'GRUtNS Reg. 939.95.... *1 LADIES' ELGIN Rtg.971.S0........ ’« LADIES' LONGINES /rom 1 LADIES'ELGIN ^ Reg.$S9.S0........ LADIES'WITTNAUER /rom *35 GENTS' GRUEN Calendar, Reg. $59.SO •* GENTS'BULOVAS /rom *35” GENTS'ELGIN Reg.t39.9S.... GENTS'LONGINES /rom *11 GENTS' WITTENAUER *3575 diamonds fmStfSWfeJji Reg-; Reg- Reg- Reg- Reg- Reg- Reg *225 *275 *325 .asflsr from CLOCK RADIO • 5 Tubas Model C147D—Bellwtme # Wake Up to Music I • Wako Ud to Alarm GENERAL EliCIHIC Teflon Coated BlifFETSWU-ET Wake up to mw«iw Wako Up to Alorm Lighted Dial ONLY $1988' olid mi a Immeft'W* # Big Fam»W only 14 really *s REMINGTON Lightweight PORTABLE TYPEWRITER N CHECK OUR LOW PRICE! 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CORNER PIKE ST. $KO*s 1-------------- - mam......aaMMmamama SAVINGS ON FINER RINGS Finest Selection— Many Smart Styles SOLID GOLD GIFT RINGS Ladies' BIRTHSTONE Take Your Vi OFF Choice at a Sensational REG. Low Frlco PRICE MEN’S FRATERNAC and BIRTHSTONES 1/2 OFF REG. PRICE DELUXE 43 PORTABLE v MIXER m, MAKES A GREAT SIFT, TOO! Poworful 3«n«l "“tor for hiividt of bitton and Hpto»t of 1 -B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1909 o/s Dependent on Dollars KSKOK, Thailand (AP) — | down the backs of Investors, Judj ]ike the Klondike of old, I economists and government of-Thalland depends on gold, ficials here. American GI gold, for its eco-| So far the shivers have been nomic health. The prospects for! due mostly to uncertainty over peace at Paris send shivers | American policy after the Viet- nam war ends. If peace in Vietnam is a prelude to^an American trBhdrawal from the Asian mainland, the Thais think they would be in deep economic trou ble. Santa and the tl IIICRECE BEALE Synopsis: Ding Dong, goes toi “I won’t let her," shouted the Purple Witch but he cannot Ding Dong. He brushed past the see her. She is dying for lack of\ astonished doctor and burst into something to read. the Purple Witch’s room. CHAPTER 15 Hippie Poems All the time the Purple Witch was.dying Ding Dong stood outside her door hoping that somewhere a book would be found that would make her well so that he could ask for the purple thread. The Purple Witch Doctor came out of the bedroom looking very solemn Indeed. ★ * * "She Is eating her bookmark," he announced. “Soon all will be over.” "The bookmark!’’ cried Dong Dong aghast. “But — that’s the purple thread!" MOST VALUED POSSESSION She was sitting by the window chewjng on the purple thread. She looked sadly up at Ding Dong but she couldn’t really see him because she didn’t have on even one of her five pairs of glasses. ‘IT IS SO SAD* She thought he was the Witch Doctor and she murmured sorrowfully, “Oh, doctor. It is so sad. If I had just one new thing to read I would recover for I’d be refreshed enough to go through my whole library ™ .Duna'e « V*™ again?" hands and WggI to read "I have something you’ve never read!” cried Ding Dong, digging frantically into his paper bag. "Listen!” He read one "Yes. It is her most valued of the poems given him by the possession because it reminds her of all she’s read.” "But she can’t eat ltl" "She doesn’t want to leave It behind. When she has finished It, she will die." hippies of Hippieville. * * ★ “Up goes the elevator “Down goes the alligator.” Hie Purple Witch stopped nibbling on the purple thread. “Fingers Freeze “Parakeets sneeze, Ding Dong. GETS OUT OF CHAIR The Purple Witch got out of her chair and cocked her head, listening. “Fishes swim “To keep in trim,” went on Ding Dong. The Purple Witch put on all her five pairs of glasses. “What is this? What are you reading? “Poems by hippies. There are lots of them." SNATCHES POEMS Hie Purple Witch snatched the bundle of poems from his Her "These are poems by hippies," said Ding Dong. eyes grew bright and her cheeks rosy. “Something new at last!' she breathed. “What originality What depth of feeling! How they go to Jthe heart of the matter! How do they do it?" *‘I bet you could do It, too,” said Ding Dong hopefully. WWW “If only I could! How refreshed I would be!” thought and thought and finally she said slowly. “When the north wind blows "I like—I like—I like "To wiggle my toes!” “There! exclaimed Ding Dong. “You are a hippie poet." ‘WELL AGAIN’ “My dear boy," said the Purple Witch joyfully, “I am well again. How can I ever repay you?" Ding Dong pointed to the purple thread still dangling from her fingers. Only an inch or so had been eaten. “Will you give me that?” * * w “My bookmark! I cannot read without itt” she protested Then she said, “But I won’t need It anymore. From now on I shall write hippie poems and leave it to others to. read." Smiling shyly, she gave the thread to Ding Dong. Tomorrow.- Popcorn Popper American spending for construction and raids and GI spending, including that from men on rest ahd recreation leave from Vietnam, during one tw£year period, amounted to $1 billion, half the government’ budget Thailand has a worsening trade deficit and, with its agriculture-based economy, the balance of payments picture, without the support of American military spending, would be serious. IMPORTS AHEAD As it is, Hiailand has been able to build its hard currency reserves with U.S. military spending even though its imports race ahead of exports by one third. The trade deficit last year was $400 million. A large part of the deficit represents importing of factory equipment and machinery as Thailand works to end its dependence rice and corn. Parts of Bangkok resemble a latter-day gold rush town. * ★ ★ On the strip where several score bars and hotels cater to American servicemen, a flood of American dollars pours into the economy. Unfortunately, Thai economists say, the money isn’t as useful as it might seem. Although taxes, especially on liquor, are high, much of the money is turned by bar girls into luxury items. Hotel owners,' who to feel that no vein of gold runs forever, build with the idea of recapturing their entire investment within three' to six years. ♦ ★ ★ American retrenchment could make the gaudy strip a wasteland, but the real blow would be felt elsewhere. Some 150,000 Thais work for the American military and firms directly re-lated to the U.S. military presence here. The Thai division in Vietnam is supported by the United States, which means American dollars for several thousand families. ★ ★ * American spending has/Creat-ed inflationary pressures: Withdrawal would probably touch off almost instant recession, economists say, not because the economic climate would deteriorate that fast but because spe culators and businessmen could be expected to run for cover until the economy righted itself at some lower level. Sporting Goods Gifts! OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN., 11-8 THURS., FRI. SAT., SUN.. Ideal Recreation Gift For The Entire Family 71"x36" FLOOR POOL TABLE Our Reg. 79.1 4488 • Full Stt of IMt” Balls • Purs Bum Rubber Cushions o Walnut Finish Wood Oablnot Floor model pool table comes with 2 48” cues; full set of balls; triangle; aide-ball return; bridge; heavy duty paneled pedestal legs, framed In “brite aluminum” with adjustable levelers. mi nSHM REELS 646 Our Meg. 7.17—3 Days • All metal. Push button opera-S a. 4 to 1 searing. I lb*, line. ... . concept. Polyethylene. With- stands Greeting temperatures. Guide brakea. Two fitting*. The length Is SW’. Steering gripe of vinyl. 11.N Snow Kart The length is 43* 3.5X Glasses tar Theatre or Sports 1.33 Our Meg. 1.47-3 Days UX coated lens. Mewing riMMg action it cany! -LENWOOD PLAZA . North Perry at Glenwood || GLENWOOD PLAZA North Perry at Glenwood 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER IS), 1968 B—9 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN. 11JL THURS., FRI., Sat. pginpg IN PERSON Merry Santa Discount Days At Kmart GLENWOOD PLAZA Th* Polaroid Camera girl will be here to demonstrate the wonderful line of fully ovtomcitfc color pack POLAROID CAMERAS . . . Come inf see how simple you can enjoy:the most fun in photography... color pictures in a minute ... black and white in soconds. Your picture taken free. • FRIDAY, DECEMDQI 20, 1960-3:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1968-11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. POLAROID 210 COLOR PACK CAMERA t/pfo/ue)fourtfom For the Holiday With Fine Regular 39.88 Features image sizer focusing, sharp duplex lens, electric eye exposure control and lightweight body. Color pictures in 60 seconds. Black and white in 10 seconds. Charge It! POLAROID 220 COLOR PACK CAMERA Our Regular 63.88 Value _ _ _ Features double-window range MC AM Jj finder focusing, duplet lens and electric eye. Adapts to a number of Polaroid accessories. Color print in 1 minute, black and white in 10 seconds. NEW LOW MSGOUNT PRICES ON FINE QUALITY PANELING W 1 4'x8' 1 BEECHNUT 2.98 3.66 1 BUTTERNUT 2.98 3.66 1 Y0RKT0WN WALNUT 4.96 | EMERALD 4.96 1 SANDSTONE 4.44 4.96 i VINYL WALNUT 4.98 5.61 | CINNAMON BIRCH 5.68 6.35 | NATURAL BIRCH 5.68 6.35 I TRADITIONAL CHERRY 6.2T § IMPERIAL CHERRY 6.21 1 HARVEST PECAN 6.21 EXTRA SPECIAL! UNFINISHED UUMN Mahogany Paneling 4’xT Panels 4’xl’ Panels 222- 2.66 each POLAROID 230 COLOR PACK CAMERA P(HAROID Color Film Special 4’x8’ Plastic | Finished Pawling I Ideal for Bathroom, 1 Kitchen and playroom. I • Pink Venetian Lace | • Blue Venetian Lace xf * White Venetian Lace Your (jfioice 12r WHITE CEILING TILES fount Price Charge It inil-ahnnrlMng. Hinoolli-MiiTarrd. ru»\- W| Ll.ll rriling tile. ml.Ik In I In- \ulur, " . urunc* ami ..fort uf >»,.r I.. each 12x12” Perforated Ceiling Tile ....-.. ,.v,.., each 12c The most comfortable home in town needs just you.., FREE OFFER 25 FOSieiRDERS With each purchase of 3 packs of Polaroid film for only — 17 a panel SNOW FENCE I-Faced (tar Insulation ...and a stapler! Not one of those do-it-yourself projects that naada an aaslaaar! Inst you.... Foil-Faced Fiber Gl.se insulation ... and a stapler can build lasting year-round comfort into your home, cut heating and cooling bills! Stop In today ro that yon ean start an-joying ita “all-weathercomfort,” money-saving benefits now! Free Use of Heavy Duty Stapler for lhaulation BE] KMART DISCOUNT PRICES 4-FOOT HIGH 50-ft. Roll Has triplet lens, electric eye, 4 exposure settings and film speed settings and electronic shutter. Expensive features at an economical price. Color in 60 seconds, black and white in 10 seconds. You get 23 Polaroid postcarders (1.00 retail value) at no additional cost when you buy 3 packs of Polaroid Film. Polaroid's new Postcarders make it quick and easy to create your own postcards for mailing to family and friends. Take advantage of this free offer to try them out while, Our supply lasts. 6-Foot Post, Each 12“ 1 44 2” Thick 24 O.C. Regular $7.57 $5*7 153 sq.ft. It 2” Thick II o.o. Reg. 4.97 4.37 100 sq. ft. 3” Thick 10 04. Reg. $3.97 3.67 10 tq. ft. Kmart-s Regular $114.87 POLAROID 250, COLOR PACK CAMERA KWRimUS DISCOUNT HUM. »T MU- Snow Blade and Chains With .This Big 7 H.P. STALLION ELECTRIC TRACTOR Our Regular $444.44 • Electric starting; 7 H.P. Briggs A Stratton • 1-Gallon Fuel Tank, 16’’ Rear, 13” Front Hi-flotati Tires • H-Speed Transmission, 6 Forward, 2 Reverse Gears • 32” Twin-blade Cutting Unit for Grass • Recoil Starter Plus Ring Gear for Electric Starting Get more for your Camera Dollar . . . Shop and Save At Kmart... 109“ The very best Polaroid has to offer. Features electronic shutter eye, Zeiss Ikon rangefinder focusing and ability to shoot black and white pictures Indoors without flash in low light. You can't top this for instant pictures. Flash Gun Included GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN., 11 Model C127AVT 20.67 Model P-15-14.88 Model M-68 13.78 A Model T4401-59.88 12” BUFFET FRYPAN 20.67 Discount Price Teflon®-coated, avocado buffet frypan with 12” cooking capacity. Tilt top lid prevents splatters, completely immersible for easy cleaning. Just say “Charge It”. 3-9 CUP PERCOLATOR 14.88 Discount Price Brews 3-9, 5-oz. cups of delicious coffee or 2-3 cups with Mini-Brew basket. Completely immersible . . . features Peek-A-Brew® gauge. Shop Kmart for all your gift ideas. GE HAND MIXER 13.78 Discount Price Variable speed mixer with control knob, see-through .handle with mixing guide, drink mixer attachment and key hole slot for handy wall mounting. Just say “Charge It”. SALE! MANICURE SET Discount ■ ■ JIB Price 1 5*47 Set includes 8 sanding discs, 4 felt buffers and 4 callus smoothers. Comes with 4-ft. cord, compact travel and storage case. Styled in beige/white with gold color trim. UattW Sammy _ Smm mM to Mn STEREO PHONOGRAPHS 59.88 Discount Price “Trimline 400” portable stereo phono with 4-speed automatic drop down changer, solid state amplifier, 8” dynapower speakers, 3 audio controls, 45 R.P.M. spindle. POWER-CUT SCISSORS Discount Price ^ A V Charge li M This precision-built battery-operated (2 batteries included) scissors with tempered steel cutting edges will cut fabrici or in •sutr 2 Days Only “ELECTRIC” HAMILTON BEACH KNIFE Our Reg. 11.97 10.88 Charge It “Hole in the handle” gives perfect balance for easy slicing. Comes in white with 8 ft. attached cord. Shop Kmart and just “Charge It.” 3 Days Only HANDY 8-SPEED PUSHBUTTON OSTER BLENDER Our Reg. .38.87 31.78 3 Days Only 8-*peed push button “Gal-axie VIII” blender has big 5 cup, 2-os. glass container. 100 page illustrated cook book is included.J Just Charge It. UsiNsS tummy - Sum iuM lu Malar, TRADITIONAL CANDY CANES Our Reg. 57c J|A# 3 Days Only. 40 Ea. Box Box of 6 or 12, individually wrapped, traditional candy canes. Ideal for decorating packages, trimming the tree or a special treat for the children. Buy several boxes. 26-OZ. POLY BAG Christinas Nougats 78‘ Re*. 97c—3Day. 15V4-OZ. BOX RIBBON CANDY 77* Reg. 88c—3 Days Only Individually wrapped, 26* 15Vfc*-ox. box of crispy thin os. bag of delicious nougats. candy. Ideal hostess gift. 2-Lb. Tie Bag Candies Our Reg. 1.13 anjf # 3 Days Only . VAC, Your Choice m ^ Choose from Bridge Mix, Chocolate Covered Peanuts, Malted Mint Ball or Delicious P.S.C.’s. CHARGE IT. Delicious 10-oz. BROCK’S CHERRY CHOCOLATES Our Reg. 48e Box 2 77* 3 Days Only! Tempting milk or dark choc-> olaled cherries for a family treat now and through the festive holidays! Stock up! HARD OR FILLED CANDIES 67* Reg. 77c to 87c 3 Days Only Choose from 2*pound bag of 100% filled candies. Or, 2 pound bag of satin finish, all hard mix candies. Both in handy tie top bags. Shop Kmart and just say “Charge It”. POUND HERSHEY KISSES 581 Our Reg. 68c 3 Days Only Fresh, special for the holidays. l*pound bag of red, green and silver foil wrapped Hershey kisses are a tasty way to add a festive touch to your home. Sale priced. Charge II •mt wt. HOUSE OF WINDSOR 567 Our Reg. 6.27 Big box of 50 ralvnat ciffaro 3 Days Only CAN OPENER AND ICE CRUSHER COMBINATION Our Reg. 16.57 13.67 Charge It Easy to operate ice crusher has removable magnet for easy cleaning, separate ice crusher switch and cord storage. Just say Charge It. DUTCH MASTERS" OsrRsg.5.57 Ml Tine Psnetelis IK I 7 rignrs. NK VACUUM PACKED TOBACCOS Eifsoutorth 14-02. 1.47 Holiday 14-oz. 1.47 Volvot 14-oz. 1.14 Prinoo Albert 14-02. 1.14 Half *n Half ISez. 1.14 Union Loador 14-02. 1.14 SMOKERS’SPECIAL COMBINATION S3* Our Reg. 68c-.3 Days Includes I Ever-Ready lighter, 3 ox* can fluid, flints. KENTUCKY CLUB SET Discount Price 14-OZ.' Our Itr-g. I’ .f* * Jlrjruinr. fully 6, I-Ox.* tins. Brush Creek, Greenbrier, 1 .09 London Dock, Whitehall, Kentucky,Reg. *. Mixture. *rm m. Charge It Large Assortment Humidors and Pipe Stands 1® t. 5“ Perfect gift for him 7-OZ.* RUM, MAKE 6.10 Oar Reg. 7.8t—3 Days °b£S^n[* ■ AT Mildest Wily rigar. n pi|ie mixture. 107 imported, dwmestir to TWIN PIPE SET Our Reg. 5.25 2 Dorset pi|iea KV GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD jTHE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1968 THURS., FRI., SAT. ip Boxed Specials! SWEATER SETS, S-XL SWEATER IN WOOL WITH FLOWERS Our Reg. 9.88 3 Daya Only Cotton. 10V4-13. stylo for' FISHERMAN KMT PULLOVER SWEATERS Comp. Value 14.95 3 Daya Only I 100% Bulky Wool Worsted Fisherman kbit sweaters with turtleneck style. Sites S-M-L. Natural. Shop Early and Save. Charge It. Mittetl Juniort! and Jr. Petitea! Furry Trimmed COATS GIRLS' DRESSES Our Reg. 19.96 3 Dayt Only Our Reg. 3.97 3 Dayt Only SPORT SHIRTS Charge It Charge It That girl will love these 100% cotton, 100% rsyon, 100% Orion* acrylics, and 100% acetate dresses. A great many colors in A-line, 2 piece, obi, belted and pleated. 3X to 14. em.s« ISs Bufsal Set,. Compare at 3.9S Charge It GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Christmas; Becoming) Worldly, Knows NaJBcHindary, Doctrine By The Associated Press Stilt walkers will parade in Nigeria. Chinese businessmen will play mah jongg and feast ' on snakes and dog meat in Hong Kong. And. addle American children receive flashy space age playthings, beys in the Congo jungles will make their own toys from wire. Christmas knows ho national boundaries, no government doctrines. It will be celebrated as a national and religious holiday in most lands, as a commerlcal . holiday in others, and at private family gatherings in the Soviet Union where atheism is law. * * * Observance of Christmas in the {Soviet Union is not forbidden outright. Russians who do observe it will celebrate on Jan. 7, the Russian Orthodox date rather than Dec. 25. Although tradition is still strong in many countries, once-alien Christmas customs have jet-setted around the world. Santa Claus, while still considered a “gringo’' in Mexico is now tough competition for the Three Kings, the dominant Christmas symbol south of the border. St. Nick, the Christmas tree and roast. stuffed turkey are steadily replacing the traditional Precipios—manger scenes— in Italy. Other countries which once had annuls gift-giving rites on New Year’s Day, like Japan and the Congo, are adopting Dec. 25. In the cold northern lands, Christmas is usually a family affair. In Austria and Germany, families gather oh Christmas Eve to sing carols, feast on roast goose and home-baked delicacies and wait for the Christkind - Christ Child - to deposit presents in a locked room. The tinkle of a little bell signals anxious children that the goodies have arrived. In Australis and New Zeaiind,jdancing to Venezuela; nine nights of drinking parties to Mexico, illegal firecrackers to Puerto Rico; dancing and drinking in Colombia, and a potent drink called Monkey’s Tail-brandy and a* coffee-flavored Births The following Is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk's Office (by name of father): Alton H. Smith. 3311 Coolldge. L. Trador, M W. llrolhmo) o. . Troy. Height*. i J. Jullono, Francis M. McKa Dennis L. Slzoland, No Jack R. Root, Milford. Wyndhom B. Reaper J,., •.,, Thomas C. Jackson, Rochester Theodore A. Johnson, Auburn Robert O, Crulckshank, Rochester. Richard C. Croon, Farmington. Jimmy D. Robinson, 171 Voorhels. David L. Sproet, Utica. Theodore J. Kilmer, Rochester. Jerry e. Utley, Utica. Francis W. Vargo, Rochester. Joseph H. Hammond, Utica. Brant M. Hiller, 407 Oeeota (Twins). Stanley W. Kebbe, Orion. William C. Smith, Utica. Ranald J. Priest, Rochester. Beniamin P. White, Rochester. . Charles R. Rlglay Jr., Troy. Mkhael B. Eborlo, Romeo. George o. Moran, 2422 Patrick Henry. Vincent A. Trcelnskl, Mil Patrick *BuJy B. Millar, Utica. Jim R. Plater, 17} W. Sheffield. Edward O. Ytoe. Halhland. Raymond P. Jonas, 111 S. Terrace. Daniel James. Union Lake. Kalin Q. Leonard, Farmington. William R. Hahn. Milford-Earl G. Hendrickson, Farmington. Jerry 8. Walla, Milford. ~ Gary W. eichbrocht, Drayton Plains. Dean i. Adams, Mijacond. Edward M. Casey, 2717 Sylvan Shores. Wayne N, Hanson, Oxford. Anver D, Karon, M Rattsk. Eugene M- Oach, Milford. OaFy L. Campbell, M S. Rosalawn. William A. Haidar, 124 N. Johnson. Eugane Miracle, I2SS Meadowlawn. John MoMlck, Bloomfield Hills. Norman L. Williams. SOI LeBaron. Patrick Joseph, Farmington. Arnold R, Stewart, Farmington, pistald W. Ivey, Parmlngtor ■ i SB. Garner, Farming' ‘ B Milford. W. Ivey, Farmington i ..... S. Garner, Farmington. Raymond A. Good, Milford. David R7 Liggett, IS Charles Lana. Isaac R, Robinson, 1114 Atkinson, aaorg* L Sloas, IS Virginia. Georgs Lawi— Clan Ronald R. Coombe Sr., Drayton Plains, lareld W. Mane la, Highland, (icltard O. Poole, Union Lakk. lamas H. Richway, Rochester. Falonl, Union KM Granada. Lake, 4ll East Ionic Loan Matheny, 2045 qpdyk*. James T. Pop* Jr., iffWashli Louis C. Rogers, 140 Victory. David M. Dangatg, Clarkston. Jamas H. MldqMan, Orion. David L. Mlnnlch, 401 E. Blvd. Not Jackl* D. Rusaall, Orion. David R. Birch, Wtliod Lake. Franklin F. Bock, Union Loko. Robert W. Cook, MHtord. Randall F. DoHoan, 7JS Young. Robert W. Hell If. Waterford. Dovid 0. Hargraves, Union Loko. Foul 0. Hicks, 171 GoMntr. Michael B. Miller, 2241. Blvd. 0. Thomee J. Price, Formlngton. Vernon W. Roberts, SI Sparrow Hll Donald R. Walts, 2M Csrrlsg# Clrc Jomos M. Zsnonl, Waterford. John M. Granger Jr., Oxford. Jgmot N. Vandorpool, Metenr Mich. J Leonard Briscoe, SIS I Sondor Gerald ■ _______. ... Russell Brewor, Wa _ Vincent R. Cytackl. Union Lake. William R. Fyloo Jr., Troy. Bruce O. Wolkor, Birmingham. Lowrenco R. GUI, Trey. Jam** E. Henderson, T< Donald A, Dekker William I, Oatee. James T. Lehmer Chrletooher M. FI Richard o. Kurd) Stanley 0. Lints, Brown City. ■■Hr * Bollock Jr,, Drayton perold E. Meldrum, Donald J. Schmidt, Frank W. Welvoeri, Troy. David D. Evan*, Troy. William L. Mueilor, Troy. DavlS S. Oloh, Troy. Clark W. Barn**, Walled Lake. William R. Oromar, Birmingham. Oanaro R. Arlndaeng, Highland Park. Robert L, Burns, Avon Tmntshlp. Richard t. McDermoM, Birmingham. Klaue Bayer, Trey. Robert S. Millar Jr., flip, Martin M. Abbrtcht, Anthony R. Cornelllor, Troy. James m. Kraus, Birmingham. Henry A. Sorter, Rochester. Menou C. Ataeh, Trey. Donald W. Colo,------ Paul E.^Brennan, Wilson, Troy. Foul J. Nagy, Troy. Ronald P. Corwll, Birmingham. Dean A. Smith, Btverty Hill*. Wllllem J, Boschme, Birmingham. John R. Kiawson, Birmingham. Bruce A. Rugg, Troy. Merc B. Aerlton, 71 Bloomfield Ter .......lingRam. James R. Loach, Formlngton. Scott K. Graham, Highland- li'S'r Gory B. Kovfo, Auburn Haight* Loro R, Anderson, Birmingham. Frank M. Knag, Beverly Hint. John H. Walsh, Birmingham. Ronald M. Am, Troy, L Blrmln 1overly I Hi Jr, Tri Jerry M. Comoron, Troy. Rally M. Adame, Blrtnlnf Louis A. Hancock, Birmingham, lari L. Palmar, Rochaeiar. Min L. Weber, WalTad Lake. fBlFh E. Chess, Navi. AMn W. Plelak, Brighton Townst Victor M. Bogdan, Formlngton. Bfijeolm 0. Ramsey, Farmington Charles C, Dorman, Farmingion. will imbibe frosty drinks, and speculate about the outcome of the Davis Cup tennis match with the United State» Dec. 26-28. Christmas in India is a national holiday, celebrated religiously by Christians and commercially by Hindus. Popular legend associates Christ -with Lord Krishna, a favorite Hindu god, and confusion surrounding the two religious personalities results in a nationwide Christmas spirit. HONG KONG HOLIDAY In Hong Kong, Christmas for most is just another public holiday. But even department stores operated there by Communist China are filled with gift-wrapped packages. Chinese businessmen take advantage ol the day off to throw gambling parties. Christmas in Japan coincides with the traditional custom ol O-Seibo, the giving of presents liquid—ty Chile. , Santa Claus is the victim of Christmas in Brazil. It’s not much fun wearing a false beard, padded red suit and pillow on the tummy in 90-degree weather. And while the Santas per- for ibrations and, limit the Yule fes-beach resorts. , 'Wjflval to religious affairs. It'is KOREA AUSTERE - Jtiie third-successive. year of a In Korea, the. govenunent>.of|g°vernment slogan: “Christmas austerity-minded President!with and for families,” Chung Hee Park has urged efti-j Nigeria, tom by civil war and 70110 (a mi Wail gIoKafaIa aaU __.1______j. ____a_s _a«_* also will have a subdued Christmas. Popular all-night drumming sessions and excessive merry-making have been banned, but traditional parades of stiltwalkers and ---afcafJ masked zens to curtail elaborate cele-'suffering 'import restrictionsjdancers will be allowed. Christmas Shop? to 9 Monday thru Saturday at Sears Pontiac Store Scandinavia has a long, elaborate Christmas with all the traditional trimmings, trees, lights, decorations arid groaning ta-| bles. Sweden’s celebration does not end until the day after Twelfth Night, well into January. A new wrinkle in Norway this year Is a campaign of the Association of Christian Students denouncing the “near gluttony’’ of their countrymen at Christmas. Norwegians sire noted trenchermen and the outcome of the students’ campaign is doubtful. MASS IN BELGIUM While France celebrates an Anslo-Saxonized Christmas. Catholic Belgium contents itself; brines music, exotic food with the traditional midniRht Mass. In rural areas the celebrating stops there, except for some onion soup and blood sausage after devotions. But plastic Christmas trees and hel&vy German-style meals have invaded Belgian cities. Thousands will make religious pilgrimages to the Holy Laiyl, to Italy to see the Pope, to shrines ahd religious symbols around the world. at the end of the year to person to whom one Is indebted. Girl Santa elevator attendants in miniskirts are not much in evidence this year, unlike last year. The new fad is Christmas cards printed in Japanese, with comical rather than religious themes. In Latin America, Christmas Marriage Licenses Charles J. Goodtll, 25 Catharlna J. Fehlly, Troy. Oaxtar C. Kuklaw, Clarkaton ar ............ commonwl Gift Perfect Sleepwear SALE orah J. Wood* 2310 Arthur M. Adam . ■ Carol J. Hatter, 73 Fulton. | P. Robli Shearer, i nomas H. Event III Ui Cheryl L. Moore, Milford mmmm Ca*wtll m Edwards, 136 Robert D. Alfa*,» uv Turner, 510 Cameron. Adams, 421 Central Israel does not celebrate Christmas, but the government has decreed that all holy places —Bethlehem, Nazareth, Jerusalem—will lie open to Christian Arabs and foreign pilgrims. Pope Paul VI will leave the Vatican to preside at midnight Mass In the steel mills of Taranto, southern Italy. SWISS ON SLOPES After spending Christmas Eve with their families, many Swiss take to the ski slopes on Christmas Day. In the sunnier climes of the Southern Hemisphere, where Christinas means midsummer vacations, athletic Australians^ and South Africans form long caravans to their Idyllic beaches. The South African Broadcasting Corp., fed up with Christmas carols about snow, sleigh bells and reindeer, ran a contest this year to select a carol more suitable for temperatures of 80-100. Thomas 6*rvl L. _______ _______ Dal* E. Caswell, 72 Horn* end Shirley 1. Edwards, 114 Cherokee. Robert D. Altery, Troy and Brand* :. Turner, 510 Cameron. Gary L. Huber, 700 Metros* and Bren-* A. Korns, 42] | " Robert T. Horst volko, Troy ami Dion* A. %$Si.Tr ENDS SATURDAY she’ll appreciate the luxury of a quilted satift robe Long Robs with Bait The look it delightfully feminine... a look she'll adore. Celaneoe® acetate satin with Kodel® polyester fiberfill. Brightly eolored in red, gold and green. Sizes 10-18. Short Robe 10-18, reg. $13,10.99 Short Robe 38-44, reg. * 14,11.99 luxurious satin trimmed tricot long cpbe Luxurious nylon quilted tricot deliciously trimmed with satin bow and streamer and satin cuffs. Front zipper lets her slip it on and off with easy. Soft hue* of green or gold, sizes 10-18. * , Lingerie A Daywoor QUESTION: How did nursery rhymes get started ANSWER: Older children, naturally, have grown out of the nursery rhyme period, yet we can all look back and remember the fun we had singing them. What was the magic they held for us? First, perhaps, it was all the dancing and Jumping around. Small children need to stretch their muscles; it makes them feel great. Then there was theThythm as we danced back and forth. We put this catchy rhythm into words that danced back and forth too, like “I wish I may, I wish I might, have the wish I wish tonight” The rhythm and catchineiB of the words Were almost more important than their meaning. Children have danced and sung jingles since the earliest times, but the Jingles were rarely written down and could not have been widely passed around until the days of the printed, book! In 1744, Englishman John Newberry published the first collections of nursery rhynies, such as Tommy Thumb’s Pretty Song Book and Mother Goose's Melody. Mother Goose stories had appeared before, In France, but without rhymes. Newberry's books helped to spread nursery rhymes far and wide. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook 1/ your question, mailed on.a postcard to Junior Editors in cars of this newspaper, is seiected for a prise.) Girls’ Nylon Peignoir Set Reg. S.M Lovely 40-denier! nylon tricot gown ’ and peignoir aetr; with delightful* trims of tricot * and sheer nylon. ! Choice of soft'' hues. 7-14 [Sears] Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 /E—-18 Frosty Fruit Is Fine Starter It's the boutique Ideas — the little things — that count in turning a holiday menu into a royal feast Candlelight, a banquet cloth and clusters of holly set off the holiday bird in grand style. Then comes planning the little specialty foods, such as a frosty pineapple appetizer, which will make the menu the hostess’ very own. * A A Its flavor is uniquely refreshing among the rich tastes of other holiday foods, Noel Frozen Pineapple Appetizer 1 (814-ounce) can crushed pineapple Vt cup whipping cream 2 tablespoons mayonnaise 1 tablespoon lemon juice Dash salt itiiiiip ★ Turn pineapple into blender and blend until very finely chopped. Whip cream. Fold in mayonnaise, lemon juice, salt and pineapple. Turn into freezing tray. Freeze until firm. Serve in sherbet glasses. Makes 4 servings. Garnish with slices of pineapple. . Serve Fried Oysters in Star-Shaped Shells CHRISTMAS EVE SUPPER - Traditional food in the Tidewater section of the country for Christinas eve supper is the oyster. Here it is nested in crunchy, buttery patty shells fashioned from enriched bread and topped with a Sherry-mushroom sauce. Biscuit Mix Is, Start of Little Fruitcakes Impressive and practical to serve during the holidays are these easy to make, individual fruitcakes. a A> ‘-A Combine 1% cups biscuit mix, one teaspoon cinnamon, % teaspoon doves and 14 teaspoon each nutmeg and allspice. Cream % cup butter with one cup brown sugar. Beat Jn one egg. Add V« cup grape jelly, V« cup brandy and the dry ingredients. Blend thoroughly. A rA A Stir in one cup each raisins, mixed candled fruit, candied cherry halves and coarsely chopped California walnuts. ■kith Fill paper lined muffin cups % cup full. Top with walnut halves. Bake at 390 degrees, 20 to 25 mfoutes. Cod. From the earliest days of the Virginia and the Carolina col-onies, the oyser has been a treasured food from the Coofcs of the romantic Tidewater country knew how to select, prepare and serve oysters. They were always served — within season — on occasions which called for unstinting hospitality. General and Mrs. George Washington featured oysters, often on their Christmas menus. . A A One oyster supper version for Christmas has all the Tidewater elegance of flavor. It has the contrast of texture needed for enjoying to the fullest this bounty of the deep. CHRISTMAS 8UPPER OYSTERS 18 slices enriched bread % cup milk 2 tablespoons melted butter 1 (10% ounce) can condensed cream of mushroom soup 2 tablespoons chopped pi- % teaspoon salt 8 tablespoons Sherry 18 breaded oysters, fried Use 3 slices of bread for each patty shell. Cut each slice into the shape of a star, using a * inch star shaped gelatine mold as a guide. Cut centers from 13 of the stars using a round cookie cutter. butter. BAKE SHRI T-S Place shells on a greased •Okie sheet Bake in a hot over (400 degrees) for ten minutes or until shells are crisp and lightly browned. Place 3 tried oysters In ead patty shell Heat undiluted mushroom soup, stirring to keep smooth; add plmlneto, salt and Sherry. Spoon about tablespoons mushroom sauce over each filled patty shell. Yield: 0 servings. Frozen French fried oysters, heated according to package !tidns, or fresh oysters, breaded and either deep fat fried or oven Med, may be Pontiac Store Is Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday ifts for Late Santas Only 5 more shopping days until Christmas classic vinyl handbags Reg. 6.98 5^ Soft, grained vinyl bags fashioned in 6 lovely styles including the popular pouch style and envelope style with handles. Perfect for casual or dreat-np occasions. All have inside sippered pockets and extra roomy interior*. Black or brown. today's fashion flirts' 1 77 Reg.Mfl X lacy legs 267 Lacy legs web 'the way to poet I legs. Lace that covers the leg scene from too to hip in panty hose style. And stretches of nylon make the lacy webs great end wearable. 2-speed Electric Scissors High speed for (beer fabrics, low for Reg. IflJfl heavier ones. Cuts np 10 hwn of rv/j* broadcloth. Handy work light- U” • 'Plastic storage box. S Rechargeable Scissors Our best can cut up to 18 layers of broadcloth. Rons without a trace of vibration. Use with or without cord. W Just plug in to recharge. Featherlite Dress Shoes Wfllt 11.98 g97 Here’s an assortment of drees shoes that carries oat today’s slim, trim fashion theme. Fashion comas alve in new tone*, shafdnp and trims; sizes S to f and 10. Not all sites in every style. Se^rsl Downtown Pontiac * Phone FE 5-4171 V !?«#- 1 ..v- . ’ r- ^ f|i| i : • • B: M.... - CRANBERRY RELISHED PEARS — ger. Simmer5minutes. Add 2 cup? cranber-Drain a 1 lb. 13 oz. can Bartlett pear halves ries; simmer 5 minutes longer. Add pears and stick with whole cloves. Combine pear and heat gently 3-4 minutes or until pear syrup with % cup brown sugar, Vs cup halves are hoi Serve warm or chilled with vinegar, 1 stick cinnamon and dash of gin- meal Makes 641 servings. Cover cone-shaped Styrofoam with cranberries pierced with straight pins for a novel Christmas tree centerpiece. , You will not have any trouble with meat loaf sticking to the pan if you put a few stripe of bacon in the bottom of the pan before filling it with the meat loaf mixture. No matter what mixture you use, the flavor Mil be Improved by the bacon. B—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Snow Castle Is So Sweet Dreaming of a white Christmas snow castle centerpiece? Don’t dream. Make one instead. White sugar cubes and tablets are glistening bricks, ready made to build a snow queen’s palace. Complete it with square towers and crenelated walls backed with cardboard frame if steadiness Is needed. Even slender window look-outs can be managed with the help of cardboard strips. Mortar the sugar blocks together 'with a confectioners sugar and water paste. Stack it •11 on a mirror, part of which can be the surrounding moat. Edge it with an array of paper, cone-shaped trees and paper lace (dolly) bushes which have been brushed with egg white (stiffly beaten) and rolled in spangling, white siigar granules. SUGAR SNOW And for the snow, especially on the reflecting moat, shake on a bit of powdered sugar. Then decorate, but sparingly, with home made sugar plums, perhaps, or with a galaxy of hard candy shapes. If too colorful, ice them with a white boiled sugar frosting. For this is a snow fairy castle, all a glistening and powdery white. Children usually like this cool drink: fruit sherbet softened and beaten with milk plus little vanilla. Delicate Touch of Wine Enhances Holiday Salad SERVE CHRISTMAS WREATH MOLD - When you have a dish that doubles as salad or dessert, you have a find. This molded wreath/ red, green and white, just shouts, "Christmas.” The sour cream cherry dressing is one you may want to repeat on summer fruit salads. "Pretty as a picture” dishes are especially welcome at holiday time. Make this Christinas Wreath Mold a day ahead, store lie refrigerator, and serve proudly for dessert or main dish salad. CHRISTMAS WREATH MOLD 2 pkgs. (3 oz. each) cream cheese milk or cream V4 cup minced, drained Maraschino cherries V* cup finely chopped walnuts 5 Maraschino cherries, halved. 2 cans (1 lb. each) small pear halves 4 pkgs. (3 oz. each) lime flavor gelatin 5 cups hot water Cold water 1 cup white dinner wine. Soften cream cheese with a little milk or cream; beat until fluffy. Blend in minced cherries and chopped walnuts. SI into 10 balls. Press V4 cherry into each. Drain pear halves well, sav ing syrup. Place cream cheese ball in hollow of each of 10 pear halves. Invert in bottom of 10-inch ring mold. Dissolve lime flavor gelatin in the 5 cups hot water. Measure pear juice; add enough cold water to make 2 cups; add to gelatin with wine. Pour enough gelatin mixture into mold to come about half-way up pears. Chill until almost firm. Meanwhile, chill remaining tin until syrupy. Beat at high speed until thick and fluffy. Spoon into-mold. Chill until firm. Unmold on serving dish. Fill center with this Cherry-Nut Dressing. Makes 10 servings. Cherry-Nut Dressing % cup mayonnaise 1 cup dairy sour cream Vi cup chopped walnuts Vi cup chopped, drained Maraschino cherries Combine all ingredients. Keep cool until serving time. Pass with Christmas Wreath salad or center mold with glass of dressing. Makes about 2 cups. Qebhakdft MEXICAN FOODS >e AMERICA’S HOMES Write tor free, exciting recipes "MEXICAN FOODS FOR AMERICA’S HOMES” Bobhanft Mexican Foods Co. San Antonio, Texas BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSii 49S. } 45S WE WISH ALL OUR CUSTOMERS A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS IMA ijhklUk Christmas Pay • to 1 608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL YOU’LL REMEMBER... Steak Sealtest1 Ice Cream M Flavors, '/a Sal. PiUsbury Flour 7Qc 10-lb. Bog . IW Crisco Shortening 3-Lb. Gan Can Sale Del Monte Sweet Pees, Cream Style or Whole Kernel Com, or Mt Cocktail E/$100 Min. Wt„ 1-Lb. 9/ | Dele Sliced, Crashed, Chunk, or Tidbets 1SV4 0s. V 4/*1 00 JoHo, all Flavors 3/25*? Butterfield Snoot hMowi<* Ocean Spray Cranberry Sauce &I9* Pet RRi Frown Pumpkin Pies j* 25 Spartan Margarine Y Lbs. * California Lge. Pascal Celery 19* = NWHim Closed Christmas Sail. Rib. 10-0 A Open 0 A.M. to 0 P.M. SUPER MARKET \1T16 Jtslyn •TOffr 330-037?/ How? Refreshm for Guests THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY LU 1 U. S. No. 1 Mleh. 1 Qoldon or Rod i DELICIOUS APPLES 3 - 49° FRESH CRISP RADISHES - pkg. FRESH QREEN ONIONS -bun. FRESH QREEN PEPPERS - oa. Your 1 AC Choice | Of fM If MTHMWm II MM lilljl California ORANGES .i> RQc si>. lie, Oranges and lemons will yield their juice mors easily If you soften them by railing before you cut and squeeze them. ' 1116 W. HURON ST. Solo Daton Thuro., Doe. 19th thru Tuot., Doe. 24th - Closed Ohrlotmas All Day Rightt Rotorvod To limit QuantitUt B—16 THE POXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys ♦ 96 *ka g$ ¥ AT ♦ J108753 *9842 WEST EAST ♦ AK109S *64 VJ1098 ¥54 ♦ AKQ4 * J10765 SOUTH (D) AQJ872 ¥KQ632 ♦ 2 *AQ Both vulnerable West North East South 1* Pass 1N.T. Pass 2 V Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—¥ J By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY No matter how well you bid and play, you can’t expect to make every contract and good defensive play will sometimes set you several tricks. When Bob Hamman went down three tricks at his two-heart contract, he congratulated George Rapee and Sidney Lazard on their fine defense ★ ★ * It was good defense indeed. George opened the jack of trumps^Bob won in dummy, led a spade and put in his seven spot. George won and led another trump. Bob won one also and led his queen of spades. George won and led a third trump. back came a spade. George was on lead again. By this time he had set up his eight of trumps so he cashed it, then played his nine of diamonds. Sidney was in for the first time. Most players would have simply played another top diamond. Ibis would have allowed Bob to ruff In and end play George to go down only two, bid Sidney led his jack of clubs. It didn’t matter what Bob did at this point He had already lost three spades, a trump and a diamond. He was still going to lose his last two spades and the queen of clubs. Bob could have saved one trick from the wreck had he known where all the cards were before he started playing es, bbt even the best players don’t start with i photograph of the opponents inds. Strangely enough, Bob’s score of minus 300 cost him nothing in the trials. It seems that a couple of North players passed to spade and ran to two diamonds after East reopened with a double and West passed.' Two diamonds was also dou-whereupon South ran to two hearts and was doubled there. Marriage Licenses ... . Thousand, ttpchedsr Carol S. Pullartoa,7i0Wiflli| Ull^ William T. LowandomM. Ootrolf and fonnla R. Abbott, Farmington. Jeffroy J. Otaehuk, Sarnia, Ontario ,n?ohnLT Bevorly A. Vows, S Jefferaon. Roper H. Hill, South Lyon and Vickie S. lfller, South Lyon. II Kathafin# F "MT I ... uSr<&n».itfusr"- Ronald Qoefcter. Bloomfield Mil an* Nancy J. inman, Farmington. S. Howard Jacob ion. Royal Oak ai tuby t Furr, Birmingham. Ouano J. Gal loro. IMS Hodge ai mid L, Nawman, 51 Thong, Cary A. Waolak, Detroit and Mary l landon, Birmingham. Hugh H. ColTot and Karin Todio Marion; Thoma* A. Car, Tray and Marilyn MKemtle, Detroit. CMon E. Snowdon, 2S2S DOvondalt ai ROBIN MALONE THE BERRYS . By Bob Lubber* ibBw^woWw/peAwexfeKrw wumc/MD\m mANca aS’iwaj T <2?MES1&TH5fl*SkDS OF 06^ A AM, iCBUtP TEACH A TH&b OfZT&lff ^ f wS&, THE BETTER HALF ¥ACHRD,5’^A^ THE BORN LOSER By: Carl Grubert Q—The bidding has been: West North BaM South 1¥ Pass 1* Pass 1N.T. Pass 2N.T. Pass rT You, South, bold: “Which one do you like best? ,., Just in case one should show up under your Christmas tree.” *J4 VAK987 OK53 *Q62 What do you do now? A—Bid three no-trump. Your opening was minimum but a sound one. You should try for game. TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding two.no-trump partner bids three clubs over your one no-trump. What do you do now? BERRY'S WORLD—By Jim Berry By SYDNBY OMARS Far Friday "Tho wlio mm contrail hit i Astrology points tho way." .... ARIES (March SI-April II) i Accant on how you negotiate — moans bo alert, flexible. Opportunity Is available. Koy Is nocsssltatp travol. Plans aro led to chango. Cot moro than on* < Ion. Chock details. Bo aura of basic j Tola. Associate Is Impaflsnf. Remain uncsrtalnfy could « fhrouoh ^W^oo X2?n TO soft-salt approach. Keep promise ta ono who JO; owoy. Don't nog lad TfiMINl (May 21-Jun* 20) t travagonco on port of children, I ones could poae problem, ip fair firm, Permit logic equal thne with pulsa, Protect assets. Soma do not CAN^R^ure^t-Ju^Zfr: Obtain from OBMlNf mooooga. bo sura agrsomonts. Tendency toward rr deeptlon — contusion dose exist. K this, respond^ accordingly. Accent dealings with public. _ leo (July SAve. H)| Indructtoro, direction, could bo oonlrodlctory. Call upon pad experience. Hood your own counaoL ttelattviia oaom Intent on contusing Issues. Kay I* to tee facto at they •Wtfug. 23-Sopt. 22): Chock any •mwlidifp smctrltY row ' “ oar (th display. Past affod dwtor thdSng.Beraedy?YOU'may hive ju&vms; end don't hang on to poet. Coin greeter S?pfifio“'. Tetriy: dynamic. QMbelto tax It Intriguad. Tun on charm. Tm from frland could roault li ultmtta profit, IF FRIDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY yoi art ideattottfl..but practical anough h make thlnga hap pan. Eventa move a tutor pace now. You aro due to trav, and to mad mart people. Recant aetbac '*GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle hlol tor CAFRlbORN, AQUARIUS. Specli R^kiCS.8, p*r'- .TH£fcAWGMg OCWBMJY^ H-HEU.Q! WmMT^MT SATICRBD WTW By Art Sansom m- By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY aaasis*.- v C ih> hr MtA fcuo TJA lu» u j. N* PEL BY Leslie Turner “In America, we call that hair atyle an ‘Afro’—what do you call it here?” OUT OUR WAY COME AT ME--IVE REAP LIP OK} JUDO ANP I’LL *5HOWYOU WHAT I CAM VO! HeH-hsH/ THINKS HE CAKJ TOSS X IT SURE IS, WAITIMO I ME OVER Hie SHOULDER JUST) ID SEE HOW LOW<3 1 BECAUSE OF SOMETHIN’ HE'S J YOU’LL KEEPUP THAT REAP/ WHY HE COULPN’T LINE OF CHATTER EVEN RAISE ME OFF TH* /( BEFORE YOU THINK SROUNP, LET ALONE i— / YOU’VE SAVED FACE FLIPME/ AMUSING, J i AMP CAN LEAVE WITH" AIN'T IT? OUT CHICKEN IMS '■iimimiiimTilitiiimiiiiii R ~ |P DUCKIWO THE DEMONSTRATION • Mt ly ML ha TM top U& tok OR anHiwxn, w.tm i, mi BOARDING HOUSE TWEMA30R WA6A GREAT IDEA/ IN5TEADA BLOMN'l OURTREASURY OKI CHRISTMAS DECO-, RATION WB'LL LET HIM FRIEKlAe MERCHANTBULLETIN BOARD MADBUY^ 0W6S)/ ME AND MY1 05 Somethin)'//careless 'RE CLAIMS)7 FDR OUR 7(T0NGUE/N0W THEVRE C(BUSINJE5$-^>1 TlL HAVE TO PArtTlN'FOR/lTHATS WHERE USO VOOR-A CHANCE) WE TURN! IN ATO-DDDR TO GETONImOUR EMPTIER/: LIKE 60M& 1 OUR 600PjN—7/——COMMON! (4lDE/y *' l PEDDLER/: J^ WAIT'LL THE KIDS SEE THE NICE JOB I'VE GOT j \ By Ernie Bushmiller TUMBLEWEEDS NOW, EPIC, PM GONNA TEACH XOU AN 0LP CCWPDNYTRlCKl.-STANP RIGHT THERE.AN; WH011 WHISTLE, TOO COME RUNN ING TO ME! .illim ^TTY' by Tom Ryan DONALD DUCK 5® Shakedown CRUISE* ahead** By Walt Disney mui THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, B—17 FAMILY DEPART! • TABLE LAMPi Choose from 4. decorator styled Al with Fabric of Parchment shadesl 33" tall! 0 SWAG LAMPSi Choke of 5 colon! 12' of imported SEVEN SEAS AFTER SHAVE LOTION FIRST DISCOUNTING FIRST IN FASHION! FIRST IN VALUE! OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 12 P.M__UNTIL CHRISTMAS rt-r] UK YOUR CREDIT CARD1 I SHOP DAILY 9:30 A.M..T0 10 P.M. SUNDAYS... NOON TILL 6 P.M. CORNER OF DIXIE HGWY. AT TELEGRAPH RD-PONTIAC • BRIAT •TORES IN 1 FREE PARKING MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU’RE NOT SATISFIED! tfHE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER -Hou/O of Ol/UAtotAf DecOraftvoly deslreable—wonderl^f wearable or eminetmy practical there is no more qyerlqjting way, to say M^^Jarjstmos. Bracelet watches in 14K Gold aiKMtyti^woman wishes for that diamond watch—a lifetime of, pleasure. Styles From $19.95 f A favorite for Christmas and a gift- to be remembered . . .choose from a large selection of fine watches. A Rolex 'Submariner' if he's addicted to water — for thelpilot or racing fan, a Chronograph. All men like a fine dress watch in 14K Gold, or, perhaps with diamonds. Promise anything, but give her diamonds—choose from the new look, whereby the diamond is placed over the wedding band. The beautiful diamond solitaire that puts all emphasis on the diamond Itself — or a fancy cut Marquise oval or perhaps — give her a diamond for her left or right hand — it is the gift of forever laying "Merry Christmas" over and over for years fo come — Connolly's take pride in their diamonds. And, isn't it time he had a diamond? Give him a handsome ringl Styles From $100 to $10,000 Give him a handsome gift, a mon's gift—an antique ring set with a star sapphire, the green of Jade or that go-with-everything Black Onyx, Cuff links are 'in'—set with a selection of colors or solid gold, a Black Star Sapphire dress set. Money clips, belt buckle, initialed tie tacks or lighters by. Kreislfer or Dunhill ... all are available at Connolly's. Items From $5.00 Heart stealers that we can suggest—Pearls,. . . a glamorous way to say "Merry Christmas"—set with diamonds in rings, pins and bracelets. Give her a gold bracelet — plain In 14K gold or set with diamonds. A pin—with the deep green of Jade. Rings set with pejarls, Onyx Garnet and other beautiful combinations. Items From $5.00 Open Every Evening Until Christrrm CHARGE • LAYAWAY • MICHIGAN KANKARD DOWNTOWN*1 PONTIAC S&JSL FE 2-0294 V: JEWELERS THE PQNTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY; DECEMBER 19, 1968 fr 'The Mails Are Decked ■F With Holly" ■ 4 &0. t*®**ttae Matt Shopping Cantor—! 