1 1 n V r. ★ ★ *3 1 Temperatures ranging as low as -5 in Pontiac from about 2:30 to 5:30 a.m. and -12 in Troy, were recorded. ■ Area police credited the extremeJ&ld with a sobering influence on year-end drivers, despite roads glazed by Snow which fell most of the day yesterday Accidents in most areas were reported light and of a relatively minor nature. west, surpassed last January's, low of -3 recorded here Jan. 18. high was expected to range from • to 15 above. RECORD LOW Three deaths were reported occurring from an accident in Highland Township. ★ ★ ‘ ★ The cold, which1 broke previous weather records through much of the Mid- Elsewhere, Chicago posted a record low of 10 below zero for Dec. 31 and another record of -9 today. Light show combined with bitter cold is making driving hazardous today, and more light snow is predicted for all parts of the state today 1 and tonight. The The Automobile Club .obMichigan re-* ports that most'major roads in the state are slippery in spots, while secondary roads are show-covered and slippery, ★ w . ★ Early this rooming light snow was reported jn only a few areas. In some, such as Ann Arbor, small drifts are forming on the highways, ' UPPER PENINSULA Hif-Run Car Kills Girl 4 Die on County In the Upper Peninsula, .Calumet and Munising area roads are covered with light snow and are slippery. Those around the Soo are snow-covered and slippery and the remainder have scattered slippery Spots. 1 Pontiac Press Photo A 17-year-old girl beebme Oakland County’s first,.traffic fatality of 1968 early today when she and her escort were struck by a hit-and-run driver while walking along. Milford Road in Highland Township. Three 18-year-olds two from Highland Township — were killed in a head-on crash in White Lake Township final 1967 traffic toll to 121 than in 1966. Across the U.S., early morning temperatures ranged from -28 at International Falls, Minn., to 68 at Key' West, * Fla. . ‘ ' 33 less Oakland Highway Toll in *68 Last Year .to Data O Sherry Ann Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LalieJE. Knight of 203 S. Center, Highland Township, was killed about 2:45 a.m. today when hit from behind by a ear while walking on the shoulder of Milford Road near Highland. with Mitchell a passenger, according to police. ■ ■, ' , ★ ★..... ★ The deaths brought this year’s Michigan road toll to 2,075 — more than 200 short of the 1966 total. Local precipitation probabilities in pet* cent are: ' today 40, tonight, 30, tomorrow 10. * • At 12:30 p.jn. the temperature in downtown Pontiac was a chilly 11. Low tor night was expected near 10. IF YOU SAY SO—Nine-month-old Heidi Lynn, daughter of Pontiac Press Photog- . early yesterday to bring the county’s rapher and Mrs. Ed Vanderwopp, prepares to celebrate the arrival of 1968 though-* ' • she can’t really find too much to complain about from 1967. It was a great year for babies, she thinks. * Bob Hope Reporting: U S. Traffic Toll Is a Low 223 Trip Highlights Rehashed (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the tost in a series of reports by comedian B6b jF/ope, whose troupe has completed another visit to U.S. fighting men in Vietnam and is homebound.) gineer. They met at Bearcat. ITiey didn’t say a word — just grabbed each other and hung on. ■>-; Phil Crosby will never forget one kid (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) By the Associated Press Traffic deaths during the New Year holiday weekend today were running far behind the number predicted by the National Safety Council. Record-breaking cold and heavy snow in some sections may have played a mujor part in a lower death count by keeping persons at home. Killed shortly after midnight yesterday were Doyle Mitchell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell, 111 St. Johns; Roger Stogher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer A. Stogner, 3536 Jackson; and Calvin For-see of Grosse Pointe.1 — The Knight girl and her escort, Alan Lengeman, 17, son of Mrs. Jhnet H. Lengeman of 3727 Gulfwood, Milford, were walking toward her home from Lengeman’s stalled car when the mishap occurred, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. He is reported in serious condition in Pontiac General Hospital. - Australian Quints Listed Satisfactory Temperature Roundup SOUGHT CAR By BOB HOPE LATITUDE 19-49N LONGITUDE 157-26E — Tpnight, as our. 87 pooped pigeons climbed aboard the big C-141 Starlifter at AnderSen Air Base in Guam, we all had the same.feeling, it was like coming home. In the past 15 days, cur gypsies have traveled over 25,000 miles by every form of transportation from a jeep to a carrier.' They’ve worked 21 shows, and they’ve logged 11 cotobat hours. They’ve been shotat, dusted, blown on, rained on baked and'catapulted off a carrier. 3rd Heart Swap Eyed in S. Africa By all rights' they Should be snoring in their seats'as our big jet drones its way toward Midway Island. But it’s all too fresh. Most of them are standing in knots np and down the aisle, rehashing the trip as they will for years to come. For each member of the cast it meant something different \ CAPE TOWN, South Africa ,W) - The diseased heart of a Cape Town dentist, who could be the world’s third heart transplant patient, worsened as doctors waited today for a donor heart. ,Dr. Christian Barnard, who guided a' surgical team through the heart transplant operation on Louis Washkansky Dec. 3 at Groote Sqhuur Hospital in Cape Town,,, was en route home after a tour through the United States and Britain. . > The council made its estimate before the weekend began. The toll reached 223 in a count that began at 6 p.m? Friday and will end at midnight today. -» The safety council, headquartered in Chicago, estimated that 460 to 540 persons would be killed in traffic accidents over the 78-hour holiday period. NONHOLIDAY PERIOD The Associated Press counted 484 traffic deaths in the ironholiday period from 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 15, to midnight Monday, Dec. 18. This year’s'Three-day Christmas weekend brought death to 685 in traffic accidents. Deputies said the hit-and-run car was apparently the same v««ffiicle that was Involved in a bumping incident with another Car shortly before and was being pursued by an unidentified driver, who discovered the Knight girl’s body and Lengeman and called officers. BRISBANE, Australia (AP) - Mrs. Roger Braham named her two-day-old quintuplets today — Annabel, Caroline, Faith, Geoffrey and Richard —then got up, from her bed for the first time since their birth, took a shower and had her hair set by nurses. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Grantiiey Stable, who slept at the hospital last night in case of complications, reported the babies ih satisfactory condition and the mother doing well. The children’s father is a 24-year-old country lawyer who with his wife, Patricia, 36, have four other children including a set of twins. Unofficial temperatures recorded in Oakland County:, Lake Orion ............. -5 Rochester ..... -6 Birmingham ..;>......... •2 Bloomfield Township..... -3 Milford ................. 2 Roily i'.........,.,....V -4 Romeo ................. -5 Lapeer ...... t - . ... -5 Novi ...„.......... -8 Shelby Township.......... .-11' Troy ...... .,1._________ .-12 However, investigators said they have no description of the car being sought. White Lake Township police said the accident yesterday on M-59 near Porter occurred about 12:20 a.m. Stogner was driving one oMhe cars The quintuplets are said to Weigh about three pounds each. ★ ★ For the next 10 days the quints will stay in special cribs, kept at 97 degrees’ Mrs. Braham took no fertility drugs before the fillet of the five were born 5:12 a.m. Saturday, six-weeks premature. LBJ Spends Quiet New Year's Eve Girl Leads For those who were on the highways, weather was a factor in many of the holiday collisions. All foQr of the major hospitals in the Pontiac area today reported the early arrival of New Year Day babies. Traditionally, the first baby born' in the new year receives numerous gifts from area merchants. < ■ , at 12; 18 a.m., a boy to Mr. and Mrs. Gary ElSner of 655 Alpine, Rochester." AT 3:45 A.M. For Johnny Pawlek, our fabulous sound engineer, who has made 22 Christmas trips, “it’s the look on the faces of those combat troops at Lai Khe..Three thousand of their , buddies had been sent out to the hills just before the show., They were so intense. Their, eyes never left the stage.’’ ★ ★ ★. 'V ■ Our Trombonist, Joe Howard made-the whole trip hoping against hope that he might see his son, Dave, a combat en- The next patient, 58-year-old Dr. Philip Blaiberg, was described as “dangerously 01” at Groote Schuur from a coronary thrombosis. In Today's Press Barnard was asked in London if he was more confident of Blaiberg’s chances for survival than he was of Washkansky’s. The 44-year-old surgeon replied: “| think the main thing is that — the main difference wifi be that we will have “'more confidence now in that we are not going into the unknown.” .All that surgeons at Groote Schuur needed to operate again was a suitable donor heart, which they said probably would have to come from someone killed in a traffic accident that did not impair the: heart. A California teen-ager was killed and seven persons were injured when their ■ car struck an icy patch and hit a bridge on Interstate 10 near McNary, Tex. ' ★ ★ . ★ The highest toll for any New Year period, 564, was compiled during a three-day celebration at the start of 1966. The lowest total fojr a ^three-day New Year observance since World War II was 269 in' 1949. The traffic toll during the last three-day New Year holiday was 469. Any baby born to married parents living north of 14 Mile road in Oakland County after midnight Dec. 31 is eligible for'the prizes. Pontiac .General Hospital reported a girl bom to»Mr. and Mrs. Earless Sing of 545 Bloomfield, at 3:45 a.m. JOHNSON CITY, Teg, (AP) - President Johnson marked the arrival of 1968 with prayers for peace and tbs White House said he spent a quiet New Year’s Eve with his wife and close friends. * ★ ★ He had no special New Year’s Day statement. But he joined in a prayer for peace at year-end services yesterday in a small Roman Catholic Church near the ranch. Except for a press gathering, the Texas White House listed no official New Year’s Day activities for the chief executive. * The ’earliest recorded arrival unofficially was at St‘. Joseph Mercy Hospital where a girl was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brooks of 747 Birdsong, The first to arrive at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital was a girl born at 5:39 a.m. to Mr- aid Mrs. Charles Wabegi-jik of 129 Norton. Teddy Is in Vietnam Milford, at 12:08 a.m. * Crittenton Hospital to Avon Township had its first birth of the new year bom Entries to toe first baby contest must be made through , the family doctor by 5 p.m. tomorrow. ★ ★ w The information Should be sent to the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce in the Riker Building, Pontiac. SAIGON (AP) — Sen. Edward M. Kern nedy, D-Mass., whose Senate subcommittee has been critical of the progress of programs to aid the civilian victims of the Vietnam, war, arrived in Saigon today for a 12-day look at the “other war.”' ■ ' i* > GM Payrolls in City Near Record Area Roundup 1967 highlights are presented lp picture, story form.—PAGES B-2, B-3. Sports Scono Big 1967 events from World of sports are recalled-—PAGE D-2. Capitol Scono Top niws stories of past year are reviewed. - PAGE C-T. Astrology .............. D-5 Bridge D-5 Crossword Puzzle........ D-lt Comics D-5 Editorials .... A-6 Markets .7. C-9-C-11 Obituaries D-6 Picture Page c-t Sports",.........,.. D-l—D-4 Theaters ..V.. . ..... .Cl TV-Radlo Programs ...... D-ll Wilson, Earl . .. . ..’ D41 Women's Pages....... p-i—c-3 t ^ H ,<***"<• IfltotoWUMIPWIWto*" • -r- c, h J. . 90 VC Fatalities in Truce Incidents SAIGON un - U S. forces weathered the first 24 hours of the allied-called New Year’s truce without losing a single GI despite at least W “incidents” and 98 Communists killed during the stand-down. , . •• , The number of,, incidents and rising casualty rate among the enemy and South Vietnamese government troops— with whom the Reds clashed to most of the Incidents — showed the truce period was only slightly less deadly .than t h e usual everyday war. ' . The Vietcong suffered to men killed when they attacked a Mekong Delta camp run by South Vietnamese marine?. Nineteen government marines were killed and 47 wounded. Employe payrolls of $321.9 million during 1967 were the second highest in history at the three General Motors plants in Pontiac, eclipsed only by the $333.8 million paid last year. GMJs 1967 purchases from urea companies for goods and services added another $92.5 million to the Pontiac area economy. The year-end statement was released jointly today by Martin J. Caserio, a GM vice president and general manager of GMC Truck & Coach .Division; John Z. DeLorean, a GM vice' president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division; and Thomas F. Wiethorn, Fisher Body plant manager. Combined GM employment in Pontiac averaged 35,900 for the year. Local GM employes ^invested more than $8.3 million in u!s.' Savings Bonds through payroll deduction, ★ * In additifln. they were awarded $944,-916 for ideas submitted through the GM SuggeStoh Plan, an increase of more tiac’s sixth successive year of sales increases. * In February,, the division introduced the new Firebird sports car and produced Its 12-mililonth Pontiac later in the year. A new all-time monthly production record was set in October when 93,293 cars were built by the GM division. Fisher Body-Pontiac began construction of a three-year project to separate sewer waste from storm water with the installation of a 42-inch storm sewer. The next two stages of the project will be completed to 1969. The project, being done to cooperation with the City of Pontiac, is to further purify water going into nearby lakes. GM$ Truck & Coach introduced a new Intercity coach in November. ’Em 49-foot-long bus has- seating capacity for 49 passengers. Its auxiliary {Tear axle assembly will permit the vehicle to operate to states which otherwtee would forbid its usage because of low-weight • restrictions. Production is scheduled for 1968. The South Vietnamese reported! that a U.S. flareship was unable to get permission from U.S. headquarters to turn its fiat-firing guns on the Vietcong assaulting the camp. than $213,000 over last year, V Pontiac’s GM 'installations Observed several milestones in 1967. Durinjx calendar year 1967, Pontftc Motor Division reported another all-time record with the .delivery of 841,000 units. Tills is Pon- ns IMufi Hu,■ifjraC Hi < uE* mm hII M JOHN Z. DELOREAN MARTIN J. CASERIO % -i il: THE POKTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1908 Cold Across U. S. —r* News Briefs From Wires By 11m Associfted Press jTbe Orange Boiyl, parade was served on Jan. 1 Ne«r Year’s Eve celebrants held Saturday night, since the across much' of the United city of Miami forbids Sunday States were forced to brave icy parades. eludes Chesapeake Bay oysters, ZURICH,. Switzerland UPl — The U; S. government’s handling 1893. it ]p- of Vieftiam war news at its source has “served as a useful example to those many govern* ments Who mistrust the press,*'-; the International Press Institute says in its annual report o n press freedom. The American information policy may also have “helped the growth of world opinion against the American conduct of the war,” the institute said yesterday. red head duck, beef, sirloin steak, spring lamb, and salads, sauces, vegetables and desserts. the rounds of parties at homes thorities said the first passen- 1° Chicago,-some 4,000 per-and clubs. ■ jger to step on Iranian soil in sions braved 5-below-zero tem- peratures to whoop it up m the Loop at the strike of midnight. sand hardy celebrants braved a j mention i garland of Persian * three-inch snowfall to welcome j-oses and a kiss from a hostess At Philadelphia, city era- the new year. Other celebrants j of the country’s tourist organ- iptoy®? worked* to clear snow filled the city’s taverns, night* Nation I from a three-mile section of clubs and discotheques to ^*L._ n_ MftNKFV Broad Street to. provide good' H ' _. pacity. iYIsab w mun&px ifooting for the annual Mum- Snow Grounds Planes ★ ★ j In , Japan, the arrival of the mers Parade. The men—it’s an j MIAMI, Fla (AP) — Snow College bowl games featured,New Year — the year of the all-stalg show - compete' forlgrounded’ 16 airline flights in the New Year’s Day attrac- monkey in the oriental lunar $76,500 in prize money offered | sunny Mianti today, tions: the Rose Bowl, with Pas-1 calepdar attracted millions by the city for costumes, comic Although teriiperatures were adena preening for the 79thJapanese to temples and routines and string band music.the 70s, more than 1,000 pas-annual Tournament of Roses;jshrines. jj I In Rome, Pope Paul VI sengers on 14 EAstern Airlines the Cotton Bowl gridiron con- Clo'ser to home, Denver’s prayed for peace, while cele-; flights and two Northeast Air- test at Dallas, the Sugar Bowl venerable Brown Palace Hotel brants started the New Year^gg flights were told that at New Orleans and the Orange announced it is featuring a New with fireworks, parties, an, II o.m..... •onday In Pontiac (os rscordad downtown) Highest temperature ........... Lowest temperature ........... Moon tomporoturo ................ Weather: Partly cloudy. One Year Ago In Pontiac Highest tomporoturo ...............i i Lowest temperature .............. Moon temperature ............ 3 Weather: Sunny. tundoy'o Temperature Chart Alpena If-11 Lansing r- 24 4 Soy City 21-4 Marquette 4 I Detroit 27 -7 Ml.. Clemons J» Escenobe -2 -II Muskegon 2t Flint 2* -S Oscoda - 26 €d. Rapids 21 -15 Pellsfon 20 I Houghton -3 -21 8: S. Marla 14 l (Houghton L. 10 -17 TroyOrso C. 2) I 1 Jackson 21 -I Ypsilantl 24 I Kinross 10-20 if" eoV •1’V WWf • * f ^ 1 . # NATIONAL BLATHER — A large band of precipitation will eovhr moat or the nation tonight with most of the areas expecting snow except for the Gulf Coast states where rain Is doe. Colder temperatures are to store for the Northeast and the upper Dfidwest. Retired Rancher; Wife Celebrate 77th Anniversary • LEAWOOD, Kan. (AP) - Mr. and Mrs. William T. Palmer were married 77 years' ago today. A retired Hickory County, Mo., farmer and rancher, Palmer, now 100 years old, and his wife Annie, who will be 97, this month, have made their home with a daughter to this Kansas City suburb for the last three years. ★ Sr ★ The daughter, Mrs,/ Omer Pruett, said both * her parents are to good health and are anticipating a reunion today with their 5 children, !0 grandchildren, 24 great grandchildren, and 2 great-great grandchildren. “My advice to young couples,” Mrs. Palmer said, “is to be faithful.” tog the combination lap and cross-chest seat belts. NEW STANDARDS The seat belt combination 's one — and, Haddon says, the most important — of the first package of safety standards going into effect Monday under the government's new highway safety program. “Most people dying on the highways are dying of smashed heads — I would put it just that way,” Haddon, director of the National Highway Safety Bureau, said nn an interview. “And these belts, used together, prevent that.” ^ SAVES LIVES And, he said, the belts prevent another major cause of death in accidents: ‘bring crushed by one’s car or by another car after having been thrown out of t^e vehicle. .' ,.m In support of Ms claim that death and mrjor injury can be rulfed out in moat under - 60 accidents, the young physician said: “We’ve known for years what 15 merchant .ships caught in the £at#r ^ waterway since the June 5-10 . * Middle East war. Israeli troops; . • • * * * advanced to the canal to the 'Pie Identified as war and hold positions along the: William M. Reid of ^3767 South h^nlf Conway' Drive, Mobile, Ala. ^ ^ ^ Identification was established Win riM when Egypt sen* wit i papels d “ addition to seat belts as: • Improved laminated windshields, which don’t break and therefore don’t gash heads and 's”jd ^feady is ta effecL necks; • Shock - absorbing steerihg LBJ Foe: My I Viet Stand Too Mild for Some WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen., Eugene J. McCarthy acknowl-*' edged today':MMampaign for the Democratic ^ presidential nomination hgg^ disappointed some ardent Vietnam war crit-'e'•' But the Minnesota, Democrat said he’s not gloomy about the prospect of, bringing about a change to U.S. war policy through his platfqrm of opposition to President Johnson’s Vietnam'position. ~, ** * * 'fk ■ j - “Some of the more ardent critics of Vietnam have been disappointed that I haven’t been, as they say, more Enthusiastic about my position,” said McCarthy, adding: v “I don’t think one can be enthusiastic about a problem • which has such deep moral implications as thjs problem has, oHi which ... has called for such serious thought and attention on the part of the public.” COLLEGE STUDENTS McCarthy said his candidacy has teen well received, by college students, “especially from the young people who are on the edge of almost complete alienation from politics i.. ” . His comments came hi a Met; romedia Radio News interview pretaped for use today. Public approval aY Johnson’s handling of his job was up five percentage-points to December —to 46 per cent compared with 41 in November—according .to the latest Gallup Poll Spurting 8 percentage points from his all-time Gallup Poll low of 38 per cent approval to October, Johnson entered the New Year with just about the same degree of approval tha poll showed he had last Janu- ! ary. At the time, adults approving of the President’s over-all actions totaled 47 per cent. 41 PCT. DISAPPROVE Of those polled to December, 41 per cent disapproved of Johnson’s handling of his office and 13 per cent stated no opinion. Johnson’s high point to the Gallup Poll was 80 per cent to January 1964, shortly after he took office. White House press secretary George Christian said meanwile that if Johnson seeks reelection next year, he’ll campaign as usual—regardless of any concern about security and demon-strsttors.* But he indicated that to such a campaign, Johnson’s travel plans might hot always be announced in advancri-a policy ha tugs and other vessels to free} ldentiflcat,on ^ the serv.| columns, which cushion impact E^mS geMsrari?okay to'icemen withheld. They 'had^ad of functioning like move ships In the canal or face chartered the plane to fly to the consequences of violating the New Orleans after missing a commercial flight from Mobile U. N.„ sponsored “no-sailing” waterway truce agreement. Israeli officials reported no Egyptian request for s^iip movement has reached here. They were reported convinced Egyptian ships would taken advantage of the*situation, possibly to; send scouting craft up and down the canal. This would trigger an Israeli reaction, they said. • A recent survey indicates that dental care costs for children to areas where water Is fluoridated are almost two-thirds lower than the cost where water is "untreated. PARTIAL IDENTIFICATION The Coast * Guard identified them only as Lee, Booker, Barnett, Christy and Martin. TTie twin-engined Beechcraft was nearing New Orleans international Airport when it disappeared from the radar Scope. * ★ A Witnesses said the plane blew up when it struck the water.' “All I saw was eight or ten pieces of small debris and a lot of bubbles,” one witness said. The plane had been rented from the Mobile Air Center, a' leasing firm. Fire Hits Niles Buildings NILES (AP)—Firemen fought! The fire department dispatch for nearly an hour to seven be- er said the sub-zero tempera- Congressman to Quit JACKSON, Miss. Iff) - Rep John Bril Williams, D-Miss., will officially leave Congress when he takes the oath of office as governor Jan. 16. Wlltirins, who lost Ms seniority jffier almost 20 yean to the House, announced tile , resignation. yesterday. House Democrats stripped the seniority..ifroin Mtn after he openly supported Republican . Barry GoMwater for president to 1MI. j tain a blaze in, second - story!everything”—the buildings, fire apartments above two stores to!trucks, streets and men. Daughter Wed 50 Years EL MONTE Calif UP) — *ow zero teriiperatures to con-jtures had caused “ice all over George M. Pauli is one of the few fathers who ever lived long enough to see a child celebrate 50 years of wedlock. Pauli, a real estate man until he retired stx years ago, wil] be 104 Jan. 16. Chuckling about his daughter Ardis’ 50th wedding anniversary, he recalled, “There was a time I believed this girl would never land a husband. She was 26 when she finally married—and she married a boy of 21," he recalled. ir downtown Niles Sunday nights Ail available men and equipment responded to the blaze, which heavily damaged the second floors of the two-story row buildings. There were no injuries. , * ★ A The first alarm tyas turned to at 10:30 p.m. and firemen were reported still on the scene at 12:30 a.m. putting out spot blazes. Cause of the fire immediately known. YOUTH COUNCIL Christian, to San Antonio, Tex., appeared on CBS television’s “Face tiie Nation.” John M. Bailey, Democratic national chairman, announced to Washington the creation of to party youth advisory council to be headed by William C. Kerr »of Oklahoma. Serving as vice chairman un-der Kerr, son of. the late Sen. Robert'S. Kerr, D-Okla., will be Spen,cer Olivef* of Bowie, Md.f president of Young Democratic Clubs of America. spears; and Evidence that “peopl • Stronger door locks, so doors don’t pop open to crashes. Evidence that “people are beginning to walk away” from once - fatal types of. accidents, Haddon said, is contained in" a study of 28,000 such crashes in study of 28,000 such crashes in Sweden involving cars with lap and cross-chest seat belts. Amotf& occupants Wearing the belts, no one was killed at speeds under 60. NOTUSED Yet only about one - third of the drivers and passengers in cars wertr seat belts, he said. Many refuse to wear them because they think they’re better off to be thrown clear in an ac cident. Haddon said they couldn’t be more wrong. , •• Six-year-old Jacqueline John- The safety chief conceded that son and her stepbrother, Mario officials expect many people — wiiborn? 7, died Saturday when especially women - won’t use a furnace overheated, igniting.a the new chest belts because qf Christmas tree which spread inconvenience,, discomfort or the flames up an air duct to concern for clothes. the second-floor bedroom of Fires Are Fatal-to 3 Children JBy the Associated Pres* Three children died over the weekend in Michigan as.a result of two separate fires which police said were both caused by- But he said ^statistics show lap belts alone improve one’s chances of avoiding death or serious injury by 35 per cent, top was not and chest belts together, by 80 I per cent. theif Lansing home. n Demetria Merrill, S-year-old daughter of Doris Merrill, died to a Saginaw hospital Saturday of injuries suffered last Tuesday. Hope Troupe Rehashes Trip Highlights (Continued From Pag# One) to a field hospital to Da Nang. “He was torn up from head to toe. ..But he managed to get right thumb up and Ivfnk at me." „ / * for Joan Maas, our production assistant from Bolivar, nothing in her seven trip* touched a kid she saw ill the hospital at Clark Field In the Philippines. “Dlls poor Idd had a brain injury. He was Just relearning to talk, yet when I said goodbye to him he grinned and mads a circle with hls thumb and Index finger.”,. . 1.»- •£.-1 / None of us will ever forget, that moment in Da Nang. It was our opening show . , . the-hill was covered with green fatigues as far as you could see j--. 12,000 combat Marines. When Barbara McNair started Into “Silent Night,” the entire audience rose to their feet , and took off their helmets and bowed their heads. An exquIsttSt over-powerlng prayer for the day when "all will be palm and all will be bright.” ARRIVE EARLY Dock Colean, who made his second trip as assistant cameraman, said:, “Die camera crew Is there setting up hours ahead, yet every place we go tiie audience is already there. There are guys there who have beenrfsalting all night." Ed KbMS, Who Is one Of the ac# cameramen from “Wonderful World of Golf/-made his first trip with 'us this year. Let’s let .him have the last word:' “I took this assignment as a job, not 'out of patriotism.. But what I saw staggered m& I’ve traveled to 80 foreign countries and worked every kind qf show, but nothing Mt me like this trip- I’ve never Ijeen prouder of mp country." (OWrlMM tv King FoMvrao lynSWgM) THE yONTIAC PRKSS.MOftDAY, JAN0ARY I, 1668 • Bm •, />/ ,■ f7 A—9 imism Western Europe's * By The Associated Press LONDON — Business in Western Europe goes into 1968 with an air of uncertain optimism after a yeqr of slowdown. * The uncertainty is caused by the devaluation of the British pound,, and fears that Common Market developments could be impeded by a political freeze between, France and the five other members resulting from Britain’s exclusion. But the five are unlikely to gamble their own prosperity against lighting for Britain. ★ ★ V If U. S. inflation continues, European exporters * see a chance to .sell more goods in the United States at restively lower prices. West Germany’s slow recovery is seen as another potential spur to business throughout Europe. y' Britain is in a class by itself as the sick man of Europe. Whether devaluation 7 of the pound will bring recovery de; pends largely on how the British themselves follow through. In any case, it will be a black year on the British home market. * USE TO STAGNATE . ‘ To keep demand and investment flowing into the export trade, home consumption is to stagnate or perhaps fall. The bite of higher taxes and interest rates and a new credit squeeze is' estimated .at about $1.8 billion, almost 2.5 per cent of the gross national product. But if exports rise as predicted, employment should rise with them. The Common Market countries had the smallest production rise of their 10-year association. Their increase of gross national product was estimated at 2.5 per cent last year, half of thqt for the years between 1960 and 1965. The Common Market Commission' predicts a growth rate of 4.5 per cent in 1968. ★ ★ ★ West Germany' is the key to this forecast. To curb inflation and boost exports, West Ger-, many underwent a squeeze in 1967. Between 20 and 25 jper cept of the country’s industrial capacity lay idle. Unemployment rose to 673,000. Late' in the year, interest rates were cut and the government launched a program of deficit spending. Private investment has risen, and economic research institutes now predict a 5.5 per cent rise in the gross national product during the first half of 1968. Little harm is expected to come to. German business from Britain’s devaluation. RISING SALES Unemployment in France is creeping upward. But the slump of the past 18 ^months has bottomed out. Department store sales and new car registrations are rising. However, French industry is increasingly nervous as the July 1 date approaches for full freedom of- trade within j the Common Market. Italy moved ahead strongly In 1967, and economists expect that the .nation’s “controlled expansion” wiH continue. Production by industry and agriculture continues .to rise. it 'it it • Belgium and the Netherlands were hard hit in basic industries by the decline in world trade. Both countries still are troubled by upward wage pressure, but order books are fuller than at the end of 1966. The equeeze in Holland fstimulated industrial! mergers* ' The outlook is especially uncertain in Scandinavia. PRICE INFLATION Sweden has been suffering serious price inflation, but even though exports haVe been rising the balance of payments is ip the red. u Denmark devalued by about half the amount Britain did, and home consumption is expected to suffer. Exports had been stagnating before, and retail, prices had jumped. A tight squeeze now is in prospect. *. ★ . ★ Norway was hit badly by devaluation in Britain and Den-i mark, and the Bank of Norway forecasts a reduction in home consumption, Finland also is facing a squeeze following . a, one-third devaluation In Octo- Soviet Union as the region’s ber. '*■'*! dominant economic force. :Spain devalued by the same.PRnP|T n4Sfa degreedBritain. ’Ibis Is.ex- ™0FIT [ . peeled to boost tourist earnings,] Czechoslovakia a program of the major source of the nation’s P^ttag key hidustrieson a prof-foreign currency. The devalua-j1 J?1?/8 h“ widespread tlon was considered long wer-^aHorn Fartory managers undue because of heavy inflation iwwiar with/a market econ-j accompanied byindustrial °ray jacked .up prices by as growth. With it, the government “‘“eh a* 3® per cent. - [ clamped (town a wage and price Hungary’s reform program freeze and started cutting gov- goes into effect in 1968. In an-! ernment spending. r " ticipation of a switch from cen-, proivoMir rfvivai tralized control to supply and j ECONOMIC REVIVAL demand, consumer prices1 Swiss economists predict .a soared - . , • slow economic revival following rAPITAT ■ a slowdown caused by restric-1NK,!'I,s CArirAL tions on building and foreign la-j Romania also is introducing a * bor. Austria is less hopeful and free market element, but badly is still battling wage and price needs more capital and know-inflation. how tb develop its chemical and' In Greece, the economic situ- other heavy industries. Its 14, ation has political overtones; per cent growth rate topped the j * ^ ’Communist world in 1967. The April 21 army takeover! Bulgarian economic planners was a blow to tourism. The re4also have tried to industrialize, mitOfnces of foreign workers, hut since half the nation’s pro-the othej- major factor helping dtiction is tied to trade with the the balance of payments, were Soviet Union, this has proved cut. by Europe’s slump. The mil- difficult, itary junta has liberalized cred- Poland is trying to mechanize it and guaranteed wheat prices its agriculture but, like most in a bid to restore prosperity Communist countries, suffers apd . stay in power. from a shortage of hard curren- ,In Communist Eastern Eu- cy. East Germany has no plans rope, free market economic re-( to liberalize, and- although its forms are under way, but they* growth statistics indicate an up-are hamstrung by ideology in-, ward trend, they are often mis-fiation ,and the influence of the Heading. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. [}m£Yug cleaner with 6 revolving plastic briitl# brushes and foam rollers. Limit V. -2nd Floor Organize Your Cupboard* Famous Brand Turntable Set $11.90 Value 5 27 .Starter let Include! I twin turntabl*. 3 ilngl* turntable! and' .1 cup and plot* carouwl. Limit I Mt. ' . -2nd Floor Hand Carved 7-Pc. Wood Salad Set ■*u Simms ; Beautiful all hand'earvad Kola Wood lalad bowl, 4 Individual talad bowb and talod fork and ipoon. -2nd Floor Dust* and Swaaps Split Tip Floor Broom At L SimmS 96 Fraih and durobt, mofitur* ru> listant split tip broom wfth no-flip action bristle!. Hnse* clean. Limit 1. -2nd Floor With Shoa Fmhanm Shape A Store Shoe Caddy S3.49 106 Value J| Chrome tubular.framu *hoe caddy held* B pair pf ladle* *hoc*. Complete with thee freihefter pellet*. —2nd Floor Hazalwaro Glass Americana Design Beverage Set $2.66 Sellar |68 7-Pc. let Includes I pitcher and 6 glasses. Ideal for patio, kitchen use. Looks like expensive cut glan. — 2nd Floor Protect* Floor*—Carpote 17x28” dumbo Boot-Shoe Caddy $1.99 Seller 1«« Holds boob, shoes And umbrella* to protect your, floor* and carpels, keep entrywoys neat. Limit IA — 2nd Floor Wsightsd Bottom 12-0z. Size Beverage Glasses 2; 25* Smooth Libbay gloss b«voroga glosses with round haoyy bottom that resists tipping. Handy 12-oz. size. —2nd Floor Final Clsaranca Army or Marino Gl Joe Dolln $3.00 Valua 88 Your choice of ormy or marine Ol Joe doll with all the accessories Including helmet, grenade, etc « —2nd Floor Claaranca of Remaining AMT Series Slot Cars At Simms J68 1/32 scale slpt cart to bultd and M> |Oy. Your cholc* Of McKm ipoctef, to-tut 30 or CheveN*. While they last Limit 2, . ‘ * - 2nd Fleer wmmm ■ '-tel PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1,1068 Editors Quiz on* QUESTION: How is a diamond formed? ★ ★ ★. «' . r ANSWER:. There, are certain objects whose values are not reckoned by their utility, but are based upon their beauty and rarity. Paintings by Rembrandt are among these rare -and beautiful objects. So are diamonds. A diamond’s value is a permanent thing, something universally recognized. The diamond is the hardest substance found naturally. Diamonds, are transparent crystals of carbon believed to have been formed millions of years ago under conditions of great heat and pressure. * r When ground with many small flat faces, djamonds split or refract white light into vivid, brilliant flashes'ofthe- rainbow colors. A diamond may at first look, colorles^as* our picture suggests, but turn it slightly and the wonderful colors leap oat as if the stone was on fire. Diamonds are rare because they are found in only a. few places. Many tons of rock must be crushed before a usable stone can be obtained. Diamonds can be man-made in huge presses, but these tiny stones are mostly used in industrial work, often to cut other substances. > U.N. Has Designated '68 as Human Riants Year UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. UP) — The new year will not be just 1968 as far as the United Nations is concerned. It will also be the International Year for Human Rights, as planned by the U.N. General Assembly in resolutions dating back to December 1963. ★ ★ ★ The IYHR, as it is most likely ’to be called, will include an international conference on human rights in Tehran April 22-May 13. The year will come to a climax Dec. 10, just 20 years after the assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Many countries Cat, Keeper Toast Future CHICAGO (UPI) - Hat Nose toasted the new year in with a saucer of milk, under the watchful eye of his ^master, who stands to inherit $15,000 when the 19-year-old cat dies. But William Fields, 78, says Flat Nose is “doing fine,” and hopes he’ll have at least eight more Jives. ■ - Flat Nose celebrated his 19th birthday Christinas Day, and Fields made it extra special with a duck dinner with all the trimmings for the two of them and a present of a dancing toy dog for the cat. „ “I celebrate his birthday on Christmas because that's when he was found, a cold, tired kitten that could hardly walk.” ★ " * * Flat Nose is the last survivor of five cats entrusted to Fields by the will of Mrs. Margaret Montgomery in 1960. Mrs.! Montgomery provided that $15,-] 000 would go to Fields, who helped her run a apartment bou$e, if he cared for the cats.! Flat Nose is the only cat left, j are planning their own celebrations. Last year, Incidentally, was International Tourist Year, And 1965, the 20th year since the United Nations was founded, was International Cooperation Year. The late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehfu of India proposed that observance in a speech to the assembly. Now the tendency is for the assembly to dedicate almost every yqar to some international cause. ’sSSS'/fe % UlflTER mnsTER ‘Thrust-Back Collar' TOILET TANK BALL Aantkm't lergatt Ulltr TK, efficient Water Maitar Instantly ttopt tha flow ol wotar altar aach Auihing. 