1 JJ'Ttfegraph#* Elizabeth Lake Rd. ‘ «' ji& Santa's in His Igloo teiOw m* Fountain in His North Matt ||g%: a.m. to 9;oo pm. , P Tro Marchris Marionettes B PSNfeftn Daily in tho South Matt 11:30 A.M. Performance on Scrtuetotrs tne Dest otmm ifl I-gvictimditional skinny, flare, a groat rmti look In contemporary casuals for. fie kind of guy who takes taklng-it-eaay seriously, Here'* the beet of both—trim-and-tapered Levi's that boast e bold new Nl |t the bottoms. Chooae theae popular navy Jeans, jh • smart belt loop version; abas 26 to 32, at $7 Perfect for Christmas OfMtioi tCo PLAYMATE - Model 9P14 i Custom instant playl Portable TV SUE Charge It, at Kresge't SHOES /vaoivtc.oaaery WARD •avmg1 i C—*41 'Darned Hour Show' Puts THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1968 By BOB THOMAS Associated Press Writer HOLLYWOOD - “It’s those darned hour shows; they’ve been giving trouble to a lot of us half - hours said Lucille Ball J In analyzing the fortunes of the1 first season of her third tele-: vision series. To the outsider, “Here’s Lucy” would seem to be far from being in THOMAS trouble. The latest rating showed the half-hour comedy show in 15th place, a highly respectable position. But to Lucille Ball the perfectionist that isn’t good enough. For most of the past 18 years, Monday night has been Lucy’s special property. Then along came a show called “Laugh-ln.” The Rowan and Martin madhouse precedes “Here’s Lucy” by a half-hour, and therein lies the trouble, opines Miss Ball. it ★. ★ “People get hooked on hour shows and they just won’t switch,” she remarked in her executvie suite during a break In rehearsals. Concerning the “Laugh-ln” competition, she remarked: “I never think about die position. I simply try ’to do the best job I can, and I think re done quite well. We’ve had some bad shows, but we’ve managed some darned good , too. And Pm proud of the way the children have come through.” Desilu, they also , bought the format of ‘The Lucy Show.’ It became theirs, completely. So I either had to negotiate with them to use the format, or I had to find a new one. FITTED INTO SCHEME “Lucie and' Desi had been wanting to work with me. The idea fitted into the scheme that I have long had for them. I feel The children are her 1 Lucie Amaz, 17, and Desi Arnaz Pf^, *nto .f.0,!?ge & >«• £ airyjaaao nearly 16. They costars of “Here’s Lucy,” and their mother explained how it happened: When Paramount bought out -—--------------------- Marriage Licenses Loulr M. Trtmontl, stlllwvter, OKI*., nd Catherine M. Carrier, Birmingham Buyer,, welled Leke en< Leura M. Tippett, ISO Starr. Ralph 0. Turnbull, Milford and Sharon J. Wroten, Milford. Kuril, Lane. Birmingham and Joann E. Naetko, Birmingham. Joel A. Burkland, Troy and Gloria J. Allan, Draytan Plaint. Jotaph Marl nick, a* E. Hopkins and Margaret Boldt, .Detroit. . Justin C. Weaver, Bloomfield Hilla and Margaret L. Roth, Birmingham. Michael D. Plnn, Troy and Chari J. Linton, Oak Park. Dale A. Scott, Rochester and Zoa D. M. Cubba, Rochester. David Finch, Philadelphia. Pa., nad perience is wasted. I’ve suggested to my children that after graduating from high school they should take a year to work or travel and decide what they wanted from their college education. “Now they are able to work and carry on their high school education at the same time. Their grades have improved tremendously with a private tutor. I feel that when they do go to college — and I think it’s very important to do so in today’s world — they will have a much better idea of what they want to do.” * ★ * What Lucille wants to do is CBS’? annual question mark. She is nearing the last of the scheduled shows for this season, and soon she will make up her mind whether to try for another. The children are eager to do so, and it appears likely that “Here’s Lucy” will be back next fall. “If I do go back, I’ll do some things differently,” die commented. “I might film six of the 24 outside the studio on location. I don’t really like to, nor do file children; we all like that instant response from the studio audience — it’s like opening night every week. * .* ★ I would also give the children more to do, particularly in the musical vein. This season the writers didn’t know how much Lucie and Desi could manage, and they didn’t push them too hard. But the kids met every challenge and were eager for more.” Made to Order Draperies 200 SAMPLES to choose from. ARDEN SHOPS The Pontiac Mall 682-1191 the * “WOW” Party Shoes UdA op the wsaiag In (Mmnwrfng pumps, Choose a spsridlna snap Is poM or tfcsr gHttarsd apptn with myfer trim or black glittBrad UMNf* with rssuds Mis trim. Foranothsr fMMon snoots pkfcthsfMilnino look of -nsMFUSV fttlFAtE of PONTIAC The Pontiac Mall Open Evenings 'til 10 A MAGNIFICENT COSTS NO MORE! STEREO RADIO-PHONO CONSOLE "The Montclair,” handsome stereo cowolette in walnut. Featuring all solid state electronics, "Automatic 400” record changer, stereo FM/AM radio and 4 speakers. Also in Co- ^ ^ lonial, French" Provincial, Mediterranean styles. J QwOU Without FM-AM radio. 159.50 3-WAY COLOR STEREO THEATRE Instant automatic^ color always brings you perfectly tuned 295 •q. Inch pictures. Two 12" bets woofers end two 1000-cycle treble horns produce concert-hall realism. You also enjoy a stereo FM-AM radio, micromatic record player with diamond stylus. Quick-Or TV pictures, automatic color purifier with Chroma tone optical filter. Natural walnut with ^ CA basket-weave speaker grilles. / (jUjU Magnevox Home Entertainment Centers from $650 TILT-DOWN STEREO PHONO "The Stereo Chorale,” rugged portable stereo phonograph by Magna vox, is perfect for parties, to take beck tp school or as a home companion. With swingdown "Automatic 400” record player, two 6" speakers, easy carrying handle / U/U and 45 RPM adaptor. 79 Select from a Large Selection of Portable Phones. BIG-SCREEN MOBILE TV WITH CART Wherever you go in your home, "The Gotham” wheels along with you on its own matching cart. this handy mobile Mapre-vox features 172 sp. inch screen, keyed AGC, automatic fine tuning. Complete with cart 13990 Magnavox Portable TVs from 79.90 GRIN NELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422, Open Every Evening 'til 9:30 and Sunday 12 Noon 'til £ Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days taint at cpsh) or Budgat Plan V- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 C—8 Still time to shop for these popular favorites A few gaps in your gift list yet?Justpick-up the phone to shop at Hudson’s Toyland for these sure-fire winners! They’re great last-minute toys for the wee-people on your list. And all are priced to please your pocketbook too! Salt? Sam the Turtle is a darling tuffed animal in short plush pile, assorted colors. A lovable gift for toddlers. 8.99 r\ o build an organ in just 4 minutes, a Playtape machine is a portable music system. Uses Cartridge solid state radio in 2 minutes. No tools or wires needed, tapes and has volume and tone controls. Operates on 4 Battery operated. Batteries not included. Hudson’s Toyland. 19.98 "D” cell batteries (not included). Hudson’s Toyland. 29.9S Microscope has .4 eyepieces. 100 to 600 Battery operated reflector light With instruction book. 12.98 Make-believe kitchen appliances snap together in' just minutes. Of heavy gauge steel, they’re built to last, take wear and tear in stride. White with turquoise trim. Refrigerator, 36” high X 18” wide X 15J4V deep 11418. Sink, 28” high X 13” wide X 15V4” deep, 9.99. Stove, 28" high X 18” -*,J- v 4 Read building Bit includes power shovel, road grader, dump Celestial dell heuee with peel—real luxury in miniature Push button telephone includes 2 phones with receivers truck, and bulldozer. Loaded with detsiUng, action play features. size! Plastic furniture for a living areas plus the family itself, and approximately 33 feet of wiring. Batteries are included. Shop soon In Hudson’s Toyland. It’s'priced at jUst 9.99 For hours and hours of fun. In Hudson’s Toyland. Si88 Save now in Hudson’s Toyland. Gift-priced at just 9.98 Extra hours to gift shop at night: Hudson's Downtown open Jfg tH fltmaB tlm<9 at %mmi mmmJ l^m!^ Monday through Friday 9:15 to 8:30 p.m. (Saturday till 6:00); Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, Oakland open l J Monday through Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. ' ■■ * , ‘ M • l ♦' " C—4 THE PONTIAC PRfeSS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 \ Dr. Oaks Says: Emphysema Easily Explained, but Incurable (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is another in a series of articles issued by the Oakland County Medical Society. Dr. Oaks is the collective voice of the society.) What is emphysema? Have you ever blown up a balloon — almost completed the project — and then there was just nothing left? No more air? You would try a bit harder, but no matter how hard you tried the balloon could not be fully Inflated by your effort. It seemed that the returned air within the balloon was greater than the counterpres-the end structures of the'the nasal passages.) or ruptured. These air sacs areillie trachea extends upwards to sure you produced — even with added effort. Take away the balloon. That’s the ailment known as emphysema. At its fullest extent, this condition has done so muchj^l 'damage that it takes ever-imlthe trachea. The latter connects breathing apparatus that beginsl To understand emphysema, it with the nose. The air sacs|is b.est!to understand normal , • L ... respiration, which involves two Sin ton c«n«r2‘&T *'r “• «» btoKW and tomb, canned MM air out of the lung (expiration), creasing, effort just to breathe j to the pharynx, which connects [MUSCLES USED — even at rest. :to the nose. Inspiration requires a con- Medically, of course, there is: * * * traction of the diaphragm and also a technical way to explain (Or: The air sacs connect to the muscles between the ribs, it. Emphysema is a condition in the larger air tubes calledtThis allows an expansion of the which the alveoli — air sacs —! bronchi which are continuous [chest wall and the air rushes of the lungs become distended with the trachea (windpipe). I Into the lung. Computer Helps Sharpen Photograp Expiration, getting the air out, t? less strenuous; the muscles of inspiration merely relax. The chest resumes its former position and the air is squeezed out. Another equally important event is effected when air is drawn in. Air reaches the terminal portion of the respiratory tract — the alveoli or air sacs — and these structures are stretched to accommodate this new volume. As the pressure of the chest returns to its previous level, the air is pushed out of the alveoli and reverses its field out the nose. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (L'PI) — A dialogue between a computer and a scientist here is helping space researchers get clearer pictures from photographs blighted by distortion, blur and exposure error. This improvement in picture quality could lead to Important advances in medicine. X-ray technology and space science, according to researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography's visibility laboratory. The research, at the institution, part of the local campus of the University of California, involves such difficult areas as celestial photography, where distortion by the earth’s atmosphere must be overcome, and microscope and X-ray photography, where subtleties recorded on film often are not visible to the human eye. "Instead of turning a problem over to the computer and telling the machine which procedure to take, we keep a scientist involved in the photo-correction process," explained James L. Harris, who directs the research group. CHANGE POSSIBLE "Although the computer can complete an entire operation on its own, In qur system, the experimenter can modify a procedure while it’s in progress. He can actually converse with the computer through a typewriter keyboard in non-computer language," Harris said. A current project®^ cooperation with the California Institute of Technology, is the removal of distortion from photos of the planet Mercury, a problem that has frustrated celestial photographers for years. Because of its nearness to the sun’s light path, Mercury must be photographed Juft. before sunrise or just after sunset, when the perimeter of the earth blocks the sun’s direct rays. But the routes of such photos slant across the earth’s atmosphere from the horizon, and the atmosphere causes severe distortion. MICROSCOPES, TOO Similarly, efforts are being made to clear up microscope pictures. "Medicalonen say great strides could be made in conquering diseases if they could see ‘just a little bit more’ through the microscope," Harris said. * * ★ "For instance, even under a perfect microscope, a point is diffracted and creates a circular pattern. We can program the computer to eliminate miich of the diffraction and reduce the pattern of light to a pinpoint.” Another set of instructions directs the computer to eliminate blur caused by camera or subject motion. Still another produces detail in areas that appear solid black in normal photographs. This process can also heighten the readability of X-rays, he said. It is evident that the ability to stretch stems from the elastic structure of the lung, which permits it to respond t o variable air pressure applied to it. Now enters emphysema overdistention of the lungs which can be the result of damage to the air sacs whether by direct or by continued exposure to high pressure. Either allows the destruction of the elastic tissue and the inability of the alveoli to push out the air. The person afflicted with emphysema, in order to push the air out, must use additional muscles. Expiration to him becomes an effort. Even minor exertion produces shortness of breath. Damage to the air sacs inspired noxious agents seems to be the most probable cause. Air pollutents must be suspected. It is not now generally conceded that the smoking of tobacco is the most common agent in the development of this disease. Recent theoretical considerations suggest picotine as the causative factor rather than the hydrocarbons. NICOTINE'S EFFECT According tq this theory, nicotine causes a narrowing of the blood vessels that feed the alveoli, The result of this rowing causes significant damage to toe elastic tissue with unfortunate results. * * * Whether the action is directly to the air sac by the hydrocarbons inspired or by the action of nicotine on the blood vessels, the result is the same damage to the air sacs. And, unfortunately, toe body caq not grow new ones. ★ * The disease tends to be slow in onset, but once initiated it is a continuous process unless the offending factor is removed. Susceptible to infection because of the weakened nature of the lungs, the patient often suffers bronchitis and penumonla. A cough is ever present. Since it may be the result of infection precautions must be taken Despite treatment to improve the air and the air interchange by the lungs, there is no cure at present. (Do you have a question for Dr. Oaks? Send a card or letter to Oakland County Medical Society, 346 Park,, Birmingham Mich. 48009.) Burts ^Pontiac Mall RINNELJ-.*S She’ll drift to sleep in a drift of ruffles 5.00 A beautifully feminine gift, floor length sleep cutoffs in pink, maize, cocoa, Home or block ’h'^fdn tucbt torth o rulflqd bodice; S-M-l. LITTLE EXTRAS PI T A Rid PU S f.X (HRlSI If i ,S SIf OPPl\ (• AT i»i\ki:mi 1 VS Extras tike personalized service and helpful assistance with your selections. ANOTHER PLUS FACTOR, OUR FLEXI-CHARGE ACCOUNT WHfCH ALLOWS YOU TO BUY ALL THE CHRISTMAS GIFTS YOU WANT AND CONVENIENTLY BUDGET PAYMENTS AFTER THE HOLIDAYS Fairfield, does a very gifted twosome 13.00 top 10.00 pants Geometric print 'She Shell', black/white, 36-40. 2-way stretch pant* in black, brown, green or navy; 8-18. BotlTof Monsanto 'Blue C’ Nylon. .Add. if you're not sure what to give her for Christmas. a Winkelman's drift Certificate ran solve the problem. Xo need to worry about size or color, and she'll he able to select exactly what she wants. YOUR GPISJPS FftSpjf Ljpp (Silrifitihasl (Sift 3bea It's a double-duty occasional table with lower shelf that stores LP's and rotates for easy finding. Mar-resistant stationary top, 21" diameter, 17" high. Your choice of walnut, * *1Q95 maple end mahogany finishes. ** V.rd. antique or black and gold finish**, 24.95 GRINNELL'S, The Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Exquisite bags for festive evenings 4.00 Beautiful black rayon To keep her hands warm and fashionable 4.00 Smart leather-palmed gloves in a long, tCi lV ] worm length of acrylic knit. Black or bone,. one size fits all. (£laL TEL-HURON CENTER - PONTIAC MALL Give her a wardrobe of our own BelCantd hosiery 3 pair 3.30 Choose seamless dress sheer; demi too opd nude heel Agilon* nylon; 9-11. All come in a beautiful Christmas gift box. Christmas Shop Winkelman’s Every Night Until 9 THE POXTIAC DECEMBER 19. 1968 0-5 %un tfri* eijritfma*, g>ap it from NELL’S OF AMERICAN MUSIC STORES I N lC. anb Jfanulp a iPtano CRAFTED IN OUR OWN FACTORY Quality handcrafted pianos for which Grinnell's is famous . . . take your choice of a spinet or console and save $96 to $126: Both in satiny hand-rubbed ebony finish, offering fast repeating action and rich mellow tone. Shop now for the perfect gift to enrich your home! Reg. $695, NOW *599 in | In mahogany or abony SAVE $300 ON A 41" KIMBALL CONSOLE Here's a wonderful opportunity to purchase a famous Kimball console piano at an amazing saving! You'll leligh and | be delighted with the rich tone (like a grand piano), responsive action and graceful styling, in Italian Provincial walnut. RegularlV priced at $995. $695 GRINNELL JUNIOR PIANO FOR FUN Sturdy little piano with 36 chromatically-tuned keys Is so much fun to play youngsters don't realize how much the/re learning! r)Q95 Music book. Z.7 Bench Included PLAY-ON-SIGHT CHORD ORGAN SAVE $10 on this fun-model Estey Chord Organ for a music-loving family! 37 treble keys, 24 bass chords, volume pedal, tone chamber. 10095 Walnut finish. I Regularly 139.91 STANDARD SIZE US-MADE GUITAR on this good-ill-made flat r. Hardwood WE GUARANTEE YOU'LL PLAY BY CHRISTMAS! No other instrument offers you so MUCH music and is so easy to learn as the Hammond! Lessons are included with every purchase! Even if you have no previous musical training, we guarantee you'll learn. (It cost! no more to own a genuine Hammond.) Left: Most popular home console has everything it takes to give you the professional sound, including rhythm and percussion voices. Prom $2535. Right: F u 11 y-transistorlzed, full-size spinet with built-in Leslie Speaker to add thrilling new dimension to your music. A pleasure to play! From Bench Included $1015. We'll bring o Hammond to your home for a FREE HOME TRIAL. Call today for complete information. Use your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Plan. GRINMELL'S The Pontiac Mall 682-0422 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake -Rd. OPEN EVERY EVENING TIL 9:30 AND SUNDAY 12 NOON TIL 5 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days soma as cash) or Budget Plan — Immediate Delivery — Christmas Layaway GRINNELLS 27 S. SaginDw Downtown Pontiac - FE 3-7168 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL 9—OTHER DAYS 5:30 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, I9S8 Filipino Killings Recall MANILA (AP) — A wave of I vinces known as Huklandia in terror killings against public the fertile heartland of Luzon officials has raised a specter of starting about 20 miles north of the Huks, legendary Manila. The area has a tradi-Communist-led rebels whojtion of dissidence, mainly nearly topped the Philippine because centuries-old feudalism government 20 years ago. has made landlords wealthy and Today’s so-called Huks are kept sharecropping farmers similary bold and tough, but poor, many project an image sharply different from their Marxist-chpnting There during World War II the Philippine Communist party switched its People’s Liberation Army to an anti-Japanese guerrilla army-Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayon, or Huks. At war’s end the movement resumed its original aim of overthrowing the government. At the peak it boasted more Insist today Huk Communists! than 25,000 men under arms are simply trickier and more with thousands of supporters They still roam central Luzon — rice bowl of the Philippines’ main island — but aommonly appear now as Mafia-style gangsters associated with honky-tonk bars and racketeering. Yet several veteran observers subtle — more lethal than ever in the long run. CONFUSION ADMITTED Filipinos confess confusion about who are today’s Huks and what they represent. A favorite question is: ‘‘How do you tell a Huk from a crook?” The situation in central Luzon, President Ferdinand E. Marcos says, is ‘‘a social volcano.” ★ * * Marcos contends “very few” Communist Ideologues are involved — that most of. the troublemakers are hoodlums who trade on the Robin Hood legacy of the original Huks A contrary view expressed by some military and political figures is that Huks are the heart of a strong Communist appartus. The Senate minority leader, Ambrosio Padilla, says the Communists are the most dangerous threat to this country. CONGLOMERATE Other analysts argue that what is popularly known as Huk movement is a conglomerate of many dissident elements — social reformers, confidence men, highway bandits, hired gunmen and feuding politicans — which shadowy Red organizers try to guide toward international communism. Whatever the assessment, the setting is the same — four pro- AT MANILA’S GATES The Huks knocked at Manila’s gates in 1950, but the late President Ramon Magsaysay drove them back and broke up the movement with military force and programs of social reform. Despite occasional serious reform efforts, the conditions that spawned the revolt have not been eliminated, and in the last four months more than 20 public officials, government agents and policemen have been slain. * ★ * Newspapers have speculated about a Huk resurgence. But today’s Huks number only about 150 to 200 armed men by the maximum estimates of both government and private authorities. From 2,000 to 3,000 more are counted as active sympathizers with perhaps 20,0m under some possible Huk Influence. RALLY POINT The original Huks rallied around Mt. Arayat, a timbered peak commanding a view for miles around the flat farmlands. A visit there reaffirmed Arayat’s tradition of peasant unrest. In a foothill village, leatheryfaced farm folk showed cynicism as government land-reform officials started a new irrigation project. “This is fine,” said one farmer, “but it’s long overdue. What happens next? Maybe they think they can forget all about us now — we’ll see.” ★ ★ * Mayors of two towns near Arayat, successors to assassinated mayors admitted to respect for the Huks. They spoke guardedly, but one said, You want justice around here? The Huks are the ones to get it for you.” Rice-paddy justice first made the Huks famous. They dispensed Instant punishment — often death — to cattle rustlers thieves and rapists in return for peasant contributions of food and cash. They also rode herd on corrupt policemen or politicians and oppressive landlords. MYSTIQUE FADES The mystique of the Mt. Arayat vigilantes fades quickly only 10 miles away in Angels City, which for many Filipinos has come to symbolize the new Huks. This is a boom town of 100,000 at the edge of Clark Air Force] Base, one of the largest U.S.| bases outside America. It is about 60 miles north of Manila. I Angeles bulges with bars,; nightclubs and brothels geared for servicemen. Sen. Padilla claims it is a Communist treasury where businessmen pav protection money to Huks. Other politicans and military men say Huks own businesses and have a hand in city government. Angeles Mayor Eugenio Suarez denies this. Huks supported him in the last election, but he says: “So did a lot of other groups. I owe no political debts to the Huks.” SENATE REPORT Angeles and Pampanga Province invariably are mentioned in connection with a 1967 Senate report that" a Huk shadow government existed in central Luzon. Stories about it continue, but Marcos ridicules the idea. I If past elections are any indications, the 1969 campaign is certain to be violent. In fact, officials say the killings not by Huks but by warring political and business factions. Two Angeles city councilors were among those assassinated. Suarez lives behind high concrete walls topped with barbed wire. Other sources Insist some of the killings^ were the work of the “Monkees,” an assassination squad reputedly organized by the national government to counter the “Beatles,” a band of Huk terrorists.. All this turmoil has failed to produce hard evidence of communism. There are periodic reports of a political indoctrination school hidden in the hills, but no proof. Rumors persist also that Communists have slipped into cetnral Luzon from the Chinese mainland with offers p f assistance. One public official who refuses to be quoted says a Red Chinese general was among then}. jQualiCraft white fabric pumps TINTED FREE dffa&erii PONTIAC MALL From Resistol: A Hat So Comfortable You May Forgot You Hava It On. That's why the salesman will always caution you to check before showering, going to bed, or having lunch with the chairman of the board. The reason behind this lack-of-feel feeling from Resistol is a self-conforming band that conforms to the shape of your head for a perfectly comfortable fit. The two versions shown are: (A) .The Wilton —a narrow brimmed, center-creased classic; and (B) The Jet 737—tapered in the crown, dented at the side, and permanently creased. Each in blue, charcoal or black. 18.50 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING *Tll CHRISTMAS OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING TIL CHRISTMAS s_______________ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 C—7 this bracelet sells for $1^000 1 Which shows, among other things, what a wide range of bracelets you’ll find at Rose. Charming 14 karat gold bangle bracelets. Bracelets Bet with birthstones. Classically beautiful cultured pearl bracelets. Dramatic bracelets and demure bracelets. Once-in-a-lifetime bracelets set with emeralds and rubies and diamonds. And you’ll *find the same wide selection in rings, in watches, in necklaces, in earrings, in all the categories of delightful things we carry. So when you’re making your own Santa parade hum shop to shop this Christmas season, pause at Rose. You’ll be • everything from pleasantly surprised to astonished at all the beautiful gifts we’ve assembled, to make giving a pleasure and receiving a joy. The Pontiac Mall — Northland =5 Tel-Twelve Mall — Woodward and John R — Universal City Mall —* Wonderland -— Westborn — Michigan and Schaefer —■ Seven Grand—— New Center — Grand Rapids, Downtown ahd Woodland Mall THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMRER 19, 1968 LANE BRYANT BUDGET FLOOR Parker: a Household Word—for Gome Players slip into comfort Real comfort via foam cushion inner soie, cushion crepe sole and heel with soft, wipe-clean Vinyl upper. Light blue or black, 1 hard-to-find sizes ,.. medium (B-C) 7 to 11 wide (D-E) 6 to 12 x-wide (EE-EEE) 5V4 to 12 best-driesses sweater vest $5 Belted or not, it's the look that's going great with everything right nowl Washable Orion acrylic knit with brass buttons, buckle belt. In white, black, grey, red. your special sizes 40 to 52 SALEM, Mass. (UPI) - A little bit of Edward P. Parker will be in millions of American homes come Christinas morning. And he’ll probably be the object of some good-natured epithets, too. Some moms and dads — kids, too — will find their lives a bit more frantic, thanks to Parker. Others will be learning something about capitalism ★ ★ i ★ He Is president of Parker Brothers Inc., makers of games since 1883. The firm’s most famous game is Monopoly on the market and in most homes since 1935. Its hottest item, though, is a mind-buster called Instant Insanity, a simple looking puzzle that lives up to its label. I WILL PROVIDE SECRET Instant Insanity consists of I four multicolored blocks. The object is to align them in the right order by colors. Chances of doing it are one in 40,000. Should a person give up — before he or she goes Insane Parker Brothers will provide I the secret for 25 cents. The boonjing sales bf Instant Insanity and Monopoly I Parker expects about t million of this standard to be sold this year — are only Indicative of the whole game I market. * * * Parker said record sales are up about 30 per cent this year. | His firm markets some 125 different games. Marriage Licenses Robert W. Valentine, 67 Forest and Elizabeth G. Trammel, 52 Norton. Paul A. Phelps, Orion and Pamela A. raves, Oxford. Ronald D. Stafford, I Susan C. Pierce, Ro^ ^ Orchari eke. Merle R. Morgan Jr„ Union Lake an< arbare E. Crisenbenr, Union Lake. Gary L. Clamant, Drayton Plains am aye A. Yales, 315 $.. Winding. ■Imer G. Carter, Warren and Janice Ranker, 2614 Judah. Cerleton C. Patterson, I nd Frances G. Graham, Parker is the third generation) “We’ve been growing a t Brothers also has plants in Deg of his family to run the firm. almost a 25 per cent rate,” j Moines Iowa, Toronto, Canada, BECOMES SUBSIDIARY j f>ar*cer said. In order to meet] and a small one in France. _ . the demand for more games, A ★ ★ Business has been so good, in facilities have hpd to be e*-f. What has Caused the boom in fact, he had to sell out. This panded. It takes capital to'do the game business? Parker the game-making finnjthis and General Mills had thetbelieves wealth and leisure time ' capital. Consequently the' plant in these affluent times are mature is being enlarged. Palter] jor factors. year became a wholly owned j subsidiary of General Mills. “People are able to buy more now than ever before. Games give you a chance to relax, forget the serious problems facing the world,” Parker said'. “Everybody hal some sort of competitive spirit, and games help families and people get together. When they do, they just can’t sit around and do nothing. So they play games.” ★ ★ a Parker noted there are no Monopoly games behind the Iron CuriKUn. “Mtpopoly is officially banned ip Hgssia,” he said. “It’s too capitalistic.” The Pontiac Mall BUY!SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! D. O'Neill, Birmingham ‘DUthflHd. Farmington Frances E. Royer aft, Southfield, "Thomi Ruth M. Patera, Liv Billy J. Buchanan. Wa Helan I. Refiner, Milford. Brlfen A. Chonnor, 371 Wilson. 417 Eatf C Don nd C Feilp# A. CortOZ, 126 1 Lois A. Petrusha avid H. Vaughn, la Flahar, Drayton Josao K. Moron, Drayton Plalna lartn A. Alsthorpe, Royal Oak. Robert- K. Martin, Drayton PI. nd Charlana R. Slovens, Drayton tains. Marvin T. Belcher, Detroit and Judith . Meatlo, Drayton Plains. Detroit and Janice lass. Milford and ryn A. Baaclano, 5075 Durl O^ii mata|i till Chfi.ii Write or Phone 682-1010 Holiday Package Deal! TOPCOAT style RAINCOAT protection STORMCOAT comfort —all his in Bond's “Four Season” ONE-COAT WARDROBE* 3995 The body of this versatile cbet is wash-end-wear Kodel* polyester/Avril* rayon, lined with goldtone reyon. Treated for durable Silicone* water repellency. The sleeved cipliner ia brushed wool box-plaid. The color-black or olive. Bonds, The Pontioc Moll 293 N. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac 48053 I Mum Orders Filled Promptly 612-1010. Free delivery on orders within dsllvery •utside delivery area add 504c far h.ndling. C.O.D. orders plesse sdd 50s. and sdd local sales tax. . "fk&TWfto Matt- ^ttm On/yL. 'Sftfo latticed -Sanito -Suggeattanif With Bench, Stand and Books 12-CHORD MAGNUS ELECTRIC ORGAN 3 DayI Oi Rtf. 44.1 Ttiur.JFri.i Sat., $un* Dec, 19-26*21*22 4 Days Only—Our Keg. Uggoga For AN Wnmi Stunning in solid colors, tweed colors, floral or paisley prints. Speciall Ker Plunk Reg. 2.96! Game for 2 to 4 players. 96 RUMS BSES!^) Sh. rail, me, turn. «mm»r mtt* Reg.™”$11.83 $8.68 Table Medal Pool J66 Reg. 1.961 Automatic ball return Ridt-ta Horse | pSoir P,oy ,fl Reg. 1.99! O## I Reg. 9.96! Tape recorder. Battery-run*. •moUrncM*! 9*3 SRI ROMAN Fanttutic Fun! Automatically draws millions of designs. $3» KENNERS ZOOM-LOOM AUTOMATIC WEAVING MACHINE Everything you need to make your own sweater, bags, slippers, etc. PONTIAC MALL STORE OPEN EVERY EVENING TIL 10 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY DEC. 22nd, 12 P.M. TO 9:00 P.M. Kit MINI • DRAGONS are comical creatures you make yourself in Motels Electric Thing Maker! ¥ PONTIAC MALL STORE only: ■49E&DOO& in PICAOOOt make your own signs, iewelry, belts, wallet* in Matola newest Thing Mokerl $. S. KRESGE COMPANY TtlE PONTIAC PRESS. TWTTBfinAV T^wr'VATiii7T» APPROPRIATE SHAPE — This goblet-shaped water tower serves Australia’s recently opened township of Coleam-bath in southern New South Wales. The tower is used to irrigate rice fields in the new center of/the nation’s rice bowl. Wind Really Is a Useful, loyal Friend By National Geographic Society WASHINGTON - Fierce winter gales may seem bent on destruction, but most of the year wind is a useful and loyal friend. Life would be unbearable without wind. Fresh breezes distribute the heat of the tropics to other regions and sweep polluted air from cities. Flowing air carries moisture from the oceans and spills rain on the continents. Despite this all-pervading in fluence, science has only begun to unravel the secrets of wind and Weather. HE KNEW LITTLE When storms drove Homer’s hero, Odysseus, into the western Mediterranean, he knew less of that world than the captain of a spacecraft today knows of the moon. According to Homer, the wind god Aeolus lived “on a floating island, the whole enclosed by a rampart of bronze . . .” * * ★ Slav mythology honored the wind god jStribog. The Hindus revered three — Rudra, Vogu and Vada. Eskimos of eastern Greenland! recognize a family of winds. Nekrayak, the father, blows from the northeast; wife Pit-tarak fancies the northwest; son Kadannek prefers the southeast; and daughter Pouwanguartek springs from the southwest. TAKE SHELTER When Piftarak rampages across the ice caps, Eskimos take shelter and sled dogs huddle for warmth. . The wind, recalls a' Danish settler, had a definite whistling note under the eaves: a long drawn-out, wild song, which occasionally would rise to an angry, deafening rumble, shaking the whole house.” WWW The strength of wind staggers the imagination. If the world’s winds died down inexplicably, starting them again would require the power equivalent of nearly seven million atomic bombs. Energy from the sun creates the vast air currents which swirl through the atmosphere, At the seashore, the sun’s rays warm land faster than water. The land air rapidly moves upward, drawing in air from the ocean, and creates the familiar daytime sea breezes. ' At night, the ground cools •aster than the water. The breeze then usually reverses direction and blows toward the Sea winds differ strikingly from land breezes. Free of. obstacles, they race steadily and unimpeded over the ocean’s surface. Generally, the flow of air is free of foreign matter except a few salt particles from the sea. In contrast land winds strike mountainsides, twist themselves in forests and cities and pour across plains. The winds (rick up sand, dust, plant spores, bacteria, and the n o x i o u r chemicals of civilization. * * * Other hitchhikers occasionally accompany a violent wind storm.. Some years ago, for Instance, citizens of Alexandria, Ont., were startled when an airborne invasion of frogs covered their streets following a big blow. Save up to 9.99! Calf handbags complete a holiday outfit Pouches, satchels, envoi- - ____ all beauti- 1 T 99 Zip com- | ^0 opes, more fully detailed par+ment*. Black, basics- i ifckjL ® Pontiac IV Q| OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M, SATURDAY 9j30 A.M, TO 9t30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. • 682-4940 C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Inauguration Medallions Now Big Hits By National Geographic Society WASHINGTON - Every four years, as a new president and vice president prepare to take the oath of office, thousands of handsomely designed bronze and silver medallions are minted. They quickly vanish into private collections o f Americana. Hie 1965 issue was no exception. Some 26,275 bronze and 7,695 silver copies of the Lyndon B. Johnson medal were snapped up by the public, raising* almost $200,000 toward in-auguraLexpenses. ★ * * Earlier issues weren’t always so successful. The 1933 Franklin Delano Roosevelt medal, fori Instance, sold only 1.000 of aj modest minting of 1,500 bronze! copies." Roosevelt, disappointed, asked why sales were so slim. NO CHECKS “Because," h i s inaugural committee chairman replied, “you closed the banks on March 6. and we wouldn’t take checks.” The inaugural medal for President-elect Richard M. ,Nixon, scheduled to be available for purchase by early January continues a tradition that began in 1901 with the second term of William McKinley. He had souvenir medals struck for his Inaugural committee members. ★ h * The artfully designed Inaugural medals became lasting collectors’ items with their first public sale in 1929. The prized mementos have I varied little over the years. Usually they measure two to,' three inches in diameter, andi depict the image of the new| president on one side. JULIE’S HANDICRAFT On their reverse! some bear the names of the president and vice president. Nixon’s medal, for the first time in history, features artwork created by a member of a president-elect’s family — a sculptured miniature of a crewel pattern of the Great Seal of the United States embroidered by his daughter, Julie. * * ,* Dr. Melvin M. Payne, president of the National Geographic Society and chairman of the Nixon Inaugural Medal Committee, has announced that the official 1969 medal will be sold at Inaugural Headquarters and stores in Washington. It also can be ordered by mall, postpaid, from the Inaugural Medal Committee, Post Office Box 1800, Washington D.C. 20013. COST OF MEDALS Bronze versions, 2% Inches In diameter, will cost $6 each. Including an easel designed to display the medal. A limited issue in solid silver, bearing serial numbers 1 to 15,000 and measuring 2% inches i n diameter, will sell for $45 each The Inaugural series presents a fine collection of presidential profiles, but few portray the nation’s second-ranking officer. Only three vice presidents have been depicted. SHARED WITH TEDDY In 1900, James S. Sherman shared die obverse side with President Theodore Roosevelt. Nixon appeared on the 1957 medal with President Dwight D.j Eisenhower. John Nance Garner enjoyed the entirel reverse side of the 1937 issue. I Some of America's most renowned sculptors designed the quadrennial keepsakes. ★ it it Sculptor of the Nixon medal Is Ralph J. Menconi, creator of the John F. Kennedy and Sir Winston Churchill memorial medals, among many others. Adolph A. Weinman, who sketched the 1916 Mercury dime and half-dollar, sculpted Theodore Roosevelt for the 1905 medal. The work was supervised by the celebrated sculptor Augustus Salnt-Gaudens. 1929 DESIGNER Henry K. Bush-Brown, noted for equestrian statues of Gens. Anthony Wayne and George C. Meade, designed the 19 2 9 Herbert Hoover issue. Paul tyanship, sculptor of the Prometheus fountain at Rockefeller Center, created the 1933 Roosevelt and 1961 Kennedy medals. Jo Davidson, who sculpted Robert M. La Follette for the Capitol'Rotunda in Washington, D.C., designed the 1941 and 1945i Roosevelt medals. Carl Paul whose works are in the White House museums, created tte lM9^9arry S. Truman issuer rtrtOISITGOA/lERY imi h ^04*1 CftluabmM. 3cfcbAA, Sale End* Sun., Dec. 22-9 P.M■ gift-inspirations Christmas Store Honrs Dally 10 SJb to 9:30 p.m Sat. 9:30 a-m. to 9:30 pun. Sun. 12 Noon to 9 p.m FOR YOUR MAN ON THE MOVE Dante cologne turns on with bracing new scents Dante bottles the sbnshine with three sassy citrus colognes: Lemon, Lime and Tangerine. They're a whole new concept in brisk refreshment will lift his spirits morning after morning after mom- a gift that lingers. £ Delight him with a smart key case *2 Rich-looking case has hooks for 4 keys. Your choice of car emblems. Imported capeskin leather gloves s°° Luxury capeskin is lined with the softest fur for greatest warmth. S-XL. Men's fine Brent* gift jewelry sets *5 A handsome assortment of cuff links with tie bar or tie tack. Many to seel Rich and rugged leather billfolds *5 Finest leathers, workmanship. Card cases, executives. In black, brown. >'Chlmney"-boxed fine cotton hankies 1*° He can't have enough cotton handkerchiefs! All set to hang on the tree! Gift-boxed Irish linen handkerchiefs 2»o Box of 3 pure Irish linen hankies with an attractive monogram. yplQ&s SkkjL, * 8 ' OPEN'MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY* 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. e 682-4940 PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 19, WMm CHRISTMAS g^UINS AT UJARP9\ Christmas Store Hours Wllf IS te f:M p.m. *•»- *:3# o.m. to f:30 p.m. Signature® deluxe cordless electric knife Cordless electric knife lets you aervein the kitchen, dining room or on the patio. Recharges In Hs own storage case (nickel-cadmium batteries) overnight. Contoured plastic handle is lightweight, balanced fdr greater leverage, full* stroke sKcin# Spatter guard, safety lock. Pushbutton release. Efficient electric carving knife set Great gift idea! Scalloped stainless staef blades have pushbutton release, safety lode. Comes complete with matching caiVing fork. Both are in storage case. Toast# 6 sandwich#! at once er baltos 9. Inch pie. Automatie heat control. Chroma-plated cases; plastic handles. With detachable cord. AAONTGO/WERvI WARD 'Roleof Police Needs a Ruling' The American people must deckle — and very quickly — just what thdy; expect of their polio*; Cd& gressman Jade H. McDonald R-lOth District, said today. "Not a week passes without news of sick calls, resigns-, tions, morale problems, ne w restrictions,” he McDONALD added. In the nation’s. Capital, there is a running controversy over a ruling thatV' JMiounan may not fire even a warding shot at a fleeing suspect unless th e suspect is armed, cited McDonald as an example of the problem. "In Newark, police disgruntled over working conditions and pay suddenly contacted Song Kong flu, simply because, as pubUc employes, they were not allowed to strike.”" There remains a shroud of mystery around the role of Chicago’s police during the Democratic. National Convention, he said. "Die recent 'Walker report’ — a staff report that 4s unofficial — only added to the confusion as a result of its failure .ty Include testimony favorable to fife police.” Hie nation’s police have understandable grievances, the congressman said. ’‘Considering the perils of their job, tljpy are undoubtedly ap underpaid segment of society. Certainly, there Is no justification for a pay system that rewards manv who are unskilled End illiterate while it penalizes men charged with protecting society, often at the risk of death.” McDonald said the nation’s police have another grievance — the failure in many instances of the^ communities to support them, often regarding them as a greater enemy than the lawbreaker. "They have been assaulted and mocked, spat upon and reviled. Each year many go to ah early grave. Unless something Is done to correct this situation, there Is a growing danger of civic chaos.” Pluto's Mass Still a Puzzle to Scientists By Science Service WASHINGTON - Pluto, -farthest out of the sun’s planets, has always been a puzzle. There Is, apparently, too much stuff In it for its size. Since PJuto was discovered in the 1990s, calculations gravitational theory Pluto’s pull on nearby and Uranus — have mass quite near to 6,000 billion billion metric Recent studies have Plul weighing eight or nine tenths what the earth does. The difficulty is that appears to ■■ of earth — miles In the eartl volume a with the large mass would make It 4) times as heavy as water. It is hard to imagine what could make Pluto so dense. The earth Is only 5.8 times as dense as water. Iron Is 7.8. A solid lead Pluto would be only HA and solid uranium^ the heaviest stable element, comes out only 18.95 times as dense as water FIGURE DOESN'T rrr On the other hand, calculations dipt start from Puto’s size and assume ,that it is abopt as dense af the earth five It a mass «py 0.13 times that of the earth. Rut tills figure did not fit the gravitational calculations. The r e a s o n for the discrepancy, says Drs. It L. Duncombe, W. J. Kepczynski and P. K. Seidelman of the Naval Observatory, was that there were too many unknown factors in the gravitational equations. They have done a series of calculations in which they have gone a long step toward harmonising the figures. They noticed that tbe predicted orbits for the planet Neptune that had been used ini calculating Pluto’s mass were, beginning to disagree with bbeervatkm. These orbits had been fitted carefully tf observations up te tbe times they were calculstedj but oiMMrvatians state then were coining out up to 1-798 of s degree away from the predictions. American Tourister Luggage for Christmas THi Lightest, loveliest, strongest, Roomiest luggage ever! Gracefully slim 3-way taper* fits body contour for ease in carrying. Patented high pressure molded one-piece shell completely reinforced with fiberglass. Highly resistant to scuffing, scratching, staining; waterproof, washable. Exclusive springless Sureglide locks* will not snap open. Stainless Steel Closure* for added strength and dosing power. AB ready to traval with Its own identification tag*! Tiara Tourister 2-suitar $53 27-ineh Pullman $53 Tiara Tourister 3-zuitar $58 21 -Inch Weekend $35 21-inch Companion $35 Tote Bag $25 24-inch PuRman $43 Umbrella Tote $30 Cosmetic Casa $35 Fitted Vanity $33 Wardrobe $50 ■:*} Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9i30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. e 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 ^Irmerriest ATJWAfP TABLE & SAVE $60l Deluxe ||4oet pool Save *2 a pair t todies1 or men's FIGURE SKATES Sift Mf.24.ft AAOMTGOAAERY WARD mwKm W*rds "Medalist" is ImndsomelystyltdiQwalnut and 2 hend-med# Italian cues. W* Wflh pwwn laminated plastic cabinetry ever 2 'A -in. balls, hardwood a wood frame. Metal corners lor extra strength. Cov- triangle, " ^ | ^ billiard cloth that will not pill. End- of-table ball raturft. A rec room mustl REG. $579 SAVE El Magnifico".It tnado of the finest materials featuring * %-in. slate bed, rails and side panels covered with Rosewood Formica* and all-wool clpth. 4 cues, balls, chalk, log. $129 7-ft. "Volley" peel table $4SS IRON MAIDEN - A man would really have to show his mettle to cuddle up to someone clad in this outfit. The all-metal fashions were designed by a painter-sculptor and shown in Nice, France. Son Marino Favors Stamps Over N-Arms WASHINGTON - the Most Serene Republic of San Marino, whose gross national product relies chiefly on postage stamps and tourism, has pledged not to develop a nuclear weapon! arsenal. The mountain enclave, en circled by Italian loll. Joined 01 other nations in signing the nuclear nonproliferation treaty last July 1 a The colorful little country, which, could ecarcely even one nuclear power reactor, traditionally has had no Interest In weapons and wars, the National Geographic Society says. Oldest and smallest of the world’s republics, San Marino for centuries was considered a pocket of democracy where the rebellious and the oppressed could find asylum. RISKED NEUTRALITY In IMP, San Marino sheltered the Italian patriot, Giuseppe Garibaldi. In World War II, the nation risked Its neutrality by giving asylum- to perhaps 100,000 refugees. After the war, a coalition of Communists and Socialists gained control of the government. Twelve years later, the government was overthrown In a bloodl-ss revolution making San Marino the first elate to rid Itself peaceably of a Communist regime. ■ it # , ♦ The "civil war” fittingly awaited the end of tho tourist season. Each year, more than S million visitors pour Into tho nation of 10,000 Inhabitants. Ixcltlng bumpwr pool table Hal lively gum rubber c u I h I • n s, reinforced wool cloth, 3 % -in. thick phrttcle bed. Welnut cabinetry. Fun for mill KM. $110 Sale Ends Sun., Dec. 22-9 P.M. admire the spsctj panorama. BUY STAMPS Most of all, they buy ■tamps and postcards, have been issued to corn- had not run for years. More than 150 air nation that has n< airport nor airplanes. exceeds $2.5 million annually. around tho clock, 100,000 pieces of mall a day. stamp in 1077. In 1802 learned them up. Spirit Reigns in Scandinavia In Denmark and Norway t legendary good spirit of t house is Nisse, who watch feavar home and farm and ^somstimes said to be the gi__ Z bringer, too. t tts Christmas treat, the rice gpdWtog traditional at Scan-PH holiday feasts, la * placed beside the kitchen door . «r, «n inns, In Urn hayloft. Ski- i Si Shop. Rag. *145 SNOW SKIS ...... *85 Rog. *100 SNOW SKIS . . . . . *65 Rog. *55 $, w . ★ In IBM' Bid state’s prison population had. fallen to just under 66 pef cent of tha 10,351 inmates in prison In 1968: As of Dec. 1 of this year it was up to over 73 per cent of the 1958 figure. A jState Department of Cor rections spokesman attributes the increase over the last year to tougher sentences, estimating! five times as .many felons sentenced to terms of 10 years, or longer this year than there were two years ago when crime also was booming. PROBATION, PAROLE Some attributed the decrease In prison population offhana to “morn probation and parole." No statewide figures are readily available on the' number gran from M fail to Show parole contributed appreciably; If at ail Judges sent only 3,061 to prison In 1966 — »the low population "yearbut a cor-rections department spokesman estimates they will commit about 3,800 during the current year. Longer sentences tend to make prison populations stack uo, since releases are slowed down. Latest figures available from the FBI for the calendar year 1907, show a total of 141,429 crimes to Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties — the Detroit metropolitan area — compared with 114.533 to the same coun* ties during 1966. FIGURES COMPARED : friyto wtfe ldl more* murders in 1967, or 366 compared with 265 ; 8,122 aggravated assaults, compared with 6.225; 14,082 robberies against 10,960. Among violent crime, only forcible rape showed a decline, r,lT9 to 1,244. In the peak year of 1958 there were 10,551 and to 1952, the year of the bloody riots, Southern Michigan alone held 6.068 — just 1,662 fewer than are in ail state prisons todav. On the first of this month the Jackson penitentiary held only 4,253. Marquette State Prison, where the toughest of the state's convicts normally end uo, housed only lit' two months ago, with an additional 113 in outside dormitories, on farms or in conservation camps under its jurisdiction, for a total.of 694. Warden Raymond J. Buchkoe said this was the Marquette prison’s lowest population in So years. In 1968 there were 1,107 there and in 1952 there were 975. • PAROLE FIGURES Paroles ovpr the last I years follow: 1968 to Dec 2.703: W **f 3^3: ’66 - 3,5 ’65 - 3,979? '64 - 4,602. Ip 1958 there were 3,558 paroles granted and 3,20? in Christmas Store Hours: Daily 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sun. 12 to 9 |MU* * ’ SALE ENDS SUNDAY, 9 P.M. "• jt JT5 COLOR! IT'S COMPACT! SAVE 35*90! NEW 102 SQ. IN WIDE SCREEN COLOR TV STAND OPTIONAL HO MONEY DOWN Phosphor-coated tube boosts brightness 43% Built-in Color Magic maintains color clarify Pictures stay steady automatically—no flutter Weighs only 51 pounds.». just 15 inches high New enjoy full-screen color viewing in a truly lightweight TV( Take it from room to room ... end look at Its BIG color TV features! Greet reception, COLOR MAGIC to eliminate hate end* blur. Keyed AGC to lock pictures in. Practically tunes itselfl Just set it end forget it. Great gift for the entire family! YOU PAY LESS POR SEWING MACHINES AT WARDSI FREE! CORDLESS ELECTRIC SEWING SCISSORS with purch any Wards Signaluri.- zig-zag s machine during this 3-day sole! JjQll/ Skkju U)oaJU~ l tur.* t.wi.g JAVI 15.12! Now “Dressmaker" Machine * Handles everyday tasks easily • No additional attachments needed * Mends, dams, hems ■many joba • Complete accessory kif bidudod SAVE 10.12! Zig-Zag Sewing-Machine * Maine buttonholes, fancy patterns, sews on buttons, ends hows of work 9 Mend, dam, ombroider, monogram * Compact-sewing heed handles easily SAVE 10.121 Deluxe Zig-Zag Machine * Features built-in buttonhoier, built-in blind hammer •. • gives custom looks 9 With pushbutton fbrward-rovorso control; handy sewing light Sale End* Sun., Dec. 22 — 9 P.M. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:30 SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. e 082-4940 <>-i4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1068 Scientists Try to Find Lost Minisub Alvin By SCIENCE SERVICE WASHINGTON - The furor ifl| considerably smaller than thqt over the loss of the Scorpion but so Is the submarine. The 819-foot Scorpion disappeared at an unknown location with 99 crewmen aboard resulting in a I search that involved some 5,000l men, 40 ships and 5 months of intensive hunting. < The Alvin, a 23-foot research! sub operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution went down with no one aboard almost! directly beneath its own surface \ support vessel. Ani oceanographic ship, a Coast (Guard cutter and a n o t her minisub were called in to help. Hie scale of the operation was smaller, but scientists would still like to have the vessel back. Alvin is one of the more capable members of "the U S. minisub fleet. It can reach depths of 6,000 feet and more, and recently it scored a coup by being the first research submersible to drill rock core samples from the ocean bottom. Built in 1964 by Litton, Industries, Alvin was com-' missioned by the Office of Naval Research, which paySj Woods Hole to run it, and two] years later made its reputation by finding the lost H-bomb off| the coast of Palomares, Spain. ENGAGED IN EXPLORATION On Oct. 16, Alvin was engaged In exploring an area of the Atlantic floor known a s Hydrographer's Canyon, about 120 niles south of Cape Cod. Hie site is on the continental slope well beyond the continental shelf. With its catamaran! mother ship Lulu and another]] research vessel, the Gosnold^n attendance, the submarine was preparing to inspect buoy moorings on the bottom prior to making detailed exploratory dives. As crewmen readied it for its descent, Alvin was resting on a cradle slung between the two] hulls of the Lulu on four %-lnch-thick steel cables. The deck crew held six more hand lines' to stablize the sub as it was lowered on its cradle Into the water. ♦ ★ ★ Standing atop the conning tower of the sub was pilot Edward Bland. Oceanographer| Paul Stimson and pilot-trained Roger Weaver were working Inside the pressure hull, with the hatch open. Suddenly, one of the forward] cables supporting the cradle snapped. An instant later, yanked by the sudden increase in load, the other forward cable broke and dropned the, end ofj the cradle Into the water letting Alvin slide off. Some of the hand-held auxiliary lines parted, others tore themselves loose from the deckhands' grip. DISAPPEARS COMPLETELY Bland leaped off, and Stimson and Weaver Just managed to scramble out to safety as water poured In through the open hatch and through a plex-lglas wipdow In the tower, broken in the Impact With the water. In 60 seconds Alvin had disappeared completely, headed for the bottom some 4,700 feet below. It is unlikely, Woods Hole officials feel, that Alvin drifted horizontally for a greater distance than It covered downward. With this reasoning, they concluded that the minisdb should be somewhere in a circle with a radius of a bit less than] a mile. * * ★ The approach of winter brings] rough weather to the northern Atlantic, and it soon became too violent, for the Gosnold, so a larger ship, the Chain, was sent from Woods Hole to take charge. Meanwhile the Coast] Guard buoy tender Sassafras] was sent in to help, and the] General Motors-bullt Deep Ocean Work Boat was floWn In from Califomial One of the first parties on the! scene was not part of the rescue, team at all, but a Russian trawler. Within hours it put a marker buoy on the spot. Three days later, however, it gathered up Its buoy and departed. RUNS INTO TROUBLE It took about two hours for the DOWB to run into troubles of its own. Scanning difficulties in its sonar (a sharp-eared Woods Hole design capable of spotting a half-gallon can hundreds of yards away), and a malfunction in an emergency weight release, sent that sub Wot to laud for repairs. The Lulu, carrying the DOWB, set out for the site on Nat- 9. She got to about an hour from the location when a storm] farced her back to port where She renudhs, waiting for clear] weather. % | MERRIEST CHRISHMAb BCnw^rVTTTTTiS' AAONTGO/l/lER ini ARO Wards exclusive color TV SAVE 51,95! VIVID COLORS AUTOMATICALLY ON BIO 172-SQ. IN.* SCREEN REG. 379.95 Delight the whole family with a gift of color. Colors stay bright and clear automatically with Color Magic, Wards, exclusive built* in device that eliminates haze end blur. Multiple signal boosters assure steady reception even in fringe areas. A pleasure to watch in this handsome cabinet of rich veneer-hardwood. Come see its superior quality for yourself! 18-hub diagonal mtw Colonial stylo / NO MONEY DOWN EXPERT SERVICE a v a i I a b I o in 1900 convenient locations. NO toADE-IN REQUIRED on any imajor appliance purchase. FREE HOME TRIAL on Airline* TV or stereo. No obligation to buy. Reg. 389.95 SALE $338 SAVE 22.95 Solid state AM/FM stereo *177 Enjoy concert-hell realism! Balainced, full-range speaker system. Radio receives FM in stereo. Four - spaed phonograph is automatic. RIO. 199.91 SAVE 5.11 SOlid state tape recorder "Tape" Christmas! 2 speeds, big 5-in. reels. Capstan drive assures even taping. Complete with batteries. 34” ^ Save 25.11 on Airline® deluxe stereo phonograph 88 Solid state for "instant on" performance. Bass-treble control, separate volume control for each channel. Automatic shut-off. 54 Rife 79.99 Our new "Twi-lite" deluxe 72-sq. in.* portable TV New "Twi-lite" reflection screen filters out harsh glare indoors or out. Lets you enjoy extra-sharp contrast. Pre-set VHF, keyed AGC. • 12-incb diagonal vittr 98 NO MONKY DOWN Sale End* Sunday, Dec, 22 (#) Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. e 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER* 19, 1968 C—15 SIMPLE, SMART — Simplicity is the key to this wedding gown with an oriental motif. A single sprig of flowers accents the outfit which features kimono sleeves, princess fit and modified coolie bonnet. Holiday Thyme Is Here Again By National Geographic Society I WASHINGTON - The! pungent aroma of spices and herbs means happy holidays to generations of Americans. The N°°den cook stove has given way to the electric range, but the same delectable odors of fresh mince pie, fruit cake, I and roast turkev mingle with the rjjne fragrance of the Christmas tree. Many popular holiday h*>rbs and spices have such a long history that myths still ding to them. s Rosemary, for instance, Is tied to. the storv of Christmas; Legend holds that the heir's white blooms turned'to .the blue of the Virgin Mary’s cloak when she hung it on a bush to-dry during the flight Into Egypt. The plant then became known as Mary's Rose. KEY TO LONG LIFE? Ancient herbalists believed that sage now a staple in many, dressings improved the memory and assured long life.| Doctors at Salerno, the greatj medieval school of m®dicine, asked, “How can a man die| who grows sage in his garden?" Imported by the Pilgrim*, sage, bay leaves, and thyme were among the first herbs to flavor festive American meals. Marjoram’s scent always has been highly regarded. Ancient Greeks and Romans believed the fragrant herb had been created by Venus, goddess of love, and used it to make crowns for happy young couples. | Judge Can't | Cover Up 1 Loss of Pants TAIPEI (UPI) - Judge LI1 Shih-Lu denied everything, but he did not explain how he lost his pants. As a result, the Judge of the( Kaohsiung D’striet Court has b»en indicted on charges of i taking a bribe and attempted rape. * * ★ The “pants scandal,’’ as iti has come to be known here, started earlier this year when Mrs. Tsai Ping-Tang visited Judge Li in connection with fraud charges against h-r husband. a sporting goods dealer. The Judge demanded a bribe for: releasing her husband on bail.1 she told the-court, and arranged, to meet her at the H«intung, Hotel Dec. 2 to cdil-ct the money. SOUGHT HELP ^ Since the judge also made a pass at,her, Mrs. Tsai said, she sought ihe help of a friend, Lin Chin-Chih, a former member of the Kaohsiung City Council. When Judge Li arrived at the hotel, Lin and four of his! friends were hidden in the next room-. The unsuspecting judge asked Mrs. Tsai for the money, she told the court. He also announced he was going to make lave to, her and started un-dressirtg, she said. ____ As he removed his pants, the TO telephone rang. Mrs, Tsai grabbed the trousers and ran from the room, calling for help, i THE GLASBELT! MONTGOMERY iw y a More riding comfort than radial tires. More mileage, strength and traction than conventional tires ... at Wards sensible price $ Riverside PASSENGER TIRE ' ‘ 4-WAY GUARANTEE 1. UNTIME quality guarantee 3. TREAD WEAR GUARANTEE for rfl biko not applicable to tirin' 4. satisfaction guarantied NATIONWIDE. Return tiro to ftOO'Bt» mm -K\Vf i ff l f i rMm mtm AUTO SERVICE OPEN 9 TO 9:30 DAILY. SUNDAY NOON TILL 6 Sale End* Sun., Dec. 22 — 9 P.M. Heavy Duty motor oil SAVE ON THE 10-QT. CAN OF RIVERSIDE* OIL 99 DUTY mot oh°“ HEAVY REG. 3.49 * Detergent oil for modern cars * Surpasses automaker's tests * SAE grades 20-20W, 30, 40 Detergent oil meets the hard-working demands of modem cars, trucks ana tractors. Cleans out your angina and keeps it running smooth. Heavy-duty detergents cut sludge, rust, deposits. 10 qt. AS oil...............3.99 1 gt. HD oil................36c 6, 12-V solid state ignition amplifier 22" NO MONlV down Boosts spark plug power to help stop winter starting problems. Spark plugs last up to 10 times longer, more mileage. Installation available c#> Pontiac \ 6.50*13 tubeless blackwall plus 1.81 F.ET. TUBELESS REGULAR SALE PLUS ILACKWALL PRICE PRICE F.E.T. SIZES EACH EACH EACH 6.50-13 $20* $15* 1.81 7.75/7.50-14 7.75/6.70.15 $25* $20* 2.19 2.21 8.25/8.00-14 8.15/7.10-15 $27* $22* 2.35 2.36 8.55/8.50-14 8.45/7.60-15 $29* $24* 2.56 2.54 •With trade-in tire ell your «er. WhHtw.il, SI mere eeeh NO MONEY DOWN — FREE MOUNTING 2 fiberglass belts fer greater . tread stability and performance Treed leys down flatter, and more firmly on the road then ordinary tires. It wears longer and provides better traction. 2 plies of strong nylon cord for maximum strength and tire safety Cross plies give more stability then radial plies. .Gives maximum protection against impact damage, heat build-up. Pin moup mm cars siu SOI 42-MONTH Ref* Sole* PITS MOUP THIS! CARS SIZH SOR 42-MONTH Re«.* SH,* Chovrolot MtW IW4-4* Ctrvelr 1.444-44 74 Stick Sptci.l 1.41-4, (V,) A nr, trie.n IfM-M kontltc Mott 1*44-4* Dodft s Plymouth Moil ItU-M SOW 17.1* Mustang All Vis 24 F Ton 17.M Mtttttt All Ctr.tlr 1.40 44 ford Mtll 1.444 4, 747 7.Icon Mod 1.40-4, in sir C.dilltc 1.44-4, Chryftltr Moil IH4-M 27 Oldtmobll. Moot 1.44-4, Stick Setcltl 1.41-4, [V4| Ttrd Moit in, 47 2*N7 ji h ~ie.ae 'Regular end Sal* prices with your baft# ry in trad# Oldimobllt Moil 1*44-44 40 Cadillac 1967-66 ii n ism 42-mo. Riverside9 SOE battery *17 Protect now against annoying battery failure! Meets or exceeds power specifications of most new-car batteries. 28% bigger plates than Special give 110% greater energy rating. Replace now! 12-V exch. REG. EX. PRICE $22 OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAV 10-AsM. TO 9:30 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M, e 682-4940 C—16 THE PONTIAC PREgS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Daily 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sun. 12 noon to 9 p.m. Sale Ends Sunday PRICES SLASHED! Save 1.11 Johnny Astro® Now you can maneuver a space ship from launch to cargo recovery and landing* from a portable unit. Reg. 5.88 LAST MINUTE TOY SPECIALS! Reg. 10.44 "Kooky Kokes". 8.77 Reg. 4.99 Super Sweeper . 3.97 Save 2.17! Unique Easy-Bake Oven set Quick! Easy! Bake in 6 to 16 minutes! 3 baking pans, utensils, mixes, cook book. SAVE 1.19! GRAB-A-LOOP BY MILTON BRADLEY Gain points by snatching a col* 77 ored loop from player's belt while protecting yours. Reg. 4.94 OPEN MONDA Y THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. • 682-4910 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Street Wqry as Firm Plans Casino Link By DICK BARNES NEW YORK (AP) - The impending marriage of a Philip, pine gold ihining company a feudal-like Bahamas land development complex will put a lavish gambling operation, cently linked with organic crime, on the New York Exchange. Involved are Benguet Consolidated Inc., a Manila mining corporation already listed on the exchange, and Grand Bahe-ma Port Authority, the develop-ment company tied to Wnhawp»« gambling and partly owned by the Bahamian government, * * ★ The merged firm won’t be the first casino operator with a stock market listing. Already available on the American Stock Exchange for the investor who’d like gambling action in his port-, folio is Resorts International— Co.—which runs its own mas casino. Resort International also has connections with some principals in the Benguet-Port Authority merger. It is no longer in the paint business. The U.S. Justice Department reportedly is convinced that profits from legal gambling iq the Bahamas are being skimmed for organized crime in this country. A PAIR OF PROBES A federal grand jury in New York is known to be investigating suspected links between the underworld and the island casinos—and the Securities and Exchange Commission has been looking into activities of Resorts International for months. The crime issue was raised sentencing in, New York' after pleading guilty to gambling-^ lated charges, and Brudner’s trial on a similar charge is pending. WALL STREET IS WORRIED Stock exchange officials won’t talk about the Bahamas operations for publication, but there are indications of concern over the implications of public trad-ing in gambling-related ventures. The ^American Exchange recently ^reviewed Resorts International but found no basis for delisting the issue. Nothing in exchange criteria forbids an or-ganization from running gambling enterprises. * ♦ ★ Benguet stockholders approved acquisition of the Port Authority Dec. 5. But before .the merger can be completed, the New York Stock Exchange must approve Benguet’d proposed listing of additional shares of common stock. The Philippines government also must approve the deal. Benguet was for several years the lowest-priced stock on the big board, sometimes selling at less than $1. It climbed to $3 in early 1967 and has since more than quintupled to 617.50, often amidst heavy volume. THE MEN BEHIND IT The Benguet deal has been 'masterminded by the New York investment banking house of Allen & Co., in which Herbert Allen is a partner with his brother, Chailes Allen Jr. Charles Allen was described last May by Fortune magazine Development of Grand Baha-untH April 1, 1963, when the Fiji Medicine Overdoses Fatal to TV Actress suing to Port Authority stockholders up to the equivalent of 10,799,000 shares of Benguet, it is making them the dominant holders of Benguet, which now has only 11,023,433 additional shares outstanding. * * * Two new seats have been created on the Benguet Board of Directors. One will go to an officer of the Port Authority. The Bahamas government, whose liberal concessions made the Port Authority bonanza possible in the first place, will get the other —to represent the interest it purchased several months ago in Port-Authority holdings. * * * Biggest single stockholder involved is Mrs. Georgette Groves, who owns nearly half of the Port Authority and will hold about 24 per cent of Benguet. She is the wife of Wallace Groves, creator and present chairman of the Grand Bahama Port Authority. ONCE JAILED FOR FRAUD Groves is a former Wall Street figure who was jailed.in '"'T*'-' 3B? 7 1W .«« betag Clm- Miss Tabor appeared in the Perry Mason; Laramie and Laredo television series. She will be buried in Sioux Falls, S.D home of her parents, after services here Friday who would hot get license to doj Groves interests won a certifi- port management with 26 sub-lcate 01 option from laws ma lagged behind expectations forbidding gambling in the Bahamas. GOVERNMENT TIES Key figure in gaining the exemption was Sir Stafford Sands, long-time attorney for Groves and at the time a member of the government’s executive council. The Commission of Inquiry found that Sir Stafford was paid 6560,000 for his work in obtaining the exemption and that the Port Authority and its subsidiaries paid him more than 61-8 million in fees from 1962 through BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Actress Joan Tabor, 34, died in a hospital .Wednesday after, police were told, accidentally taking influenzA medicine 1966. more frequently than, pres- A former Chicago model, she [S 'ure 0,f «amblin* married actor Broderick Craw-rffve f p «SSSS P™,clPal ford in 1961. They were divorced c‘ty °J tGrandQ£Babama.Is , JHHMRRIi-. IH in 1965. Another former hus- f°?,r®d 26,000 amva s Kthority in 1967 was $11.8 million, band, David Gold, a Chicago 1963 t0 332,0V° ln ,967‘ up 62.3 million from the pre- financier, (old police she mis- Today the Port Authority is a vious year. Its assets as of Jan. takenly took too much medicine, vast complex of operations in-|31,1968, were $99.9 million. Ben-Gold said he and Miss Tabor eluding residential land sales, iguet’s assets totaled $27 million were reconciling. | industrial development, port as of Dec. 31 and its 1967 eam- management, utilities and air-lings were 62.5 million An autopsy was scheduled by sidiaries or subsubsidiaries. ■ TAKE* IS ASSIGNED Bahamas Amusements Ltd. Is the actual holder of the certificate of exemption that permits! gambling at the island’s two Ca-| sinos, (me at the Lucayan Beach j Hotel and another called simply I El Casino. But Bahamas! Amusements has assigned the operation, including all profits, to Grand Bahama Development Co. Ltd., a subsidiary of the Port Authority. Port Authority’s financial! statement, as presented ln the I proxy, says that it has no own-! ership interest in the Amusements company. ★ * * With all Its other operations,[ net Income over-all for Port Au- mail fraud and conspiracy in connection with a securities transaction made while he was a director of the General Investment Corp. of Boston. In the late 1940s, Groves began considering a large-scale development on Grand Bahama Island, 60 miles East of Palm Beach, Fla. * * * In 1955, the Bahamas government made land on the island available to the newly created last year by the British aovern- as Probably the most success- „ ...... mentis Commission of Inauirv ful venture capitalist of modern £ort. A.?th ”ty' Whl1®requiring WaXTP* magazine placed1 ^ Authority to provide schools ness of^astaw^^I^e^ort^and b's wealth at between 62M mil-i a”d jjj ^ facilities, it Nassau. hon and $300 million. Among other things, the commission said that Meyer Lansky, long rented to be the big boss of organised crime In the .southern United States, was consulted qh the Initial staffing of one gambling house. It also suggested that the original managers of the Lucayan Beach igetel eaaino on Grand Bahama Island—Frank Ritter. Brudner—“were not suitable persons to haVe been employed in the Bahamas, venture.” The three subsequently departed the Island, by government request. Courteney and Ritter now face Brother Herbert is a former board chairman of Benguet. The Allen family interests were the single biggest shareholders of Benguet with 743,800 shares, according to a statement filed last year with the SEC. The Allens hold a bit more than 10 per cent of the Grand Bahama Port Authority, according to the Benguet proxy state- No Bus Holdups INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -The Indianapolis Transit System says It has had no bus robberies since Nov. 12 when sengers were required to have exact change. A company spokesman says only about 30 cash-refund slips are issued also granted broad tax exemp- each day, mainly because pas-tions and empowered the Au-j sengers help each other make thorily to decide who would and1 change. Max Cdt*tepey and *h,n WM? worth of Resorts InternattoM|], according to the 1967 SEC report. NOT WHAT IT APPEARS On paper, Benguet is acquiring the Port Authority. But in is- Drive a little- (only a few minutes from your homo to Shelton) save a lot (that short drive to Shelton can save you big money on a new Pontiac, Buick or Opel). ehelton PONTIAC - BUICK - OPEL V6 Milt South of Downtown Rochester 855 Rochester Road, Rochester 651-5500 Guardian Premium SNOW TIRES WHITEWALLS - 4-Ply Nylon 7.35x14-18.50 plus 2.06 F. 7.75x14-20.50 plus 2.19 F.E.T. 8.25x14 - 21.60 plus 2,36 F.E.T. 8.55x14 - 23.50 plus 2.56 F.E.T. SNOWTIRES-Retreads 7.75x14 Whitewalls 2-26" KING TIRE CENTER FI 3-7068 31 WEST MONTCALM, PONTIAC, MICH. 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EVERY EVENING mi CHRISTMAS \ MALI - PHONE 682-4940 C—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19„ 1968 Capitol Facade Needs a Face-Lifting (DPI) -jjinispace by moving the West the other side of the Capitol I Front some feet outward while Building from where the scat- doi the necessar^ repairs. folding is going up for Richard * .-*•*„ ■ F . . . M. Nixon’s inauguration is! ,Stron* M ^ another set of scaffolding.!Plae? “ 1*».ta sh«* UP th® Engineers erected it to help "fked- disintegrating and hold up the building. sandstone walls of the ~. , .. „ .. ... . West Front’s central portion, This is the Capitol’s West leted 139 years ag£ It t ° xr “ ,umP°SIng, facad® the only exterior portion left of crumbling with age and in need the CaJito] as reb^ilt after the of a face-lifting^ ^ British burned down the . ... . . , original one in 1814. According to a controversial i proposal of the Capitol HOPING FOR GO-AHEAD Architect’s Office, the time isi Capitol Architect J. George also ripe to create more office'Stewart has been hoping to get) 6-Pc. HOSTESS SERVING SET COMPLEMENTS YOUR ONEIDA STAINLESS FLATWARE AND ONLY $7.95 IN GIFT BOX Suttor knife, cold matt folk, pierced < , augkr a pc on, gravy ladle, ONEIPACRAFT* DELUXE STAINLESS PC. SERVICE FOR t IS Uaspoom, I dlnnir knivti, I dlnnar forks, 8 salad forks, I loup Chataau* Tampo* Tanjura* Laillnf Ron* only MS15 EASY CREDIT TERMS - TEEN ACCOUNTS WELCOME Eiumau Eat. 1163 Pontiac Jewelry Co. 25 North Saginaw Street OPEN 9-9 TIL CHRISTAAAS SUNDAYS 11-5 the go-ahead for his $30-million-or-so project to extend the now uneven walls out as much as 88 feet by building new marble walls, matching the rest ol the Hue-Da Nang Rail Tie Work Tough Going PHU LOC, Vietnam (AP) — They’re working on the railroad almost all the livelong day in South Vietnam. It’s slow, tough going. Here, about 28 miles South of the old imperial capital of Hue, employes of the national railway system sweat under the blazing sun with picks and shovels, reshaping the roadbed, replacing track and ties. ★ ★ ★ They are striving to link up with another work force moving north from Da Nang. About 18 miles still separate the two par ties. It is hoped they will join up by February, the fortunes of war permitting. y*5‘ * .* j The railway originally was j built by the French between ! 1902 and 1936, running from Saigon to the Chinese border. The tracks are standard European meter gauge laid on ties of steel or prestressed concrete, and I when it was running as the French Indochina Railroad lt was one of the best In the Far East. Until 1948, railway head quarters was Hanoi and Saigon was simply kilometer 1,729. HIT BY WARS The railroad was damaged ex tensively during World War III It was torn up more in the French Indochina war. ★ * ★ In 1959 the South Vietnamese government had the line open from Saigon to Dong Ha, about 10 miles south of the demilitarized zone. In 1960 the Vietcong began their sabotage and har-rassment along the railway — about 100 incidents a month. Throughout the early 1960s most of the line was unusable. FIVE SEGMENTS About two years ago Intensive reconstruction plans were made and the railway was divided into five operational segments for repairs. It is hoped that a I segment will be opened this! month running from Song Maoj to Phu Cat, permitting work then to switch to the line from Song Mao southwest to Long Khanh. If this is done, it will join the already operational line from Saigon to Long Khanh and wouldyflBke 409 miles of operating railway from Saigon to Phu Cat near the coast just above Quin Nhon. Closing of the break between Da Nang and Hue would add 64 miles. building, to take over the structural burden. Observers suggest daily that the nine-million-pound cast Iron dome added to the building a century ago may come toppling | well be worse down if an unfortunate earth; tremor or sonic boom should; occur. until now, and the money situation has failed to indicate improvement for either the new Nixon administration or the incoming Congress. In fact it may Negro Tenants Buy Buildings The West Front of the building is all but falling down,” Rep. Laurence J. Burton, R-Utah, said recently. There is a 4V4-inoh bulge in the wall, and the Capitol Dome could fall in on Congress at any time. And it’s no laughing matter.” Burton said he would in- troduce legislation to allow the extension project to proceed. 2 OBSTACLES Stewart’s plan faces two obstacles — ‘‘traditionalists and money. The commission for extension of the Capitol made up of the capito] architect, the vice president, the House speaker and the House and Senate _ , minority leaders, unanimously Tlie group plans to use a Ne-approved the proposed ex-1*™ archite<* and contractor tension in 1965. !and as much Ne8™ labor as | possible. | ! A subsidiary of United Ten- But after consulting with key |ants' financed the down payment | appropriations committee from a loan-by the Metropolitan! members - who were faced| Detroit Citizen* nevelnniwwit! with a national money pinch as well as the outcry of the traditionalists — the architect’s office quietly dropped its request for money to proceed with construction. There the matter has rested DETROIT (AP) - A Detroit inner city rent strikers organization has purchased nine apartment buildings and plans to rehabilitate them at a cost of $3 million. ★ ★ ★ The all-Negro group, named the United Tenants for Collective Action, purchased the buildings from Albert Goodman for 8710,000. It is said to be the largest land acquisition ever made in Detroit by an all-Negro luliutKcitler Company. Ltwrenceburf, Indiana. Blended Whiskey. MFraC 72'/,% Grain Neutral Spirit*. faced Detroit Citizens Development! Authority. * ★ * The subsidiary, United Tenants Rehabilitation Co., is negotiating for a 83-million loan from the federal housing authority to rehabilitate the buildings. Anybody can put a bottle into a fancy package. But only Kessler can put Smooth as Silk whiskey into a bottle. Give Kessler to a friend for the holidays. Did You Soy We said it, indeed. Our higher dividend rate turns dollars saved into more dollars, faster. 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DECEMBER 19, 1968 Central America Poverty Still Prominent TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) **• “You’re going to dto and will go straight to heaven,” Sister Maria Rosa told Claudi^ a frail orphan of 13. “And when you got mere, please tell Jesus we need His help.” . Claudia died peacefully of one of the many ailments'that had enfeebled her. The day after the funeral, a prosperous land* owner, Alonso Valenzuela, a Honduran born in Detroit, Mich., donated 125 acres of land in Claudia's name to the children’s aid society that Sister Marla Rosa founded and rects. A, A A To those around Sister Maria Rosa, the significance of the gift was unmistakable: Claudia had delivered the message. Among the little folks of Honduras and Central America, faith seems to nourish more readily on small “miracles” than on formal religion. Still, there are some sharp contradictions to a widely held supposition about the depth of religiousness in this part of the world. Uppermost among these is indifference toward the value of human life, as evidenced by the high rate of homicides and illegitimacy. CHILDREN AT PENITENTIARY Several years ago, on a visit to the filthy, overcrowded Central Penitentiary, Sister Maria Rosa came upon a large number of children—Claudia among them— living inside tbe< prison with parents serving long terms. The nun talked the imprisoned parents and the prison director into letting her take many of the children out to her »me. Children can end up in prison with their parents, Sister Maria Rosa said, because of the lack of child-care institutions and a paucity of community interest in a protyem that’s no secret in “In almost all cases,” she explained, “the father has committed a crime aid is sent to Jail. The mother, usually a com-monlaw partner, turns the children over to the man, saying she has no way to support them and that in prison at least they will have welter and food.” Sister Maria Rosa, an orphan who never knew her father, was born 40 years ago on Honduras’ Atlantic Coast. She cares for some 145 parentless children, ranging in age from diaper to early teens. For every orphan under the nun’s care, there seem to be at least a dozen homeless waifs who spend the cool Tegucigalpa nights curled up in cardboard boxes or crammed into large doorways. They’re up at sunrise, begging, borrowing or selling chewing gun ‘ and lottery tiqkets. Abandoned children are acute social problem, in Central America because of widespread poverty. They seem to be one aspect of overpopulation but this is a part of the world some sociologists consider underpopulated. A ★ * Central America is a narrow strip of land curving southeast from Mexico to Colombia. It includes six republics—Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama —and the colony of British Honduras, also known as Belize, Some 14 million people, multiplying at one of the world’s fastest rates, live on its 227, rugged square miles. Illiteracy in this area ranks upward of 55 per cent. Life expectancy in Guatemala in 1966 was 43.6 years. SCENIC, FERULE The area has stunning scenic beauty and high fertility. Poisonous snakes abound, and mosquitoes are nearly always a problem. Much of the cooler highlands Is raw forest where trees provide the shelter required by coffee, the economic lifeblood of most of the Central American countries. Corn, food staple of the-poor, is grown on steep hill sides not much removed from the vertical. * * * Volcanologists have counted 14 active volcanos and countless dormant ones. Two eruptions in Costa Rica in the last five ears cost more than 90'lives and mil- lions of dollars in damage—but volcanic ash deposited by the eruptions has made the land even more fertile. Mutuality of interests and needs is moving the people slowly toward an economic and political federation such as unified them before separation from Spain in 1821. VARY ETHNICALLY Descended from thft/ original Indian settlers and their Spanish conquerors, Central Americans vary in ethnic composition There is more black skin in Be lize and Panama than in the other countries. Costa Ricans ^^predominantly of European stock while more than half the Guatemalans are estimated to be of pure Indian blood—nearly half speak only their Indian dialects. Christianity has reached the remotest areas but has not entirely replaced pagan gods and faiths. ★ * * A rising rural problem is alcoholism, particularly among the younger people. The most trivial festive occasion calls for drunkenness on a collective scale. Drinking often leads to vio- The “brain drain” has affect-,ence‘ ed national leadership, somegers were killed and 20 injured Homicides, suicides, accidents believe, because those who stay when two trains collided head-and other misfortunes account- bqhind are usuallv the well-con- on today on the. single-track ed for 1,407 deaths in El Selva-I nected or those of lesser ability Seoul—Chunchon line in the dor —population 3 million—in unable to finance their migra- eastern suburbs of Seoul, police 1966. In Guatemala, conserva-Jtion abroad. The privileged reported. Chunchon is a provin-tive estimates place at more classes usually look on pqjitics cial capital 45 fniles northeast of than 1,000 the number of people! as beneath them. I Seoul. With all its problems and backwardness, Central America is far removed from the “banana country” image created abroad by its own turbulent history and myths perpetuated in movies and novels. The cities offer a surprising1 modern setting for old and new cultures. Along streets choked with gleaming new cars and mule-drawn carts, miniskirted girls brush elbows with Indian women carrying their children strapped to their backs. First-rate restaurants compete for the late movie > crowds with sidewalk cooking stalls featuring corn on the cob, steamed rice or broiled beef skewered on what once were wire coat hangers. The glitter downtown at night could be that of any mediumsized U.S. city. The image of a slumbering native also is fast disappearing pairs to deodorant;. killed in political clashes alone in a 12-month period. ★ ★ ★ Still, the biggest killer of all, sociologists say, is gastroenteritis, an intestinal ailment usually more prevalent in rural areas and among children. The wealthy dead are housed better than the living poor. The wealthy are a miniscule minority who control the national resources. The poor somehow seem poorer than almost anywhere else in this hemisphere except Haiti. LACK WATER El Salvador is one of the more prosperous countries, but 75 per cent of the people lack wateF fit to drink by modern health standards. In between the very rich and the very poor is-a small but steadily growing middle class, a _ key source of political leader- behind the surge of entrepreneu-ship and popular dissent. Ane- rial hustle, especially among mic national economies have the less privileged. From push-] stunted the development of this carts and crudely built sidewalk group. Young professionals in stalls they peddle almost every-] substantial number abandon thing from curb-side shoe re-] their homelands for better employment and promotion oppor-tunities in other countries. Trains Collide SEOUL (AF) — Three passen- Sale Ends Sun., Dec. 22 — 9 P.M. 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The CMRI hospital is a striking departure from other Viet-hospitals. Nurses and SAIGON (AP) — Tran Thil Being accepted as a patient at Huongs is an alert 8-year-old j the CMRI hospital in Saigon charmer whose eyes occasion- was the turning point in Huong’s ally betray the sadness she has life, as it was for 51 other Viet-known. jnamese children who have en- When Huong was 3, she acci- tered the hospital since it dentally dropped her left arm opened in mid-August. into a tub of boiling water. The * * * doctors are on duty there superficial treatment that doc-; In the last eight weeks, more around the clock.. In most other tors applied to the severe burns l than 60 operations have been'hospitals, relatives are required could not prevent a web of scar .performed. jto provide nursing care for the1 tissue that joined the inside ofi “If we hadn’t come along, | patients, her arm, from just above herithese children simply wouldi + * + wrist to just below her shoulderJhave remained untreated,” said .. .... * * * George H. Jamieson oY Venice,! T afe The arm locked into a rigid Calif., the hospital’s administra- ™atata*e see bis most recent ef-After “I love Lucy,” came fort launched early in January “The Cara Williams Show.” Inwhen “My Friend W re‘ the wake of James Bond came a!Places ‘,Thc Beautiful Phyllis freshet of tongue-in-cheek ad- Dil,er show” on Sundfly ni8hts-venture spoofs. AROUND PERSONALITY SOMETIMES IT WORKS | As Leonard developed “The Sometimes, of course, it f?ick .Van Dyke Show”^ around works—“Gomer Pyle” spun hopes, as sparkling as that be- are imP°rtant parts that you tween Cosby and Culp. ]can t teach- The hardest thing is -____________ to teach involvement, the im- FLUENT IN ENGLISH I portance of getting the audience Cerusico, during his recent involved with the characters, under-wraps period in Holly- . * * * wood, has become fluent in Eng- “Sometimes I think we in the lish and has appeared in minor American theater, in pictures roles in a couple of fjlms. j and in television, are dying and Leonard, who went into show,we don’t know it. Hollywood is business the year of the big no longer the center of motion crash, worked out the Depres-!pictures, and I don’t think it sion as an actor in radio and on even realizes it." Sale Ends Sun., Dec. 22 — 9 P.M, ArabTerrorists Jailed for: Life TEL AVIV (AP) - Four Arab youths were jailed Wednesday for life by an Israeli military tribunal on 22 charges of terrorism, including bomb attacks in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. * ★ ★ They are Ghassan Aboul Latif Kamel, 18; Salim Khaled Mus- AP Photo ANDY GRIFFITH PARTNERS—Sheldon Leonard (right) and Danny Thomas each own a-part of television’s “Andy Griffith Show." Leonard seems to have more than a clue to the mystery of TV success, to judge by his record of hits..He feels it important to base a show on an ecceptable personality. seibeah, 20; .Ahmed Mou-hammed Muheimar, 19, dpd Maruwan Abu Hart), 19, til from Jerusalem. Several grenade explosions in Jerusalem Aug. 18 and the ceh-tral bus station blasts in Tel Aviv Sept. 4 killed one person and wounded scores. NOW! SUNDAY LI0U0R OPEHMJ.VEW Only at MOREY'S M OOLF A COUNTRY CLUB ft WILL YOU SEE | LIVE LOBSTERS at Sensible Prices Wed. Noonday Buffet Luncheon, Thurs. Buffet Dinner SALAD TABLE INDESCRIBABLE SEAFOODS Make Your Christmas Party Plans Now! SING-ALONQ PIANO BAR You'll Sing, You'll Soe MOREY’S 3 GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB Phont 363-4101 2280 Union Laic* Road UNION LAKE happily out of “The Andy Griffith Show,” and “Petticoat Junction” and “Green Acres" grew on the same tree that produced “Beverly Hillbillies.” “The Virginian” and “The Big Valley” followed In • “Bonan-sa’s” footsteps with success the star and his professional family, and as he built “I Spy” around the relationship of actor Robert Culp and comedian Bill Cosby, Leonard has carefully constructed the upcoming series around the personality of a young Italian actor, Enzo Cerusico, by whom he was im- But more often the carbons Pre?sed ,when tha y,Tg,.™n were pale or they were not as sP°ke not one word of Engl,sh lucky in their network time “l met him about four years spot. At any rate, the quest for the all purpose recipe has to T date been about as successful as Clrkran Trial lum that of the alchemists. 31111011 IllOI JUiy Thus, success In television Is likely to be a fast roller coaster ride, marked by fast footwork and a “grab-the-money-and run” attitude. Today’s hot production team is likely to be among next season’s unemployed. In this nervous company, a few names stand out: Paul Henning, with three country-style hits and no misses; Paul Monash, who made “Peyton Place’’ work for five years and had a critical success In "Judd for the Defense”; “Quinn Martin with “The Fugitive” and “The F.B.I.” And, of course, Sheldon Leonard, actor-turned-producer and a veteran of almost 40 years in show business, who has been associated closely with more hit TV series than anyone else in the business. Will Be Locked Up LOS ANGELES (AP) - The jury hearing the murder trial of Sirhan Bishara Sirhan will be locked up nights and weekends Judge Herbert V. Walker ruled Wednesday in Superior Court. The prosecution objected this would make selection of a jury difficult since the trial of the man charged with slaying Sen. Robert F. Kennedy is likely to last three months. * ★ ★ Emile Zola Berman, New York attorney, was officially approved at the brief court session to join Sirhan’s two other defense attorneys. Berman, 65, told newsmen he supported Kennedy for president. Surhan, 24, a Jordanian, Is to go on trial Jan. Starts FRIDAY! : DIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL RESERVED SEAt : : ENGAGEMENT NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME : : AT CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES...REGULAR PRICES : HURON I frilMII HI HARRISON. SAMANTHA (GEAR, ANTHONY HI RUT to -ONCTOH BOUTTU’wi Arthur N.crti reduction md RICHARD ATTEMOMUSH u ". ItfMttd by Rithard Timelier, Setttnpliy b| Itilit IttCMM, ItMdMlttll Storm bj lto|ti Luttm|. Music Md Lyrics b» Ltiln Iricusst. Muncil Humbsrs SUfSd k| HurWrt Imi. Color by Dtluit MOIL-TUES.