75* AT HARDWARE STORES France and Soviet Russia recently inaugurated color television programming with a transmission system incompatible with that used in the United States. 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HeMesiey la Fay *479 FULL SATISFACTION GUARANTEED INSTANT CREDIT 3 YEARS TO PAY FRETTER5 Mt. Clemens 34813 S. Gratiot 1 Blocks, of 15 Mile Road 293-3260 791-3440 Opan Daily 10 ta 9 SUNDAY 10 to 7 FRETTER'SpDetroit 14366 Gratiot Near 7 Mile Road LA 7-4304 Opan Daily 10 to 9 Monday thru Saturday FRITTER'S Oakland 411 W. 14 Mile. Road Opposite Oakland Mall 585-5300 Op«n Daily 10 to 9 SUNDAY 10147 SEE IB ‘XLM- 33 TJAC rKESS,. MON 1)A V. J AN CAR V 1/19«8 Corner. Saginaw and Huron Downtown Pontiac',/ FE 4-2511 AP Wlrephoto EAGER LEARNERS — At the century-old American University of Beirut, Lebanon} engineering students gather around a laboratory table to gain the knowledge that may help their underdeveloped countries. • ' American $1 Is Hub of Arab Education ^Ry ELIAS N. ANTAR (area add AUB is not the only Associated Press Writer »J jone producing Arhb political, BEIRUT, Lebanon - “Please civiC ^ professional leaders, watch over her. She is our only Unlik the case in other un. daughter and we hand her ovct derdeve, ^ ,areas o{ the in your1 care. We .don’t knot? —a when we will be able to- come back.” world, top education and training at AUB have not produced a _ ... ... “brain drain” in the Middle. The parents had crossed the East. Of the university’s 14,000 Jordan River from the Israeli- graduates over the past centu-held west bank of the Jordan ^ go per cent have chosen to and had scraped together jjve and woric jn y,e Arab world, enough money to travel,to : ★ ★ Beirut with only one objective— en[1phasis at the universi-to enroll their teen-age girl at jy jn paSt three years has the American University of |jeen 0n academic research. Dr. Beirut—AUB. ^ ■ jElie-Salem, assistant dean of .... , ’ , the faculty of arts and Sciences, Wars, petal crises and en* sajd -t re*ects the wishes o{ the my occupation ^s this inciden students „who are „0 , sat in an AUB official’s office la t isfied wit|) ex.cathedra8 teach. summer shows, have not affect- • „ ed the 102-year-old university’s - 8‘ ^ ^ position as the No. 1 center of j- The AUB w‘hose yearly budg-higher education ia the Middle ti3 $14 millipn pays professors East, , ^ [the highest academic salaries in For a few months ill summer the Middle East, but there is! 1967, American was an Ugly i also "Strong pressure to achieve word in the Arab world and results In research and publica-thousands of U. S. citizens were tion. evacuated. But the AUB, veter- r an of"every major Middle East® MULATING crisis over the past century,! Although the emphasis on re-| stayed on to continue the legacy search leaves less time ' for1 its founders teaching, Salem maintains that EDUCATION^LASTS I8"8 ** EDULAiiUN 'research to be stimulating “and “I $idn’t see how we could go this stimulation will be carried through the pearly gates and into their daily lives when they tell those people we were tee graduate.” ones who had buckled under ahd . * * / closed the university down,”| other members of the faculty, said E. Terry Prothro, the however,. are unhappy about AUB’s provost, referring to the what they consider a lack of exsummer’s events. tracurricular activity at AUB Prothro, who remained in Bei- and insufficient student-faculty! rut throughtout. • contact. The cdmpus has be-1 The Arab-Israeli war and its come too large for the sort of aftermath, has been on. the uni- approach practiced in the early, verity's faculty for the past 16 (days, when founder Daniel Bliss years and believes the AUB!knew most of the students by should never, allow itself to became and often invited them to influenced by the changing po-J dinner. litical climates in the area. ★ ★★ * The students, for their part,) < “Most'things come and go, do not appear to have any com-; but education is the only thing plaints about social activity on that lasts,” Prothro said. “The'campus. They pubjish their own future of this area is tied to edu-| newspaper, they have debating cation, no matter where it and photographic societies, to comes from, and the students name but two campus organiza-know it.” , jtions, and they find plenty of, This was evident when AUB outdoor activity on the 75-acre opened its 102nd year in Octo- ■ hillside campus bordering the her. Despite widespread Arab Mediterranean. bitterness at U. S. policy in the! The campus now is a far cry area, student enrollment actual-] from the first graduation class ty increased by 7 per cent to. a in 1866, when AUB—then called record 3,490 students from 62 the Syrian Protestant College-countries. ^ consisted of 16 students studying! INCREASE !ih a five-room rented house. Arab students at AUB in | ^ow university draws stu-creased despite financial and . . . . , ph,,^ UifeulUre ge whst they »anl-. good du- E> cat on-and are deterreioed not uked ^ , / to'let the’m^rialiots oaptote ^ Year„ The our ntlndo,”'In the words ol..^ £ how, one faculty member^ g„, ,te eyeb2l treatment. In fact, the name “American University of Beirut” is almost J> a misnomer. Seventy per cent of the faculty of 553 are Arabs and the student body is overwhelmingly Arab. American professors ami students are a distinct minority. Safety Inspired by Head of Firm SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) r Fred Smith, president of the Despite its preeminent posi- Seattle Stevedore Co., is using tion In the Middle East, the a safety program here which AUB no longer enjoys the aca- thinks will appeal to his em-demic exclusivity it once did. At ployees. . the founding conference of the * * * United Nations in San F’rancisco He is putting up $500 each in 1945, for instance, 19 partici- .quarter to/ a safety scholar-pants wele graduates of AUB.— ship program for children , of more than from any other single members of Longshore- educational institution. . !mfn 8 Unlon Loc?'|9- i However, each time there is OTHER UNIVERSITIES la ]0S( time accident reported But .now other universities on a company job, $10 is de-have -been Established in the ducted from the amount. Check Pages A-8 and A-9 ' for WAITE'S January White Safe Annual January BRA AND GIRDLE SALE Shop our annual January Bra and Girdle Sale for all your slimwear in your favorite brands. maiaenrom TRIC-O-LASTIC LACE WITH STRETCH ALL AROUND! $3.19 CHANSONfeTTUMli* world’* most popular bra on tain for • llmltod dim paly! With farnout circular and •pskt-tlllchud cup* for tuparb shaping and comfort, So buy now nod tavo. la Whlfa Cotton. X, I, C Cups. ONLY JI.W. (rtg. {2.50 value). SY MAIDENFOOM* TRIC-O-LASTIC LACE THREE-QUARTER LENGTH B, C cupa Rpg. (4 Vatu* While or Black TRIC-O-LASTIC LACE FULL-LENGTH WITH CUFF DopfeM Reg. $5 Value B, C, D cupa $4.99 Rag. $• Valuo White or Black B, C, D cups $6.49 Reg. $• Value WhKe or Black WARNER’S Reg. 3.00 Warmer's short line stretch strap contour fiber fill bras. Sizes 32 to 38. Reg. 4.00 Warner's A-lina short bra with Iac«y contour and fiber fill. Sizes 32 tb 38. Reg. 11.00 Warner's “Concentrate" power net girdle In the pull on style. Sizes S..M.L. $in" Reg. 13.50 IU Warner's Concentrate long leg girdle with triple power over the tummy, bnd double power of 'the sides. Sif« S-M-L. t J^imwear . .. Second* Floor Our Entire COAT STOCK REDUCED for CLEARANCE r Ear Trims d Reg. 99.00 110.00 45.00 55.00 Untrims »I 100% Cashmere Famoiis Make Reg. 85.00. V^UU IO to 95.00 I • • •. • Reg. 69.99 'Choose from our .entire stock of coats including famous brands, fur trims, and cashmeres. Camel,, brown, gray,'blue, green, black and white. * Coats ... Third Floor Men's and Boys' Winter COAT and JACKET SALE Men's Reg. 15.00 to 18.00 Reg. 19.00 and 20.00 Reg. 26.00 Reg. 35.00 to 45.00 $] o" $1499 $1099 -$2999 Cholc* of our untiru ptock of (nen'i wtntur coat* and jackets at. tremendous savings. Quilt or pita linings with outer shells of wool, nylon or corduroy. Chorge It at' Waite's. Men's Wear .•>. Street Floor Boys' Reg. 13.00 and 13.99 Reg. 15.00 to 17.00 Reg. 20.00 to 25.00 choose from parkas, benchwarm-ers, ^quilted ski parkas df nylon-1 warm-ups in assorted colors and fabrics. V Boys' Wear ; Second floor asp THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West Huron Street ■ - i ^IHjntlac, Michigan 4805# iMtii ’/> - fc § MONDAY,: JANUARY' 1, 196# Howaub a. Fmoifrt*. .11 President and Publlirter Mm w. FitamAit Executive vice Preeldenl and Editor Haixt J. Him Menaginc Editor John A. Rn.xr ■ . ■ i Secretary and Advertising Director Richard 1C PmctMiD Treasurer and PtnCnce Officer • Altto ■ McCuilt circulation Manager O. Maiihau joaosN local Advertlalng Manager It Seems to Me Forecasters for New Year Have Optimistic Outlook As 1968 begins Jo unfold, everyone in the area is honestly curious about the business and ; economic prospects that lie along our own future. ' t , Leading - businessmen in aU occupations^ and in all 'sectors of the Nation have been interviewed faithfully by news associations and newspapers. • Here in our own area we read the forecasts of the four top figures in the all-important automotive business. .They’re all optimistic. They see good things ahead. As reported here in The Press, James M. Roche, Henry Ford II, Lynn Townsend and Roy Chapin have gone on record with the conviction that more automobiles will be manufactured in 1968 than were produced in 1967, This refers to passenger c # r s, but they’re equally optimistic in regard to ' trucks. Our own James Roche believes that the car and truck business together will total 10.7 million. The Chairhian of the. Bftard also said that Pontiac and Cadillac led his organization in comparative showings in 1967. \ Business leaders across the Nation in other lines of activity are optimistic in a guarded and cautious man-heir. The clouds in the economic sky revplve around: , flow about Vietnam? Will the British re-evaluate the pound again? How about other currencies? How about other war spots? Wink U.S. taxes will be imposed? Will unemployment stay down? Will building accelerate? Will strikes upset progress? How about inflation? How about steel? ★ ★ ★ Last year the gross national product touched 783Abillion.. ©ptimistic forecasters for 196^ suggest 835-850 billion. If this comes true, some will be-attributed to inflation which 4s- a false note in prosperity. ♦ ■ Readers of this newspaper are obviously more interested in otir own area. That’s true of all sectors; Hence, all local relationship must be evaluated with the movement gcross the Nation. Right at this point,, your timid scrivener arises pith a definite, prediction: this general area will prosper beyond the national average. ' If national business shrinks slightly, we’ll shrink less; if it holds still, we’ll show a little gain; and if the total business steps tip, we’ll advance more. This isn’t blind, optimistic hope. It’s based -^n mathematical facts; Pontiac Motor Division is one of the two or three leading gainers in America for several years. We’ve battled from seventh position hvihe industry to third and are remaining firmly entrenched. This activity pulls our big, important Fisher Body Division right along equally. Martin J. Caserio has won a warm spot in the hearts of his fellow associates in the area with the fine showing the huge GMC Truck and Coach Division has made. Percentagewise, the institution on South Boulevard mav rank as one of the top gainers in its division of the industry m 1968. The new products are winning acclaim and recognition., The Truck plant is standing somewhat in the position Pontiac Motor did several years ago: a persistent advance is in the 1 cards. r" i Thus to summarize: the men across the Nation believe we’ll have a slightly better- year in 1968 than we Jhad in 1967, recognizing a$ the same time that obstacles do exist. And the West Huron Street soothsayer in The Press building feels that both Pontiac Motor and GMC Truck and Coach will out-do the bulk of their opposition in moving forward. Voice of the People: . ' * . _____sL.___—L-------—■ ; , •• ' i Citizens Should Support Law Enforcement Effort In view of out* rising crime problem?; why do some civic groups feel it necessary to harass our police for performing their duties? After the County prosecutor ruled the last “incident” justifiable homicide, the matter should havf been dropped..," "’f ■ -. • ,r. ■ ’ ; , ★ ★ • tV-. 1 A* ">I'- ‘ . . fVgpK Any law-abiding citizen stops at a polite order to halt. He has nothing to fear.1 If the lawbreakers want to ignore these commrads, let them take the consequences. f ★ * ★ ★ I’m afraid to think what would happen to Pontiac if law and order were not enforced. Let’s back the police department 100 per cent and commend, not criticize, the men who do their jobs. ■« * f CLIFF MASON Congress, LBJ Vie for Applause Budget-Cut Bows Crowd Stage Inescapable Phrase One of the inescapable phrases that we hear daily is that immutable: “This Changing Wdrld.” ' ★ ★ ★ v It changes in so many ways no one can predict or forecast. , Copper is » losing steadily to aluminum. Plasties are un#c-'> countably crowding out steel in 'unexpected places. In Europe, natural gas has leaped forward 4 as an available source of energy and oih feels it definitely., Conversely, coal, overseas is backing down before oil. Foreign automobiles are slowly but persistently advancing in the U.S. -market. In 1966, the total was 658,-000. Last year’s figures will touch 750,000. What’s next? Who really knows? By ROBERT GRAY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON — Both Congress and the Johnson administration now seek credit for budget cuts each shied away, from for many months. Post-session statements by several senators and representatives list a resolution mandating spending decreases among the top congressional achievements of the year. But the administration views the resolution as the result of “an Executive branch pro-., posal.’” For months prior to enactment of the resolution in the closing hours of the congressional session, President Johnson and Congress each argued the other had, the responsibility for reducing spending. ★ ★ ★> Each expressed1 satisfaction with the end result, however. One likely reason is the way in which the final product allows generalized claims of economy while • avoiding any impact on such politically sensitive areas 3? veterans’ benefits, farm supports, medicare and public works projects. CONGRESSIONAL SAVINGS The; complexities of the federal - budget allow members of Congress to claim savings ranging to $10 billion in the ' current fiscal year, although actual spending is expected to be higher than it was in the 1966-67 fiscal year. The economy* claims are related to the appropriations President Johnson asked for in his budgej proposals last January, rather than to actual expenditures./'^ . mandate for cuts to previous tags directive will produce a reduction of $4 billion in spending this, ygar, that figure is again related to the Johnson budget estimates, not to any actual levels of federal spending. And there’s some question as to whether the number of dollars paid out this year will even be under the estimates, much less last year’s spending.’ „ - But what is being hailed as a major economy^ move will enabld members of Confess to point with pride ana the administration to/assert it has met the congressional condition for budget cuts before any tax-increase legislation will be considered. Bob Considine Says: Continuing the Saga ofa Misplaced Year NEW YORK - Saga of a misplaced year '(continued): September? There must haVe been a September. It just d i dn ’ t go away. Of course, it didn’t. ^ Remember the resolution-never to gripe again, during a, trip through the - November. Would you believe Honolulu; Guam, Saigon, Phu Bai, the DMZ, Da Nang Chu Lai, Hong Kong, Macao, Bangkok, Takh-Li, Udorn, Utopao, Tel Aviv, Golan Heights (Syria), Jerusalem, west bank of the Jordan, Siriai Peninsula, Suez, Rome, -London .? You wotrid if you — knew Billie Joe. ‘Hhine Improvements Cause Tax Increases’ There’s a good reason for not keeping your property up. Every time you add on or paint your, house, up come the taxes on it. Instead of making people keep their houses up, you really mean let the State take your house. That’s what it would come to. We have too much of trying: to force people io do things. .v CHARLES T. NIXON 56 W. RUTGERS ‘Americans Must Strive to Remain Free’ With* the turn of events it is time for us to remember we are' Americans. Why should we be made into a mold concerning our celebrations when our holidays are days for remembrance, of the history of America? Each is an event to make us prohd we are Americans. To grow hi patriotism a people must feed on the instances in their lives that have such meaning. ? . .■ . i ★ ★ ★ . 'We should be mindful, of our heritage and the trust it imposes and pass on these 'meanings to our children In such a manner that they will feel our love for our country, our land and respect for our flag. By rubber-stamping our holidayf you are Contributing to a Socialistic and Communistic order where you will not have a free choice. Keep free to pray. Keep free to sing the beautiful songs of Christmas. Keep free to vote widely. „ ^ ' AMERICANISM CHAIRMAN JjF W.W. I VETERANS /Enjoyed: School Vocal Music Program* I heard “Christmas, ’67“ presented by the vocal music department of Pontiac Central High School. This organization has been widely acclaimed. Girls Glee Clubs, Male Chorus, Hgrmonettes, Central Singers, Senior Boys Ensemble, Girls Choir, Madrigals and Central A Capella Choir presented perfect harmony and rhythm with serious or gay moods. ' .;v • ★ ★ ★ The audience heard soloing in high soprano and deep bass tones that Would have done the opera stage proud, It was a mixed group—boys and girls, colored and white—In a music department taught by colored and white directors. Neither claims preference over the other. ★ ★ ★ We have been so busy celebrating Christ’s birthday, let us study a quotation: “Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of @od as a little child, he* shall not enter therein J’ * MRS. WILLIAM GRAVES 225 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. Question and Answer And'in Conclusion Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic- reporter; \ . I understand two of the hardest 200 golf courses in the U.S. are within a few miles of where you sit: Oakland Hills and Warwick Hills. . . . . .......Frank Sinatra’s next movie will be “Lady in Cement” and along with him will be Dan Blocker, Bonanza star.......... Overheard “Did you know about the Texas mil lionaire who owned four Cadillacs one for each direction?” . . . . . . . . Washington (perhaps accidental ly) revealed that the U.S. has now dropped more bombs on North and South, Vietnam than we dumped on Europe during all of World War II. Personal nomination for one of the attractive young ladies in the / area: Jaini Roman. ..... ..... SanFran-, cisco’s phone book pops up with a new last name: Z e 11 a • * ' v * JAINI Zzyzzwump. Often men with a small* club design a name like this to win the last position so the-y can find the number easily or help friends do so........ ... The latest rumor suggests a hog strike this winter wijh-farmers holding back on pork just the way they did on milk hot so long ago. Overheard: “How’d you like to look forward to the ‘wedding of the year’ with each of Bobby Kennedy's flock?”............A recentJsompil- ation by Broadcasters Association itself showed that nearly 70% of the viewers agree there are altogether too many interruptions for Commercials. . Overheard: “If milk goes up again, it will be cheaper to keep a cow in the parlor.” .... ......The sixth round of New York State’s lottery just paid out $1a>30,- 000 to winners. ......Dept. of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—Bobhy Fischer, greatest chess pla$»r*in the U.S. and probably in the world; the J’s—Bobby Fischer, biggest international cry baby in all chess historyp -Harold A. Fitzgerald % And, the W a s unrelated years. * " * ★ Thus, in the wonderland of federal finance, the claims of a cutback of nearly $10 billion cOme in the wake of a session of which total appropriations apprgyed were "$10 billion more than the previous ali-time high of 147 billion set in 1942. ACTUAL OUTLAY In any given fiscal /year, "much of the actual dollar outlay is based on appropriations of previous years. W^ile the congressional budget-cutters say their sav- Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs, Forest L. Ketzler of Cfarkston; 54th wedding anniversary. Henry T. Mogg of 443 Marion; 86th birthday. Mrs. Clara Coyle of 1225 Silver Bell; 92nd birthday. Mrs. Rodney s. Choate of Fowlerville; 88th birthday. ■ Mr. and Mrs. John L. brumm of Rochester: 51st* wedding anniversary. Mrs. Addle Green of 835 Woodward; ; 82nd birthday. Phu My. refugee hospital in Saigon? ‘ CONSIDINE The utter, utter destitute of a war that neither side any longer wants, bulged the seams of the rotten building. The death rate was, and is, 25 per cent a month. The babies are from the gutters and the trash heaps of the war. ★ * ★ Then later in the month, in Trenton, of all places, a speaker’s nightmare. A® lady fell over in a dead faint at the table nearest the lectern while listening to my recitation of some of the facts of life and death in connection with cancer: October was a shout. There was a bunch of us flying from Nairobi , to Athens on TWA’s first trip out that way. All efforts to find oqt the winner of the American League peitnani, the day be^ fore, had met with failure. ' Then, just before dawn as we flew over the heart of Africa the aircraft comander, Capt. Wolfgang Strangelove, came on the pipe loud and clear. U ■> “Good morning, folks,”-he. said. "Thought some of you' might be interested in knowing that the American league pennant was won by the Boston Red Sox.” It was the loudest cheer I heard all year, and must have frightened all the fellow savages on the earth below. Baler in the month: Dick Nixon’S office. The candidate was relaxed. His well-shod feet were crossed - on bis coffee table. The greats of his time smiled fondly from silver -framed autographed photographs on a .table behind his desk.” "If I decide to enter the primaries," Nixon said, be-' ginning several sentences. ■** Dear Pat was in an outer office, going over a supporters’ list that soon will be 8-years-old. , ★ ■ Sr .*V " December. I’ll miss Cardinal Spellman, his death marks the end of an era. His successor in all probability" will be a completely different .personality. Perhaps as much of a change as there was when John XXIII .succeeded Pius XII. But life goes on. My wife gave our granddaughter Kelly (who is going on 3) a tiny dressing rtable and sample cosmetics for Christmas. The child sat down immediately and began making up— the beginning of an 88-year chore, actuary figures show. •Why is custody.of children so often given to the mother when so many times the father has been the best parent? CURIOUS REPLY As custody cases are now handled, presumption of fitness favors the ^mother and.to prove unfitness strong evidence is required. Such evidence is often hard to discover and hardier to prove. However, Mr. Prout of Friend of the Court tells a hew concept is emerging for'handling such cases, which deals with the “best interests of the minor child.” This concept will give courts, wider latitude audit won’t be necessary to prove the mother unfit before a father can be given custody, as is now pie case. . Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Tactics ... Arizona Republic % Even if he tried, It is doubt-' ful whether French President Charles de Gaulle could more effectively Sjplinter western units than he is doing with his present meddlesome tactics. De Gaulle is not satisfied with blocking Common Market membership for Britain, whose very economy may depend on whett\pr it is admitted. * ★ * He is j not satisfied wftii heightening unrest in Canada, by continuing to call for Quebec’s independence and sovereignty........ He is not satisfied with disrupting NATO by ordering American bases off French soil and by threatening to withdraw French forces from the alliance entirely. # , ir ★ Now at a crucial time In world monetary affairs, hud as a result af Britain’s recent devaluation of the pound, df Gaulle has launched an Irresponsible attack on the American dollar, which is the. very backbone of most of the currency of the free world. It is Ironic that de Gaulle, who obviously suffers from one of the shortest memories in history should .attack the country which twice in this century ' has intervened to save his French nation from extinction. ★ * ★ During World War I, 2 million GIs fought to save France. Some 36,000 were killed, another 224,000 were wounded. We spent 27 billion dollars outright waging that war, and in addition loaned France another 12 billion. And France still ewes almost 7 billion dollars in interest and .principal on that debt. ♦ 4 ★ In World War 11, 184,000 Americans gave their lives helping to liberaie France, an- other 500,000 were wounded. That war cost America $200 billion directly, plus some $50 billion in Lend-Lease and indirect aid. Furthermore, to help postwar France get back on its economic and political feet, America has given it 17 billion dollars, which is more foreign aid than it has given any other European nation which explains why de Gaulle, no# heading a solvent rather than a bankrupt nation, feels he can afford to lecture the rest of the world. TN* AltoclaM Pres* I* entitled exclusively-to the use for ropubtl-caflon of‘oil local nows printed In this newspaper es welt a* all Al* nows dlapatbxn. The Pontlec Press It delivered by cerrter Mr Id cents • week, where tnellod In Oeklend.' Genesee, Llv-Ingstan, Macomb. Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties It It 111.00 o yean elsewhere In Michigan end all Other places In Its* United Stafee tu.oo a .yaw. All man subscriptions daioiMt In advenes. Postage her lasn paid of the 2nd data rati i of Al lac# Michigan. Self Assured Die Presse (Austria) 'Not (or a long time haye we seen the President of the United States so self-assured and, convinced of hie policy. -The forty-five minute show in which Johnson convincingly explained his policies and sought to disarm his critics in a dignified manner'was almost like the start of an election campaign. It caused many observers to feel that Johnson’s popularity rate „will surge the moment he personally challenges the critic# and faces the nation. v « , TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDA V, JANUARY i, 1968 Right. Habitat for Homework i , By D|CK .WEST „ .WASHINGTON (UPD — A fellow named Jack P. Solovy, who designs college dormitories, says study hrfbits are influenced by a student’s environment: A fat lot he knows! { ■ Actually, as anyone who has schoolchildren at'home can attes}, the reverse Is true. A student’s environment is influenced by 'his . study habits. . Indeed, in some cdses a student’s, environment is created by his study habits. T am a part of my children’s environment and for IS years I have been fighting losing battles with their study habits. --' ' .in ' 5? ★ ★ ★ ■ * , So when Solovy, president of Corqp, Inc., recommends “adapting basic dormitory design prihciples to the home,” I demur.' BASIC PRINCIPLES? Attention to such things as desk space, shelves and closets is all very well in theory. But in practice, more might be achieved by adapting basic home* design principles to the dormitory., WEST Based on my obser its, a well-designed like this: ration of study hab-■mitory should look The main piece of furniture would-be a living room coffee table. No matter how many desks, shelves and closets are available, it is the natural habit of students to dump their books, papers, pencils and other paraphernalia op the living room coffee table. 1 ‘ • '■:< '• E !.. wt : W- * (T. * y •Proper lighting, which solovy stressed, is not as basic to Study habits as sound. 3-DIRECTION SOUND llie dormitory should have three-difec-tional sound — a television blaring from one direction, a radio blaring from another direction ancTa record player blaring from a third direction. In the center ’ should be a telephone, rigged to ring at least every five.minutes and situated so as to create: y. scramble to answer ft. The dormitory should have a carpet upon which to place milk gldhses, saucers of foodstuffs and soft drink bottles. It should have pillows on the floor so the students sprawled thereon can elevate their feet. . ★ * * Above all, it should have an older fellow the students can badger with home work questions while he is trying to read the evening paper. Sr * * Only when these minimum requirements are met can study habits reach their full >potential4 TAKE UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY Closed Today, Now Year's D*y SALE! Reg. 139.88 2-pc. Early American . f ■ sofa bed and platform rocker set A quaint rocker chair, plus sofa bed that converts with fingertip ease to Sleep two comfortably at night. Both covered in a rich colonial print. 6.25 per month SALE! Rag. 119.88 5-pc. maple dinette set “ 6.S0 .per month 42-inch round hardrock maple table with extra leaf plus four matching mate's chairs.. Hurry! CLEARANCE LAMPS, PICTURES, TABLES OFF Hurry Ip for savings . . . tremendous choice of d6-■ corotor itylesl CLEARANCE ROCKERS AND RECLINERS 20% OFF Qomfortable stylos tb fit, ail decor*. 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The payment for the fourth quarter distribution normal]/ would not be made until mid-February. The advance still must have the approval of the state administrative board. Stress, Disease May Cause BloodClot i the Swedes better high dtuatjorn {he UCLA enginering tage transmission equipment faculty has been making a ? t *•'*’ * ?tudy of engineerihjg education. ‘Outside of computers, we _ *_ * beginning tofall behind in,. A stone age burial group of LOS ANGELES UR — The day of U.S. technological leadership in the world may be fading, an engineering professor says. “Wtl are now making off with lots of Nobel Prizes,” ♦ said Prof. Allen B. Rosehstein of the University of California at Los Angeles. “But the French are designing better trains, the Japanese better cargo vessels tion that has brought together (Vlogged vein), Dr. Wells points an international group of scien- 0lV Yet virtually all these pdr-tists here in November. sonfe have a greatly accelerated One of them, Dr. Roe Wellsjsedimentation rate of zed of the Harvard Medical School corpuscles says the critical factor that con- Y i \ * . ★ verts normal blood into throm- “Whatever permits the static bus is believed to be an excess] blood tb Coagulate in the body of coagulability in immobilized!appears \as a function of dipatents with a venous thrombus sease or stress,” fie said. - By Science Service | A thrombus is not simple a WASHINGTON -r- Healthy blood clot,-but the blood clot is people who sit,at desks all day, a part of the accumulation of thus slowing up the bipod flow,)matenal that can block a vein rarely suffer from thrombosis. But slow moving bipod brought “* J' ■ H about by elderly persons break-1 Just whaV is it that turns doting a hip or a young woman ting — anormal repair mecha-delivering a child creates prime nism that iS healthy in a cut candidates for " forming blood finger — into a fatal mass inclots that can endanger life. side a blood .vessel is the ques- are l—a„—0 B most technological areas, and in SO years — unless we change our ways — the United States may cease to be competitive,” he said. In an attempt to remedy the three people who lived about 40,000 years ago was found in the Samarkland region of Russia. Archaelogists also found a number of dwellings and stone implements. 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I In the first phase, artificial earthquakes will be created in the ocean off Siberia and hi the northwest Pacific {by Russia) and on Hokkaido and in the Japan Sea (by Japan). Twenty land stations .will monitor the shocks. ,** ★, it h Because tif anticipated difficulties in communicating — not many Japanese scientists speak Russian, nor Russian scientfets Japanese — and because it will be the first time that teams from the '•two countries have worked together, thd first year’s work is of modest scale compared to that which will follow. y The project was proposed by Russian scientists at the time of the Pacific Science Congress, held in Tokyo in August 1968. : ■*: ★ ★ Sr • Members of the Soviet Academy of Science’s Oceanographic Institute will work with Japanese experts from the Tokyo University F Seismological Research Laboratory, and from Hokkaido University and other institutions. 1C ‘ MEXICO CITY rn - To commemorate the 1968 summer Olympic games in Me^JcOf City, Mexico, plans to* mint 3u million silver coins of 25 pesd£-$2 each. • ; ■' ■ *■*, * ' ''' ; % 1 ’ 7 Rabbits Are Ravenous An ointment made of water repellent silicones may cut the number of .Marine Casualties in Vietnam, where water immersion foot has been one of the biggest medical problems. . , MOSCOW • (AP) — Several chewed up thousand “fearless rabbits ashore by the tide, then moved trooped through the streets Of .back to the tundra in the same towns on the ^Kamchatka penis- disciplined herd, sula in far eastern Russia recently, openly d e f y i h g .town dogs, a Soviet paper said. *1 V ★ Reaching the seacoast at Okhotsk, the rabbits ravenous- The incident was disclosed by 'the Soviet newspaper Korn-somolskaya Pravda, which button-holed some specialists who said the “demonstration” was caUsed by \acute hunger.. White SALE STARTS TOMORROW 930 AM. Corner SogindW and-Huron Downtown Pontiac, FE 4-2511 Fourth Floor, Ext. 55 Save on Springmaid’s Whiter-than-White Combed Percale Sheets and Pillowcases during our January Stock-up White Sale. Sale *2.49 72 x 108, or Spring-On™ Twin Fitted, Reg. 3.00 RTTED SHEETS WITH FAMOUS SPRING-ON1* ELASTIC CORNERS: Reg. Sale Cot, 30x72...____________ 3.30 $2.49 YoutH, 33 x 66............ 3*30 $2.49 Day, 33 x 75 ..............3.30 $2.49 Single, 36 x 75._............3.30 $2.49 Twin, 39 x'76..........;..3.00 $2.49 Foam twin, 39 x 76.:.......3.00 $2.49 Extra long twin, 39x80 .....3.40 $2.79 Double,54x76...............3.40 $2.79 Foam double, 54 x 76.....,13.40 $2.79 Extra long double, 54 x 80.4.00 $3.49 Long queen, 60x80.,........5.00 $4.29 King, 72 x 84............ 6.30 $5.49 Hollywood, 78 x 76....... ..6.99 $6.29 Extralg.Bpllyw'd,78x80..-.8.00 $7.49 i SPRINGMAID MUSLINS 72 x 108 qr Filled, Reg. 2.50.................. 81 x 108 or Fitted, Reg. 3.00,...... ^ ■ Reg. Side FLAT SHEETS: Double, 81 x 108.......3.40 $2.79 Extra long Jwin, 72 x 120.... 3.80 $3.19 Extralg. double,,81 x 120 ..4.20 $3.69 Extra wide dbl., 90 x 108 ..4.00 $3.59 Queen, 90 x 108 ....... 5.00 $4.19 King,,108x 128.........8.00 $6.99 PILLOWCASES: 42 x 38 ........... 1.70 $1.39 42x48...............2.18* $1.89 .$1.1 •$l.i 42 X 36 Oases, Reg. 1.20 pr. 89 99 98c Springmcdd'i.fasliion floral* and stripe patterns In combed percale* * V ■ • f . Morning Garden: Greet the morning from a flowerbed of spring blossoms—pn the hem of your top sheet, edged in pastel lace, and scattered across the Spring-On™ fitted bottom sheet Pink, blue or yellow flowers on white. Floral Lace: Delicate Schiffli embroidered lace on enchanting nosegaY print hems In a choice of blue, yellow and'pink. Matching pillow oases. Echotone Stripes: Honey Gold; ' Pink, Blue, Yellow, Fern Green, Lilac. Matching pillow cases. '• Solid color pastels available In wide range of sixes. Sale *2;99 72 x 108, or Spring-On™ Twin Fitted: REGULAR SIZES i FASHION PRINTS i> Rog. Sale j| 4^ x 38 Pillow Case 2.70 $2.31 _ DwMeFlSidII $9.99 £ XING SIZESi 42 x 48 Pillow Casa ............~ 3.00 $2.M i 90 X130 ---■■■■_____8.00 $1.41 1 108x120......fiHiniinr irrrt——*-» 10° $*.*• Long Queen Fitted 60 x 80 .,...TO.™.... 8,00 $1.49 Extra Long Hollywood Filled 78 x 80. 11.00 $9.99 i ____________________________________________JL________________ SOLID COLOR* Baa. Bod* 2.50 I1.N 4.50 «« 4.50 33.41 “3.00 $2.(1 7.00 $5.99 11.00 $94$ 7.00 $9.99 11.00 $949 Blue Heaven’ Mattress Topper' New Blue Heaven Mattress Topper. Makes any mattress feel like new, eliminates surface irregularities, won't slip or slide. Made of genuine B.F.Goodrich foam on foam. Twln-Siko reg. $9.99 Full-Sin reg. $11.99 ' Queen-Size rug. $16.99 i i ' King-Size reg. $19.99 SAVE AT THESE WHITE SALE PRICES! *799 *999 MOW *1499 NOW *1799 NOW 8 - NOW blue heaven* Blue HeavenPillows now just ’4.99 vX;: •X<\ 1 Reg. $6.99 Royal Queen 183/4 *263/4 X.53/4^ NOW Reg. 6.99 It’s the pillow that adjusts to the way you sleep. Hare's tha cool, breathing pillow that adjusts to the way you sleep because It has more than 3000 tiny alr# venta In Its foam latex core. Beautiful zippered ticking. Order noW at white sale Reg; $9.99 Imperial Deluxe ?V/2x29V2*7 , NOW $799 Reg. $8.99 Royal Ki.ng ^Ol/2 X 28/2 X 6VH ' ' NOW $099 I vXj! 1 v Ci * ■ppw - "TIIE PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, JANUAKYI, 1968 * J . jk k* ^ i , , 5 1- ; t Hazards to Health [ | Last Unman lfted Moon oe Near | Are Mushrooming ■’f „ ■ ■■•! Qverdmbiiious Aims, CAPE KENNEDY, Flq. liP -America's 29th and last unmanned riioon probe# Surveyor 7, is to be launched next Sunday toward a soft -, landing in the rjugged highlands near the Cra7 ter Tycho. / , After that, the next U.S. moon explorer will be man himself, perhaps in 1969. ★ * * The Surveyor 7 launching will climax an extensive American lunar survey program that started Aug. 17, 1958, with the first of the ill-starred Thor-Able j rockets. The rocket exploded 77 secqnds after liftoff, triggering a string of 12 straight moon shot failures in the Pioneer, Atlas-Able and Ranger series. Ranger 7 broke the jinx in Ju|y 1964 when it took the first Jclose-up photos of the moon before crash-landing as intended. GOOD RECORD Since then, the American lunar launch record has been remarkable, with 13 shots successful in- the Ranger, Lunar Orbit* er, Surveyor and Kunar Explorer series. Russia has launched 17 moon rockets, eight of them successful. The Soviets scored many lunar* firsts—first to hit the moon, first to photograph the backside, first to make a semisoft landing and the first to orbit the moon. But the Russian spacecraft have provided only a smalMrac-tion of the data obtained by the more sophisticated U.S. vehicles, according to Amerifan experts. I - .