-THURS.-FBI. AtTitS A 9:35 UT.-SUN.-WED. At 1:30-4:45-8:00 PRICES AOIILTS Mays $2.90 $1.25 Children (under 12) |1 .M MONTGOMERY For your kind of man—his kind of scent IMPECCABLE GROOMING BEGINS; WITH A SELECTION FROM OUR WORLD-FAMOUS TOILETRIESI I 0 Old Sptce Burley Gift Set of after shaye and cologne by Shulton.. .4.50 0 Soap-on-a-rope, body talc, after above, deodorant and cologne have Shujton’s Old Spice scent......6.SO 0 English Leather Gift Duette of after shave lotion and cologne by Mem, $5 0 English Leather’s Tlmba>ithe set — after shave and soap by Mom.. .4.50 0 Brut Jet Set of after shave lotion, cologne and deodorant spray scent-mates In a travel case, by Faberge, $5 0 Srut’t subtle scent In a split of allpurpose lotion from Shulton.... .5.50 0 Swank’s Jade East after shave and cologne are natural go-togethers,5.SO 0 Swank's Jada East after shave, 2.50 0 Hal Karate cologne and soap-on- a-roposet....................... 54 0 Hal Karate cologne and after shave are paired as a gift set........5.75 0 Russian Leather after shave lotion and cologne combination in a full-bodied scent by Imperial Del Ora.......3.50 0 Imperial Del Ora's Russian Leather colerle of offer shave, cologne and soap-on-a-rope in a cose that does double duty as a jewelry box.....$10 This holiday season, shop tha convenient way, just say "Charge !tlM at Wards TRUST WARDS COSMETICIANS TO HELP YOU CHOOSI THE RIGHT GIFT FOR EVERYONE ON YOUR USTI OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. • 682-4940 ***** ruinTiAU THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Jffltfl Cabern STYLE SHOW EVERY FRIDAY During Luncheon 12:30 to 1:3Q Featuring the LATEST FASHIONS FOR WINTER . PLANNING A HOLIDAY PARTY? Let Us Help Make It a Successful and Memorable Occasion JOIN US NEW YEARS’ EYE For a Gala Celebration No Cover Charge For Early Diners 'Serving Dinner From.5 p.m. to 1 a.in. SPECIAL NEW YEARS’ EVE DINNER PARTY • from 10 P.M. tv 4 A.M. 925 Per Couple . Will Include: Dinner, Cover* Charge, Music, Dancing, Party Favors, Hats, Noise Makers, Etc,,>" Dinner selections PRIME STEER FILET MIGNON, mushroom caps . NEW YORK CUT SIRLOIN STEAK TWO BROILED AFRICAN LOBSTeRTAILS, Drawn Butter , ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF, au jug BROILED FLORIDA RED SNAPPER Abundance of Assorted Relishes, Shrimp Cocktail*, Followed by Consomme' Julienne, Tossed Salad With Selection of Dressing*, Chef* Own Special Baked Potato, Buttered Asparagus, Hot Rolls, And Butteri Coffee, Tea or Milk. THEN A SPECIAL TREAT! FLAMING BAKED ALASKA FOR DESSERT X THEN; % FLAMir OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 623-0060 Pakistan Leader Now Object of Scorn Your Host: Chester (Mr. B.) *' 5838 Dixie Highway . Waterford, Michigan RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP) — The students who stormed into a jewelry shop hadj only one request. “We just want the picture of President Ayub on the wall,” one said. buses, pro-Ayub newspaper offices. p/ * * * High-ranking officials have anted the unprecedented agitation on “hooligans and mix, creants” and opposition political leaders. The proprietor complied,-and the picture that had adorned his shop since Mohammad Ayub Khan came to power 10 years ago was taken outside and ripped to pieces amid a chorus of cheers from hundreds of demonstrators. Two months ago, few persons would have dared desecrate Ayub’s picture—or speak publicly against him. DEATH TO AYUB ■NOW, almost daily, & shout “Ayub Hal Htd’Vdeath to Ayub—and beat their breasts in mock mourning as they demand political and ' educational reforms, release of political detainees and freedom of the press. Stone-throwing mobs, many made up of boys no more than 10 years old, discreetly seek but a variety of targets associated With the governmentc-sign-boards advocating family planning, telephone exchanges, ■ j p tbfiaiuttat (M-59 & Elisabeth lie.) 682*9788 PRESENTS Pontiac's Own THE SKEE BROTHERS - GALL NOW FOR YOUR NEW YEARS EVE RESERVATION But many informed observers believe the demonstrations since early November show widespread discontent underestimated at first by the govern-! ment. Much poverty Economically there has been impressive industrial and agricultural development, for which Ayub is credited because of his emphasis on pragmatic planning, but there is still much pov-erty. * ★ * Politically, it is felt Ayub has failed to create any wide base of popular support. * * * It looks as if the masses—the professional class, laborers, small-business men—have become especially disenchanted during the past year as prices of key commodities rose steeply or, as in the case of sugar, became scarce. ■ ■*, * * . Criticism comes from persons once associated with him. These include the former foreign min-Zulfikar All Bhutto, now in on charges of inciting violence; retired Air Marshal As-Khan, former commander-in-chief of the air forces; retired Lt. Gen. Azam Khan, ex-military aide to Ayub, a member of his first Cabinet and former governor of East Pakistan; and Syed Mahbub spnal ambition, but he has urged Ayub "to retire from pub-| lie life to give room to other leaders.” Mrshed, former chief justice of the East Pakistan High Court. With the former foreign minister behind bars, most opposition parties have focused their The president has given no in-attention on Asghar Khan as a dication whether he will run for potential rival to Ayub in 1970 a third term in 1970 but insists elections. [the government won’t be cowed Asghar denies he has any per- ] by agitation. SINGLES 21 and OVER HOLIDAY PARTY BANJO'S RINGIN' PEOPLE SINGIN' PEANUT CELLAR SING-A-LONC. AL MAYWORM — CHET RACINE. 9099 Hutchini Rd. lV'a Ml. North of Union Loko Village AAONTfiO/VYERY pwdiaz DRIVMN /WM-*' BtutSluf DRIVE-IN THEATER U SO TELEGRAPH AT SQ LAKE RD 1 1 MILE W WOODWARD •ram no. at walton ilyb. | ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS £ euK AMD * PAUL NEWMAN ami _ Ml , NIGHT ■ “fTHE — Living DEAD Ofeusm AruMBOfMiu-STOt w»ooebn w ‘Bullitt , OPENS FRI AT PONTIAC-JOH N WAYNE W ‘HEUfKWEF?8 Viet Fighting Idls 41 Yanks WASHINGTON (AP) one servicemen killed In action in the Vietnam war have been named in the latest Defense Department casualty list. •k R * The list includes 16 men from the Midwest. Killed in action: ARMY Indian* - We. Gary W. Chapman, (Ml Gary. MMMMa - I»ac. 4 Thomas D. ( Wkhaftj Potjoll, p»e. Holland B. Dari- Thto'*^-7»l."'Armo«r D. Wilcox Ul, AlvarI Spac. 4 Dannia C. Erlord, -Itvi Spac. 4 Leonard R. Marlin, Ipac. 4 Curtia M. Sharp Jr„ NAVY mhmt, “• Carl A LHmt—. Hoapltalman John K. — Lanco CpI, VIcMr Hal*, Changed from missing to dead Htostile: ARMY me. 4 John -Sucmj* - »w« « MJiaourl — Wc. Ar Nan. 'Ohio — We. Michael R. Bach. Cln- Misslng as a result of hostile action: , ARMY Spac f Edward Ford. AjLowgr. Spec 4 Tilton L. Mockoy, Missing not as a result of hostile action: ARMY WQ HonryC. Knight !'W! ! R&kCHRISTAAAS SHOPPERS SPECIAL Ineludst 3-pc- Chicken Dinner *1.25 Tog Tired To Cook? After shopping all day, stop in for our BOX DINNERS or URGE DRUMS (If you haven’t tried our chicken, you’re really miitint something) M-59 L f% FOR FAST SURE SBRVICB CALL AHEAD 682-1120 3138 W* Huron Street - Pontiac NEXT TO PONTIAC STATE BANK iW a Rugged Powr-Kraff power tools speed the job along 19M,1/6-NP ORBITAL SANDER 1688 POWR-KRAFT 15-IN. JIG SAW Produces 4000 oscillations par minute to give excellent results on any sanding job. Includes auxiliary handle, 6-ft. cord. NOMONtYDOWN Cuts wood up to 1 %-in. thick . . . table tilts for angle cuts. Motor alto drives disc sander (inch). Other accessories available. 2488 RIO. 21.91 NO MONEY DOWN Save *5 on Wards *10 off I Powr-Kraft* rugged sabre saw 7 Vi" circle saw 24” V*-HP motor produces 2300 accurate strokes per minute for fast, precise cuts. Shoo adjusts 45s . . . ideal for continuous heavy-duty work I Shoe tilts for bevel cuts. REO. 29.99 NO MONEY DOWN Rugged 2-HP motor develops 5600 RFM to cut 2x4's at 45° . . . ideal for continuous heavy-duty work! Shoo tilts for bevel cuts. 34” VIMATIUE 3/8 INCH VAHIABLK SNIP DRILL 0088 Mm Mm REO. 29.99 Drill 0 to 1000 RPM. Low spoocls for stool, masonry; medium for plastic, aluminum; high for wood. PONTIAC MALL- PHONE 682-4940 C—24 :"V ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PftESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER jp, 1388 You always look better in blue. extends its flattering dimensions, in beautifully shaped suitings that carve a simmer silhouette, that take your natural lines and do surprisingly complementary things to thm. Immeasurably helpful is the cloth of the matter: elegantly supple twills, worsteds; subtly handsome stripes, plaids, solids—all shaded in that most man-flattering of colors, blue. $130 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING TIL CHRISTMAS In l$w“rfwas fun becaueW- guessing game turnpd1!^; a wag^fjtog! contest. In this. purtiCuia#’ instant w|3fog W dollars from sfonTfe, caster^Bob Reyrtoids v^o jfot, his money on Pl^hti^this game: v « ' ,, ■$ TALKlMttUY ROOKIE ' ' !•' ' \ In oneebf tlfe rooms on toe eve of the game, ^roommates Terry Barr and doe Schmidt were talking about some of the ro°kiemjpliem|^ the Lions’ 1964 sea- aifoi|j a rookie from Baseball Eager to Find Leader Press Box By BRUNO L. KEARNS Snort* Editor, Pontiac Pro** August 7, 1964 was a sweltering night in Charlotte, N. C. The Detroit Lions had arrived that afternoon in preparation for their exhibition game the next day against the Washington Redskins, and after an abbreviated workout, head coach George Wilson let the Lions get back to their air„ conditioned motel rooms. This was the era of—“Who’s Start at QB?” — Earl Morrall Plum? Every game, son, the the thepontiM^iess pothering Set for Tomorrow in Windy City THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, lftGS -H‘‘. w'M: >:■: ^tate In Terry was Texas Southern . hik job, and Barr was corfvinced that the husjcy speedster would be his successor before too long. * * * As It happened during the 1964 season, Wells caught only |wo passes for 21 yards and Barr was the top receiver on the team with 57 for 1,030 yards and nine touchdowns. WWW The tyext two years went by and nothing was heard from the rookie who was called to join Uncle Sam’s team. But in the summer of 1967, with Barr already retired for two years and Schmidt as head coach, the young pass receiver reappeared at Cranbrook training camp. But before the camp was hardly two weeks old, Wells was out looking for a job and he received a short fling with the Kansas City Chiefs of the AFL. He was then placed on waivers,arid the Oakland Raiders immediately grabbed Baltimore Colts' Named 'Coach of Year' NEW YOR* ’(AK- - t)on Shula, the boss man of «t CRgl^inco^R^vd crafty Mltchali Sfppp. Samuali, William ^fahlart* 1U10 A.M. ACTUALS Pftbio Rotfriquai* wmia May*. Chuck Shotwaii, Al LucarOt Id Bale*, Dava Moreno, Harlan Keith, Lewi* Reynold*, Bin Diedrich. Joe Pray* Tom Taahka* Jack Monkti^^ar^ oraan, Ouldo Inf rat a, Larry lurfln* Redmond, Don —P Bob Lawton, ilph Welter, Harry aka. Tim White ^ Anootf, D llllam Landry. Jot Mory», L. Archie St lab I, Tony Lodoama# Al Urban-an. oai warn lay. I,fv* Oilaack, Vinca Spancar. •Ill Kirkland, iill Poljilaf. Bm Jot^ TKbarl Oronto, Fran Bertram, Paul Gaorga, jog BonfloM*. NaalRIckatt*. Ron Cot nor, Richard Baamgr, Tam Awpalto, Tom aoylli, Y*t Troac/ Bob Oorrotl, J* Alar ad, Clargnc* Stapleton, Jtrry Dunktl, Ed OlM Pat Swaanay, Marv Wabar, r Nick Coat**, Ray Keith, j| hirtlu Ed Auitrang. * wTLtin!led ^ hy' ufrote each i<*gA* - iff natae, toe^ew V Wchardsou and tight end commissioeer, who probtoW Will-, get a n»s titt oasrine orMorrall M&d |Kld;o6(| yeesJy ilfoYktuf . Ex-Catcher Severeid Dies at Texas Home SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) - Henry L. “Hank” Severeid, who sports writers say dropped just one foul ball during his long dgier as a catcher In the American League, will be buried here today. Severeid, 77, died in his sleep Tuesday. He was former manager of the San Antonio Missions of the Texas League and for 16 years served as catcher for the St., Louis Browns, Cincinnati Reds, Washington Senators and New York Yankees. ' * * * At the time of his death, ^e was still active as a scout for the Boston Red Sox. this year because pilfers in toe past reacted badly to toe Vaccine. The Bl2 vitamin -iad luck jure hoped chough fo Jat^hgliptlutoafli toe wlnfoiF-—-- Couch BHl Gadsby declined > to/aay if Crozier would start tonight agafost the Chicago Black Hawks. Backstop goalie Roy Edwards who helped out against Oakland and Minnesota in weekend victories was expected to rejoin the team. After tonight's game against the Black Hawks, the Red Wings face a weekend home and home series with the Toronto Maple Leafs. NOT; CHRISTMAS WRAPPED - „r.,■ t BwlMc fM^iWck‘Kqrl Mt^uHouTb of j#**! IlMWyeuJy ialii^foe -TJotrat Cions shtoivs Ms bandaged V- tor.^onTofr *' L Jlrat jeomm^rio^^s Ra-pner -Sdutocm Csl ft to* ovqr, Jud(to Kenesaw MlWtaln 4^» ^todsfer W qjiktod <« ifomtaR for ^jwiowed cowfltion tKat humperqd hi* ready to refom, n 1946, and Frick, fortotr Nt pres%>)t vlale scason play with tog National Feot-p___________f *■’• • ^4-T WrWaMue clbb. Arthur Hill Next for Cefttral Former FBI Agent Joins Rozelle Staff NEW YORK (AP) - John J. ‘‘Jack s’’ Dahany, 50, special agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation for 26 years, has been named director of security on toe staff of Pro Football Commissioner Pete Rozelle, it was announced Wednesday. Dahany succeeds William G. Hundley, director of security since 1966 who resigned to form a law firm in Washingon, D.C. Hundley will continue to serve the commissioner's office on a part-time basis. — A very quick, well-drilled Saginaw Arthur Hill quintet will test Pontiac Central’s promising hoopsters Friday night in the key Saginaw Valley Conference contest at the PCH court. Arthur Hill whipped Bay City Central in its opener, then stunned a veteran Saginaw outfit last week and now is drawing a lot of support as the team td beat in the SVC title chase. * ★ Sr PCH’s Chiefs were victimized by their own mistakes and the effective low post play of 6-9 Ken Brady in a league-opening loss to preseason favorite Flint Central, but bounced back for a lopsided conquest at Bay City Central last week. * * * - A victory over Arthur Hill tomorrow would put the Chiefs back in the race, but they can't afford another league loss this early in the season. The Lumberjacks will come to Pontidc with a veteran unit and a 6-5 sophomore center, Bob Becker, son of former Arthur Hill grid coach Hi Becker, han dies toe tip-offs for SAH. QUICK SWITCH But unless it gets into trouble^under the backboards, Arthur Hill will likely replace the rangy plvotman with 6-0 Tom Rousseau as new coach Gary Ice — ex-Lumberjack cage standout and successful Marysville coach for six years — goes for speed, ball handling and defense. With Becker out of the lineup, the tallest SAH performer then is 6-2 Frank Sigourney, who is one of three Lumberjacks scoring in double figures. Mark Champagne and Bill Jurgens join him in the 16-19 p p.g bracket. Steve Kelly runs the offense and rounds out a veteran lineup of senior letter-winners. The aggressive \ Arthur Hill quintet is described as a crew that "never stands still.” Pontiac Central mentor Ralph Grubb also is toying with a six-man starting lineup. He only has one senior, though, guard Clayton Burch, UNDERCLASSMEN juniors Monte Herring, Waverly Jones and Jerry Ratliff, plus sophomores Campy Russell and Anthony Styles are also available. Grubb has indicated he won’t decide on the starting five until Friday. The young Chiefs have the height and jumping ability to give Arthur Hill a lot of competition for the rebounds. Bui inexperience could hurt them on defense -- personal foul, problems were instrumental in their losing a 19-point lead to Klinl Central and on the attack where they have been known to take bad shots and run with the opposition when they should be content to set up their pattern offense. Another important league meeting has Midland (1-1) visiting Saginaw il-i). Bay City Central will be at Flint Southwestern. Chirp, Chirp! 'Tis a happy tune that comes from the beak of our feathered friend, The Birdie, after his Tuesday bit of prognosticating. * * * He chirped the one point win by West Bloomfield over Waterford in the Blue Plate Special and stands *20-5 for the season. * * * Because of several key games tonight. The Birdie looks into his crystal bail to cover the entire weekend, including next Monday’s PCH-PNH contest: lake Orion over Avondale Rochester over Madison Romeo over Clawson OL St. Mary over RO St. Mary Arthur Hill over Pontiac Central Pontiac Northern over Farmington Wpst Bloomfield over Milford Andover over Ketterin* Waterford over Lathrup Stevenson over Wailed take BLUE PLATE SPECIAL Monday Pontfec Northern over Pontiac Central he=*- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Key Games in Prep Cagers Have Active Slate on Tap Tonight Th* high school basketballl It would havs two losses I Utica whose Chieftains are still scene will be active tonight with already after four OA outings. I seeking victory No. 1 in the four pre-holiday wrapup games Troy, the leader, meanwhile circuit on the schedule, three of which | will be gunning for its fourthI SHOWDOWN ajght success tomorrow at1 SILAS SLOWS DOWN — Forward Paul Silas (white uniform) of the Atlanta Hawks finds his path blocked emphatically Wednesday night by ex-Detroit Piston Len Chappell (right) now with the Milwaukee Bucks. Also getting in a foul on the Hawks’ performer is veteran center Wayne Embry (left). Atlanta prevailed on the scoreboard against the NBA expansion team, 122-116. league races. ||tri Two of the games involved Oakland A League contenders. Lake Orion is at Avondale and Romeo is invading Madison. Northwest Catholic League leader Orchard Lake St. Mary hopes to extend its winning streak at home against third-place Royal Oak St Mary. nonleague action, Royal Oak Kimball’s undefeated Knights are visiting Warren. The 0-A contests involve two of the four second-place quintets. Neither Lake Orion nor Romeo (both 2-1) can afford another loss in the league at this time. Best Local Times Compiled Groves' Swimmers Excel in 4 Events Power-laden Birmingham Groves is setting the pace in four of 11 divisions according the best local times compiled this week by B 1 o o m f i eld Hills swimming coach Mike Lane, former national diving c h a mpion, is serving as a clearing house for ran'king area swimmers. Coaches hav- LANE 8 Horses Line Up, Finish by Numbers ing swimmers who equal or better the following times may contact Lane at Bloomfield Hills Andover, MI 7-0155. Results will be printed each Thursday in the sports section of The Pontiac Press. * ★ * Groves’ Larry Driver heads two events, the 100 backstroke 58.4) and the 200 individual medley (2:08.3). Tim Jones is setting the pace in the 50 freestyle (:22.9), while Steve Driver holds the No. 1 spot in the 100 breaststroke (1:05.4.) ★ * h Birmingham Seaholm occupies the top spot in both relays. The Maples own a time of 3:31.3 in the 400 freestyle and a 1:48.0 clocking in the 200 individual medley. NEW ORLEANS (AP) - It only happens once in a million times, said officials of the Fab-Grounds after the eight horses In Wednesday's ninth race finished exactly In the order of their program listing. In addition, the New Orleans oval had a whopping dally double payoff of $1,749. In the ninth nee, the No. 1 horse, Beau Baker, was first across the finish line, paying $8- England Passes, No. 2, was second; Merano, No. 3, third and right down the list to No Countess, No. 8, the eighth horse. Liner "Wicks' Away Moisture Andover Pins 66-39 Defeat on Northern The Barons of Bloomfield Hills Andover (2-1) turned in a 86-39 swimming victory over Pontiac Northern last night Jim Black was the lone bright spot for the winless PNH squad. He took the 50-yard freestyle In 24.8 seconds and the 100 freestyle in 56.2 seconds. Ill AnSevar Northern I* Rtloy — And) It’s called the “Hot Glove" which can’t hold much water Itself, but is great at “wicklng the moisture away," according to the distributor. “Wicklng away” refers to carrying the moisture from the fingers to the outer glove lining, resulting In dry Joe Namath AFL's Best NEW YORK (AP) - Quarter (Kuimo, worn, i, Aaomaj i:oo.4. MO Frootiylo - B Adams (A), icClonothon (A), Woavor (AN) t-M.i. JO Frootiylo - Block (AN), Trootl (A). Min (A) :J47. MO Individual Modify — Kuzma (A), v*ns (A). Hotlod iAN) 1:7f t. I 1a~ L,un#*r (A*N). Fortboro (A), Hi............£& (A), «hofit«d*?A) | fins 100 Butlirfly -(AN), Nakat (AN) Wyiankl Backstroke ijj dnerww 400 Freest1 Weaver (AN (AN), Lloyd —"Klaras (A), Way (A) Adams (A) ityle -4) 4:11 Iraastslroka — B. All (AN) Lydaoy (AN) 1:11 PrMStyla Relay — wan, flea, Fischer, Still Unbeaten DETROIT (AP) - Michigan Lutheran extended Its season record to 8-0 Wednesday night crushing Olivet 76-48. Noland back Joe Namath of the New street led the winners with 21 York Jets was voted the 1968 points. Olivet, now 5-2, trailed at American Football League'the half 34-14 Player of the Year Wednesday |------------- by the New York Chapter of the Pro Football Writers Association. M0 IND. MSDLBY m 6. Madison Haights . 7. Feradale ........ ..BkrnmSWd^mj^, 1. Rich Watson, —* “ i mi ■ Cforty* Grovas 9. Tom 4. Jim _______ ________ 5. Jim Ikberg, Seaholm 4. ftavr ' j ‘ ■ 7. Bob I. Dave t. Chuck Mitchell, Grovas I •;& Everett, Seaholm ........1:59.5 'ieeholm ......1:59.5 Southfield ....1:59.0 Wright, Ferndals .......2:00,4 Groth, B. Hills Andover . 2:00.7 iir 3. Brother Rice ............... 4. Bloomfield Hills Andover ... 9. Bloomfield Hills Looser .... 4. Southfield ................. 7. Feradale ................... 100 BRRASTSTROKB l. Steve Driver, Grovas 1 Bill Bdwerds, Groves 1 Jeff Klann, B. Hills Andover 4. Bruce Butzier, Brother Rice 5. Mike Benda, Madison Heights l Bill Runs, Feradale ......... 7. Torn Conners, Seaholm ...... "X 4:31.1 J. Onorg, Boycott. Atrndalo 0. Oan Rooar*. Southtlald ’ 400 AREISTYLB t. Craig, Southtlald 1. Bob Wright, Forndolo ... I. Jim Evorott, Saaholm ..........4:2a 4. Gary Rodman, Orovta ...........4:M J. Jaft Klann, B. Hlllt Andovar 4:30.2 4. Kant Otwald, Grovaa ..........4:11.1 i. Kavan Trlmtnar, S, H. L ah tar 4:3JJ . Brad Adama. H. Hlllt Andovar 4:M f. Chuck Mltchall, Grovaa .........4:5.1 10. Bob tkandalarhk' Andovar ......4:407 1. Rich Math any, B. Him Andovar 333.70 1 Pick Quint, Grovaa .............314.50 1. Kim Maaonlgal, Grovaa ..........21073 4. Tom tunouoat. Howl Park .. 203.30 3. Darrol Jorganaon, Soulhflold 173.00 4. Tom Loman, B. Hlllt Andovar 141.70 M ARBBITYLB 1. Tim Jonaa, Grovaa ...............227 i Gary Ortago, Southtlald ...........227 ■ Saaholm ..........23.1 Southtlald ......23.1 Small College '5 Widens Margin in National Poll By the Associated Press Kentucky Wesleyan has almost doubled its lead today over runner-up Central State of Ohio in (he latest Associated Press' small-college basketball poll after tacking two more victories onto its unbeaten record. 9 ♦ , The Panthers, winners over Arkansas State and Southwest Missouri State last weekJF: 5-0 mark, drew 12^flfst-place votes and 268 points In the balloting by a'nationai panel of 14 sports writers and broadcasters The Owensboro, Ky., team’s lead is 62 points compared to 33 last week. Central State collected two votes for the top position and 206 points In the latest vote based on games through last Saturday .^Central State was idle last week? Th# Tap jo, with flrat-placa vot«*. ra-:ords and total point*. Point* awardtd tor 01 1. Kantucky Watlayan 11 ... M MS J- CMIJJI W oklas........H 304 *. Trinity, Y«, ........ 3-1 M4 0. Tom Kirkpatrick On 10. (fio) Tim Murphy, S Sob Warnor, Saaholir M0 (NO, (MEG Kirk. Bill {idovnky, Brothor Rica ... El Brother Rico ...,, 14.3 ■ OrpvM . m 2:11 1. Chuck MitchVlL Grova* '' ^ 3:17.1 3. JoH Klonh, a. Hilt* Andovar . 2:11.5 7. Kavan Trimmer, B. H. Lahiar 2:22 10. BrUCt Butzier, Brother Rica . 2:24.5 -----urrr------- !. Bruce I. Doug Grog Ortega, Thorburn, K Groves Sfoffl, Southfli 4. Paul Howari 7. (tovo Tull, 0. Tod MOV, B ■ItPLY Ihflold height* ' F1°A*l»icKITROK ' Drlvor, Qrovot Kuzma, B. Hlllt And Forndolo 2. Stovo Kuzma, i. Hlllt Andover 1:00.1 3. John Klomontkl, Ferndnie ... 1:00.0 4. Lonco Wolloco, Oooholm 1:02,5 5. Skip Thompson. Brothor Rico . .1:04 4. Mark Croroy, Grovot .........1:04.2 7. Gilford, Saaholm ... 1:04,5 I. Joff Lloyd, B. Hlllt Andovor 1:04.4 9. Bill Hmkomp, Saaholm 1:05.2 10. Marc Bergeron, Grovat ww-iiai,1 atawba, Drury; AftonHc Chrlt- ---- -—-z-w*/ Drury, gan; East Tenhestee; ard Pay no; Illinois SIl.,. ______ N9R Lincoln, Mo.; /Moorhead, Minn.; Northorn Arlrinoj Pittsburg, Kan./ Pugot Sound; South Cr *----- a ‘ South 0 I______ _______ _______ Tonn.; U. Cdllf. of Irvlno; Valparaiso; Was tarn Washington; Wlttonborg; Yank Eattern Mlchl-Jh Point; How Tach; rtharn ___ Jound; Southorn Colorado; W YuRK—Louis Hlckt, 102, Brook N.Y., outpointad Stanford Bullard, tow York, 10. ORLBANS—Jot Burnt, 17S, Now nt, outpointad A.J. Staplos, 175, St, * 10. The other Friday game will find the other runner-up squads, Rochester and Madison, in can ’t-afford-to-lose struggle. They will meet bn th Rochester floor. Avondale continues to sec the right defensive combination while trying to break Into the win .column for the first time under coach PhilKahler. * • * * Orion’s Dragons rebounded from their crushing loss at Troy with improved performances against Clawson (1-2) Tuesday Sports Calendar city SOUTHPAW SHOOTER -Junior Randy Polasek has developed into the most dependable scorer on the Avondale varsity. He has been in double figures in each of the first three games, averaging 16 points a game so far. The Yellow Jackets are hosts -to Lake Orion tonight. LaS, at Famdala JR«M at Detroit ». Rita |^§T SS rf: Northam South Lyon at Dundee FIIM Northern at Ypallantl *•* City Central at Flint Soulhwatlem " Tonhihl " Barkley at Warren^ (artncevllle of Clark*ton LampUre at Utica lorthvllle at Brighton Oa Perk at Soufhflaid Pontiac Cent: l Royal Oak Dondara Waterford KeHerlng at Bloomflald Waterford at Milford |M' ' ' Farmington OLS Dayton Nears Top After 6-3 Victory DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Day-ton moved within two points of International Hockey Leagueleading Toledo Wednesday night with a 6-3 victory over Port Hur- The Columbus Checkers rolled over host Des Moines 3-2. * ★ * Chuck Kelly, playing his first game after being purchased from the Checkers, scored first, followed by Tom Iannone, with the fourth goal in his three games with the Gems. Cr'irWoM P,rk ^ CMv ,“* SWIMMING oomftol dHliit Lahiar Jthnip Haul Park at Warren Relay* Rayal Oak KlmbMI ijLUnoeln Park |.*«w Arkar Aleneer at Birmingham ;Vaner^ Altiaerald at Slrmlntham sgarT.^HHI OakHKrdaroL*k** ** ^‘ at KanfudwTnv atjn-.gg.jwta wan at ilgan at Va" birch 4x8Cap- WAGS heard ttook i ROOF SHIRGLES 210 lb. 2“ FORMICA COUNTER TBPS a3Y SFC0 TILEB0MD ! Fot UMmm sad Baths Green Marble (other*colors in sleek) (r«S.) 9.95 SPECIAL 8" MlhUtl FMIPIUVEBV | »j|« inMtH/UT.TIH j I 1114 KMMLAND RD. AT WILLIAMS LARK R0. I On* Mila Wait at Rbntloc Alrpart j OR 4-0116 in M-59 Plato OPEN SUN. 10-3 laaaaBBBaBaBaaaBaaBBBBBBBBBBB J CilHDIM WIHSKT-I HtW OF MUCTtt MHWKI. til KU21010. Ml PROOF. KMUttH MITlUin CO . KT.C. WT-KMFFO IT M UTU CNMtt. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 D—3 BASKETBALL “"jjmjy 33 > Pa- 77, American U. 5* ^BrcSSkiyn ftl/nJ^S^Vark Maritime St. Janifs, N.Y. 73, Providence 53 lawifeSffiSF^ ^Southern M.urTelh*?T*'Nortti Adame IHgafc. J NBA Standings Bittern Division . Wan Last Bet. Bahlm Baltimore .. 24 7 .274 — Philadelphia .... » 7 .737 I Bolton ..... 20 to .447 3Vt Cinlnnatl .. It 11 .445 4 Now York ... to “ 17 .314 8 gatrol* ... 11 II J77 11 Milwaukee ......... I 24 .231 1MB . Waatern Division Los Angeles ....22 10 .488 — Atlanta ..... 18 is J4S 4Vk tan Diego ... u 18 .438 8 San Francisco .. 13 20 .374 7Vb Chicago .... 12 20 .373 10 fWtnt ....... 13 22 471 10W Phoenix .^.^... 8 24 430 14 NawYorrott?,*""' Baltimore 1«7 San Francisco 100 Pmanlx 123, Cincinnati 114 Aflanta 122, Milwaukee 114 UWin Only gam^jh,!^ Milwaukee atChlcaBO Only game scheduled. t^Yorkft&t0*""’ Chicago vs. Baltimore at Milwaukee Seattle at Milwaukee San Francisco at Loi Angelas ABA Standings Baelani Division ... Wan Leaf Pet. Behind Minnesota .... 17 7 .700 — Kentucky ..... 13 12 iu 4W Indiana ...... 10 17 370 IVk .Wow York ,.....t 14 to in Wesfarg Division ™ S*klaad ...... 23 4 .852 — genyer ....., 14 11 33 tu Dallas ...,.... 11 7 .530 tvi teW::::i#o if $ Vm W«lnMday*s itjf Denver 111. Houston 102 Kentucky lls; Los AngelM 107 New Orleans 117, New York Til Indiana 122, Miami 118, overtime New Orleans al Dallas New YBrk at Miami Kentucky at Denver only games scheduled. Friday's Games Minnesota at Houston Only game scheduled. NHL Standings Bast Division W L T Pts. OP OA Montreal ..... ... 17 4 4 40 74 70 Boston ....... 14 7 3 37 109 70 Toronto ........ ' 15 7 4 34 77 47 New York ........ 14 13 1 33 19 77 Chicago ......... 13 11 I Sin 78 Detron 11 11 4 30 78 84 west Division St. Louis ....... 12 7 8 32 87 44 Los Angeles ..... II 11 1 23 42 77 Oakland .......... 7 17 3 M 73 101 Minnesota ........ 8 17 4 20 47 71 Philadelphia ..... 8 17 4 20 . 38 82 Pittsburgh ....... 4 17 4 IS 71 105 Wednesday's Basalts Montreal 2, Lea Angelas 2, tie Chicane 1, New YSrk 1 Toronto 5, Oakland 2 Only games scheduled. Today's Oames Angeles at Boston —--lFDelnolt at Philadelphia «NWr scheduled. Briny's games 'r;*BbsLoutt at Oakland ■dpity gape scheduled. Western Connectlcut Tl, Hawthorne 43 nburg1ft CCNY 17, C.W. Cerrtrel Connecticut 74, , AI w\ Baldwln-Wallac* 85, •fthuno-Cookman Virginia ir. va. 84 mmKmz )ssmu j5ma&.uvre, South Carolina 75, Bast Carolina 41 Butler 47, Western Kentucky 43 Peru 7% Hump 77 Missouri 77, Tulane Tl _ 70, llllnois^BH Central Missouri 48, Washburn, 3 Methodist 47, Evangel 41 Baylor Continues Search for Head football Coach WACO, Tex, (AP) - Baylor University—spurned by Virginia Tech’s head football coach Jerry Claiborne , — resumed its search for a successor to head Coach John Bridgers, who was fired Nov. 29. ★ * dr Claiborne became die second coach Wednesday to withdraw bis name from the coaching stakes after the five-man faculty athletic council had voted to offer the Job, Texas assistant Mike Campbell was picked last Friday, but declined. Arkansas assistant Cecil Ingram withdrew his name although he was not offered the post Central I 111, 74, Concordia, Nab. 77 ____ ’u585wi 7*, Olivet 44 Detroit Collage tt. Urbane 47 Detroit Tech 57, Mackinac 55 2m2SS2^-0I%J! State 48 Chadror River Fells 43, Eau Claire 4t La CroaSe hTsT --------- Steven PoUf fij Case Tech i r-aus w, cau ywim as SuHRfe McMurry 98, Mornlnaskla, Iowa 79 Taxas-Arllngton 14, Mliaburl-Rella It West Taxaa State in, Coloradb St. Coll, tail Loa Angela* Layi 5, Whittier 41 i 81, Badland* 14 > »it Caaat Claute Consolation Bound Catawba 84, Wilmington 77 Albion 77, Hop* m” Michigan Uittwran 74, Ollvatta 44 DatroirCollege 71, Urban* (OBI Datrttt Tech 57, Mackinac IS Orchard RMge 100, #Washtenaw l Oakland Auburn Hill* 83. Highland Park St. Clair 111, Oakland laland Lake* 74 Detroit '5' Wins DETROIT (AP)—Detroit Col? lege defeated Urbans of Ohio 73-68 Wednesday night in a nonconference basketball game. Leroy Jenkins of Detroit and Terry Anderson of Urbana topped the scorers with 17 points each. Detroit is now 4-2 and Urbana 6-2. Gel professional insurance counseling! 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THbn, well automatically keep yew tank ffflc_, .-----A emergency services you may requite, end help you to keep your budget in balance with easy-to-meet equal monthly payment plans. LUMBER and BUILDING SUPPLY Since 1890 AUBURN HEIGHTS... 101 SQUIRREL ROAD iHHmttlg&attg** PRonaJILS IT’S CHRISTMAS every day at... THE NEW. NEW AUTO CENTERS RETREADS FJ.T. 1.0T ta t.lf Deluxe 4-ply nylon snow tires. WINTERIZE NOW AND SAVE AC CHAMPION AUTO LITE SPARK PLUGS e Brand Naw e Factory frash e lit quality GIVE DAD A STEREO FOR CHRISTMAS YOUR CHOICE! W* «-**vty*1ki Bob pulford and , _ Northern utilizes a f r e c - George Armstrong. lAlKQIPC him \Parfh wheeling offense and seems to ★ * * MUJJlvJ LIIU JGGIL.il, have the personnel to make it Something new was Montreali A| _ i r j work. So far the Huskies have,rookie Tony Esposito, 25, still MCI jDOflSOf rOUflQ managed to overcome their unbeaten after six NHL starts as the Canadiens rallied to tie ____________ ,_ Los Angeles 2-2 on Yvan Cour- MELBOURNE (AP) gi The noyer’s goal with 3:25 to play. Something borrowed was Chicago’s Denis DeJordy, brilliant in a 3-1 victory over New York in his first game since coming back from a five-week exile in the minors. Esposito, a second-year pro, stepped in for Montreal after Gump Worsley was ordered to take a month’s rest to cure his Glenn's Edges Spencer Floor Adsift Timely Bucket Brings 69-68 Victory Bob Adsit’s basket with two seconds remaining gave Glenn’s Motor Sales a 69-68 victory over Spencer Floor last night in Class A Waterford Township basketball. Spencer (2-1) had taken a 68-67 lead moments earlier on a two-pointer by Earl Hook, but Glenn’s (34)) worked the ball down and fed It to Adslt for the payoff. Spencer led at halftime 35-34. * * * Jerry Wright tossed In 24 points and Bob Rabaja added 17 for Glenn’s, while Bill Waun checked in with 19 for Spencer In a second game, Sam Allen’s (1-2), down 40-39 at halftime, took charge In the second half and raced to a 91-76 decision over Booth Homes (0-3). * * * Irv Gingrich picked up 18 points, while Rick Rhoney and Booker Humer tossed in 16 apiece to lead Sam Allen. Tom Booth tossed In 30 in a losing effort. DAD TAKES THE. lifting! OUTtJ DRIFTING? ILL OVER- PONTIAC : Ifl no locrot. An Artom Sno Thro 1 loto moro than ll. It ihould. It do. drift! quickly, on any typo tnow —doan it ootily. An Arlan! Sno-Thro gives you a fooling of power— a way of putting Old Mon Winter In hi! ploco.' All Arioni Sno-Throo havt 4 f ward opoodi, powor rovor dll—Hanoi Discharge xhuto. Tho j iiee-Stort 4 hp, 5 np, 6 hp and 7 Up angina dependable lo got-up-ond-go per-NIWI LOCK-OUT OlF- i Why I off Ifou Arioni Sno-Thro. 4 H.P. Priced at Only Only $229.95 .. MZKL_________l____ JONS BBOS.lHC. PONMCPO it I ING BROS. ONTIAO Rd. «t 0PDYKE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN iFt MM2 and FI Mil Lawn Tennis Association of Australia has found sponsors for the 1968 Davis Cup challenge round with only seven days to spare. Three large companies have told the LTAA they are interested in sponsorship. The total figure of sponsorships amounts to $28,000. This is more than three times the amount the LTAA was {prepared jangled nerves and Rogatienjto take two days ago in aespera-Vachon broke a hand. The NHL tion. rookie has three wins and three Neville Vickers, the LTAA ties in the six games he’s start-!promotion committee chairman, ed and the Canadiens have a!said in Melbourne he has re- three-point lead over Boston. Another rookie goalie, Gerry Desjardins, was sensational as the Kings grabbed a 2-0 lead on second-period goals by Ron Anderson and Larry Cahan. But the Canadiens fired 42 shots at their ex-farmhand and Dick ceived the three offers Dec. 18. One of the sponsors is Coca Cola Bottlers Limited, whose division in each Australian state will be involved. The Shell Oil Company is another and the third is as yet unidentified U.S. organization. loss Tuesday after winning its first three games. The Skippers haven’t had*an easy game, but their experience should be too much for Lathrup. The Southfield squad lacks a senior class and its record (0-4) reflects this shortcoming. WTHS, meanwhile, has several key 12th graders who are producing vital points and rebounds for it. GOOD START The Skippers are off to one of their best starts under coach Bob Taylor, and need the momentum ofya big victory tomorrow tosready them for their next clash, a Jan. 7th meeting with Kettering. ■■ ■ W W * Walled Lake is working to get its defense in step with the progress shown by the offense. The Vikings nearly upset WTHS in their last buting, but faded in the closing minutes of play. Still, there was definite improvement shpwn in the loss to Waterford. A similar step forward this week could produce a surprise success for the Vikings at Livonia. The Stevenson Spartans couldn't keep up to PNH, but they feel the other I-L members have to try to catch up to them. UNITED TIRE SERVICE 'WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED - NOT QUALITY' 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC BARBELL SETS 110 LB. PLASTIC COVERED > $•« *98 INCLUOES DUMBELL BARS REG. 19.98 If 160 LB. PLASTIC COVERED S4A50 INCLUDES DUMBELL BARS REG. 31.50 A3 PORTABLE CANVAS FISHING SHANTY-4 Styles HEAVYWEIGHT Black Canvas IWXB'I” High LIGHTWEIGHT Green Canvas BlSW High •10*s SWxS’S" High •14** PLAY TENTS Pup Tent .... *5" 1x7 Tent... •11* Pup Tent with Floor and Net Door *11 7x7 Tont-Floor, Outside Frame $24.98* JOE’S IT SURPLUS 19 N. Saginaw - IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Shop Mon. & Thurs. 'til 8:30; Fri. 'til 9 Tues., Wed., Sat. 'til 6 P.M. - FE 2-0022 full featured, handcrafted ifemiiL all new 1969 AUTHORIZED ZENITH Service Dealer GIANT27 Consolette milted Walnut color. Super Video Range Tuning Syttam. Sunshine* Color Plctura Tuba. Advanced Zenith Color Demodulator Cir “ guilt a* only Zonith would build Itl *449“ NOW YOU CAN BUY ZENITH COLON for as low as............................ FartaMa Medal MM Check Our Prieas Before Yau Buy! AL L-CITV TELEVISION ALL-CITY TELEVISION Wishes You and Your Families the Merriest of Holidays Color Preview Days RCA../First in Color TV' SAVE $150 *299 NOW YOU CAM BUY RCA COLOR FOR AS LOW AS EL 41OJ >299 OPEN 9 to 9 ling. The bUy. MuM ZIM«. *99“ FULL LINE OF 1969 RCA STEREOS ON DISPLAY NOW ...com LEU WITH YOUR OLD SET IN TRADE AUTHORIZED RCA SERVICING DEALER 2363 Orchard lako Rd. Sylvan Shopping Cantor Phono 6B2-6670 CHECK OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY! 2 GREAT STORES 4350 N. Woodward Phono Ml 2-3139 OPEN to 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY'. DECEMBER 19, 1968 D—5 Outlook Promising for State's Skiers flie weatherman’s blow at aiding around the state and In the Pontiac area appears to be mostly a jab today with no heavy punches ejected over the weekend. '* * »* While today’s wet, thawing trend will likely deteriorate conditions from the good-torvery good range to fair-to-good, the' promise of freeaing temperatures returning tonight and the presence of snowmaking equipment at all local area retorts adds to the prospects for lots of weekend skiing. * -k ' * The resort operators are expected to have their slopes ready again by late Friday afternoon. Operating hours Saturday and Sunday are listed as 9 a.m.-ll p.m. for Alpine Valley, Pine Knob, Mount Holly and Mt. Brighton. + * * Mount Grampian, also, hopes of offering skiing with similar, hours of operation. SHORT SCHEDULES The resort owners are an- 'Rose'Program Now Available Local Kiwanis Club Selling '69 Edition the 1969 Rose Bowl Game and Tournament of Roses Parade official program is now available locally through the auspices of the Pontiac North Kiwanis Club. ★ * * The organization has the exclusive franchise for selling the program in Michigan. The cost of the 48-page colorful edition is $1 and may be obtained only through club members. Hip program includes background information on the Tournament of Roses, the methods of floral float decorating, pictures and the order of march for this winter’s floats, the Ohio State and Southern California, Rose Bowl rosters and a listing of parade officials.' The Pontiac North Kiwanis has a limited number of the programs to sell. ★ * * More Information on purchasing the programs is available from club president John Streit (Parks and Recreation Deoart-ment), Bill McGlashen (Walton TV), Buck Shelton (Service Glass), Harold Palaian (Green Plrrott), Hat. Hatfield (Rich-ard’s Tavern) or Bob Wemet (Super Chief Drive-In). tidpating short schedules Tuesday (closing at 6 p.m. Christmas eye) and special hours Christmas Day. Alpine and Mt. Holly plan to open at noon, while M t Brighton (4 p.m.) and Pine Knob (6 p.m.) will resume operations much later in the afternoon Christmas Day. Snow conditions ranged from fair to excellent across Michigan’s skiing slopes Wednesday. Georgraphic location appeared not so important as the facility, for making artificial snow. * * ★ Slopes across the Upper Peninsula reported varying snow conditions. The outlook for the weekend remained in doubt as the weatherman predicted freezing rain and temperatures hovering near 32 degrees — conditions more suited to the granular cbm snow of late February and March than to the powder of early winter. Here are conditions reported Wednesday at various resorts around the state: SOUTHEAST MICHIGAN f "• Knob, Clorkston, 4-Inch boss, good. Alpine valley, Mlltord, 10-Inch Eeie. •Pray lop. Very good. Mt. Holly, Pontiac, 4-12 Inches bate, •prey top, good, Brighton, Snowtnake 20-25 Inch id. Oxford, may, ■AST MICHIGAN Mountain, Saturday. ------ 10-12 I Clare, 44 Inches Otsego Skr Club, Gaylord, 10 Skyline Ski Club, Grayling. _ ■ _______aln, Grayling, i Mt. Marla. Hubbard Lake, ' i Mountain, Ft 8-10 .base. Blntz 12-24 Boyne Mountain, Boyne Falls, 24 base, Brady'S Hills, Lakevlew 4-0 base. Caberfae, Cadillac, 8-20 base. CanntMburg. Grand Rapids, 0-12 base. Crystal Mountain, Thompaonvllle, 4-12 Nub's Nob. Harbor Springs, 4-12 base. Pando, Rockford, 4-14 base. Schuss Mountain, Mancelona, 2-14 base. Brule Mountain, Cliff's Ridge, 8-1 Indlanhead Mou «... » Pine Mountain^ closed. Porcupine Mountain, cie Avondale Matmen Post First Victory Avondale picked up its .first wrestling decision of the season last night by handing Warren Cousino a 36-14 setback. * * * Avondale’s )l-2) Dan Souheaver remained unbeaten with a victory by default in the 165-pound class. AVOND4LB 1 . 95—Kaacnala 103—Watson (A) —Walton (A) | 36, WARREN COUSINO 14 dtf Ermlar, 3:37; Shemlt, 1:07; 112 Jiff (W) dec. Allen, 5-1; 127-Clason (A) pinned Sample, 3:39; 133—Roe (A) pinned Frick, 2:21; 120—Witmar €C> pinned Harper, 4:59; 145-0. Sutherland (A) dec. Marchese, 2-0) 154-Vogell (A) dec. Da-Vora, 10-0; 165—D. Souheaver (A) default; 175—Frans (W) dec. Steve Sutherland, 4-2; heavyweight - Massarone (W) dec. Barker, 13-2. POWERFUL' GIFT IDEA! BY ¥A MCCULLOCH 'Pistol Pete' Sparks Upset Scores 45 as Tigers Turn Back Florida By the Associated Press What happens when the top collegiate basketball scorer meets the tap rebounder? The high sewer wins—in this case at least. Which is to say that Pistol Pete Maravich' of Louisiana State led the Tigers to an upset overtime 93-89 victory over Neal Walk and Florida at Baton Rouge Wednesday night. ★ ★ ★ The 6-foot-5 Maravich threw in 45 points, including six in the extra period, to overcome the 34 points and 14 rebounds by the 6-10 Walk. Maravich, who now has 195 points in four games in defense of his national scoring crown, got an assist when Walk foul out with four minutes left regulation time. FIVE ASSISTS Margvich collected his 45 points on 17 of 32 shots from the field and on 11 of 15 free throws. In addition, he handed out five assists. Before he fouled out, Walk hit on 14 of 27 field goal tries and on six of 10 from the charity line. Pistol Pete’s heroics overshadowed the 71-70 come-from-be-hind victory sixth-ranked Cincinnati scored over 15th-ranked California at Berkeley j Two free throws by Rick Roberson with 17 seconds left pulled it out for the Bearcats. Orchard Nikes Triumph Ren Donoho, who entered the game with seven seconds left to play, sank two clutch free throws with five seconds remaining to clinch Oakland Community College Orchard Ridge’s 100-99 conquest o f Washtenaw CC Wednesday night in Farmington. The victorious Raiders rallied in each half after Washtenaw had moved into 40-30 and 71-62 leads. Orchard Ridge led at the half, 47-46, as Mike Charette dropped in 16 of his 21 points and Fred Street scored 15. TOP SCORER Street finished with a game-high 28 points plus 15 rebounds and six assists for Orchard Ridge (4-3) who was playing without its top scorer and rebounder Charlie Rice. I * ★ ■ ★ Bill Miller added 22 points 11 rebounds for the win-1 ners. Washtenaw, too, was minus its top player who was] ill. Joe Cole’s 25 points and] Willie Bates’ 22 paced the losing Warriors (3-7). AUBURN WINS In other games, Auburn Hills (3-5) downed Highland Park, 83-1 65, while Highland Lakes (1-5) j dropped a 128-96 decision to Saint Clair. | , ★ ★ * Highland Lakes and Auburn Hills tangle tomorrow night at Royal Oak Dondero High School. Glenn Lenhoff poured in 27| points and teammates Ron Kirkwood and Larry Middle-brook collected 12 apiece to spark the Auburn Hills attack. The Nikes led at. halftime, 47-33. ★ * * Saint Clair, with Jim Harris collecting 37 points, jumped in| front of Highland Lakes at j halftime, 69-49, and coasted the j rest of the way. ft ★ • ★ Frank Russell turned in a l sharp game for Highland Lakes, hitting on 14 of 20 shots and finishing with 30 points. Len Cole picked up 15 markers and hauled down 15 rebounds. HIGH. FARK (45) AUG. HILLS (811 FG FT TF FO FT TP Jvlsr 2 1-2 5 Blanch'd 5 1-2 11 £chM«r M I Lenhoff 12 1-2 V Harris 5 22 12 McNabb 4 25 10 Barth wall I 21 8 Stub) 1 21 2 " - I ” - — WsJXan Pomln 2 22 Mofon 2 20 4 McO'nald . 1 Cottrell I 2-5 14 Mlddleb'k 5 2-1 12 Rannov 0 21 S Tola's » Ml 45 Totals V; 210 os Halftime: Auburn Hills 47, Highland wrapped up in the holiday spirit—no extra charge. Skelton .15-4 7 Sloma . 0 22 2, Rasika 11-2 3 Tetala 55 1228 128 Totals 44 218 88 Halftime Score: St. Clair 4», Highland, Lakaa 48. OR. RIOOB (181) WASHTENAW (88) FO FT TF FG FT TF Bowens 1 0-0 15 Helntschal 5 22 12 Charette 10 12 21 Berkllch 2 20 12' Donoho . . 0 22 2 Bates . 0 42 22 Hunt .... 2 24 8 Cola ...10 211 251 0 42 22 Wilson ..I 4-5 10 , ........... ti. r |Wms j&k , Halftime Score — Orchard Ridge 47, The Confident ones give Welker’s DeLuxe the elegant 8 year old bourbon $5.36 $3.38 $13.48 They have a gift for knowing what people like. That's why they give Walker's DeLuxe. Nothing else quite measures up. STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 88 PROOF • HIRAM WALKER S SONS INC. Motley . 2 0-2 Street 210 21 Cheeks BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I Looking for Dad’s Special “A STANDING OFFER HARD TO BEAT” SAMOA'S MW AT MOUT U-2223/8” Deluxt Variable Speed Drill ti% reduction gain. U-144 BELT SANDER WE HAVE TIE CSMPLETE SETS OF FIREPLACE ACCESSORIES Weight pounds lass than any Gthar chain aawl Vet cute like saws twice Re weight— even downs 6-in. treat In seconds. POWER MAC 6 has th# muscle—you don’t need anyl *Lett bar/chain. •169** FREE CHAIN SAW DEMONSTRATION Yea don’t knew bow ml ■ chela taw It aattl yea Uy a NEW McCulloch! Oeaiela May) $100*9 ■ m M Complete _________| haln saw with automatic oiling! Engine power up almost 15% for '691 taalnat to Mart, uadi f cavity-type muffler Self Oiling Lightweight Lightest weight chain odWr ------ KING BROS.] PONTIAC RD. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICH. TELEPMOflE FE 4-ISM Md FE 4-0734 » K/N6 seas. iMC. 1 At pavruc/no U-100 1/4" DRILL Accessories and Attachments make this tool a complete workshop In Itself. S|Q99 3" x 24" belt removes materiel fast. Exclusive Lo-silhouette j means eayw w ?Q99 handling. * U9up Join tha Covered BARBECUE Bandwagon... ... with a Weber, of courea MEAT FNR YOUR INDOOR WINTER PROJECTS SEE NS FIR ALL TORN BUILDING NEEDS! HIGH- 0 COMPRESSION STAPLE GUN | BAR-B-Q TORN STEAK INDOORS AN IDEAL SIFT $1495 NEW SLIMKNIFE SLEDS ly True Teieper, 4 Sine see from $ir ELECTRIC GLUE GUN . ... $795 POP RIVET TOOLS ...... $3M WORK BENCHES...............*34“ YEARS OF RELIABLE SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY ” mt OAKLAND AND.. PONTIAC • FK4*t§94 A 7Va" saw for less than a 6V2" . . Includes rip fence, combination blade and blade wrench. POOLE'S Invito You To Live Bettor Where You Aral D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 Wirldsor Raceway WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS 1st—1909 Claiming Pact/ 1 Milat HI Lo Wayside 9.00 6.2 Janice M. Grattan 13.2 I. R. Win Dally DoaMat (M) Paid homo 3rd—1900 Claiming Trot; 1 Milt: Cltan's Daughter 7.60 4.1' Prince Eddie 5.2 Salt Air Johnny's Pat Gracia Adlos Al Kay C. Chimp 5th—$900 Cond. Pace/ Chief Masquai Star Chief C. The Filer Quintile: CM) Paid $16.70 Chief Masquerader Star Chief The Filer OulMHla. ___________ 6th—$1200 Cond. Tret/ Flora Hostess Mr. Mlllou 7thMt14M Claiming Pace, Miss Mighty Quick Roger L. Davie Blue Quinella: (1-1)____ •tiv—$1800 Cond. Pace/ Honest An * Aroyel An Dolly Haw 9th—$1200 Claiming Pace/ 1 Miles Wlm Toilgate Abbe Ch... Exactor: (3-6) Paid $200.40 $31.60 56.30 20.80 6.00 . _ .1.40 685/ total handle $269. Steam-Powered Racers Squeezed by '500' Ruling I INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -| Anton Tohy Hulman, president of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, said Wednesday that the entry form for the 53rd 500-mile auto race May 30 will provide for steam-powered cars on a conditional basis. ★ * * The conditions are such that] no steam engine is likely to be j pushing a car around the 59-year-old track in the annual Memorial Day classic. ★ * * "Lack of information concerning the performance qualities of such propulsion systems at this time,” Hulman said, "makes it Impossible for us to establish precise maximum specifications! comparable to the ‘specs’ already in effect for other types of engines.” * V, * I Hulman said supplementary! regulations for the race "wlUi give the speedway the right to reject or accept such an entry pending a thorough evaluation Of it, which may necessitate a1 .. Series of tests at the speedway to determine whether or not it dan be expected to compete With other entries In a fair and squltable manner." AP Wlrapliet. JUST PLAIN WILLIE — Officially, it will be Willie Horton from now on. Named William Wattison Horton at birth, the Detroit Tigers’ star outfielder had his name changed to Willie Horton in a Detroit probate court. Willie shows the document that makes the change official. It took three minutes for him to have his petition okayed, then another 20 minutes to sign autographs for the court members. Oh, yes, that’s a 1968 World Series ring on his finger. Local Skaters Vying in Hockey Tourney DETROIT (AP) - There will be a touch of hometown atmosphere about the fourth annual Great Lakes Invitational hockey tournament that begins Friday at Detroit's Olympia Stadium. The favored University of .toman, a forward and Ron Michigan Wolverines, Michigan Springer, a defenseman, are State, and host team Michigan from St. Clair Shores. Tech all have a total of eight * * * Detroit area players. | Dearborn’s Bob Pattullo Is a forward on the team, along with games, losing once to Wisconsin. Keough has held opposing shooters to 2.5 goals per game. Of the MSU Spartans, goal-tender Bob Johnson is a Junior from Farmington. Dick Hout- Expos Sign Pitcher MONTREAL (AP) - Pitcher Craig Glassco was signed to a minor league baseball contract by the Montreal Expos of the National League Wdnesday. He was assigned to the Sarasota, Fla., farm team. The two-day tournament gets under way at 6:30 p.m. Friday when Michigan State, already beaten twice by Michigan this season, meets the Wisconsin Badgers. | Michigan State and Wisconsin split a pair of games recently, |and Wisconsin, which also beat {Michigan once, is a co-favorite to win the tournament. The Badgers are playing as independents this season but are expected to Join the Western Collegiate Hockey Association in the near future. FAST TEAM Michigan, led by All-American goalie Jim Keough, meets Michigan Tech at 8 p.m. Friday. The Wolverines, fast this year but smaller than in the past, have scored only 13 goals in four Randy Sokoll, a Detroit sophomore. Sokoll has two of the team’s 15 season goals. Michigan's Detroit products are defenseman Craig Malcolm-son, a senior from Femdale, and Tom Scott, a Troy sophomore. Bullets Win 6th in Row Pistons Snap Slump By the Associated Press The Detroit Pistons pulled big Dave DeBusschere back to double team the “Big E”—Elvin Hayes of the San Diego Rockets—Wednesday night, and when the scrapping was over Hayes had 19 rebounds and 40 points but Detroit had a 124-112 victory. The difference is that you win,” said Happy Hairston by way of explaining what enabled the Pistons to overcome eight-game losing streak. In snapping their own, the Pistons handed the Rockets a fourth straight loss. New coach Paul Seymour, who replaced Donnls Butcher Dec. 2, noted: "We’re inconsistent, but except for the first quarter we played good defense. We made them turn the bail over a lot.” The Rockets took off like one, though, blazing a 12-3 lead in the first two minutes. But Hairston and Jimmy Walker, who each collected 27 for the night, ran off 10 straight points in the second period to bring Detroit back to trail by only three, 57-54 at the half. SIXTH STRAIGHT The Baltimore Bullets, meanwhile, posted their sixth straight victory, beating San Francisco 109-100, and maintained a precarious, one-game lead over the Philadelphia 76ers who whipped Seattle 115-111. In other games, New York turned back Boston 104-98, Atlanta stopped Milwaukee 122-116 and Phoenix defeated Cincinnati 123-114. ★ ★ * In the American Basketball Association, Indiana topped Miami 122-118 in overtime, New Orleans whipped New York 117-113 at Jackson, Miss., Denver defeated Houston 111-102 and Kentucky checked Los Angeles 115-107. The Bullets had only an 80-76 lead after three quarters against the crippled Warriors, then Loughery scored 10 of his 26 points to put it away. Teammate Gus Johnson con- tributed 21 points and 23 rebounds—15 in the final half— and Wes Unseld had 26 rebounds and 15 points to offset a 30-point showing by San Francisco’s Jeff MuUins. The Warriors, suffering their eighth loss in nine games, played without star Nate Thurmond and Clyde Lee. Philadelphia, in extending its mastery over Seattle, staved off a last-ditch rally by the Super Sonics and whipped them for the 10th consecutive time. Hie Sonics, who came into the league last season as an expansion club, never have beaten the 76ere. Philadelphia led 60-58 at halftime, and then pulled in front 101-85 early in the fourth period before the Sonics launched their spirited comeback. FINAL POINTS Seattle closed within 112-111 with 61 seconds to go on a basket by Lenny Wilkens only to have the 76ers score the final three points. Hie Sonics’ Bob Rule garnered scoring laurels with 36 points and Chet Walker provided most of Philadelphia’s punch With 30. Phoenix reeled off the first nine points and was never headed after that in preventing Cincinnati from capitalizing on Boston’s loss and moving into third place in the Eastern Division. Gail Goodrich, who finished with 34, scored 15 points in the opening quarter to help stake the Suns to the early lead. Then, after being blanked in the second quarter, he came up with 17 in the third session to thwart a Royals’ rally. Jerry Lucas topped Cincinnati with 24 points, Oscar Robertson had 23 and Connie Dierking 22. Atlanta shook off a late Milwaukee rally for its sixth straight victory to move to within 4*4 games of idle Los Angeles in the Western Division. Christmas _ _ Hours Mon. ft FrL, 18 M. to • Mk is* Wad* Than, II a*, to • p.*. Sat., 11a.m. to Sp.m. Sun., Tito I L’S G0LFLAND 181$ S. Telegraph Rd. FE 6-8095 V 2 4-4 8 10 21 1MM2 40 Dls>r MLmort 2-6 10 Williams 9 9-12 27 Kimball —-----— Lentz Tripp 4 14-50 134 Totals lot roll 31 33 37 31—134 Fouled out—Detroit, Bing. Total fouls—San Diego 3i, Detroit 12. Want a snowmobile THAT’S EASY TO START-EVERYTIME? NO PROBLEM! SKI-DOO starts faster, easier. Even our non-olectrle start models purr Into action with next to no effort And SKI-DOO is Just as simple to steer. It maneuvers Erotmd anything. And thanks to unique light-footed actiont it won't bog down — even in waist-nign snow! Come and see ail the new features that make SKI-DOO the most dependable enow* SKIDOO’69 MAKES FUH BO PROBLEM PROM *695” mrmr PONTIAC RD. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Phone: FE 4-1662 and FE 4-0134 y* ms gear./ac. WfimSk Durable rubber cover, nylon lining, official alia and weight. Regular $E95 Gift Suggeotions 9800 Value t1 Cun Case $2.98 - Turtleneck $4.95 Hookey Stiok $1.25 - Knit Hat $1.25 Dart Board $2.96 - Chets Set $4.95 OoH Bag $5.95 9 A.M. til 9 P.M. ^SRoceH 24 E. Lawrence FE 2-2369 TO ALL. OUR FRIENDS It's A Pleasure T& Take This Opportunity To Greet Our Many Patrons—And To Wish Each And Everyone The Brightest Of Holiday Seasons. FINE GIFTS FOR THE FAMILY' UNFINISHED FURNITURE OAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST DEALER GOOD PRACTICAL GIFTS FOR HOME HOBBY SHOPS fife- svfc.a®* <5*r****aif *Q75 open rn, j HAGGERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. shop now FRIDAY NITE FOR CHRISTMAS THE PONTIAC PRESS. THTHSPAV. DKC’KMBKR ID. 1008 D- 7 ee ■ ■h i MARKETS Hie following are top prices covering gales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by thqro in wholesale package lots Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. t Produce FRUITS Apple Cider, Agel. case ........S2.S0 Apples, Delicious, Golden, bu....4.5# App ee. Oelkjpus, Red, bu.......5.50 WPlee, Jonathan, bu..............3.75 Apples, McIntosh, bu............, 4.0# Apples, Northern Spy, bu. ......4.75 VBOBTAbl.es Beets. Topped, bu...............32.50 Cabbage, Curly, bu..... ........ Cabbage, Red, bu. ... Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu......3A0 Cbrrote, Cello-Pak, 2 dz........ 2.00 Carrots, topped, bu: .......... 2.25 eatery. Root, Vk bu.............. 3.00 Horseradish, pk. bskt.......... 4.50 Leeks, rtz bens..................2.50 Onion, 50-lb. bag .............. 2.00 Parsley. Root, dz. bchs......... 2.00 Parsnips, W bu...................2.25 Parsnips, Cello-Pak, dz......... 2.00 Potatoes, 20-lb. bag ..............05 Potatoes, 50-lb. bag ............ 1.00 Radishes, Black, Vk bu.......... 2.50 Squash, Acorn, bu.................2.00 Squash, Buttercup, bu. ...... 2.00 Squash, Butternut, bu........... 2.00 Squash, Hubbard, Vk-bu.......... 2.00 Turnips,,topped, bu..............3.00 GREENS Col lard, bu. .... ....,31.50 LETTUCE-SALAD GREENS Celery. Cabbage, dz. . $2.50 Lettuce. Bibb, Hothouse, 5-lb bskt. 2.50 Lettuce, Leaf, Hothouse, 10-lb. bskt. 2.75 Reacts to Interest Hikes Market Falls in Heavy Trade NEW YORK (AP) The stock market fell in heavy trad* ing. today as it reacted to news of higher Interest rates, but scattered recovery was evident early in the afternoon. ★ ★ ★ Losses outnumbered gains by slightly less than the 3-to-l margin for the downside that prevailed earlier. ★ * ★ The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon took a thumping loss of 3.0 at 361.9 with industrials off-5.5, rails off 1.6 and utilities off .2. Wall Street analysts predicted Wednesday that when the mar- ket reopened after a day off for 962.64, trimming an earlier loss paper-work catchup, there would be a hevay sell-off. Many of them also forecast that the initial drop would be followed by a recovery late Thursday or Friday as yearend reinvest-mend demand made itself felt. KEY STOCKS FALL Key. stocks fell along a broad front, with most losses going from, fractions to a point or so. As the initial shock of the selloff of 9.26. The market was reacting to the boost in the discount rate to 5% per cent from 5% per cent, approved by the Federal Reserve Board late Tuesday; and also to the advance in the prime rate by commercial banks to 6% per cent from 6% per cent on Wednesday. . Prices declined in heavy trad- waned, selected issues posted ing on the American Exchange gains running to a point or Asamera Oil, up 2, was the vol-more. ume leader. Also active, Fisher * * * Governor, Kin-Ark Oil and Ca- At noon the Dow Jones Indus- nadian Export Gas & Oil trial average was down 8.27 at dropped fractions. U.S. Steel Plans Price Increase Ian effort to gir-Four Pet. Hike Slated die an economy r _ . ., .. , [now bursting at for Early Next Month! the seams. Itl may be the less-' PITTSBURGH (AP) - U.S. er of tw0 dan' Steel Corp., which usually set ^ Economy Rein Has Risk: Credit Crunch By JOHN.CUNNlFF |too large for the frame. Not all. There is a health hazard, of AP Business Analyst 'the size is muscle; some is fat. course, in restricting credit, NEW YORK — The Federal j * •* * : which is the food and fuel of Reserve may be willing to run; By making money less avail- economic expansion. The dan-the risk of a credit crunch in able the Fed hopes to slow eco- ger is recession, an anemia of nomic activity to what igconsid-j the economy whose onset is ered sustainable. And \yhat bet- sometimes difficult to discern, ter way of doing this than to * ★ * make less available the credit | The alternative danger, the gers. that permits economic activity? Credit demands today are phenomenal. Spending by corporations for expansion is forecast to run anywhere from 5 to 13 per cent, and most of this would be borrowed. Consumer credit demands also are near records. danger of too much fat, of a yeasty, inflated economy, is that the world might look at our dollar bills and say these symbols of the economy also are inflated and therefore unacceptable. The New York Stock Exchange the nation’s steel-price trends,! The existing! hays it will hike the cost of the danger is from! industry’s basic product early I inflation. The! next month. risk in tighten- The 4 per cent increase, which ing credit is CUNNIFF 'PSYCHOLOGY ' By constantly'running a high will boost the price of semifin- that it might provoke too great,. ........ . .. rate of debt, by spending with ished carbon steel $5 a ton and a slowdown. j Much of this demand is the re-; foreign nations more than we semifinished alloy steel $7 a ton,! * * * suit of an inflationary psycholo-;se|| lo lbem tbe united States is the largest in a series of ad- The Ingredients of a crunch 8y. which means that although]cou|(j ^ forced to devalue its justments in the industry. seem to be present in the Fed’s. P“ces are high now, many indi-,currenc-y. action this week. First it raised•viduals '&nd corporations believe| -phis, [n effect, would be an the discount rate, the rate at|they will be even higher tomor-j admission that American dol-which banks borrow money,ro^- . , , liars are hot worth what is from 5.25 per cent to 5.50 per When such a psychology grips claimed for them, that Ameri- cent. Money thus was made ani economy it means the very cang are consuming at a rate more expensive. existence of inflation is the faster man their ability to pay. Second, the Fed took no action £*“**• K^nnJ^tnmnrT’nd that forei8ners should get to remove the lid on the rates $uy»w, tomo^ mor| dollars for wliat they send In addition to semifinished steel, the giant producer said Wednesday it’s raising the price of steel pilings $7 a ton. Semifinished steel is sold to mills in rough forms called billets, blooms and slabs. The NEW YORK (AP Exchange selected Salts Poultry and Eggs DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP) - (USDA) - Egg1 AdmlVo'l prices paid per dozen by first receivers AetnaLIfAr (Including U.S.I: Grada A Jumbo 43-SJi AlrRedtn l extra large 45-511/,; ,arg« 47-SO'/o medium -- -■ ' 43Vk-47Vk; small 27-30. DRVROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—(USDA)—Prices paid par pound Ur No. 1 live poultry: Heavy typ. hens 2M2> heavy type roasters 25-27; boilers and fryers whites 12-20; turkey 26VM0; ducklings 35; young CHICAGO EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago-Exchange — Butter steady; buying prices unchanged; 93 CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) poultry: wholesale buying prl changed to I lower: roes tew young tom turkeys 25. Livestock DETROIT (AP) — (USDA) too. not enough sales ot any ar class to provl Vealert 25, IN anough yeelars, hogs or sheep on olfar CHICAGO LIVESTOCK | Avon Pd 1.50 CHICAGO (API- — (USDA) — Hogs] 3.500; butchers 50 to 75 higher; active;1 Babck w 1.35 shippers took 2,000; 1-2 200-225 lb butchtra.Balt GE 1.50 20.50-21.00; 55 Head, sorted at 21.25; 2-3 Beat Fds 1.32 190-235 tbs 19.75-20.50; 2-3 230-250 Ibs'Becknr “ 19.00-19. 5; -4 250-275 lbs 18.25-19.00; 3-4 Beech 300-350 lbs 15.3G17.00; SOWS 35 to 50 high, er; fairly active; 1-3 350-400 lbs 15.50-16.00; 1-3 400500 lbs 14.75-15.50; 2-3 500-550 I lbs uSmIKTm 550-500 lbs 13J0-14.00; I boars 11.50-13.00. ,, Cattle 300; calves none; cewSmaklng p,h* to 50 htghor In an active trade; commercial cows 14.5016.50; Utility 16.75-11.00; high dressing 11.25-10.50; cannere and 1SJMT“ mills then roll these into virtual-1 banks may pay to attract depos- row will be too expensive. ito us. rods, its. If it had been raised. the| As an adviser to'DIFFICULTY SEEN ]banks could attract more money President j0hnson once noted,! Despite attempts such as sur-| from business for the purpose of tWs js jjgf a fat lady eating taxes and credit restrictions, it chocolates. Knowing that she is will perhaps be difficult to keep eng. ly all steel products, , Wires, Sheets and strips. i'1 PRODUCTS AFFECTED , . I irelending. Monev thus Lffi? U.S. Steel said the increase , ? _va;iahlp , ha ,t affects products that accounti ae Iess 8 overweight but unable to face the American economy from i for 4 per cent of total industry net e^ect's that demand me facts, seh dispels her an-j getting out of shape from time “J shipments, making them one of«»! f“r exceeri the a^ilabi|ity|gu|8h by eating more choco-to time 1 r of loanable funds. Credit-sound lates. customers may be refused loans. Tight money may .be back with us. the biggest tonnage items. It said the price hikes are intended to raise the company’s revenues less than one-tenth of one per cent. The new prices, it said, will go into effect Jan. 2, The Fed seems to feel It has good reason to turn niggardly. This economy of the United j It was unknown how the rest state^_oUL°f shape' swollen of the industry would react to; the move. Steel prices have! been fluctuating since Bethle-5m - " hem Steel, the nation’s second + largest producer, rocked the in-+ ,,'dustry earlier this year ^with a i3w s2Vj (jv, ~ £22 per cent cut on the price of 939s Mw -i jhot rolled carbon sheet, mostly 32vs 31 32% + >k! used for autos and construction 25 43H 42',k 4»k -t* U.S. Steel and most of the in Si* _'14|dustry followed. But then U.S 4?9k - w j steel said it was restwing hot J rolled sheets to the former price s| a|f of $125 a ton. Bethlehem said it 4j {would go up on the price, but 1£ only tb $118 a ton. “ h ABOUT-FACE + 9I As other producers followed U.S. Steel made an about face t and said it wouldn't put its high-+ lij er price into effect. The compa S'1 -in sa^ wanted to wait for 52'/4 .. ... “further clarification of the r’v.; competitive situation.’' i59k + '^j At the same time theindustry » ^ Jj! was also raising prices on some - J4(other products. In terms of that analogy, the (at lady is now being put on a more stringent diet. She won’t starve, perhaps, even though she might believe the end is near. But she is likely to lose some weight. The reason for this is a commitment to an expanding, full-employment economy. Such lrl*l>__________________ whirled through a preliminary ^.S. space agency $4.7 mllllonj bond avoRagio orbit today cn route to a station-'to launch the $6 million payload. cwnpiM th*^AstKisisu^pms ary outpost high above the At-! * ★ * • [ Rails ino. um. Po«. l. vo. lantic Ocean. J satellite is capable of 2f£J til Once In position, Intelsat 3:handling 1,209 simultaneous wssk_ aoo St e. will more than double transat- |W0.way telephone conversa- Ymr Ago0 «4$ Its 71.3 sso 7*1 lantic satellite telephone and t}ong or four lclevig|on pro-I^J LH^h So’ JJ? Ji J ff? S;? television channels and will link Bramg High 73» 95.S ;<» 92$ ».< stations in North and South America, Europe and Africa. . .. ^ .. .,.. v/.v. .... The 642-pounid satellite soared,j|f't' w ^ * J tf, ** into space Wednesday night' j| L atop a fiery Delta rocket which! magazines are ,J published by '* C 0 m m li n i -1 4a tions Re-'• search Ma-1 si!chines Inc. Farrell has I been associated ^|Magazine since 1952 most 33 v»|cently as its Detroit divisional I j rang|ng from, about 165 sales manager. to 22,700 miles above the earth. A member of the Recess Club Afler checking It lor ocveral iw and the Bloomfield Hills Loun- h(jurg ttackerg plan flt about ||L || 21 7074 5994 70M.-iH|^y Club. Farrell has a law dtf-jg;30 a m EST Frlday to send » ment FuDd rsulUbirinvMtment mana8er* hope to Improve the p Successfublnvestttig iRHi' + s 1 h <* mm m. By ROGER E. 8PEAR are hard-pressed to find a fair Q—lo Investors Variable Pay-I,,hare of U)e bl« pinners. 1DB r* 8S BSSaip* /T, the ™rer8i‘y of to fire a spacecraft performance of investor, Vart- 20 35^ li'4 Z ^iMaryland ,Lflw School and wasthat ,g to place Intelsat 3 ,4,vear.old ?_j G. Why l#iable dividing it into several m m jm s stant ,ega* couIn,el into a permanent orbit 22’3®9 investors V a r I a b I e so muehismal,er °PeCatin8 unlts called ^|U.S. Senate Crime Investigating mi|c!, abov? the Equator just off g|ower many olhero?-N.D. ",atelllte,i'' each *° mflna«*d Committee m!95l. Stocks of Local Interest Figure* after decimal point* are eighth* OVIK THI COUNTER STOCK* Quotation* from the NASO orb re chenge thro pot include Tthe roast of Brazil 12-Month Earnings ’ dealer AMT Core. A»*ocleted Truck Braun Engineering Citizen* Utllltle* Oetrex Chemical......... Diamond Crystal ...... Kelly Service* . Mohawk Rubber Co. fefren Printing Scrlpto Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund Commonweeith Stock Keystone Income K-1 . separately.___ A-1 partially answered these! Hold shares to test this new q u e s t i o n s in mid-November (concept, but for educational pur-readers were writing poses with only four years to ravage between run, I recommend buying equal-B . r I traditional and contemporary dollnr amounts of General Mills, B3& tor td I son lnCr69S6('orReptH "f fund Macke Co., Kennecott Copper has more recently created the'0r other growth stocks meh-"Tl Detroit Edison’s g ros 1 funds emphasizing capi- tinned in the column, w'j revenues were $441,738,768 for tal Rains lor short-term trading. * * a “ J the 12 months ended Nov. 30. j Investors Variable is a con- Q— At what age are a paid-up “ 7 This is an Increase of 7.4 per:*rrvatlvn larly managed funds, having investment to its pdak potential. D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 "Perhaps the best-remembered picture from the ship Arizona after it was hit by Japanese bombs.* Pearl Harbor disaster of December 1941 ... the battle- uProbably the best UNposed picture time ... the 1945 Iwo Jima flag-raising taken by any news protographer in1 our picture by Joe Rosenthal." "Back in 1938, the AP paid a fancy price for a roll of undeveloped 35mm film taken at night, during the major naval battle of the Spanish Civil War , , , this was one of the memorable exposures . . . the Beleareg, pride vessel of the Spanish insurgent fleet, on Us way to the bottom." Photo Editors Best F. A. (Al) Resch, who retired recently as executive newsphoto editor of the As-s o c i a t e d Press, spent 40 years as an AP staffer, 30 of them heading up the world's largest picture agency. One of Reach’s final assignments for the AP was the selection of some of the most memorable pictures to cross his desk. Here they are with Resch describing the impact theyv made at the time. During those years most of the great newsphotos of the time crossed his desk. Also during those years remarkable changes took plaeef in the world of news photography, changes In equipment and in techniques of transmitting pictures from distant places of the world. But one thing did not change — the inherent drama, the sheer tingle of excitement in shooting, editing and transmitting news pictures. Many a great picture was transmitted into Reach’s New York headquarters as he watched them roll in inch-by-inch on the automatic picture-recording machines. “One of the most symbolic pictures to come out of postwar Germany, a defecting East Berlin soldier leaping a barbed wire barricade into West Germany, August 1961.... taken by Peter Leibing of the Hamburg agency, Contipress.”_____ / “One. of the most shocking pictures ever taken in America ... assassination, by Bob Jacksdn of the Dallas (Tex.) Times-Herald. Jack Ruby shoQting Let Harvey Oswald in the aftermath of the JFK assassination. “No caption was needed ... Ike’s eyes told the story of his reaction in 1951 when he was told Gen. Douglas MacArthur had been relieved by President Truman as U.N. commander in the Far East. His memorable comment was, 'Well, VU be darned.’ A Stars A Stripes picture a 9 *1 A THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1968 Promise of the Prophets—l D—9 Predecessors of Jesus Challenging and at kings, governments social orders. “You are the man! ’’ the prophet Nathan blazed ht the great King David, after leading l)im to sternly condemn another “man,’’ described by Nathan as a rich landlord who had seized a poor peasant’s only sheep for a feast. Much-married David, of about 1,000 B.C., had taken a soldier’s only wife, Bathsheba. Although the rulers sometimes had thier own fawning circle of seers and dervishlike “prophets,’’.who served only to please their superiors and sanction official policy, the genuine truth-bearers, the real prophets, were ruggedly uncompromising. “You troubler of Israel!’] King Ahab flared at the prophet Elijah when that desert mystic, clad in hairskin and leather girdle, appeared about 860 B.C. to condemn the national idol-worship of Baal and Astarte promoted by the queen, Jezebel. Condemned, hunted, hiding near the end of his life in a cave, 'Elijah sorrowed that other prophets had been “slain by the sword, and I, even I only, am left, and they seek my life.” But others would arise after he vanished in whirlwind. INDIGNANT MEN They were agitated, indignant men, pained by rampant greed, alarmed at exploitation of the poor, passionately concerned for human 'welfare, as if they mirrored the very pathos of God at man’s callousness. “Here this, you who trample upon the needy!” declared the rural prophet Amos, a tree-tender from Tekoa, around 760 B.C. He warned that divine justice would “smite the capitals until the thresholds shake.” ★ ★' ★ Fearless, acute, driven by an inner fire, they flung their jolting admonitions at a flabby, delinquent society, and as happens in every age, this drew stem reactions. Amos was accused of conspiracy. “The land is not able to bear his words,” agents (EDITOR'S NOTE - This is the first article in a five-part Christmas series about the prophets, those courageous, deeply inspired social critics of old, whdse sensitivity to divine composition for mankind held a vision Of a coming Messiah, a Savior. Their ancient intimations are regarded by Christians as pointing> to the' advent of Jesus Christ on the first Christmas. Their challenge to wrongdoing also has continuing parallels.) By GEORGE W. CORNELL AP Religion Writer From the start, a hard question beat at the heart of the world Who owns it? And for what intent? “What is his flame?” puzzled Moses, more than 3,200 years ago, while his enslaved people toiled under the Egyptian oppressor, Pharaoh Ramses II. To whom, or what, does man belong? Where lies his real allegiance? ★ * * The answer remained sear-Ingly elusive, unbound t o manageable equations or definitions. “I am who I am.” It was mvstifying, the central enigma. Whence came this cosmos, this^Iife, and whither? What whs man’s function in it, to find full Satisfaction? How to decipher the purpose and participate well? It wasn’t clear. clues Accumulated But clues accumulated through time and events, chiefly for Christians in the birth of a Jew called Jesus, the manifestation of “the mystery hidden for ages,” as described by the apostle Paul. That is the content o f| Christmas. But it wasn’t an isolated occurrence. Jesus stood in a long! succession. He came in turn in the unfolding of h i s t o r y ’ s disclosure. He was part of. a process. It foreshadowed Him. It pointed to Him, before and since. ★ * ★ Its prior agents were the Old Testament prophets. They were the precursors. They witnessed to Him, He said. “Everything written about Me in the law ... and the prophets must be fulfilled.” They prefigured the Elect One,” the Annointed,” the “Day of the Lord.” They were a fiercelyi challenging phenomenon, j among the most disturbing men ever known. DEFY SYSTEMS Like the One they proceeded, they defied established systems. They were protesters, rebels, reformers, idealists in a groping, confused era. They pro-| pounded a lofty , concept of. man’s role and right obliga-| tions. Like Jesus, they also had j it rough. Typically, thev were scorned, ridiculed, flogeed. imnrisnn<’d and sometimes killed. TVy! were lonely, anguished man,| often pursued as fugitives, i markedlas. traitors. * * * 1 “Get away from me!" the Egyptian monarch roared at the] prophet Moses, who had! unleashed a staggering slave revolt in 1290 B.C. “Take heed . . never see mv lace again" orj “you shall die.” • But the peoole miraculously got free of the grinding tvrannv,| giving them the first vivid,! m°morable impression of an' ultimate sovereign a'lied with man. of a supreme Deliverer, freeing men from their chains. : DEFENDED DIGNITY | And the continuing line of prophets thundered that defense of human dignity, of help for the imprisoned, of strength for the downtrodden and abused, of hospitality to the stranger and alien, of peace among peoples and equity for every man. I »T; v" c * * ★ I “Nabi.” thev were called.iViet Hero Signs for 3-Year Hitch ... in Detroit “speakers" or “announcers” of the divine will for men They w"re not soothsayers or fortune-] tellers, practicing occult arts, I but they discerned keenly the shape of the tijpes, its directions-and Impending consequences. reported to Israel’s King; Jeroboam II, whose crushing! taxes bled the improverished! farmers and enriched the riotous cult of Meribaal. ] MESSAGE OF CREATOR As with other prophets,! Amos’s message was that a universal Creator of the world is actively involved’in its affairs, interrelated with men and their institutions, and that their right function is to advance human betterment,! not ritual posturing. * ★ * “Thus says the Lord God... I hate, I despise your feasts, and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies, Amos proclaimed. “But let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream'.” •k * ★ Amid the confusion and decadence of the times, however, the prophets also sensed an eventual rejuvenation, the burst of new clarity, cleansing and universal dominion wrought by a divine emissary, whom Christians seel as Jesus. The prophet Nathan told King! David that God would raise up a descendant and “establish the! throne of his kingdom forever,"; that He would be God’s own son, chastened “with the stripes of the sons of men.” IN GENESIS “And I will, make Him the firstborn, the highest of the kings of the earth," goes Psalms 89, one of those strangely futuristic D a v i d i c psalms. Even further back, in the misty story of creation and man’s sinful attempt to deify himself, a verse in Genesis 3:15 has been regarded as referring to a coming representative of, the Creator who would counteract hyman corruption and “bruise” the- head of the ser-j pent, personifying evil. * * * jfB HI THERE, SANTA — Jill Mahlie, 4, “The scepter shall not depart of Fenton is happy to see Santa at the annual from Judah... until He comes to Christmas party given by the Oakland Coun- whom it belongs,” goes another]_____ remote allusion in Genesis 49. j “A star shall come forth out; of Jacob,” says an obscure oracle in Numbers 24, another part of the acient Torah, or! Pentateuch, often attributed to Moses. The early intimations were C*HAC vague, often ambiguous, hazy! prophetic visions of a coming! divine intervention. A gunman robbed a blind couple Township accident involving of all their Christmas shopping school bus and three cars, money and threatened to kill The mishap occurred at Pon-thelr frightened weeping son t*ac Lske and Crescent unless he kept quiet, police said!roads just before noon, township | that could refer to the ordeal of I Wednesday. ] police said. Jesus. “Woe to you who desire! Deputy inspector of detectives! S&Sg & K * Kenneth Marple said the rob-1 gPJ D gHg of 28212 Greencastle, and Ginther darkness and not light bery victims Kenneth North- J* J- lESdchce Blankenburg of Wavne, say- A description of he very rop. 33. and h.s wife, Carolyn, thev never had registered as scene that would involve Jesus had 'gone Christmas shopping • ownsnip, ana Mr. wuwm ^ (h . on the cross hundreds of years Tuesday night, escorted by their Grav | 1225 Hil,er; Wa*rford aBenU th* laW* later showed up in some ancient sighted son James 8. Township were treated a t * */ Davidic Hymns, as recorded in R * * * P°ntiac General HosPital andlD1Also "a*"edJn Psalms r> — . . , released. iRinnert & Hamilton Drilling psalms ii.^ T1,e gunman accosted the * * * Co.. Inc., also known as R & H family on a South Side street,] Drlver o{ a third car, Ronald Drilling Co. Inc. of Olney, 111. Blind Couple Robbed; Son, Pontiac Pros* Photo ty Society for Crippled Children. The party was held yesterday at the Pontiac Elks Lodge. Mishap Injures ^rm:n9'°"TJwp- t)Aan Included m 2 in Waterford; Sales Injunction BROODING NOTE “I will pass through the midst of you, says the Lord,” wrote Amos, adding a brooding note 1 Two persons were injured I LANSING W—Two men—one MILWAUKEE Wis (AP) — yesterday in a Waterford from Farmington Township — and their associates Wednesday, were ordered to stop Michigan sales of working interests in II-, linois oil and gas wells. The Michigan Commerce Department’s securities bureau Issued the cease and desist Drivers of two of the cars, order against Wesley Potts, “My God, My God, why has stuck a pistol in Northrop’s ribs L. Strobe of 1735 Petrolla, West thou forsaken Me? i . . A com- and told him, “I want your mon-pany of evildoers encircles Me; ey,” .. .they have pierced My hands Mrs. Northrop told the man and feet . . . they divide My “We are blind and we don’' garments among them, and for have much money. Let us keep My raiment they cast lots! . what llttle we have ” “Yeah, to Him shall all the NO MONEY proud of the earth bowl “i don’t have any money,”jof nature certain early North down Posterity shall serve the gunman answered. “I’m a!American Indians burled their Him...and proclaim His deliv- hippie. I can’t get a Job.” dead in huge earthem mounds erance to a people yet unborn." The gunman took $51 then formed in the shapes of birds (Tomorrow: Isiah) fled. and bears. Bloomfield, and the bus driver, Mrs. Sylvia Hampshire, 6411 Prairie Lawn, Waterford Township, reportedly escaped injury. Hoping to influence the forces The department said it had received evidence that oil and gas well working Interests In the vicinity of Noble, 111., were being offered and sold In Michigan although they nevor have been registered for sale in the state. Last year 6,500 new and improved food items were introduced Including many canned and frozen meat dishes. People inihe News By the Associated Press Helen Hayes will teach a seminar in play-reading at the University of Illinois'in Chicago beginning in February. The appointment of Miss Hayes, known as first - lady of the American theater, as distinguished professor of speech and theater at the university was announced yesterday by Chancellor Norman A. Parker. Miss Hayes, 68, in Chicago winding up an, engagement in George Kelley’s “The Show Off." Wife Sues Janssen for Separate Maintenance Actor David Janssen, 38, who starred in the television series “The Fugitive,” was sued for separate maintenance yesterday. His wife. Elite, charging extreme cruelty, asked Superior Court in Santa Monica, Calif., for reasonable support and equitable division of community property. Married 10 years ago, they separated last August, her suit said. Neither were they mi c r p. p hones mechanically speaking divine dictation. Rather, they • were intensely conscientious men, sensitive to God’s vision of the world, attuned to it and conveying it through their own particular human perspective and temperaments. And they stabbed the complacency of the proud and powerful. Unlike temple-confined pagan' religions, they saw divine concern engaged with history, and! they hurled their exhortations! Dwight H. Johnson, 21, who won the Medal of Honor in Vietnam, is signing up todhy for another three-year-hitch in the Army — but this time around, Johnson is not leaving the Detroit area. Sgt. Johnson has agreed to another hitch on the condition that he is not required to leave the vicinity, an Army spokesman said yesterday. The youthful hero, who was credited with pulling wounded comrades from burning tanks in a Vietcong ambush and holding off the enemy unit until help arrived, will spend , most of the time visiting Detroit schools and explaining Army programs to students, the spokesman said. Career Officer to Head Hondurcy AID Mission Walter G. Stoneman, a career officer of Agency for International Development (AID), has been appointed director of the AID mission to Honduras, it was announced today in Washington. Stoneman. 50, succeeds Robert J.( Minges, who has transferred to.Ecuador. Stoneman’s most recent assignment was with the compliance jjpdmanagement staff of AID, in Washington. Suspects Held inCity Burglary Alarm Brings Police to Radio-TV Store A Pontiac man and woman were being held for investigation today in connection with the burglary of Hod’s radio and television store at 770 Orchard Lake. Pontiac police arrested Miller I C; Webb, 26, of 312 Hughes inside the building after respond-; ing to a burglar alarm shortly! before midnight. » * Mary G. Williams, 31, of 477| Central was taken into custody I a short time later when police• stopped a car fitting the description of one seen leaving from near the scene of the break-in. Found inside the auto, according to police, were 25 insulin needles, five plastic syringes, swabs, a pair of wire cutters, and a number of assorted wigs and wiglets. Nothing was believed taken from the building, but police found many radios and televisions In a panel truck owned by the firm and parked in an adjoining garage. Webb reportedly was standing behind a counter In the store when police broke down a front door to gain entrance. Police said that at I a m. Willie Driver of 242 Earlmoor reported to police that the car that they impounded when they arrested Miss Williams was his, and that he had loaned it to Webb Dec. 10 and had not seen it since. "CHARGE IT" - At All KRESGE Stores D—10v THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1908 Marriage licenses .35? j. R. McArthur Sidney Tweed, Union Lake and Patricia M. Westover, Rochester. Roger W. Kline, Detroit and Raelynn L. Perry, Union Lake. Terry W. Tuckeri Birmingham- and Linda Broslus, Southfield. Francis J. Lee, Milford and Penny E. Schrader. Milford. Frederick M. Adams, Highland and Bonnie J. Kra|enke, High! NOTICES Jonnle Eileen S. Smith, Ortonvllle. 115 Ortonvllle tor Brady, Austin, Lafferty, 290 N. Paddock Clasman, 274 Victory. A.^Gulth^Jr., Troy and Donne Death Notices DWYER, THOMAS J. ; December 17, 1968; 1969 Long Point Drive, Bloomfield Township; age 59; beloved husband of Nell J. Dwyer;; dear father of Mrs. Donald j&f&qS&Sl (Linda) McCulloch, Mrs.! Richard (Joanne) Lesner,' Janet M. and Thomas L, Dwyer; also survived by three brothers, seven grandchildren and t h r e e great-grandchildren. Recitation of the rosary will be Fri-| day, December 20 at 8 pm. at! €. J. Godhardt Funerad| Home, Keego Harbor. Funeral, service will be held Saturday! at 11 a.m. at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church., Interment in Holy Sepulchre: Cemetery, Southfield. Mr.1 Dwyer will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) — . December 18 FALCA, ELIZABETH, Decern-, ber 19, 1968, 2665 Silver Hill:i Waterford Township; age 64; dear mother of Mrs. Helen Zian and Mrs. Maria Scorobet; dear sister of Mrs. Gertrude Branzak and Mrs. Pauline Nichiow; also survived by three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Funeral service will be held Saturday, December 21, at 11:30 a.m., at the Donelson-Johns Funeral j Home. Interment in Perry! Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs NICHOLSON, HOWARD; PONTUC MBS December 17, 1968; 288 3 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Auburn Avenue, Avon Township; age 58; beloved INDIX husband of Aumie Nicholson; dear father of Mrs. Frank Marvin; dear brother of Mrs. Philip Ernst, James and Ed- Gord 0f Thanks........j ward Nicholson; also survived| ,n Memorlam ...........j by four grandchildren. Service 1 Announcements........3 of Bible Vigil will be conduct-! F|orjsts.j.........3.^ ed at 8 30 p.m. ThursdafMt Furteral Directbrs 4 the Harold R. Davis Funeral Cemetery Lots ..........4-A Home, Auburn Heights. persona|$ ...............*.....4.3 Funeral service will be held Lost and jound...........5 Friday, December 20 at 11H| a.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Nicholson will lie in state at the funeral home. EMPLOYMENT HAROLD, Help Wanted Male..........6 Help Wanted Female........7 Help Wanted M. or.F. .... 8 Sales Help, Male-Female...8-A Employment Agencies.......9 Employment Information .. .9-A Work Wanted Female. Work Wanted Couples SERVICES OFFERED .12 ..12-A December 18 1968; 2050 Bass| |nstructions-Schools......10 Lake Road Commerce; age Work Wanted Ma,e...........„ 64; beloved husband 0 f Elizabeth Pearcey; dear! father of Elizabeth, Patricia Ann, Margaret, Grant, and and Mrs. Irene Mast in. Bus;nes, |ervlce .........15 Memorial service will be Bookke9p,ng and Taxe$.....16 n° " d^. ‘ urdayi Credit Advisors ........16-A December 21, at 2:00 p.m a , Dressmoking ond Tai|oring. .17 the Commerce Methodist; Gardening "...................M..18 Church, with Rev. John Smith Landscapfng ............18.A official,ng. The *9™'? i Garden Plowing................18-B gests memorial contributions ,ncome Tox Service ........19 may be made to the Michigan laundry service ..........20 Arthritic foundation. Convalescent-Nursing .....21 pump: NEIXE MARGARET. ■ u, 111 Ont'id3, Television-Radio Service...24 age 73; beloved daughter of Upholstering............24-A Mrs. Katie Howe; dear moth-, Transportotion ............25 ti 1 Insurance..................26 Deer Processing..........,27 WANTED Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.....30 er of Mrs. Thomas L. (Gret chen) Thomson, Mrs, C. J. (Gloria) Appel, John C. Pump and William Henry Ossman; dear sister of Mrs. C. C. Welt-man; also survived by 13 grandchildren. Memorial service will be held today at 8| Wonted Money ....,.!!!! !31 mfri.'-at the Sparks-Griffin! Wonted to Rent ...........32 Funeral Home. The family share Living Quarters.....33 suggests contributions may be Wanted Real Estate........36 made to The Heart Fund. RENTALS OFFERED Falca will He in state at the SOKOL, RICHARD S.; Aparfments-Furnished.......37 funeral home after 7 p.m. to- December 17, 1968 ; 6175 Snow Apartments-Unfurnished ...38 Apple Drive. Independence Rent Houses, Furnished ... .39 Township; age 26;^beloved Rent Houses, Unfurnished...40 PVoperJy Management....40-A day. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m HENDERSON, TESS E.;| December 18. 1968 ; 76 5 Oakleigh Drive, Bloomfield Hills; beloved wife of Dr. James E. Henderson; beloved daughter of Mr. Albert Hensick; dear mother of] Claudia, Prudence, Susan, and Bruce, Henderson; dear sister or Donald and Bert Hensick. Funeral service will be held Saturday. December 21, at 11:00 a.m., at the Cross of Christ Lutheran Church. Interment in Glen Eden Cemetery, Livonia, Michigan Mrs. Henderson will li« in state at Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Home. (Suggested, visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to, 9). The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to Tess Henderson Fund at Albion Collegft. husband of Janett M. Sokol; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Sokol; beloved grandson of Louis Pruchnik; dear father of Shelly and Kelly Sokol; dear brother of Thomas and Mary Ann Sokol. Recitation of the Rosary will be Thursday, December 19 at 8 p.m. at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston. Funeral service will be held Friday at 11 a.m. at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church. Interment in Ottawa Park! fncome Property !!!!!!! Cemetery. Mr. Sokol will lie: ioke Property ........... in state at the funeral home. Northern Property* V " Rent Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms...............<.42 Rooms With Board...........43 Rent Farm Property..........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms..........45 Rent Stores................46 Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property...47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ...............49 ,50 .51 ,51-A the Clarkston Area Jaycees’ Lots-Acreags .. Richard S. Sokol Memorial] Sale Farms Fund WELLS, December BAILEY F.; 17, 1968; 995I HOWELL. RETAH R; December 18. 