„ ! The. most significant U.S. data came from the Kunar Orbiter and Surbeyor projects. ioo per. success The Lunar Orbjjters scored five successes in five attempts and photographed the entire front side of the moon, including 10 potential astronaut ' landing sites, and 90 per cent'of the hidden, backside. The performances earned nearly $7 million in bonus money for the spacecraft prime contractor, the Boeing Co. |r For of the six Surveyor craft successfully soft-landed and relayed thousands of pictures, dug up soil samples and analyzed the chemical composition of’the moon’s topsoil. They verified that the four primary astronaut landing sites are safe for manned expeditions. Two of the sties are in the Sea of Tranquility and the Central Bay. * ♦ ★ ★ With the four sites verified, the Surveyor pro-am had fulfilled it commitmennt to support the Apollo man-to-the-moon project. So the National Aeronautic and Space Administration decided to use the final Surveyor, No. 7, to study an area of high scientific interest. The highlands of T^cho were selected because they appear to be. geologically differenet from the relatively - smooth Apollo landing regions!* Ths soil in the already - explored areas is very much like that found over large sections of the earth. MOUNTAIN LANDSCAPE 'Lunar orbiter photos show the By Science Service MILWAUKEE - New chemi cals and new processes, particularly in plastics manufacturing jare creating health hazards faster than they can be overcome And the dangers are creeping into the home as well. * , jW ★ ★t In industry, there ii, a backlog of lung disease ° compensation cases that will cost millions of dollars, tl)e chairman: of the Wisconsin Industrial Cpm-j mission reported here. ----!___________!_1 i » . ★ * A total of 1.28 million workers! Joseph C. Fagan told a sym-were involved in 2,600 strikesjPosium on lung disease that the first six months of 1967 in whUe many em,pl°yerus h,fkveube' - ■ come aware of the health haz- the U.S. The strikes cost the,*artjs (0 WOrkers from new plas- nation’s economy 14.5 .million tic products, employes in most man-days of lost working time, small plants still lack protec-the most in 15 years. tien. 1 53-mile-wide Tycho crater with Its 15,000-foot-high rim rising from a moiintain landscape heavily pocked with smaller craters. A large system of rays, like grooves or ridgqs, extends thousand of milds/ outward from the crater. ★l. ' ■ ★ ★ ■ * Robert E. Sears, Surveyor program manager for Hughes Aircraft Cp., the prime contrac-| tor, said Surveyor 7 will carry a greater scientific payload, than any of its predecessors. * Russia's Economy ■ tf ■ ■' 5 ,r‘‘" " f, f MOSCOW m - The Soviet economy grew at a healthy pace in 1967 despite some over-ambitious goals and the strain imposed ,bv defense expenditures and the Vietnam war. Life for the average Russian thus gets gradually better, but still lags far behind the stand* afls in other industrialized countries. The secretive nature of the Soviet system makes evaluation of economic performance difficult because official figures are sometimes, skillfully juggled and often conceal failures. eimeiff ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY “ REDUCED! All our famous NATION-WIDE* quality, famous long-wearing muslins. 133 count.* twin 72" x 108" flat or Elasta-fit'Sanforized* bottom ........ WHITE 1.51 full 81"xl08"flator Elasta-fit Sanforized bottom ..;... .. 1.71 pillowcases 42"x38" ................ 2 for 83c PENCALE* quality, fine combed cotton percale,'186 count* twin 72"xl 08" flat or Elasta-fit Sanforized1" bottom WHITE full 81"xl 08" flat or Elasta-fit Sanforized bottom . pillowcases 42"x38" 1.81 2.05 2 for 1.05 PENCALE FASHION COLORS: Pastels • pale pink, It. lilac, pastel yellow, seafoam. Deeptones - avocado, ‘honey gold, copen blue. twin 72"x108" flat er Elasta-fit Sanforized bottom ... full 8 l"x 108" flat or Elasta-fit Sanforized bottom pillowcases 42"x38" 2.58 2.T8 2 for 1.28 PENCALE DEEPTONE STRIPES: # Avocado, honey gold, copen blue. Combine them with deeptohe solids. tf twin 7£"x 108" flat or • Elasta-fit Sanforized* bottom 2.99 full 81 "x 108" flat or Elasta-fit Sanforized bottom..... 3.99 pillowcases 42"x38".................. ............. 2 for 2.34 ' #Not available at Lincoln Park Store JAN UARY WHITE in all SPECIAL! Top quality carpet remnants to use qs scatter rugs! 27"x45" to 27"x54" w for ft... are quality that ai carpeting would tell for far, far more! Axminttert, velvets, wiltons, tufted*! Wool, nylon, .Acrylan ® acrylic pile in the group. High Style color*! Finished to use a* ■cotter rugs. Be early tor the first choice! Save on rug runners now! .Bi9 buys On pillows . . . pick your type! 3.99 27"x72' Brighten that hall or stairs! 100% continuous filament nylon pile. Non-skid waffle back, all sides serged. Decorator colors* ! i ' / i ? ■ ' / ;•' ■ , r Jumbo kapok filled pillows. Big 22"x28" and plump 26 ez. Cotton ticking in blue and white floral border stripe. Dacron® polyester fiberfill pillows. Soft, fluffy. Full 20-oz. Non-allergenic, mildewproof. Stripe or floral cotton ticking. 20"*2A" Dacron® ‘93* polyester fiberfill pillows with built-in even support. More durable. 21 oz. Floral Stripe cotton ticking. 20"x26". 2 for $5 for *7 for-- $12 STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M..TIL 9 P.M., MON. THRU SAT... "CHARGE IT NOW", AND SAVEl’ ‘ So much of the iceberg Is under water,” said one veteran Western diplomat. “There’s no way of knowing all the details.” STEADY RISE " Defense spending, however, has been rising steadily in the past few years, totaling $15.9 billion in 1967, according to official figures. Non-Communist analysts believe this figure accounts for only about half-the actual defense budget as measured in Western terms. A- *★ # Provisional figures on 1967 growth in many sectors of the economy were releasd in Octo-| ber at the Supreme Soviet {Parliament session by Nikolai K. Baibakov, chairman of the !State Planning* Commission. | Although. Baibakov did not jsav so, Western observers believe the Soviet commitment to aiding the North Vietnamese "has made domestic economic .progress more difficult than usual. | U.S. officials estimate Soviet military apd other aid to\ the Vietnamese Communist drains off ft billion a year frqpi precious Soviet resources. Official figures are not available but aid to North Vietnam has been described publicly here as “tremendous.” GREAT BOOM . Soviet industry boomed In 1967, increasing its total output 10.4 per cent over 1966— the- greatest percentage increase in the curent decade, according to Baibakov's provisional figures. This includes aid to Vietnam. * Agriculture, another principal indicatpr in the economy, fell short of the planned four per cent growth target, just holding its own with last year’s performance. ★, ★ ★ Grain production in 1967 has been estimated by Western experts at 150 million metric tons, down 9 per cent from last year’s harvest, which was boosted with a bumper crop. But livestock and cash crops such as cotton reportedly helped make up for this drop and kept total agricultural production at the approximate 1966* level. NATIONAL INCOME Other important indicators included national income, up 6.6 per cent, and average urban pay, up 3.5 per cent to . $113.83 a month. This was 1.7 per cent slower than planned and just under the 3,6 increase in 1966. The failure perhaps most keenly felt by the - average Russian was in housing construction. The plan to build 1 billion square feet was missed by 8.9 per cent as construction crews managed to put up only 904.1 million square feet. * ★ * Gains in industrial production can be credited partly ’ to the -” reforms gradually being introduced into the tightly cdhtrolled economy. fteforms have given factory managers some discretion in how much of which items to produce and have made the managers responsible for selling it. This replaces the old system of high-speed work to meet a’ quota, which has ofen meant poor quality production, especially in consumer goods. Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, an economist himself, has backed the reforms as a necessary step to modernize the Soviet economy. Kosygin said when the transfer was started in January , 1966, that one-third of the plants would be put on the/new sys* tern within a year. It has taken twice that long. A ★- * The over-all target h^s not been revised, however,' so the plan still calls for all of industry and construction to be running on the new system by the end of 1968. Transportation, ■ / communications and stafe farms will be-switched oyer by 1970 ~ according to the original plan. Two names you can trust vi--r i# THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1908 OAK PARK, 111. (AP) — The|make down payment* on Roberta and Lee Brooke, chairman of a subcommittee on housing, claimed that an elaborate check on listings in Decem- flrst* round of a campedgn'heroes,” he said. Roberts said the committees "T*1 P^P^i effort now is aimed at matching Chicago suburbs has b^interested Negroes ^th white^ hrt .. . . waged and mat. famine* who will hein ®*r *howed that many home ; But the,SiBO members of the ^ homesTuid amuJ 9Wllitumlia i - - * - * nvi : »— I ^ -j- was —a.... _ was broken there only last sum-ordinances for the two suburbs, elemental unit. The commis-]owners of 52 apartments adver-mer when a member of ..the " Eberts assailed the w use sion, in turn, was to submit the Used for rent in November, and Human Rights Committee sold “so-called nondlscrimtoatoryjlistings to Brooke’s subcommit- only three said they would rent his borne to the Negro family, listings,” saying tee. ,, ;to Negroes. In launching the antidiscrimi-practice ‘presupposes that * * ★ | “This shows how humiliating nation campaign last winter the 8 parson has a right to discrimi- The real estate board stopped it is for Negro families seeking ■ ' HH” [submitting, the listings tempo-apartments when there are so committee invited Negroes to an open house tour of Oak Park and River Forest. The purpose, Said Stewart D. Roberts, past president of the committee, was merely to show Negroes what was available. SOME INTERESTED About 50 Negro families visited houses and apartments in the tree-lined suburbs, and several said they were interested. That was 10 months ago, and many refusals,’'' Broojce said; “A lot of NegrCes give up/' ’ ' Roberts, who describes himself as a conservative on civil rights, said his committee “would like to bring one new Negro family into the area each month.” : ' SS “This sounds like a modest goal, but it would double the present Negro population,’’ he said. * * ★ “We’re persuaded that if we can bring in a reasonable number of financially qualified Negroes, we will make it much more difficult for the people who want to break the blocks,” said Roberts, referring to panic selling that sometimes develops when a Negro moves into a block. Dountoun Pontine Store Oilfy SPKCIAL ispir an, wuNuotr sate save IweacceptI FOOD COUPONS Whole Baby -11* 12 Pound Avarage PORK LOINS m Sliced Free lb. the committee has only the one Negro family in River Forest to show for its Efforts. No Negroes have moved Into Oak Park. ■" * ★ ★ ★ Roberts blamed real estate dealers who refuse to sell to Negroes for the campaign failing. - ■ “We made numerous contacts with interested Negro families who had the money to band to Puerto Rican Instrument ' Has ? Strings By STEVEN H.YOLEN SAN JUAN (UPI) - The “cuatro” is a small mandolin-like traditional Puerto Rican musical instrument which looks harmless in itself, but don’t try to find out hoW many strings it has, for in that direction doth dinger lie. Cuatro in Spanish means four, but if you think a cuatro has four strings^ |ett» try again. I play gafteir and banjo myself, so I thought it would be a snap to take ap the cuatro. So, getting down to basics, I asked a Puerto Rican Mend how many strings a cuatro ★ ★ ★ Six, was his authoritative reply. Six? I asked — if cuatro means four to Spanish, why six strings? ■ \ ■ TUNING? Because they are tuned to fourths (cuatros to Spanish), he said. I wasn’t satisfied with that an-iwer, so I asked another Puerto Rican friend. He said a cuatro had eight strings, toned i four pairs, in fourths. A third friend who overheard he conversation disagreed. J ★ it ^ r• ■ “Wrong," he said. “A Puerto Rican cuatro has 10 strings, uned in pairs. I know, because my grandfather plays >ne and he can never get ail hose'.strings in tune.” 12 STRINGS? Then my maid, whose hus->and plays to a cuatro band a “cautrista”), said his cua-ro had 12 strings and the group's lead cuatro player’s cuatro has cuatro cuerdas ... hat is, four strings. By this |iine, my next door lelghbor, a Puerto Rican folk-orist, heard the commotion, or tile argument was beaming heated, and produced a cu-itro of his own which hns even s t r i a g s, six of which rare timed in pairs, la fourths. He joined the melee. *'Y * At * finally got smart and de-/ to eiid the argument, lich was really getting out of 1 called the Puerto Rico In-tute of Culture; which is sup-sed to know all about these Die Institute's music expert | Id the original Puerto Rican stros, as the island’s “jiba-i,” or mountain men, used to ike them, had four strings, t that they ahoud not be con-ted with a larger four-Inged Venezuelan instrument called a cuatro. iariraday*, he said, cuajros m being made with more tag*usually 10, although icwl any number can be uaad and they are often tuned to rths, although not neces- LIMITED TIME! Fashion Manor I PERCALE PRINTS - MINI ROSE Twin 72"xl08“ flat or Elasta-fit Sanforised Bottom Full 81 "xl 08" flat or Elasta-fit Sanforised Bottom. Pillowcases 42"x38" 3.99 2 for 2.34 PENN-PREST NEVER-IRON SHEETS Luxury blond of poly-otter and combed cotton. Stay smooth. Wear longer than cotton percatos. Fabulous buy at those pricesl Twin 72"xl08" flat or Elasta-fit Sanforized bottom wHrfl 255 Full 8T*x108" fiat or Elasta-fit bottom Pillowcases 42"x38" J 3.55 2 for 1.65 PENN-PREST FLORAL FANTASY doHcatobr stylod print in sky blue or pink orchid. Twin 72"x 108" flat or E|asta-fit bottom Fulj 81" x 108? fiat or Elasta-fit bottom. Piliowcasos 42"x38" ' .5.75 2 for 3.25 i %' j( . . j ■ „ , « ■ ^ . HURRY! STOCK UP AT SAVINGS NOW CHARGE ITl GOODS EVENT r SPECIALI blankat tin r p ■ All-Suaton thermal haathar w«av«. now Special buy I Big 80"xl Q8M cotfen flannel sheet blankets SPECIAL BUYI Fitted mattrots pad I with eldstie snug fit e^lge SPECIALI Penn-Prest nevep-iron jacquard spread, 3 designs) 4.66 nw 1.99 J 3.37 twin 4.37 full 5.99 twin or full Nicest thing that’s happened to thermal blankets, a heather weave that glvos, It the most fashiony look youVo soon. A beautiful soft blond' of nylon, rayon and acrylic In heatbary shodos of bluo/froon, gold, rod, blue, orange. Bonded Jn nylon. Great to use as coxy shoots how, or at a throw over thermal blanket for winter warmth. In summer1 they make a fine .light-weight cover. Craaiqy, natural color. Finiehtd with etitehod ends. A most generous size and very small price. Note those quality details: Sanforized cotton -cover with bleached cotton filling; double needle binding, double box stitching. A big value, hurryl Give your bedroom a fresh look for spring and be thrifty^ tool Expensive designs, elaborately woven in heavyweight cotton. Most-favored spring colors. Smartly finished with fringe. Penn-Prest'to let your dryer do the ironing. Fantastic, 1 o 13 Mill A WOODWARD Nsrthwood Shop Ctr. a TELEGRAPH A SO. LAKE Bloomfield Township 113 MILE A VAN DYKE Tech Plain Shop Ctr. ; e 7 MILE A MACK Grosso Pelnte Woods .* 15240 GRAND RIVER last of Greenfield e FORT A EMMONS Lincoln Pai^c Plate CHARGE ITl * iiiiii.---——■ , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY I, 1868 ♦ *S -Ml * Bad count. Many siieVto choose. 70-2042,42x38” c««f........... 4/1.74 2/2.68 .. 2,69 &&d8f4 ;»*5 ■ j.' * -,».V ■ "M $5*** JL isffl isi HRlHi M(l#>*vvf'»i< \ llllllll ‘.-•rv^'xv' (rink, pp lllll | "XA "'?V'i Martex towels-patterns, solids SALE 1.89 * 2.50 Bath Sovereign of cotton Terri-Down®. White, tan, lemon, gold; blue mist, persimmon, verdian -frost, pink and evening blue. 60-2-2645, bath ...£,........1.89 60-2-2640, hand _____:.....’..L29 60-2-2646, wash cloth________ .59 60-6-2641, fingertip ..£.......69 60-2-118, mat_____......_____2.99 60-2-500,5-pc. set includes 1 of each of the above ...*M„7.45 Cotton Terri-Down® Casbah: blue/oUve; pink/verdian; red/ blue and gold are the colors. 60-103-4294, bath___________„i.99 60-103-429, hand i.........!..1.29 60-103-4296, wash clpth ...... .59' 60-103-300, 3-pc. set .includes 1 of each of the above.......3.87 Daisy Down cotton Terri-Down®, avocado, blue, pink and gold. 60-104-9864’, bath .. 1.99 60-104-9860, hand........... 1.29 60-104-9866, wash cloth ...... .59 60-104-300, 3-pc. set includes 1 bath, hand, wash cloth 3.87 Invitation of cotton terri-Down®. Antique gold, bitter olive, blush pink, lemon, persimmon, frosty blue, verdian frost, evening blue, scarlet, white, blue turquoise, frosted pink colors.’ 60-5-3644, bath ........___*JZ60 60-5-3640, hand ..... ....,...^....1.80 60-5-3646, wash doth .......... .70 60-5-300, 3-pc. set includes 1 each bath; hand, washcloth..$5' SALE Chateau Acrilan® acrylic blanket by Field-crest. 8 colors. Twin, 12.99; full, 14,99; dual/queen, 23.99. SALE Fieldcrest’s Baronet automatic blanket comes in 6 colors to complement your bedroom ddcor. Twin, 1 control,. 14.99; full, 1 control, 16.99; full, 2 control, 22.99; queen*, 2 control, 28.99; king*, 2.control, 42.99. SALE AMC thermal acrylic blanket is available in 4 colors. Twin, 6.99) full, 8.99; queen/dual, 14.99.* SALE Majesty comforter by Barclay—4 bright colors. Twin, 14.99) full, 16.99; queen/dual, 29.99.* • &■ SALE - Insulaire U bf Morgan Jones in 9 ■colorful shades. Cotton. Twin, 6.99; full, 8.99; queen/dual, 12.99. I Jt ’ ’ , 4 • ‘ ' SALE , Washable Northwood wool blanket by Faribo®; 1 7 colors. Twin, 14.99) full, 16.99; queen/dual*, 24.99. SALE Contemporary FloWer Song spread by Austin Lee—machine washable cbtton. *3 colors; Twin, 12.99; * full, 14.99; queen*, 16.99 ; dud}*, 18.99; 36" Cafes*, 4.99. SALE Fieldcrest’s Imperial Rose Heirloom spread-machine washable cotton/rayon. No-iron finish. Four handsome colors. Twin size, 15.99; and full size, 17.99. / SALE | Wide Wale cotton corduroy spread by Karla Looms in 6 sparkling colors. Twin, 12.99; full, 14.99.;. bunk, 9.99; 63" pinch pleated draperies, ;9.99. SALE Never Press Harmonaire coverlet ensemble by Olde Kentucky® in 4 shades. Twin, 12.99; full, 14.99; queen**, 19.99; 36" tiered cafes, 6.99. *■ ' **o//ow 2 weeks delivery SALE .Choose Scotch Check spread in 4 jeweled tones. By Taylor Maker. Easy-to-care-for machine washable no-iron fabric. Twin, 11.99; full, 13.99. *o//ow' 4 days delivery SALE 5.99 24x36* rug - ^ Sturdy lush Tempo bath rugs by Regal—made of Zefran® acrylic and nylon. Choose from 15 colors. Available in 7 sizes and 2 sizes matching lid covers. 2.39 to 10.99. SALE 5.99 6x6' shower curtain Aquafaille shower curtain by Jaksqn made of Celanese® acetate taffeta. Handsomely styled in 8 colors. Hand washable. Tailored set with 6x6' shower curtain and 54" tailored draperies. 11.98. Globe Bed Pillows sale 4.99 to 14.99 Classique has a handsome printed border; cotton ticking with soft linen finish. All down or 50% down, 50% feather, 11.99 each, 20x26" is the standard finished size. Victoria pillow filled with all down. Regular finish size, 20x26", 8.99; 20x30" finish size queen, 12.99; 20x30" finish size king, 14.99*. ), ( Athena Jumbo Dacron® polyester filled pillow. , Cotton ticking in blue/white. ‘21x27” finish size, 4.99. I . ■ V ■ v H Shop late Tuesday at Hudson's; Pontiac till 9 p.m. « TTTF PHNTT A H PP TTSft 1 rl Pi irUii X iilv XTXiJuOp PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY. JANUARY 19«g LBJChosen Leading Newsmaker for Straight BY MARY CAMPBELL '■J AP Newsfeatures Write Lyndon B. Johnson, for the fourth straight year, has been chosen newsnfaker of the year by Associated. Press member newspapers and radio and tele* vision stations. Much of the news the President made, concerned the Vietnam war. He reaffirmed the U.S. commitment by stepping np air at? tacks over North Vietnam, at the advice of generals and a Benate preparedness subcommittee and against the advice of his secretary of Defense. And he sent 45,000 additional troops, between the 70,000 asked by commanding Gen. Wiiliam Westmoreland and 30,000 recommended by Robert McNamara. He sent messages to „ North Vietnam president Ho ChkMinh suggesting peale talks, all of which were rejected. He criticized U.S. peace demonstrators, saying they weren’t :bringtag a Vietnam settlement any closer. LBJ sent 5,000 federal troops to Detroit, at the request of Gov. George. Romney, and went (hi TV to say that lootiing ami arson are not civil rights and must be ended, as must the condi*. tions that breed despair and violence. t / He set up advisory commissions on civil disorders, econom- ic opportunity and crime png sent a panel to Vietnam to observe its election. Johnson met twice at Glass-boro, N.J., with Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin.. They talked about the Middle East, Vietnam and a treaty to halt the spread of nuclear weapons. ■" He went to Guam to talk with Vietnam’s leaders, to Punta del Erie, Uruguay, for a hemis-sphere summit, to Germany for Konrad Adenauer’s funeral. Jt-t' * ★ At home, he asked for an Increase in taxes to reduce the budget deficit .and finance the war and a postal rate hike. He saw the beginning of the first phase of his model cities pro-gram. . t < f - ... The’ 59-year-old President became a grandfather when daughter Luci Nugent gave birth to Patrick Lyndon Nugent in June. I He gave his other daughter, Lynda, in marriage to Marine Capt. Charles Robb in, a December White House ceremony ★ ★ ★ Maj. Gen. Moshe Dayan, hero of Israel’s 1956 triumph over Egypt, and^ now at 52 defense minister, was the editors’ choice as foreign newsmaker. He led his country to triumph over the Arabs in a six-day war in June BATTLE PLAN Dayan’s battle plan for the Arabrlsraeli war was to trap the entire Egyptian army, which he did in what has been called a textbook war of blitzkreig. Dayan opposed giving np territory taken in the war. As Israeli , forces occupied the old city of Jerusalem, Dayan said, ‘‘We have returned to the holiest of our holy places, never to de part from it again.” After the war, there was talk of the eye patch-wearing Dayan as a potential premier of Israel. *■ % * Other newsmakers in The As-mmmm sociated Press poll arer-’Wern-; h«r von Braun, science; William, McChesney Martin, business; Walter Reuther, labor; the Rev. James Groppi, religion; Carl Yastrzemski, sports; Frank Sinatra, entertainment; William Manchester, literature, and Svetlana Alliluyeva, woman 'newsmaker. ”:>•' SPACE HEADLINER As Saturn 5, the' 6.2 million-pound, 353-foot-tall booster rocket which will launch men to the moon, made a ‘‘dream flight” in November, Wemher von Braun, 55, was looking to the future. He wants the U.S. to put a man on the moon by 1910, go to planets between 1976 and ’85, a' salary, and he accomplished it. -, ■' *; ‘ » • ■ , h h ★ His 1.5 million-member Union struck Ford for 45 days, won S revolutionary guaranteed annual income that will provide Iaid-off workers with 95 per cent of their regular income. Reuther called it the largest package ever negotiated by the UAW with a major industry. * $? ’ it tk »★ Reuther, 60, resigned as a member of the Executive Council of the AFL-CIO in February, As head of the CIO he had and made a number of extraordinary defensive plays. The manuscript set, off a long,| She has had two of her; Writ-publicized, legal haggle, indud-togs published, a magazine es- He .was the Amer ieanIllg . ,pit to protect her prt-toay and “Twenty tetters wV League’s most valuable player; —■ —P i-—™- Vn„,Friend,” a nonpolitical mcmotfY and many regarded him a? play-}'™* bF Jacqueline Kennedy, o{ ,lfe with ^ father *,3^ er of the year fo# slugging, an« .involving Sen. Robert Ken- jn ^9^3 nedy, Manchester, publishers! ; , ! Critics called her a major Harper & Row and Look Mag- talent in the Russian lyrtea] fielding and team leadership. SINATRA NEWS Frank Sinatra, 52, got two aztoe’s syndication rights, front tooth caps knocked off in! tradition. By December, 115,000 copies establish manied space stations; viser to the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council, has been providing the City with what he calls “Creative tension.” % and satellites. The Saturn, with two million separate parts, was developed during the pari seven years at the Marshall Space Flight [August, he led nightly marches Center at Huntsville, Ala., head- of ed by Von Braun. ★ tr In Jurie he received the Smithsonian Institute’s coveted Langley Medal. Established 59 years ago, the Langley has only been awarded 12 times." FEDCHARIMAN William McChesney The suit was resolved with a brawl in September after he j 1,600 words cut out of the mag- of the book had been sold and Was refused credit in the Sands azine version and 2,000 more out Miss Alliluyeva (her mother’s (Hotel casino in Las Vegas. of the book. name) was in seclusion, writing Sinatra watted out on his a► ★ *, a second book, singing engagement at the Manchester, 45, said he ex-: ★ it it Sands, ending a 16-year affilia- pected to make between $300,-j Her son, Joseph, 21, and topped merge with the AFL in Hon, and signed a contract to 000 and $400,000. He thought daughter, Yekaterina, 15, reappear at competing Caesar’s the Kennedy Library would mained in Moscow. Palace. * realize $5 to $10 million In roy- He testified'In a May hotel alties from the book, libel action in Miami Beach that SALES he never met or gambled with From its April 7 publication members of the Mafia at the to December, “The Death of a For more than three weeks iniFontainebleau Hotel ,there, ( President” had sold almost ★ ★. it 600,000 copies. In August Mexico lifted the Joseph Stalin’s daughter, 1955. The ^v. James Groppi, ad- 200, to 2,000 Negroes, pro- Martin, 61, in his fifth consecutive term as chairman of the Federal reserve Board and a conservative in maintaining the value of the dollar and the value of gold, supported LBJ’s proposal for a tax surcharge to fight inflation. He spoke against perpetual federal deficits. testing discrimination in organ-ban it had placed on Sinatra Svetlana Alliluveva at 42 be-’ izations and schools and the after he filmed “Marriage on city’s refusal to enact an open the Rocks.” In November Sina- defector, housing law. tra’s 16-month marriage to Mia On Sept. 1 he was arrestedja for violating the mayor’s ban on demonstrations, later was re-released on bond. The 37-year-old priest told the President’s Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders that if nonviolence doesn't work in Milwaukee, he couldn’t continue to tell Negroes to use it. SPORTS HEADLINER Carl Yastrzemski, 28, led the American'League in hitting with .326, in runs batted in with 121 and tied for most home runs Farrow, 22, hit the rocks with In India to take the ashes of mutually agreed trial sep- tote husband to his home* aration.” land, she asked for asylum to • _ ■ _ find self-expression, to write JFK BOOK and to worship. William Manchester, author- WWW ized to write about the assassi- She arrived in the United nation of President John F. States April '21, charmed view-Kennedy, wrote “The Death of ers at a press conference and a a President.” iTV interview. 'Ng 1 m mm V' WOMAN OF THE YEAR SVETLANA ALLILUYEVA MAJ. GEN. MOSHE DAYAN DR. WERNHER von BRAUN WILLIAM M. MARTIN FOREIGN AFFAIRS J After Britain devalued the pound, Martin advocated the .re- peal of the requirement that 25 In the final two games of the per ceht of United States paper season, both of which the Bos-money be backed by gold, so, ton Red Sox had to wiri to take that all American gold could be the American League pennant used to defend the dollar and the (by one game), Boston’s suc-world monetary system. cessor to left fielder Ted Wil- United Auto Workers presi-|*i«ms made 8even bits in eight dent Walter Reuther’s stated!trtP8- goal for 1967 was to abolish the In the World Series, won by* hourly wage system in the auto the St. Louis Cardinals. Yaz industry and put everybody onjbatted .400, hit three home runs 1 I'limiri urir--■■ __^ a ■M CARL YASTRZEMSKI FRANK SINATRA WILLIAM MANCHESTER WALTER REUTHER REV. JAMES E. GROPPI NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR FOREIGN AFFAIRS SCIENCE BUSINESS LABOR RELIGION SPORTS ENTERTAIN- MENT LITERATURE WOMAN 1987 Johnson \ . Dayan Yon Braun Martin Reuther Groppi Yastrzemski'' i Sinatra Manchester Allilnyeva 1966 Johnson , De Ganlie DeBakey Nader ^ Meany Pike Koufax Batman Capote Gandhi , 1985 Johnson Johnson White Donner Dirksen Paul vr Koufax Beatles SholokhoV Johnson 1964 Johnson Khrushchev Guthrie Ford Hoff a Paul VI Clay Beaties -r Fleming Johnson 1963 Kennedy De Ganlie Pauling Fanston Hoffa John XXm Koufax x Taylor * Frost Kennedy 1962 Kennedy Castro Kelsey Estes Goldberg John Kion Liston Monroe ’ Steinbeck , Kennedy 1961 Kennedy 'Khrnshchev Gagarin Romney Hoffa Blake Maris Minow Hemingway Kennedy 1960 Kennedy Khrushchev Von Braun Romney Hoffa John XXm Patterson Gable Drury none 1959 Khrushchev Khrnshchev Von Braun Romney McDonald John XXm Johansson Van Doren Pasternak none 1959 De Gaulle De Gaulle Von Brann ry *;~ Romney •.none 3 John XXm <“ a-- . :* M Stengel Cliburn Pasternak none Costs, Incomes Likely to Rise in 68 By JOHN CUNNIFF Iwere a bit depressed last year . AP Business Analyst could spring back. Sales of NEW YORK — Rising prices, houses, cars, television sets and a tax increase, high mortgage -appliances and long distance and- interest rates, a threat of travel are among' big ticket of tight credit CUNNIFF continue to ajpd more inflation are among the prospects for American consumers i n 1968. These are the dark clouds iif the picture. The silver lin-j lng Is that A meric an consumers will Improye their already high standard of living, with their Increase to disposable income al< most certain to exceed an estimated 3 per cent advance In living costs. ’ „ : As 1968 comes into clearer focus U seems apparent that Americans may be In a mood to spend somte of their unusually large aavlngsr-they saved at a - rate as high as 7 per cent of dll-posable income In 1967. As a result, some sales that items expected to be higher than in 1967, despite any tax increase. / NO RECESSION WORRY There are perhaps as many uncertainties about the future economy as there were a year ago. But the chief worry of 1967, that of a recession, now is well behind us. Inflation is the big danger this year, and though it can be just as frightening as a recession, it is a less ominous threat in the public mind. Inflation, after ail', Is often the product of a vigorous-economy. Here are some economic highlights of the past - year and a preview of several consumer areas: Jobs—A low rate bf unemployment. , ’* , -The jobless rate remained very low during 1967, under 4 per-cent for moat of the year, and a continuation of the same is expected in 1968. This means that most skilled workers wno want jobs will be able to find them. UNSKILLED JOBLESS Joblessness will be confined mainly to the unskilled, who will continue to see their jobs eliminated by the rapid implementation of nety technology. Technological unemployment is a continuing problem, but there are indications It is being tackled more effectively now. . More attention will be given to job., training, especially among Negroes, where'tile lack of skills is. pronounced ami joblessness is nearly double the whites'rate. As shown by urban riots, this problem is critical. As a result, public and private programs will* concentrate as never before on upgrading worker abilities and An encouraging employers to offer/job!, eliminate bias and institute training programs. P e r a o n.a i Income—Higher again. ^. The nation's personal income in 1968 will reach nearly $700 billion by December. About two-thirds of that will be in wages and salaries, the rest in shopkeeper and farmer income, rents, dividends and social security* 6-PER CENT PAY HIKES Wage Increases to some major industries are expected 1$ be close to 6 per* cent, enough to keep well ahead of the risini cost of living^), Near the eqft of 1967, Income of nonfarm production workers was near $140 a week in mining, 9117 in manufacturing, $83 in wholesale and retail trade. Construction laborers weje getting $4 an hour, skilled workers $5.80, ■" j 1 ■■ w ★ . % In February, the Federal minimum wage will rise to $160 an hour from'$140 for about six milllon-of the more,than 30 million ' covered upder minimum wage laWa. Living Costs—The family budget may be a little less tight Many forecasters feel that living cpsts will continue to risb lie: through the first half of the year. But family income is expected to rise also. CITY BUDGET HIGH Late in 1967, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that the budget 6f a city family of four, in order to maintain a moderate living standard, would have to exceed $9,000, well above that of millions of fami-a. “ ( - . ' ■ ■ | Although the costa of aervices are expected to continue rising, in general, the American city workers will continue , to spend about 23 per cent of His budget on food, 24 per cent on housing, 15 per cent on taxes and social security, 5 per cent on medical care, 9 per cent on transportation and 8 per cent on clothing. Miscellaneous coats will take! care of the rest / < J Ike* Roo>t/ ^kop ACROSS FROM HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL Taxes—A question mark for the third year in a rftw. The, answer to whether there will be a tax increase Is basic to almost’all consumer spending in 1968. A large percentage of economists now believe a surtax ACOUSTICAL STYROFOAM CEIUN8 TILE irxii” -------------4----- VINYL SANDMAN 6MM2' Wide, $1.59 Sq. Yd. INLAID LINOLEUM TILE 9”x9»t 7c Ea. ARMSTRONG C0RL0N $2.95 Sq. Yd. - MICA 206 Sq. Ft. GENUINE CERAMIC TILE 1 VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 39 First Quality! Qraasa Proof! PLASTIC WALL TILE w. n.; Open Mon., Thurs., Frl. • to I Tuos., Wtd., lot., I to i Across from HUDSON’S PONTIAC MALI > 2218 ELIZABETH LK. HO., \ FRONT DOOR PARKINQ I, ; THE PONTlAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1968 Death uia unrest dominated the news inlM7. . ' . The robbery-murder of a West Bloomfield trustee shocked the Pontiac area. And casualty reports from Vietnam brought that war into local Homes, taking its measure of emotion. / ■ : Further bad news was the summer civil disturbance hi Pontiac, w h i c h caused still another emotional storm. The entire community sustained a big ’ loss with the death of Mrs. Alfred 6. Wilson, nationally known benefactoress, who in a large measure is responsible for Oakland University. « • * ★ * Enemy bullets cut down a war hero" from Holly, and death claimed Dr. Clifford T. Ekelund, beloved Pontiac physician, * NOT ALL BAD There was good news, however. ' Hi .# ■ **' , Pontiac Motor Division introduced n personal sports car - the Firebird —' which has found succeis. ... The Pontiac Mail completed its expansion program, providing for an enlarged selection of stores and merchandise. Officials of the Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine announced that they were going ahead with construction of the projected medical school. Here is bow the year shaped up: land1 Couny ’ circuit bench to extend his one-man grand jury investigation for another six months. ' ★ •• w ★ ■ • l(vr-Chairman of the Oakland County Democratic party George Googa^on, a Pontiac lawyer, was named outstanding young man of . the year by the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce, if , 22—Emmett E. Ransom, 26, of 366V4-Ferry was shot and killed by Oakland County sheriff’s deputies after leading them on a high-speed chase following a holdup of a grocery in Pontiac Township. ★ ★ ★ 27—Sheriff Frank Irons said he would sign an agreement with the State Civil Rights Commission to integrate the Oakland County Jail. 29—City commissioners . granted developer A. Alfred Taubman a six-month extension to find two' major tenants for the proposed downtown shopping center.' March January l—A 39-year-old Detroit woman, Margaret Overton, was arrested by Pontiac mike add charged with murder in the Xiotinf of David B. Foster, 33, 4735 Paddock, the owner of Foster’s Bar. 4— Meadow Brook Theater opened at Oakland University to a capacity crowd applauding “The' Caucasian Chalk Circle.” • ★ * ★ 5- State Rep .Bill S. Huffman, D-Mad-v Ison Heights was charged by . Oakland County grand juror Philip Pratt with contempt of court for refusing to answer (juesttons.' ,"" 7—John Merlo, 25, was sought by Farmington Township police for the shooting of his wife Sharon while she worked WK beauty salon. K ® **■ - * * ‘ ★' ' ★ " 14—Construction of Consumers Power Co.’s new $3-million division service center was ready to begin on .a 27-acre site on Featherstone. ”17—The federal government Announced that Pontiac General Hospital will receive $292,996 to expand emergency room and physical rehabilitation facilities. ★ ★ ★ 18— Pontiac’s coldest day of the season was recorded when the temperature dropped to three degrees below zero. 19— Delos Hamlin, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, was named president of the Michigan State Association of Supervisors at . its 68th annual meeting held in Lansing. ★ h h > 29—One hundred tonitayes and customers in’the YankeeSwre afc the Bloom-0. field Miracle Mjle Shopping Center escaped safely when fire swept through the building causing An estimated $375,-000 damage. . 25—Rochester voters approved city incorporation by a 4-to-l margin, 689 to . 166. . . " ★ ★ ★ 27—Oakland County was paralyzed when three to five inches of snow, the heaviest of the season, fell on the area. Februgry I— Michigan Bell Telephone Co. announced it would spend $4,398,000 in 1967 to expand and improve communication facilities in the Pontiac area. 3— The Pontiac Finance Study Committee voted to recommend that an income tax be initiated in the city. it it it 4— A lengthy dispute over mental health jurisdiction in Oakland County ended, paving the way for a $259,000 federal staffing grant to Pontiac State Hospital.' 