1968 : 50 West Square Lake Road, Bloomfield Township; age 82: dear sister of Ralph D. Williams; dear aunt of Mrs. William B. Brown and Ralph M. Williams. Funeral service will] be held Friday. December 20 at it a m. at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Cremation at December 19 survived by three grandchildren and one great- rvice a t Donelson-Johns Gardens. Mrs. Howell will lie| Friday at II a.m. at White In state at the funeral home. Chapel Cemetery. Interment (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to’; -|n White Chapel Cemetery 5 and 7 to 9.) UEDTKE, ALFRED E . ; I December 17, 1968 ; 960 Pre-mont,. Waterford Township: I age 59; beloved husband of Dorothy M Liedtke, beloved , son of Helen Liedtke: dear father of Mrs. Robert Pickett;! dear brother of Mrs. Albert Speaker, Mrs August Dreler, Arthur and Arnold Liedtke; also survived by four grandrhi Idrcn. Funeral, service will be held Friday, December 20 at I p.m. at] Donelson-Johns Funeral: Home. Interment In Perry] Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Liedtke will lie in slate at the fdrieral home after 3 p.m. today. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9-) MATLOCK, BENJAMIN JAMES; December 17, 1968; 8005 Circle Drive, Clarkston; YOUNGQUIST Wells Will lie in state nfter 7 p.m. tonight at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 18. 1968; 128 Leonard; age Hall and Mrs. Dorothy Johnson; also survived by eight grandchildren. Funeral service will be Saturday, December 21, 1968 at 1:00 p.m. at Bossardet Funeral Home. Interment In Lakeville Cemetery, Lakeville, Michigan. Mr. White will He in state nt the funeral home. Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOit FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED RT S P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. fication of such error is mado by » got your “KILL NUM- or ogato typo it 12o'cl CASH WANT AD RATES 3.76 5.81 The Ponfiac Press From 8 A M. TO S P.M. Card of Thanks THE FAMILY OF THE late John M. Ball — Ortonvllle, wish to extend thanks to neighbors, friends Special Goodrick Memorial Mosp., Laird, H. Sale Clothing ...64 ] Sole Household Goods .. ...65 Antiques ,.65-A Hi‘Fi, TV ■& RaWio* . . .v. . .->64 Water Softeners For Sale Miscellaneous .. .. 67 Christmas Trees ,.67-A • Christmas Gifts Hand Tools-Maehlnery.. ...68 Do It Yourself ...69 Cameras—Service ...70 Musical Goods ./,. ...71 Music Lessons Office Equipment ...72 Store Equipment ...73 Sporting Goods ...74 Fishing Supplies—Balts .. ...75 Sand—Gravel-Dirt ...76 Wood—Cool-Coke—Fuel . .V77 Pets—Hunt’mg Dogs .... ...79 Pet Supplies—Service ... ,.79-A Auction Soles ...80 Nurseries ,..-81 Plants-Trees-Shrubs .. ..81-A Hobbles ond Supplies ... ,...82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ...83 Meats .. 83-A Hay—Grain-Feed ....84 Poultry j Farm Produce ....86 Farm Equipment ....87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers ....... ....88 Housetroilers ....89 Rent Trailer Space ...90 Commercial Trailers a.. . .90-A Auto Accessories....., ....91 Tires-Auto-Truck Auto Service Motor Scooters ....94 Motorcycles 1 Bicycles ....96 i Boats-Accessories .... ...97 Airplones ....99 Wanted Cars-Trucks ... ...101 I Junk Cars-Trucks ...... .101-A t Used Auto-Truck Ports ...102 j New and Used Trucks .. ...103 Auto—Marine Insurance ...104 Foreign Cars New and Used Cart ... ...106 Funeral Directors Personals .ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING ^VOj^MRNUHMENTj^ Debt Consultants SI4 Pontiac Stat* Bank Building FE 8-0333 data Licensed—Bended Open Saturday * a.m.-U Noon HOLIDAY HEALTH CLUB mam-bershlp, family plan. 30441229. JUNE, PLEASE COME homo The FE 1-mi.____ WILL PAY SIOTfOR latter M in Sunoco. Sunny Dollar* Swoop stakes. Send phone number. Pon-tiac grass Box C-42._____ Lost ond Found 5 Singles 21 and over, Frl. Dec. 27, Donation' $2.00 %r * all ages, Rochester Country Club, lust south off Auburn Rd. (M-59) and east off Rochester Rd. (M-150). Remember those alone and forgotten with a gift • durh g these joyous days. THE-KLUB OF_ROCHESTER. __ CITY OWNED VEHICLES Is" condition. Minimum bid Is Indicated. 1949 Ford Truck $50; 1950 GMC Truck $100; 1951. GMC Truck, $75; 1951 PMC Truck, $75; 1955 GMC TruclT $50; 1962 GMC Truck $100; 1954 GMC Truck, $100; 1960 Ponfiac, $50; 1962 Pontiac, $75; 1963 Pontiac $75; 1963 Pontiac, $75; 1963 Pontiac, $75; 1964 Pontiac, These vehicles a.m. and 12;00 noon on Saturday December 21. 1968. Sealed bids will be accepted by the Purchsing Agent between these hours at the above location. Envelopes and forms will be- available. Thf bids will then be publicly opened after 12:00 noon and successful bidder declared, who must then pay the full arhounq of his bid either by cash or check. Failure to do so will result In next highest bid being considered. Successful bid- from the City Property within ten (10) days or forfait bid money. The City Reserves the right to accept _or reject any or all bids. HALL FOR RENT. RECEPTIONS. Meetings, parties. FE 5-0316 aft. 6. HALL FOR RENT, RECEPIIONS, lodges, church. OR 3-5202. FE 2- IF if'S-AT kLL~possTbie~—~ we~do our best. Read Classification 16 A then see or call Debt Aid. 10 W. Huron Serving Oakland County Home calls by appointments LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY with Dex-A Diet Tablets. Only 98 cents at BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following , boxes: ... C-2, C-5, C-7, Gil, C-12. C J GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Huntoon FUNERAL HOME serving Pontiac tor 50 years 79 Oakland Ave.__FE_ 2 0189 SPARKS-GRIFFlN FUNERAL HOME 'Thoughtful Service' 8-9281 VoorheesSipJe FUNERAL'HOMS. 332-1371 fslsbtlshad Qy«r 45 Y««r« Cemetery Lots - 4-A 4 LOTS, WHITE CHAPEL. Centrally located. UL M740. BUYINGSELLING-LOOKING-TELL IT TO 260,000 People With A Pontiac Press WANT AD Phone 332-818L FIND YOUR LOST pets at 1200 N. telegraph Rd., dally. LOST OR STOLEN: German Shephard, mala, black and brown, approx. 3 mos. old, vicinity of K-Center. Reward, .ugi . wnisB mMLE POODLE, VlC* Inlty of Morgan Lake. 674-2924. LOST: VICINITY of Parkwood and Scottwood/ _____:: tabby kitten, child'i FE 8-2438.________ LOST: RED CLUTCH PURSE, vicinity Farmer Jacks, Glen wood Plaza, 12-16-68. Please return, very important. FE 8-2292.____________ Lost: Aircraft Logbooks Would person finding these please "Mister," Clarkston area. 625-4073. LOST — CHILD'S PET, small' black male poodle, vicinity of Pontiac Lake along M-59. Reward OR 3-5114 LOST—SMALL BLACK Poodle with a few white chin whiskers, spayed, 5 yrs. old; vie. Clarkston main st. area Tuesday night. Ans. |o "Princess," very friendly; no collar, some white paint on left ear and shoulder. Reward. 625-1824.__ Hein Wanted Male 6 $5 PER HOUR, WM --installer and service man, time and *''j for overtime. O'Brien Heating, FE 2 2919._______ _________ ACCOUNTANT, COST Requires some accounting and lob experience, all aspects of cost including variences from standard, major company with plant located near Oxford, salary ... f---------- range depending 06 experience, exc. fringe benefits. Reply Pontiac Press Box C‘10, Pontiac AUTO MECHANIC GM EXPERIENCE Fringe Benefits — No Saturdays HAUPT PONTIAC pn N. Main St., Clarkstgn Apply In pen CAB DRIVERS. Da< BARTENDER FOR PRIVATE Club, paid vaci...........wBm * sick time. Rd., Pontiac. BOOKKEEPER ' Full charge, experience necessary, salary open, apply Transign, Inc., 34 W. Sheffield.___________ BURNER SERVICEMAN, top wogn. t me and a half and double time. Blue Cross, guaranteed year round work. 23 year old company. For interview call 363-4154. CLERKS—FULL TIME, retail store, good working benefits. A. L Co, Bloomfield PlaZa, Telegraph and Maple Rd. 626-3010. CARPENTERS ROUGHERS AND CUSTOM WORK. -.>v- : ^l^NLI 8-1843._ CLERK FOR MOTEL, full time, nights call 646-1848. \___ COLLEGE GRADUATES IN PSYCHOLOGY-SOCIOLOGY SOCIAL WORK POLICE ADMINISTRATION THE COUNTY OF OAKLAND — Is seeking qualified ifyian to work with Juvenile Division^ of the Probate Court as child welfare workers. This Is an excellent opportunity tg work with the most outstanding program in the State, excellent fringe benefits. Including educational opportunity In addition to salary. For additional information “"the- PERSONNEL DIV. Oakland County Court House liCO N. Telegraph Pontiac, Michigan 4S0S3 33S-4751 EXT, 4*5 Carpenters Experienced Roughers Apartment projects In Pontiac area, call 673-1291. days. An equal opportun Ity employer._ CAREER OPENING J men needed for new position, with old established firm. $750 month to start with benefits auch as company car. Insurance, shift. Full time. Guaranteed salary. Apply In person. Birmingham Cab. Reer o f 1351 Rutfner, Birmingham. COLLECTOR SALESMAN and fifty par weak, with *7-year old highly respected Ins. Co. Outstanding fringe benefits, etc. Cell FE 2-0219 or FE 2-211,. DESK CLERK For moteL Full time* Over 25. iTisponsibfi persoh: 338-40r»: ~ DISHWASHERS, DAY only, full or part time. Brass Lamp Restaurant, 130 West University, Rochester. 651- 1661. ____________________ DELIVERY MAN OVER 25 yaara, 11 ‘ ae Drugs, 4390 Dixie Hwy., Drayton^ DIE DESIGNERS . DETAILERS Overtime. Apply In person or cell 539-0500. Northeastern Tool A Die Corp. 25411 Ryan Rd , Warren, MIcjL___ 0AY WORK over 30. arithmetic, mechanical experience desirable. Apply 2)7 Central, near Saginaw. Pontiac._____ _ Drilling—Milling—Boring Machine Operators Second shift opening. Must be experienced end posses* tools. Steady amploymant and good fringe benefits. THE CROSS CO. 17(01 E. 14 Milo Rd. Fr»ser, Michigan 41020 ------ An tqual opportunity employer EXPERIENCED BODY MAN' Rtf Bulck Bump .hop Lott ol work, apply In parion to John Rintallla, Body Shop et |40 Oakland only. experienced semi driySr. 335-114L______________________ ESTIMATING ENGINEER Sharp Individual tor estimating and pricing work, axparlonca tmntlel In plan take-off of towor con struct Ion, building toundotlons land balance etc. This Is a boil-E bolter rosumo Box C- tlmo position for man with ox-porlanct on small assemblies, now rates, fully paid Blue Cross. Bon-ton Corp,. 21/0 Industrial Rd., Troy,________________________ EXPERIENCE BUMPER ' madam shop, plenty to work inc. ill Main, to work. SO-SO, ________ Ford, I Rochester. EXPERIENCib OASS T A T I ON HELP. Glann's Airport Marathon, M-» st Airport Rd. FLOOR COVERING Salesman — Full time No axparlonca needed — we will The Floor Shop MSS Elisabeth Lk. Rd. FOREMAN NEBBED Immediately, prefer man who ha* boon In Iho building trad* field, should have excavallno experience as well as layout background. Sand resume and salary requirements to Box C-23, Pontiac Press.___ FOREMAN stamping plant, 15-20 employees, knowledge of high speed presses end- automatic feeds with die oK die repair background. P tease furnish age, education and salary rtq. with resoma. Ripiy Box C-13, GUARD * IMMEDIATE < Part time Ond lull time — Utica, •Ml. Clemons and Detroit area. Top Union scale paid — Blue Cross, vacation and holiday benefits. Call u* collect - *01 - ' ‘ ‘ Service, 441 B. Detroit. LO MISS, Grand Blvd., GAS STATION ATTENDANTS, must bo experienced In minor repairs and flmaM, afternoon shift, full or part time, good pgy, Cookie's Marathon. 12 Milo ond Telegraph, GRILL MAN' AND ASSISTANT TO THE MANAGER . For evening shift. Excellent w«qos and benefits. Good opportunity tor advancement. Apply - 3123 LopooreRd. rork. HOUSEKEEPING PERSONNEL Immediate openings for full time men on second and third shuts only. S1.S4 per hour, applicant must ba IS years of ape or older. Apply personnel Dept. Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital, 50 N. Perry St., ftntlac. I HAVE AN~OPENlM4 for a good mechanic with tools, guarantee plus commission, also positions for 2 - drive-way salesman, exp. preferred by not necessary. Apply Chucks Standard, 1411 Orchard Rd. MAN TO WORK around horsa barn MACHINE OPERATORS AND TRAINEES We will train you to run lathe mills and surface grinders, some shop experience preferred, good steady work In fast growing cor- a..a, • WALMET CORP. Pleasant Ridge (off 10-MHe Rd ) MAINTENANCE MAN," full til work with overtime. Commission plus car allowance, I 549-9000. MOONLIGHTERS Cost of living loo high? Solve some of your money worries with a second lob. This Is an opportunity tor steady, part time work In the nation's fasfost growing fast food chain. Wa have openings fgr 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. Phone Mr. EMas at 335-M7S between the hours of Ml ».m. or 4-4 p.m. at Arby's Roost Boot Restaurant. ■ Needed at Once! Young Aggressive Auto Salesmen! Intends to < 5591 i 335-5660. afternoons, < overtime. Benton Corp. i work drive. No t . _ . ... lubrications. Paid vacation, hoe-pltalization and life Insurance. necessary. Apply WeL Wanted Mule STEADY WORK In Industrial office, for man ovar 30. Early retirees considered. Send complete resume and MV' Information wo Pontiac TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR route servicemen tor local vandlng company, no axptrlanca nacatsary, will train, ,FE_ l-m An Equal Op- TELEPHONE ORDiS-commlssions paid, dial 4S1-01M tor appointment,______________________ TEMPORARY" Factory Jobs Light factory work. P r a s s operators. Mlsc. labor of all kinds EMPLOYERS . Temp. Service, Inc. CLAWSON 65 South Main REDFORD 24117 Grand River YOUNG MEN ARE YOU IN A RUT? • DO YOU TO WORK HARD 100 PER CENT OF THE TIME? f your answers are yes — there may be a spot <------- With the fastest management positions within 4 $155 WEEKLY For personal Interview coll MR. JOHNSON. 332-9742' before 2:30 dally. ' ' TV TECHNICIAN FULL OR PART TIME txparlenco Huron. ^ Sweet's Radio ond Ap The Oakland County Merit -System Closing Dots examination Applications for this oxaminatlon filed until no later then 5 To ffl staff, ________________ wagas, hospitalization, profit sharing, fringe benefits including Demo end , Bonus I Apply Id person only, to Mr. Burmelster, GRIMALDI BUICK^PEL, Pontiac, 210 Orchard Laka. ______ AY O P E R ATO R RESTAURANT PLANS TO OPEN OTHER UNITS, I need a young man with brains and ambition andugh fi to manage a unit. 335- morning, adult mafas desired, cellent opportunity for retirees. Please apply In person Champs of Troy, Inc. 1420 W. Maple, Troy, Michigan.______________ MECHANICS Cars and trucks, also helpers. Apply KEEGO SALES I. SERVICE 3080 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor. 602-3400._ ” " . . 1 ' OPPORTUNITY If this word means anything to you, If you Would Ilka the opportunity to grow with a dramatically new fast food franchise organization capacity; i ‘““f ti the initiative to lake advantage of this opportunity. Contact Mr. Ellas at Arby's Roast Beef Restaurant between the hours 6 p.m., 335*5675. 1 being taken for P.M. Thursday Dec. 26, 1968- TITLE ATTORNEY II Salary range S10.M0 to $11,500 Applications must be Obtained from THE PERSONNEL DIV. Oakland County Courthouse 1200 N. Telegraph Rd. _____Pontiac, Michigan 40053 _ n WANTED: MEN 45 lo 55 years old tor porter work. Day and evening shifts. Apply otter 4 p.m. Big Boy Restaurant 24*0 Dixie Hwy._ YOUNG MAN TO operate machines on night shift.-mFostorl* Screw Products. **J S. Eton Rd., Blrm- Ingham. _ _ ____ YOUNG MAN, 18 to 21 tor apprentice sales and stock work. Apply 1650 Talegraph, Pontiac Fretter' ‘ Interviews are full, time day and night managers^ OUTBOARD MECHAN 1C, full time fringe benefits and iton <---- Industrial Row, Troy. PORTER For day or evening shift. Apply at Elias Big Boy Restaurant. Dixie Hwy. 8, Sliver Lake Rd.___ PORTER Nights, 12-8:30 shift, premium pay, good employees benefits, Mechus Red ^=0x^626-4200 ___* PART OR FULL TIME Hl-lo men, mailers, general labor. Call Carl Wowly, 852-9710._ _ PAY-LESS STATIONS INC. needs changes P*v-Lau £!ationft I cleaners, 681-0021,__ PORTER Pert time Good working conditions. Paid Holidays. Transportation necessary. _ Janet Davit Cleaners. 647-2009. _ RETIRED MAN wanted for security work, 325-8141.___________________ Restaurant Manoger Excellent opening for o person fully qualified in tost food, high volume restaurant. Top salary, security and benefits. Sand resume to Pontiac Press. Box C-36. „ Real Estate Classes Vrsderharr at Jon Rosily 1401 W. Huron or phono *42-5*00.__ SHIPPING ANb RfebilVINO clerk. SERVICE MANAGER Call Mr_Franklin, 424-1572. _ SCHOOL CUSTODIAN. ' good I good working conditions, frl benefits. Lake Orion Commu School», apply S ch< Administration Building, 315 Lapeer St. Help Wanted Male Help Wanted Female__________7 A HOSTESS AND ASST TO MANAGER Excellent opportunity tor young lady Interested In a career lit restaurant supervision. Previous waitress experience preferred. Wa will train. Apt 23 to 40. Apply at: BIG BOY RESTAURANT ______Talegraph A Huron___ ADMITTING OFFICERS Opening in admitting department, must meet requirement of aptitude test. Type 45 WPM with accuracy, must be able to rotate shifts. Starting salary $437.48 per month. Huron, Pontiac.____________ k RELIABLE WOMAN, complete charge of motherless home, must pending, openings for full time 1st or second shift, pern while you learn, fringe benefits, pleasant surroundings rotates Sunday end hoi (days. Apply In own handwriting, high school grad end must be able to SPELL. No canvassing. 12 So. Mill St. Pontiac, _Mlch. 48858.__________ __ A WOMAN WANTED, cooking and housekeeping, must love children, can live In or out, 624-5411._ 1 MATURE WOMAN, small grocery part time nights. 673-9389._ A BARMAID-WAITRESS tor bar In Lake Orion, good working conditions, Cell for 693-6103.____ AUTO BILLER, NEW CAR dealership experien after»1, FE 5- appointment. 651-5500. BABY SITTER," transportation, 4760. ___ BOOKKEEPER* FOR mul diversified posl ----1. itt-ir* good n tips, if It's time for e change, see Junior mri« BABY SITTER WANTED, home, ylclnlfy of Huron from 7:30 to S. $ dove , during day coll FE If, 6034700. 71 r,-r(U.„7 executive secretary. Gordons, area, personable young with good secretarial skill CHILD CARE, housekeep EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR 673-6865 and holidays off, (no phone calls plain). Town Country Ipn, 1737 So. Telegraph. ' CLEANING WOMAN Mutt have own car, top pay for right dol, full time, soma weekends. Nursing Home. EM 3-4121. 5LERK-STENO IVT Here's unlimited ' earnings' less Iona I field. Call 334-2471, Snellf * FULL AND FART avllable, excellent opportunity retfrees, h Holly MATURE BABY SITTER WANTED SECRETARIAL AND oman in my home .evenings, experience call I with small Infants. tSiai. _ ER 25, dapen- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER io, 1968 7 H#lp Wonted Femal*____________71 IMp Wntittd M.or F. 81 CoiivolBsctirt-Nursing 21 Wanted Real Eitata JDITOR,.......... I ladies, convalescing Q—ii MOTEL MAID OVE | dabie, experienced fIce7 must''have^tyoWand" 36 Rent Houses. Unfurnished 40j Sale Houses ?,e.ner.K ?.!,iclE?PE.RLEflCE? N'GHT AUDITOR. PRIVATE HOME FOR • elderly TRANSFERRED COUPLE WITH 2 BEDROOMS niNINn r«. shorthand | front desk clerk, d.y porter. 334-, „nvalj.cln,, with nursing, *5800 down desires 3bu”«m kl.ch.S.nvTaSooS'w^flr.piac,; Call 693-4756, 425-2472._| home In Waterford area. Agent OR | full basement, a girl office, shorthand front desk clerk, dey porter. 334-Jany sup^1 its. Write Mi\ Sewell, Suite, Woodward, Bli MATURE WOMAN for flee, must have typlr. _ __ bookkeeping experience, call 333- ,| >251, ask for Shanv.______ ''NURSE AIDES, EXPERIENCED or! BH5| will train, all shifts, must have 4STw!| ag ^ L»k* em 3-] fT NURSE AIDES^OVER 21. j STENOS EKakli girl 725 S. Adams, B'ham RECEPTIONIST for Real Offlga, 5 days a weak. 651 concession, cashiers, favorite movies. Moving and Trucking WAITRESS, FULL TIME, nights, arbor Bar. WAITRESS WANTED. Good tip, Plne_Knob Nursing 'Home, *»«t»want. 2150 O^dyk A PRICE TO SUIT YOU. Heavy an, light hauling basements am garages cleaned and odd lobs. Cal nytlme, free estimates. 334-9049. Agent OR •H*”- .......-■■■■■ 1 ecrae. 6695 M-S9. across" from 951 TRANSFERRED EXECUTIVE with Airport. Goodrich. 434-2270 ™, all cash wants 3 bedroom homo In _John Slrlgnano. ______________ Pontiac, would like possession «i >' BEDROOM HOME In oxcellent soon as possible. Agent 674-4104. , west side location with full bast- gas heat, 2 car gai ............ chll Apartments, Furnished 37 part time positions monthly statements, end attend to; PART TIME NURSES aide, apply ell financial records. 1 woman of- P*rspn, Pine Knob Nursing Horn*, «07a w ulirftn Anniv'in nflr.nn flee Beautiful surroundlrw. «- Jfo_Waldgn_RO, ClarkstonT Mich. r159— i w, .,me inyaw. Kirk the HIHs, MA 6-| GENERAL. COOK for-fiS~Blrm-' - Moor» or Mrs. Evans, 332-1022. FREE REAL ESTATE classes. ART DANIELS REALTY, 1230 N MU S-1S47. 22177 Painting und^Decorating 231 HOLIDAY SPECIAL Milton) Rd. Michigan, CR 4-0250. JANITORS, WE HAVE full time‘and1 washing, carpet ........... KT09 I parlance and general office work, MS «WL. SmSXi............ SsfarL”®! sS ttW*7”bar manllL** ‘iPL .ft” M~ OT y' M4~ww>* Eltt- 249 or 320. I Laura Schultz. OL 1-93IL Personnel Director.' P a n t f a Huron, Pontiac. _______ CLEANING LADY t day . VHP musfhavt own transportation, ret.. COMPTROLLER with manufacturing sh'SSli. •pply COOK un,on COOKS KITCHEN UTILITY DISH WASHERS For day and evening hours In andy 'is^wun&r? M transportation and ba reliable, apply In parson. HOWARD JOHNSONS I Telegraph at Maple Rd. to Birmingham ■_ C L E A N I N O L A D I E $Ta | s o GIRL WITH INSURANCE in fire and auto policy ' rating. Position open after Jit-Col1 Martin Insurance Agency 451-7272, GIRL FRIDAY, EXPERIENCED, new company In Troy, must bt a good tvplat, familiar with ttio IBM Executive typewriter, km dictaphone, and must bo goo, figures. Good hours, pay and with GIRLS — DO YOU an|oy matting the public? A short week with convenient hours, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. ? It you nave your dltlons. Mrs. Hyry, Avon Canter ».m. I SECRETARY WANTED. Ml young, attractive: enthusiasts ahdj £** 1^^ 70.75 ^nspoi can become a PHOTOMATE your__area. PHOTOMA . _ Uniforms provided size 7-12, open interview call Miss Gee, 16038 d for Quality Dry Cleaning, I s knowleclc»abi« Tnd *hTJ itRer^frlno^Unem's Caff^r' nSht* ,f de*ked' 5150 month I L™ SS? Mr* _4B85, 887-4462. ____ WANT A MAN'S JOB? TIGERS—18 TO 25 Wa will hire several sharp, single women this week, for executive training program. You will learn p a rsonnel, management, advertising and display. Positions Involve: Correlating and communicating promotional technl-quet. No Experience Necessary All applicants must be neat, aggressive, enloy meeting and talking with people and nave a sincere desire to get ahead. Only Rochester area, “,e'F0?i* more' ' 875-7580 collect in estimates, cell in Waterford ■2 LARGE ROOMS’ AND bathT nc !_chlldren, after 5 p.m. FE 5-1705. i 2 ROOMS, BATH and kitchenette j adult working couple, no pets, den I ref., 429 N. Paddock. i_____hr wr utilities i Deposit1 ___ __________ ... The Rolfe H. Smith Co., 333-1 hlldren, equired -7848. LOOKING _ FOR ERl II 1mm wn»»t|ng"and drapiiT full basement and oarage, all on 2 fenced lots with bordering lilac bushes. "0” down 3150 FERNBARRY CT. This home In Cherokee Hills, lust o Elizabeth Lake Rd. will be avllable CALL RAY TODAY 12-23-68. 5 rooms and bath, rental 8135 par month, suitable f child or children References requl ■ last month, rental, RESPONSIBLE PERSON to b sit, beginning the first of the w ------- * 334-8133. RESPONSIBLE WOMAN TO for 4-yr.-old girl, itay from 9 p.m. to 4:30 a.m„ own bedroom, 5 pr 4 nights. No housework. 820. 335-1877, McNIchols, 1-273-1724. HOUSEWORK AND proporo 1 moot for 4; 4 p-m. to I p.m. 5 or 4 days per week. Call after 4 p.m. 770 Starling, Perry Park, Pontiac.____- HOUSEKEEPER, 5 DAYS Vicinity of Oakland University. Exce"*», c,rl '“lilJJi- r«,«r*nces...2.school % per minute. 483V373 any time. ATE sharp GIRL WANTED for barmaid — or waitress work, c'-kUi^yu Saginaw. See Ralph SENIOR KEY PUNCH OPERATORS (4) mm WEEKLY AND WOMEN for new building Orval Gldcumb, 473-0496._______________j utilities, clean, FE 2-4991.' I .JMlIford Rd? (S?ralr?' Upholstering 24-A 2 Reply Pontiac press Bex C-33 ~ ' ~ 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE entrance, 532 bedroom ranch in Holly with bullt- pontiac, Michigan.___________ j January Sale Prices | «■ w bik. from s RAY (P-26) 4TAL SERVICE to ir K~ ~ TT—.-,-- MBsr/ 1 AuburnHeights 4. Mil S-1567, 22177 - ^ Hempstead. * SERVICE’ ST. CLAIR ST. aturlng full basement. older. $150 Pharmacist! DELICATESSEN COUNTER CLERK ApP!y DeHcatossan C/O Montgom- Plains DENTAL ASSISTANT for plaasanl Birmingham orthodontic office. Chalrslda assisting and typing. Reply Pontiac Prr - --- Pontiac, Michigan. Secretaries. Apply Thealei to the Pontiac Drlve-I INTERVIEWER-TYPIST Experienced, age 20 ‘or older, permanent position. Variety of duties, including typing i n d meeting the public. Opportunity for icement. salary In keeping training and experience. 5 tervlew: CALL MR. LAWRENCE ; 332-9742. BEFORE 2:30 DAILY. I WAITRESS J Full time evening work, Rocco's, i. 5171 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. Help Wanted M. or F. 8 Please cpll Miss Brooks. ^tmb YTJ T V /^TDT DRIVER Jn-LLL Y UinL I SSSi.,r«ncf,"*"rt"“n" Of Kelly Services Long end short term assipnn starting Immedlgtaiy. Pontiac Pleasant working c o n d 111 c Absolutely the highest hourly rate. --------------- i li ■ 125 N. Saginaw EQUAL OPPORTUNITY BREAFAST AND LUNCH COOKS, rienced, day work, exc. work-conditions, top wages. Apply rr ' fiHi m gn " * Dixie experienced, day Ing conditions, to. Harvey's Colonial House, m 1e Hw Purchase discount Hospitalization Life Insurance Overtime beyond 40 hrs. Liberal vacation pay Paid holidays Planned Retirement Many other benefits APPLY IN PERSON FROM 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's Pontiac Mall ShoulcT You MAKE AN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE NOW IS THE TIME Michigan Bell ty dep. 887-9 ROOMS ’ AND " BATH, ’utilities i^ 42 WE BUILD ON YOUR, LOT. $14,690 reupholstered no_w__.at January j _fu/nlshed,^CIark.___________________ [ATTRACTIVE FURNISHED ROOMS 3 ROOMS AND BATH, utilities turn, for men, Pontiac area, $12 par H EM 3-2566._______ Oxford;!CLEAN, Q U I E T" GENTLEMAN, «% UL 2-4962. | H------ 3 ROOMS AND BATH In Lake I n . 9 MH9BI Orion, $30 per week, utilities, n m.9a pw •> BMch' F,a l Deposit, call 493-6613. | man. 563 W. Huron, FE 3-7111 ---- - • - 3 ROOMS, WORKING couple, $120 LARGE CLEAN SLEEPING Wanttd Household Goods 29! month, FE 5-9789. for quiet gentleman, within - —------------------------™,3 BEDROOMS, wMl J.ide, large and LnJL,,JL,,'.*n2, ,°.,,.Pon,l*c' parkin° A DCnDIhOMC 1 clean, parking, utllltlm turn” ideal! “vaUabio. 451-3519. ____ 4 BtUKOOMS FE 5-7932 I ,or «®rking girl* or couple. FE 2- NEWLY DECORATED SLEEPING Off Joslyn. | Call 335-1700 for L Com'l. u^^M Transportation WANTED: DRIVER TO deliver carl OR 3-4539 SB. q‘u i . Iveta entrance. West Side. FE2-^4517. LOVELY ROOM FOR protauloi YOUNG^BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, Bldr. _ 334-3830 — 53LV W. Huron St.. Si BACKUS 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. 1___________FE 5-7932 ! HIGHEST PRICES-PAID FOR good and appliances. Or what day bRUG STORE clerks? years, experienced p r e t evenings 5-10 p.mM and part-time. Lee Drugs, 4 Elias Bros. Big Boy Restaurants NEEDS: Waitresses Curb Girls Tel-a-tray Operators For evening shifts. Apply Telegraph £ Huron - ■ ■ Hwy, B Silver Lake Rd. benefits. See .... . . . Dial Finance Company, Huron, Pontiac. _ Press Box C-30, IMMEDIATE OPENiNG" lor-full time d«ntel assistant, experience T'e'Ceph Press Box C-.ffi LPN . PART-TIME Saturday and Sunday, or 2 days a week. Gian Acras, 1255 Wast Silvtr Ball. LADY TO CARE for eldtrV lady, PLOVER___ IV employee SECRETARY - BOOKKEEPER R. F. Lohmeyer* days, 334-7477 . SHIRT PRESSER for daparf-—‘ Pike. Ogg Cleaner*, 379 E Dixie ■ CAMERA SALES Soles Help Male-Female 8-A ALWAYS LEADS ALWAYS J4S4. __ C up e. ROOMS AND BATH/ welcome, $35 bT& B AUCTION i JS-4& 3B89 Dixie Hwy.______OR >1717 J ROOM WILL BUY OR SELL your furniture. I 331-7952 Tylers Auction, 4959 Highland BACHELOR- APARTMENT . 8cn_d,47M5J41.;........... . M and bath. 514. FE 5-9178 Wonted Miscellaneous J$ • CLEAN APARTMENT, single ml COPPER, BRASS, RADIATORS.| ladies. 273 Baldwi FuTtNISHEbr" Near Mall 1TCH- ’ side location. FH^erm 0 Phone ' close to^Ponf7^"MtrsW33l6893.r SLEEPING ROOMS, 2“with cooking,! location, lake starters end generators. C. Dixson, security. Apply 14 Wed. 4 to 8 p.m. VERY ATTRACTIVE ROOM for ni _reflned Gentleman. OR 3 7539. ’ Rooms with Board 4 finished delivered. Royal Oak Waste er and Metal Co., 414 E.l pedestal stand, FE 2-2945.___ Wanted to Rent accept chairs. COUNTRY LIVING 5 minute, north PRIVATE ROOM, HOME cooked!“b.droom»' Of 175 and Dixie, upper 3 rooms meals. 335-1479. hith, frtc ^couple preferred**'525 *«r'SoDM' . BOARD and laundry forL wJLk a“dPdip.Pr^i;S: OR 3-«M7| nclnerator, I. immediate p<&&sslon[ Land contract. 623-0451 after 1 ^pj^Noagents. BY OWNER — Golf Manor How m«ny_extras. Priced to BY OWNER family room Garegt — 363-3951. Lake Estate 3 < 4 bedroom Bag TEMPORARY Factory Jobs LPN-S 53.50 PER MATURE YOUNG WOMAN tor housekeeping. Must be free to 1/4V4I,. 5120 per week. CO 4-9457 ilttor MATURE RELIABLE bi Huron and" 'Dlxiel *J* »,cInl,V ■ - - I _Lake—4514)725 after 5 p.n ----- MARKER AND PACK Gresham Cleaner, 405 S. Cass labor of all kinds. These Jobs Are Free a art an Equal Opportunity 32 required, call FE 4-4410. - . .. EFFICIENCY 2-ROOM, air Utilities H®1" Stare* lOTHER WITH 5 children need L°Y”‘#,h,#dr'150 house desperately Pontiac area, J S5k* 0 a rn* P.O. Box 1243. Berkley, Mich., c<» _______ R. Cahoon. FIRST FLOOR clean 3 rooms 8, minimum raqulrements'' pwr: WHITO-WOAAAN "daslres apartment _^,h- entrance. FE 4-3349. minimum requiremems. | t0 share with seme. Unfurnished, FURNISHED APARTMENT 542-4444 - 2 locations FE 8-9405 immediately. FE 4-9445.___4 ____ 481-0023 khare Living Quarters 33 LAhS®E ,J,5 R°^s' MAJ°°EpRN;m»*‘ child welcome. 682-1318. * open A REAL ESTATE EXPLOSION" i?2Satl®“l|h^t« fteW^rwIllfiSleW you end is able toitarnlnQg uniimitgd. we will consider cpmmensurete with full or part time men provided you meet our quallflcetlons. We will teach you this exciting field if necessary. Bonut arrangement. WARREN STOUT, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE background end experience. THIS IS NOT A CHRISTMAS OPENING. Excellent employee benefits Purchase discount. . Blue Cross-Blue Shield. Life Insufance. LG E R J Oakland EMPLOYERS' Ex-Career Girls EARN CHRISTMAS MONEY ! - Ave- Apply tyiw, taka dlc-MAID URGENTLY NEEDED,-paid Temp. Service, IftC. funeral office holidays, vacation and Blue Cross, CLAWSON 65 South Mein assignments Pontiac * *amporarv apply hou9ek«M»Mr maiih»w iMa» m ____M^ioutn main Paid vacation. teflon, key punch, work for profit assignments Pontl. CALL MANPOWER 1450 I FE 5-8165 gen. 334-2444. 2320 Hilton Rd. Aluminum Bldg. Kerns ALUMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS,1 Call Ft 4-3171 anytlma. Antenna Service Beats and Accessaries BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcraft. I.M.P. S I Fiberglass & Alun Marc, outboard & stern i M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED Complete eavestroughlng service. Free est. 473-6066, 673-5662 Excavating Roofing HOT TAR roofim __ lng. I _______Price, FE 2*1016. HOT TAR BUILT-UP to estimates “ ' - - -334-1024. NEW ROOFS FOR OLD, HOT ROOF Shinnies, 24 hrs., free est. Repairs. BULLDOZING, Finish Grading. -JL_°uMon,_Ff 0-1725. ....----- ---------------- F| Fiberglass & Aluminum Boats, “ere. outboard & tfern dr. 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Carpentry CARPENTRY _ end roofing, ---- MA_5-4T“ Y, NEW 338-6721. LI INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Family rooms, rough or flnlshe dormers, porches, recrestlc Backhoe. Basements. 674-2639. SILDOZING -TRUCKING, reasonable, reliable. Free estimates. OR LET US FIX YOUR Road! of bulldozing. 625-3735. CHAIN LINK AND PONTIAC FENCE CO. W32 Dixie Hwy., Watertord 433-1040 ___ Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND old I lloor sanding. FE 2-5719._. , . . " - SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING. -j Secretarial Service TYPING. SHORTHAND. Notai mimeographing, 332-4117, ^ Sand-Gravel-Dirt FILL SAND LOADING DAILY 50 cents per yard, * ke Rd., U * i EM 3-3516 INTEI _______AND GRAVEL CO. Snow Plowing ANYTIME DAY OR Reas. Call attar 5 p.m. - sanding and finishing. Ft Floor Tiling ADDITIONS AND ALTERATIONS of - *HY Mnd- —aebdktem— , CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING, BY JOURNEYMEN noleum, formiaca, tile, Carpe Homes, attics, basements, garages1 741 N. Perry. FE 2-4090. and any type concrete work. "No-----^ ,----- Job to big or to small." You get HoniB Repair ght. Com- __________08-0211. B&K SNOWPLOWING,’ 2 M, trucks, reliable 335-0064, 331-8665, or 332-5024. _______ _________ HR CLARKSTON ROOFING- si SNOW PLOWING. 673-9297 Hudson's Pontiac Mall ' ENJOY®81 DRIVING Enjoy Extra Money MOTOR ROUTE Opening in WASHINGT0N-R0ME0 - ARMADA AREA Apply R. T. PECK Circulation Dept. THE PONTIAC PRESS REAL ESTATE PERSONNEL, full or^part time, cell 627-2825 or 627 ■ REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCE liiiMgtt. TRAIN our UNION LAKE ) com office at 3 3 0 0 0 .TERN HWY. near Orchard Lake Rd., good pay. For! II 7-6560 5460 HI OR WILL TRAIN We neat offee — 8000 Commerce Rd. Also NORTHWESTERN HWY, ______ 46 LARGE AREA, PLENTY of perking, raas. rates by the yaar. MICHEALS REALTY 427-3848■ _________427-2825 Rant Office Space 47 SEPARATE OFFICES te rant. WthN„IJfL. “ LOWER. CLOSE IN, baby welcome, snare noma wiTh same. 332-3163. | dep. riq » 330-2343. Wanted Real Estafo 36 * MONTHLY LEASES ROYAL CHAMBERS APTS. Completely furnished, 11 n • n s, dishes, utilities, TV. FROM S375_______ Mi-2417 Apartments, Unfurnished 31 1 BEDROOM DUPLEX, ADULTS. 1 MILLION homes, lots We will give you ces X‘K Our eopralser < | details phone C. SCHUETT 815 S. Woodwai outright. 674-2236 | McCullough realty 1 -JnW*™1 R<1' ,M 5*’ welcome, stove, % 1 To”50 I HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE 3 PARCELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 14S0 N. Opdyke FE 5-1145 Urgently need lor Immediate taiel Pontiac Dal'y <>!| | MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE_ ALL CASH For homes anyplace In Oakland dltlonlng and cleaning furnished. Call JoKn_Stlar, 474J134. _______ 3 OFFICE SPACES, HEAT, light turn.. 4548 Dlxlii. OE S-13M. available nPw in one of Rochester's finest and newest ot-flea and commarcial c a n t • r. Medical suites, general office •ull»* and commercial spaces. Pr,h"‘ INDIVI^DJJAL OFFICES '.liable on busy M-59, ExcSflont king and sign facllltlss. Call n. 881-9080 or Inquire 1 AND 2 BEDROOM LAROE, light airy unfurnished apartments. Exceptional kitchens, large closets, .. all utilities, except electricity, 8145 PRIVATE OFFICE WITH reception to $145. No pets. N art It Id room. Apartments, 115 Campbell, south of. WILLIS M. BREWER ranch, professional (Intel_ ____ ment, garage, lakt privileges, J per cent mortgage, $23,000. Can elter 4 p.m. 474-4384. Beautiful Executive home 20 min., from Pontiac. 2.000 a*. «* Hv ngJ area. 3 bedroom BL Ltvel, blllard room, family room, 3 fireplaces, heated swimming pool, oriental Landscaping, many occupancy! '“,urM' & DAY Frank Marotta Assoc. i»*TO‘ll P.M. AFTER S P.M. 343-7081__________________887-4553 1 OS: County. Monty I 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____ 363-5477147"3*offi, Hwy • SYNDICATEIJ training in company school, sio.ooo Havlno unilmi1«d fund* tn invait in LOOO first year. Call i.w a. t0 acquire I wlll, Commercial Kii .. WM -----‘ts aertaoe. May m Baldwin A^e., call ROOMS AND furnished, util. Inc side location, sac call 338-6380 bet. SMALL ROOMS and bath, upper, heated, range and refrlg., private entrance on Putnam St., $80 month. Reply Pontiac Press Box C-15. Pontiac Michigan. ROOMS, BATH, GARAGE, working « WSM PE 4-8181 all • and iumlays 682-2073 12.50 per wk.r Pq.ur.;* »usln#ssPropErty 47-A 18-4054. ' I lATH. - psrtlv )0X5#' BUILDING WITH LOTS ot •d. good wtsll P*fklnQ W.vHufon. FE_3-784t._ Sep. required,138x45 BUILDING. 2.825 ft. m a Tli floor, 650 ft. basement. Ideal for storage or service work, Lake Orion area, Write Pontiac Press, Box C-10. It. 682-6105. /^TD T/“ r and^ot wa! I kJliK. I ask for Mr. it side. 332- AND BATH, upper, heat water furnished. 334-8613. NEAR WILLIAMS LAKE. . --- ^ dfp 47WK)74> (VE TRADE, FE 8-71741 1702 S. Te'egrapn ____RAY REAL ESTATE_______ r TAKE “LESS THAN $2,000 IN MONTH? Opening In Pontlec ‘ ‘ ‘ 40, WlMB contact customers. Air D. D. Deers, Pres., ______________ Lubricants Co., Box 476 Dayton, over 40, wim car, to Pres., American ____ cn . r m “ - Ohio 45401 Employmsirt Agencies ACCOUNTANT Intents, third building: No children, no pels. property, lend contracts aerugo, suggest that Dolor* ^ I , roporty you contact Von Realty tor * cosh ul*. Th* syndicate wonts property now. If you hov* to mov* tost or do not Ilk* prospects going through your homo — us lor on appraisal. VON REALTY REALTOR MLS Full chart Urn BLOOD donors URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positive 87 50| adorns & adams 647-8880 Administrative Trainees $600 UP Excellent opportunities for young men with top-notch companies. 2 vrs. college required. Math oriented. Fee paid. i INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL .. ' 685-5802, office, Pre*»lfl9|CHjfisTMA|“PkESiNT F0* My FAMILY: S PRES e nice I or large down payment home. Agent, 674-4104. CASH Hlllvlew! _ Eiizeoem anal Rds. $165 mo. CLARKSTON CORNERS ALL ELECTRIC APTS. Open Mon.-Fri. 7-8 p.m. Sat.-Sun. 2-4 p.m. stay, 114. 105 WASHINGTON W. CLARKSTON CALL RAV TODAY INDUSTRIAL BUILDING, •quar* toot, near Pontiac Plant, and exprouway, lultabl* f( ' ' MFC,, warehouse, 482 RENT OR LEASE. : building 40x91. Lot* Xonod M-l. $408 ur I po**o**lon. Located at 1388 Crw-cont Lake Rd. OR 4-3547.___ Rant Mlicallanaous 48 GARAGE FOR RENT. Dopoilt required. 482-3872._______ HALL FOR RENT iber 1 thru January 1, mosfl _ still available, plenty of, perking, room for -800 guests or el party of <25, kitchen faculties/ |uke-box, catering and entertainment; available, cleaning service avail. Call Joan Moore at McCullough Realty, 474-2236. 9 a m to 5 p.m. for details and reservations, small deposit required. Saif Mouses "0" DOWN. CLARKSTON rench end* drepe* OWNER NORTH «nd room, goroo*, lond cor DO. 83,000 down. 338-1842. boumont, family room flroploct, 2-car garage, appraised *037,500, our price 133,MO. Coll CAPS COD boumont, ga* hast, 3 mi, lull dlnliw room, lota 0} I - PHA approvad, Only *300 down. Agent for Owntf, I38 499T CLARKSTON AREA Now 3-bod room brick ranch, IV* both*, full boumont, Bear at- Inched garage, corner Hot, loko privilege*, quick potuillon, will K*L*. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 ORCHARD LK. RD. 482-0M0 CAPE C6D ;7uTdVntng#,AKm!:*«i. J room, PHA opprovod, 0_nly WOU ranch on oxtra larga lot. Big llvltH ' •toil ' rpotlag 908 FH. EMBASSY WEST (CIOUS 1- and 2-bodroom, SIM 1170. Mr*, tchultl. 874-8541, 1 RAY benefits, 8318, coll Anglo 334 929, estimate • lob. MIRACLE MODERNIZATION —~ 335-1218 _ \..—j CAWREfTTRV MW CEME9IT wdfiT, fro# estimates. 852-5252. AROUND home. MAINTENANCE AND OENERAI _______ ___, commercial residential, 334-4229. 24 hr. service HEINRICH, TUISKU, HIBBLIN, INC. or* looking tor work, all phaus '•ntig, no kto too *ma'lori TALBOTT LUMBER I. Specializing In room Glass service, wu |fj[ Building and Hai Glass service, wood or aluminum. Building and Hardward supplies. 1025 O A lond_______FE 6-4595 Moving, Storaga A-l TREE SERVICE BY B B Free estimate. FE 5-4449, 474-35 A-l jrRRjrTfiVtet stumi removed free If we take down 1 tree, free estimates. 3348049. EXPERT TREE SERVICE a I slump rsmovpl. 473-7491, alt, 4 .p^._____a_____ I FRAZIER AND PENNINGTON Tra# Removal. 334-SI21 or 3348083. TREE SERVICE-REMOVAL | Trimming, removal, spraying and dOTsUN 437-1478 Tracking Rook, 332-9157 Associates Person- PH Neg. srs ., B-neg., AB neg $10 tm MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER 1 In Pontiac FE 4-9947 - ---- 1343 Wldjt Track pr., W. , ENGINEERS -----_ - 1 AiHypaL for pormanont staff. , adorns & adams 647-8880 ship, good working conditions, all fringe benefits, apply In person, Terry's Country Squirt, 1476 West Maples, lust w. of ' 642-9190. V day 3927, >49-5716 or 349*5144. INTERIOR FINISH, ponoflng, 40 years 2*1235._________ "KITCHENS, flOJD WU. ^ ___________ , ^ W”*W "-jobs. Can feOOF AND GUTTER repalr and OSCAR SCHMIDT FE 2-5317 replace, paneUng. painting Interior and beCOfOting your prlM.AAnytlmo.BFE54mo95<*m* HAIR STYLIST Office Girls' Will Train, Benefits Call Ann Todd 334-2471 __Snelllng and Snelllng._ TRAINEES No exporlence necessary. C Britannic*, 338-9405 txtertor, storm and screen repair, free estimates. FE * Cement Wark BLOCK AND CEMENT w tloc 391-1173. ________ CEMENT FLOORS, now Ponfloc, 391-2506. COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL .........I. Bloc! work. ..... lXPERIENCED imM tiUdU| PianoTunlng A,SCMr.^'S Uflip JT attention' 1 ™, T „ w%vhSS'ln‘ FEMALE. Mf»rt8fS.r HAULING, REASONABLE To work In our ultra modern beauty lslknw^FOR?, MSTROIT ' A I N T I WORK ____ ___________RATES. 33S-1344. Free estimates. LIOflT HAULING OF ANY KIND. '• ' ' FE 43347. ',il PAINTING AND LIGHT HAULING and MOVING, of PAPER HANGING LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS THOMPSON____________FE 48344 Ia-O.K. PAINTING. Quality work, goragos cloonod. 474-13437_ CTSH^ANp-lfEAVr-TEuCKING.I Block GUINN'S TONST. CO. fm (tTtmwos. PainTTno and ( wall rubblth, fill dia grading I WASHING, window cleaning — gravel and front-ond loading. FE 2-1 335-8793. ________ 8*83. ________.________________ I 3347477 or 391-3*71 QUALITY WORK ASSURED Point, j NEW PICK-UP TRUCK, will help FIREPLACES. EXC B-L i ENj j £-*^4189.W*" W*shlno *73 ■ 1 scrap: romovol, rUs. 345-4714. 342-4117. IplASTERING, NEW work 0 Track Rtirtal patching, fre< Plastering Service dellvir anyfhlna. trips, FE 43S74. days. ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT! dresses. ItMhar coats. 4*24533 • ETTY JO'S dressmaking, altera- APPROVED AUTO DRIVING school. PE 49444. Free homo pickup. 1 DRIVING IHITRUCTldNS, 14 years. •xporlonoi, 338*1280.________I estimates. 363*5687; 9 A iTrucks to Rent CONDRA PLUMBING & HEATING W-Ton; Plcku 5 A L PLUMBING AND HEATING,! let George do It. 673-0377, i GAS FURNACE, average $595. A A H Sales, 825-1501 or 674-4341. TRACTORS Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD Open Polly Including Sunday WeH BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls cloaned. Root, Satisfaction guarantiee. Inst— totol Insured. FE 2-1431. . benefits: Special dlacount on purchou Hospitalization, generous sick pay. Life Insurance — Pension plan. Paid vacation — Paid holidays. APPLY IN PERSON Employment Office Basement' Hudson's PONTIAC MALL ENJOY DRIVING Enjoy Extra Money MOTOR ROUTE Opening in ROCHESTER AREA Apply R. T. PECK Circulation Dept. THE PONTIAC ‘ PRESS __________wowm | Work Wanted Male 11 A JOURNEYMAN CARPENTER small, roofing, additions, oarages, 1 rec. guaranteed In quality and prica. Bill ! Dew, FE 8-2198 State license No. j16497. r ____ ALL ROOfTnO, SIDING, gutters and repairs, licensed contractor 549 3185. A-l CARPENTER, large or small 5137 CARPENTRY, 36 YEARS R « p a I r t, remodeling, kitchens, specialty Reasonable. 673-5728 YOUNG MAN. AGE 29, seeking full, time employment, 398-5337. Work Warned Female 12. ^ cash to your m o r t g a g SISL0CK & KENT, INC. 309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. __ 338 921 CASH IN 24 HOURS Wa buy property anywhere, an condition. For fait service till: ' 333-7156 MILLER BROS. RIAL I HAVE A I WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN ! OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL | AGBN1 _ 874-1898 _ elderly' couple n!£68 home j _ near Mall. Cash. Agent, 3384952. FOR QUICK CASH smart people know It pays to call — Agent 674* ! INVESTOR WANTS HOMES — any! condition, any location. Top dollar,: LOTS WANTED 50 ft. or longar, eny location. Cash, j YORK ‘ 674-03631 ■ LOTS--WANTED IN PONTIAC ~EAL ‘ REALTY, 642 4220 Gardtn Court ^P0^men*S 2 BEDROOM. ^BUNGALOW P*!.!?0? JtwP 8 4S fireplace, garage, knotty pint 8165 completely Insulated. I . acre, nicely ! : i contract term, conditioning, phona LPH-IP 5105 i garuq* aispatai. net wale, heat. - ivy Blacks tram Pontiac Maters i 191-195 W. KENNETT ROAD F,E 1 2734 _ 958-5428 j'tfSWWini HOWELL Town & Country Inc. >ing. REAL VALUE 1125 par mo FE “3.749*4. PIU* *'**"" *n' s*ra°* an* carport. U' ATTRACTIVE HOME 3 bedrooms, large living room and basement. 814,100. FLATTLEY REALTY j 428 COMMERCE 343-4911 I2 STQRY, 120' LDf, vary goad con-| dltTon, 81400 down and good credit M2- 7897, _ 2 BEDROOM BEAUTY Agent for owner, OR.4-14 Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 5TxieTakEF46nt acre — attractlv* I mb horn* with 3 car ga and Income rant. Darden and fruit. Immediate poises*Ion. Hurry! Etwood Raaity. 483-34107 EXCELLENT WEST SIDE LOCATION Lire# * bedroom hem* — * baths, recently redecorated Ineld* and out, golden oak Moors, clou to Central Hospital, zoned multiple, farms. WRIOHT REALTY M2 Oakland Av*. FI >8141 FiHT^jn VAIlflt- RENTING $78 Mo. Ixdudina taxe$ and liwgrence ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION WILL ACcWt AU APPlIcaTIONS -MSSLBANw«{THa5?&TRli OKAY WITff Ul, OPEN DAILY AND MT. AND (UN. or cema te* eeaJSElty For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 HANDYMAN'S HOME, kgra'a llttl* r*,Cf L <*brk- If'* a frame ranch with 3 bedrooms, 3 car garaga and jnctaud ^orch. All youri.for only COMMERCE Almost new callings; carpatad CALL RAY TODAY Full basamant; RAY PAYS CASH FOR Homes planty of clotaf spaca, ground laundry facilities In avary bul beautiful grounds ovar look inf Clinton Rlvar. Rantal Includa facilities except alactrlclty. Nc CUSTOM CRAFTED APPLIAN • BY "HOTPOINT " SEE MANAGER APT. No 1 12 6 P.M. only Dally by APP OR CALL 673-5050 NFW APARTMENT 2 bee uEi ronomoninq, »tr rnlshed, plu« i alactrlclty. Call a - Drayton Plaint. $11,900. OWnar, 541-1927. BEDROOMS, basamant, gas haat, naarjNorthtrn High. PE 5-H42 3 BEDROOM : Brick and aluminum ranch, tancad COOLEY LAKE FRONT J nice lot, prica raducad for* quick COSWAY 681*0760 3379 ORCHARD l ¥ (AT COMMERCE RO ) BEDROOM RANCH In Cli carpeted and panala^ living RAY r FOR LARGE FAMILY lg 5 bedroom atono home w ffl basamant and 2 closed arches^ new jas furnaca. Lc 1,000 dow £ Ortonvllla, 516,900. ^couldn't bt tAY TODAY Ai IRONING. I^Bay sarvlca. Mrs.l secRETARiAiTwDRK. Pertoneiized! occept 30 day listings ALL CASH IN 24 HRS. iccept 30 day lidB Guaranteed sale 1LLEY PLACE APARTMENTS 2 bedrooms — 2 baths 5177 RAY END WORRIES Ifh A Payday Psymi •abt Aid, protassfona f ident la I money problems. Getting r by ^taking all jtour bills and Home Calls by Appointment DEBT-AID, Inc. Dressmaking S Tailoring 17 DRESSMAKINO, RESTYLING,! alterations by experienced! 1 eeemstresa. 