6— An. early morning fire destroyed the Bee Line Bus Co. garage in Keego Harbor, with damage estimated at $300,000. * / 7 * * * II— 7— Three Oakland County 04 r c u 1 t judges ruled that Michigan’s ope-man ftAOilU Juijf A dW Wdt> U/UdUtuUOasid ami UyHMI a luuUOii iU against, lour men, incoming ouue iwp. plU t>. MUtunun A—Consumers Power Co. announced It would invest. $6.5 million on projects to expand its Pontiac division in 1967. it it it 19—Mrs. Beatrice Branner, 38, of Pontiac, was charged with the riflA slaying of her 21-year-old son Theodrious. II— The Traffic Improvement Safety Association of Oakland County ‘was formed to reduce accidents. ' v fev, * M*- * ■" ll—Laurie Isenberg, • junior majoring hi English, was chosen Miss Oakland University over 14 other contestants. ■ v 15—Circuit Judge Philip Pratt received permission from members of the Oak- 1— City commissioners received a prp-test from the Citizens Committee for Pontiac’s Positive"Progress blasting the - city’s agreement with Oak Park developer A. Alfred Taubman for redevelop-men of the downtown area. 2— Pontiac school officials presented the board of education with a $14.8-million preliminary budget 4—A four-year-old Independence Township boy died in a fire at a neighbor’s home, apparently while he and two other young boys were playing in the basement. ★ ★ ★, 7— Three city children playing on ice covering Crystal Lake fell in. One boy was saved by his mother, but his brother, Tracey B. Turner, 5, of 423 Howard McNeil, and Daryl Green, 9, of 443 Howard McNeil, drowned. 8— Four mongrel dogs that mauled a 7-year-old Independence Township boy two weeks previously were destroyed. 14—Waterford Township board members approved participation in the Clin-ton-Oakland sewage disposal system, joining Avon, Independene, Orion, Pontiac and West Bloomfield Townships in the project. A ★ ★ » 14 — Petitions seeking annexation of ' a portion of Wolverine Lake and part of Commerce Township to the City of Walled Lake were filed in Oakland County. 18—The Oakland County board of supervisors nsmed Douglas H. Hoard, a Birmingham attorney, as director of the merged county and state welfare units. 24—Waterford Township; School Board members reviewed plans for a hew 84-million Charles Mot| High School.. 5—Oakland County supervisors rejected a Road Commission request for $2.1 million for new roads and repairs. . 8—Donald V. O’Brian, escaped .March 26 from Ionia State Hospital where he was committed fof murder and rape, is accused of the^sex slaying of a Grand Ledge girl. • ' , 1 11—The Oakland County board of Supervisors named Delos Hamlin to-A 12th consecutive' term As chairman of the 87-member board. ' 18—Assessed valuation of real and personal property in Pontiac rose more than $9.6 million during 1966, according to figures released by the city assessor. ' * ★ if . 1ft_Tity rnmmigsinners approved planned 525-unit project for rent-supplement housing on Kennet around Alcott Elementary School. 29—Oakland University received a $825,000 gift in. bonds from the will of the late Ormond E. Hunt, a General Motors executive. 28—A $l-million federal grant was awarded to Oakland University for a proposed fine arts building. SwiHm Pnp* PM* Snow Belted Pontiac And Oakland County Last January 1—A 10-year-old Clawson boy was buried alive after falling into a gravel bin at Barrett Asphalt Co. in Troy. 1—Two persons, a 24-year-old Pontiac man and 22-year-old Waterford Township man, were killed when the car in which they were riding went out of control on Wide Track near Oakland: 3—Mrs. Arthur Falls, 49, of Avon Township was shot to death in her home, in the presence of her family; police charged her 40-year-old son-in-law Paul M, McDonald of Pontiac Township with murder. 3— Pontiac Motor Division announced plans to install new electrical melting facilities to reduce foundry air pollution. 4— Pontiac police arrested a former city used car dealer believed to be head of a car theft ring which stole $50,00d worth of automobiles. . 5—Psychiatrists at Ionia State Hospital ruled that William Gravlin, who allegedly killed seven nriembers of his family, was mentally unfit to be tried for the crimes. 10-rShelby Township filed suit in cir- cuit court to stop construction of Detroit water lines through the township. 10—Oakland County law officials conducted a search in Ohio for the body of Mrs. Dennis jO’Dell, 20, after her estranged husband,, a Metamora Township man, turned himself in Is hex’ killer. 13—Pontiac Motor Division announced that the first 10 days of May saw more Pontiacs produced than any 10-day manufacturing period in the company’s history. ★ ★ ■ ★ 17—An Oxford Township man and his 15-year-cld son were killed in a two-car crash in which seven persons were injured. ' __ 20—The worst car accident in South-field history was recorded when a car, believed to be drag racing on 1-696, jumped the median and slammed into another car. Three occupants; all Detroiters, of the speeding car were killed as was the driver of the other car. zj—The Village of Lake Orion hired ' John F. Reineck, Pontiac’s assistant city manager since 1963, as its first village manager. ★ it it'" . 26—A three-member committee was established by the Oakland County Board of Supervisors as the legal operating agents for the two county-owned Air*, ports. 30—School Officials announced a school Firebird — The Personal .Sports Car — Was Introduced In January tax increase of $1.56 per $1,000 of assessed valuation to. bring the tax levy to $28.16 per $1,000. - JuneP 10—A 10-year-old Bloomfield Township boy was killed and three other youths were injured — two seriously — when struck by lightning at Dodge No. 4 State Park in Waterford Township. ★ •' ★ ■ it 13— Incumbents Monrde M. Osmun and Russell L. Brown were reelected to the Pontiac School District Bond of Education for four-year tarms . , . Lewis S. Long and Donald W. Porter wore elected .to four-year terms on the Waterford Board of Education; incumbent Michael G. Patterson won a new three-year term . . . Oakland County voters approved a half-mill tax (50 cents per $1,000 of assessed vacation) for establishment of four vocational education centers. • ‘-j ■— — . 14— Troy school officials announced school outbacks in wake of defeat of a proposed 7-mill tax levy; voters rejected the levy 1,532 to 613. 21— City commissioners approved the second revision of the year in the 1967 general fund budget and set the 1967 tax rate at $18.02 per $1,000 of assessed valuation as equalized, up 24 cents per $1,609 over las^ year . . , State Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley announced he would ask Oakland County Circuit Court judges to appoint a hew grand juror to succeed Judge Philip Pratt, who had served one year. ' * it it it * 22— Circuit Judge JameA S. Thorburn was named to finish eight weeks Of the Oakland County ^Grand Jury investigation. 23— A plan to provide $70 million in improvements to the Clinton River was set into motion by an augmented drain-** age board organized for the task. PmH** Pr*M PM* A Jam 30 Land-Fill Hearing Attracted Over 400 Persons In Waterford Twp. 1—Plans were announced for Oakland University’s first, health center building —■ a $600,000 facility to be completed in 1968. 4—Weist Bloomfield Township Trustee Edwand E. DeConick was shot to death and his sister seriously injured when four persons forced their, way ihto their home and escaped with cash and securities. . 7—A 19-year-old Pontiac boy was held in connection with the killing of his 15-year-old riinawAy girl friend. 12—A law signed by Gov. Romney added nearly two years to current terms of Michigan’s elected township officers and trustees. .y*-* ★ ★ # 10—The federal government gave Pontiac A $156,288 subsidy for a new rent supplement program for low-income families near Alcott Elementary School. 20— A flash rainstorm struck southeastern Oakland County, dumping five inches of rain on some communities, flooding streets and basements. * 21— In his first indictments, Oakland County grand juror James Thorburn accused a former Madison Heights councilman with bribery. > it it it 22— Ability-to-pay tuition plans, report- edly the first in.the country, were approved for Michigin State and Oakland universities. ' . t 25—Two persons were killed .—.one by a local state representative — and five more wounded by gunfire as looting, burning and vandalism hit a section of Pontiac;. at least 87 persons were arrested >... . J; L. Hudson Co. new full-line store was ready to open in the Pontiac Mail; the almost 300.000-squAre-foot store vevolved from the original. 80,000-square-foot building. V •’ # ”*/. 28—Holly School District voters turned down a 10-mil! tax levy for a second time. ' "“H 31—Holly’s war hero, 1st Lt. Karl W. Richer, 24, who had flown more strike missions over North Vietnam than any other U.S. Air Force pilot; died of injuries suffered when he was shot down. August 2—Waterford Township School District’s three-year, $1.4-miliion Indicom experimental individualized instruction, program got under way.* 4— Figures show that 54 fires in Pontiac’s civil disturbance caused an estimated $200,000 damage. 5— Oakland County 4-H Fair dosed with a record week’s attendance , of 50,-000 people. 8—Shelby Township voters, approved millage issues to beef up the police and fire departments and to give them a 'pension plan . . . Bloomfield Hills at~ torney William T. Gossett was named president-elect of the American Bar Association. . f II—Charles Ervin, one of two Pontiac brothers on the FBI’s most wanted fist, was captured,.in Ottawa after a prisqn escape nearly two years ago.. Ground breaking ceremonies were held for a $920,187 emergency care annex'to Pontiac General Hospital. 14—Federal government gave a maximum of $3.6 million to Pontiac for the construction, of 234 low-rent homes for senior citizens. \ ^ 16—Eight persons including a state representative, were indicted by a county grand juror in a year-long investigation of crime and corruption. 18—Oakland Community College purchased 75 acres of vacant land in Madison Heights for $477,000 for a site for the college’s fourth campus. ' i ■ 24—Pontiac school board announced plans for a $1 million elementary school next to Lincoln Junior High School to open in September 1968. 30— Pontiac teacher representatives and the school board reached tentative agreement on new teacher salaries and fringe benefits. 31— Two construction workers were killed ^during a cave-in at an excavating site in West Bloomfield Township. CONVICTED — John Merlo, 26, was found guilty of first-degree murder Dec. 20 in the shooting of his estranged 18-year-oid wife, Sharon Ann," while she was working in a Farmington Townabip beauty shop last January. * # . * *% %■$ ; $ y ,, * $ \ “ • : ^ THE POXTIAC PRt/SS, MOXDAY, JAXVARY h 1968 B—fo September 1—Holly 'voters approved a 7-mill school levy by 2-1 margin with a record turnout at the polls. ,i '(■ if"/, .* A, , , * 6—New Pontlacs, Tempests and Firebirds for 1968 < were introduced to nation’s auto writers at Bloomfield foils Country Club. I- '-Ways and means committee of Oakland County Board of. Supervisors approved a 821-million county budget for 1968, which proposes an average pay increase of $600 annually for county employes and allows for the addition of 106 new. employe? to the payroll. ★ II— Pontiac couple, Mr. and Mrs. Abb Jackson of 230 Elm drowned in Lake 16, Orion Township, when their boat capsized'; two others were saved. ’ ★ ; A ''.A 12— Troy voters rejected a One-year 7-mill school tax proposal for a second time by almost a 2-1 margin. > ★ * . 13— Birmingham teachers rejected the board of education’s “final” offer to«resolve a contract dispute which had prevented the opening of school for five days. , , * ' 14—Mongomery Ward formally opened a two-story addition to its Pontiac Mail store;’ . r. 18— Judge William J. Beer signed Oakland1 County's first back-to-work injunction, forcing striking Birmingham teachers to return to clashes. * * * * 19— Mrs. Alfred (Matilda) , Wilson, benefactress of Oakland University, died in Brussels, Belgium, at the age of 83 ... Independence Township voters rejected a 1-mill tax increase to establish a police department. ★ * ' ♦ 20— Pontiac voters favored, an income tax over a hike in the property tax levy with 4,682 in favor of tne income tax and j!,606 for raising the property tax levy. p • * * * ’ 21— *GMC Truck and Coach Division’s 1968 trucks were introduced. jMartin J. Caserio, vice president of General Motors and divisional general manager, said the addition of two new V8s give? the division' the most complete line of engines in its history. ★ * * - 22— Waterford Township Planning Commission-.rejected a permit request for a sanitary land-fill off Maceday Lake Road by a 6-0 vote, Culminating a nine-month-long issue. 28—Pontiac community leaders endorsed an all-encompassing area plan-, ning council to “reverse the tide of this city’s urban decay.” I >' ht "'**'★ , „. s 27—Pontiac city commissioners approved adoption of a city income tax ordinance by a 64) vote . . A yearlong agreement between Pontiac and Oak Park developer A. Alfred Taubman was thwarted with the Taubman proposal to redevelop downtown urban renewal land apparently dead. a ■k ★ 36—Bene ficiary of largest part of late Oakland University benefactress Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson’s estate, filed in Oakland County Probate Court, is Michigan State University at more than’.$1.5 million ... The Academy of Dramatic Art of Oakland University, cited as the'first of its kind in North America, opened with a charter class of 14 students. October TOP GM OFFICIALS — The New General Motors Corp. top executives elected in October are James M. Roche (left), board chairman, and Edward N. Cole, president. Roche, 60, of 425 Dunstan, Bloomfield Hills, succeeded Frederic G.Donner as executive officer of the giant industrial firm while Cole, 58, of 1371 Kirkway, Bloomfield Township, succeeded Roche. 2—A $550,000 fire at Ellis Trucking CoV 120 Franklin Road, was_blamed on arsonists-burglars . . . The Oakland County Board of Supervisorsadopteda record $21,134,162 budget. 6—The Waterford Township Board of Education voted to ask for a 7Vi-mili property tax increase in a special Nov. 20 election. 11—Pontiac city commissioners ord-. ered the director of law to draft an open-housing ordinance. # ★ ★ 16— *-Sears Roebuck & Co. reaffirmed a decision not to, construct 3 new department store in Pontiac’s downtown urban renewal area. 17— A dual torchlighting ceremony Was held as the Pontiac Area United Fund campaign officially opened. 18— Developer A. Alfred Taubman acknowledged the deie;i of his plan- i or downtown Por*'- ft ft • 23—Death cfcu<.J| u. Clifford T Ek'lund. 74. a knrj-ti Me promin?nt Pon-ti c ar -i physician a>id m-dical director at Pontiac General Hospital . . . An earl., rood stannic dai. nas bjen set for initial Classroom construction at Pontiac’s projected Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine, slated for a 104-acre site on the city’s, east side. A HERO’S HONORS — First Lt. Karl Richter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Richter, 11610 Dixie, Holly Township, received an Air Force tribute during funeral services Aug. 6 at St. Rita’s Catholic Church, Holly. Richter was on his 198th Pontiac Pratt Photo mission over North Vietnam when shot down, foe received the Distinguished Flying Cross with one oak leaf cluster, th« Air Medal with 13 oak leaf clusters and the Vietnamese distinguished Service Medal. ACQUITTED — Donald DeClercq, 30, of Detroit was found innocent by an Oakland County Circuit Court Jury in November of an aggravated assault charge brought against him by Mrs. Roy (Ruth) Fruehauf, 43, of West Bloomfield Township, the widow of the truck trailer manufacturer. Pontiac Prm Photo NEW POLICE ACADEMY — (One of the feiy police academies in the state to train pblice officers opened at Oakland Community College’s Auburn Hills campus in Pontiac Township in March. Head of the Oakland Police Academy Ralph F. Moxley fright) appears at the academy’s first graduation In September with class president James W. Fowler. « ACCUSED — Farmington Township physician Ronald E. Clark, 56, “Was captured in late November in Michigan's Thumb Area after evading area police when he was charged with manslaughter in the death of a patient who was given an overdose of sodium pentothal. IMPRISONED — Donald V. O’Bfjian of Pontiac "received the maximum prison sentence in July for the killing of a 10-year-old Grand Ledge girl he raped following hid escape from Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. ** \ TO BE TRIED « More than three years after being accused of killing all seven members of his family, William G. Gravlin of Troy was declared mentally fit in December to go on trial for murder. Pontiac Prou Photo A GREAT LADY — The death of Mrs. Alfred (Matilda) Wilson, 83, benefactress of Oakland University, Dodge automobile heiress and philanthropist, shocked the community Sept. 19. She suffered a heart attack in Brussels, Belgium. . 24—In two county elections, voters in the Oxford School. District approved a $2.5-million bond issue, and voters in Farmington- Township rejected incorporation • . Oakland County Circuit Court jury found a Pontiac youth, Porfidlo (JuniorC Acosta, 19 of 307 Ferry, guilty of first-degree murder, in the July 7 slaying of his 15-year-old girlfriend, Linda Darlene Arnold. * * ★ •30—Hit-and-run motorist killed an 11-year-old Waterford Township boy — Darelle J. Desotell of 739 Scott Lake — Near the victim’s home. ★ w *★ 31—Three Walled Lake area youths were killed in Walled Lake when their car failed to negotiate a turn on Pontiac Trail . Holly voters turned down a $5.2-million school bond proposal by & 2-1 margin. November 4—Pontiac Motor Division passed a milestone in its 41-year history with ’ the completion of its I2.millionth car. LEADER SLAIN - West Bloomfield Township lost a leader the night of July 3 when intruders entered his home, shot him through the head and left with $25,-000 ini. a safe. Edward Emmett DeConick was much-mourned by his township and church. * *'■ ■ -. ' ' ' ., " $ ■■ - 16—Bloodhminds assisted in the cap-, ture of Dr. Ronald E. Clark off Farming-ton near Port Austin; he was charged with manslaughter in the death of his nurse from an overdose of sodium pen-tathol. ★■ ★ 20— A 7V4-mill property tax increase for the Waterford Township School District was defeated by a 1 decisive 24 margin. ‘ ★ ★ A . I December 4— Patricia Guy, 17, was crowned Pon-_^ tiac’s Junior Miss at the Jaycee pageant at Pontiac Northern High. 5— About 15 sign-carrying Oakland Community College students at High- * PHYSICIAN DIES - The Pontiao community lost a long-time physician when Dr. Clifford T. Ekelund died Oct. 22. He was 74. A prominent doctor in the Pontiac area, he was medical direo> tor of Pontiac General Hospital at the time of his death. \ land Lakes campus in Waterford Towa-ship blocked Hospital Road on the school grounds to protest poor conditions of the road. » i ★ ★ ★ 11—Sheri Seiber, 17, won the title of Junior Miss in the Waterford Township Jaycee pageant. ★ ★ ★ 14—Foes of the proposed Pontiac income tax filed petitions calling for a referendum vote on the lsshe. f 16—Plans for a second large airport in Oakland County were revealed as a master plan was approved by the Board of Supervisors for Allen Airport in Orion and Pontiac townships. 26—About two Inches of snow fell In the county area causing the most has-ardous driving conditions of the winter % season thus far; temperatures plummeted to 7 degrees.above zero. “ * ★ ★ ★ 7j^~ A Troy man, William G. Gravlin, 33, accused of murdering his wife and six children in his family three years ago, was declared mentally capable of standing trial. MILESTONE — PontlaC^Motor Division passed an historic F. James McDonald, works manager, looked over the Tempest point in its 41-year history with the completion of its 12,000,000 LcMans hardtop as it rolled offr the line, cpr. John Z. DeLorean, left, general manager of Pontiac, and r ' ■ ’ ' ' “fVf HF *■ THE PONTIAC PRESS* MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1008 NEWEST STAMPS EYED —Chester Ha-rucki, superintendent of the postage stamp division at the. Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, uses his magnifying glass in a double ^exposure photo before giving approval to a sheet of the six-cent Frank- AP Wlrsphoto lin D. Roosevelt postage stamps. The Roosevelt Stamp will become the basic stamp when domestic first-class mail is raised to six cents Jan. 7i The presses are currently running 24 hours a day. Post-Expo Flush Grips Canada OTTAWA UP) — A post-Expo| Also contributing was the sue-the final quarter from 714 67 flush of national confidenceicess of Expo '67, the world’s earlier in the year, poses Canada on the, threshold fair held in Montreal to mark * * * V of another surge of economic the centennial of confederation,! The money supply—chartered growth in 1968. % iwhich brought together the bank deposits and currency in Economists in government f our original provinces of circulation, held by the general and private industry • described 1967 as a year of moderation in the long climb of national pro duction, which reached $61.5 billion at midyear, up 6.8 per cent from mld-1966. •kft ★ ★ Industrial production was up 4.4 per cent at midyear to an index of 283.1, based on 1949 industrial production equalling 100. Strong underlying support for the economy was continued growth of exports, likely to reach the target $11.25 billion set by Trade Minister Winters after last year’s $10 billion accomplishment. Canada under a federal constitution. More than 50 million visitors to* Expo, many of them from abroad, strengthened the tourist, industry. jhere were less welcome effects on the economy, however,' caused by high interest rates. Housing starts ran below the government’s target, and industrial capital investment moved sideways during the first half of the year. ★ ★ ★ High interest rates were indicated in the! 4 government’s ceiling on federally - insured household mortgages, which moved up to1814 per cent in public — rose sharply by 16 per cent pear the end of the year* to $23.75 billion. The Bank of Canada, the central bank, was ensuring there was plenty of money around, though available only at high cost. Jobs Are Found GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A program aimed at providing 1,-000 meaningful jobs for “deprived, disadvantage(Kand underprivileged men Pnd women” in Grand Rapids is about two-thirds complete, chairman Herbert G. Daverman announced. TO UPT1 STEP!— STEP ~{down ^PRICES PONTIAC * MALL ROCHESTER PLAZA S. S. KRESGi COMPANY NEW DELHI, India (AP) -Religious leaders from several countries will open a “Symposium. on Peace” here, Jan 10 to Igy groundwork for a planned World religious confereride. The goal is to organize religious leaders so they can advise governepts on such issues as disarmament and jwar. The project is being organized by-' the Gandhi Peace Foundation. ★ ★ .★ The conference will be held in 1969, probably in Geneva, to co-lincide with centenary celebrations of the birth of Mohandas jK. Gandhi, who fought for India’s political emancipation by espousing loye, truth and nonviolence. Participants in the symposium will include John; Wesley Lord of Washington, Bishop L Bernardin of Atlanta, Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath of New York, the most Rev. G. Nichi-datsu Fujii of Japan, Princess | Poon Pismai Diskul of /Thailand land the venerable Pimbure Sor-jatha of Ceylon. INAUGURATION i It will be inaugurated by President Zakir Husain, an authority on Islam. .» ;. Invitations have been sent to Moslem leaders in the Middle East, to the 6rthodox Church in Moscow and Leaders of the i Protestant faith in Prague, says Homer Jack, joint secretary of the symposium. I ‘ . *, # * “The crisis fcf our time, compounded by the mountfflg arms races and the deepening poverty of the developing world demand of religion more than a routine acknowledgment of evil and fate,” he told a news confer ence. “There are religious leaders active today in all the major world religions who, looking deeply into theif* heritage, are bringing the temple, the church, the mosque and the synagogue in a meaningful support of the United States and other re- gional and world structures for peace.” 4 y*- ★ ★ it Jack is the Boston director of the division of social rtsponsi-[bility of the Unitarian Univer-salist Assocation, of the United States and Candjgja. He is the Au- thor pf several books on Gandhi. The symposium will not discuss theology but “urgent ^gnd vital matters” engaging the attention of the leaders and people of the world like disarmament and the Vietnam conflict and will send recommendations to the 'various governments, . hejdox Church in Turkey’. After the said. _ five-daj symposium here, the The 14-member U.S. delegtP! team will visit Saigon for . a tion on its way to India wilivisit 'conference with Buddhist lead-the headquarters of the World lers and then fly to Kyoto, for a Council of Churches at Geneva, I one-day symposium with Japa-the Vatican in Rome, Jerusalem inese Buddhist leaders oh reli-and the patriarch of the Ortho-'gioft and peace, , HERE'S BIG SOUND FOR YOUR COMBO! & ■ . _ _ ” New "Wolverine" 4-Drum Set Snare Drum Kit New drumming excitement! ALL the most wanted accessories are INCLUDED in this deluxe set! Choice of sparkling finishes! Save $148! Ludwig Drum Outfit with cymbals. Now 549.50. 259' BO COMPLETE GRlNNELLL’S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 This chrome double-tension snare drum, 5Vi"x 14'' with flat-base stand, has wire brushes, drum sticks, 6" practice pad, vinyl carrying bag, self-instruction book. Convenient Accounts Available 59 50 COMPLETE n m> HOIftEKEEPIIK HURRY! 51 W. HURON AUTOMATIC WASHERS Now $ Only EASY TERMS-’!)76 MONTHLY DELIVERED - INSTALLED WARRANTEE!) Here it is, the mod-advanced automatic on the market — and • proven dependability above and beyond anythini built in laundry cleaning. You get 3 water tempi., (incl. cold), 3 water levels, lint-filter; detergent, fabrie softener dispenser, porcelain top and tub,’ removable cabinet panels, big capacity, rust-proof cabinets, virtually indestructible pump, washes all fabrics safely. 0. NO MONEY DOWN MAYTAG WRINGER DELUXE — ALUMINUM-HEAVY DUTY FREE WIRING NOW! = e on the purchase of. ANY Electric Dryer Delivered! Warranted! Serviced! Easy Terms9(f Days Same As Cash Yea — that’s right, — America’s No. 1 Wringer-Washer complete with heavy duty Double Tub with aluminum linen Big W H.P. Motor that drives May tag’s patented unbreakable Agitator. Large Agitator Rolls that are self-adjusting. Come See! Co the Buy! > “Permanent Press” Dryer • Ideal for permanent press fabrics. Hat Automatic “Cool Down” 5 Drying Cycles, Drying temperatures. Full 70-minute Timer • 230-V Installation included at no extra cost. - \ , The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING Shop Open Monday, Thur. and Friday Nites ’Til 9 P.M. 51 W. Huron r _Tree Parking.. Downtown Pontiac FE 4-1555 r Jjv.iK- -------- v/:j*---- ' \ If V IfM •’ ,.-. .. THE POXTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1,* 1068 - *»,. .'.I . ■'—» .■ - ^ •— -** “ '* -a- — - • — —y— V — —- -t • , ivl B—fi ; •AV ,A, — T •v\ •« ■' ^ :3() A.M, TO 9:00 I’.M. SUNDAY 1? NflON TO 5 I>.\1.682-4940 \QL Ujl UJoJL i'ffl 9-DRAWER DRESSER Ready to paint reg. 24.99 _ Sale B-DRAWER CHEST Ready to paint reg. 19.99 Sale j 5-PC. SPANISH LIVING ROOM Solid Oak Frames reg. 499.95 / Sale 5-PC. COUNTRY OAK LIVING ROOM Choice of Colors reg. 469.95 Stale MARBLE TOP TABLES Fruitwood finish „ reg. 49.99 Sale ITALIAN CLASSIC BEDROOM 3^pc. set—fruitwood finish reg. 579.99 Sale 3-PC. MODERN BEDROOM Dresser - Chest - Bed reg. 199.99 Sale 3-PC. MODERN BEDROOM with door dresser reg. 269.99 Sale 19" 16" 43900 DM 399°° 3988 AAAQO 149" 199°° 3-PC. ITALIAN PROVINCIAL BEDROOM Cherry Fruitwood reg. 399.99 Sale Sale r, . Sa|« MAPLE 4-DRAWER CHEST Plastic Top reg. 59.99 MAPLE DESK Plastic top reg. 59.99 MAPLE BUNK BED or Twin Beds v reg. 29.99 COLONIAL SLEEPER SOFA Gold.or fast Tweed ipg. 269.99 Sale DUPLEX BED Hi-riser with 2 mattresses reg. 89.99 Sale 90” ROLLAWAY BED with Mattresses reg. 29.99 Sale FOAM or'INNERSPRING MATTRESS ... V ,i V?Vv full or twin size >4v V , • reg. 69.99 Sale FOAM or INNERSPRING full or twin size reg. 59.99 Sale 269°° 49" 49" 19" 23900 69°° 19" 39" 39" KING SIZE SLEEP SET 76x80 Innetspring reg. 299.99 . Sale COLONIAL SOFA Print cover — Blue or Beige reg. 179.99 * Sale COLONIAL LOUNGE CHAIR Persimmon or Avocado V Sale TRADITIONAL SOFA Black and Gold Cover reg. 199.99 * 7 Sale MODERN SOFA Gold or Glive Tweed reg. 149.99 Sale SOLID MAPLE TABLES Cocktail • Round lamp - Chairside reg. 59.99 Sale SLEEPER-SOFA Channel Back reg.'259.99 Sale ITALIAN PROVINCIAL TABLES Cherry Fruitwood reg. 54.99 Sale PLASTIC CHAIRS * Choice of Colors Dining or all purpose *et„of 4 TABORET FOOTSTOOL 3 cushions on casters reg. 39,99 Sale MODERN SOFA Gold or Green Tweed reg. 249.99 V Sale MODERN SOFA Oilwalnut Trim reg. 279.99 | Sale. 2-PC. LIVING ROOM Early American reg. 299.9{? Sale 6-YEAR CRIB Maple or White reg. 34.99 •„ Sale CRIB MATTRESS 140-coil reg. 14.99 Sale GRO-QRIB Youthbed or Crib. reg. 84.99 Stole WALNUT HEADBOARD, 39" Twin Size rea. 11.99 Sale 249" I450. 78" 158" 119" 49" 199" 39" 14" 29** 199" 229" 249" 24” 'V- 11" 69“ 2 CU. FOOT REFRIGERATOR Nice for Apt .♦or Doctor Office regylar 99.95 now 3.3 CU. FOOT FREEZER 115-lb. capacity reg. 129.95 g now 5.7 CU. FOOT FREEZER 200-lb. capacity Save, Save Now only 15 CU, FOOT FREEZER 540-lb. capacity, Serve $32 regular 199.95 now 23 CU. FOOT CHEST, FREEZERY 805-pound capacity, Signal light Save $50, regular 269.95 now STANDARD DISHWASHER 12-place setting reg. $140 now DELUDE DISHWASHER 16-place setting, auto, control regular 229.95 ;* now PORTABLE BUILT-IN 15-pl. setting, deluxe dishwasher regular 229.95 now WRINGER WASHER 107 to 124b. capacity lovell rollers -regujar 139.95* now 18 lb. AUTOMATIC WASHER 3-cycle, 2-speed, Save, Save $33 regular 199.95 now 18 lb. AUTOMATIC WASHER 6-cycle, 2-speed water saver, . Suds Saver, Save - Now only 9.1 CU. FOOT REFRIGERATOR Full width crisper, save $30 regular 169.95 now SPECIAL PURCHASE DRYER Automatic Control. Electric wiring,, free on Edison Lines. Was 179.95 *• now SPECIAL PURCHASE DRYER Automtatic Control Gas, Large Lint Screen, was 209.95 now 18-lb. AUTOMATIC WASHER 12-cyele, 2-speed, water saver model. Save $50 W 1 ’ now 40” DOUBLE OVEN ELECTRIC Sfcde by Side Ovens All Automatic Save $40 regular 289.9.5 now 30” SELF-CLEAN ELEC. RANGE $79 *109 *129 *168 *219 *99 *169 *199 *199 *166 *199 *139 *129 *159 *219 *249 .400 30” ELECTRIC range Deluxe Feature Save $40 2 only, regular 209.95 GAS SPACE HEATER 60 BTU, 44?oom, regular 199.95 Only 3 to sell now 1 BURNER KEROSENE HEATER Food for Camping - Fishing Regular 15.95 now 30” DELUXE GAS RANGE Cooking Hour Control Coppertone white Save $32 reg. 209.95 for SAVE $50 12.3 CU. FT. REFRIGEhATGIT White only with ice maker £■' now regular 299.95 now 12,8 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR Left Hand Door only, White or Coppertone Save $60 regular 279.95 now j> . 14 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR Self defrost, ice maker, white and coppertone. Save $70 regular $309 now 16.1 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR Twin crisper, ice maker, whitepnd-s coppertone. Save $90 regular 359.95 now 18 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR Side by Side,. Large capacity Freezer, regular 399.95 . now EYE-LEVEL RANGE Large Oven, 2 Only, Save, Save, regular $179 _ now 36” MENU MAGIC GAS RANGE Easy to' Clean Features Storage Area, White only. reg. 239.00 now 30” deluxe Electric range Automatic Oven Control. Oven liners eafy clean, reg. 209.95 now 30” DOUBLE OVEN ELECTRIC 1 top oven, 1 bottom oven save $90. Chrome top, Burner with Brain, regujar 389.95 now 30” ELEC. RANGE WITH LINERS Automatic Burner>and Oven Save, Save $60, reg. 279.95 now STANDARD AUTOMATIC WASHER ' Single Hose Fill ' regular $169 - - now 115-VOLT ELECTRIC DRYER Standard Time Dry *219 *239 *269 *347 *149 *219 *168 *299 *219 *139 sn ON THIS SALE *12 off! Bookcase with walnut Made of thick 5-ply hard-board—Sturdy enough to hold encyclopedias! Both shelves . are adjustable. 30x10x36 inches high. ^ REG. 24.99 612-coil innerspring mattress-reg. 69.99 Smooth rayon damask cover is quilted to foam’" for comfort . .. Dura-Fresh® treated for hygienic cleanliness; Box spring, now . . . .39.99 *Wmrdt lab-tmited unthan• foam TWIN OR FULL Big value! 15 cu. ft. upright freezer o Full 540-pound capacity o 3 quick-freeze shelves o Adjustable cold control ' *e Easy-to-clean interior e 32 inches wide; white *168 *70 off! 14 cu. ft. refrigerator-freezer o All-frostless throughout $ o Fully adjustable shelves o Twin porcelain crispers o Cold control; door space o Big 123-pound freezer With ice maker—left hand door only REG. $309 ArHIilAliliBd In M|||i i m mMmmm ONTGOMERY / m THE.PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,' JANUARY 1, 1968 JJ*^7 QUANTITIES*’ LIMITED • SORRY, NO PHONE, MAIL OR CO.D. ORDERS ON THIS SALE Compact 176 sq. in.* Airline® COLOR TV • Colon stay rich; vivid • Cloar. steady recaption e 3 IF tran«formor chassis • Perfect for cart or table •lt.lnch vlmtabU iiugoaali 174 »«. in. *248 AM/FM stereo FM In walnut veneercase Unique design! Speakers separate 20 ft. for best ' sound, vivid realises in FM storoo! Bose and treble tone controls;, precision tuning. Save 1.00 on fiber glass Insulation Itlfl.lfl.M Spun extra fine to trap more heat. Resists ret, Moisture, vermin. Easy to cut, 'install—just staple on. Roll is 70 square feet. 4,99 TP roll WITH FOIL ROLL mq. i.n Save *201 Built-in power humidlifier 39« Big 16,000 cu. ft. capacity, keeps air comfortable in up to 8 rooms I Dependable, automatic, quiet. Trans* former, humidistat, fittings. RK8.4I.IS STERE0/TELEVISI0N ■ STERE0/TELEVISI0N ■ MISCELLANEOUS ■ MISCELLANEOUS 100 Sava 81.04 STEREO w/AM-FM radio Walnut only 90floo Reg. 369.00 Only £00 Save 51.00 STEREO w/£M-FM radio Oak, Vyalnut or Maple f ORQI Reg. 409.00 VwO Save 91.00 STEREO w/AM-FM Radio Cherry Only 90000 Was 319.00 Only ££0 Save 81.00 STEREO w/AM-FM Radio MapleOnly ooooo Was 319.00 Only ftvO • Save 52.00 STEREO w/AM-FM Radio Walnut Only 10700 Reg. 249.95 Only O f Save 31.00 STEREO w/AM-FM Radio MapleOnly 1AQ00 Reg. 179.95 | .* Only I Save $32 CREDENZA STEREO w/AM-FM Radio Oak Only 10700 Reg. 229.95 Of Save 31.00 STEREO w/AM-FM Radio Walnut Only 1AQ00 Reg. 179.95 Only I •f® Save 65^00 STEREO w/AM-FM Radjo Oak Only Wai 269.00 IUIU 204 00 Sava $41 CREDENZA STEREO w/AM-FM Radio Oak or Cherry 04000 Reg. 289.95 £*VO Save 33.00 STEREO w/AM-Flf Radio MapleOnly d ’ OOIOO Reg. 259.95 f Save 71.00 STEREO w/AM-FM Radio Cherry Only mooo Was 269.00 Save 7.00, TABLE RADIO Solid State Was 16.99 Save 12.00 TABLE RADIO Solid Sti^te Was 24.95 Save 15.00 TABLE RADIO, AM-FM Solid State Walnut ■ j* Was 29.95 Save 20.00YAB1.E RADIO, AM-FM Walnut Cabinet Wa*49.95^ ,, ' J . Save 15.00 CLASSIC GUITAR Full Sixe Reg. 39.95 % . 198' 988 12M 14*® 2988 24M Mjl. COaJU. :X) Save 31.00 PORTABLE TV 172 Sq. In, Deluxe—Black Only Reg. 129.95 Save 6.00 TV STAND Deluxe—Black Only Was 13.99 Save 21.00 P0RTABCE TV 125 Sq. In. Deluxe— w/Antennas Reg. 119.00 Save 15.00 PORTABLE TV Solid State All Channel Reg. 119.00 Savg 32.00 PORTABLE TV All Channel Reg. 119.00 Save 32.00 0RQAN Walnut Only Reg. 219.95 Save 63.00, C0L0RTV Portable, 176 Sq. In. Reg. 359.95 Save 62.00, COLOR TV. 176 Sq. Ip. Console Walnut or Maple. Reg, 379.95 Save $100, COLOR TV 295 Sq. In. Walnut Only Reg. 749,95 99°° 788 98°° 104°° 87°° 189°° 297®° 31800 649®* 628°° Save 100.00, COLOR TV 295 Sq. In. French Provincial Only. Reg. 729.95 , Save 100.00, PORTABLE COLOR TV 180 Sq. In. 71Q00 Was 419.00 V I 9 Save 72.00, PORTABLE COLOR TV 176 Sq, In. 9AQ00 Reg. 319.95 £40 Save 100.00, COMBINATION COLOR TV W/AM-FM Radio. Maple Only Rf|Q00 Reg. 699.00 * 999 Save 62.00,00L0R TV 267 Sq. In. Walnut Only 40000 Reg. 449,95 f 900 Save 52.00, COLOR TY 267 Sq. In. MapleOnly Reg. 449.95 Save 10.00, PORTABLE TV 74 Sq. In. Black Only Reg. 74.95 Save 7.00, PORTABLE TV 74 Sq. In. Deluxa w/Antennas Reg. 84.95 % V 398°° 64*° 78°° 799 1 00 100 Sav. ss -FLOOR PILLOWS I Exciting round mod pattern. Buy now and save. Reg. 15.99 Savi $11.09—MOSAIC DRAPERY One way draw—Assorted colors. 1900 *100x84 size. Reg. 23.99 I £ Special Selling-VALANCES Assorted patterns. Buy now and really save. Your Choice “Special Selling—TIER CURTAINS Assorted patterns. Buy new and really save. Your choice dm - Save 2.02 Sq. Yd. DuPont “501” Carpet Continuous filament nylon., 997 four fresh colors. Reg. 5.99 sq. yd. |f Save 2.02 Sq. Yd. “Palatine” AcrHan Beautiful tweeds in broadloom. CQ7 Buy nowand really save. ■ Reg. 7.99 Sq. Yd. Rf Save 50c Sq. Yd. Carpet Padding RugfedAd ex. long wearing padding. Buy new and really save. Reg. 1.99 s4 yd. Save Sc Per Tile - 9x9 Vinyl Sparkling colors—Shop early and save. Reg. 18c ea. 1 49 Sava 4.02. q. yd. DUPONT-501 ’’ CARPET Continuous filament nylonin hi-low ACY scroll pattom. Como* in twoods, w I solids. Reg. $10.99 sq. yd. $AVE 2.52 SQ. Y0l - “501” LOOP PILE DuPont "501" nylon with muitl-lovol surface, in 30 colo/s and patterns! Rog. $8.49 sq. yd. SAVE 13.17 - OVAL BRAID RUQ PACKAGE You‘ll get one 9x12, one 2x3 and one 2x6 foot runner. In groan, brown, multi, Reg. 347.17. 6 587 00 34 SAVE 72c Run. Ft. 27”CLEAR VINYL RUNNER 97® 69 SAVE 6c APIECE - 12x12 VINYL TILE 15* One foot square vinyl asbdstos tile for easier installation, loss seamsl 12 colors. Reg. 21 c ea. la. Sava 30.00 - WALL FIREPLACES Completely electric, white finish. AQ00 One only—Save now. Reg. $129 * VM ; Save 40c — PEG-BOARD ' 2'x4' six* with 50 hooks. Buy now and save. Rag. $1.28 Save Now - WINDOW AWNINGS Rugged metal construction. 36 In. size. Bqy now and save. Reg.-5.79 99 S.V. 4.11 — KITCHEN STOyE HOODS Duchess style. Buy new*and really save. Regularly 32.99 4 28“ 188“ 13“ Savg $20-7' BUDGET POOL TABLE American walnut veneer finish. g A 9 9 Buy now and save. Reg. 99.99 f -RP Save $31 -7’ PRO MEDALISH FOOL TABLE %" sealed composition wood bed. Save new. Regularly $219 Save 6.02- 3-Sp* HI-RISE BIKES Your choice, boys' or girls'. 4491 Buy now and save. Reg.49.99 4v Save 10.11- MEN’S OR LADIES’ SKI BOOTS Wards best double speed lace 4Q88 boot. Save now. Reg. 39,99 faff Save 5.11-YOUTH SKIS 4'6" to 5*9" midnito blue finish. Save now. Regularly 18.99 Save $20-MAPLE GUN CABINET Designed for 6 guns. Rich Salem C999 Maple w/glass doors. Reg. 82.99 wmi Save 5.11 - STAINLESS STEEL SINK Big 21 x32 size. Faucet extra. Buy now and really save. Reg. 29.99 mrW Save 5.99-24 INCH WHITE VANITY Formica top. Six only, take with. KABO Buy now and save. Reg. 59.99 ' Save 4.99- Vb-HPPUMP Shallow well jet. One only. Take with; Rog. 59.99 Save $3- KITCHEN FAUCET Single lever action. 8 inch center. Buy now and save. 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SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • Wi2-l9.Hi I ■ g' i b‘Q> ”■ ' 'V ' B—8 ■ i <.$£ . ::, Doubts for Negroes ' rampaged around prevented opeiiing of the hatch !crisiSi and the the possibility 01,1,18 this year fi8htln8 for for five minutes. i0f jmit|ng the nuclear arms Mao Tsetung against his chief A $45 million safety overhaul race. § antagonists. President Lin [of the Apollo was started after! Kosygin had Dlanned to leave i 0entra 0oll[!InT th. «r,Tr»umng i, a >4^.7^ &X'M which can be opened in threeistayed for another meeting. Bothl seconds. » said the meetings were cordidl They Plastered the county and useful and they wouldWith, P°®ters and leaflets about They were AirsForce Lt. Col. Virgil I. Grissom, one of the The Apolo program was- de-1 keep in touch. Mao’s .cltural revolution', original seven astronauts and first man to soar twice into the GRIMMEST TOLLS In Newark, in plid-July, rioting reached its grimmest toll since the Watts riot in 1965, Twenty-six died, more, than 1,200 were injured, 1,316 arrested and more than $15 million in property was damaged. The next week, Detroit, after WAR PROTESTS—Antiwar demonstrators in the vicinity of the Pentagon huddle together in the chilly air of the early hoursi of 0<5t. 22. U.S. troopso stand by as a U.S. marshal hauls away one demonstrator. IN VIETNAM — A paratrooper of-the 173rd Airborne, advancing |o the crest of Hill 875, passes the poncho-covered body of a soldier killed in the fight that claimed 178 wounded and 79 dead paratroopers. The U.S. troops made four attacks on the hill, capturing it Nov. 23. layed, the shoot being resched-| 6. In November, Britain de-rallied. Paraded, fought ■« <■» July. Lm itS poo* W fromfe*^ ££ ^ 5. While Soviet Premier Alexei|$2.80 to *2.40, in an^ effort tof .. , . ® * . halt the excess oLexports that 0 „ , " was threatening the stability ©f ^ey besieged the Russian her currency. While the move ffpbassy and sacked the Brit* rhade Britain more competitive ** chancery in Peking, battled in international trade, it Cdused!rfi,way workers for contro1 of a money-tightening increase in «on8 Kong-Canton lines. They U.S. interest rates. disrupted farm, factory and mow Misrnvnnrr raiIway economy 90 much tha* GROSS MISCONDUCT Cho En.lai ordered them to 7. A select House .committee st,op fighting and go back to* found Adam Clayton Powelllhigh school. guilty of gross misconduct — 10. The Sept. 3 election Ip using public money for private Vietnam was won by Chief of travel and dodging the courts State Nguyen Van Thieu and of New York which* held him his • running mate, Pren&ier in contempt because he didn’t Nguyen Cao Ky, who had au- pay a libel judgment: The com- tiounqed his candidacy and mittee recommenced that he later took second spot under *be seated as a House member pressure from military leaders with stiff censure. who favored Lt. Gen. Thieu. •-* On March 1, the Housej turned down the recommendation and voted to declare vacant the House seat Powell had held for 22 years. Powell, on tiie Bahamian island of Bimini, called it a racist attack. Among claims of dishonesty was one cry from nine civilian, candidates involved in a tra sportation snafu in Dong which they believed was deliberate. NEGRO RIOTS, — Police protect firemen from snipers on the fourth day of violence in Detroit, July 26.' Police at right crouch behind their cars with rifles ready; rooftop snipers harassed fire fighters in the riot area. 8. Svetlana Alliluyeve, only daughter of the late Soviet-dictator Joseph Stalinvtook the ashes ■ of Brijesh Singh, her third husband, to his native India after his death in October 1966. While there, she decided to defect. She walked into the American embassy in New U Thant and the 1LS. Congress turned down requests to send campaign observers, but on/sei watchers, who were among 1290 President Johnson/sent 22.poll observers from/24 countries. There was/ increased Viet-cong 'terrorism on election evfp but about half those registered voted. Observers said the eleo-tioh as more free than fraudulent. X Qanueuuf 3—Jack Ruby, slayer of Lee Harvey Oswald, the alleged assassin of President Kennedy, dies of cancer. North Vietnamese Premier Pham Van Dong's suggestion of possible changes in settlement conditions touches off peace feeler flurries in Washington and European capitals BERRTS WORLD I Ot>00 00*00 OoOOdO© 10000 000000000 00c .—SW»t' ’Surveyor 3 urye—'WHFWI—ifs UEDERKRANZT 10— Hep. Adam Clayton Powell is denied Seat in House, pending investigation of his conduct. Georgia Legislature ends election deadlock, names Democrat Lester Maddox governor. 15—Green Bay Packers take pro,football championship in 35-10 Superbowl defeat of Kansas City Chiefs. 16 — McCormick Place, giant Chicago exhibition hall, is destroyed in $120 million fire. 24 — President Johnson submits record peacetime budget to Congress, asks additional taxes and postal rate hike. - Mao Tse-'tung calls *ln army against foes in Red Chniese power struggle. ■Hi rdc 26— Worst blizzard on record—23 inches of snow-pat alyzes Chicago. 27— United States. Soviet Union and 60 other coun-tt-ies sien treatv* limiting military activities in space. Three Apollo astronauts die in flash fire aboard spacecraft during ground test. 28— Robert G. (Bobby) Baker, onetime Senate Democratic majority secretary, is found guilty of, income tax evasion and fraud J’HJbhuaJUf 3—Walter Reuther, UAW-president, quits executive council oi AFL-CIO. 4 — Federal government orders further controls on air pollution. 10— Enough states ratify 25th amendment to tiie Constitution to assure continuity of power if president is sick or disabled. 13 — National StQdent Assn, acknowledges it took funds from CIA after expose in magazine article. Some 700 pages of hither to unknown drawings by Leonardo da Vinci are found in Madrid, Spain,. 18 — National panel on crime asks sweeping reform in crime fighting techniques. 19—New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison says he. will make new arrests in President Kennedy assassination case. 22—Indonesia’s President Sukarno signs oyer his powers- to the military. 24—New cheating scandal unearthed among cadets at U. S Air Force Academy. VYlaAch 1-House ol Representa tives votes to exclude Kep Adam Clayton. Powell 6— President Johnson an nounces revised draft plan, calling 19 year-olds first. Stalin’s daughter flees Soviet Union, is granted asylum in Switzerland. 13 — De Gaulle's force* suffer severe setback in French elections. > 16—Senate approves con with Soviet 18 — Supertanker Torrey Canyon runs aground off Engfish coast, polluting re sort coastline with oil. Saigon Assembly adopts, new constitution, for South Vietnam. 21—Hanoi discloses it rejected Johnson letter .suggesting peace talks. ■ 23—NASA suspends astronaut training for Apollo flight as probe continues into spacecraft iire fatal1 to three spacemen. 29—Television and radio performers strike four networks. 30 — President Johnson orders CIA to quit subsidizing organizations. Gpjul 5—Plot to kill Vice Pres ident Humphrey is uncovered in West Berliri. 7—Israeli-Syrian clash is worst in border's history. 9-^ Apollo fire review board finds “many deficiencies” in spacecraft in which three astronauts perished. 12— United States refuses to renew arms aid to India and Pakistan. 13— Cave art found in And tor on extra 25 centt I'll guest your Mexico may be oldest in the Western Hemisphere. 17- East Germany's Waller Ulbrtoht proposes German talks with West Germany. 19—Surveyor 3 soft-lands on the moon. Konrad Adenauer dies at 91. 21— Greek army stages take-over. 22— Tornado kills 54. most of them in Chicago area. 23— Soviet cosmonaut is killed in spacecraft landing yyiaif ■ 2—Britain again runs Into coolness as it renews Common Market bid. 5— ^World-Journal-Tribune dies, leaves New York City with only th^ee daily newspapers. I 1 , 6— Long shot P r o n d Clarion (30-1 j wins Kentucky Derby. 15—Kennedy Round trade talks are .success; nations slash tariffs on 60,000 items with $40 billion worlf’ trade value. 18— Nasser Ignites Mid- east crisis, demands U.N. peace force withdrawal, blocks Israel's access to Red Sea. , . 19— U. S. Marines move into Vietnam demilitarized zone in biggest assault of war. 28— Britain’s Sir Francis Chichester makes port at Plymouth after solo round-the-world voyage. 31—A. J. Foyt wins Indl u anapolis 500 third time. £um Open Season All Year-round Mother's Day, '67 { 5—Richard Spegk is sen teneed to electric chair for murder of eight student nurses War breaks out between Israel and Arabs. 9—After defeat, Egypt refuses Nasser's offer to resign. 12- U. S. Supreme Court upsets state bans on interracial marriage. 13— Thurgooq Marshall is named first Negro Supreme Court justice. 17 -'-China explodes is first hydrogen bomb. , 20—Cassius Clay jg convicted for refusing draft induction. "Cool ft for now—I hear he's with the Cl AT 23—President Johnson, Premier Alexei. Kosygin meet in five-hour talk. 216—U. S., Panama agred on new canal treaties. 28—Actress Jayne Mansfield is k i lT?*d in New Orleans car crash. 4—Soviet move to Con demn Israel is defeated in United Nations. 18—Buried Minoan city is found intact on Greek island. Britain announces plans to pull out of Asian bases. 20—Negro “black power” leaders meet In riot-torn Newark, N.J. 22— Poet Carl Sandburg dies at 89. 23- Worst U. S. racial riot In history breaks out In Detroit. 29—D i s a s t r o u s fire sweeps aircraft carrier Forrestai, killing 130 of her crew (hiqiud 3—President Johnson asks for 10 per cent surtax to meet war costs and act as a buffer against Infla lion. 18— Pope, Paul VI announces sweeping reform in church government. 19—S n i c k chairman H. Rap Brown is arrested after rifle is found on plane. . 21—Two U« S. jets are shot down in Red China. 22—Red Guards sack British diplomatic quarters in Peking, beat envoys and families. 25—American Nazi leader George Lincoln Rockwell is slain. 27—Sixteen skydlvers die1 in plunge into Lake Erie. 31—Egypt, Saudi Arabia! move to end 5-year civil! war in Yemen. demonstrators lay siege to Pentagon. Egypt sinks IsraeU destroyer Elath; Israel retaliates with bombardment 875 in/ month-long battle of ■ To. S&pi&mbsui 3—Thieu-Ky ticket wins presidential e 1 e c t i o n in Vietnam. 7—UAW strikes Ford Motor Co; 160,000 in-walk out?" , ■ 16—Lynda Bird Johnson Is betrothed to White House Marine aide Charles Robb. 20— Cunard luxury liner. Queen Elizabeth Il.Qis launched. Hurricane Beulah causes $1 billion damage along Gulf coast. 21— Secretary of State Dean Rusk's daughter weds Negro. 22— Retiring luxury liner Queen Mary sails -from New York on her last regularly scheduled Atlantic run. 29—New York teachers ratify contract, ending long strike. Dak 2Xdefense Secretary McNamara to take World Bank presidency. / 30— Sen. Eugene McCarthy challenges LBJ in presidential primaries on Vietnam issue. . (Dncsmbsth Odobth 4—Communist forces break off siege of Con Thien, U. S. Marine outpost in Vietnam's UMZ. 9— Guerrilla leader Krn erto Che Guevara, former Castro aide, is slain by Bolivian armv. 12—St. Louis Cardinals win World Series in seventh game from Boston Red Sox. 20— Mississippi Jury convicts seven of 18 defendants in 1964 slaying ot three civiJ rights workers. 21- Anti • Vietnam war 'Ttt go along with Dr. Spoek whan he goon along with mol" 80. per cent of oil produefng destroying E g yjYt *s capacity. 22-VSix-week Ford strike ends/in new labor pact. 26—Shah of Iran crowns self in splendid coronation ceremony 26 vears after he came to throne 31—Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu is inaugurated as president of South Vietnam TbvfmJboA 1— Viet Cong release three captive U.S. sergeants. 2— Jacqueline Kennedy Is royally welcomed ofi Cam bodia tour. 7-Negro mayors are elected in Cleveland. Ohio, and Gary. Ind. Russia marks 50th anni versary of Bolshevik Rev olution. 9—U.S. space efforts to get big lift in successful launch of Saturn rocket and Apollo moonship. 15—Turkey and Greece on brink of war over Cyprus. 18— Britain devalues pound, shaking up world monetary systems. 20— U.S. population tops 200 million. 25--Yanks capture .Hill 2— Francis t a r d i n a I Spellman dies at 78. 3— Greek-T u r k I s h war crisis over Cyprus is easing. 4— Medical first? Human heart is transplanted from traffic Victim to man with coronary ailment. 7— Viet Cong wipes . out Montagnard village in Vietnam with flamethrowers; . almost 150 villagers are killed. 8— Congress enacts an. across-the-board increase of 13 per cent in Social Security benefits. 9— Lynda Bird Johnson becomes the bride of Marine Capt. Charles Robb in White House ceremony. 11— Congress approves extension of War on Poverty. 12— C o n g r e s s O.K. is stamped on postage , rate hikes and pay raises for millions , of federal employes arid servicemen. 15—Military Junta tightens grip on Greece; lung Constantine' takes refuge in Rome An estimated 65 to 80 fiersons are killed In cel-apse of Point Pleasant, W.Va., bridge into Ohio River. 17—Australian Prime Minister Harold Holt drowns in shark-infested na surf near Melbourne 21— Capetown man dies 18 days after human heart is transplanted into his body in the first operation of its kind. 22— United States recalls 35,000 GIs from West German to cut balance of payments deficit'. , Stairway to tiio Stan k Among tho Casualties Cradle to the (grave Bon Appetit A Tree Grows in Moscow / ■rapfW5S&*' |p'’ .S B B—10 v TIIB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1968 W\) -S; ** 5 Great By tiw Associated Press States borderihg the five Great Lakes are striving to puncture predictions that the water will soon be too polluted for use humans, but some cities continue to disease' the lakes vyith poorly treated sew* age. Ontario and states edging Lakes Erie, Michigan, Ontario, Superior and Huron have taken steps to regulate and reduce the flow of waste materials; gov-\ eminent and industry are • spending millions to combat the problem seWers are combined and become overloaded in heaver rainstorms. In Ontario, Canada, the Water Resources Commission reported that about 300 plants—nearly half—discharging wastes into lake watersheds are providing inadequate controls. The commission says most of the plants are in the *pulp and paper, mining and food process ing fields. * * * ' The New York Department of Health said receiitly that the in crease in the transport of oil on the State Health Department is working with the Corps of Engineers and major oil Companies to keep spillage of oil at a minimum. • In Pennsylvania, Erie and, the Hammermill Paper Co. are) collaborating on a joint project to determine if their excess' wastes can be treated jointly. • the Ohio Water Pollution Control Board has. set 1970 as the target date for all municipalities in the Lake Erie basin to install-sewage plants for at least secondary treatment and for . industry to step up waste controls. partment is moving on another front to build reservoirs for control Of water flow jn streams emptying' into Lake Erie, The program includes stream monitoring, stations for constant pollution surveillance. • In Wisconsin, Milwaukee Of- ficials are studying the possibility of constructing storage tanks to hold storm and sewage overflow until the polluted water can be treated’after high runoff periods. v • In (two years, since a get-tough antipollOtion law wad enacted in Ontario, 14 industries have been convicted or pleaded guilty1 for violations, Several industries near the lakes have started their own an-tipollutioKl programs voluntarily. Thar Michigan Water Resources Commission said, that some large industries—notably Dow Chemical Co. of Midland JScksoh-started their own p r o-gramS early. But the commission said others wouldn’t move until they were pushed, f .. • ......- *» About S per cent of the land in Georgia is ,owned J»y^ the federal government. * * + | the Great Lakes and the St. But some Cities continue to Lawrence, River has resulted in dump inadequately treated sew age into the Great Lakes and The department reported that even the federal government oil pollution has had an adverse has admitted it is a prime of- effect on recreational use of the fender. A U.S. Army Corps of Engi neer official admitted, dt a the states to halt pollution. Lake House subcommittee hearing in Michigan pollution is being Washington in October that the tackled py a regional Confer* agency was polluting Lake ence which wiH meet in Chicago Michigan with harbor dredg- ings. He cited insufficient funds Pari in the conference are ° i « .. i i_______i Tllinnic Indiana Minhiffan and as the problem and testified that pollution from the dredging was small in comparison to other pollutants. MAIN POINT Rep. Roman Pucinski, D-Ill.. replied that the amount of pollution caused by the corps is not the point. , ‘‘The problem,’ ’he said, “is that you really can’t crack down on private industry when you have a federal agency doing any kind of polluting.’’ But the government, tab, has recognized the dangers of continued pollution of the lakes and has taken steps to alleviate the problem. In April the Corps of Engi neers started a pilot program of alternate disposal methods in eight areas on the lakes. In December the corps com pleted two dikes in Cleveland Ohio, on Lake Erie to control pollution from sediment and to keep river .channels navigable. The dikes form the walls of two cribs where dredgings from the Cuyahoga River can be dumped. ★ ★ * TJie two dikes are part of an experimental program at eight Great Lakes ports. Other porta are at Green Bay, Wis.; Calumet River, Chicago; Buffalo, N.Y.; Toledo, Ohio; Sodus Bay, near Rochester, N.Y., and River Rouge in Detroit. Each region borderihg the lakes has its individual pollution problems. The city of Erie, Pa., dis- meat. charges excess from its sewage treatment facilities into the lake cilities -in New York are being during storm emergencies be- reviewed at 36 plants. In an at-cause the sanitary and storm tempt to combat oil pollution, several cases of oil pollution. waters and on fish and wildlife. These problems have spurred Jan. 31. The states scheduled to Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin. STATE ACTION Here is. what some of the Great Lakes states have done to combat water pollution': • The Illinois Legislature' adopted a law in October banning dumping in Lake Michigan without a state permit and approved in July a referendum on a $1-billion bond issue to fight-water and air pollution. The referendum will be held in 1968. ★ it it The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago filed suit in Circuit Court against one Chicago steel plant and 12 plants in Indiana asking. that they be enjoined from polluting Lake Michigan. • Indiana and Illinois officials set Dec. 31, 1968, as the deadline for completion of industrial and municipal waste treatment facilities where needed near the south end of Lake Michigan. PLAN DEADLINE The Michigan Water Resources Commission set Nov. 1, 1968, as the deadline for approval of pollution abatement plans. Facilities under the program must be ih operation by Nov. 1. 1970. • The Minnesota Legislature created a Pollution1 ControJ, Agency with increased, power, staff and funds, SEWAGE STUDIES ________ In New York, comprehen- Michigan was stirred to action sive sewage treatment studies in 1962 when Sterling State are under way in 17 counties Park,, near MonrOe, was posted along the Great Lakes to devel-as unsafe for, swimming. A lope immediate and long-range study noted that the polution plans for treatment facilities. ,In was interfering with water sup- addition, there are 104 construc-plies, fishing, swimming, boat- tion grant projects in varioiis ing and other recreation stages of planning or develop- Industrial waste treatment fa- One Person in 100 Is on a School Staff WASHINGTON UP) — A year-end report by the National Education Association disclosed Saturday that approximately one American in every 100 is a schoolteacher or holds some kind of instructional position in th^iation’s public schools. The report, Estimates of School Statistics for 1967-68, said more than two million people in the United States now are engaged in work of this kind. ★ ★ ★ “With the nation’s total population having reached 200 mil-j lion in November,” the NEA re- i port said, “approximately one person in 100 is on a public school instructional staff. This comprises classroom teachers,! principals, supervisors, librarians, guidance and psychological personnel and related instructional workers.” The report, based on « nationwide survey in which state departments of education participated, also showed the number of pupils y enrolled in public schools has increased by 1.9 per cent over the enrollment for 1966. Estimated fall enrollment in Ti.S. public schools was 43,788,324, the report stated. NO. 1 ENTERPRISE ^ ‘‘Education is clearly the No. 1 civilian enterprise in the United States,” said Dr. Glen Robinson, director of NEA’s Research Division. The estimated 1967-68 average ialary for teachers and other instructional staff, NEA says Is $7,597, a 6.6 per cent gain over last year. The estimated average pay for an elementary school teacher is $7,077; for secondary school teachers, $7,569, according to the report. ★ ★ ★ The typical public school teacher, the NEA report says, is 38, holds a bachelor’s degree and has an average 12 years of teaching experience. The report reveals wide differences between states when it comes to average salaries paid to school instructional staffs. In some southern and plains states areas, average annual salaries range around $5,500 but New York, California and Alaska pay teachers average annual salaries of $8,500 or more. LEVELING OFF More men are going into education, the report says, although the percentage increase has been leveling off in t jie last three years. The estimated 583,-344 men classroom teachers account for 31.7 per cent of the teaching staff in elementary and secondary schools kt this time, the" survey discloses. The school age population of the United States, the report says, makes up more than one fourth of the total U.S. population. The normal school ages are from 5 to 17." V Total expenditures for public schools this year are expected to exceed $31 billion, a 9.6 per cent rise o v e r the preceding year. FIRST FEDERAL HAS THE MORTGAGE DESIGNED FOR YOU PROTECTION! Our True Open-End Mortgage means that you pay any additional amount or pay up "your mortgage at any time Without notice or penalty." ... Your mortgage can be increased at any later date, to the original amount for additional improvements or any other satisfactory purpose. < . . . You may pay Interest and principal in advance at any time. . . . Terms on our conventional Open-End Mortgage run up to 25 years. Monthly payments include Principal, Interest, TistfeS and Insurance. . 761 W. 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Reg.-$189.95 Contemporary 84" thin-arm sofct in 100% nylon fabric. Choose olive'or royal blue. Foam rubber cushions and arm covers included ........... Reg, $219.95 Italian Provincial 84" sofa, tailored in an attractive patterned beige fabric . . .. .................... Reg. $399.95 Modern sofa and matching chair. Wide arm style in heavy nylon char- broWn frieze. Both pieces complete.... Reg. $369.00 Modern 68" short sofa. Heavy earthtone, textured herringbone tweed. Ultra comfortable. Perfect for tent or den .......................... DINING ROOMS CHAIRS Reg. $169.95 Rural English high wing back fireside chairs. Cane sides and ex—~ posed wood trim. Mellow orange tweed. Each............................. Reg. $105.50 Colonial lounge chair in brown-tone documentary print, Arm< covers Included ............................. Reg. $152.00 Large Colonial tub chair. Quilted in green and red fruit pattern".... Reg. $84.95 Italian’ Provincial .occasional chairs. Diamond tufted backs. Armless style in a mellow pumpkin shade. Each. Reg, $149.99 Lafdies' occasional chair. Heart-back, roil arm and skirted base. Olive matelasse. Petite, yet comfortable.... Reg. $164.00 Ppir of transistional lounge 'chairs. Beautiful lemon yellow damask fabric artistically double’welted, each....... Reg. $85.00 Swivel rockers—choice of prints or tweeds, skirted or walnut base. Each ............................. Reg. $99.95 Thin line high style decorator ■chairs by Selig in accent red. EaciW's*. . Reg. $268.00 Oversize contemporary lounge chair with matching ottoman. Durable olive expanded vinyl. Both pieces. Reg. $99.95 Decorator chair with antique yellow bamboo legs and base. Gold olive atTd black floral .................... Reg. $174.90 California modern lounge chair and ottoman. Olive green. Both. *19800 *133°° *219” *198“ *148°° *138“ *165°° $98«® *249°° *185” ■ *88“ *68°° $88<>o 04500 *65 Reg. $199.95 Walnut round extension pedestal table from Lane's 'First Edition' collection.............. ............. Reg. $129.95 Spanish octagonal plastic top extension pedestal tables......... Reg. $19.95 to $49.95 Odds 'n Ends— dining room chairs—match and mismatch .. Reg. $199 Walnut extension" table with plastic top. Complete with set of 4 modern captain's chairs .. .*........:...... . Reg. $449.95 Stanley Rural English large 4 door credenza with 4 door china top ................................. Reg. $24.95 Authentic Colonial stub arm Windsor chairs ...........4.... 07900 *09°o *14°° *129°* *299“ *15°° Reg. $279.95 Modem walnut Armolre $1CA00 from Lane's 'First Edition' collection ..... 1 ww Reg. $289.95 Amber teak Oriental OI3900 door triple dresser, twin mirrors and bed. Reg. to $69.95 Beds—25 to choose from—oak, maple, cherry, fruitwood, white, pecan in twin, full or queen size...... $igoo at DRAYTON store only DINING ROOMS Reg. $169.95 Walnut buffet from Lane's modern 'First Edition' collection ......... Reg. $99.95 Keller modem walnut extension tables with plastic tops..... Reg. $399 .95-Five piece dining group in an exciting jade finish. Includes round extension table with four cane Hi-back chairs -.................................. Reg. $549.95 Six piece grouping by American of Martinsville. Walnut contemporary design. Glass'china, oval extension table and 4 cane back chairs.............. Regs $139.95 Colonial five piece dinette-choice of two table styles with four mate's chairs ...,........ 31...... »79#0 09900 019900 *399«« 09900 We Really Sharpened Oar Pencils to Come Up With These Low Prices! MISCELLANEOUS 00 09800 $4500 05300 018800 ’ 04300 $3300 Reg. $249.05 Mod-ern 4-piece bedroom; triple dresser, mirror, chest and bed ...... Reg. $5.95 Sq. Yd. Nylon broadloom carpet in Hl-Lo pattern. .Only 140 yards to sell. Beige 12' width....... Reg. \ $139.95 Chrome dinettes. Walnut plastic top tables -black vinyl chairs.... Reg. $139.95 Spanish curio, cabinets. Fruitwood finished pecan, gloss doors . . . $099 V Sq, Sq. Yd 09900 099«O Reg. $278.00 Traditional S-piece” dinette by Chromcraft. Pecan Formica® top table with 1 arm and 3 side $1 jQflfl chairs. Green Vinyl. I “9® Reg. to $39.95 Maple or walnut occasional tables with Formica® tops. As- MISCELLANEOUS Reg. $159.95 Solid cherry lingerie chest O9900 Reg. $139.95 Con; temporary bar with 2 stools. Walnut and black............. Reg. $89.95 Lane walnut cedar chests . . 09900 *59“ Reg. $139.95“ Spanish curio cabinets. Fruit-wood finished pecan, $QQ00 glass doors....... . 99 Reg, $39.95 to $109.95 Lane 'First Edition' *44* * library stack * | to*49 units. ....... Reg. $129.95 Wal-nut or fruitwood desks. Reg.‘to $39.95 Maple or walnut occasional tobies with Formica® tops. Assorted *89 00 limited quantities — discontinued # MATTRESSES AND BOX SPRINGS Including quilts, smooth tops, but- Save E AO/ ton tufted. Regular and super sizes. unto uU A} Hurryl \ BOTH STORES - 6 one only — Reg. $1,173.55 COMPLETE MODEL ROOM Beautiful display correlation — sofa, $COO 3 chairs, 3 tables, 2 lamps and picture. Classic styling. ' ® y , DRAYTON STORE ONLY comp,#,a BEDROOMS i BEDROOMS Reg. $499.95 Brushed white and gold $OQf|00 French Provincial group; triple dresser, £99 mirror, chest or chest and hornfoot bed ... Reg. $249.95 Modem 4-pie£e grouping, $1Tfi00 triple dresser, mirror, chest and bed ...... If 9 Reg. $579.95 English Colonial group; door drestor with hooded mirror, door $OTfQOO chest on chest queen or double bed ....... V I 9 SOFAS Reg. $169.95 Contemporary 72* thin arm sofa. Olive,' 100%'nyion fabric. Foam JIK00 rubber cushions and arm covers Included..— I ®Wlf Reg. $199.95 Modem 56" high back love seat |n elegant dark brown nylon frieze. Very durable and very comfortable Reg. $339.95 Deluxe 64" Colonial short * sofas. Bright red crewel over beige texture. $49(100 High style at sdvingsl.................. BimV Reg. $379.00 Modem 86" slouch couch. Bold decorator blue/green nylon plaid. Comfort and style for living room pF torn- $44 f|00 ily room.. .......................... hiW Reg. $189.95 Colonial 56" loyeseat in vibrant blue green, traditional pattern, luxuriously quilted. Comfortable . coil spring construction with plush paly-dacron cushions............................ Reg. $509.85 Selig transitional 86" sofa and two high back armless chairs. Blue/ olive stripe combination. All 3 pieces Reg. $269.95 Contemporoiy 86" sofas. Comfortable loose pillow back and seats. $4 0400 Choosejrom olive or brownIOO ‘ Reg. $269.95 Contemporary 82" sofa. Stylish walnut wood rail across back and walnut finish .knuckle arm. Choose blue or $4 4000 gold 100% nylon........................ 190 Reg. $229.95 Traditional skirted sofas. In beautifully quilted floral patterns.^ Blue or toast colors. Arm covers, self-decking . and foam .rubber cushions included. Your $4 £000 choke..,!.... 100 CHAIRS Reg; $85.00 Swivel rwcera In a choice of tweeds or prints. Traditional skirted $£C00 style or modern walnut. Your choice.. Reg. $139.95 Colonial lounge chair. Coil spring comfort with rich browrn 100% $0000 fabric . - .; ................. OO Reg. $129.95 Small decorator chairs by famous Craft. Textured blue tweed with $0000 solid walnut exposed arms. Each ...... OO Reg. $139.00 French occasional chair beautifully tailored in Dresden blue. Beau- $E A00 tifully carved legs in fruitwood finish ..... 9v Reg. $199.95 Large traditional lounge chairs by American of Martinsville. Choose $QQS0 gold, olive of blue. Save Vi off!........ 99 Reg. $179.95 Ladies' lounge chair. Traditional heart-back style with skirted ; $4KOO base. Soft melon nylon ...,......... |9 Reg. $149.95 Bright red Colonial occasional chairs with contrasting gray welt- *98oo Reg. $124.95 Selig decorator chairs. Contemporary nectarine party (tripe $0000 fabric. Each____... .. QO ^ Reg, $139.00 Smart modern lounge chair with ottoman. Olive print, fabric. Both $0000 pieces....................... ......... 90 Reg. $139.95 Contemporary high style wingback lounge chair. Lush antique gold $*V|*QQ tweed.................................... 19 Reg. $280.00 Top grain leather men's lounge chairs. Choose brawn; green or $10000 ■oxbloed................ 190 CARPET SAMPLES Discontinued. 27" x 18" samples useful 4Qo throughout your home. Your choice .... 19 BOTH STORES • . • t sorted styles £*4 ~ Reg. $69.95 approx. 9*x 12' THOMA '• nylon Braided rugs ■f I Colonial design in vivacious colors. $£Q9$ S An outstanding Value. Your choke.;... 49 V' 1 ‘V , \ L* 9 1 ^ A PONTIAC 361S. SAGINAW• EE3-7901 DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY I OR 4-0321 BOTH STORES OPEN TUESDAY TIL 9 P.M. Newlyweds of the year were the George Scott Rorfineyt.~The son of Gov. and Mrs. George Romney married Ronna Eileen Stern Aug. 23 in the Salt Lake City Mortyon Temple.'She is the,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kraus of Bloomfield Village. The Pontiac YWCA passed an important milestone in October when they burned the mortgage. Two former board presidents, Mrs. W. J. Emerson (left) and Miss Alice Serrell participated in the Not always are PTA fair pictures as appealing as this one. Shed-ric Watkins of Linda Vista Street makes friends with two puppies for sale at the Mark Twain fair. ceremonies. Mrs. Ayers Miller (left) and Mrs. "Vinton Ball, both officials in the Pontiac Navy Mothers Club No. 355, admire the cake served on the group’s 25th birthday in September. V ;* , J> . ‘J THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JANUARY I, 1968 Meadow Brook Theatre at Oakland University opened its pre- miere season Jan. 3. The second season began Oct. 5. The John FernaldfCompany is giving audiences a taste of classic and contemporary drama. Katie Burgurn of Birmingham and her date from Ann Arbor, Bennis Le Golvan, were first nighters. V The late Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, Marcia Starkey became the first lady of Oakland University, first curator of the Mosqt Wisner ' not only attended theatre and home, “Pine Grove,” in April. Meadpw Brook Festival openings Since then, she has been busy but she was hostess at many an with tours, cataloguing and set-“afterglow.” „ ting up room displays. The second annual flower show at The Pontiac Mall in September was enjoyed by thousands of area residents. Mrs: W. D. Sexauer of Birmingham admires one of the table settings. Cultural arts in the area got a boost with the * .. ;er«*» mmm organization of the Pontiac Area Community Arts board of directors; and William Shirley, vice presir Council. From the left are George Putnam, presi- dent. The group with headquarters in the YWCA dent; Mrs. Hortense Riddick, a member of the has publishedtwo cultural calendars. Father Complains ' - These Are Separate Problems By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Our daughter, Sandra, is a college freshman. We bought her a car to get to and from campus, but Sandra maintains it with her earnings as a part time waitress.-Sandra is usually short of , funds for clothes, so when^she appeared recently in an especially fetching outfit, 1 commented on it. ' She said Dick, her friend, had given it to ABBY her. They are not en- * gaged, and I take a dim view of a boy buying clothes for my daughter. I feel that the only female for whom a man buys clothes is his wife, daughter or mistress. " . ★ ★ ★ Yesterday my wife Informed me that Sandra had blown $90 on a matched aet of golf clubs for Dick’s Christmas present. I nearly turned purple. My wife urged me to let her handle it. She intends to tell Sandra the next time she asks for something that the money is mpre urgently needed elsewhere. True. * ★ ★ ★ I am fearful that if I remain silent, I’ll develop an ulcer. What do you and your readers think about this? FRUSTRATED FATHER DEAR FATHER: You have two,separate problems: a daughter who has accepted an Inappropriate gift from her boy friend. For this, you * have every right to disapprove and to show your disapproval. But, if your daughter wishes to “blow” her hard-earned money on a gift for Dick, it’s her money, ahd her privilege, and When she’s broke, it will also be her problem. ★ ★ ★ CONFIDENTIAL TO IRVING: You have a '“gelt” complex. Forget about your money and maybe your friends will. \ • ★ ★ -k Troubled? Write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, ©ept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Bennett Cerf came to’speak at Pontiac-Oakland Town Hall in October and charmed all the women who regularly turn out for the lectures. Proceeds from Town Hall help support areas philanthropic, cultural and educational activities. Area residents always open their fyomes to/contestants in 'the annual Junior Miss Pageant, sponsored by the Pontiac Jaycees. With Mrs. Louis Schinimel Jr, hostess fdr a briefing tea, are Mrs. Bruce Hubbard (center) and Mrs. J.