363-C70, | 1 674-4101 689-0760 OPEN Sundays OPEfyOAtLY 10 e Phone 651 4 Ron! Houses, Furnished 39 BEDROOM, COZY, 3 BEDROOM HOME, 3 CALL COLLECT 427-2815 HOME ON A HILL. This’le ana you I can't past up. Hart Is a beautifully landscaped home with a magnlff. rent view an fa Sueln Lake. room, big kItchen,VLd'roomsH? ‘ f ef garaga and awning* In Irani I end back. Den'f miss mis garaf opportunity for lake prlv. CALL RAY TODAY 674-4101 RAY HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL Good residential area. Lake privileges on Middle Straits Lake. 3 lots. 59750. $1,000 1 contract. Immediate po. EVERETT CUMMINGS, Rtaitor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD | EM 3 3308 381-7111 DeSOTA This l HUSBANDS mifeg0 w *3^ Pontiac.001 entry, also family or TV Rent Reuses, Unfurnished DROOM. CAPPETFD, closing co«8 estimated at $350 to qualified buyer. Kenneth G . Hempstead, 334-1214 AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA 3 bedrooms, full basement, 20 ft. ms your offer land contract . of Ctarkston. rage oil 2 acras, FOR YOUR EQUITY, . PH OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAOSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0356 OR EVE- NINGS. FE 47005. TOM g REAGAN PEAL ESTATE OpEyka Big Lake Privilege* W. i with this 2 bedroom bt new gas furnace, good wbll, newly painted, 510.600,51505 down. | UNDERWOOD 332-0156 625-2615 ^ *25-3125 Evee. D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1968 TAYLOR STONEY CREEK ACREAGE MOVE RIGHT IN I 3 P.M. —'TILL i?”'* ESTATE RAY "ffCTIbrkkLY rB,?cAhND ,.NMura.Thl5 iLIli AND OFF TO SCHOOL nor .W.erp*r?ci PS"?'.0S7*S,.r%3/^^K TUCKER REALTY CO, STRUBLE WE TRADE WE UP IN THE AND OFF TO SCHOOL ISSK IRWIN h«t. sis,.so, W 17 ROOMS AND BATH mina rlffisRS3HP R^LTWS^E.!^ Oftlc. Op«n^Ewntag» «. Sund.y 1-4 LARGE FAMILY HOME, STOUTS EASTHAM NORTHERN HIGH AREA iYOU'RE IN BARGAIN country - FE 5-8183 BSBuB^SLESS ! O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? FE 5-1201 After 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 imtuiAit ruiitiiiun —SHSHS"- "IPS. GAYLORD! WE BUILD - TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE, 634-8204 ' Holly Branch_,_HeMVj'Jig HAPPY HOLIDAYS BY THE HEARTH ROSS IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY ........„.eBEU!'VSrcbh«.3R¥ $21,500 AVON | c#n | FE 4-0591 appointment * Nl IW IMIS, area ■jpip pmip mmmmm m ■ms v.n^'p^.SILtrP I Nicholie-Harger Co. I k..........................................- " 10 ANDERSONVILLE rd. I —**-^nE&'X I™> DI*I._Hw7,_-Mb , Lorj. ranch.r o^.Joy.ly^.L.j 7T ggsW VON , I AVON REALTY imVMmmm ^ START THE NEW YEAR OUT RIGHT ggj land Contract {m» roSS tS? m2&. K t r JACK s ArmNPmB** ® 332-0552 332-4810 TRADE YOUR PRESENT HOME mmemm mmm HALL pi MILLER lak6e7rd2245 SBffliWflE I gJSBSBia .NEARING completion "* just listed RSP* K*13* fi£g£g SNYDER, ' KINNEY c Building Col BENNETT “SFE 4-3531 o ^ ^ ROCHESTER^W. UNIVERSITY ' your, pocltlc.,,on,. I blooms nwT shoMnS .nd'Von’ bed'roomL ranch* ljR|ocK.ted In PHONE: 682-2211 I^V ‘ No. ,34. iR.IitcGrruder Ife^iSaWLfiriBS. WIFE will LOVE IT ”c< ™es BtfiBB ACRES M WANTED LARGE FAMILY 5-SS flRmS&Rj Partridge Jggr’S? JJgg No' 1325 “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" TED’S TRADING 674-2236 R-62 IT ISN'T A FANCY PLACE-F-29 $700 MOVES YOU IN SsM R-38 PEOPLE WHO SHOP AT McCULLOUGH R 61 GIFT OF THE MONTH McCULLOUGH Realty, Inc. 5460 Highland Road (M-59) 674-2236 Realtor RPI__________ WMMk? mieVtilflfSSsu'i ’KINNEY C •#. “Across From the Moll1 i5~ca~ffTcHBsri^rTFiw^, 563^8200 1968 TOUCH-A-MATIC Sold tor MiE balance enly *31.40 »AruaRkc— AAA-1 1968 USED SINGER wed memyeree. Dehzxe medH esme. StoRRi to Buy totor Funprtoe 444.95. Free tossont and pinking sneers with purchase. Call Midmisf Appliance, 9-9 dally. S343311 N.jeca mar taffeta, tUCtoV 431 Oakland Are.________FE 44547 ra xts. I COMFORT YOUR HOME n a. new. gee furnace, com-Illed, 4595 tvg. Safe- GET OUR I SOLID VINYL SIDING SHERRIFF GOSLIN 332-5231 CARPETS VtNYU, CERAMICS. TILES Advance Floor Decorators 474-0431 SMALL APPLIANCES Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr. Wist Open FridavSlI 9 p.m. GROW PLANTS flowers Indoors •let, $7.50. 573- CHALKBOARDS paints?**Michigan Flouroacent, 391 Orchard Lekif, Fa Mt63, For Daughter AT SCHOOL A SUBSCRIPTION To The PONTIAC PRESS Circulation Dept. Pontiac, Michigan 1947 CAMeRO SPORT coupe, reny (part aatopmant. v-g, power steer- ^ttewells.1 Intoe' towy 'flntohrpnTy MATTHEWS HARGREAVES CHOVROLIT 1965 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE V4 automatic. Console. $995 Call FE 8-9661 STAR AUTO [gifts fos dad AN IDEAL "CHRISTMASpil A NEW OR USED CARPRO FLANNERY FORD 1940 FORD, Vto AUTOMATIC ex- Here, Pay He Oakland, FB I. . ......... eeautWiconOmy? PRICES? Give them a Used Car from RUSS JOHNSON powir steering, DriKtt, wir tectory air conditioning, vinyl top Ivory finish. Onto *5 MATTHEWS HARGREAV CHEVROLET Is a mighty good gift tor Ititos. Came to end lay ana •way. The now McCulloch Power Mac 4. The world's lightest chain ONLY $169.95 USE IT EVERYWHERE WJNTBB AND SUMMER. KING BROS. M to 4344 1941 GREENBRIER BUS excellent rendition, 5495, Buy Hare-Pay Hare, Marvel Motors, 151 Oakland, FE 4- 1945 FORD, GALAXIE, 500, XL, convertible, blue finish, with white top. buckets. Console, lull power, automatic, whitewalls, save at 1995. AUTOBAHN MOTORS FE 84531 "HER OWN CAR" DAD, we hare a number of dependable used cars, specially priced. How about one for Mom so she won't have to be house-bound? Come an in and let's talk it over. We're in a holiday mood. HILLSIDE _ LINCOLN-MBRCURY ItW Oakland 133-7143 '"THE GREATEST GIFT GREATEST G It A BliLf I LITERATUR and Ave. FE 1 CALL CHICKEN DELIGHT I pUr COAT> full length, toll, (Wire. *450. 473-7471. _____ Fast reliEf"fo* tired she — 6 hearty meal at Bat l _4$4 W- Huron. . Ask 6bsut gift artifice tot Carpet ClMc 334-7340 SURPRISE MOM WltH: HER OWN "WHEELS" Sharp quality used care ... _ . RONEY'S AUTO •MNHMi PE 4-4909 SCHOOLING MACHINES. Itrga CURT'S APPLIANCE 4414 wnilanw Like Rd. 474-not “fHE PERFECT GIFT" HER OWN CAR .. . LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track PI 3-7154 1268 TOUCH-A-MATIC New tewing machines, does fancy stitching, makes buttonholes, etc. Sold tor 1114.50, balance only 011.40 , or pay 11,10 par weak. Call day or nlenf, 330-2544, Imperial. [HOLIDAY FOODS ^'■SVri^Rc ten i Sesbebew GIFTS DIAMOND RING — Appraised tor 01,000. will awl for $400 or best offer. Call 634*140. (•hie WIG LUGGAGE end alt; wrapping with all wig gift certificates, 100 per cent human hair, Rene's Wig Boutique, 474- AiVi Utk WHAT SHE really wants ____________ if VLB HER PET POODlE* by Mr. 'a High eppl- UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER toll Dixie Mwy. PE 4-0905 Dally 11-0 _____________Sal, n-4 KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - 050 PULL GUARANTEE Kirby Servlet & Supply Co. my dixie hwv. 474.2234 m GIFTS FOB ALL AKC RBOISTtRED 410 ea„ unreglstarc bel, 4-3, or ettor 4. I ANdMADrj UfdUI0AL GIFTS FOR ffMciil p»o-pit — antlauM, email appllencat. China, sterling, furs, lewelry, objects d'ert. The Exchange House. •tore, Clarkston AN IDEAL "CHRISTMAS GIFT" A NEW OR USED CAR FROM — FLANNERY FORD On Dlxle-Watortord_____413-0900 II Nova 2door,.4 cyl. greclan radio, heater, only 41995 MATTHEWS HARGREAVES CHEVROLET 431 Oakland Av. FE 4-4547 GIFTS FOR THE PERFECT GIFT FOR HIM Select e car from— KESSLER'S DODGE Oxford_______________OA 1-1400 CLOSING OUT WILLIAM'S TOOLS. Open end wrench tele, box end metric wrench sets, 25-50 per cent off. Ferry Service Inc. 4129 Highland Rd.__________ GIFTS FOR CHILD AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD CB RADIO, aerial. Fluffy whit POLO BIKES A* low as 51.15 per weak. Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., Weet MINI-BIKES SSSMfc ~autor •mj#’ Ml* CHRISTMAS PUPS, 43. BIKE SALE ur l«ro# Mlectlon from 1 to 10 n» BNws savlngt, alto larga I many typaajnd tlzai. ALU ID CYCLB toS.ib!3 illlDS AND OBABlLS Pet Shoe, 55 MINI-BIKES Variety to chooee tram. B'S RETAIL 3151 Lapelr Rd. SNOW WHITE FLUFFY kittens, free, kind pnpe. Will dellvm. Colleen Flannery Fllmore, 1151 Parke Rd., Romeo, 7M-1744. GIFTS FOR A FR1ENDI "TH,?«moiFT'' CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. PE 49591 1 CHRISTMAS TREES -DECORATIONS CHRISTMAS TREEI, AMERICAN Leglwt, Chief Pontiac Poet 377, 53 If jeu cut It, |5 If we cut it. 3P1- -----CUT y6ur Own ten--------- Pina Spruce Plr 4«,00« Cultured Trew to CheoM ..............Pram Wagons tor C Aden Tnomton, ^'Cernmmre'feed GIFTS FOB THE FAMILY Oktfland rent. Wonderful met gifts. Olio tech. Also eld Shetland Otellton. ' Bn drive, 0250. 39I-2J00. 1949 fevINfUbJ ' DAWOON'O 0ALE0 iWIHGlR It and hunll fviNRUDk oAOwmOBUTF 039-2170 odkNARDO TO HITCH io IN YOUR HOME, FE 44)439. WHAT COULD BE BETTER then to put your temlly Into 4 nev homo tor Chrlstmre. We at Avon •re the "Opeclelleti," at helping vo find an weal heme for the wholi met. bath gbit la ailing, y< AVON REALTY 0L 1-0222 ftiik "ilttVR euApifi, 'Atit r*fi' 417 44i|,l,ld and ,how ausllfy, 1968 VW FASTBACK Zenith blue with radio • whitewall tires. Very tow mllee. $2175 1966 VW Square Back $1595 1968 VW FASTBACK Jet Meek outside with 1 leatherette Interior. Radio actual miles. "*^2195 BILL G0LLINGS ACROSS FROM BIRZ AIRPORT AIRCDALE PUPI AKC. 10 woeks 144, ISO. 330-3341. COUNTRYSIDE LIVING SKIING, FAMILY? SEE our com-Mate lira of ski equipment end Ikl Ski Heue, 4110 W. Start Christmas with the beautiful "Sound of Music." Buy your temlly • Lowrey Organ tor ell to enjoy. Priced from S59S up. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1710 S. TELEGRAPH FE 4-0344 PONTIAC Open Evenings till 9 p.m. Sal., 5:30 p.m. Sun, l-S p.m. puppies, Ak£ lu°l otU!oy.'°MA AKC MINIATURE reasonable, FE 5-4752 Porpoise Sell Boats. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS MAY YOUR DAYS BE MERRY AND BRIGHT... In a dream home at your vary awn. Lit.the staff at Ray Real Ettoto help your temfty'a dreams CALL*RAY'TODAY ~ 474-4101 During tha Busy Christmas Rush EAT AT THE “BIG BOY" Telegraph t Huron Dixie Hwv. iToHuair Tike Ed. GE STEREO 02.35 PER WEEK Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr„ west WILKINS BAR AND RESTAURANT tanner eul tor the whole family. ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY 4)05 Orchard Lake Ave. AKC BEAGLE PUPR *73-0304 FOR YOU AND Y0URSI Acreage Homesites Clarkston Rtal Estate SIBERIAN - Hug a Huskio this Christmas. Big TraU Kennels. 887-5117. ft ■ X U T I P U L AKC TOY end mln -tov while poodle puppies. ? weskt. alto flny white toy etud service. Reasonable. 515-4453. GIFT OP Iiy -• years to on beeutllul rnuslcl STORY AND CLAIM argent stl treasured generations to coma, saa also our tine selection of used pianos and MORRIS MUSIC 54 5. Telegraph Pontiac "Across from Tsl-Huren" RUSS JOHNSON OnMMmSar^YBim I UNBEATABLE WITH AN UNBiATAiLB DEAL PROM THE UNSEATABLES Oakland Chrysltr-Plymouth Christmas tsss TRIUMPH — FIAT — SUMBEAM MO - AUSTIN HEALEY Complete Parts 4 Urvlcis GRIMALDPCAR CO. 90S osklsnt Malm It a Family Gift I Contact us tor your now hams at home eRe. LOVELAND Leona Loveland, Realtor I1SS Case Lake Ed. 443-1351 Sparta Display Department FREE-BEAUTIFUL Scotch Pine Christmas Tree With purchase of Ml or mere SNOWMOBILES SKI-DOO, SNO JET Starcraft Camp Trailers and Travel Trailers SOSILI DS-SLE DI-TOBOGGANS <44 iketes, HMkey Stfekt Skit, sunt, Archury, fishing MARINl^ND^pS^m GOODS Pontiac's Only mircury-mercruTser dealer CRUISE OUT INC. "KTy USED CAR PR< FLANNERY FORD On PIxta-WtTfpfd i THE NEW YEAR WILL START BUT WILL YOUR CAR? I net, then It's time for you to rode. Stop In end tee our tine •lection of new end used cert. 1966 CADILLAC deer hardtop. Extra clean. $2595 1966 BUICK ELECTRA 225 deer hardtop. Factory air. $2195 d Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Soles ANTIQUlS-IMPORTS Orchard Lake to world tor you. Rd, THe tREASURC I 3-0242. Open dally. 11 to rlqtrt on Com-to 3221 Union Lake SURE CHEST. EM HOWARD T, KEATING V. 15 1 . --- Birmingham 444-1234 5*47959 “A Year Around Gift" of Happiness for the Whole Family Beautiful homeslte lor Mother Good fishing tor Dadi Summer end Winter recreation for the Children. Meet the homeslte at your Choice on beautiful Lake Breemer. We will supply the builder. On Devleburg Rd. and WMt ujt ^ Devlsburg. Near 1-71 C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT 313-425-2295 . OR 4344411 AKC BASSET PUPPlti, I week*, •holt end wormed. Wlil hold ter Christmas. Highland IS7-5t0B. Standard's Finance Plan BUY HERE-PAY HERE ' BANKRUPT? NEED A FRESH START? TIRED OF WALKING? WE CAN SELL ANYBODY A, CAR ALL MAKES AND MODELS QUALITY B USED CARS CALL AND ASK FOR MR. WYATT 681-0004 fcddiitiRib. MiMIATUftl silver cwdit puppies, male end female. CHRISTMAS GIFTS Mercury*f Ishfng'mtopri Mercury inp^enfeiet .. Snowmobile suite Yet, It's 4 feet you can save S at BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER IMS S. Woodward at Ademe Rd. Pick up your free calender POR BOYS AND OIRLS end grown-ure ^lre^Toy*. oamee,. new fwrnj. * HALL'S AUCTION SALES CM CHRim PLAY SANTA to Your Family with a “lasting" gift S offices to serve youi Royer Realty GOODRICH 636-2211 HOLLY 634-8204 OXFORD 628-2548 61VI TMI '69 Brand New American Rambler 2 deer. 1M h.p. 4 cylinder engine. Up to IS mllat per gallon. Pull safety equipment, deluxe radio. AN taxes, teles end excise, factory rustproof delivered. (Autometlce ellghtly higher.) $1999.90 Village Rambler 666 South Woodward , BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 MARINE GlftS AT PINTER'S AhUmfi Thompson, ^^TaTc r a fVI 5TON WHALER, M P G .. 0RT-YAK), Johnson Meiar, all LAYAWAY — AMPLE PARKING 370 Opdyke 9-4 <*€*** (1-75 el Oakland University Exit) SNOW, INOWMOf ILIS tttt NSW INf WH.P. snow aLOwiai. m CHAIN ftAWS |7| MACO DISTRIBUTOIII _ D—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER119, 1968 Mg HowhoM Goods 65 ftwiry of usro wm JtMlMi refrtoeratori, and tr» 'furniture bargains. Little , Hradt-ln store, Baldwin at Wi Bind. FE 24842. > MBISC E L LANIOUI "furniture. FE MWS.________________ • A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN I pc. living rm. group (iota chair, iaaotnid tables, 2- lamps) I p todro far taouDie aresser, cnesr, - Item Sold Separately Attention Housewives , it Wyman*» Furniture Fg 5-1501 UuNKBEDS, ABOUT V» price. Little1 Joe's, 1461 Baldwin. FE 2-6842. BUNK BEDS ’Choice of 11 stylos, trundle beds triple trundle beds end bunk bedi complete, 549.50 and up. Pearsor.'i Furniture, 040 Auburn, FE 4-7551 IelT D HOWELL I mm movie prelector and screen, *75 Solovox (like organ) 070, French bedroom suite, antique. White male poodle, 000. Old clocks, Williams L ....... Airport Rd Lake Rd., tvs i Bronze or chrome dinette sale, BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round, drou-Mat, rec-tangular) tabled In V> >6nd 7-pc setae $24.95 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 64Q Auburn FE 4-7861 Beautiful 4-piece dining room set. Buffet and hutch with glass front. Drop leaf table, seats 2 to 8. ‘4 chairs. Light oak finish# excellent electric dryer, 4 years of excellent condition, $50. $38-3606. ' CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE Furniture, Stereos, Color T.V.'i Sob Household Goods 65 'SON'S F rWn. FLASTIC WALL TILE BAG Outlet 1075 W. Huron REFRIGERATORS. DISHWASHERS. T*rmCURT'S APPLIANCE 4*4 WILLIAMS LAKE RO. 474-1101 ForSolo MbcoBaaooas W ANTIQUES GALORE, GIRL'S cMti-' Inj.jStte m, NCR Cash Register. ANTTgOB CORNER CABlNBftFtli ANCHOR FENCES \ NO MONEY DOWN_______FE 5-7471 Christmas Trots CHRISTMAS TREES spruce, cut your owi Hospital Rd. 662-4969. Christmas trees, u comar of Motorway and LeyEstate. CHRISTMAS TREES . shaped trees, $2.95 Free boughs with purchase. H Quality apples. 61ft boxed ae packs. Oakland i Commerce Rd. B Duck UtaTRtf. Milford. 8-6 dally. IA MYERS UNIT RED DAVENPORT AND matching chair $40. Green swivel chair 1 kitchen set $40. Coca Cola 1 kitchen set * jfl chest $2. All N. E<~ ‘ ■ 4757. Cell 757-0944, eves. 47* CARNIVAL ITS North By Dick Tamer ataflea «13SSBE» Cell 425-4044, after 4 P.m. .. BRACE YOURSELF FOR SINGER * ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine. Cabinet model, automatic "Dial Model" makes blind hems, designs, buttonholes, etc. Repossessed, payoff. $53 CASH OR PAYMENTS OF $5 PER M0. GUARANTEED UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2415 Dixie Hwy._____FE 4-0905 SINGER SEW AND TOUCH TREE | FE 5- the first time'’you use~Blue" Lustre EfiSa ruiturtui SJiorhnM. c™ lean rugs. Rent alactrlc sham- 40/000 Cuitured^Traasto Choosa From r Si. Hudson's Hardware, 411 mJMBB BRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING ts at discount from, Dixie. Drayton, OR |> BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSTRE SHAMFOOERS SI A DAY 952 Joslyn__________ FE 4 41 CHIPPED BATHTUBS, $20 Furnace. Taylor's, 402 University _Dr._________ CHAIRS - UPHOLSTERED, save ■ “ W5-1700. close-out fabrics. Cell ! ______ Commercial Upholstery._________ _____ Automatic bobbin CHILD'S METAL RIDING horse, winds direct from needle. Slant I end a baby buggy. FE 4-4424. driven needle, gear driven, heavy rrti Koo duty model, zig zagger for designs lULUrr hems, etc., 1st $70 cash or $10, monthly claims. Household Ap- 42 lb. portable ready haater structlon, sold for $249, batanca due $180 cash or $10 monthly. Color combination entertainment - center, 22" picture, AM-FM stereo, .radio, auto, record changer, diamond needle, told for 8749, balance due $590 cash or $24 month- Maple bunk bed set, complete i 'mattresses, rails and ladder, : for $126, balance due $85 cast 110 monthly. Walnut consol# stereo, AM-FM radio, 4 speakers!,^>lays • M_ size j or ^ records. Sold for Sitt, i 8148 cash or 810 monthl Modern sofa and matching cheli zippered reversible cushions, sol .for 8189, balance due 8125 cash or 110 monthly. *23" Colonial Color T.V., nel, 2 yr. guarantee < ibe, told for 8559, I 9462^ r0cker and chairs. 334- j SOFAS — UPHOLSTERED the price . I ;l Com'l Upholstery. SAVE PLENTY TODAY On ell 1941 floor samples of j ranges, refrigerators, washers and TVs. Little Joe's Bargain House Baldwin at Walton Bjyd.__ FE 2-4841 TOM'SAWYER TRUNDLES with 2 mattresses, dresser, mirror, chest Ranch Oak. 425-3243.___________| P~lUNCLAIMED LAYAWAY Ntw 1968 Zlg Zag Sawing Machine, mult be sold, built-in controle, makei button holee, overcasts, blind hem ititchet. sews with one or two needles. Total belence 839.00 portable ------- of in* cottage. Come I 651-7010 new. Cell 33S-1700. m Downtown Rochester CHRISTMAS RUMMAGE Set •*: Thursday-Seturday, 9-8 p.m., new and used Items, handmade articles. Judah Lake Sub, 301-3064._________ DOUBLE-L PARACHUTE with reserve. 685-1305. DYNAVOICE portable electric piano player, plate over keyboard and plug In. Makes any piano an alactrlc player, cost over 0300, never used still In Mrton, 895. 651-0310. _ DOG HOUSES. ALL alzai. Insulated. 8623 < • 818 monthly. Mediterranean stereo console, AM-FM Warao, radio, 6 speakers, eolld etett, diamond neaole plays all alia records, sold for 8278, balance due 1206 cash or 810 monthly. Californio modern sofa and (notching choir, zippered reversible cuthlone, sold for 1119, belence due 8185 coth or 110 monthly. Charcoal bedroom suite, double dresser, mirror 4 drawer chest, mattress end box r 8788, balance Sue 1 BIS momhly. Colonial eofa and matching chair, par month. Call Capitol Credit of Milford, Mich. led. ___________1 LARGE CHRISTMAS TREES. 10-30' Churches, schools, business, cut cut. Saturday pine l N. of Intersection. Coder Lane Christ mat Trw Form. 1870 Dixie Hwy. 625-1822.___________' Pierre's Orchard Largt selection already c u Good variety of apples end fruits, we make fresh fruit holiday gift baskets $4.95 end up. or. of Clarkston and Sashabaw Rds. Vt Mile N. of Sashabaw 1-75 Exit ROBLES CHRISTMAS TREES pruned and sprayed, 5 to 4 ft. 83.00! your choice. 3135 Lapeer Rd. by: , 1-75 overpass. __ SCOTCH PINE, SI to 83.50. 39151 Auburn, Auburn Hts. SCOTCH PINE, RETAIL and wholesale, M & B Topsoil and j Supply Co., 7421 E. 14 Mila Rd., at, AMPLIFIER “Mind if I use the car myself tonight? I’m taking your mother out and I want to impress her!” Spwtlig 6—4r TRACK SIZI Horse po Prices t c«stories. PION clothing trailers BEACH, FILL SAND, fop i _your drivowiv nr mod. 6! • A- W. TRUCKING WmUMMMw* T1 i ACRES OF OAK TREE Topi. 851- PUGS AKC BLACK Mask Formed Puppies. Wormed, Shot, 875.00 end up. Older fomolo 858.36. 651-8884. SABLE GERMAN Shepherd, 4 weeks, AKC. Mack shepherd, 13 mot., AKC. Ml-77« Ofl. J p.m._ REGISTERED ENGLISH* setters and poodles, >10. 474-1306._______ REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA and white toy poodles, stud service for both. FE fCmS A-l OAK WOOD. 891-2708. ________; A-l OAK AND HICKORY Seasoned, ‘SASOi! HARDWOOD, will de 881-1704 3085 So. Lopeor 1 AKC POODLE, SILVER, molo. Trained, oil shots. 33S-4S71, ADORABLE POODLES AKC DARK Apricot puppies, : silver malt, all color service. 3354)20.____ tremelo, exc. condition. 67-B BROWN BEAR RUG, head mount! 1 Elk Antler, mount, 10 point; 1. Elk Shoulder mount, 12 point; 1 -J4}. Qrwlfl-L>1, ^------------n- I complete, excellent condition,' *wv. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER ov#r fhel UL 2-5544. o^ta.t.'r"^.u*mSSS‘HtUr,.^?.,,ith!J poodloe. While. •end blasted Swan design, $28*95. — — ---------- G. A. Thompson, 7009 M-59 W. Manager til 9 p.r 563-8200 col-FURNACES . Fast Installation 338-4964. Kindness Instant hair setter, brand new, 815. 412-4924. USED COLOR. I RADIO AN 422 W. Huron SWEET'S RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. ..... 334-5477 FOR YOUR ^^OPPIHO1,5^l»^M#0CO2O^cJrVd SS i I wo hove #o big* assortment of toy. « »• 'r*S faucets, mode 128.85 tnd up. Michigan Fluore cent, 383 Orchard Lk. FE 4-S442 - WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC dryer, like new, 8130. 338-8401. _ WAIhIr PARTS 3213 Dixie Hwy spring, sold 11“ color portable with stand, walnut groined cabinet, sold tor 3378, belence duo S287 cash or 119 monthly, SVi' stereo console, AM-FM, radio, 4 speakers, pltyt oil size records remote speaker provlalons, walnut cabinet, wld tor 8379, balanca dua 8226 cash or 818 monthly. I E 8 T I N O HO U S E WASH I machine, auto., deluxe ftatu 830. 426-1241. _ WHITE AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG Alto a large selection of new end used furniture. TYLER'S AUCTION 4959 Highland Rd. (M-99) 473-9534 ______Open dally end Sun. 9-9_____ FIREPLACE B N 6 EM.BCMBl Tractor, 4111. attached, 617i. 651- , converts tl v system to AC tor tra track Call 425-4044, attar 4 p.m._____ BEAUTIFUL RED VELVET antique chair, reflnlahed, 5125. FB 5-3906 SOLOVOX GOOD condlt|yn, 830. UL 2-38I_____ BALDWIN SPINET Organ, walnut, built-in Thaatra-Tramolo, almost Sporting Goods I CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE SPECIAL Doc. 20, 21 tnd 22 Frl. & Sat. 8 to i Sunday 11 to I Bolens Deblo Rouge Snowmobiles, -A GROOMING, and compr ‘ PROFESSIONAL mm, Rees. registered. IS. 33^0120. 1-AAA DACHSHUND pups AKC FE CLOSEOUT Gigantic close-out of discontinued, model guitars — amazingly low prices. Ley-eway now for1 Christmas. ■ Morris Music FE 2-0547 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwy. Clarktton 025-1711 - ___ 625-2516 COLT .357 TROOPER, 5100, ' S-V guns, 720 W. Huron. I-A AMERICAN ESKIMOS, I B | ose, Poodtot, English I Now only_848S| Woolle Monkey (very tamo). Mon-Blrds. Canaries, TropL GROOMING ck:r*Fi 8515. CONN TRUMPET, EXCELLENT FRIGIOAIRE ELECTRIC ttova, good cOndltlom Kan more washerj and labial! coffee tablet! mage! baby'i olothaai boy glrla clofhet sizes 2 and 31 and man'a clothes. 118 Stout St. ottj GARBAGE DISPOSAL. Very reat. 802-0314. flood cond., cheap. FE 6-4740. Sewing machine, deluxe features, gtainiass SfeeT*Slnks, 32x21, 829 50. PROFESSIONAL PORTRAIT pain-"Early American", pp sabl “ " Taka over payments of: $5 PER MONTH OR $49 CASH BALANCE 5 year guarantee power, $2758. | Hess Sfoot SI Sable Leune Plywood. 4x8xtt, of the late John F. Kennedy i 24x24 canvass with blond frame. Any rees. offer considered. ANTIQUE ORGAN, FE 4-0905 ____65-A STOREY and S place sectional, z I p p a r a < reversible cushions, told tor 8328 balanca dua 6188 cash or 813 Ml 7-3485. 0IAUTIFUL ROSEWOOD Molodloni china cupboard. Y-Knot Antiques, Davlsburg, 414-1881. "Charge- A-Matlc." Collector waHts old music box or cylinder type phonogi 330-3136, ________ USTOM ANTIQUE RlKlNliHINS. Specializing In lurnltura retlnlshlng .. t|) |ypM 3^3-9)81, Walnut bedroom suite, mattress, box tprlng, double drooler, mirror, 4 drawer cheat and boohease bad. (old tor 5218, bounce duo 5145 coth or 510 monthly. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 333-8211 Inch marble clock 575, oik Westminister chime clocka, 841 nd 45. After 6, 792-1180.______ OLD HANGING LAMP, vary goo< condition, 890. 682-7587. _ ___ PUMP ORGAN! ROLL-TOP datk, i register; meet block; othei •. Muit sell. FE>1149.____________ Hi-Fi, TV A Radios 66 CLEARANCE i c t r I c range, 814.89! her 628.991 altcfrh CRUMP ELECTRIC 8449 Auburn Rd._______PR 4-2971 CHiOMB DINETTES, low ts 814. Llttla Joe's, 1461 Baldwin, FE 2- aofas, 20 to SO par cant off on aolKttd group of fabrics. 223-1700. /Com'l. Upholstery. _______________ DIMING TABLE. 4 CHAIRS, tolld walnut lags and chairs with matching wood grain Formica lop. Extension leaf, black vinyl seats. COM value at 185. Phone 473-7771. DESK, 8 DRAWERS chest. , . headboards with frames, white, or wlll sell separately, 6517)676_ Dinette table, t chairs, t leaf, tike new. Ft S-S227.__ BTnEYtB Table; 5 chairs, bunk Bads, desk and chair, toldlno bad coftoe table. OR 54057. COLOR CHANOINO OVER ilECTRIC STOVE, t»i GAS stove, 335j Refrigerator with too freezer, 548! Wringer woslwr. 540. G. Her-rls, FE S-1764- ___ PhlOIDAIRtf DELUXE eutometlc wether and deluxe get dryer, 5121 tor both, good condition. 473-6304. F6K~5ALf 2-PIECE sectional sots •nd tablet, chalrti dinette sal, with 8 chairs and other Items. Raal bargain, 847-7788. _ o6od REFRIOERATOR ctil _______OR 3-S790.. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL 020 A MONTH BUYS ) ROOMS OF PURNITURE - Consists of: 1- ploco living room outfit with living room tulto, 2 stop tables, t cocktail table, 2 table lamps (U 9W rug Included: 2- placp bedroom tulto with dt dresser, chest, full-size bod Innortprlng mottrosa and matching box spring and I vanlN Tamps. l-placa dinette sat with 4 chroma Chairs and table. All tor 1288. Your credit la good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON___________FE HSOI KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - 150 PULL GUARANTEE Kirby S«rvic«*5upply Co. >817 PIXIE HWY_______ 874-1234 LaROB ELECTRIC Wasfinohout* doublt oven, 030. Call 338-184. Linoleum rugs, micST-«HfL Ufl up. Paaraon'a furniture, Hi ¥. Pika 01., FR 4-700). FEt MOVING DOUBLE DOOR fan striped oat. upright ■ppvra? r NOW F(5R SALE ■ Name brand dishwashers fro Warehouse forcloture. Hotpolnt, Gl klfchan-ald, Whirlpool, PMIco. of Prom 110, 02 down 52 per week. ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 40f» Van Dyke 1 blk. S. of 12 Mil S54 East 10 Mila Tmoo, Til 04.9S par ahaat on o 24x24 canvass with TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland___________RUFF CONTI MENTAL a ieef re mini- “ WATER BASES O A R D| bike.J_lke new- $170,551 -3750.______ REVEL ROAD RACE SET NSULATED DOG house, $15, fires size 0.55-14, 4-ply I** after 9:30 p.m. 363-3755. 5 year guarantee i hot water baseboardi UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER] W005l,E S40 1 ___________OR 4-08W________ KITTENS, reedy-' IN FORD TRACTOR, alee 40 oarlao John Ootn, plow, .puRtKAb spring tooth, all 2 point bitch, NA ---J’nafc weights, lights. Sd Whiz__________I Farm and Industrial tractors. Loaders, baenhoot crawlers. Also tome good used tractors and PoniFacTarm l> Industrial Tractor 925 woodward 3244M41, 334-1442 SNOWBLOWER FOR Moisey Ferguson tractor, like now, 51 OOy SIMPLICITY 7 I Travel Trailers ir AKC, AKC Chrlwmee. 551-751$.______________ SCHNAUZER MINIATURE pups, AKC ^registered, sfud service available. 332-1590. ST. BERNARD, TOY COLLIE, • MONTH c end while, housebroken, S35. 334-5555. 1969 STARCRAFT •* TRAVEL TRAILERS CAMPERS INSIDE DISPLAY " CRUISE-OUT, INC. . " 62 E. Walton Dally 84 . PE 84402 ______CLOSED SUNDAYS APACHE CAMP TRAILERS See the now 1869 Apache Camp trailers and Travel Trailers. A large selection of Pickup truck covert and campers. Bill Collar, Vt AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT gat a demonstration at Warner Traitor Sales, IMS W. Huron (plon to loin one of Welly Byam't exciting caravans). tropical fish-and isuppiias7~625-' Atb you going to Florida? All 1968 Corsairs and toy fox terrier hold tor Christmas. 625-1 9ES UNREGISTERED TOY poodles. 530 aaeh. Call between 1-2 or attar 6. Ptf $qppBa»Sanika 79-A CHRISTMAS SPECIAL .Reduced rates Dec. 13-Dec. 21. imlng by pro-appointment call Gem Travel Trailers in stock must be sold in Dec. Sale starts Dec. 2. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixit Hwy. 6254400 LARGE AUCTION, Saturday I p.m.^ Auction land 1200 Crescent Tauction^ Sat., Dec. 21, 8 p.m. (COME (EE SANTA) Salon. nefurel raienfs eoound for fhe bes In Poodle Grooming. Mon., Tues. Wed. from 5:30 p.m.-10 p.m Thurs. through Sun. 9 a.m.-lO p.m. ough Sun. 9 a. 335-5259 ! OR fW 1-A POODLE GROOMS, 2 MALE DALMATION Year-end reduci 519.95 1,000. S-V GUNS GIBSON AMPLIFIER REVERB all with alactrlc flutter, axe. i dltlon. 473-0557._ ELECTRIC GUITAR AND CASE. _eellent eondltlon,_S8S. 602-1959. LOWREY ORGAN, built-in L9 LOWREY SPINET organ, t condition, (900. 6(2-(S76. _ PORTABLE ELECTRONIC 8 GUNS ------- clearance All guns reduced. Buy now end save. Shot ■fHr per 100. wads 57.95 . per Primers S10.9S per 1,000. MiWWrzi 720 W. Huron GUNS-GUNS-6UNS One of the largest selections In Deklend County, Weetherby, mm Coil end scopes, sights, we do our < "SKI-DOO'S FROM $695 12 to 49 H.P. 15", ir', and 20" tracks (Top out this wEekendi Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-6771 Open Dally and Sundays MASSEY FERGUSON SlO Whiz ' PORTASHOP, Complete, with 23 horse machines, Pontiac Farm and Industrial, 125 Woodward. 234. 0481 or 86-I4«., 3 AKC SILVER Poodtot, 1 malts, 1 tomato. Ran. 2184 Auburn Rd.__ 4'xr SLATE POOL TABLE ,____ ______OR3-SJ90___________ 4 MINIATURE SCHNAUZER puppies, • weeks old, lhots. International Champion Nock. 682-3735. AKC BLACK POODLES tSO each, between H or after 6, 825-4639 AKC PAPER WHITE Poodle puif-ples, 6 weeks old._394-03J6^ AKC REGISTERED whlto tomato miniature Poodle, 7 wks., 5(5. 48> AKC SAMOYED PuPPfiST-itoo brown Shellies 135 and up. 3944)275. AK(b TOY PdoDL* PUPPIES, alio Variety of "goodli tor toys,. Surprises galore. Sorry, no rutted, burned, btqt frozen groceries. DOORS OPEN 7:30 P.M. AUCTI0NL&ND _____1300 Crescent Lk. Rd.__ BLUEBIRD AUCTION Because of bn unexpected emergency I irge estate must be sold n night Doc. 21 at 7 i* ! fci ... „ i. sharp. Includes: y antique Victorian Check our deal on SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13-to » ft. on display at - Jacobson T railer Sales 5490 Williams Labs Rd. OR-2-S8S1 CENTURY YELLOWSTONE I _ TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUOGET , LIFETIME I MOTOR HOMES i STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 13771 Highland (M-59) 602-9440 I FREE-FREE COLOR TV WITH FIRST 12 ORDERS . Cherry rocker. Maple vanity and btnch, Maple 1* size bad, couch end chair, motel filing cabinet, GE freezer. Iron mantle clock, wall lap desk, ask lamp, antique Walnut cane bottom choirs, cut gloss, antique iron fireside bench, bedroom eulto, antique gold railroad watch, spool typo to size bad, lata modal refrigerator, 2 door metal wardrobe, quantity of lined drapes. Hoover vacuum, console labia, 2 Peruvian blast heads, quantify of bad linens, hand palmed 3 section electric fan, a ladder, -alactrlc iUr"X New SPORT TRAILER DELUXE HARDTOP CAMPER Stoapa I. 8149S . c P| Ellsworth Trailer Sales SEE rliT,!’ *377 Dixie Hwy. 6254400 LLOYD BRIDGES ^ TRAVELAND 3 full Unas of pickup campers deluding OEL-REY, The Aristocrat DODGE — Champion Explorer MOTOR HOMES 6 used campers electric r, .er j | Qu lawn PRICED TO SELLI Everything estate. Bluebird Hwy., Ho f. Dec. 21, 7 p.m. Auction. 16853 Dixie r. Phone 334-0742. B & B AUCTION ~FVmaie,'~grey'aabiar'nZlBVERY FRIDAY ......7:00 P.M. v —— Ivery SATURDAY .......7:00 P.M. INiATURB peodtei, » «vg»* MWa- • •• -**.!■*■ black mala, 080. 383-4078. AKC PEKINGESE PUPPIES _______ 842-1563 AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD .7:00 P.l _______ 2:00 P. ; BUY - SELL - TRADE Rafail 7 Days Waakly CONSIGNMENTS WtLCQML CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 i. Service, Auctioneers _____________________PH., Swartz Creak____________635-9400 AKC BLyK^PljMALE Labrador, 3] PERKINS SALE-SERVICE. AUC-435-9400 AND D TO I W. Maple, Walled Lk. 628-1572 OAKLAND CAMPER Midwest covert and sleepers. AS ....* Tour-a-home campers. Parti Lynx covers itorl Colgalt 225-0824 OPEN HOUSE . Dae. to, 21, 22 FRI. S SAT. 9 TO 0 SUNDAY If TO I TURKEY DRAWINGS EVERY 1 HRS. ALL 3 DAYS cabin#!, Ml » hU- Ski Early 8S2-7IS4. BRAND NEW 19" WESTINGHOUSE COLOR TVs TABLE MODEL WITH ANTENNA AND ROTOR $44935 Friday 'til 9 p.m. 'TV f6R CIpiTMMHl five that art^xjlclrr goqd 800 to (275. Ft 85489. _ S$4^"*™" ■’7’'"JJB"^^WIdi-Tr'.ek-2rh5'.’*kl D«ldl.r""| J*™*. T mala, 4 w^. aid,' 49* ..u- ICtRieras—Sereki . °«^rf^S’w,d* Tr,c,< « hB- lM ^*^P3P”SBE>Be!» alnf, axcallanf condition,!-------—-----------I 4330. .____ liyviho sn n.nm.r "Si ' T,rl<^Lcotor*- WRmiimmm saverai __SOUND jnovla SUPRO AMP, 2-19" tpaal cat with a 19 h.p. or 23 h.p. engine. Take a demonstration run on tho now ftnowflakt mini snowmobile. It's smell enough to fit In a station wagon, yet large enough fir two people end up to 40 Tails *M*5? to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridgo II loft end follow SALES TIR8ICO SKTAR LENS, No. los i............m Reward. Cell 363^723. MOVIE OUTFIT, camera, Zoom L< Pistol grip, proh Kroon, $75. 623-01 $7.________ Musical Goads'______ _____71 to SIZE KAY CELLO, LIKE new, 889. 6213199. ___________ 4 PIECE SLINOERLANO While poor I drum let, top hat, 2 Zlldfean 1656. SILVERTONE TWIN " | excellent cog SPINET PIANO, $300. : Y ST ONE Electric tVSjl__________363-6404 SOLID BODY p.JktDjjg^ Standol Echo, $65,120 h.p. Demo Ski 6addlor, ______1 USED SAVE $$$ h-P- Skl Doo. $395!A 682-8047. ^ h.p. Diablo ROUOO, ^ 8495 CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 ■. Walton PB 8-4402 Daily 9-6, Cloied guitar 2 pick condition, 646-4937. lake' to Dawson'*1___Cl PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 640 AUBURN, PONTIAC, PE 4-7801. COLOR TV tOViTR Johnson's TV, FI 0-4869 45 E. Waiton neer BekNvin Color tv >a*6aIn|, LiTYl* Joe s Bargain House. FE 1J84J. MANUPACtbRiR* CLCII-bOT-STEREO WALNUT CONSOLE 4-5eeakeri Diamond needles a BSR 4 speed chenger $89 OR 59 PER MONTH UNIVERSAL 2415 DIXIE HWY FI 4-0805 Dally 11 1 ____________let. 114 FAllTiffREO 3 way hTfrapeeker'i. 22x14x34 paean finish ceblnels, 5110. 548-7338. OBERTS 4 track laps recorder, OE portable stsreo record player, Ml changer, pair speakers. 683-ill STEREO CdMPONENT PARJJ, Fisher 800 lunar, 2 Soztc set Plumbing standlnfl I bargains, nm iftir 822:95: ~ 30-gallon 99, 3-place bain sals. 050.95! laundry trey, trim, SI9.99, shower stalls with trim. 538.891 I-bowl link, 82.951 levs.. 83 95! tuba, 110 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE FLU MB I NO CO. S4| Baldwin. FB 4-1916.________ KayUPFIAN6 00 k|yS, painted torty and Clark pump ixcalranl condllon 0195. odd chairs excellent condition 05 each, ' la, ex-5175, roll! to Ieatl organ, exceln chairs excelk Mink Jacket________ cellent condition, nteble. cell a /?* r 6, OR3-3U1. _ SCOTCH RF CORDINO TAPE at Kilty discount price. Pontiac c and Seund. 2101 W. Huron. 6^3-3350. ■ _ TV, VERY GOOD CoNt>, Ntw tubas, Ival aland, 825^3356703. _ fv.'8 pDr SALt, r a aeon a b I • Sagamore Metal, 718 8 Woodward. Warehouse sale open * to pubic, tnllra Inventory of new Zenith, RCA, Motorola, TVs. color mat be told, Ivory many below coal, tor refused, bank farms. Sato today and tomorrow 10-9. Hllf Appliance 2418 14 Mile, between Creeks. Islmas Wreaths, _ ta. Is wait Hur_____ pinball machTnr p¥rfrct working condition,JMLJ35-M2S. RUMMAGE SALE: tome antique beauty shop equipment, 9 to 5, Friday end Set. 6050 Shepple Rd. machine, old trunk, dishes end extras. 122 c Court, Pontiac. F E 4-6594. SLATE POOL TABLI SQUARE TUB wringer washer, mfchinlcatly perfect, 130. 674-4375 SUMP PUMPS SOLD, rented end repaired, Cone's, FB 1-6642. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Jtojjply. 2871 Orchard Lake. 682- khNTA CLAUS MiCHANICAL 4' Mb free standing, rad velvet suit, I 1 season, 2304322. TYPEWRITERS (19, adding machinal 839, Chackwrlttre Slf cash reglttora 838, ttono chairs 612, desks 824. IBM's 848, flits |T99, COmplometors 818. 8414404, 22741 Woodward, Business Equip- ATTENTION MU8|C BUYERS" I place drum tats. 088.10. Shure per ctnt off. Top microphones, name bran Instruments, discounts Peopjet, FE AtTO TENOR *NDT maldoy darlnef. 025i trumpet,■*819i era! upright pi up! 1 player piano, plei---------------- ■ azs end up! good; 1 player pi _ Smith Moving, 10 ARB YOU THINKING OF BUYING A NEW PIANO OR ORGAN? GALLAGHER'S la Iht place to shop New organa from 8595. Ntw pianos from 8888. ~ GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1710 TELBGRAPH PE 4-0066 PONTIAC T| . OPEN EVENINGS AT. 5:30 P.M. SU ROYAL PRINCESS WATER Unit with 1964 tanks iflH trailer Assembly, 1400 unft, will •scrlflce. 152-5208.______________ for Sale Miscellaneous 67 •78. PC 1 FLOOR FURNACE, 2-4376. \ .. t BEDROOM HOME. Musi be mov ed. 473-2506, 5220 Williams Lake Rd. V COMPLETELY TRIMMED silver Christmas tree, 6I5. FB 14140. fill' LINOLEUM R0&(, 83.95 1a Platflc wail III# . .. Ic i Celling tilt - wall paneling, chei BIG Tito, FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Hur (0 PER CENT DISCOUNT on boxed Christmas Cards. F.rbas Printing •nd Offlca SUPPI,, 4500 Dlxla Hwy., Drayton, OR 24747. 1960 ENGLISH FORD VAN, axcallent condition. 40' wooded extentler ladder and alum, cat-walk, 0125, 363-8085.___________________________ 1942 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, good .■Met, new transmloalen, i cerbucrtor, selling for 5250. Honda 50 Into now, (Too. One i table, full slza, iso. 2»42t1. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 1II W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your no Clothing, Furniture, fbYS, GIFTS, JOKES, novelties. Liberal Bill's Outpost — 2245 Dlx- la. OR 2-9474.___________________ Uslb AND NBW office desks, chairs, typewrltora, adding machines, drafting tables, flit cabinets. Forbes Printing end Office Supply, 4500 Dixie Hwy.r Drayton, OR 3-9767._______________ washed wiping ra6s7 at low at I 24c per lb. 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. New 5 hp. 3 phase air compressor, $550. Naw a no used steel, angles, channel, beams, plate, pipe. I Used metal garage doors. Maal lor algnt, temp, sheds, etc. BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 5. Blvd. E.___________322-71811 wfl25Se~ TAFi recorder, sis.1 Antique lavabo sat 850. 412-4366 ■ Christmas treat 67-A GRINNELL'S Downtown Store Only CHRISTMAS SALE Pianos and Organs— USED UPRIGHTS PROM $69 USED GRANDS PROM $50 USED SPINET PIANOS PROM - $189 New Floor Sample SPINET PIANOS PROM $469 USED SPINET ORGANS FROM $289 NEW SPINET ORGANS PROM $699 aiAUTIPUL GRAVE BLANKETS, Pine traei, 12.50 end up. Blue Spruce, repine end Bares Country Merkel, I 1AUT.. Scotch Colored 2250*Dlxle 1 well-known brands, prices as $289. GRINNELL'S Downtown (tore J S. Saginaw FB 2-7161 Used Electric Organs Baldwin, Lowrey, Storey-Clerk Electrovolce — priced from 5225 -----------------^ ergem out on combe I "SAVE $$$ BR( Jryt 4 111 SMILEY BROS., MUSIC , N, Saginaw FE 4-47*1 Open Every Nlghf atartlng ACCORD'ON, GUITAR. LESSONS. i tuning. nr m Office If|al|)meat________72 ADDING MACHINE, 5 months oldl Electric 10 koy. 050. 254-1500, lve». 3884040.______________ Sportmg Seeds 1 GERMAN LUOERl .38, 1 .22 Rimming ton, OR 3-5041.________ lot SEE THE SNO-JET (by alMtren). Save now. TOM'S HARDWARE, MS Orchard Lk. Dolly 84V(un. 9-1 FE »4l4. 1 iARRECRAFTIRS SKI reck. Ski bbeta, ilie 5. 1 pair alza 7Vi. 1 Mir of Nevada Grant Prlx tea and haal ' Ward ■ 0*. m 74 German P-121; 6toia (BARS TENT, complete with ecc 6734664 after 3 p.m 15% OFF ON SKI-D00 CLOTHING lUIT^JACKITS-PANTS-SWEATBRI miTt$-$ock$-helmets-morr Dec. 19 through Dec. 24 KING BROS. PE 4-1662 FE 44724 Pontiac Rd. •• Opdyka 1847 SKI DADDLER, 15 mechanically perfect, 5375 Private, 9M Baldwin. 1840 HEAD 200 SKIS. Leek Olympia buckle bee new_473-2424. 9 0 0 R U P P * I tin On, . . O wlbORT ■Pit, with cover, mutt aell, 5005. 0814172. i860 SKI KAT, ttoetrk •lari, SOlTp:, arnSSXL ^ ? ^ EVINRUDE^SKEETER'S JUST ARRIVED Electric Start with reverse Immadlato delivery LAKE & SEA MARINE S. Blvd. at Saginaw__FE 4-8557 1848 YUKON King. 10 Huaklt, rag. 8485 now I Kar'» Koatr and f 409 W. Ctorkaton Rd. MY 2-1800 ALOUITT* 0741 SNOW AAoblla, flood ^condition, new angina, Miras, o"n PISTOLS FOR SALE, guns end repair; PE 2-4652._______ IK I EQUIPMENT AND Cldthlnfl for the whole family, Donn't Ski Heus, corner of Walton end Sethebew. SKI-D00 SNOWMOBILES KING BROS. E 61662 FE < PONTIAC RD. AT OPPYKE I FBKTDOO SPECIAL Ovar 80-1888 machlnts In I Saw Caatrol par catp. now (8.85. New 1848 double i I r», fl etty, ,180 black, in yetre eld. 472-5274._ ‘ K C CHOCOLATE MINIATURE Poadto* I wka. old, 135 and 550. AKCTofeRMAN SHEPHERD PUPI, 5334507._______ AKC. DALMATION pupplea. the 4 mon'h* TYLER'S AUCTION 4*58 Highland Rd. (M-50) 0724534 HohUet G UfpOt *2 STROMBECKER RACE track, 2P of tracka, transformer, and c7 EVAN'S CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE Dac. 20. It and 22 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT *«■» Hwy. Clarktton MSL1711___________ 425-2514 STElL FRAME PICKUP alt and tops. Cab to camper Sportcraft Mtg. 4160 Ft Waterford. 6334650. sleepers •r toot. TRAVEL TRAILERS WEST WIND WOOD LAKE BONANZA SPECIAL WINTER PRICES McClellan Travel Traitors Inc. 4820 Highland Road PIONEER CAMPER SALES Campari: Swinger. Mackinaw, Travel Quaen. Caribou, Berth Covers :Stutz Baarcar, Merit TRUCK CAMPERS IRS —■ ' toil Jacks, TROTWOODS trailers 3)7 E. Walton Elvd^-PE 44(52 TRAILERS^AMIliRS- COVERt' WINNEBAGO New '*8 Models. Motor Homea, trailers, pickup coaches, with evry unit sold. 3 toys ln sen S’*ui*coi Li* VtB**' UlanaytorSII hltetos ' ***** ,nd Dra*FUte F. E. HOWLAND SALES » Hwy., Pontiac, c- ' AXXY Alio SER’ Frankllns-Creas Frl J, Sat. Sunday TERRIFIC BUYS i TRACTORS Wt are giving a free turkey away 2 hrt.. Slio 2 portable MEM IN STOCK SCORPION SNOWMOBILES The Proven Snowmobile. U" end ir-Tracks, Manual alee, alerts. ’ uTmp, UP. . Traitors, Claming, eccassorlat Me. STACHER TRAILER POODLE GROOMING Del your Poodle groomed tor Christmas. Reasonable- 682-5487. MfPPils. poodle and wire haired farrier, mixed, SBjtoi. PI 84871. PUPFIES.PART Basset and Spring _ar, 7 stttl., 85 ta. 1784505. POODLES, HRALTHY ACTFyl I ALL BOLINS EVAN'S EQUIPMENT Mxto Hwy. Ctorkaton 8(5-1711______________ 825-2511 bjr^sppolntment. PUPPiE!“>REB TO gaed home, ideal tor Chrtotmaa prasanfs. Til- GIFTS BY DECEMBER 19, tractor cycles, farm toys. Insulated ‘lockets, coveralls. Hemettto chain . tain. Jam Dee ns Barts paiort. 1 And 3M*d JXarM^" T0 SPECIAL SALE BACK BY REQUEST McCulJech Chain laws Model Mec .1l wtth 15" m . chain Regular Prlca, 3128.93 Sal# Prica $109.95 « KING BROS. M '"’‘Purttoc Rd. at Opdvks* *m* m trs MUST GO-at Year-end Prices. Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15210 Holly. Holly_______ME 44771 ----T OF THE LEADERS---- IN Mobile Homes lerly American-Modern And Modern Decor FINANCING E-Z TERMS hlCHARPSON LIBERTY Park Space - immediately Available COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FI (1857 612-1118 29 Opdyke Rd. 5430 mil! Auburn Hofghn ». of wawraird “j'OP QURSlf MEANT FOR YOUI SPECIALS!!! 2Z<§ pM» M* x IP, 2 bed . ‘ Exp, t X If xcei condition, 2 helmets and car • Motorcycle Sale SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL MODELS Anderson Sales & Service 1645 Sr TELEGRAPH FE 3-711 SUZUKI CYCLES* SO CC Rupp and Wlr | accessories. Take M-59 to W. Highland, rlghl Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode I loft and follow slant to DAWSG SALES TIPSICO LAKE. Phono SENTRY ACCEPTANCE Boats-Accessories 17' CENTURY RESORTER, ISO h i A-1 shape. 12200. KE 5-9042. Chrysler and Johnson Boats and Motors PAUL A. YOUNG, JNC. 4030 Dixit Hwy. OR 4-0411 Marina on Loon Laka Champion boat kit — Hydroplane, partially built, material avail. Bast offer. 332-6005. 6n ICE BOAT. MINT condition. Just time tor Christmas. GLASSPAR STEURY MIRRO-cerft boats, Gumman rake M-59 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to DemoC Rd., left apd follow signs DAWSON'S SALES T I P S I C PINTER'S TONY'S MARINE INSTRUMENT RATING?? 10 week course, your airplane ours, I.F.R. C-172 (dual) 26 PH, privata license, 0660. F Airport Commander F l Service, 6W-1230. Wanted Cert-Tracks Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs, Pontiac. Olds end iuldca for ouf-ofetate market. Top FE 5-5900 MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1106 Baldwin Ave. EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT . EXTRA Sharp Car ■specially 4 spar-* end corvettes. “Check the real, men get the he Averill's FB 2-9171 3020 Plxl6 FE 64096 STOP HERE LAST M&M foP DOLLARS FOR SHARP, L&W MILEAGE AUTOMOBILES. . H. J. VAN WELT_OR S-1251 Wb w o u I d liks to buy Iota model GM Cars or will ac-cept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 , New and Used Tracks IQS - brass; Radiators end generators, C. Dlxs* WANTED: JUNK CARS 1*47 JEEP, _ __ _ 625-3956 after JEEP PICK-UP, 4 wheel drtv 1961 JEEP PC 150, 4 wheel drl t mow Mode. 338-9645._ 1963 FORD 100 pickup, crulse-o- msJsssfissAi 1963 FORD 04 TON plck~t 1944 CHEVY PICK-UP 1964 CHEVY PICKUP LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track 1965 CHEVY Mon, VS, - 1010 W.Maple, Walled LkJ 1966 Chevy % Ten Pickup, with VO, stick, very <]u#Mty truck, Chrletmee price $1275 TOWN Oi COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER 1001 N. Mam St.______451-4220 1967 GMC 46 TON PANEL drlva, 4 speed, many ax [SSQilHHBiaaHHd 1967 DATSUN PICKUP. $1195 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm Ft 5-4101_______ LI 3-2030 transmission, r case, free ___ west coast mirrors, hydra- $2795 John McAuliffe Ford 1966 FORD %-Ton Pickup with VI, stick, radio, haata only- $1495 -4966-FORD-- Vi -Ton Pickup with 6 cyl. stick, radio, haata Only— $1395 1967 FORD Vo-Ton Pickup wllh VI, custom cab. radio, heah $1795 1967 FORD Wrecker with Banger package, V | automatic, buckats. Only— $2495 1967 FORD %-Ton Pickup with VI, radio, heeter/errty- $1695 1966 FORD Vi-Ton Pickup/' with VI, radio, healer, cply— $1495\ 1966 GMC %-Ton Pickup;; with VI, 4 speed, redle, heate Only— $895 1964 GMC 14-Ton Hondyvon with V0, automatic, power step Ing, brakes, Opeclel at Only- $695 1966 CHEVY i-Ton PickL finish. Only— $1495 elfti o cyl. stick, lew mileage. FLANNERY FORD . (Formerly esallla Ford) On. Dixie I New and Used Cars GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 1964 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE wsrufar Suburban Olds ' BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 JEEP Sales-Strvice Over 23 Used Jeeps . In stock — Reedy logo. HAHN JEEP 4673 Dixie Hwy. Near MU MA 5-1635 p ALL E T I Z ED BEVERAGE &£, 1-C must tell. Several New and Used FORDS-JEEFO-BRONCOS Reedy fe go with SNOW PLOWS FROM $795 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm Auto Insurance-Marine 104 Auto Insurance CAN YOU QUALIFY? 