‘R. Greenhalgh. The Women’s Association of the Pontiac Symphony does tUHF, pleasant tasRs at once. They raise money for the symphony by selling geraniums to brighten local gardens. Mrs. C. Bfyan Kidney ffrom ■£ § left)] Mrs: Collis A. Scott and Mrs. Nelson K-' Hunter admire colorful flowersM-this year’s sale. * *■ v• 'M : : : ■ ; Ipfll ifeSL THE-PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,'JANUARY I, 1968 WHITE COLLAR GIRL plain knit shears with NO-BIND TOPS $1.00 pair, JNeumode Junius, he took a day. from February brought the spring eqgjnoz of scientific advance when , hejQuintilis, Sextilis, September,'for August to RUiSe it as ldng the next year tnto Une. ’Jk. realized that nature furnishes a regular sequence of' seasons The seasons determined his needs and controlled the supply of his natural foods. * He needed a calendar So he could prepare for winte? before it came. The Egyptians were probably the first people to adopt a predominantly solar calendar. They noticed that " the Dog Star, Sirius, reappeared in the eastern sky just before sunrise after several months’ absence. They also discovered that the October, November and Decern- as the montit of July. i To correct the’ Julian «alan- ber‘ . * - i ★ dar’g error regularly, the pope * * * I This Julian calenday was wide-decreed that February would The last six names were tak- ly used for mom than 1500 have an extra day in year? that en from the words for five, six, years, it provided for a year could be divided by <00, such seven, eight, nine and ten. Rom- that lasted 365H dayf, But it as 1600 and 1000, buf not in ulUs, the legendary first ruler Was actually about 11 minutes other century” y*Rfs «eh as of Rome, is supposed to have and 14 seconds longer than the11700,1600, and 1900. The Gregorian calendar was adopted by the• Roman Catholic MRS. ROBERT T. SACK Missp Wilkinson Wears Velvet Brocade Gown^ introduced this calendar about! solar year. pities soon crept into the' Flfteen -ft®*!' *£* ,UUMieu ____________________ calendar. One king added ^Lier nations of Europe almost im- months, Januanus and Febuar.1"" 0^^ ^ It is sb accurate that ius, at the end V the year, forjjjj1 *•» gjndir Mld 11 the. difference between the cal-the purpose of collecting more Wou,a- C JP endar and solar years is now taxes during that period. Public MORECHANGES [only about 26.3 seconds, annual flood of the Nile River officials used the extra months! Pope.Gregory was a big map! Yet various German states came soon after Sirius reap-to stay longer in office. ' l0f that time, and in 1582, on kept the Julian calendar until Ipeared. | By the time of Julius Caesar, the advice of astronomers, he 1700; Great Britain did not They used this event to fixi^*0^ 7ears the calm- corrected the difference by or-change to the Gregorian until their calendar and came to rec-rf^ was abou^ three months dering 10 days dropped frorp 1752; Russia until 1918, and Tur- ognize a year of 365 days, made T*eat* °* ™ scheduled fixed by the month of October. This key until 1928. ! up of 12 months, each 30 days theseason^ Lj--------------------------------------—-------------------------: llong and an extra dividend of _ .. .. . , ! five days added at the end — Lmalign the calendar with | six days every fourth year. J8 seasons in the year 46 B.C., | Thesfe extra days were notCaesar- actm8 uPon ad- Attired in an A-line gown of velvet brocade, Kathryn Sue Wilkinson became the bride of Robert Terry Sack Saturday in First 'United Presbyterian Church, Holly. Bands of mink outlined the neckline and sleeves. The bride chose a matching brocade Wat-, teau chapel train. Her floor length illusion veil carcoats and carcoats 15.99 pants 5.99 X The looks you like most for’ wintej, carcoats and trim stretch pants .are at exciting savings. Hurry to Hadley's for the.se exceptional values! Carcoats tailored with fine precision. Pan-ts are stretch for the fit, you love. Coat'colors in group include green, . camel and brown. Pant colors: navy, brown and laden. for sale savings, just say “charge it” - t/: '■ £■ ■ Open Tues., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. ’til 9 P.M. The New Fashion Mall in The Pontiac Mall was secured with a peau de sole cloche detailed with seed pearls. She carried a colonial bouquet of pink and white Sweetheart roses with streamers. Joye Good was maid of honor for the afternoon vows with bridesmaids Jennifer Ganshaw, Carole and Mary Jane Sack. Best man honors were performed by Wayne D. Witmeyer with Michael Hurst, Terry Dyk-stra and Douglas Sharp. TRAVEL EAST Prior to their departure for a honeymoon in the East, the newlyweds greeted guests in the church social hall. The bride, daughter of the Francis J. Wilkinsons of Holly, and the bridegroom, son of the Robeff ff. Sacks of Grand Rpp-ids, will make their home in Washingron, D.C. part of any month. They were used as feqst days, to hortpr their gods. The earliest known Roman calendar consisted of 10 months and a year of .304 days. The vice of the astronomer Sosigenes, niled that that yelar should have 445 days. He ordered that all , subsequent years should have 12 months of 31 and 30 days, ex- Romans ignored the remaining February, which had 60 days which fell in the middle onl^1J29u Ever>[ {°urth year, » of winter would have 30 days. He also, The 10 months we>e named ™oved the beginning of the year -------------- -----— from March 1 to January 1. AND HOW! . The Romans called this their year of confusion. | The month Quintilis „was re-nailed to honor Julius Caesar,! gwing us Julyyrhe emperor Au-| < gpstus took the next month, Sex-1 Don’t count on finding soap,jtilxk'and~nmned it for himself,! towels, or hot water in the “la- giving us August. Carry Soap in Europe MRS. RICHARD O. HANSEN dies’ lounge” of European restaurants. The facility in even a plush. Barcelona dining place has only a trickle of cold water and no soap. The best preparation for this situation is to carry a spacious purse equipped with a plastic envelope of soap and, cleansing tissues from the U.S.A. Being only human, after all,i Cathy Lynn DeLorge spoke Stows Saturday in St. Andrew’s Episcopal 1 Church, Ann~ Arbor, with O/C Pfc. Richard Omar Hansen. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jack R. DeLorge of Amy Drive, Independece Township, and Mrs. Omar Hansen of Birmingham and the late Mr. Hansen row Old ? ***<:ASH THJfi PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARV 1, im Raisin tovfers It's AN Just Hoax Here are the four young ladies who will reign as queen in the four football games today. From left: Linda Jean Strother, Queen of the Towrnament of Roses for the Rose Bowl t Game in Pasadena, Calif.; vs-;I AP wirtphol* Kathy Heldman, Queen of the Cotton Bowl in Dallas; Patricia Marie White, Queen of the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans; and Pat Taylor, Queen of the Orange Bowl in Miami, Fla. . ■ , Is Wed to David Newlyweds, the David Owen Kortes (nee Judith Ann Belljf.j will make their home in Lansing where he is a student atj Michigan State University, following a northern Michigan honeymoon. The daughter of the Murneyj F. Bells of Rippleway Street, White Lake Township and the! son of the George Kortes of I Maple Heights, also White Lake Township, repeated vows Saturday in St. Mark’s Lutheran Church. For the evening wedding, the bride wore a traditional wed-1 ding ensemble fashioned from held at the Middle Straits lace and taffeta. A full veil of'Community Association Hall, illusion framed her hair. | Orchard Lake. Carrying white roses, the * bride was attended by Katherine Adair as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Mary Jane Ebach, Christine Becker and Suzanne Carlock, with flower girl Shari Griesmer. James Tebben was best man with ushers Murney Bell, Ronald Korte, Steve Habitler and Gary Thomas. Before departing for their honeymoon, the newlyweds were honored' at a reception Korean Club for 'Family' of Seattle Pair i MRS. DAVID 0. KORTE By BETTY CANARY I was considerably cheered today w h e n I opened9 my mall and found a notice from the California Raisin Advisory, Board. It told me that I could kiss my husband 22 times on the energy I’d get from eating only 12 raisins. ♦ k k I looked to the west from whence cometh my help and envisioned a whole new idea sweeping the country. Raisin Power! But, as with all „poetic visions, practical application must be made and I spent some time thinking about how I would solve not only the problems of the world but also stop some of the commotion in aj house containing two adults, five children and various pets.| ★ * * I I A box ot raisins in not a particularly inspiring sight. One! simply doesn’t look into a boxful and see the rays,of the sunj being trapped and converted! into kisses. RAISIN POWER I knew I couldn't swing Raisin Power by myself and de-j tided if I could get the thing! under way that Madison Ave-j nue could surely come up with a sexy looking raisin. I will give the world raisins and kisses, I thought. But I am selfish. My family comes first. So. when the kids came in from ' school, I was ready for them with the cunnirig little individ-l ual boxes I got in the market for twice the price of the bulk* package. “Look what mommy has, for you,” I cooed. “Eat them up and then I’ll tel} you what’s going to happen!” »Well, Rick gave, me an odd look and mumbled something about going down to the corner for a Coke, but this wasn’t too ■ deflating. One can’t win them all., "You know I hate raisins!” Cissy said. Then Stu asked me how he could have lived around here 11 years and have a mother who. forgot his allergy. By this time Babs had epunted hers and was^owling because Tad got four more than she did. She counted his as he threw them into "the aquarium. ’ ★ * I Getting these reactions when I' expected energized, kisses | rather dampened my ardor. As a matter of fact, I completely abandoned my world plan. But,. I still had a husband and lots of raisins so I decided to feed them to him. Drawing upon my reserve of tried and true idea, I first stirred'them info a sauce and slipped., a baked ham under them. You can boil eggs without breaking their shells if you wet the shells thoroughly with warm water before dropping them into hot water to cook. Now Is the Time to Train for a Career in Business! Secretarial — Accounting Business Administration Clerical — Office Machines • (Individual Attention • Concentrated Programs ' I, • Free Placement Service • Approved for Veterans MID-TERM OPENING - JAN, 22 FOR MORE INFORMATION WRITE DIRECTOR OF ADMISSION FOR CATALOG OR CALL FE 3-7028 Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey Ford of Stirling Street announce • the engagement of their daughter, Linda Elaine, to Michael G. McNamara. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Symons of Flint. Trrrrorrimnns sr MEXICO TOUR : Leaving February 3rd ® PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE c Ponli.ic Mall Shopping Centrr ° 108 MALL OFFICE BUILDING ° PHONE 882-4600 SEATTLE, Wash. UR - The Korean "family” — numbering about 200 — of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dougherty of Seattle has formed the Dougherty Family Club in Korea. ★ ★ ★ The local couple’s house here has been a second home for young Korean students and military personnel ever since Mrs. Dougherty struck up a conversation with two Korean army officers 10 years ago and in-vited’them to dinner* A ★ ★ I Since then brides, ter from home, have had their receptions in the Dougherty home and scores of Koreans have stayed there, some overnight, others as long as three months. Members of the new club meet in Seoul once a month. Mr. and Mrs. Dougherty, who Polly's Pointers Use Handy Eyeshade v even better than the cardboard.' It fits tight, does not bend and has a helpful handle. - MRS. J. P. H. JR. DEAR POLLY - Mary should put her salt shakers in hot running water for awhile and then try to twist the top6 off with a WET dish doth'.. If this does not work, she could put a drop of household oil into the edge of the threads or the caps and I place a large paper.sack, agajn twist' with the wet cloth, flattened out, under my electricj US€ this method on my two-.... skillet when frying anything and canning jar.tops, some of have no children of their own, jit catches most of the spatters.! which reaiiy do get rusty so I hope some day to accept the _ MRS. L. M. V !hope this works, for others, -j club s invitation to visit Korea. | DEAR POLLY - I have been j JOSEPHINE I using and liking the new no-iron By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY — I can barely see without my glasses Oh and when using hair spray I spotted both my glasses and the mirror. I made a cardboard eyeshade and now hold this above my glasses, first to one side and then the other as I spray so I have no more spotted glasses. ★ ★ ★ ALL PERMANENTS 395 to 595 } ME HIGHER Include^ All This: 1 — New Lustre Shampoo 2 — Flattering Hair Cut 3 — Lanolin Neutralizing 4 —Smart Style Setting NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. . 78 N. Saginaw I Over Bazley Mkt. 338-7660 Sandpaper the soles of your childrens’ new shoes and they won’t be as slippery. . C. R. HASK1LL Suggests: “IVhile Everyone Is Home For The Holidays FAMILY PORTRAIT!” C. R. HASKILL STUDIO One University Drive Pontiac Phone 334-0553 Clyle R. Haskill W+kk+^k*'#***** cotton and polyester fabric sheets and pillowcases. However, the cold cream I put on my face at night does not come off the pillowcases. I have written the manufac-tuier and they do not have toe answer, but there must be many among your readers who have the same problem and MAYBE someone has solved it. — LOREN A DEAR POLLY - While painting my back porch I discovered a better way to paint without getting paint on the floor. I had misplaced the cardboard previously used so I substituted my inexpensive plastic dust ran! Turned over, it slips right up against the molding and works k k k DEAR POLLY - I, too, had some old metal salt shakers that corroded so badly we could scarcely use them, but now I keep a few grains of rice in the shaker and it works perfectly - MRS. G. M. S. W YEAR'S SPECIAL 8x10 FULL FAMILY GROUP AT NO ADDED COST ONLY ONE OFFER PER FAMILY Mon., Tuei! and Thurj.,. 12:00 to 1:00 Frl. and Sat., »:00 to 5:00 KENDALE’S Photographers 45 W. Huron ' . - Phone FE 5-0322 or FE 5-3260 PHONE FOR APPOINTMENT PONTIAC 81TC PRHTO BIVLY! NONE HIGHER ALL 100% HUMAN HAIR WIGS 2950 Compare at 0125.00 VERYLARGE SELECTION OF ALL SHADES World’s Finest Reg. $49.00 Human Hifr |-| a WIGLETS *15 HUMAN HAIR $AQ FALLS Wonderful color range! You’ve aeen them at thrice the price for this fine quality. ' / SPECIAL on PERMANENTS Custom Cold Wave Phone FE 5-9257 Beauty Salon plete No Appointment / AvvwtAi, y uniuit Necessary 11 N. SAGINAW—Between Lawrence and Pike St. DRASTIC REDUCTIONS SAVE UP TO 50% AND MORE Save 50% and more on little heels, sports, flats and dress styles, all from your favorite famous makers! Brights, neutrals, suedes, leathers, patents, textured and evening looks... something for every occasion, and just look ot the prices! Hurry in now and save! Regularly $12 to $2 ft DRESS SHOES NOW *5.99,.*17.99 DE 1150 DEBS / MARQUISE / JACQUELINE NATURALIZER / CONNIE / CORELLI REGULARLY $9 TO $14 SPORTS AND FLATS NOW *3.99° %99 CONNIE / CORELLI / LARKS ir/MSUc* 48 N. Saginaw St. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open Tnes. and Friday Nights ’til 9 UNTRIMMED COATS were to $90.00 *36 ‘56 ‘76 Fit HUM HITS- were to $170.00 : ■‘94 ’III ‘134 -tosniMB stm- were to $90.00 *46 *56 * *76 were to $26.00 $688 $|088 SJ2&8 were to $49.98 *fi8 —BRIDALS COMPLETE CLOSE-OUT 1/2 off and morn VASSARETTE Bras . ’ mg. $4.00 Girdles mB.to$ii.oo OLGA FOUNDATIONS 299 to 8" L. Leg Pantie Girdles$13.00 *11 GOSSARD L. Leg Pantie Giffe S& ID" ll91 PERMALIFT / rag. $4.50 341 mg. 113.00 * IIP SPORTSWEAR SWEATERS SKIRTS — BLOUSES SLACKS -»•**» *8 *8 ’M *3 *5 *7 $250 5^50 *6 *8" *10 YOUNG FOLKS COATS reg. to 38.00 *20 *30 DRESSES 'It reg. to 8.98 3*8 J** SWEATERS' reg. tp 7 98 3** 4«8 SKIRTS reg. to 8,98 3** F SLEEPWEAR reg. to 5.00 J8S 988 MILLINERY' reg. to $12 $3 *5 » / '™T,|'r?r. ■ ,-tVi Cnt TUB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JAJfoJARY I,#1068 HAVANA (AP) - Cuba’s struggling economy remained ■biggish in 1967 despite breakthroughs that could give the country a big boost in the years ahead.fy Preliminary indications are, however, that 1968 will not be one of them Prospects for the new year already have been rocked by a severe drought in Oriente and Camaguey Provinces, traditionally the island’s leading sugar producers. Originally programmed for 8 million tons in 1968, the plan is now talked of in terms of 7 million, tons. Many The weAtber vane for the is- j observers think it could. be con-land’s economic climate, as 'siderably less than that. \ ~ usual, was last year’s sugar | An unsuccessful harvest in harvest and the prospects for 1968 probably means. Cuba this year’s. „ jagain will be forced to reduce Cuba earns more than 80 per the amount of sugar it delivers pant--of its foreign exchange (at 4 cents above world market ’‘from sugar. Thus the crop still price) to the Soviet Union, dominates the economy despite | Observers, noting that this efforts of Prime Minister Fidel,ups the Cuban sugar debt to its Castro, to diversify. I principal financial backer, say After a roaring good start and this is hot as serious as it the biggest human mobilization sounds and that it could be com-ever, the 1967 harvest finished pared loosely to increasing the at 6.1 million metric tons, near-ju.S. national debt, ly a million less than hoped for. draining PRODUCTS SHORT OF GOAL | a poor 1968 harvest, however, Although 6 million tons is a also could have the adverse ef-respectable figure (the record is jfeet of draining into foreign 6.7 million tons in 1961), it was j channels some of the agriculturist enough to keep the Cuban jal products Castro has been econdmy moving toward (Cas-| promisingthe people, tro’s goal of 10 million tons byi As for the Cuban consumer, 1970. |life continued hard in 1967, per; of 1966 would not apply for last year. Most felt there was increased trade with both Communist allies and the West. In 1966, Cuba, exported 81.4 per cent of its goods to socialist countries and the rest to. the West. Russia accounted for 46.2 per cent, Communist China 14.7 per cent and Spain led the West with 5.5 per cent. Cuba imported 79.8 per cent from Communist countries in 1966. The Soviet Union again was the leader with 56.3 per] cent. Communist China had 9.3 i per cent and Spain, 8.1 per cent.) Observers suggest that 1970 is! still the magical year to watch! for a takAiff in the Cuban econ-| omy, although some contend if, (Used Auto Parts Available) WITH USELESS JUNK CARS ■ghect Meet Paid - We Pick Up 2-0200 PONTIAC SCRAP 135 Branch haps harder than before. He struggled with food rationing, clothing shortages, high prices, inefficient service and red tape. In July and August ^ the food problem began being reflected in longer lines at restaurants and cafeterias. The Communist government made more demands on the Cuban’s free time, opened a drive to eliminate overtime pay and raised the price of cigarettes. In return, it declared funerals, public telephones and sports eventsfree. AGRICULTURE In agriculture, the government claimed more acreage in coffee, rice, cotton, vegetables, and citrus and said 100 million timber producing trees were set-out in 1967. Castro said the coun-i try now has 1.3 million head of cattle in its artificial insemination programs. Increased production of beef,1 eggs, poultry, fish, vegetables dents again are roaming the and fruit was reported and rout-j walks of old Carthage College, ed past the consumer to earn founded in -1870 and moved toiJ. R. McCartan and Asiiciates badly needed foreign exchange Kenosha, Wis., June 1964. jof Pittsburgh, which incorporated as a nonprofit Illinois corporation. The McCartan group also is associated with Robert Morris Junior College of Pittsburgh, but the two schools are not legally related. argue that Castro Is building a might be before then. They solid agricultural infrastructure and that all the things he u planting eventually must bear fruit. , They add that if 1967 was stagnant, it also bought time for Cuba to train more technicians, acquire mere tractors, build more rohdsyand educate more people. But it also was another rough year for the average Cuban who already has had nine tough years. By 1975, predicts the bearded Cuban leader, no one will be able to call Cuba underdeveloped. “What the country is doing now is investing,” Castro says SAVI ON SOLID STA1NLMSB Old Carthage Is Reopenedf CARTHAGE, 111. (AP)—Stu- each school year. It opened.with 415 students. The campus was purchased by credit. * ★ * At the port of Muriel east of The new Robert Morris Jtulior Havana, the third unit of a ther- Co„ of Carthage offers M** mal electric plant began push-lyeflr coarx of stlidy in one and ing out 50,000 kilowatte of power g^ooi years through and the fourth snd finsl units *up “trimester” svstem which were scheduled to begin operat-provides three i/week' terms ing this year boosting the plant’s ——------ total output to 200,000 kilowatts. Thfe other thermal electric plants will be ready in the near future. Steel, glass and cement production were reported up. A new plant at Nuevitas and Siguaney in Camaguey Province is planned to open this year producing 1 million tons of cement annually. CEMENT GOAL “HTJA3H RUOY" 2JAHOI2 J130MACI H3V32 flinq Q*i io •HddiJsdS .2 tsthobosH pnmuDgg . [ \bno noimit iiwvmM .6 ttsniixib 10 •bium ybod IsiMtO A noim*l '‘‘JaiiD110 nioq jtanM .C gniqqoq bfiD pnitoid .€ pnimut noHw si ion bosH nsswtsd niol > ••bold lebluoiii OMIMRAW tsineq zmotqrnyz ezerit lo yno H flOTOASWWIHD S1UOY JJAD i.HSlH'ia’TSSS’S.t H .11 .i« i The government says it will triple cement production by 1971. The cement is vital to road construction and to meet an announced goal of 100,000 apartments a year between 1970 and 1980. One important success of 1967 was an agreement -with a Brit: ish firm to build a $50-million fertilizer plant at the southern coastal city of Cienfuegos. Con-j struction begins in the first quarter of 1968 with production starting in 1970. Customarily, trade figures were not announced but diplomats here said there was no evidence to doubt the percentages Ai Great Lakes Log Buffalo, New York How“rrms named Prff*h THE CITY OF BUFFALO, NEW YORK DID NOT GET ITS NAME FROM THE BUFFALO - BECAUSE THAT ANIMAL 010 NOT INHABIT THIS AREA. SOME HISTORIANS BELIEVE FATHER HENNEPIN. A FRENCH MISSIONARY AND EXPLORER, ACCIDENTALLY GAVE THE CITY ITS NAME. WHEN HE FIRST SAW THE NIAGARA RIVER HE EXCLAIMED ‘BELLE fLEUVE* (MEANING BEAUTIFUL FL0W)l THE INDIANS MISPRONOUNCED THE TERM, CALLING IT \BOOF-FLO’ AFTER THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR, THE ENGLISH SETTLERS BEGAN MOVING INTO THE 6REAT LAKES AREA. WHEN THEY HEARD THE INDIAN WORD ^BOOF-FLO" /-fflte THEY TH0U6HT THEY MEANT BUFFALO -AND THE NAME STUCK. ^ IUFFALO Prices drastically reduced for this limited time sal* onlyl Buy now while these low, low prices ere In efficfTSolkTStalnless by Oneida Is nstionally advertised, high quality etalnless. Correctly proportioned, perfectly balanced. Choose from many popular designs... traditional, contemporary, or Early American. Sale ends January 31. e-rc. pik« s«ttiif consists si; 2taaspoons I hollow Inndlt kolfo 1 dinnor(oik —1 soup spoon 1 salad foik SOLID STAINLESS by WHILE THEY LAST! ONEIDACRAFT* DELUXE STAINLESt 6-Piece Place Setting ♦398 Cr*(ular1y$8A06 COMMUNITY* aTAINUtt 6-Piece Place Setting ♦5« Front top to What (COMMUNITY) Wood SHIS*. Csntsta*. WsSWwP, M (ONEIDACRAFT) Wintononi*. Ttmpo*, Tnturs*. Lsstini Roso*. CKstssu* Mwwmrt WARD Pontiac Mall TELEGRAPH At ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD PHONE 682-4940 BUY! SELL! TRADE! V__ * USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! CLOSING OUT Iff SToor Samples emb Warehouse $loc£ &V mo, $oom*$eal>fe lamps'pictures Smiers'cBarref Srirmiure Anqing, ^unpst^DmSinRs tf$ui m and rnatu/ _ decotafatpcecei 4405 Highland Rd. Comer Pontiac Lake Rd. 1 Mil* West of Elizabeth Lake Rd. Open Daily *til 9 P.M. Phone 674-2251 Toms Arronqod-90 Days Cash OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 6 P.M. CLOSING OUT SALE All Floor Samples Warehouse Stock ■ ■ ' . j , ■ v Save |0 f° to (0 % Off FI * Nothing Held Back Living Room - Bedroom - Dining Occasional Chairs - Recliners Love Seats - Occasional Tables Table Lamps - Wall Pictures Bars - Bar Stools - Fireplace Fixtures AIRPORT TERMINAL □ \* M-69 Highland. Rd. Gilberts GILBERTS FURNITURE % Ml. WEST 6959 HIGHLAND Phone ROAD SUNDAY 1 to 6 P.M. 674-3149 Terms Arranged, 90 Days Cash C m.v 'DUE PONTIAC PRESS, MOXDAV, JANUARV 1, 1908 ----- ........~~u.----------__=-—— l----- — c■ sm C—5 rv* i DETROIT (AP)—'The field of year in the minds of AP editors {hundreds of fishermen on Lake January''and February bliz-civil rights, Including r aci a Ijand broadcasters were t he Michigan off Frankfort. zards that tied most of Michigan riots that swept Detroit and oth-1teachers strikes that kept more] The disaster brought with it!*” a snowbound knot, and the er Michigan cities and the push,than half a million pupils out of call* for tighter Coast Guard continuing investigation of the for a statewide open housing school* for weekrat the begin-regulations and predictions that State Highway Department were law, was the top news story of ning of the school year. as the Coho boomed more such the ninth and 10th in importance, 1967, a survey of Associated! In some districts teachers are tragedies might occur. editors and broadcasters felt Press broadcasters and news-working ipedpr court orders with )Cts. The trials of the auto industry, I paper editors showed tpday. |out contracts. Pupils in Detroit including negotiation of new con- 'Xlso receiving mention whs JS T V* ? 10 POlnt^ r bTred fr0m kClairmS t^^swithtteU nited Auto theresignatibnofM^n Per- ,,, f l°Plc rece‘ved their teachers were on stme, hikes ^ the cont,nuing prob- man and • the controversy sur- ST S ' “ “i Rankin, fifth to n™, lmDorl l'm -fcty. ww'ro.ndlA, tfie ousu/o( a .* * > 1,s?,£ gy*81,(11 ■“>» **y *i Mlchl8M Included under the heading of of the Coho salmon, implanted j „y ' ... civil rights Were the fiots that!in Michigan waters fo improve!; ®r, ,e .nau ■y’. I967 was,a broke out in Detroit July 23 and game fishing and hopefully curb nt which saw the kept the city in a state of siege the harmful spread of trash fish wratuig.of the biggest labor confer six days, plus the smaller in the Great Lakes. In lts bistory—a pact that eruptions that spread, a&ross the | When the state’s fishermen , *n.c^®®se avera8e work- state to such cities as Pontiac, | discovered the Coho had come ?rs M-70 in wages and benefits Flint, Grand Rapids, Jacksonjof age, there was a fall run on by roughtly $1 an hour over the and Benton Harbor. | the northern Lake Michigan re- nex* fbree years. It was the big- Also included was the leeisla- sort area that usually Suffers labor'contract written in a tive battle, for an open housing | tremendous letdown after *he |industry any-law, a campaign that started as;summer tourist season ends and; c,c a direct result of the summer’s which this year had been badly TWO-MONTH STRIKE unrest. hurt by an unusually slack sum- The contract came after a two- JtOMNEY CAMPAIGN bier season. month strike at Ford Motor Co., Judged the seennd ton FISHING TRAGEDY a week of local disputes that story of the year was gov. I The Coho boom also brought Chrysler Corp. produc- George Romney’s campaign for with it tragedy. Seven people ^ the :1968 Republican presidential lost their lives when a treach- d wes at General Motors, nomination . erous September squall trapped The industry raised prices an average of $79 per model over MAN-MADE INFERNO—Michigan National Guardsmen stood ready as firemen battled numerous blazes in rist-torn Detroit in late July, the Detroit riot was one of several that swept the country last summer. The Romney drive received 25Q points with three first place votes. i ★ ★ ★ The gover&er-bggan the year! in the flush of his landslide re- ‘ election to a third term—a vie- j tory that catapulted him into the forefront of GOP presidential contenders. ' Refusing to declare his inten- State's Top 10 the 1967 sticker prices and because of the new labor contracts and price hikes in the steel industry the prospect at year's end was fqr still another increase. [ Dissident steel haulers in eight states, members of the Team- 1967 Dramatized Risks of Space Race | achieved their first linkup of spring thaws come in March or manned flight a two unmanned space vehicles in! April. er. a major step toward a lunar? America’s 1968 Apollo timeta- * ★ {flight and toward assembling ble calls for: ! • A second unmanned Saturn United States. — sters Union, took pot shots at ihc LU uccaie L. u.ie,i DETROIT UP) — Here are the truckers who refused to honor a lions'asthe toP 10 ne.ws stories 9f 1967 as strike and in more than a month by„ TsnPress°< look” at his chances of winning and broadcasters in several-.njured the nomination. Michigan: The one fatality occurred in wnv sorreu i. Civil rights, including riots Michigan as d i d at least one INUV. is speech that struck Detroit and other of the injuries. The continuing The exploration ended Nov. 18 Michigan cities and the battle story was judged seventh in im . .. * . f with Romney’s announcement in for, open housing legislation. portapee. Detroit that he planned to “fight g*. Gov. George Romney’s CHANCELLOR PICKED for and Win nomination and elec-campaign for the Republican ‘ The Universitv St Michigan ^“..V*** 4 th" ***** nomination- picM "KbS? £ SS? By HOWARD BENEDICT AP Aerospace Writer CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. — — Lessons learned from tragic, .... ... _ T ,. mistakes should advance man!large orb,ting stat,ons- Q * Launching ... nearer the moon in 1968 * * * Lunar Module on its maiden in March. moved in New Hampshire, site cometax Tho iinitoH Qtatoc Rncoia I The Soviets may resume flight in January atop a Saturn • In the summer, a three-man of the nation’s first presidential 4 Teacher strikes , n ’manned missions when the 1 rocket, with a second un-crew headed by Navy Capt. primary in March while the gov- H| man-in-space programs- * 1 r ' an their stunned by disaster, are expected to resume manned flights next year, with both aiming for a possible climactic race to the moon in 1969. ★ -k ★ The world had expected great feats by astronauts ‘and cosmonauts as the second decade, of the Space Age began last year. Instead, the public became painfully aware of the risks of rocketry, that dangers are involved and that brave men can die. America’s fir$t Apollo team, Air Force Lt. Cols. Virgil I. Grissom and Edward H. White II and Navy Cmdr. Roger B. Chaffee, died when flames swept through their spacecraft during .what was considered a routine ground test at. Cape Kennedy last Jan. 8. COSMONAUT DIES Three monthsjater, Col. Vlad-Imar Komarov, a Soviet cosmonaut, was killed when his spacecraft parachute lines became tangled as he returned to Earth from Russia’s first man-inspace trip in more' than two years. Three other U. S. astronauts died'during the year, two in plane clashes and one in an automobile accident. , ★ ■ ★ ★ The Apollo blaze delayed U.S. astronaut flights at least 18 months. The Soviet program also was held up as it underwent careful study. 4, At year end, it appears that unmanned 5 test with an Apollo spacecraft, within days Romney forces . Enactment Of first state in- w“m, ^namld^suj! ceed Harlan Hatcher as presi-dent of the University of Mich Walter M Schirra is to take the'ernor himself planned to a ^ SSn^^fboS’totouJ- Kd^s^hT^hmmajoTs'to^ new Apollo spacecraft up for an!month-long world torn. ist-hungry northern Michigan " the state dSSS Earth orbit flight intended to . and the tragedy they caused v-r~—r—t------ last at least 10 day?. 1 ^s. ended, Romney was wjien a September storm killed j» . LUNAR PROBES* 1 runnmg far behind former Vice geven fishermen. 'President Richard Nixon m most PE^CE SYMBOL—Soaring skyward in Hiroshima, Japan, the Peace Clock, donated by the city’s Rijo Lions Club, stands near the bombed World Peace Memorial (background). It mil chime every day at 8:16 a.m., the exact time the atomic bomb flashed over the city Aug. 6, 1945. . ^resident Kicnara iNixon in most Th_ -,nj„e*Pu inrinri- The United SUtes pursued a public optoion polls as the likely coottac, negotiat%s, prfce ZTl’o "lm ZSf S1"^- B“ W6re ",*dy “ hikes, sales revere M sale-gram in 1967, launching eight .count Romney out. t ’ spacecraft to probe lunar se-| Judged the third biggest story y‘ ★ ★ ★ crets. Four of them orbited the of the year was the enactment 7 Independent Teamsters ter- moon and three soft-landed on of the first income tax in state______• . _____ . k.j - „ the surface. Only one faBed. |history. The las of 2.6 per cent “£ * Russia, surprisingly, did noton personal Income to 9.6 per announce a single moon shot cent on corporate income, ™ "g na^a during the year. , passed the Legislature in July ^ersity of Michlgan prCsl * * * [and became effective Oct. 1. The . . The U. S. plans to launch its story got 227 points in the voting 111 er final unmanned moon vehicle, | TEACHER STRIKES f. iq ^olten Ferency resigns as Surveyor 7, in January. Also on| Fourth biggest story of the Democratic state chairman. Hoffman’s Famous - Guaranteed Tender BUTCHER BOY STEAKS storms cripple the 1968 schedule are more sophisticated versions of communications, weather and scientific] satellites. France launched two satellites in 1967; and British, Italian and Australian payloads were orbited by American rockets. These nations, plus Japan and a group of European nations, are expected to continue their growing space activity next year. AP Wirtpholo ’ BEFORE APOLLO TI&GEDY — U.S. astronauts (from left) Virgil I. Grissom, Edward H. White and Roger B. Chaffee stood at their Cape Kennedy launching pad Jan. 17, just 10 days before they died in an Apollo Project training session. Military Advised to Use Gas, Oil WASHINGTON (AP) - Army [ and Air Force installations [could reduce costs several nriil-. lion dollars a year by converting manually operated, coal j furnaces to automatic gas or oil heating units, government investigators have reported 'Friday. Efforts to con- caused the death of hundreds of, The investigators, in the Gen- Water Woes in Everglades THE FARM MIRACLE both nations are bouncing back * in their determined efforts to MIAMI (AP) , . , _ . explore space. fr°l water in the Florida Ever-,deer t h r o u g h starvation and eral Accounting Office, said a glades have met with indifferent drowrting north of the sprawling1 study of 12 military bases, SUPERROCKET !success although many millions park, * * f [including Selfridge Air Force On Nov. 9, in a spectacular have been spent over the ydibs. | -------------------- *. Base, Mount Clemens, Mich., demonstration, the United Dry summers jor the last sev-i The moon is made of the showed these conversions would States launched its first Saturn eraj years have taken a heavy [same materials as the earth, out costs about $3.5 million each * ■& superrocket, which eventually toll of aquatic and bird life in much of it soil and rock of year, primarily by releasing is to boost men to the moon. the Everglades National Park, volcanic origin, sc ien tfsts military personnel to Other In October, the * Soviets And the wet summer Of 1966;believe. duties. i AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT - The rapid increase in population would be presenting the United States with the food problems familiar to many crowded nations elsewhere " on the globe if farm production had not been inci!easing even more rapidly. At the turn of the century, one American farmer fed an average seven other Americans. Today, it is one farmer to 40. Hie farmer has accomplished this miracle on less than a third of available farm acreage. Machinery enables him to accomplish more work than four men, could do before World War II. 59 < lb. COUNTRY STYLE • ' _____ BACON SLICED SUGAR CURED HICKORY SMOKED DRY AI R TROUBLES? ITCHY SKIN? DRY NOSE? plaster (Sacking? STATIC ELECTRICAL SHOCK? “DEAD” CARPETS? Coolerator AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER $74.95 Eliminatt troubles caus.d by Kartk, dry, bak«d-out winter air. This' new Coolerator Humidifier moiiteni the air, filteri it of duit and impurttiei. You feel comfortably at lovyer temperatures. ARTIFACTS UNEARTHED—Ancient artifacts that may date back 3,000 years Were discovered when construction wirkers unearthed an Indian burial ground and garbage dunp on California's TUAtron Peninsula. A spfear point (left) ancr shell beads were among items said to relate to similar findings that have been dated by radio-carbon analysis to go as far back as 4,400,years. Phone 333-7812 93SEBE01 , ’* . MM650-8" 1 PORK CHOPS CUT FROM WHOLE OR RIB HALF PORK LOIN |> reserve the night to lituit HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 526 N. PERRY FI 2-1100 FHK PUNTlyVC PKKSS. MONDAY, JAN UARY- 1/19U8 THE VIETNAM WAR—subject of controversy as doves, hawks, antiwar, antidraft groups zero in on LBJ’s policies. Weary, wounded GIs (left) rest amid shattered trees on captured Hill 875, fiercest battle yet. Antidraft protesters (ah&ye) get lumps at Oakland, Calif., induction center. - OIL.ON TROUBLED WATERS—Soviet Premier Kosygin and President Johnson discussed problems and peach—Vietnam and Mideast—at a 5 Me -hour Glassboro, N.J., confrontation undoubtedly beneficial to both nations. % .%•••..• y *\. W& •. <*'\ v^.>. $ THE ARAB NATIONS gave provocation and, like a cornered animal, Israel lashed out. 'Result: The Mideast war was over in six days, the Arabs completely routed, their war-making potential utterly destroyed, much of their territory under Israeli control. Pictured, a sample of the Egyptian war machines which strewed the Sinai Desert from the borders of Israel to the bankrof the Suez Canal. THE “LONG HOT SUMMER” came to Detroit, Newark, N.J., and Cambridge, Md., among others. Negro riots were at their worst in these three places. It was necessary for National Guardsmen to help keep the peace. The result: Millions in properiy damage, injuries and loss of life, plus an erosion of sympathy for the Negroes’ civil rights cause. Here, in Newark police and troops struggle to control the city crisis “A BLUDGEON”"was Henry Ford's term for the strike of 160,000 UAW Workers against his firm. For the 61-day strike, workers lost $5.2 million a day in wages. Big gains: Pension boosts, 95 per cent of take-home pay for laid-off workers. A 33-YEAR REIGN of the seas ended with the retirement of the Queen Mary to Long Beach, Calif., to be a maritime museum and .hotel. To thousands of GIs her most' Illustrious service was braving the U-boat threat as a World War II troop, transport. GIANT STEP TOWARD THE MOON was the successful test ef the 31-story-tan Satnrn 5 rocket (launching at left) and the recovery fron\ the Pacific of the battered and scorched Apollo 4 spacecraft (upper right) after 8 hours, 37 minutes in earth orbit. In the last 18 months six U.S. robot explorers have been sent to the moon to probe its surface. Pictured, Surveyor’s ID’s mechanical arm digs a trench, proves lunar surface is cohesive. FRANCES De Gaulle had a field year. He insulted Canada, vetoed B r i t a i n’s common market bid, “advised” |JtS. and Israel. MARINE CAPT. CHARLES ROBB and his bride, the former Lynda Bird Johnson, walk through an arcn or drawn swords following their wedding in the White House. The wedding was the which hf **re8 daughter in the White House in the last 53 years, climaxing a romance GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY of the Soviet Union was a backward glance at the progress of endeavor daring the S8 years slncf the Bolshevik Revolution. Preoccupation with might is evidenced by this mammoth ICBM rolling through Moscow’s Red Square beneath a massive portrait of Lenin during the Inevitable military parade. PHOTO DRAMA OF T967 Nguyen Van The democrat Twiggy Mod exponent Patrick L Nugent Grandpa's pride Pope Paul V! Restored to health m U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY U.S CHOICE TENOERAY SIRLOIN STEAK U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY BSEFRIB STEAK ROUND STEAK CHOICE CHUCK ROAST U.S. CHOIQE CHUCK STEAK 59* blade CENTER CUT U.S. CHOICE v / REGULAR OR DRIP niK l’ONfTlAC l’KKKS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1068 LANSING (AP) -gs The past on whether the appeals year gave Republicin voters, an could act on It. official H^kldiHitiar candidate,! < > * * court ity budget"; if no new revenue;his father; approved; Rep. Dbvid Holmes, trips, ho . . i, s . .,•* I PJ [D-Qetroit, flattens Rep. Thomas!.. taxpayert a iww lncome drain,! Secretary of State James Hare Sharpe, R-Howell, during argu-11™' 44 J and daylight buffs a few extragobbled 0f*and on by a mls- ment off House floor. [organizing state military. .lories of 1967. battle during 1987 with pessagej acting highway _ director; Rom-1 JULY - Romney thinks heplans to cut 8tate y National| ., • * * father; Romney cancels Milliken announces new policy; ized during Detroit riot entitled,T. John Lesinskl reelected chief|H61mes state selective service «’ hosts legislative tax nego-,In assigning state cars, says leg- to veterans property tax ex«np-|Judge pf Appeals ^drt; “viceldlreetOr; warns protestori tum- Haws? se te^aar-ssirts *a-s * ** «s m »» rules cities mav adorn ooen;un,vers»y officials may not^S «£?*?** dr#ft *** ■* •* *• housing ordinances w^riiZal H?* uwith firms, doing business area ^ F^sS^k^J 5**1 °* ‘nductlon li,U! ClvH area and Flint; Schnipke «av«L. . _____. forfornf 9iuu.rnmf.ni Commission i,of a state implied consent layir.Jney says U.S. should encouragejcould win New Hampshire pres- Guard stqries But many troublesome issues, ®tber malor Hare projects—I South Vietnam to negotiate with j ideiytial primary ; lawmakers ap-including court reorganization ?1**1*00 sPendln« controls and [Vjeteong; Republican Anthonyjprove fl.ioi-billion state budget, and statewide open occupancy kniporary driving permits for|Mc*ta whips young James Hof-g0 home; Romney sets up riot y^ere put off until 1968, guaran- **cltet^ m°torists — were fa >or Detroit House seat. !headquarters in Detroit; Dr. AI-teeing more front-page stories00* Passed- ’ „■ ’ | ’ f* * . * jbert Heustis resigns from the Capitol in the New1 * * * ! JUNR^Frederick Matthei Jr.health director- Year. L The State Health Department named U-M regent, replacing1 AUGUST-Lt. Gov ★ ★ ★ ordered most good-sized com-' Gov. George Romney, fresh munlties to fluoridate their from a landslide third-term vic- dr*n*c'n8 water, but a special tory, gave out early in the year legislative committee suspended that He was taking a “long, hard toe order. Opponents of a West look" at whether to seek the|Michigan bug spraying program GOp nomination for president.;took the State Agriculture De-Soon the hard look had be- partment to court without suc-come a ‘‘hot courtship,” and by cess. April Romney was' saying he * ★ ★ would run jt the people wanted1 Lawmakers reconvened in him to. Apparently concluding October for a special session that they did, he formally an-jand approved a-$65-million pack-nounced his candidacy in No- age of road tax increases and a vember — becoming the firstrloll-lowering appropriation for serious contender in eitherjthe Mackinac Bridge. But the major party to do so. . 'two major bills of the fall go- GOES ALONG , I round—open housing and a new The Legislature, meanwhile, j*°*rer court system—met death after spending half the year 1" the House. to cut state National are ‘‘totally unaccept-1 federal government boosted Michigan's proposed Guarc OCTOBER—R. G. Rice namedIsmength about 10 per cent; Dyk approves Guard r9'milli0n pay raise tor 4LO0O grappling with its yearly search for revenue, agreed July 1 to go along with Romney’s suggestion of a state income tax. A 2.6 per cent levy on personal earnings, less $1,200 pet dependent per year, took effect in October. The Legislature also approved to no avail, a measure designed to keep Michigan on Extern Standard Time during the'sum [mer, where it had been for .more than 20 years. ★- * ★ Both houses passed, and the governor signed, a bill exempt ing the state from the federal Uniform Time Act, but advocates of Daylight time gathered enough signatures to lay the exemption aside until the 1968 election. Michigan’s clocks jumped ahead an hour in Jurie and back an hour in October. Hiree- legislators — Reps. Joseph Kowalski, D-Detroit, and James Nunneley, R-Mount Clemens; and Sen. Harold Volkema, R-Holland—died during the year. Kowalski was succeeded as House Democratic leader by Rep. William Ryan of Detroit. DEADLOCK ENDS Kowalski and Nunneley were replaced in the House by Republicans, ending a 55 -55 partisan deadlock. Republicans had taken over the chamber’s leadership in January, aided by nonvoting Democrat E. D. jQSBrien CAPITOL SLEEP-IN One group favoring open housing slept on the Capitol lawn over several nippy October nights and another filed into Romney’s nearly empty office, asking him to abandon his tour of several American pities. Romney, meanwhile, asked the State, Supreme Court to take over an Oakland County civil rights case that raises never answered questions about the state’s authority to outlaw housing in real estate transactions. The high court took the case. •k dr R State Police graduated their first Negro trooper and the Corrections Department promoted its first Negro deputy warden. The State Police director ran into an unforeseen windmill when he distributed “guidelines” to local police agencies, telling them what they -should and should not make public in com nection With crimes. QUICK DISAVOWAL Both Romney and Kelley hurriedly disavows any connection with the guidelines, and Romney after a meeting in his office a few days later, announced they had been suspended. And there were these stories during the year: JANUARY—Romney inaugurated, calls for .“new generation of Detroit. GOP chi£T Robert of progress;” Supremfe Court Waldron of Grosse Pointe was;justices attack each other in elected speaker. 'controversial case? Romney ★ ★ ; ★ takes unannounced trip to New Zolton Ferency in January;York, his staff won’t say why ;j announced his resignation as;Hare, disturbed by Democratic, state Democratic chairman, but'defeats, replaces several fee-; later .revealed hiswillingness to branch managers; Romney'si SHANK PORTION able;’’Milliken says 22i school | acting health director; David I house estimates Detroit’s in-, districts are without teacherjDykhouse reappointed state in-1 sured ridt loss at about $32 contracts. |surance commissioner; Highway [million; Hiye marries his secre- SEPTEMBER—Supreme Court DePartment slashes $26£ million tary; Romney leaves for month p0p! 8 8iate takes up precedent-setting teach-jfrom proposed five - year con-jtoyr of Europe and Asia, turnsi'T. w .. «r rfa.'ITta '** l~P.ni- . o,er u Milliken. E& William Kelley rules guardsmen federal-1 NOVEMBER-Former Lt.GovJ DECEMBER,- Col. Arthur tion director. P*n8 State employes; morals conviction of former State* Sen. Rarnard O’Brien erased when key prosecution witness refuses to testify in appeal; Michigan adopts $L6-million 1868 TENDERAY SALE'^H Only USD A Choi c*. Grain—fod hoof 1$ pi a cod in apodal roomt whoro contrallod *Ijmoto tpoodo op natural tondorlnp action whila thd bool it aflll "pook-froch”. You can bo aura yu’to patting boof that't hath itath and tandar ovary tima you buy Kragar T an da ray Brand Baaf., be drafted for another term. He was, in February, k- W it} ^ In October, the colorful Fer^n-cy called on national Democrats to consider alternatives to President Johnson. It, was promptly labeled a “dump Johnson’’ move and in the ensuing furor Ferency resigned again, this time for keeps. State Sen. Sander Levin of Berkley took over as chair- er to order Medicaid holdback; man. Romney picks Harvard’s Johna- Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley spent than Moore as foreign affairs six months probing the Highway specialist; legislative Democrats Department and concluded that blister Romney for out-of-state state of the state message plead for fiscal reform; John Deth-mers elected chief justice of Supreme Court. A ★ ★ FEBRUARY—Romney recom-mends to Legislature a $l.153-billion budget and a 2.5 per cent state income tax; Kelley announces Organized, crime division, rules Romney lacked pow- during the early 1960s it had made some illegal payments to favored contractors. SHOUTING CONTEST trips, ★ " A A MARCH—Otis Smith, former Supreme Court justice, is named „ „ ... I . University of Michigan regent; Kelley said he saw no need i Kelley announces $l-million-plus for a one-man grand jury inves-lttlement against several rock tigation of the department, but Laft producerS; state Police Set after a shouting contest with motor vehicIe elleck ianes. Romney, he agreed to help peti-j tion for one. Romney and Kelley [COURT RULING in an unprecedented step, took APRIL—Supreme Court rules their petition to the new State'county boards need not be re-Court of Appeals. The Michigan apportioned oi) population ba-Supreme Court agreed to rule'sis; Romney threatens “austerj KDU OF MONTPARNASSE. By Frederick Kohner. Stieri 8c Day. $5.95. Here is a vignette of life in that Baris of the early 1920s which so m a n y writers have celebrated as the great, romantic, bohemian, dazzling center of love among the drtists. It is presented as a memoir of one year in the author’s life, just after he had turned 19 and was supposed to be a student at the Sorbonne. But of course he spent most 6f his time in the art-world cafesof Montparnasse. There he became enamored,! In a naive, postadolescent way,1 of a sexy young tramp lrom| Burgundy known as Kiki. She sang in cafes as a part-time job and spent most of her time as a model and mistress for a succession of artists. In a way, this is a period piece. It looks backward to a time when the euphemistic word fqr Paris was “naughty." . In comparison with today’s metnoirs and novels which are so sexually explicit, the old days of "naughty Paris’’ may seen) a little quaint. But that is part of this backward glance toward a youthful fling of the day before yesterday. ' -, It is a welt-written tale that captures the aura of■$*special time and place. *$•* PORK CHOPS FLAVOR-SEAL-PAC' ALL BEEF HAMBURGER CENTER CUT RIB SMOKED HAM BUTT PORTION 89. 49 HYGRADE’S BALL PARK WIENERS...L.‘.69< SERVE N’ SAVE ... ■ v v * - SLICED BACON....... GORDON'S ROLL PORK SAUSA6E.....2X77* WHOLE Wl TH RIB OR BACK PORTION FRYER Lies OR HEUSIS......-«*• MAXWELL HOUSE LB CAN FOR SALADS OR COOKING ALL PURPOSI KROGER OIL REFRESHING % BREAKFAST IAN6 KROGER FRESH BAKE6 GIANT. 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CROCKER CAKE MIXES kraft Plain ■GOLDEN ■ BANANAS FRESH CRISP NEW CABBAGE 10 IB IMgf 1 1 • ^SiSI3SS^8 § ■* llfPff*, -« j'Tirw" X \. ■ewr EH THE POffTfXfc 1’UKSS, MONl)^ Y, JANUARY It 196» [v- Prehistoric Monsters [Military Desertions in Europe Are Few RON TODAY ft TOES. do not seem so remote when one views the wildlife inhabiting the Galapagos Islands—sometimes called the "enchanted isles"—-650 miles off the coqst of Ecuador in the Pacific Ocean. It was after his visit to the Galapagos in 1835 that Chgrles Darwin developed his theories on evolution. The islands, discovered in 1535, have been dubbed enchanted because of the extraordinary tameness of the animals Joan pnd Alan Root, bottom left, husband and wife team, were filming a British documentary'when they received a visit from a frigate bird. Prince Philip, president of the World Wildlife Fund, will narrate the film. Marine iguanas, left and bottom right, swarm over the islands without fear of man. The fear instinct, it is explained, takes thousands of years to develop. BRUSSELS (AP) — Deser-jsome well known people* fes-tions from American forces in | pon3ed with .signatures and Europe have been few, military money, including the poet Ste-authorities say, despite feelings phen Spender and John Le against the Vietnam war and a Carre, author of “The Spy Who sizable loophole in the agree-Came in From the Cold.” ment that requires European! The loophole for deserters in nations to return deserters. j Europe was found in an agree-Us. Army headquarters in ment signed by the IS member Europe listed 335 men away , countries of the North Atlantic without official leave on Nov. 1 Treaty Organization. The agree-out of-225,000, including 46 de-jment binds them to turn over fectors to Eastern Europe. The any member of an allied force Air Force says it has had no de- who deserts. But some lawyers serters in Europe for more than hold that when soldiers' leave three years. j the country where they are star •* ★ ★ .. tioned, their presence in a sec- The Army says volunteers for on^ country is not in congee- ■MAGNIFICENT!! — CHICAGO AMERICAfl | "BREATHTAKING!’' -TORONTO STTUt MICE* THIS ENGAGEMENT THE MltlSCH CMNfUTNM MtSENTS JULIE ANDREWS -MAX YON SYDOW RICHARD HARRIS ADULTS NITESt SUNDAY and HOLIDAYS .................•••MS MONDAY AT 1:30 - 4:45 - 8:00 - TUESDAY AT 8:00 ONLY tion with their official duties.” So they are not, strictly speak-, ing, any longer members of an Tracy's Death Tops '67 Movie Stories Vietnam service are increasing, with 16,500 registered up to mid-August, compared .with 14,000 for the whole of 1966. This, jallled force-a spokesman added, is a truer! . _ indication of how the U.S. sol-1 West German courte ^re con-dier* feels about Vietnam. I sidering the case of Willfam G. . . . . 'Hester, 27, alleged by the U.S. More has teen heard about N tQ-have «ateented h'lrnsel{ deserters in Britain than any- ;without proper leave {rom his where else. In London the shi at N~ t RJ - ^ Committee of 100 distributes ^ *J965 Hester fa studying law leaflets urging American sol- at Heideiberg University, in the diers to desert or, refuse to it where the us A has serve in Vietnam A spokesman jts European ^quarters, claimed that the number of j The West German federa, at. those who do so is increasing, t at Karlsruhe refused to but he gave no figures. let American military pohee ar- ANTI DRAFT DRIVE rest Hester because he was not Two young Americans in Lon-! stationed in Germany when he don—Harry Pinkus, 24, of New allegedly went AWOL. Hester York City and Joel Gladstone, says his ideas on the Vietnam 27, of Teaneck,. N.J.—havej,W8r are .H1086 °f ten. J. launched a drive to encourage! William Fulbright, D-Ark., but American youths abroad to re- te is in Germany because he sist the draft. They took an ad wants a law degree, in a London newspaper and _r FREE COFFEE FOR OUR PATRONS 12 NORTH SAOINAW | IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11:46 AM. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous 334-4436 FOR MATURE ADULTS - ENOS TUESDAY CONFIDENTIAL FILES REVEALED! > ,f ..PSYCHIATRIST TELLS ALL! fi SWW iww Ulc nillocy ncpui| lei l Oil “THE GOLDEN GIRLS” OPEN TODAY 3:45 CONTINUOUS By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Jhe movie world underwent violent change during 1967, and -it can look' forward to more changes in the coming year. Here’s how the top stories of 1D67 appeared to this reporter: j ★ ,*♦ ★ | 1. Spencer Tracy dies. Afterj years of ill health, he had been, in the news with his return to, films as co-star once again with; Katharine Hepburn. Days afterj finishing his last scene, Tracy died, and many of his colleagues believed his passing marked the end of the most brilliant acting career in American films.... . • . ys# Ar ★ , ★ 2. Jayne Mansfield killed. The would-be successor to Marilyn Monroe was' no longer in demand for movies, but she had i kept her career alive by persis-tent self-promotion. Her death I on a Louisiana highway brought recolections of .the remarkable - number of sex symbols have died, young. <’ ★ -, ★ ★ 3. The sex revolution in films. 4. The Oscars. Always one of Hollywood’s biggest news I M0NDA ONLY GO AHEAD TELLTHE £ END PLEASE / DON’T TELLTHE 1 BEGINNING! M SHIRLEY MICHAEL MacLAINE -CAINE GAMBIT TECHNICOLOR® ^LWatch the women gamble for inning TECHNICOLOR' events, the 1966 Academy awards featured a second victory for Elizabeth Taylor, but not fpr her co-star of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia \Voolf?” — Richard Burton. His yellow Britisher, Paul Scofield, won for “A Man for All Seasons,” which was also named the best picture. 5. Networks into films. The entrance of CBS and ABC into production of feature movies for theaters was considered by many observers to be the most important industry trend of 1967. The long-established film makers responded hy asking the government to halt the move on anti-trust grounds. 6. Elvis marries. One of America’s most famous arid wealthy bachelors married Patricia Beaulieu for the mbvie-land wedding of the year. And now the singer expects to be a father early next year; 1 WINNER OF B ACADEMYAWABDSI DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PASTERNAKS DOCTOR ZHilAGO IN PANAVISI0N* AND METR0C0L0R /[[ asm keeco LEAVE A SHADOW OVER YOUR HOME In the event of your death, wouldn’t you like to leave your home mortgage free? For as little as 1 per cent you can buy Modern Woodmen’s Mortgage Cancellation Plan. For details call or write: M. E. 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Kirk Wayne Douglas “the War Wagon" ■ TECHNICOLOR* OBNAVISIOW ■ RWrwi SopwiiT BRmido (PPON "acotiNiess . ftumHOftOKpntf’ SAVE NOW ON TELEVISION*RADIOS• STEREO • TAPE RECORDERS* CAMERAS BEDROOM and LIVING ROOM SETS • CHAIRS • MATTRESSES • DINETTES REFRIGERATORS • WASHERS • DRYERS • STOVES • DISHWASHERS* FREEZERS WATCHES • DIAMONDS • DINNERWARE • MISCELLANEOUS GIFTWARE! / TI1K rONTfAG PICKSS. MONDAY, JANl/XltY 1, 1908 M 1 0""" 9 By JOSEPH RJ COYNE Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON -L The nation’s economy 'clicked off a longevity record this past year and there’s every indication the expansion which began in early 1961 will continue to set new records with each passing month of the new year. But the longest period in U.S. history without a recession—December marked the 82nd month of the expansion—weathered some critical times during 1967, and major headaches lie ahead. ★ * ★ f Inflation, taxes, government spending and high interest rates should be standard topics Of conversation for Americans by the time 1969 rolls around—if the past year hasn’t already made,, them familiar household words. But as the new year begins, the big question is gtiU the fate of President Johnson’s 10 per cent surcharge on individual and corporate income taxes™ MOST IMPORTANT Government officials from Chairman Gardner Ackley of the Council of Economic Advisers on down contend it is the most important factor determining the future of the economy. • ..Despite impassioned pleas by administration leaders, Con- gress failed to aqjt on the surcharge and prospects during 1968 appear to hinge on the. extent to which federal spending can be cut. *'_*''* With or without the surcharge, however, the ecopomy is Expected to roll onward, at least for the foreseeable future. The only question, officials say, is whether it will roll at a safe sustaihed speed or will overheat and eventually, jump the track. It rolled to a record during Npvember, the 81st successive month without a recession, top ping the 80-month mark which extended through World War II. PRICE RISE Even with higher taxes, inflation is expected to take its toll during 1968, however. Without a tax increase, some government experts foresee prices rising at a rate of 6 per cent annually near the end of 1968. Higher taxes won’t stop inflation but will check the upward trend, the government insists. Jk.. 1 ★ ★ Here’s how the Commerce Department’s top economist, Dr. Willian? H. Shaw, assistant secretary for economic affairs, views the problem: “The major problem of the' year ahead ... inflation. “And unhappily there is no as- suranee that inflation will vanish Cven if we take strong measures to combat.lt. In fact, the nature of recent price increases indicates that the chain reaction of price and wage boosts will not subside for some months to come. We certainly can’t afford to gamble by adding to these built-in pressures." He said inflation can set off reactions which eventually may choke off the expansion. ★ ★ ★ Ackley said the tax increase “is the single most important factor we can now foresee which will determine the kind of an economy we have next year.” Most economic predictions for 1968 are based on adoption of higher takes to help stem inflation, keep interest rates in check, help pay for the Vietnam w£r and assure the continued recovery of home building by keeping mortgage funds available to the home buyer. SURCHARGE APPEAL The administration intends to continue its appeal for the surcharge. Gross national product—the value of all goods and services produced in the economy—is expected to reach about $785 bullion for 1967 as a whole, up from I the $743.3 billion of 1966 The ex- act figure for 1967 won’t be known until mid-February. 9 ★ it ■.'■it Most economists now see GNP rising to about $840 billion for 1968—or an Increase of between $50 billion and $60 billion if taxes are raised. Without taxes, Ackley has said,/ the increase could be a highly inflationary $75 billion. The standard forecast has not yet been adopted by the administration which makes its formal annual economic projection in January. 7 PCT. GROWTH This forecast would mean growth of about 7 per cent, with about 3 per cent eaten by inflation. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler has spoken of a return of the old boom and bust cycles without higher taxes. ★ * ★ "Just as the recent" strikes have temporarily calmed down the boomy atmosphere that was beginning to emerge late this summer,” he said recently, “so the aftermath could contribute to a dangerously inflationary fervor early in 1968.” It was on Jan. 10 that Johnson first proposed a 6 per cent tax surcharge which was changed to 10 pet; cent on Aug. 10 and Con- formally transmitted gress. REGAINING SPEED By this time, the economy had begun to pick up some of the speed it lost during the first half and added $16.1 billion to GNP during the third quarter, a pace economists consider at the upper limits of safety. Anything above that ultimately will lead to heavy inflation, government experts contend. ★ ★ it. v Strides kept the gconomy from expanding even faster and a high level of savings held consumer spending in bounds. Unemployment, however, rose to above 4 per cent in the latter part of the year, but government economists insisted the economy was basically strong and heading for an inflationary spiral Fowler in the fall said inflation was no longer a dream but a reality. ' . x SPENDING FIGHT *■■■ Congress, however, was unconvinced and the surcharge became lost in the fight over who should cut federal spending— Congress or the administration. Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., of the House Ways and Means Committee, said he wanted to see the future course of federal spending before asking his colleagues to approve higher taxes. He sSid $4.1 billion in spending cuts proposed by the administration fell short of his expectations by $2 billion to $3 billion. Federal spending for the next fiscal year Arhich begins July ;1 won’t be known for certain until Johnson’ presents his budget to Congress in late January or early February. Spending likely will exceed $140 billion while revenues depend on what Congress does with the surcharge. v ★ ★ it" The deficit tdr the current fis cal year which ends June 30 now is estimated at from $13.7 billion with higher - taxes and spending cuts to $22.4 billion without them. Spending for the Vietnam war leveled off as 1967 ended but is costing the option about $2 bil lion a month. worst years for home building | in reaction to the British deval-' since World War II. 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Anheusr 4*92 23 98 52% 98 Anheus 5.45*91 750 11)3'/. 89% 90% —9% 154 90 77 77 —8 40 82 74% 74% —4% 40937 132% 88% 99% 14r 88% 82 82% + % 89 86% 70 70 —23 aPMSlIH 698 92 82 86 +4% iLfbAAcN cv5s76 4035 126% 94 120 +24 87 91Va 86 .86 ^-5 LiggMyer 6s92 4900 105% 91% 92%—11 II 104% ”% 104% Ling TV, 5 *76 2524 92% 84% 84% — % 1497 104% 93 95 —8% 241 99% 94% 97 122 94 82 82 —5% 80 78% 78 78% —2% 8107% 105 105 +4% 7783 132 103% 132 L 1 95'* 95'* 95'* +4% 217 66'* 54 54Vh —9'* 129 70 58 58 —6'* 221 70 59% 64 —IV* 41 58 48 48'* —7% 22 27V* 20'* 21V* —2 . 101 53% 45 45 —4 178 27% 19W21 207 48'* 38'* 38'* —7V* 708 27 19% 20V* — % 116 66'* 58 58% FairHIII 4%s92 76% 95 +18'A I . , , -75'* 7T —5'* FamFIn 5s81 771* 77'* + '* , FamFIn 4%s90 741^ 76. —3%j F«nstl 4%s76 ,75 75 —5»/a FedPapB 5s81 90 9T* — % FedDStr 4'*s85 .. ■ L.J________ 91'* 93%+1 FerroCp 5%s92 440 98% 86'* 88 ••• \un%T cv5%s76 5362 732 98% 99 Firestne 3%s77 392 85'* 76% 76% -3% Lionel cv5'*s80 n 1731^ .75 —2'* Firestne 2%s72 29 92'* 90 92'* +2'* 12267 134 152% 128 + 75'* 74'* 75'*—4% Flintk cv4Vas80 155 100 88% 90V* + Va Litton cv3'*s87 2776 292'* 200 270 +70% 56 56 —8 FEC Cv5V*s11f 3643 85 41% 70'*+29% J Lockhd 4’*s76 147 92. 85% 86'* 'A. 55 55'* r-5% FlaECst 5s2011 471 77 67»* J0 V* Lockh cv4'*s92 73 73 —14 FlyTigr 6.60s80 643 99V* 93'* 94.........i 55373 117 85'A 89% . 68'* 68'* —«'* FMC CV4'*s92 LondSC 4%s90 84 95 78'* 78'A —8V4 7tt* 71'A —’* g j __ 25629 108 90'* 10T* _ LoneSG 4%s82 +250 vlNH 4<*s73f NYP8.L 2%s75 NY8.Put 4s93 NYSEG 2%s77 NYSus 4'*sl9f NY Sus CV4S94 NYSus 4s2004 NYTel 4'*s91 NYTel 4'*s93 NYTel 3%s96 NYTel 3'*s78 NYTel 3s81 i NYTel 3s89 i NYTel 2%s82 Nia MP 4%S87 Nte MP 3'*s83 Nia MP 3'*s83 Nia MR 2%S80 . Nia MP 2%s80 NorW 4.85S2015 INorfAW 4s96 NorCen 5s74 NorCen 4'*s74 Nor NG 5'*s79 Nor NG 4%s80 Nor NG 4%s81 Nor NG 4%s85 I Nor NG 4%s77 Nor NG • 4%s78 Nor NG 4%s81 Nor NG 4'*s76 Nor NG 4'*s84 Nor NG 4%s83 Nor NG 3%s73 Nor NG 3'*s73 Nor NG 3'*s74 NoPac 4'*s47 j NorPac 4s84 NorPac 4s97 Revere cv92wl 981 103'* 100 100% m ” ,w * 83'* 83'* + '* 401 93'* 89’* 89% —1 499 9PA 86% 87’* — % 8 85 80% 80% —4% 34 92'* 91% 91'* +1'* UnGasC 4'As78 UnGasC 3%s73 UnGasC 3%s71 UnGasC 3<*s72 UnGasC 3%s75 UnGasC 2%s70 Unit Merc 4s90 26156 99’* 80’* 86’* +3% Westch Lt 3s79 USFrgh cv5s8l 398 307 180 300 +124 Wn Md 5'*s82 USGyps 4%s91 324 97 79% 80%—11'* Wn Md 4s69 USRub 2%s76 21 79'* 72 72 -^8'* Wn Md 3'*s79 USSmlt 5%s95 2151 88'* 76 78 -3 iWnPac 5s84 WnPac 3’*s81 USSteel 4%s96 21092 94% 75% 77i*-12% ] WnUn 6’*s89 Salas Net (hds.) Hlgli Lew Last dig. Wabash1 4s|1 106 80% 70% 72 —9 Wabash 3V4s71 287 93 88V* 88% — % Wag El 6%s86 5017 102%r 90 92 —2% Ward cv5'*s87 4712 185 110 178 Warm 3'*s2000 31 40 36% 36% ..... WPenEI 3<*s74 30 92% 90V* 90V* —1'* 952 65V* 55 57V* —IV* 7 74% 65 65 —19% 46 95% 80 81 —18% 549 91 93V* 93V* + % 19* 78 77 77 —1% ™ 53 87'* 80 80 —7 ^35 77 70 70 —10 96'* . .. 82'* 83 136 258 213 234%+16% 1 85% 85% 85%— l4HiVjinjlH WM IV* It* +<» vSUSd 3Va*69 193 95% 83 85 2549 96 65 121 Vendo cv4'*s80 2895 115 81 88 101 118 +15 11557 105V* 95 98 —7 WnUn 5'/Js87 505 96 79'* 80 —11% Wn Union 5s92 2070 92'* 74% 74%—13% WestgEI 5%s92 1526 99% 88% 88'* ....... WestgEI 2%s71 115 90 86'* 88 +1 Weyerh 5.20991 1789 102 86 87'*—12% +2V* , 23853 100% 82'* _?4'*+12 |VaEPw 3%s81 + 00 |VaEPw 3'*s82 VaEPw 2%s79 VaEPw 2%s75 VaEIPw 3%s86 6607 104% 86'* 90'*-9’* I Whirl 5%s86 23 90 1912 80 132 246'*+109'* {\/aEPw ^s80 % * jVaSw 5S2003 5 79 74 83 88% +l’*!^^rO^{Y inc6s08 1145 108'* 93 77 77 -'lyirg gy 4S83 17 79% 75 %'Vlrg Ry 3'*s73 75 79% 71 35 73% 66 62 74'* 69 , 27 76 70 43 87 81 386 87 54 94 42 91 ZJyJlVlrg Ry 3s95 305 70'* 56% 56%. 77V* 72% 72% —'l%|Yornad cv5s82 4289 205% 120 200 +79 620 73% 60% 60% —7% 80 82% 72 72 —8 8 79 79 79 —5'* ' Wabash 4'As91 S 97 96% 96%—835'* mia Rohr cv5'*s77 992 286 SAM 4.97/a ** SCM Cp 5%s87 1406 99 151 93 82 83'*-5% ScottPa cv3s71 5042 126 104 95% 83 84 —4% Scovill 4%s82 53 90 211 93’* 83 83'* —r4%,$eabAL 3%s77 1 85 272 90% 82 82% —6 SeabAL 3s80 28 73% 67% 67% 92 93% 79% 80 —7 Sbd Fin 6%s87 1478 101'A 87 87'* 224 91'* 83 85 —4 Sbd Fin 5'*s80 88 93 85% 87% —2% 148 90% 76% 77%—9 Seagram' 3s74—. 7 86 86 86 —5 165 88 75 77'*-5% Sears R 4%s83 6534 98 83 85 -9’* 75 87% 84'* 84'* —1% SearsRAc 5s82 1803 98% 79% 84%—8 206 87'* 82'* 82% —2% S'darsAc 4%s72 2253 97 91,'* 92'*—1. c. 52 m2 MW 892 75% 75% 97 97% +3% 92 92 —11% 78% 80 —19 80 80 —10 TO TO —13 83 *3% —7% 78% 76%—11% 75 78 —2% Beth Stl 3*79 113 79 Beth Stl 2%*70 1081 93 89% 91% +2 Beth stl 2%*78 34 7V% 75 75 —1% Black D cv4*92 8486 130% 105% 128% BobbleB 5%»81 5015 100% 81% 85% —3 Borden 5% *97 482 1«% 9f^ 95% „ Borden 4%s91 134 91 77 77 —11 Borden 2%*81 i 59 75% 71% -71% -2 Borg W S%*92 230 100% 89% 89% Boston Me 8*70 2447 81 61% 72% + % BosMe 4%*70f 1384 52% 38 44 —4 Bren 5%*86xw 13441 89% 75 Bway H 4%*92 5951 125 107 BrkUnG 6%s92 436 101% 99 41 89% 76 11 13% 76% 76% 54' 85 73% 73% 356 82% 75% 77V 61 93% 88%' 89 + % Day PL 3%*82 26385 105% 78% ContCan 4%*85 ContCan 3%*78 ContOII 4%*91 ContON 3*84 CopwSt cv5*7? 2588 120 Corn Pd 516*92 1208 100 Com Pd 4%*83 901 9464 Crane 5%*92. 419 102% 109 93 76 76 —14 61 85 75 75 —5 296 95 78 —11 138 7M 68 \70 M-S 93% 94 —16% BrkUnG 4%*90 BrkUnG 4%*B8 BrkUnG 4%*83 BrkUnG 2%*76 BrovdnS 3%*7t V.rano otmt*. "it «w«- Cresc cv5%*80 .3923 TO Crow Coll 4*92 4151 105 Crn Ck 4HsB8 71 87% Cur PUb 6*B6f 1470 80 D 12% -8% 98% v . 100% 78% —364 —5 —9% DanaCorp 6*91.1509 106 Daystm 5%*80 7 98 - 7 - ------- 59 77 89% 102% .. . 67% 71%—13TO 60 60% —9% Brun* cv4%*81 7114 8164 6364 7464+40% DayP&L 3*78 BudgfF 6*2010 1247 90 74 75 —4% DayP&L 3*84 But Nia 264*75 332 82% 75' M% — 4% Day P L2M»75 Bulova 4%*84 8612 141 106% 138 +17% Deer* 4%483 Burllnd cv5*91 6924 121% 102 c +9% Deer* 3%*77 DelLW 5*73 DelLW 6*85 CalEIPow 3*76 5 80 77 78% + % DelLW 4%*85 CanOry 4%s90 30 85% 81 .81 — % DelLW Inc93f CenPac 4*perp 1305 74 60% 61% —6% DLW 4s-6*2043 CaroCO 4%»90 38 81% 77% 77% — 3% iDelPtL 4%»94 CarthAd 4*81 29 70% 66 66% — 2% 'OelPfL 364*80 Case 1%*90 814 93 75% 77. -8 DelP&L 3%*77 Case j%*78 48 S3 77% 7764 —2% OelPAL 3*73 CalerT 1.30*93 1077 99% *7 *7% .....lOtIP&L 41**97 15 74 31 75% 281 83% 1099 93 1*7 *1% 152 TO 130 68 72 55 145 36% 635 55 32 *7 37 79% GulfSUt 3*69 GulfSUt 3*TO GulfSUt 2%*76 Gull Wind 6*87 1951 87 GulfWI 5%*87 17295 145 H Hack W 2%*76 41 75 Harsco 5%*92 92 97 Hart SM 4%*92 4074 117 HarvAl 5%*91 21318 211 Hess OC 4%*87 HockV 4%*99 91 86 Honey 5,60*92 Hdoker 4%*91 HouseF 6*69 33 77% 72% 73% +5% 10 74% 69% 69% —4% 32 75 69 73%—10% 68 96 92% 95% +1% 8 79% 79% 79% —4% 77% 76% 74% +2% 78 84 71 72% —1% 112 196 +8314 74% 138 97% 92% 92% 24 34% 81 81 62568 102% 99% 100% — % MoP 4 *2020/ MoP 4%*2030f MoPac 4V.S90 Monon 6*20071 MtWdCr 4%*87 MtWdCr 5%*81 MtWdCr 4%*80 MtWdCr 464*81 MtStTT 3%*78 AAtSt TT 2%*84 MSL cv4%*84 104 87% 73 73 -12 50 73 61 61 —7 81 84 78 78 —1 1800 97 95 94% +1% 88 97 . 05% 97 +1% 25 94% 93'/4 94% +i% 47 00«/4 92 9? 121 100% 99 I00V4 234 90% 81 82 120 90’A 85'A 86% + % 1066 99'A 83 84 —7 ' 203 94 90 90 + % 727 65'A 52% 54% —5% 6910 40 22 35 +14 141 67 58 58 —4 1020 60 4916 51% — 1/4 12832 76 64 65 —4 5024 73% 61 61 —7 5801 73 60 61% —5' 3117 80 63% 64% —9% 4595 76'A 58% 60 -11% 66 66% 56 56% —3% 14948 177% 102% 160 387 857A 76% 79 1494 V4 75 76 -11 896 00% 97 99% 281 93 79 80 —8% 419 91 «A 77% 78% —7% 332 91 78 79 —5% 1502 51’A 40% 42% —3% 12 80 79% 80 +i 20 06'A 56% 56'A- -10% 11353 132 89% 96 PacG&E 5*89 PacG&E 5*91 2485 100% 81% 82%—14% Pac GE 4%*92 ID ■ “ Pac GE 4'6*86 Pac GE 4%*90 Pac GE 4%*93 PGE 4%*96J J PGE 4%*96KK SoPac 2%*86 SoPac 264*96 SouthRy 5*94 SouthRy 4%*88 SRyCar 4%*88 SoRyMenj 5*96 — — .. SwBellT 3%*83 73 —SwBellT 264*85 335 73 77% —3% Spartan cv5*86 140 +39% 12741 139 103 14 Spiegel 5%* 83 411 93 75 Splogetlnc 5*87 66 85% 75 Spiegl cv4%*90 ■ 10448 107 80% 83%—1264 Sprague 4%892 3443 103% 90 95% 12% StdOCal 564*92 2137 100% 9364 95% 95 86% 83 83 —1 41 92 80% 00%—19 20 76% 75 75 60% 62 —4% 21 +14% 75%—11% 77V* —8 796 9364 76 7864—1064 850 92 75 78% —964 315 90 73% 79 -8% 330 8964 74 75%—10% 232 8964 75 75 —10 Pac GE 414*94 245 8864 72% 73%—15% Pac GE 4%*95 389 86% 71 72% —9% Pac GE 364*78 1385 88 76 77 —644 Pac GE 344*85 146 76% 66 66% —9% Pac GE 364*87 285 7844 60% 66% -7% Pac GE 344*88 83 TO 67 67^ —8% -r---- H 7,,^ «8 264 76% 65 193 TO 62 698 9244 90 861 93 2486 88 703 82 Pac GE 3%*82 PaGE 3%s84W PaGE 3%*84X PacG&E 3*70 PacG&E 3*71 PacG&E 3*74 PaCG&E 3*77 PacG&E 3*79 PacG&E 3*83 Pac GE 2%*76 Pac GE 2%*B0 256 79 Pac GE 244*81 106 77 69% —244 70 -3% 90% — 44 88 88% —1 7844 8044 —2% 72% 7444 —3% 930 80% 69 71 —664 138 7564 63% 65% —5% 45 83%. 76 76 —3% 68% -6 63% 64 —844 N PacT&T 4%s88 1210 92Vi 76 82Vfc —5Vk PaT&T 3%s91 PacT&T 3Vas81 PacT&T 3V4S78 PacT&T 3'As83 PacT&T 3'/b»87 PacT&T 27As86 PacT0|T 2%s85 78Va 72Vi 72’/a -3 116 B3'/i 71 71 —8% 294 85'A 74 76'A —4Wi 232 79' 65'A 69 —5 ~ 62 64»A —6% 62'/k 62Va —7'A 88H + % StdOCal 4%s83 2385 93'/a 78 StdOInd 6891 8451 109'/i 97% 98% StdOInd 4Vas83 2835 96% 81'A {2 —P • StdOInd 3'As82 92 80 68% 74% + % Std Oil N J6s97 3526 100'A 98 100% StdONJ 2%s74 1306 86 80% 81 StdONJ 2%s7l 2624 91'A 86 StOHOh 4'As82 146 90 75 Std PjftCkg 6s90 1329 85 71 StPkg cv5'As90 6923 97 74 Stauff cv4%s91 7720114 96 StaufCh 3%s73 35 91% 86 Stevens cv4s90------------_ 16217 111% 86 Stoke cv4'As82 ^ 11935 222 84% 200 +116% Storer cv4%s86 ... 21135 126%. J7 Sun Oil 4%s90 373 95% 80 - - 96 98% 87 140 90 76 73 86 77 59 86% 84 Axe-HoOgton: Fund A Fund B Stock Sci & Electr Blue E Mut Bondstock Corp Boston Fund Broad St Inv Bullock Fund Can Gen Fd Canadian Fund Capit Income Cap Life Ins Sh Century Shrs Tr Chaoning Funds: Balance Com Stk Growth tncome Special Chase Fd Bos Chemical Fd Citadel Fd Coast Secur Colonial: Equity Fund __ Grth & En {Com St Bd, Mtge 3.25 2.66 3.12 9.19 7.73 9.04 9.50 7.88 8.69 1.341.16 .1.29 3.90 3.37 3.44 12.22 10.99 11.99 7.83 6.11 7.81 42.70 29.48 39.91 11.34 9.29 10.58 7.69 6.53 7.22 1.72 1.34 1.55 8.05 6.66 7.87 9.00 6.25 9.00 11.67 9.06 10.98 8.23 5.12 8.23 24.96 15.62 24.01 15.04 12.39 14.50 7.29 643 7.05 9.41 8.65 9.02 16.27 13.80 14.82 16.24 13.60 15.37 10.21 8.66 8.95 19.89 16.71 17.84 9.19 7.89 8.82 7.45 6.36 6.78 11.81 9.28 9.69 Med GBd B 2 Disc Bd B-4 Inco Fd K-l Grth Fd K-2 Hi-Gr Cm S-l Inco Stk S-2 Growth S-3 LoPr Cm S-4 Inti Fund Knlckrbck Fd * Knickrbck Gr P Lexingn Inc Tr Lex Rsch Life Ins Inv Life Ins Stk Loomis Sayles Fds: Canadian Capita I Mutual -Manhattan Fd Mass Fund Mass Inv Grfto Mass Inv Trust McDonnell Fd 14.14 12.81 14.T4 2.28 1.86 2.24 21.62 14.60 21.62 8 69 7.86 8.33 3.85 2.25 3.85 14.60 8.64 13.37 19.43 10.33 19.11 3.33 2.27 3.31 1:67 1.53 1.63 17.41 12.47 17.17 14.99 11.68 13.89 10.63 7.*65 10.58 5.46 4.15 5:30 75 +4 89%+17 104 +9 90'A +3'A -10V4 Sunbm 5%s92 Sunray 4'As 87 SupOil 3%s81 Swift 2%s 72 320 r-47 219 95 436 93 385 91V4 85% 85% + % 72 89% 78 mi “ 279 81% 71 71% 313 99 . 95% 98 HouseF 5s82 HouseF 4%s81 HouseF 4%s77 HouseF 4%s84 HouseF 4%s87 HouseF 4%s68 HouseF 4s78 HouseF. 2%s70 197 93'A 87 90'A +3 Howmet 4%s92 4075 124% 106 116% ' Humble 5%s97 40 98% 97% 97% HuntFd\ 4%S90 295-84 75 75 —5 Hunt cv4%s86 NAFI cv5'As80 12667 165 91% 149%i-57% Nash CSL 3186 28 64% 60 60 NatAIH cv 6s76 3 1117 1117 1117 +267 NafBIsc 4%s87 956 97'A 80'A 80%—11% N Cash 5.60s9r 1249 1 04 89 91% —9% _ NatCaSfl 4%s85 166 94 85% 87% —2 n —0% NatCash 4%s87 285 89% 75 75%—10'A 82'A —6% lN Cash CV4'AS 85% + % 42512 138% 108'A 134% 79% NCylO 5%s77 7715 148 77 82 —24% 317 78 191 75 492 75 PAA c\T4%s79 752 485 PAA cv4%s84 25355 249 154'A 162 —22% PAA cv4%s86 62708 122% 82% 86%—13% ParkrH cv4s92 1462 TOO 90 94% ... Peh Dix cv5s82 8028 104% 82 104 Penney 5%s87 558 99% 84% 84% Penney 4%s84 449 89 72 73'%r-13 PenPw&L 3s75 1002 85% 75% 76% —4% Penn RR 5s68 68617 99% 98 98% + % Pen RR 4%s81 1512 85% 69 71%-11% Pen RR 4'As84 900 '87% 68% 70% —9% Pen RR 3%S85 248 84% 55% 55% —6% Pennzoll 6%s68 # 155032 102 97 99 13-16—9-16 Peorlq E 4s90f ^ 267 60 53 54 —5% 0% N Dairy 4%s92 N Dairy 3%s76 1%' 77% 77% —3% H*llWry 3*70 N Dairy _ ... NatDIst 4%s83 NatDIst 4%s92 152 86 76 % 76% 350 87% 76% 78 -5 1 538 93% 89% 90% + %. 645 91% 88% 90% +1% 365 93 80% 80% 75% 76%—10% 76 76 -t - 4.4 51 51 ^12 86% 30 04 7 99% + % 25% 25% «S-M% 45 48% —2 80 88 —3% 71% 71% —9 86% 86% 11% |i% —2% 99 99%..... Ill BellTtl 3s78 III Bel IT 2%s81 III Can 3%s79A III Cen 3%s79B 111 Cen 3%t74C III Cen 3%s80 III Cen 3%s89H IllCen 3V4I80G Inlands 4%s89 Inlands 4%s87 18973 134 I 318 81% 72% —4% 492 77 85% M% -7% V4 75% 75% 75% + TO. 74 74 74 -I 38 85% 12 82 —5% 10 M 75 75 —8% TO 49% 43 43 -1% 48 78 70% 72% +3% 544 93% 74 70 -8% 117 91 75% 70 -8 131 + 33% U L Md 4%«88 NstSfMl 4*8*89 NatStM 37*s84 NatStMl 3%982 Nat Tea 5*77 Nat Taa 3VTOB0 NEng TT 3t74 NEng TT 3a82 NJBellT 3%*88 NJ Junct 4*84 Nj PwLt 3*74 NY Cant 4*80 NY Cant 8190 524 90 77 347 94% 79 93 85% • 73 242 79 49 44 95 235 75 47% 47% — % 180 88% am em—i% 10175% 45% 49 —4 IS 73% 44% 45% —7 7 80% 75 73 —5% 2304 102% 91 91% —4% 955 102 84% 18% —8% ParMar ‘3%*80 PhllaBW 5*74 ( PhllBW 4%*77 PhllaEI 5*89 PhllaEI 4%*I7 PhllaEI 4'%*94 PhllaEI 4%*84 PhllaEI 3%*88 PhllaEI 3%*82 PhllaEI 3%*S3 PhllaEI 3%*85 PhllaEI 2%*7B PhllaEI 2%*71 PhllaEI 2%*74 PhllaEI 2%*81 PhllMor '4%»79 PhllllpP 4V.S87 181 80 Plllsby 3%s72 PltRLE 2%>94 PCC&SL 5*70 PCC&SL 5*75 PCC SL 3%s73 PltWVa 3%*84 Plant PL 3%*B4 PlantPL 2%*7o Proct G 3%*81 PubSEG 8*2037 PubSEG 5*2037 92' 94 TO 90 81 81 —7% 747 101% 83 84%—11% 510 94% 79% 80% —8% 220 91% 77 . 79% —7% 414 92% 75% 79 —0 242 03% 47 70 -8 67 77% 72 72 —3% 120 70 68% 88% —5% 233 75% 66% 64% —5% 74 80% 76 , 76 —1% 455 90 86% 87% +1 545 86% 78% 79 —2% !0riPac' 2%*76 100 73 68 48 —4 UnPac 2%*91 238 94% 84 84% —8%'unTank 5*84 . ilinTank 4V.*73 62203 120% 98% 119%+20 lunAIrLIn 5*91 Talcott S’/** 79 Talcott 5%s 80 - - , Talcott CV5S79 1776 104% 80 Tandy 4%*78 343 98 90 Taylor 4%*87 7409 115 90 Teledyn 6%*92 986 100% 93 Teledyn 3%*92 ~Ofl%+10% Consym—Invast Convert Secur Fd Corp Leaders Country C.ap Inv Crown Ws9n D2 de Vegh Mut Fd Decatur Income Delaware Fd Diver* Gift. Stk Diver* Invstmt Dividend Shrs Dow’Th Inv Fd _2%!Drexel Equity 54 88% 85% & HB.I I?™I Eaton & H Stk Employ Grp 94 (Energy Fd T 80 95- 87 Commonwealth Funds: Cap Fd Income investmt Stock Commw Tr A&B Commw Tr C&D Composite B&S Composite Fd Concord Fund ConsolIdat Inv y8 umuryyr Add Investing sht 2 Ibyl SP 11.71 9.38 10.63 1.75 1.63 1.73 1.92 1.79 1.92 11.37 8.73 10.92 i 12.24 9.17 11.52 20.64 13.46 20.25 13.62 10.75 13.50 97'Ai fEnterprise Fd Equity Fund Equity Growth 42966 123 97'/a 120'A Tenneco 6'As92 5119 110 102’/a 109’/a I FalVflelcT f'«T ' TerASL. 4S2019 10 75 74 /a 74/* +1A I p-rm gur TerASL 27As85 82 67 >^ 67 —4 A Qr Texaco 5%s97 3302 100% 93'A 94 TexasCo 3%s83 1182 86% 74 747/« —6% Tex Inst 4.80s90 61 96 ft 83 08 185 94 67 88 340 76 52 83 Tex NO 3%s90 TexNO 3'A$70 Tex Pac 5*2000 Tex Pec 3%*85 TPMPT 3%s74 Textron 5%*92 ThomPd 4%*82 ThoRW 5V,*86 Tide Oil 3%*84 Trane cv4*92 TWA 4%*78f —11% 43% 63% —2 90% 90% + % 80 80 —4% 67% 67% —1% 81% — % 484 100% 88% 88% 29 94 80 81 102 92% 04 84 151 80% 71% 71% ■ 444 101 93 100 16070 104 TWA cv 4*92 TRWInc 5%*92 152 99% 92 TwenCn 5%*92 7115 129 105 87 17% —9% U UnCarb 5.30*97 3281 101% 86% 87'4 ;< UnEIMo 3%*71 400 93% 89%, 89% — % =.......... 158 79 677A 71'A r-4 565 99'A 96'A 98’A +2H 75 82»A 74'A 74H—47A 310 99 sm am—10’A 221 284 218 242 +1’A 92 92’A 90 91’A +2% 184 03 76'A 76’A —4^ 388 64 56 56 —7 209 98’A 80'A 80’A-13tt 83 92’A 85 88 —5 UnEIMo 3’As82 UnEIMo 3s68 UnEIMo 2%s75 UnOCal 47/as86 UnOCal 4’As91 UnOCal 2%s70 41827 155V* 107 116 89 85 80’A +5’A 23 74VA 72VI 72’A--3 Unit AL 4’As92(.. 729 99VI 93 j „94 — ’A 1 31685 117IA 8l?A 99 328 96’A |0H 86H —OH.UAIrc cv5Hs91 94 84 75H 77VI +2H i 15990 140V4 108’A 117 T 7$ 75 75 —2 IUAirc Cv4’As88 1803 331V* 225 200 5 72 72 72 — T3*/4rfuAlrc Cv4’As92 29 92'A 90 90 +1 i 12006 104’A 95 +2 423 88% 7518 76 —9 29 150 125 125 —13’A . 