010.30 Quarterly for liability. Full Coverage as low at — Quarterly! ANDERSON t> ASSOCIATES I Joslyn________FE 4-3535 Foreign Cars 105 I condition. 962 RENAULT Daulphlns dalu: rust, good mechanical, trad. ... good pickup or car or cash. FE 2- 1963 VW VAN, 4, good 330-3021. oHtr. Over *1,100. 1967 VW, EXCELLENT cond Taks over payments. 335-6435._ 1967 vw. White with UaSTiaather ' rlor, 26,000 miles, superb con-th.~ 332.4707. 1967 ENGLISH FORD Cortina, I960 AUSTIN AMERICA, 4,000 miles, ■Mj warranty. AM-FM radio. speaker. 30 m.p.c m.p.g, 0IJ95. 335-3536. 1961 RED MG MIDGET wheels, convertible, 3000 n gas mileage, still on warranty. 451-5690, 651-6712 or 601-0297. A REAll CHRISTMAS goodie stocking 1*67 VW Squaraback. xxl condition, 5)400. Call attar 4:30. Come on Sente your stockii Vary good 651-7214 afh VW. 1941 WITH 1*67 tngln*. Call FE New ogd Used Cars 106 NEED A CAR)- Now In me areni — Repossessed? — Garnished? -Been Bankrupt? — Divorced? -Got o problem? Call Mr. Whitt al King Auto, 601-00M. ______ WINTER SPECIALS MOST ALL CARS, SOME ’5t0, TC '66s. S45 UP. Also a. faw trucks. Economy Cars 2335 Dlxlo FE 4-2131 1961 BUICK'LoSABRE. Real sharp. Power. Full price 1395. Call Mr. Frost credit manager at 643-3219. AUDETTE PONTIAC 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4101 LI 3-2030 East ef Birmingham In tha Troy Motor Mall, across from Bara Airport. 642-0600 1 A-1 > Used Trucks FROM , FLANNERY FORD : 1952 FORD 1964 BUrCK, power brakes and •tearing. Raal aharpl Raasonabla 3334741. Tfo BUICK RIVIERA 3 way power, good tlret. Muet eelL *1495. *51-JTif. 1966 BUICK ELECTRA 225 4-dear hardtop, full power and $2195 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury 1950 W. Maple Ml *22N %-Ton Pickup will) VI. 4 spaed, Only— $95 : 1967 FORD Vi-Ton Pickup : with ft cyl. stick shift. Only— $1595 1966 BUICK LeSABRE 4 door hardtop. A-1 ownar now car trade-in. Can bs purchased with no money down. LUCKY AUTO 1240 W. Wide Track FE 4-1006 or FE 3-7154 1966 BUICK RIVIERA Hardtop, vinyl top. Full power end $2695 Bob Borst Lineoln-Mercury FINANCE FLAN. If wu hi t garnisheed or bankrupt, any credit problems. We * LUCKY-AUTO FE S56 I04S W. Wide, Track SHELTON I960 RIVIERA with only 0,300 (actual) brought here — now P0NTIAC-BUICK-0PEL 1968 Buick Riviera Factory air conditioning. Rod sharp. Only— $3595 Bob Borst 1962 CADILLAC Hardtop, Black finish. Full powa $595 Call FE 8-9661 >t|r Auto ' LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME CADILLAC CO. WOO Wide Track Pr. FE 3-70W 1965 Cadillac Ssdan DeVille Full power. Exceptionally mltaaga. Now Cadillac tree Craftsman Rs-condltlonsd. Salt $2195 - Wilson Crissman CADILLAC of Birmingham Phone Ml 4-1930 1350 North Woodward S1995, C«lt 646-10M. 1966 Cadillac Coupe DeVille power# I It toned, 1 •..One o owner. New car Wilson Crissman CADILLAC of Birmingham Phont Ml 4-1930 1350 North Woodward 1965 CHEVY IMPALA, 1 door lwrdh>p. V0, automatic, steering, real nice, 0995. OAKLAND chryslbr3plymouth no Oakland FE 5-9436 1965 CHEVY, IMPALA A4- d o o hardtop, V-0, full power, price 1966 Cadillac Coupe Full power and climate control, a conditioned. A real beauty. Lo mileage. New Cadillac trade-li On# year guarantee. Only— $2895 Wilson Crissman CADILLAC of Birminghom Phone Ml 4-1930 1930 North Woodward out. Toney'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin Ave. FE 4-4909. 1966 CHEVY Bel-Air Station Wagon, with vs, automatic, radio, hoator. real sharp! Only— $1395 BILL FOX CHEVROLET OChes ttr 651-70QC 1966 CORVEtTE CONVERTIBLE, O tar 12700. 332- 1966 CORVEtTE^ TOF^ plr~cej>- 1966 CADILLAC Coup* DoVlllt, FM radio, factory olr. Ml 7-22) 1967 Cadillac , Fleetwood «w*r, climate control, unod. tilt wheel. Vary Wilson Crissman CADILLAC of Birmingham Phone Ml 4-1930 1350 North Woodward Cadillac Coup* DovirtoTil - w*lt vinyl to 60B-1I47. Wilson Crissman CADILLAC of Birmingham Phone Ml 4-1930 1350 North Woodward WHEN YOU _ MARKET TlRj give It * trot |P»*1y Chock. 1615 Orche | engln*. Runt good, 0125. 1997 CHEVY 2-door hardtop, auto., good condition, ul 2-172*. 195* CHEVY STATION WAGON. SI* ______93 f. Oonford, upatilra 1961 CHEVY IMPALA 4. DOOR “ardhOLTWWBifory: ShSiw^Uas. , 100 pr beHottar. 6034*04. $CHevv ,UPBR IP0 1*47 CHEVROLET Bl 'ir, *■ —Mg ■ _ *i*9._________ 1*63 CORVETTE. VERY good coiv dltton $2,350 calj6J3f»| altar 5. iooreHM^Eiriffin^rv-*. a DOOR. Clean By Kate Osann New and Used Cars D—15 '‘I’m worried about my future — all I see in it is a lot of dirty dishes!” New and Used Cars t*65 COR V AIR -dot 4-speed, tt 4EVY IMF r, 21,000 ml ■ -„--PALA hardtop, full oftor, 2W4432 orjt02-ljW. 1944 CORVETTE with two tops, I speed, air gondnlon. Call Phil Strom it 624-1572 LLOYD BRIDGE! TRAVBLAND ___1010 W. Maple, Wallod Lk. 1*66 CHEVY IMPALA, 010*9, 2 dr. 966 CHEVY BEL AIR VO station wagon, auto., double power, condition, mult toll, 01979, or otter, 330-4340. LPRIC, 1967 CHEVElIe. out* I ‘ , power Bteerli , V4, 646-5326. Nsw and Ussd Cars 1968 Corvstts Coups »aded^«xc«ll*nt condition, must 1968 CHEVY Impolo Wagon, with full power, automatic. Demo I Over lioooT Discounted I $ovel BILL FOX CHEVROLET Rochester________________651-7000 wgi 11n11>11 lmini Nmi KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS j. . Salat and Servlet Mfd ________ OA H400 4 DARK GREEN CHARGER, 303 $1495 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1*67 Dodo* Polarg 2 door hardtop, automatic, doubl* powtr. whitewalls. radio, red, clean car. 677 M-24, Lake Orion. MY 2-2041._ 1*60 DODGE R-T Charger Power ,.n<).?i,K.,n,lIlc.-.*3» d°wn, payments of 010.92. Full prlc* $2395. Frs 1969 license plates tor this auto you call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7S00. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward_Birmingham 1968 DODGE 4-Door • Sedan V-S, automatic power steering. $1595 1967 OLDS Toronado Sport coup* with full power, fw condition. $2295 TAYLOR . . CHEVY-OLDS I960 DODGE CAMPER, model 101. I cyl. outo., sleeps S, used 5 mos Must sell. 03400. 473-2197 betweer yiPWSoturdovt 12-5. FORD: When you euv II 101 MARKET JlSe olv* Tt o free . safety check. Orcherd Laka Rd. Kteoo. FORD GALAXI1 - ______Xli, all at cessorlat, air, best otter. 651-3641. Power steering. I 1961 FORD. 2 door 300, 209 V-l .. good tiros, good trahap. uo iosf offer. FE 3-7230 oft. 3:30 cyilndoi 022*5 MIK€ SAVOIE CHEVY 1900 Mapl* Rd., Troy Ml 4-2735 1968 CORVETTE 427 with 4 snood, fully oqulpptd, factory official carl Only— $4295 BILL FOX CHEVROLET tochoator _______ 651-7000 196* CHEVELLS AAAlibU, fifoor hardtop, powtr. steering, 367 atwiEr*wlfi’ “•cit ifOOCHBVROLdT CAPRICE. *11 oaicopf olr, loo mil**, 1 torn mm 1966 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, doubl* §?rrii7*U,°'' """ ,k'*' *'40# “M 1*67 CROWN IMPERIAL. 4 $3595 $895 OAKLAND H CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH 714 Oaklond___ . FE 5-9134 1964 FAIRLANE HARDTOP, Bucket Mats, outomsttc, radio and hotter. Full price 1095. payments of 13.91. No I down. Fra* llconM pistes Parks, credit 710*. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 s. Woodward 1*64 6ALAXIB 500. 0605. *9*2. Full ants ploN. ■ you Coll Mr. Parks, :radlt manager at Ml 4-7M*. HAROLD TURNER FORD '69 Ambassador Automatic Air Condition Power steering Power Brakes 200 HP V-0 regular fuel tngln* Heavy duty radiator and fan. Fu safety equipment. Factory rut proofing. All tax**, llconM, till delivered. $3048.16 1963 Ambassador Wagon V-0 automatic powtr. sharp. N rust, good rubber. Delivered 0944. (Price Includes tax) 1964 Ambassador & Classics V-8 and 6'ie Sticks and automath From $495. 1965 Ambassador Custom 4 door. Platinum body with black top. Low mlloi loaded v air condition, powtr attar power brakes, cruise con' radio, hsster, and whitewall til Immaculate one owner. 010*5. more sharp '45s to chooM frs •799. 1966 Ambassador 2 door hardtoo. Rad and wh Low miles. Powtr, etearlng i brakts. $1299. 1967 Ambassadors 9 to choost from. I door htrdl 4 door sedans. All one owner trades. Chock all this luxury — air condition powtr altering, power brakts reclining Mats. New car warranty. From 019*9. '69 AMERICAN SAFE-SURE-SOLID 2 door sodan, 120 HP 0 cylinder, radio, hoator factory rust pro- Delivered on tho rood. $1999.80 Village Rambler 666 South Woodward BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 , 1967 CHEVY Impala Sport Coups with V-0, automatic, powtr a Ing. radio, healer, wt willow green finish. Only— $2195 Matthews- Hargreaves Jt Oakland Ava. FE *6947 I960 CORVETTE, BLACK with Mack hardtop, 417, 4-speed, AM-FM. Now Car Warranty. OQOO. 353-7244 attar Tom Rademacher CHEVY-OLDS On US 10 at Ml 5 CLARKITON Ovsr 75 othsr cors to select from I 1961 CHEVY Impale S door hardtop, VI, automatic, powa; steering. Only ■■.1795 1969 TEMPEST Custom 4 door, VI, I960 CHEVY BNcayno 4 door. cyL. 1*65 FORD Country tlH PDNttXC i d I o rJUfti 1 doer 1*66 FORD 1 door, with VI, tttckJ radio. Only .................. *395 1960 CHEVELLB Malibu t door hardtop, with VI, automatic, nowar steering, brakes, vinyl roof, air conditioning ..................02595 1*67 CHEVY Impala 2 door hardtop, with VI, automatic, power steering, brakts, 1 .sr l0SSSfi hardtop, with Only ........ 1964 PLYMOUTH 4 i •io»i with VI, Come See... Come Buy Mac Morrow Bob Chass George Sanford Frank Culotta Christmas Greetings To All From Everyone At Pontiac Retail Store 1966 Bonneville Brougham 1968 Ventura 4 doer hardtoo. power etaarino, powtr brakae. ess. $1795 $2795 1964 Ford Folrlane 1965 Catalina t pettenjor Hatty wagon, v-l, hydramatlc, radio. 4 cylinder, automatic, • radio, hotter, whitewelli, perfect Mcond ear lor family. $695 $1495 . 1967 LeMons 2 doer hardtop, V-0, hydramatlc. power Hearing. !X£?MSL SSHsSS 1966 Catalina 4 door hardtop, v-l, hydramatlc, power Hearing. sx is^sAraTSFtS ’ -$2195 $1795 1966 VW Custom Bus 1968 Ventura two tan* Mbit, 4 .peed, radio, heater. I a»-••hflff# reel sharp* one owner* tew mileage. $1495 2 doer hardtop, v-o, hydramatlc, power alaarlna, aBUfnwm.* ,s53® $2695 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE USED CAR LOT NEW AND USED CAR SALES OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY Corner East Wids Track and University Drive FE 3-7951 1962 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD door, full power and Plr. i vnar. Lika new, $795 Bob Borst Lintoln-Msrcury Salts 1964 Cadillac Fleetwood Pull power and glr candltlenlng, vinyl tag. Sat giid drlva tbit beautiful luxurious Plaatwead. One year guarantee. Wilson Crissman CADILLAC of Birmingham Phone Ml 4-1930 1350 North Woodward On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 I’M CHSVYTiiL AHTodSTT*) DEADER______________ 550-95 1964 CHEVY IMPALA 2. d 0« hardtop, VI, dwblo power, whi with rad Interior. RONEY'S AUT 131_Baldwin Ave. FB 4-4909. !944 CHBVY~4, AUTOMATIC, rs oped. MM222 Rlgplna, dealer. 1964 CHEVROLET HARDYSp. No down, payrnants of 06.44. Pull prt *7*5. Prao i*6t HcanM plates I this auto H you can Mr. Par credit manager at Ml 4.710*. HAROLD TURNER FORD NEED A CART - Now in ft *JTttSZ&--9MS oaf a oraMm? tail Mr. i King Auto, 601-0102. Wxla, Hi tslva JJI A U T o MaY I C Ml. 2 boor hirltop. CM) ■ |__J90 wHh no money down. LUCKY AUTO 191ft CHEVY IMPALA 4 automatic, powtr staai brakat. Wlntarixad. Atfc Hava now Chavy. Callx fm Ottf 6:30 p.m. Ifftft CORVAIR Moor hor&oo, bpood, exes......... 0ko ovar pt i i _ _ NOW AT TT-TF. 1 a m SMW W8W SfflM | -IMP MAPLE ROAD (15 MILE) BETWEEN C001IDGE AND CROOKS 214 MILES EAST OF WOODWARD ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT i | mm \ mmmmrn ONE STOP!!! NEW-USED CAR SHOPPING , T Audette Pontiac TS33) & Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth ■ mm !■ Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury i MMSMMS ® Bill Golling Volkswagen ■ffl® Mik© Savoie Chevrolet If All Brand Nsw Focilitiss on 60 Acres! i Mansfield Auto Sales BUICKS 1968 BUICK ELECTRA 225, 4 door, hardtop, full power, air, gold, vinyl top, 12.000 milts. 1968 BUICK LESABRE, power steering, power brakes, red, whits top, 10.000 miles. 1967 BUICir225T2 door, hardtop, full power, air, gold, black, vinyl top. 1966 BUICK WILDCAT, convertible, power steering, power brakes, red, black top. 1965 BUICK WILDCAT, 2 door, hardtop, white with red interior, low mileage. 1965 BUICK SKYLARK, V-8, automatic, red with white top, like new. 1964 BUiCK VISTA CRUISER, V-8, automatic, power, air, burgundy with matching interior. CHEVYS 1968 IMPALA, lup.r sport, V-8, automatic, power, blue, vinyl trim, 6,000 miles. 1965 IMPALA, super sport, 2 door, V-8, automatic, burgundy with black interior, sharp. 1966 CORVAIR, hardtop, automatic, blue, radio, heater. 1964 CHEVY IMPALA, 4 door, hsater, V-8, automatic, red, black interior. OLDS 1968 CUTLASS, 2 door, hardtop, V-8, automatic, powtr stssrina, powtr brakes, red, black top, 7.000 milts, like nsw. 1968 88 4 door, ssdan, V-8, automatic, powtr stssrlna, power brakes, whits black, vinyl interior. 1964 88 2 door, hardtop, V-8, automatic, powei steering, power brakes, air, burgundy, whits top, 8.000 miles. PONTIACS SPECIAL 1967 LEMANS, convertible, V-8, automatic, full power, factory air, tilt wheel, console, FM-AM radio, trunk opener, flam-bo burgundy, whit* top, 17,000 miles, car ovsr $4,700 nsw. 1968 LEMANS, 2 door, er steering, powtr brakes, cream with black top, 7,000 miles. * 1968 Batalina, 2 door, hardtop, power, factory air, vinyl top, 3 to choose from. _______________, 1968 GRAND PRIXr full power, factory air, tilt wheel, vinyl top, official car. 1968 CATALINA, 4 door, hardtop, factory air, powtr, rtd with rsd in-tsrior._______ 1967 BON NEVILLE, 4 door, hardtop, 1 owner. 1968 TEMPEST, 2 door, hardtop. 1967 CATALINA, icoups, automatic, double power. 1967 GRAND PRIX, double power, vinyl top. 1966 CATALINA, doubts power, factory air. 1965 BONNTVlTtt, Brougham, full power, air, vinyl top. 1965 BON NEVILLE, 2 door, hardtop, automatic, full power. STATION WAGONS 1967 CATALINA, 6 passenger, station wagon, double power. 1966 CATALINAT6 passenger, double power, air conditioning. 1965 CATALINiO passenger, double power, chrome rock. 1965 TEMPlST, wagon, 6 cylinder, economy plus. Mansfield Auto Sales1 1104 BALDWIN FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900 D—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUKSDAY, .DECEMBER 19, 1968 New and Used Cart MUSTANG convertible. INI MUSTANG. DEALER______ 338-3763 or 333-4774. 1*66 T BIRD LANDAU. Full power. 83* down, payments of 813.88. Full price 817*3. Free license plates for Nils car If you call Mr. Parks, Wow ewd Used tmt 1966 MUSTAN6 CONVERTIBLE with automatic, power eq .$795 Cnne FORD FLANNERY Waterford on Dixie' Hwy. 1946 FORD FAIRLANE GTA, convertible, best < " 624-0799. Transportation Specials Buy Hero—Pay Herel 947 CHEVY 2-door ..$9! 963 FORD 2-door sedan .$291 965 FORD Convertible .$695 964 FORD Convertible 963 FORD Fair lane < 965 IMPALA Hardtop .$995 Many 4-speed cars Now In stock 15 good used trucks $495 up VAN CAMP Chevrolet On N. Milford Rd. (Nr. High School? 1967 FALCON Sedan, 6 cyl. stick, radio, heater. If you are looking for economy—this Is It. Holiday Special Only - $1288 full price, lust $88 down, end $40.22 per month, big Trade Allowance. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1967 FORD 10 PASSENGER wagon. Power, automatic, radio and heater. $39 down, payments of $15.92. Full price $1995. Free 1969 license plates for this auto If you 1967 FORD GALAX IE, A-l condition, gej balance. Call Aft. 4 p.m. 338- 1967 FORD X-L convertible. Power and automatic. $39 down, payments of $16.18. Full price $2095. Free 1969 license plates for this auto if: you call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward________Blrlnjham 1967 MUSTANG 2 PLUS 2' Automatic and power. Air con-payments of 195. Fre gfifU plates for this auto NiWMNMMCort TORINO FASTBACK. air wndir MARMAJBUKE By Anderson and Iwmhw Fre* 186* llc*m* plate, tor this auto If you call Mr. Park, credit manager at Ml 4-7308. HAROLD TURNER FORD T965 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT • with 4 wheal drive, snow plow Only 11,000 milts* Ilka brand new I $avel BILL FOX CHEVROLET Roctiettar __________ 651-7001 1*6] CONTINENTAL 4 door. Ful power. Air conditioned. No I down, poymofit. ot 86.*0. Full price $895.1 for thli auto If Park*, Free I TURNER FORD Fin* Selection Of '68 Continental Trades Now at Reduced prices Bob'Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1*66 PONTIAC TEMPEST cuetom 3 cylinder, 4 $pe«l^harp. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY j 1*33 Maola Rd. Troy Ml 4-2735 1*44 PONTIAC STARCHIEP OX-ocutlva 4 moor udan radio, air- I Catalina 2-door conditioning, 3 brake*, auto., 11,380 ml. axe. condition. To aattia aatato. *1.300. 334- 0*33 » s.m. to 5_p.m.____ l*6*-^8l4TIAt~E XICUTIVE Superior condition, hydromara, power steering and brake*, low mileage, t owner, 31383 or boat I offer. 635-3815 after 3:30. _____ I 1367 TEMPEST' C'O UPE, 4 speed ...................... 31633. ____________ _____ 338-*238 ^ Olds 4-door, PONTIAC 1*67 BONNEVILLE, 2-door -hardtop, 81*88. By New oM Used Cm 624-1441. LUCKY AUTO 1967 PONTIAC WHOLESALE SPECIAL# 1*83 Catalina hardtop coupe ™ .823*5 mi pi Sip Pi siifi $1195 H8QBH 4-door sedan ... 1965 Catalina " “ 'an .................$ 195 .-. $ |95 ----------,. ._rp ■ S 495 Catalina station anna station wagon KEEGO PONTIAC KEEGO HARBOR_________ < 1968 FIREBIRD CUSTOM. 3 50 angina, automatic* power steering and brakes* console shift* vinyl top. Lika ahpwtjogm NEW. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY 1900 Maple Rd. Troy Ml 4-2735 1963 COMET CUSTOM 2-door, 6 A-1 shape* $1,000. FE 2425 Malnrad* Drayton Plal condition ilns after FINE TRADE-INS ON NEW 1969s 1965 BARRACUDA Fastback Two-door hardtop. "382" V-8, radio, heater, whitewalls. A nlc* on*. 1968 COUGAR Two-door hardtop. V-8, automatic, power steering, power disc brakes, console, vinyl top, radio. Motor, whitewalls. A Ford Motor Co. executive's car. 1966 PONTIAC Grand Prix Two-door hardtop. Groan In color with all black Interior. Bucket seats, automatic, power ataarlnng and brake*, radio, heater, whitewalls. 1968 MERCURY Monterey Marauder two-door hardtop. Madras blue In color with matching all vinyl Interior. V-8, autometlc, power staarlng and brakes, radio, heater, white-walls. Gorgeous. 1967 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille Emerald green with matching Interior, automatic, •Ir conditioning, full power, steering, brakes, vents, windows, 4-w*y soar, tilt ataarlng wheal, vinyl top. Naad wo say more? 1966 MERCURY Monterey ------IP hardtop. A snow • Interior, factory alt. I radio, boater, whltawal 1966 MERCURY Monterey Braanway sadan. Bright rad with black Interior, v-8. wSfiowtlfs, POW*r >,Mrlna •ft* brakes, radio. Motor, 1967 MERCURY Monterey beauty with turquoise Interior, factory air, power steering end brakes, radio, boater, whitewalls. Real sayings. i mile warranty. matching In-/ and brakes/ Balance pt HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland s 333- $1295 $2795 $1895 $2495 $3895 $1295 Jute! $2195 7863 1967 MERCURY Monterey Sport Coupe with V-l* automatic* power tto Ing* black vinyl top. Most gr< finish. Only— $1995 Matthews- Hargreaves “PLEASE come in, Marmaduke! We won't have another cookout until NEXT YEAR!!” Nt^nd UMd Cars ^J06 New and Used Care 106 1984 OLDS HOLIDAY Sadan. PgHvar and automatic. No $ down, payments of <85.22. Full pried $495. Fra# 1949 license plates lor this auto If you call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. / HAROLD TURNER FORD 444 3. Woodward / Birmingham BESt 0LDSM0BILE 550 Oakland FE 2-8101 1965 VALIANT V-200 4 door ledan. white with blue In-terior. 4 cylinder* automatic* radio* heater. $995 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2188 MAPLE RD. TROY, MICH. miles. Call Mr. F AUDETTE PONTIAC East ot Birmingham In the troy, Motor Aha II. across from Baft Airport________642-8600 whitewalls, Mauflful 631 Oakland Ava.______ 1*67 COUGAR XR-7; i and steering radio, one, cond. 332-5220, bo t*37 MERCURY MONTERAY hardtop. Mack vinyl ***1. * steering and brakes factory whltowolls AM-FM, txecul personal car, oxc. dpnd. $1,650. f*5*~OLDS"FOR iaV SSOCphtme 6*3-♦12*. , 1*62 OLDS, 2-DOOR, hardtop, ( $495 1966 Olds Delta 88 4-dopf hardtop. Power steering and brakes* automatic* radio and heifer. Whitewall tires. $1595 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 $2095 Matthews- Hargreaves finish. 1*6* PONTIAC CATALINA. top, oxc. cond.. i refused. 682-4185. _ MONEY * CHEVY. 1*00 W. 1*63 RAMBLER CLASSIC, blue and whit*, sharp. An excellent 2nd car and prtod to soil. ROSE ■■■■ IEEP, Union Lake, RAMBLER-JEEF 1*63 RAMBLER Beautiful condition Inside and out. Worth $595. 336-7466.. Year-End Sell-Out LAST CHANCE of'68 Naw I960 left overs reduced—many less than dealer cost — some as much as $1000 off and more — Hurry a limited ^election left. STOCK #3529 - 1968 Polara, 4-Door,' Hardtop BRAND NEW $3994 LESS SrtXK) YOUR PRICE $2994 CHECK THESE NEW CAR TRADES 1*67 1 1*47 Ford : Fury 111, 2 door, hardtop ... YEAR-END PRICE<14*3 DO, 4 door .......... .YEAR-END PMCrflitS ♦ door ................YEAR-END PRICO *M*S 1*87 Rambler, 2 door .............YEAR-END PRICE ft8*3 1*33 POIara, 2 door, hardtop .....YEAR-END P£lC£ tl2*S 1*65 Plymouth Fury III, 4 door ...YEAR-END PRICE $10*3 1*43 Ford, 4 door .............. YEAR-END FtelCC SMS 1*43 Polara, 4 door ............ YEAR-END PRICE *9*5 1*33 Chevy II, 2 door ........... YEAR-END PRICE $4*3 1*43 Ch4vy V, ton panel .......YEAR-END PRICE S3*3 AND MANY MORE i SELLS FOR' LESS Pontiac 43) Oakland Av*. 1*47 TEMPEST LaAAANS, Pow* storing and brakes, automatic^ cylinder, 31358. Ai FE 5-*422. $1350. Ask for Dennis. FE 4*422 . FE 5-9436 $115. -FE 5-327* 1963 OLDS DYNAMIC 88 Mellon wagon, red with rad Interior, double power, reel nice car, 84*5, Ml-8473 or MI-8215.__________________ HUNTER DODGE WHERE THE HUNT ENDII 19M VW Bui* orange and whlta* rail •harp 1945 Odlimobila Vlita Crulsar station wagon* full power* olr conditioning* rack on top. Thor# art non# of thoio around. 1-1944 Dodge Coronet* to choota from* prlcod from $995 up. 1944 Dodge Dart convertible 4-tptad* black with a whlta too* thli car wasn't orlven by i Prlca $1495. •wagon, real 1947 Chtvy II 499 SOUTH HUNTER Ml 7-8955 ________BIRMINGHAM 1944 6LbS 88* 2 door hardtop* full powor* air. $795. $95 down. A&P MOTORS 2020 Dixie Hwy. FE 8-815* 1967 Cutlass % i door hardtop. 8 automi power storing and brakos. Turquoise finish. $1995 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 1967 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan Full powor, factory air* vinyl 5 to chooso from— $2795 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD MI-7-5111 ff HAVE A MERRIER A 1 CHRISTMAS WITH ONE OF W \ OUR FINE USED CARS. T 1968 Buick Electro THf LAST PISCHKR BUICK 6pMO 1968 Buick Riviera Custom Interior* bucket seats and FULLY BQUIFPED INCLUDING FACTORY AIR V-l ■NGIN^'^uVvM *^IC TR N brakes and windows. AM-FM radio. Full factory warranty. _ RtAJR SPEAKER CORNERING LIGHTS E-Z EYE GLASS REAR WINDOW DEFROSTER Factory Air. $3595 Eaiy tormi arranged POWER WINDOWS COLOR RED WITH BUCKSKIN VINYL TOP Lilt Price (5427.11 DIdcouiM 11432.11 Mow Selling for $3795.00 WITH FAMlL FACTORY WARRANTY ilYR. 50,02$ MIL«$ 1965 Ford Country Sedan White with red Interior* V-8 automatic* power steering and brakes. Excellent transportation. Only — $795 Easy farms arranged 1966 Buick Electro Moor hardtop. Burnlihod brown with buck ikln vinyl top. Automatic trenwnnato, radio, hooter, power window.. Full foctory warranty. Factory air. A real bar- 1966 Buick Riviwra Full power and factory air conditioning. Exceptional condition. Naw car trade-in. One owner. gain for only $3395 Eaiy term, arranged .$2195 Easy farms arranged mmsm mum 544 S. Woodward 647-5600 | MERRY OLDS M0 DEAL MERRY oftsMOBILE ROCHESTER. MICHIGAN _ 1968 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan Full powor and factory air conditioned. Vinyl top. Low mileage. Factory warranty. See and drive this beauty. Immsdlatt delivery. °n'V “ $3695 Wilson Crissman CADILLAC of Birmingham Phone Ml 4-1930 1350 North Woodward 1968~0(ds~98 Holiday Hardtop Full power* Foctocy olr* vinyl top. Only 5*400 miles. $AVE Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD * Ml 7-5111 1*50 PLYMOUTH COUPE, » condition, Npedi A fuel pump, tret. US. 47443*8. r*40 PLYMOUTH, 2B*)r ....... Sovo Auto — PE 5-3 1*63 PLYMOUTH BtLEViDERE door, 4 cylinder, manual trai good condition. I275. MI 7-1271. SAVE MONEY AT MIKl~SAVOli -HBVY, 1*88 W. Moplo, Ml 4- 1*61 PONTIAC TEMPEST 4-door, MILOSCH AUTOBAHN YOUR VW CENTER ho greater Btoomflakt-Pontlaf FE 84531 1*64 PLYMOUTH Birmingham of-* - - wagons. As low •• $795. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1947 Btlvodoro 2 door hard auto.* V-8 powor starring* n . and whitewalls* $1795. 477 M-24* Lake Orion. MY 2-2041. 1947 BELeVEDERE II V-8 wagon, 1 owntr* 4 post, auto.* double •r* 22*000 mi. 81750. Call whitewalls* priced at only GO! 1 HAUPT ; PONTIAC i And Save $ $ $ CLARKSTON___ 423-3588 T*47 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-door | hardtop* powor brakat and tfeer-Ing* autOL* air* radio* perfect cond., $2495, 345-0448._ 1967 PONTIAC WAGON* double $1495 toka over payments, call after 5, SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE I CHEVY. 1*80 W. Maple. Ml 4-2735. 1 PONTIAC 1*63 BONNEVILLE 4 door tilt storing, climate control, air, powor windows, many extras, low mileage, so* at Bob Hutchinson's, 4301 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. 1*61 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-door hardtop* power steering* power brakes* vinyl top, air conditioning. 335-5089 aft. 5 p.m. 1968 TEMPEST 2 door, 6 cylinder, standard shTft._482-495|.______ . 1968 TEMPEST 2-door* 4 cylinder* powor steering must salt to settle ostalp. 887-4474. GRAND PRIX 1*6* PONTIAC, loaded, a ditto, mutt acll. *52-1744. bill HAHN Chrysler - Plymouth - Rambler - Jeep -CHRISTMAS SPECIAL--^ 1964 CHEVELLE 2 door Hardtop $895 With automatic, power steering, top condition I 1965 TEMPEST LeMans $995 , 2 door, with' 226 engine, stick, red beauty! 1964 JEEP Wagoneer $1295 6 cyl., 4 .wheel drive, ideal family car. 1967 JEEP Universal ....’$2150 With ^ V-8, very low mileage. 1962 T-BIRD Hardtop $795 Bright red with red buckets, console, power steering, brakes, and windows. 1967 PLYMOUTH 4 door $1495 Sedan, with V-8, automatic, power1 steering, ideal family carl Station Wagon, one owner, low mileage, top condition. Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 MARKET TIRE gl safety chock. 2435 Rd.* Kooflo- Orchard Laka Iff? after 4:30 call 343- Frost credit i AUDETTE PONTIAC East Mot Airport. _______________________[jmmSoo 1942 GRAND PRIX. excellent condition* whit# with white Interior. FE F5105. ____ ________ 1942TSMPEST - $200. ____ Call 334-8444. __________1 1963 Grand Prix 2-door herdU^^full powor. Call FE 8-9661 condition, moke otto, 338-4328 : LOOKING FOR a BARGAIN* TRY THB PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 3-7951 1(64 PONTIAC Grand Prix, beautiful •liver Mu< stats, V8, silver blue with lutom ■ring, brakes, po lollday spoclal at ( •1,88* full price, lust Ml down, 444.23 par month. Big Tr Allowance. John McAuliffe Ford. 1*64 TEMPEST CUSTOM, cyl., automatic, vary a ditto. >380. 473*656. 1*64 pSntTAC "GRAND PRIX ___ I DOWN, PAYMENTS *8*2 WEEK. CALL MR. PARKS, Ml 4-7*08. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1964 Pontiac Cotolina 2 door hardtop. V-8 automatic. * $795 Coll FE 8-9661 _ Star Auto _ . . doors, 1723. 334-7546; 1*44 CATALINA VENTURA, 4-spaod, Second SL______________| potl . irl:power!J§3*;_PE 2-4480. X yTTT ADOT T 1*65 CATALINA ...... 84*5 MILVJM ,H Also 1*43 eonnavlllo ... $11*3 ivuuvyuui 1 lopdyko Hardware_________________FE a-4416 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH iwTaWais. i-spdfco. moo >■ i- 17*3. 477 M-24, Plymouth _______Rl itlc. wnltawalls, radio, oorina, turquolst. Clean c 1-24. Lakt Orion. MY 2-2Mt JTO, EXCELLENT tohstflon. Cleon car. 477 . 1968 CHRYSLERS & PLYMOUTHS NEW CARS & DEMOS TERRIFIC SAVINGS GIVE US A TRY BEFORE YOU BUY . 1 i Mi UNBEATABLE DEALS (724 Oakland a---------- FE 5-9436 PONTIAC last of Birmingham in the Troy jjatjk Mail .cross fom^Bjrr ltiSPONTiAC £atitina. *»S0i 1*66 Jeep UntorMl, Sim 334-P3>. 1965 Pontiac Catalina 4 door. V-l automatic. $895 Coll FE 8-9661 1*65 BONNEVILLE..........311*3 Opdyko Hardware PE 34334 1*43 TEMPEST CUSTOM 4 door, goad condition, I7M, M1-86M Pier 1*43 ^lVERTlBLl~, Mf Adama, attor 4 all day jtohands. PONTIAC East at Birmingham In the Troy Meter Mall, acroas from Bari A Mart ____ltlN*> hordhy, condition, *1350. 3*1-1543. _a__j MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1*44 Catalina 1 door hardtop, bio power, whltawalls, radio, automatic. Gold with gold Interior. 117*5. 477 M-84, Laka Orion, MY *• Custom 4-Door Hardtop SHARP '67s & '68s-TRADED ON THE 1968 PONTIAC '69s 1967 JEEP CJ 5a wlfh lew mileage* plow* 4 wheal drlva* beautiful beige with rad convertible tap. ""$2495 1968 CATALINA 2 Door Hordtop with Vt, automatic, power storing, brakes, Only — $2595 ^ 1967 PONTIAC Bonnevills 4 door hardtop, wtih factory air conditioning, power storing, brakes, windows, and powor seat. $2495 B 1968 PONTIAC VENTURA with V8* i $3195 $3195 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville Convertible 1 "!$ YA automatic, power storing, brakes. Rad with while top. Only — x $2295 1968 Bonneville Cordovan top, whitewall., automatic, aafaty track, AM-FM radio, rear maakar, power storing, power brakes, powar window., power seats, oasy-oy* Bless, automatic tamp, control, air. • $3495 1965 TEMPEST WAGON ..... $1295 1963 PONTIAC WAGON ......$595 1966 PONTIAC Convertibla ....$1795 1966 PLYMOUTH........... $1295 1965 CHEVY SS........... $1495 1966 PONTIAC,. Brougham - < LS*2»d with eaulpment, Mka new tlraa, whlta with black cordovan top. Only — $1995 1968 Bonneville Coupe with V8, automatic* powar steering* povw ju^brakasy sharp. Law mllaaga* cordovan $3395 1967 FORD Vt Ton Pickup P-100 with V-8 anoint, now Only— $1995 1965 Pontiac Bonneville 2 door hardtop, sharp, white vinyl Interior. power stearins, Power brakes. $1395 WE WIU. MET OR BEAT ANY DEAL WE WIU NOT EE UNDERSOLD PONTIAC-TEMF>EST On M-24-Lake Orion MY 3-6266 ---—fc------ Entertainment Aanrw fe Pfcvhw Praia 36 Feminine jjppellatlon 3 Mood lor a 37 Train track torch singer 38 Abound UActren , 40DiRcov«r Gardner fi Scruple (ib.) ' 13 Asian total 42 Kind oX ' 14 Where , .thread movies are 45 Neck of land made 49 Intrude 16 French ball 51 Choler 10 Purses 33 Leg joint 18 Geometric 63 Passage in , . plane curve ' the brain 20 Expunge 64 Singer, — 21 Abstract *TOng”Col» wailach 24 Land 66 City in measure Italy 26 Depots (ab.) 67 Note in 2?Fl*tH*h Guido’s DOW.. ---. “Sr-4 ltssLssa,. RJS”---- 23 Artist’s 44 Let it stand MShXteiidby 2 Ellipsoidal 24 CUy to Italy "bS^fcuda nanvas SDanseuse 23 Female 47 Soviet stream 6 Native metals chair 6 Open to 27 React Public decision perusal 28 Tropical 7 Actor, igpii plant Wallacb 28 9 Actress,— 31 Weirder Albright 33 —Miller Note In lOShoshonean 38 Fools Guidons Seale Indians 40 Runs from Guido s scale 11 Essential danger DOWN _________being 41 Cubic metar r~ r- 5- 5 r- r- 5“ 10 r 12 15 15 15 15 1; 15 i5 ar 21 24 55 58 29 5o 55 36 W 40 55 45 55 IT 45 55 5T 52 55 ter 55 (S6 IT 19 Dean Martin's Vegas Shift Nets Him ‘10 Point7 Interest By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Dean Martin’s going to become (Resident. . of the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas. It’s part of the deal he’s Just made which will moving over from the Howard Hughes-ownedj Hotel Sands next summer. More important financially, Dino will receive “10 (joints,” or lOl per cent interest!in the-Riviera profits, morel than any star ever received from any Las Vegas hotel. Atty. Sid Korshak representing the Riviera! told me in Los Angeles that hg completed the! deal with Herman Citron, representing Dino, last Saturday. It has long been in negotiation. Jack Entratter of the Sands, who first employed Dean' In Las Vegas, said, “We know nothing about U WILSON and haven’t heard from Dean about it. We still have him under contract at the Sands for 14 more weeks." Dean will contend that his contract at the Sands expires April 29 and that he is eligible to work at the Riviera in May, the lawyers said. * * * Bob Hope when leaving for Vietnam was very happy about a gag that his writers had worked out for Rosie Grier, the huge lineman appearing on the USO show. It was very abort and went like this: “Good night, Tiny Tim, whatever you are.” Aatta Louise and her husband Henry Berger gave a very posh party in Beverly Hills for the Joseph E. Levines (some* body said the most exciting personalities In form Were there). Anita and Henry are forming Delfem Productions or Delfera Films, named after their street. Harold Robbins won an orange blouse under hit Jacket I naked him, ‘What does yow wife think of yon dressing in that?” He replied, “She likes It. It’o THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . Producer-director Robert Aldrich flew in from L.A. for the "Killing of Sister George” premiere—and brought Ills flu vaccine with him . . . Elliott Gould, filming <_ tom MS-WXYZ, Newt, Dtvt ■iSgCFfc Ti«S—WWJ, IporitL In*. Mat Wins MW t'tt—wja. News, Dlnwmkm tslSr-WJR. Ssnsrsms. Ml nortty Report St IS—WJR, WMMssndWtNri WXYZ, MMl Dick Rurtan CKLW, Jm lperarPs WJSK, News, Marc Avery fits—whfi. Tom oiumsti CKLW, Scott Rponi WJR, Nmra, kmsMsksps •new* llftt—WJR, Newt _ 11,11—WJR, Focus Sneers ittis-wwj. Hem tilt—WROM, News. Jefm Silt WWJ. Morris Carlson TtSS-WNPI. Gary Purees WPON, Nesss, Chuck Warren St»—WJR. SunnysMt,' lOl# WWJi Sport»LIne 11*00—WJR. Nawa . ;i;!UjS: NSPflfS-. WWJ, OvemWit lltSS-WXVZ. Sew*. Jim 0-*- »!3-WJr! News WHFl, uncle Jey WCAR. News. Jnn Davit CKI W, Mark Richards ^WWJ^Mevtt^ ^ Hutgh- CKi w. Prank SmSIt WCAR^ Newt. Wtynt WJR, Open Heuee IStlS- WPON, News. Jerry WJBK, Nlpntiune FPtOAY MORNIMP WCAR, NeM. Rep Miner wjrk; Meets. OtnraP wxrr'kSwv, Johnny Rant- I t:IS-WJR. Music Hell 1 WWJ, News UiSS-wjr, Newt Rami — PllW RodMIller Saw', 111 If—WJR. 111*-WJR, Newt, Arthur WWJ, Nmi. Emptittit liM-WXYZ, Newt. John, pelton BIN TV Features LITTLE DRUMMER BOY, 7:30 p.m. (4) ANDY WILLIAMS, 8 p m. (4) BOB HOPE, 9 p.m. (9) IVORY TOWER, 9 p.m. (56) DEAN MARTIN, 10 P-m. (4) — to a yuletide spoof of * ‘ Mission: Impossible.” Guests include Nancy Ames, Janet Leigh, Glen Campbell and Carol Lawrence. (7) C — That Girl - Ann and Don empty the Bauman apartment of all valuables, fearing it will be robbed on Christmas Eve. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) Ivoiy Tower — Reporters debate “Are the Newspapers Doing a Good Job?” 5:19 (7) C — Journey to fib Unknown — Alec Worthing is to deapdlr over being stranded on a desert island until the girl of his dreams appears. (9) Te Be Announced (56) CtoepOehim — First to a Series which offers the audience a chance to join in a critique of filmmakers. 10:00 (4) C - Dean Martin — Dennis Weaver, Bob Newhart, Dorn DeLuise and the Golddiggers join Dean on his Christmas Show. (9) Horse Race (50) C - News, Weather, Sports (56) Free Play 19:10 (7) C - T.H.E. Cat -Cat is hired to recover a necklace from a blackmailing lover. (50) C — Les Crane (62) Star Performance 11:10 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (62) R - Movie: “Tim Quiet American” (1058) Audie Murphy, Michael Redgrave, Claude Dauphin, Georgia Moll 11:36 (2) R - Movies: 1. “So Big” (1953) Jane Wyman, Santa's Given Traffic Ticket Sterling Hayden; 2. “Double Verdict” (French 1061) Serge S a u v 1 o n , Magali de Vendeuil (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: “The Verdict” (English, 1964) Cec Linder, Zena Marshall, Nigel Davenport (50) R - Movie: “The Mask of Dimitrios” (1944) Sidney G r eenstreet, Zachary Scott 1:19 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Untouchables (9) C — Perry’s Probe 2:99 (7) News 3:99 (2) R — Dobie Gillis 2:39(2) R — Highway Patrol 4:99(2) C - News, Weather FRIDAY MORNING 5:29 (2),TV Chapel 5:25 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:39 (2) C—Sunrise Semester 6:09 (2) C — Gospel Music Programs 0:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman __(4) C — Classroom 6:45 (7) C - Bat Fink 7:00 (4) C---Today (4) C-Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:20 (9) Warm-Up 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (9) C—Bonnie Prudden 8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:20 (7) R - Movie: “Courage of Lassie” Windsor Blast Injures Three WINDSOR, Ont. (API-Three firemen were taken to a hospital Wednesday following fire and natural gas explosion In the basement of a downtown food market in Windsor. Smoke and a* strong smell of gas was detected in the building, which has apartment uiiits at the top floor above the grocery. It was discovered broken line in the basement was pouring raw gas into the base Firemen and gas com- WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) Santa Claus was given a traffic ticket Wednesday. “There was Santa, decked out in his white beard and red suit and all, standing beside his carl™** of the while the cop wrote him a tick- ^lapsed It," said Bob Gibson, who — watched.. Gibson and some friends rode by to Gibson’s car. “We rolled down the window and hollered Scrooge,’ ” he said. The policeman didn’t respond. “He Just kept on writing that ticket to a very serious way,” said Gibson. Santa waved at all the cars driving along the busy street, he wasn’t saying “Ho, Ho, Ho.” pany officials were called In, and all seemed to be under control. Firemen allowed the gas to burn In order to prevent ai explosion, but the gas fire ex tinguished itself and exploded when some escaping gas accum ulated to the basement. Flames from the explosion burned 1he face of one of the firemen and the hands of another. A third fireman staggered building and Airport Aid OK'd IRON MOUNTAIN (AP)-The Federal Aviation Agency has approved an additional 168,100 for Ford Airport at toon Moun tain for Airport development, to' eluding land acquisition, runway extension, apron and taxi way strengthening. The nAr grant brings the total to $242, FOB OFFICE, HOME — These gifts each sell for under $25. They include a candy dish, ash trays, vases, pencil cup, clip cup, paperweight, and candy bowls. (1946) Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Morgan (9) Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:08 (2) C - Merv Griffin (4) C - Steve Allen (9) C — Bozo the Clown (56) Rhyme Time 9:16 (56) American History 9:35 (56) Sounds to Say 9:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00(4) C - Snap Judgihent (9) Ontario Schools 10:10 (56) Children’s Hour 10:25 (4) C — News 10:19(2) R - Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) C — Dick Cavett -Tentative guests are Rod Steiger and wife, Claire Bloom 10:40 (56) Interlude 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) R — Andy of Mayberry (4) C — Personality (9) Window on the World (50) C — Jack La Lanne 11:30 (2) R — Dick Van Dyke (4) C — Hollywood Squares (9) Take Thirty (50) R C.- Kimba FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C - News (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R - Bewitched (9) Lunch with Bozo (50) C - Alvin 12:10 (SB) Misterogers 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:39 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C - News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Treasure Isle (9) Bill Kennedy's Hollywood (50) R — Movie: “Christmas to Connecticut (1M5) Barbara Stanwyck, Dennis Morgan 12:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:55 (4) C - News 1:00 (2) C - Love of Ufa (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dream House (0) R — Movie: “The Cheaters’ (1045) Joseph Schildkraut, Billy Burke 1:06 (56) Rhyme Time .1:20 (56) American History 1:25 (3) C — News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:10 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — Let’s Malp a Deal ' (7) C — Funny You Should Ask 1:45 (56) Sounds to Say 1:11 (7) Children’s Doctor 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Dsys of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game 2:25 (56) Interlude 2:16 (2) C - Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 2:66 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R — Topper (50) 4-H TV Action Club 1:10 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) c —You Don’t Say (7) C - One Life to Live . (0) Lively Spot (50) c - captain Detroit (56) Innovation (62) R - Ann 4:00 (2) C - Llnkletter Show (4) C — Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (56) Continental Comment (02) R - Robin Hood 4:25 (2) C - News 4:20 (2) C - Mike Douglas (7) R - Movie: “12 to the Moon” (1900) Ken Clark, Michi Kobi (0) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R - Little Rascals (SO) TV Kindergarten (62) C— Rae Deane, Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:66 (0) R C — Batman (50) R — Munster* (50) Misterogers 5:20 (4) C - George Pierrot — “Swiss Holiday” (!) R C - Gllllgan’s Island (50) R C — Superman (50) Friendly Giant (62) R )£> Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) C, - Davey and Goliath Color TV RCA-ZENITH LOWEST PRICES BEST SERVICES CONDON'S TV Salas and Service 730 W. Huron FE 4-9736 A Look at TV Movies' Decline a Fact By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - The popularity decline^of televised movies — once a sensation in the ratings — is not longer merely a trend, but a confirmed fact. Video seasons usually start out with the top network films, which draw good ratings before the lesser motion pictures come along later in the year and lose the audience. * ★ ★ This season, however, the drop in audience occurred almost immediately after the season began. And there is no sign that televised network movies will recoup their former popularity, except for an occasional blockbuster, a fluke hit or a film starring a personality who happens to be a tremen-mis favorite. The national video ratings .for the week ending Dec. 8, for Instance, indicated that of six motion pictures shown o n the three networks, the highest-ranked one among all television shows listed came in 35th. ALREADY SEEN The most obvious reas the ratings slippage of films is that the majority of available popular hits have already been seen on the home tube, and most of the current titles are from the second rank of motion pictures. Yet seven movies a week continue to be scheduled by the networks, with casional specials slipped in as illef. A shortage of motion pictures may not, however, be the only major reason for the ratings drop. It is entirely possible that what is currently happening to audiences of movies o n television is similar to what took place not too many years back with audiences of movies to theaters: they Are getting weary of the old-style approach. * * * It was television itself, with Its routine series, that took away the B-movle product from motion pictures to those years. And now the networks, with Ut-more than second-class movies left, find themselves with the kind of films that audiences outgrew. And most of the original two-hour movies for JVlumbingI !iLdiscountsJ| I Q.Piooo HATH CFT I a 3-Piece BATH SET i White or ’>"■ CA95 ! Offered “1” JJ I TOILETS J*" 18" VANITIES CABINET SINKS EXTRA SPECIALS! i steisr*** video, though a sensation when the other films were also hot, now are clearly recognized as routine stuff. ★ h ★ I don't think that home audiences are tired of movies at all. What the networks need to do, ironically, is just what the film industry did when it was to trouble: give the fans what is presently not available o n television — that is, more contemporary, creative, biting stuff, along with the occasional big standard movies that always draw. Stave PLUMBING! 841 Baldwin FI 4-1111 er FI MIM ■ 6hso Mae* Sat, MS SAL 17" Zenith *19” lrSylvanta *24” 14* Portable *29” 21" Emerson *29** 21“ Sylvonlo *29” 17* Portabl, *39** 21- Sylvanla ♦39” 21* Motorola ♦39” 21 "Olympic ♦49” 19" Portable ♦4S°° 30-DAY EX0HANQE PI 1-1217 (WALTON TV 111 E. Walton Blvtf. Comer Joslyn Open 9 to 6 TENUTA’S RESTAURANT FINE FAMILY DININQ - OARKY-OUT AVAILABLE Tender, Golden Fried Fish Dinners DAY FRIDAY FE 8-9639 CORNER OF HURON and JOHNSON (Across From Pontiac General Hospital) SINATRA NEEDLED By WHITMAN ... But Jerry doesn’t stop with Frank. He also gives the phonograph needle to stars like Glenn Campbell, Barbra Streisand, The Lettermen, and The Tijuana Brass. Whitman needles them for you during his “Music From The Mall” program from ten till two from The Pontiac Mall Shopping Center. Tune in. nfloR* THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER mediation Limit Slated for Uranium Mines WHY CHRISTMAS ALMOST WAStt'T By Jack Kent “working level” was set In Junei There is a great deal of work by Secretary of Labor W.|to be done in the area of Willard Wirtz, who was im-J persuasion because there Is a pressed by reports of high in-great deal of doubt as Regards cidence of lung cancer among! the effectiveness as well as the ' By SCIENCE SERVICE Icontracts will* automatically go SHHpiRH't — Uranium Into effect, unless President -InMIl Workers show an in- Johnson /eels that the minimum fjjweu of taig cancer six times is too strict and requires the — a problem adoption of a higher limit. [flSysMHjht a public cry last I His decision will be based on! uranium mine workers. , attainability of a limit of three-Bjinng in congressional hear-a report by the Federal Radia-| At the sa"me time he estab-, tenths of a level. ;fmi I'tion Council, which so far has lished the limit of three-tenthsi ★ 4 ? -tipponse, the Department kept its recommendation secret, of a working level to go into On one side is the Department! gFjUabflf1 has called for severe|At present, the council’s report I effect automatically on Jan. l.|0f Labor, which favors three-[ fnine radiation. is sitting in the office of Wilbur1, * * * i tenths of a level. On the other is jh, ^ '** * * fcohen, who is both secretary] When questioned whether the|the Atomic Energy Commission jpj' *an._ lj 1969, a newlof Health, Education andjFRC recommendation would,and uranium mining companies! iMpMobl limit for radiation in Welfare and chairman of the!affect his thinking on the mat-lwho argue that a three-tenths! 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