86 100’A 75 80 —15 PubSEG 418*77 1243 95V8 837A 8414 —614 PubSEG 3V8S75 190 80 79 79 —4 PubSEG 318*72 277 90V8 80’A 67* + V8 UnBIs 3%s77 UnGasC 5’AsOO UnGasCp 5s80 UnGasC 4Hs78 UnGasC 4Hs82 UnGasC 4V8s77 81’A 82 —2'A 417 97 83 83»A —714 418 97’A 83 83'8 —8H 616 9118 80'A 807A —5'A 315 9114 76 78H—1018 873 94 II'A 82 — 5V8 Fidelity Cap Fidelity Fund Fid Trend Fd Financial Programs: Dynamics Income Indust Fst Inv Fd Grth Fst Inv Stk Fd Fletcher Fd Fla Growth Fnd Lf Founders Foursquare Fd Franklin Custodian: Com Stk Inc Stk Pfd Stk , Utilities 1 Fund Qf Am v Fundamtl Inv Gen Invest Tr Gen Securities Group Securities: Aerospace-Sc I Common StK Fully Admin 12.32 8.76 12.32 17.46 14.87 16.32 13.07 11.20 13.07 7.10 5.71 6.95 79.82 66.93 73.43 14.24 11.02 12.89 17.49 14.55 16.49 16.90 11.16 13 90 10.44 8.63 9.85 '3.92 3.35, 3.78 8.68 6.56 8.35 19.15 15.44 16.83 15.60 12.59 15.45 12.17 11.06 11.25 17.42 14.72 16,42 29.57 23.13 29.57 17.65 12.88 16.61 26 32 12.34 26 32 11.48 9 41 10 66 18 64 13.70 18.64 15.63 11.70 15.63 12.29 9.97 12.26 16:21 12.45 15.33 16.35 12.38 14.82 20.40 16.16 20.40 34.55 25.57 34.13 6.66 6.07 6.63 700 5.53 6.80 ,6.114.975.54 10.80 7.94 10.80 11.87 10.15 10.88 18.75 9.36 18.75 7.69 5.57 7.48 5.37 4.49 - 4.72 9.02 7.34 8.79 15.81 11.95 15.58 8 04 6.46 7.35 3.25 2.84 2.97 2.69 2.49 2.60 7.79 6.71 7.22 12.33 6.20 1 2.13 12.53 10.20 11.73 7.27 6.46 7.12 13.52 11.96 12.52 12.67 9.16 11.38 ;5.21 12.74 13 66 10.15 8.90 9.16 yB umurvyr Add Investing sheet 3 zyy SF Growth Indust Gryphon Guard Mut Ham Fd HDA Hor Mann Fd Hubshman Fd Imperial Cap Fd Imperial Grth * .Income Found' Income Fd Bos Independence . inct Trend Industry Fd Ins & Bank Stk Fd Invest Co Am Invest Tr Bos Investors Group Funds: Mutual Int Stock- 2382 19 36 23 57 21.36 >2.61 21.36 30.53 24 29 28.20 6.13 4.72 5.95 16.39 14.66 15.65 13.16 9.96 13 06 10.70 8 84 10.43 8.66 5.45 6 63 14.14 11.86 13.15 8.10 7.57 7.73 14 06 1Q.94 13.42 16.02 11.13 15-30 8.95 7.50 8.46 5.83 .5.12 5.23 Selective Variable Pay Invest Research Isfel Fund Inc I vest Fund Johnstn Mut Fd f.04 t.J1 9.3S 9,78 7.41 0.13 21.76 15.77 21.13 26.32 17.38 26.32 18.05 12.68 18,85 22.57 17.55 21.99 23.49 22.18 22.18 10.32 9.57 9.63 9.45 8.# 9.29 8.30 5.80 7.35 23.47 20:02 22.44 11.55 9.66 11.11 11.31 1.57 10.17 7.78 5.43 7.78 18.50 10.94 16.88 8.06.6.56 7.53 13.86 9.37 13.86 0.Z7 9.75 10.26 17.85 13.51 17.85 7.33 6.18 6.51 5.34 4.25 4.35 37 22 28.67 37.22 14.02 10.07 13.96 16.69 14.56 16.39 11.97 8.51 11.92 13.07 11.65 13.04* 13.19 10.45 13.10 17.65 15.06 17.54 13.21 9.21 12.81 y8 4 everyyr u v Add Investing Mid Amer 7.85 6:20 7t51 /Moody's Morton Funds: Growth Income Insurance M.I.F. Fund M.I.F. Growth Mutual Shrs Mutual Trust Nation-Wide Sec Natl Investors 17.64 15.65 17.60 15.43 8.83 14.57 4.65 3.67 4.54 . 7.72 6.36 7.33 19.91 16.27 1806 6.46 5.30 6.19 1990 15.49 17.88 2.84 2.45 2.67. 11.38 10.18 10.52 8.16 6.40 7.97 Bond Dividend Preferred Income Stock Growth Natl Western Fd NEA Mut Fd New England New Horiz RP New World Fd Noreast Inv 100 Fund One William St Oppenheim Fd Penn Sq ‘ Phila Fd Pilgrim Fund Pilot Fund Pine Street Pioneer Fund Price, TR Grth Provident Fd Puritan Fund Putnam Funds: Eqult George Growth income Invest Rep Tech Revere Fd Scudder Funds: Balanced COm Stk Inti Inv Special Sec Dividend 1 Sec Equity y8 5 everyyr wyyf Add Investing Sec Inv Selected Amer Sharehl Tr Bos Southwstn Inv Sovereign Inv State St Inv Steadman Funds: Amer Ind Fiduciary Science Stein Roe Funds: Balance Stock I I It* IU.JT I I.W 6.37 SM 5.83 5.33 4.39 5.18 7.82 6.517.62 6.39 5.70 6.20 9.39 8.20 9*16 12.24 9.65 12.21 6.96 5.80 5.99 12.06 10.26 12.06 12.06 10.92 11.70 27.43 15.02 26.97 14.50 13.39 14.74 17.82 16.22 16.81 14.52 12.76 13.90 17.86 14.63 17.74 26.70 21.99 28.70 19.56 14.55 17.80 15.79 13.15 15.46 11.38 9,5111.38 7.75 7.23 7.64 13 21 11.30 12.16 13.59 10.07 13.00 24.70 20.06 24.57 5.78 4.48 5.78 12.05 9.78 11.43 12.30 10.31 12 30 16.88 15.11 16.80 14.84 10 78 13.37 10.05 8.72 9.31 8.85 7,18 8.81 7 18 4.31 7.1,8 17*8 11.40 17.25 19.06 17.10 17.87 12.95 10.87 12.53 14.87 12.98 14.62 41.89 26.06 40.31 16.17 12.99 14.67 17.77 10.93 17.77 8 68 7.10 8.20 13.28 10.37 13.11 13 85 10.76 12.78 10.73 8.54 9.35 17.25 14.09 16.00 54.85 43.99 54.85 13 13 9.14 13.13 9.83 8.17 9.19 *0 30 5.63 8.29 Inti 15 53 12J8 1400 14.01 11.51 13.90 1KI4 i O 40 11.39 22.65 19.00 22.11 Sterling Inv Sup Inv Grth Teachers Asspc Televlsn Elect Temp Gth Can Texas Fund 20th Cent Gr Inv 20th Cent Inc United Funds: Accumulative Income-Science Unit Fd Can Value Line Funds: Value Line Income Speci Sit Vanguard Fd 2? 88 19.71 22.88 J5 56 12,69 15.56 10.24 12 98 16,24 13.72 12.01 12.77 7.53 4.M 7.(M 14.59 13.19 14.14 11.43 1.48 lO.a 14.79 14.00 15.TO < 12.90 10.43 11.13 7 04 5.02 7.04 1 45 5.27 4.37 18.43 14.24 14.90 15.53 12 80 14.841 10.3B 8 25 10.14 4.49 4.82 4.49 Varied Indutff Viking Gth Wall Sf Invest Wash Mut inv Wellington Fd Western Indust Whitehall Fd Windsor Fd Winfield . Grth In Wisconsin Fd Worth Fund 10 64 7.09 10.64 6 95 5.59 6.M 9 32 4.90 9.32 a 63 4.71 4, Ilf 5 9) 106 |.M , * m jil %Mr /12 58 10.81 12.34 1.178 11.31 13.43 14 U 1194 13.07 9 72 4.83 8J2 15.20 12.44 14J| 2 100 14.54 1849 14.48 9 95 14 # 8.47 4.14 14 1 57 5 43 8.84 ■V'- e—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS/MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1968 Year-End Look at Transactions at / V-y; ' .1 ■■ K NCW YORK (AP) . N#w York Stock, Exchange trading for 1947. The net Change Is from the previous /year on Carlisle .60 fsliies* lleted"prior to Januar? 1,- 1*47. A Caro C&Oh CaroPLt 1.38 Caro TS.T. .68 Carp Stl 1.60 Carrier Cp I 141+ +3?+ Carr pf2.25 Sale* . Net (lids.) High Law Lost Chg Abacus .70f 1715 17% 13 16% +31. - . ■ Abbott Lab 1 16066 53% 61 67 +1 CarrGn 2-15g Abax* Cp 1 60 6652 36% k27% 28%,+ % CarterW ,60a ACF It'd 2.20 '6756 50V, 38% 66% +6% Case J Acme Mkf 2b 6060 66% 32 36% —5% Case Jl rt AO ?_ - 3008 36 / 27 731% +6% Case plA1.66 29210 87% 16% 62%if67 61009 *80% 66% 79%+29', 50753 38 18% 18%—10', 2826 69% 35 66 + 29 13151 66% 31% 61 896 130 103% 126 ABetfiS .... AdMIllis .60a Address 1.60 Admiral .25p Aeroquip lb Air Prod .200 AtrPd pf6.75 Castle Cke /lb CaterTr 1.20 Ceco Cp .80 CelaneseCp 2 .... Celanese pf 7 + 26% Celan pfA6.50 Sale* Ref I (hds.) High Low Laat Chg. | 63987 30% 16% 23 +6% House Pin 1 26633 33% 19% 33%+12% HousF pf6.60 2373 15% 9% 15% +6% HoustonLP 1 50022 25% 17% 20% +2% • How Jhn .1 Set „ 3967 39% 30 39% split, Howmet 1.60 205 70% 35% 70%+34%' Howmet wl 7296 106 59 % 99%+39% HudBav 3.60a 657776 67 76 +25% HuntFds .50b 5936 101 77% 98% +7% HuntF pfA 5 15 69% 67 69 split HuntF pfB 5 16856 60% 26 36 +10 2076 31% 26% 25% -3% , t 6206 66’+ 267+ /65%+15% IddhoPM* 1.50 7666 35'/4 21 Vi 28 +6% deal CemJ 103 1 71 60 63 + 3 III-Cent 1.50 9012 52 It <9% split HI Pow 1.72 878 157 1 07% 152 1 p* Jjg-M 3136 39'4 33% 36% + % !!! Pw Pf? ?] AirRedtn 1.50 17166 66% 32% 36% split Cenco Ins- .ju AJIrSustrles 56661 10% 3% 10 +*^6 9*"A»V,lr jf? Ala Gas 1.88 1659 37% 30% +3'/4 CenFdry .711 Alberto C .20 23676 63 16% *621/2+26% CenHud 1.66 AlcanAlum 1 66566 33% 23 26# -!?*,<;*") 1 »L,n*V'so 19300 16% 7% 11% +6 C IIILt PT6.50 993 50% 25% 66 + 20%,CenlllPS 1.06 9563 79% 55% 70% + 13 CenMPw 1.08 . 393 79 69% 73% I 11 14371 27% 21 22ft -5% Cent Soya -bu Z2440 107 91 95 -7 CerrciCp 1.60 1037 28% 21’/a 25% +4% Cert-teed .80 41406 46% 33*4 40 +7 Cert-ted pf.90 3161 30ft 15V4 27 ft+ 12% CessnaA 1.40 257 53V4 47Va 48% -f/rCFI Stl .80 18747 60% 26Va 57 ft+30 Chadbn Goth; 15823 41% 22V* 36%+14% Champ S 2.20 119 77% 64 64's —6% ChaseBk 2.20 2099i 24 11 19% +8ft Checker Met 12/049 44 21% 35%+13% Chemetn 1.80 2086 V46 6140 14ft 8054 lift 22073 9m 1496 33 3827 35% 22’/ 24169 97V 20766 70% Aileg Cp .20a Alleg 6pf .60 AflegLu 2.40b AllegLud pf li Alleg Pw 1.20 Aileg&West 6 A Hen I nd 1.40 Ailed C 1.90b Allied Kid 1 Allied Mills 2 Allied Pd .60 AHiedStr 1.32 AlliedSt pf 4 AlliedSup .60 Allis Chal 1 AlllsCh pfcld AlphaPC 12p Aiside .20 Alcoa nl.80 AmalSug 1.40 Amerace 1.20 Amerada 3 AAlrFlltr .80 Am Airlln. .80 Am Baker 1 AmBkN pf 3 Am Bosch .60 AmBdcst 1.60 28410 1 02 Am Can 2.20 26449 64 A Can pt 1.75 1765 37 Am Cem .60 A Chain 1.60 AmComi 1.80 AConsm 1.1 If AmCredit .80 AmCrySug 1 ACry pf 4.50 AmCyari 1.25 AmDist 1.40a Am DualVfst ADualV pf.84 AmEIPw 1.52 AmEnka 1.30 Am Exp Ind AExInd pfA6 \AmFPw 1.16 \a Hoist 1.20b A Home 1.20 Artome pf 2 Am Hosp .60 Am\ntl 1.50g Afnlnyst 1.10 Amin* pf5.25 AmMFdy .90 AMF p<\ 3.90 A Met. Cl\1.90 AMet pf \25 Am Motors AmNatGas Am New^ 1 Am Photocpy A Potash 1.50 AResrch ,25g Am Seat 1 Am Ship .60 Am Smelt 3 AmSoAfr .70 Am Std 1 AmStand pf 7 Am Steril .80 A Sugar 1.60 Salts ' Ntf (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 2938 39 28ft 35% spirt Elect Assqc 195 97ft 75% 75%—13ft I Electron Sp 10706 47ft 33Va 40ft —3ft Elgin Watch 8375, 32 20% 22ft +2% EIPasoNG 1 8111 49ft 32ft 37ft +5ft Eltra Corp 1 12589 69ft 47ft 56% spilt Eltra pf 140 131 46 40ft 40ft — 2% Emer El 1.68 522 30% 26% 29 -F3 Emer El pf 1 27267, 20ft 13 V. 16% +3% Emery A 1.40 22936 26% 14% 16ft ,«r-3% EmeryA n.70 9613 ft 1-16 M6 f ..... Emhart 1.20 1908 29Va 31 ft 23 m ! EmpOlst 1.44 /6l/57 39 26ft 37ft/ll EmporC .85 40159 50 34ft 43% +8% End Johnson 1301 35% 24% 26Va split End Jhn pf5k 25825 70% 47Va 63Va+16 Enge*M .60b Z9140 136 120 121 —4 . Eng M pf4.25 k 1237 84 70ft 70%-5ft\EqutG*S 2.10 HR HR liP P■ S J Pmi n#0 ,, 14346 62 35ft 56%+21% EnieLack RR 24910 1 0% 7% 8Va + % ™ pf2.13 3497 41 28% 35 +4% Erie Leek pf 511 3S?+ 25 26 -3 Pw p,2>® 3049 15% 7% 13 +5% Erie Pit 3.50 1490 58'+ 53% 57 —IM* liPJ'I,pL04 3926 32% 26 27% —1++ESB Inc 1.20 4877 30'* 24 24% spit ™PCP 7647 29V. 20% 23'*—2>* Essex Wife 1 45603 58'+ 32'+ 43]+ sg]it, J]|j;ome_ Ca|)|t 135 86 70% 72'+ —7'+ Ethyl Cp .60 51241 51 12616 24% 177* 20'+ —2'+ Ethyl P12.40 — “ m« i.u. wet Seles *’/, Net *eiei Net , Sales flour** are unofficial. (hdt* High Low Last Chg. f (hds.) High Law Last Chg. [ (hds.) High Low Last Chg. I . (hds.) High Law Sl’iorMolna’&bl**^“e°annuai 25012 jl’* 251+ 31V+ +fv+]«asonlf*_1.M ?*04 49]* «. +4%1 Pap*rcrtf„.40 10693 #+ 1» Jtafl.6™* I WM &. £* iSSaS liM&BrwSv >11.50 3047 6012 umi.u.u.l rierlerStion. Soeclal or R*l H *1 .....________ 11612 14% 10'+ 13% +3% SterlO pfl-JO . 3047 pays sty* aerlerelldn. Soeclal or 15290 50'+ 31 45%-=a..| Mattar..40 .. UMj 53% lt% 49%+M%>arg.s pf2^4 .JO iT 43% 44% .. | jtavansT 2-23 14425 CTb- gj. h«W 2526 108 101% +6 Massey 40911 25% 16% 18'+ —2'+; Perga* ,.50 21466 61 34% 42'+ +6'+!MayOStr 1.60 33110 43% 30 15565 101'+ 45'+ 85 +36% May 45pf3.75 <1230 75 110 45% 41'+ 42'+ split May 47pf3.75 1653 69% 57 61% +3'A May 59pf3.75 24142 58'+ 20 57 + 37 MayD P13.40 303 '87 73 73'+ —4'+ MayD^pfl.80 17800 86'+ 71 71 —2 iMaysJWYWb T I Maytag 1.60a . 1 ! MCA Inc .80 8520 37% 27% 30'+ —3%, MCA pf 1/50 15347 21% 14'+ 17?+ 4*3'+ McCall .40b 40'+ +7’+ ParkaDayls 68 —4 | Park Han 1.20 4950 75 62 63 -10 I Park Pen .M 240 72 70. 71% + % Peab Coal 1 lei, .jwe fie aim. nei 4280 67'+ 64% 65 | PeabC pfl.25 47920 24'+ 72% 22% 4- % StoneCont 5113 32% 13 21 +15 StokeVC pf 1 15811 45'+ j40% 42% fl>+ Stone Wpb 3a i______. _ Iff HI ‘ M V * ‘ .60 298 37% 32% 33% + '+ PtnnOIx , .60 43666 30'+ 11% 29%+ II V StorerBdest. 1 4135 27 12 24%+12% Penn Fruit. 4622 14 6% 13 +6% Stud* Worth 5477 40% 29 35'+ +6 PennF pf2.34 44000 42 33% 35% +1% Stu Wor p|B5 7769 74" 34% 74 + 39% Ptnn*y 1.60a 15194 70% 53% 65% + ll% StuW pfAl.40 490 40 26% 39%+,12% ’ Pe.mslt 1.20a 5324 65 43% 50%+14% SuburGas 48349 33% 25% 24% — %'StewWir 1.55 3070 34% 25% ,38% +1%|y;y w. -::-azT..r In Ilia 3850 67% 38% 57%+17% Stoke VanC 1 37934 60% 19% 51%+32+ na*pd « raguiar ara idemmeu in me — mu 4* tiiic ,cubewr mj « lam ii ia iftft + ft following footnoies* ______a -Also extra extras. b-Annual 7184 76 44 64'+ split MeCord 1.20 9370] 44% 32% 37 —5 ,McCrory ),20 ,35g 5559 20% 17% 18 %— % Eurofnd Cent SW 1.60 14759 48 36% 46'+ EvansP 60b 10106 30% 21% 25 — % Eversharp 36937 48 - 35% 43% +6 ExCellO 1.20 13980 20% 12% 15% +3 6540 21'+ 15% 17% +2% ... ,, 14523 51 37% 42% +5% FactorA .80b 10394 67 30063 24’+ 11% 17'+*+5% FafnlrBr 2.20 3257 77 17715 31% 37% +5% InCCum .49g 4392 68% 46% 55% Indian Hd .60 4429 19% 9%. 18% +9% nd Hd pt4 50 33946 38'+ 22% 28'+ +4% nd Gen ,80b 17984 27'+ jUj t~’nUPI lUVS 45% 36% 39 Z3020 43% 34 34 Z6240 42% 33'+r,34 Z1840 41 33 31 101 41% 32 32 49966 9% 5% 61 1782 11% 996 10'/ -4 'McCro pf4.50 -6'+,McCrory6pf 6 -5 iMcOermott I -5% | McDbnld -5V+ McOonD ,40b 16211? 59 m5 35 26 29% +3% Pensll pf2.50 1406 26% 19 23% +4% Pa Co pf4.62 6284 28'+ 17% 26% +9 IPGSand 1.60 249 73% 58 71%+14% Pa PwLt 1.52 121 87 75% 83% +7%'PaPL pf 4.50 14015 85% 49% S3 split PaPL pf 4.40 22453 97 .........mmm 406 91% 71 90 +18% Sub Prop 1.60 804 96% 73% 76 —9 SuCrest .80 2065 53% 39% 51+4+12 SunChem .40 8298 37% 27% 27% —6% Sun Ch pf4 50 382 92% 71% 72%,—9%; Sun Oil 1b 212 86% 69% «9%%0% Sunasco 1993 18 ■ . ijm '39% 3l'++U’+ rate p'liTa stock dividend, c-uiquidalkio ,’SJ S'* 5V..47%.+6% dividend. d-Decl*red or paid ht Si* m 63% I Pin slock dividend. e-Pald last year. 4744 79 103 % * — PoyoDIo In »*ocK durlfwi 1967, esti- 14M 491* 37 jji*........ mated cash value on ax+flvidend or nx, J,? + i*1 distribution dae. g40eclarad or paid so IS IIS +r jfar thls jear. h-Toiclare?/ Or paid attar 2802 30% ?6% 2|% +1 stock dividend or split up. k—Declared IKlt ...a, mn ernimillellue Issue 9% I McGrEd 1.40 ■ McGHIII ,60a iMcGH pf 1.20 28% 861++58 ! Penn R ft 2.40 29933 70% 52% 021+ +9% Sunasc pf.B2p 28% 54%+24% Pennzoil 1:40 7541 126% 75% 124 +45% Sunbeam 1.16 ODl. 111/. _1_S ' « in *-—i —-- ----- ------ • -- --‘ 1616 21% 15% 17% 12179 28% 13% 25'++11'+ 2650 90 87 87 —1 3426 78%, 49'+ 64'++l4 '‘If* '»* l2l* nwe-nu. ——..u «. ?5% 12% ]?V t5 * , slock dlvlde>id. I—Paid 14322 60% 43 51 +2 — 29% 84. +54'+ or paid this year, ah accumulative Issue with dividends lit arrears, n—New Issue. p-rPaid this year, dividend omitted, deterred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—Declared dr paid In 1966 plus stock dividend. I—Paid in stock during 1966, estimated cash value on ex-dlvidpnd 15499 45% 29% 37%+5' j PeopDrg 1.10 2752 21% 181* 19% + % Sundstrnd .80 17525 87 29% *4, +54%. ix-dlstribution date 10546 56'* 42% 47 Spilt! PeopGis 1.96 19301 38% 32% 34% — % Sunny 1.50 49443 40% 26% 39%+J7j% j z—Sales In full. _aj+ 119 +34'+ Chemway 7% 121* +4% Ches Va 1.60 534 13%+7 iChes Ohio 4 70% 80'+ +2% i Chesebro .84 20% 29% +8'+;ChicEast III 53'*+10%|Chlc Gt Wrf 80% +3%|ChiGW 11pf2.50 7167 45% 30s* 33 +1' a: ChiMil StP 1 72338 49 28% 333* split ChMSPP pf 5 11209 29 45% 24%.+81+ Chl Music I Z2050 JO 5529 52% 36% 50%+13% FairHI(l .30g 11937 69% 59% 61% — % Fairmont 1 2086 21% 12 15'+ +2'* Falrmni pf 1 13811 5B3/* 38% 49%+ll% FalstaffV.6 26279 15'* 6 15% +9 Fam Fin M 654 39 30 32 —5%1 Fansteel, Met 15607 69V, 5510 71% 60% 61% + '*! Far Wesr. Fin 10386 1 2% 11482 44% 27% 41 +12%! FarahMfg . 13% —1% Fawick .80 71 +15 Fodders .80 73%+13'+ FedMog 1.80 IndpIsPL 1.50 31'* 37'+ split InEIMex 48g IngerRand 2 ingerRd pf 6 41 62%+21'+ Inland Stl 2 44'+ 76 +31% Insplr Cop 2 FalrCam ,50h 70181 123% 78'* 87% split InsNAm 2.40 1694 39V F 10353 43ft 18ft 41ft -F 22ft McGregA 232 151 104 147 IMcIntyr 2.80 11795 43 24% 35ft McKee 1,50 5353 35 28ft 29ft —3ftnMcLe«n .60a 431 8ft 6ft 7ft -f-lft McLouth 1.60 10136 38V 14823 53ft 37ft 44ft +5ft.McNeil 1.20 7265 45 Z1370 156ft 146ft 146ft -7ft^’McQuay 1.10 1198 753 91ft 59 79 +18VVPepsiCo ... 1995 14ft 10H 12ft — ft * PepGnBot .70 763 9 7 78 Rft -f 8ft: Perl Film .411 6763 48ft 21ft 43ft+22 I Perkin Elm 4570 32ft 16ft 30Va+13ft!Perk Elm wl - 24ft 34ft+10%| Pet ’1nc 1 24ft 41ft+17ft^Pet Inc pf.80 17ft 19 + ft Petrolane 14816 17ft 6174 49Va 2763 52 746 19ft 1195 17% 12 5238 26ft Z2300 91 9766)8 37 2113 44ft 3631 13ft 1677 1 4ft 12’ 31138 41,ft 31 10688 42 28 23150 55 26 266 89ft 78 16143 34 Chi&NWest ~64ft+4ft Chj8.NW pf 5 66 — 18ft ,ChiPneu 1.80 51 ft +4Va 19 -2% InterlkSt 1.80 1 M 31% 55%+ 23% IBM 4.40b 5Va 8 +2ft IntFlaFr .36b 4923 34% 22Va 32% Int Harv 1.80 3835 29%* 16ft 26ft+10ft Int Miner 1 22712 49ft 13 47%+35ft IntMlner pf 4 7797 42 30 407/i+l0% Int Mng .40b MS* 37'* +2?» FedPac Elec 37778 2t'* U'+ 25%*+tt InJNICk 2.808 .» •> c pac pfl 26 2132 28?* I*7* 26'* +6S* Inti Packers ■ - ■ - 5548 38'* 213* 3S3++14' a Int1 Pap 1.35 309 23S+ 20?. 21 + !* Int Pap pf 4 16179 757* 54'* 75 + 28'» Int PipeCer 1 2403 9'* 6 8'* +21+ Int Pipe pf 5 5576 38 25'* 32S+ +7'* Inti Rectlt 5275 416* 26?+ 36V++I0 lint SaH 1.80 5989 29'* 20 25'* +5?+ IntSllver .70 13659 36+4 24 33?« spilt Int Silver rt . 25962 24?+ 12'*’ 14 +1'* IntSllv pfl.75 23891 57 42?+ 55'* +9Vj IntSllv pfA.75 54437 327* 15+4 21?+ +5 Int T8.T 1.70 09 91 In 93?a— '/■ Int T8.T wl IntT&T pfB 4 lntT8,T pfC 4 74'* —2'* lntT8»T pfD 4 34'* —2'* lntT8,T pfE 4 1 6I'*-12 IntTSiT pfF 4 7'+ 18'++11?+ ITT pfG3.10g 9 45'* —4'* IntTT pfG wi 5'* 7514 +l?4 IntTSiT pfj 4, 3993 22'* 137/l 17?4+4 i Int Util 1.20 3993 22'* 13?+ 1714 +4 ! IntUtil pfl.32 19040 65 31?4 64?++32?+'Int Baker .90 69399 48'*.. 22’+ 277* split InterDSt - .60b 34590 397/* 29?* 36'* +6'* IntMtrFr 1,20 1092 55?i 48'* 53?* / IntersPw 1.20 11188 17?4 14'* 15'* Al'+ la El LP 1.30 47/a,Fd Fr pt4.20 Z2490 83?A 75 75 —8'* la. III GE 1.38 11?+ Foote CB .80 7208 207* 13?+ 15?i +1*4 lowaPLt 1.60 6652 36 23'* 33 '■ +8?* lowaPSv 1.24 ■Hi 3385 42?+ 33 39'* . IRC Inc la 49'* 55'/. | FordMot^ 2.40 , 88420 55'* 39'* 53'*+15 HslCrljC 1,60 12155 27 16?+ 247* +67* ForMcK ,12g 24303 32?* -24 26?* Z1080 133 117'* 117'A —8'A,FMcK pfl.BO 23245 577/s 24?* 53?*+28'*1 Fost Wh | 28587 39?+ 30?* 33?* +2'*,MeadCp 1.90 10702 497* 36'* 387A —5'* I Patriot 1.84g 4027 38?4 30'* 33'+ +3'*!Mead pf4.25 If .......... ■ 1----- - * “ 19006 88+4 52 58'*—27?* Mead pf2.80 6834 40'* 27 36'* +9'* Medusae 1,20 125 88* 70'* 70'*—14 | Melv Sh 1.60 47V? 28ft 42 +T3ft Fed MTg Inv 23% 17% 17% i + % Ferro Cp 1.20 22% 15% 17 + 1% Fibr Cp 1.40 23ft 15ft 17 +1 Va FieldctM 1.20 47V? 30ft 45 + 14% Filtrol 1.' 40 26ft 8% 22% + 13% Fin Federatn 45% 21% 42 +20% Firestne 1.40 43 29. 39% i split FstChrt 1.24f 57 31 ft 56 Vi +25% FstNatStr ip 29 23% 26ft — % Fischbch 1.30 94 Va 74% 75% lift Flintkote 1 80 63. 64% i —8 i Flint pfA4.50 5738 677+ 32?4 57'*+24'+ Flint' pfB2.25 41295 36?* 277/i 32?* +3?* Flintkt 4pf 4 504 107*. 93Va 102Vi ,Fla E Coast 366 95 76 90 + 4?4 Fla Pow 1.44 48261 55?4 44'* 47'* + ?« FlaPWLt 1.76 196 182 147?i 156'* +1'* Fla Steel .90 387 99'* 80Va 85 .+2 Fla Steel .90 18019 1187% 43'* 113 +66?* FluorCp 2.871 4147 23?* 15V* 197* +-4?*1 FlyTiger ,10h 19497, 36'+ 21 26'+ +5 FMC Cp .75 11591 59?* 21?+ 48 +25?* FMC pf2.25 5351 31?* 18'* 27'* +8?4 28279 27'* 16?* 24?* +77/. 156 84'* 71 ....... 267 44 31 Z3440* 79 5396 19V* 7313 54 12071 80* +26'/a FoodFair 36'* 53?+- _______ 32 —5'* FooteM ,25g 55V*+16?» Foot M p(2.20. 24303 32?* -24 26?*......I TE„ Ckt 1 1861 54'* 41'* 45'* .....'Itek Corp 20711 36'+ 13?* 24V++10?* ITT Sv 044.50 28 '+10?i! CocaCola’'2.16 12820 139?* 87V* 132V++42?*1 Fost Wh pf 1 422 20 17 18?* U +9Va CocaBllg 1.20 4960 28Va 20?* 23Vs +2?* Foxboro J, /-13789 77 40 64 +22'* - - ' - ■ - -- 19736 45?* 267* 44?++16'/a Frank St+. .Sr 2312 17?* 12'* 15'* split Jaeger .40 Z9510 76 59 59 —9'* FreepSul 1.25 21735 78 36'* 72?*+34 JapanFd .85g 9265 32 19 297*+ll'/a PruehCp 1.70 42489 42?* 25?* 387*+13?4 JerCPL pf 4 54440 114V. 53 99 +40?*'Fruehaufi pl 4 Z3840 90 70 70 —7'*; Jewel Co 1.30 11432 45?* 28?+ 427*+13?» Fulfonln .S4f 8340 14 8'+ IQ?* +2'A Jewel pf3.75 131 57?* 48 48?*— '* Fultojll pfA 1 295 17?* 41512 65 19 62'A+43?* Fuqualnd .32 15755 74 1552 38V* 23?4 37?*+14 , ri 64182 76?+ 47 54'* —7 I - V? 7123 397l> 22 32 Gam 5ko 1 3( 25481 28?* 23V+ 25'* - V. GamS5 Dfl 75 11854 607* 33Va 607/»+25V. g!^| p 30]* split g^ WtSdf 75 30?+ 6303 40?a 30'* J4J* —4va, rtarw ' Djo 95k 28569 93 47V. 2f'*+2»7* GMdDen 1 65 23566 35V. 25?i 32 | +57/. Jj” 200 83 66 67'* -6 A- 29737 57?+ 32+4 36'* - 7/« g?™£ ,„aP56 771 33?+ 23 237/. - ’* gS?c2|rt I SO G Accept pf 1 -Fl3/4! Jim Walter l 26ft 69ft-F41% JImW pfl.20 JimWalt pf 1 JohnMan 2.20 John John .60 JohnsSv 1.60 JonLogan .80 Jones L 2,70 i m, Jones&L pf 5 T? ,Jorgnsn 1.10b Jostens .50 Joy Mfg 1.40 25% +33/b 30ft +2% 29 +2% 8ft +23/4 28ft 28% 311 135 76 135 . AtComwOil 10617 43ft 32ft 37% splltoComsat .60 93188 40ft 223/4 35%+ll%XoneMill 1.20 70661 50% 18% 46%+27ftjCpngOlum .80 6431 57ft 38ft 52Va+13ftCOnracCp .60 25360 53Va 42Va 47% split CortCigar 1.20 5953 55Va 39 ft 44 —8 ft Con Ed is 1.80 Z1680 84 83ft 84 +1 ConEqis pf 5 5949 44ft 26ft 37 +9% ConE pfC4.65 21214 18% 10ft 12’/a +2 ConEldcInd 1 15753 27V4 16ft 23% +6‘/a ConFood 1.50 13751 45% 103/4 37 +26% Con Frght .80 6415 62% 35% 57%+2l% ConNatG 1.70 16091.30ft 21ft 23% —5ft ConPwr 1.90b 6989 34% 21 1C40 36 ft 28 30V 2703 34Vj 253,4 29 8907 9ft 5ft 87/ 77 38Va 30 36 5717 40ft 29% 35^ 3421 23% 15 21% +6’ 2043 13ft 10ft 13 742 11 Va 10% 11 8260 35 19% 35 +15% ....... At . 464 23 15% 23 +7ft jer A 1 2511 42ft 30Vs 40% +10% 5? * Z3780 93 79ft 8OV4 —8ft J*j* 13812 45ft 293/4 41Va+10% !;!S.AI66K1?5 55 26694 42 y* >*;* +2;;? GAmv" P(+5o 45241 77V. .4?V. 49'* +6'+ rAmnn *nh 7018 28'+ 20?* 217/. +1?+ ,,a -rran ‘i ce 96694 42 * 29?* 36?* +2?8 1^?!?+' pf4.!2 15897 25'* 17V* 23 +5?* g*,"*" "J” „v, ^ +2V+!K*is "CPf2-37 16535 70 - 25 , 487/.+44V. S + Kais Cem .80 46518 26?* 17?* 26'+ +8VV g"*™1 p'780 iovJ + ?/J KaisC pf2.50 m ii inst - V* GeS Branze’ 9560 34 17-* M +16*!|18ft GenQynam 1 57385 79 Gen Elec 2.60 67659 115ft Gen Fin 1.10 1340 23 Gen Fire 1.20 5500 60 1 Gen Fds 2.40 19274 81ft 65ft. 69%—2 Gen Host .14311 40ft 15Va 39ft+23 ! Gen Inst l.OBf 62063 86 43% 58%-FH Genlnstr pf 3 1151 72ft 51 55ft Z2270 89 ft 70 ■■■■! Z880 86Va 70 . n?*i}Jim « P_L. p'4 2? « 477/. M’A+18'* Sr PPLL DM IU) dX4A ” 82'* 96 3606 72’/a 34',4 72%+37 Melv Sh pf 113 71. 51 71 MercanS 1.40 6114 34% 26% 28% +2ft Merck 1.60a 22968 648 362ft 627 + 255ft Merck pf3.50 11785 67ft 32 60%+27% Meredith 1.20 30429 41 327/a 35Va +1 Merr Chap S 47638 47ft 24ft 287/ 81 76 60% 6Wa—10% Mesta Mch 18554 33Va 12% 31%+183/4 MGM .10b 16527 119% 83% 117ft+29ft Metrom .80b 16449 14% 8ft 9ft +Tft Met Ed pf4.45 96942 32%‘24ft 30ft +5% MetEd pf4.35 Z8550 83 67ft 67%—1?% MetEd pf3.90 5197 27% 15 26ft+11% MetEd pf3.85 425 95 74ft 83 +8ft 1 MetEd pf3.80 25964 34ft 19 26 +6>/a MichGas 1.20 282 43ft 37% 41ft spit Mich Tube 1 726 33% 26ft 33 split MAmPIpe .50 33808 13-64 M6 5-32 MAmP pfl.12 Z1830 38ft 34ft 36 —2 ; MidCnTel .80 534 33Va 28% 30'/a MidSoUt!! .82 33654 124 72Va 116 +43% Midld R 1.40 237 112 81ft 112 split MidRpfA 4.75 Z7900 2073/4 126 202 + 76Va Midw Oil 2.60 262 207ft 125% 194ft+69Va MiehleG 1.20 139 202 124 197ft+72Va Miles Lab 1 254 187ft 118 180Va+63Va MiltBrad 1.20 986 176ft 110 168 +56Va MinnEnt ,30p 567 138ft 86Va 138" 2132 124 ,87Va 119 488 120ft 105Va 116Va jMissnCp 2.35 4110 3tft 23 39ft+16ft'Mlss Rlv 1.10 2864 39ft 25% 39 +13% Mo Kan Tex 1736 22Va 18 20ft split Mo Pac A 5 14362 50%^' 26 44%+17% MP Cem 1.60 2015. 311.. 20ft 29 +9 iMoPubS .80b 4512 25 ' 20ft 20ft —4 IMobilOII 2 3640 27% 23 23Va —1% Mohascp 1 3667 32ft 25 25ft —2 ! Mohas pf4.20 4615 35% 27ft 30ft — %' Mohas pf3.50 2160 27 21ft 22 —3’Ai Monarc *M0a 21983 58ft 31ft 58%+15»/4 Monogm Ind 16468 72 35% 67ft+31ft MontWard 1 8500 72ft 36 72Va+35% Monon B Id 68255 172ft 84 134%+44 [Monsan 1.60b 654 140 87ft 140 +52% MontDUt 1.60 T | Mont Pw 1.56 u ! 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NatCash 1.20 179 46ft 4Qft 40% —4 NatCityL 1.60 5339 19ft 12»ft 16 ft+4ft N Dairy 1.50 649 49ft 38 41% +3% Nat Dfst 1.80 1121 22ft 19 20% + % NDist pf4.25 6863 38Va 31 32 —5Vi; NDist pf2.25 71 Va—lOVa] Nat Fuel 1.68 70 —7 Nat Genl .20 Nat Gyps Z4090 85 789 59 49% 51ft -5 1 PhelpsD 3.40 3622 30% 21 29ft +6% Phila El 1.64 8335 87Va 34ft 85%+51 iPhilEI pf4.68 124 79 66 67ft-4% PhilEl pf4.40 1234 52'/a 28% 52 +21 26710 94 Z7890 75 ■ IPhilEI pf4.30 73% 84% +7%: PhilEI pf3.80 61ft 64ft —7ft j Phil Rdg 1.60 16967 46ft OS1/! 40 split Sunsh Mng n 315 32V 4573 20% 12% IS +2% SunsMIn .60b 22269 40 19275 67% 12 66 +54% ?UP Valu 1.10 655 38^ 16014 95 46ft 81 +32 SuperOil 1.40 • 263 47ft 37ft 40ft split Swank 60a Tampa El .61 Tandy Corp 22% 24ft+1%'Phil.or pf 4 PhilM pf3.90 Phill Pat 2i40 PhllVH 1.60f Pike Corp .20 Pike Cp pH Plllsbury 1.15 PIperAIr 1.40 PJthey B 1.20 60Va 60ft -^6ft Pit Coke .40b 18% 19% — % PCoke 5pf 61'/a—lO’/a 4167 26 15% MesabiT .79g 11610 13ft 11% 1ft% .................. 2546 42% 32ft 35 +3Va 19674 64ft 3’/aft 48 +10Va 13313 66ft 40% 56 +14 Z1570 87 70ft 72 —9ft Z2560 87 Z7670 76 Z1490 74 Z810 U 1388 23 2810 25'* 15V* 20'* +5'+ PCoke ofi/SO 12354 29'+ 12'* 28?++14'+ pit Forg 80 154»„ 37?* 20'+ 37?i+17?* pittFtW pf 7 3523 29V* 21'* 22'* 4-1 PltPfqte 2.40 24317 29?* 20'+ 25?4 + '*1 Pitts Steel 15152 42 24V* 35S++107*! PltSteel pf A 140 184 109 155'*+44'* I Pltstl pf5.50k 1353 85 49 711* +3'+! pitYnaA pf 7 9198 44?4 25V. 3»?*+!4?*j Plttston 1720b 12801 51 30?+ 50>*+ll7* Plough |nc 1 7177 43 20'* 50V++30?*! Polaroid .44 2324 149+ 9'* 11 split! Poor Co 1.20 86'* 138*4+51'* MinnMM 1.30 32407 9 6 75 94W+16V*1 Porter pf5 50 split MlnnPLt 1.10 4233 269* 19'* 21'* — 2?*l Potom Elec 1 | ’ 3102 170'* 92?* 168 +73 | p0t El pf2.44 20052 23?* 149* 19?i +2'* prem |nd .80 18400 20'* 5?* 20V.+V49+ ProctrG 2.20 792 85'* 71 72'* -TV* PubSvcCqlo 1 2483 25?* 19?* 219*+2 jPSvcEG 1.40 1453 29'* 21?4 224+ —2?i PS EG pf5 28 62B52 49'* 39'* 42?+ —4'* PSEG p»5.05 35404 25'* 14'* 24'* +9 psEG pf4.30 Z3190 82 77 77 — '*; ps|g pf4.1l PSEG pf4.C8 PSEG pfl.40 Pub Sind 1.92 PSInd ' pf3.50 PSInd pfl.08 PSInd pfl.04 Publklnd Z1470 74 67'* 49'* + V* 5883 479* 14'* 41'*+26?* 13181 01?* 44% 71 split 55318 3)9* 20?* 24?* +4'* 9347 34'+*20/ 28'*+0'* 80261 55'* 399* 47?* +6V* 4087 339* 28'* 29'* —1 9541 349* 24?* 29 -2H|"Pub|kr pf4.7S 14908 26?* 14V* .22 +f7* Puib Sup 44 16039 71 24?i 70?++45'+tpR Cem 1.10 5881 47 21'* 43V.+22'* PugSPL 160 47925 146'* 90 117 +24 Pullman 2.80 3450 32?* 279+ 28H + >* PurexCp ,72b 6128 27 21 217* +1'* purex pf t .3S fSkti !pur°ia,r , ao 3501 239* 18?* 22?* +3'*! . £ .SIS GuekOat 1.20 13,3ioi75* iJ .^tl^ OuakOat pf 4 338 1345 107'* 1-36 +5' QuakStOII « 7728 34 24%. 26ft ■H i 2289 22ft 16% 17% —1% 4159 34ft 17% 32 +14ft 1804 24% 18% 22 +2ft| 21450 93 68% 75% +5% 14522 80 62% 72 +5ft 17271 34% 28% 2t% —2 Z7640 96 75% 77%—10% 227 90% 72 74 -10 Z9610 86 68% 70 -Si 203 77% 61 62ft —4% 32058 99% 39ft *2%r+52% 16512 57 Va 31% 44%+10% 137 79 62% 63 ft- -13% 1 Z3840 76 61 61 • -10% 35216 67% 49 67 +17Vi 5113 22% 16ft 20ft — % 23222 36ft 19 28% split __665 107ft 43ft 85 +37% 1749 44 Vi 32% 40 +6% 10708 56 Va 39 Va 52'*+13'*' 12923 77% 44 Vi 71?++23'4 3887 75 41% W*+25'* Z1330 87 80 80 —2 i 49 85 .77 77 — ft 9322 25% 15ft 16% +1% Z2470 132 114% 114%—15%, 11834 68% 53% 65 + 10%, 9240 9’/a 12% +3% Z4500 88 77 78ft + fti 230 77 66 66% —2%; Z4M 128 120 120 -2 55028 59 1 29ft 52 +20% 3095 131ft 60 120 +58% 69005: 254Vi 154ft 250?++-92 3358 35ft 21% 24 split 110 93% 78 79 -14V? 25635 21% 17 17% —2Va 705 53 Vi 42% 43ft -7% 2505 33 V., 16% 29% + 13% 14798 99% 69 92ft+19 ft 22692 26ft 19ft 21% —2Va 20661 37% 30 32% —3% 169 102% 81 Va 83 -14% 105 100 78 79%- -11 Va Z8790 86% 67 68% —9ft . Z3570 62 64% 64kto—l 1% Z7400 82% 63 65 —9Va 1059 27% 22% 22% —2% 7301 52% 37ft 42ft —5% Z9290 7 55 Va 57 —5 234 21% 16ft 17. —2% 129 21 16 16% —3 17331 lift 5% 9ft +3% Z710 81 75 75 9670 33ft 14ft 31%+17% 2844 23% 18% 20% +2% 4886 37ft 31 31 Va —1% 12759 55% 43 50% +7ft 41418 37’/i 18% 36%+17% 291 49 29 49 +20% 3017 53% 36ft 43% +71/4 JUJ. «IM cld-Calied. xw-Without warrants ww-VXt J5?J+ 2 'with warrants. wd-When distributed. 4«: J4IA+S0+. Wi-When Issued. nd-Ngxt day delJwery. 60Mt69^117 J44'*+|0?4- v|.|n bankruptcy or receivership or 15739 34?, 25'* 29?* . bemg reorganized under the Bankruptcy 32118 34?+ 23?* 32?+ split Act, or securities assumed by such corn- 12043 71 36'* 49 +31’* J 'j 16791 45 20V+ 4t'++21 split-lndicales split or Stock distribution rn of 25 per cent or over during 1967, no net 1 change shown. 11761 49'* 33’+ 37 +2'* '-------;--------- 12700 22 15?* 21?* +8'*^*ANHUAL 11545 35'* 20 35 +15* folal 1967 10457 33'* 23'* 27 -2+ Total 1966 10)47 57 14?* 55 + 40V+ Total 1945 13440 47?* 43 51?* Total 1944 24001 14?* 10'A 14'+ +49+ Total 1943 39307 59?* 29?+ 48?*+18?* ! 34050 143 93?* 139'+ split, 3723 205 II'* 285 +193 NEW YORK STack sales ... 2.529,785.834 shares. . 1,900,215,074 shares. ... 1,550,244,262 shares. . 1,230,005,223 shares. . 1,147,103,295 shares. Aeron 5fts82 Alaska 6Va$86 AI tog A Sfts87 AllenEE 6sfl7 Alsco SVas 74* ThomBett .96 Thom Ind .6Cb Thomasvl .80 40198 32'* 209* 27'+ +6 247 94?* 94 94'* 44007 04 48 83 +11'* 18177 24'+ 18'* 22'+ +2 7071 34?* 24?* 34'* +7 75777140 94V..127 +«^ aSmEo 4V*S ** m.wj +‘v! 2S4s',eef,q 4$94t „1l28 MW J^+lJ4 AppEI gg 6766 16267 tWi so'/m t i w Assd OG m « jlPSfiySS Astrex 5S74 59 219 114 219 +108% Bald AAt 7s72 888’« S l* US.^ BSldM 6'/!s87 7810 43?+ 25?* 39?++12+ b |oom 6Vis77 BosEd 2+* }. 51784 529+ MV+ ,52+4 + 24?+ I 41, 125 170 N Q 588 41 <* 34 Z7590 126+4 103'* 140 29 26 R h,..^ 1133 191?* 112 191+4+79?* prontAir 4s»2 Transllron 43170 22?* 11?* ]]]■ /J]"’ FronA 5'*s87 TnswnP ,50 4004 1614 Trl -Cont 92g 22161 32' Tricon pf2.5l 1372 48'* 41?* 49V Yfingl 1.20a 9728 45?* 27'* 36 +10 TRW Inc 1 40 26743 104?* +4 103 +58 TRWpfA 4.25 477 320 139?* 317 +175'* TRW pl 4 —<1 Z2370 79'* 47 69 TwenCent .80 1 4971 32'* 21?+ 31 u 5212 40?4 22 Crestmt 6s80 2922 151 DataP 5?-4s87 23944 325 133'* 325 DataP 5'*s87 24902 140 93 140 384 51'* 41 • 41V* 189 34 20 20J* • 3972 127 86 120 325101'* 85 100 37 100 90'* 91'+ 4432 192 109'* 170 3113 188 101'* 180 3175 149 110 143 200 72 50?+ 65'++ 1802 197 127'* 155 1451 98 812 65 FlschPtr 6s86 Split r 26450 40 K 28212 59 V 1535 114V 276 112 6378 45ft 35 7777 57% 32% 42'/a-FlO RCA pf 3.50 92 50% 46ft 47 RalstonP .60 2096 54% 39'ft* 43Vi -F4% 3389 40 31 .. 34Va split 6305 54 40% 52 ft -f5ft 15025 51% 42% 43ft —4ft 11312 39% 23% 35%+) 2 1858 39% 33 35% 29410 136% 67% 133 +65% Rayth pfl.12 3274 ,50 28ft 48 +20 I Reading Co 30538 40% 32% 35% +1% Reading r pf 16394 49% 37ft 39'ft ft Reading 2 pf 348 86 66ft 67ft —9 RedOwl St 1 421 45% 35ft 37 ^-4%:ReevesB 1.50 6116 31 ft 26% 2734 — ft; ReichCh .40b 52671 25% 9% 24%+12ft! Reliab Str >0 19522 47% 29'ft 43'ft+14% RelianEI 1.20 Z7360 9 0 70'/a 71ft—14'ft RelianEI pf 3 RCA 1 105353 65ft 42% split RCA cv pf 4 2992 134 110ft 120% 240 81 60% 62 —12 16584 31 22% 23 —IV 10214 27ft 15% 26 +11 1194 663/4 49ft 61ft +6V Ranco Inc .92 Raybestos 3 Rayette .60 24538 76 Raym Int .60 20922 19% 10 Rayonr 1.40b 30841 45 30 Raytheon .80 56185117 UARCO 1 Udyjite 1.60 UMC Ind .60 103'*—18'* un?Mtd *°;no o*3/* «oiit Ltd ./og za?* split uht|NV , I6g UnCamp 1.72 OnCarbide 2 53?++10?+ Un E|ec 1.20 Un El pf+.56 Un El Pf+.SO Un El pt 4 Un El P13.70 El P«3.50 2604 4ZV4 .4 32598 26 IV 4760 14 1 1613 26'X 1, 4110 31?+ 2 16183 47 34 79614 59 45'+ 21359 27+4 21+1 Z460 92 78 284 89 70'+ Z3230 82 63 z660 71' “ .... ■ nww ... 59 J 60'* US tSJ GCComp 6s06 40544 166 105 156 JJS +SJJ Gran 5.75S87 1993 174 109 163 GrowC 5'*s87 1375 121 Gif Ld 6'*s77 7360 126 Hartfd 5'*s81 1797 1 47'* Hydmel 6s72 621 103 Inf Ind 6s xw 4247 111 IrvAir 5'*s79 2342 144 Jacks 6'*s8) 1228 205 Jervis 5?+s82 3291 124 a?7/,t?!?J Kaltm 6?*s87 2032 210 531 520 split 75+a+44?+ (jnOilCal 1.40 •— +J7/». UOCal pf2.50 +9?* unionPacif 2 +52'* unPac pf.40 4123 58+4 30'* 53'* un Tank 2.50 2]?* 40?4 + l2!* Kallman 6s77 ; Kkufm 5',s87 tUJ Kawec 47*s76 &!* 2'4? +4S Kesko 6Vis76 23?* JO]]. +7V» Leasc J3/4S87 t “ Leece 5'*s82 4»,t +’]? Letner 6'*s02 22* —3?* Leslie 6'*s86 75* — Levin 5'*s87 J?7* Levin 5'*s87 64,^ LTV A 6'*S86 30145 253 ____ 62'* —5'* LTVEI 4'*s92 30788 196 Z9060 68+ 56'* 58 —4V* McCul 5+S87 32301 64 47'* 56?+ +5?+ Merger! 5s77 11231 83 64?* 75 +7/4 Mesap 534582 21030 44?* 36 38 + '* N Be||H 6s84 6912 8V« 6* 6?+ — 1 n, Gen 5'*s74 3986 78 55 * 75?4+ 8?+ Nat Gen 5,54 113?+ 91 +2'* 140 +58 98+++18+S 104 205 +98'* 200 , 520 + 330 1851 135 103 ^ 132 2290 145 103 114'' 295 97% 92 Va 95>, 8936 70% 63ft 69 5907 165 . 98 159 2097 81 75 79 4716 114 95 114 133'* 243 +109?* 105 145 4240 195 1519 1 58 - 90 90 —12 1982 170 103'* 155 1322 98'* 78'* 95 +18?* 968 95 85'* 90 +4'* 2217 ,73'* 64'* 731* +1'* 9370 25+4 13 22+4+10'* uniroyal 1.20 22637 497/i 36'* JW+'g’* Noeast 6'*s86 16158 131 , 99 103 —8 18V« 20 +2ViUr * 22?* 444*^21'*^!™ P^l KanPwL 1.03 I KayserRo .60 Keabler 1.20 'NGyps pf4.50 ____ .. ____ .., ________. -7<* N Lead 3.25g 25160 70'+ 55'* 66* g„PC*m «n - ' " 15875 89?+ 73?+ 80V. + +4 ,gjgp„r r,n c*»oi co 071*. iTa*xit7/a 1 ucnrrcc i.3u AssdBrew .40 23936 28?* 12?+ 18V+ +2++fCont fns 3.20 AssdOG 1.60 6996 76'* 49'+ 71 +19 iConfMtg 2.12 AssdSbrng la '2117 29?* 18'* 25++ '+7?+cont Mot .40 Asad Tran 1 6603 23 14'* 19?* +5?»: cont Oil, 2.80 Assoclnv 1.40 7570 25'* 21'* 22?4 +)'* Cont Oil pf 2 Atchison 1.60 40012 33'* 26 28'* . . . Con) Stl 1.80 Atchls pf .50 10900 9+a O'* 0?+ —1 |conf Tel .60 AtCItyEl 1.26 4223 318+ 257/i 26'* — ?+, Control Data AtCttyEI pf 4 Z36B0 80'* 66 66 —12'*, ... . ---- 15943 109?* 83'* 104?*+10 5281 52 27'* 47?4+187*.if5prpr 3587 23'* 15?+ 22?4 +7?* g^7?cs p,’^° 34113 81'* 63?+ 74?+ +3?+ SEPPJ.V, 2154 59+4 50?* 55V* +3'*]gE“PJ2' 'vS. 1785 37V* 25'A 37 +12.- |gen’sim 43024 34?* 23?. 20?+ +!?+;?„ c,® J, , 2029 1 04 83 85'/a—14 BJSHS 1078 80'+ 62'* 65?+ — 9?t, -5- 15211 15'* » 13'+ +4'* 5Vn lYf,?". 2 35362 80 59 79'++17'*' S*lruA'i V^L 3605 58'* 42 57+.+14?* .Jl” 14214 7 5'* 6 V* + 7* 23939 34'* 26?+ 27’* -3'+ v Sd b#a * on 9546 18'* 12'* 14?+ +1'* ElVivJ 4404 441/. OOl/m 401A—1134. 7y<>1Dl.lK 4 3078 58'* 24?+ 53+++29VV NatSugR 3631 32 19 30 ,+ll?4 Nat Tea .80 8554 45?. 35'* 42'* +6 : Nat Un El .80 12487 44?• 27 42V4+147* Natomas .25 4622 69'* 35 59V++23'*,Neisner Bros 6030 54?. 367* 44?+ ...... Neptune 1.40 36292 53'* 35?+ 46'* +8'*, Nevada P .92 3183 34?* 28'* 29?+ — 3?a Newbrry ,45g 11452 33 18’+ 20 —IV*! Rexall :30b 24314 23?+ 11?+, 19?++8 Rexbll pf 2 1578 IS?* 8 12’* +4?4LReyn Met .90 5682 03?+ 26 54'A+28 ReyM pf4.50 3916 40'* 36 45'*+0'* ReyM pf2.37 8077 30 Hi ------------1 “ - v 2262 70 5003 55'. 36 64'* 59 4'* 69'*+64'+ Unit Fin Cel — ■ -RM 11'* 75 +63?4 un Fruit 1.40 41053 61?+ 26'* 60 +33# p$y EG 6s»8 —....... * 20124 86?+ 47'+ 86 +371* | pur!tnr 4yjsai 2881 24?* 20 20?+ + ?a PurFash 6s79 2807 39?a 271* 39'+ split Ramada 6s86 37?+ 09?++31?+ Unit Indus! 20140 20?* 13 18 +3?. r8pa 5?4s77 30'* 50'++18'* Unltlnd pf.42 2392 11 8?+ »?+ + ?» Real Eq 0s80 .................................12 28 +S'A : ReevesB 6s70 OO'* 38660 41?+ 23'* 37?i+l!'A| Unit Nuclear 7196 40?* 37'+ 44 +6'*1 Unit Pk -Min 41958 59'* 44 50'* + '/.Unit Snoe 3 1117 123'+ 101 109 — 71* U Shoe ptl.50 567 46'* 38?+ 39 —6V+-US Borax la I Unit MM 1.20 12439 297+ 22 18'* 41 +23# | RefCA 5?*s80 2 8J+ +61? Rio J2S20I2 52+ 62# +9H Saturn 5'+s87 25'* 25# —3* Saxon 5'*82 927 235 29 80 2009 101 3395 125 33641 79 1927 165 14215 72 Atl Rich pf 3 Atlas Ch .80 Atlas Corp I AtlasCp pf Ik Aurora PP .40 AustNch -60b ARA Inc .72 AutSpNtr .08a Gen Sig pf 4 147267 165?+ 33'* 136'*+104'+1 gT?1,lc'ld I'm Aft Rich 3.10 15943 109?* 83'+104?*+18 Conwod 1.40a 1762" 39, 22’*'36W+137* AtIRch pf3.7i 266 79'* 61?* 64'*—10 CookCof*2.27» 3913 49” 26'+ 47#+21'* S|!”1 PY?“ — - 19038 93?+ 73 89 +12'* Cooper In 1.20 15638 58'* 237* 48V.+24 gT. -mi in 19458 23?+ 16 19?+ +3'* Cooper TR 1 10615 29?* 15'* 29?*+14'+ 1196)5 77+ 2?+ 6'* +3?+ CoopT pfl.25 1399 26'* 15?. 173* +2'/. Copeland 1.20 11210 23?* 14'* 173+ +37* CoppRng .50 1562 31'* 17?* 21'* +2?+ copwlSII 1.20 8811 86'+ 51?* 833++29V* CorinthB ,07g _____________ 16210 73?+ 44V. 7234 Corn Pd 1.70 Avco Cp 1.20 130938 65?i 22'* 65 + 43'* CorGW 2.50a iJ9S Aift 37ft i9V2+l2% Ij! iov*,R o/ft -r.Vft iNewmn? lvj 558 104 83'+ 90'* KInSeel ^1.5Ca 3387 45'* 25'* 40?*+T5?+ Newmnt pf .4 6497 26'* 18V* 22'* +4'A1 !,!n®sRSL 103M 37’* 20?+ 36?* split NewpNSh 2a - -- T Klnn.vNC xn 5792 57?* 26'* 5734 +31'*, NY Cent 3.12 1801 56.'* 26'* 56'++293* I NYHond ,95d 36406 117?+ 653* 76V*—19'* NYSta EG 2 7422 40 29'* 37'* +73+,NY SE p»3.75 533 28?+ 2214 28?+ r— Tlr, 4660 39'* 24'* 32?+ spilt SenT,']r*. , 6709 56'*. 40 43'* —67* p,f J 7291, 317+ 21?* 22?+ 2351 29?+ 2234 29'* Avco pf3.20 422 130 93'* 130 _____| |____ Avery Pd .30 2628 52 42V* 50'+ ■ jCorng pfn3.50 Avnet .50b 66212 -71'* 16?+ 63 +463+ Coronet .40 Avnet Inc wl „■ 117 52?+ 47'* 49 split Cowles. 50 ' Avnet pf 1 446 . 70 30 65'* CoxBdcas’ .50 Avon Pd 1.40 2607 142'* 76 142'A+61’+ CraneCo 1.60 R - —Crane pf3.75 44 Crescent ,45d Babck W 1.36 27467 58'* 34'* 467* +9V. CrompKn .00 Bak Oil T .55 22424 11?* 87* 18 +9'* CrouseHind 1 Balt GE 1.52 14488 353* 27'* 29'* —5?+ Crow Coll 2f BaIGpfB 4.50 194 90'*. 72 73 —11 Crown Cork Balt G pf C4 Z6480 01 64 65 —8'* CrownCk pf 2 BangPunt .60 17176 55 237* 5234 +263* jCrownZe 2.20 BangP ptl.25 969 55 2534 53 +25 ' Cr+ Z p»4.20 Genesco 1.40 Genesc pf4.50 28584 513+ 373+ 40'* -63+ g?p aci,i5, unm »nv, 107 jjj +16 ga£ap p|j ‘J Gerber 1.10 Gettybil . 1 Og Gefty pfl.20 Giant PC .80 Glbralt F .90f Gidd Lew .80 Gillette 1.20 17% 31ft+14ft GTel El 1.40 66817 55 382 58 287 24 407 24% 19% 20 Gen Time .50 21705 26 1 4' * 24 40704 38ft 24 ft 28 Z9890 99 j??* Kinney pf.70 ‘ KLMAIrl ..83g Koehrlng 2 1C nnnorc 1 A —4ft -13ft: 8007 390ft 307 Z1390 84 77 Z840 91 85 5263 32ft 13 7956 21 % 13 4464 58% 34' 4565 58 Z3360 81 11857 16 4426 21V 7422 48V 16697 59^ 16215 697/ 85 42 17920 55' 345 + 36 82 —1 89 +3% ' 32ft+19V 15% +1?/ + 17Va 33% 47ft+13 10 12ft +«.% Koppers 1.40 Kobper^ pf 4 Kresge .90 13134 45% 24Va 41%+17 1r+ d5® 179 168 99% 158Va+58% R“ro®er 40% 58%+17% +9% Lab Electron 25*4. Si7 Lac 1.30 ^ r+^i:^ 'jf. . Lanvin pf.80 +'v?1La|robeSt .60 ]Lear Sieg .80 SJS, ! LearSg pf4.50 Leaseway ... v HR 5H — 15?4 20'*+12?*|ReynTob 2.20 50946 453* 34'* 44'*+10'+ USForS»3.46g 15613 150 80'+124?i+44 Newb pf 3.75 Z9750 64 . 56 56'* —3?+! ReyT pf 3.60 215 7334 60 60'* —O'* USFrg* 2.20a 989 3834 2934 32 +2'* NEngEI 1.48 12070 28?+ 23'* 26 —1'A RheemM 1.40 34929 60'* 23?* 50 + 26V* US Frght wi 46* ,79 +29V« , NEngTT 2.36 7616 467* 40'* 4034 —2?* Rheingold .20 28925 29'* 16?+ 19'* +2V* USGypsm 3a 95'* 165 +64 jNJPwLt pl 4 ZI320 76 ' 64 64'* —8 | RichMer 1.30 llMO 103'* 66 86'* +9 US Ind ~ 473* 57'* +9'* Newmnt 2,20 17312 70?* 44?+ 6J'++I97A -------- - - ---- — ------- ----- T 160 190 138 190 +50 6301 55?+ 33'.* 49+++157* 25873 86'* 63'* 75’* +6?* 4103 50?+ 36'* 44'+ +??* 5767 44 i 35'* 40'* —3 . . , Z9710 72'* 56 58 —10'* 7036 45'* 26'* 36 +9'A Niag MP 1,10 34059 227+ 19?* 1934 —1'* 159 78'* 63 64 —O'* NiagM pf6.10 zlOOO 97 94 94 11409 88?? 36?+ 88 +50'* NiagM pf5.25 106 100?* 79 81 4050 25'* 16 24'* +8'A NiagM ,pf4.85 131 9334 73 75 ■ 26366 25'A , 20'* 23?+ +1V* NiagM pf4.10 Z5180 80 677* 68'* Ginn Co Glen Aid wi 4434- 6iv++i2v:'g[«" 36'* 40'* +2'* g ii i,S34 4-lVa - PJ __ 22103 66 7797 48V 317 36V 9726 393-25216 1057/ 740 23 V 3692 13* 8768 25V 6022 35ft 29 35237 62% 40V 13341 43% 27V 19% 19' BarbOtl 1.72f Basic Inc .80 Basic pf 2.50 BatesMfg .40 Bath Ind BauschLb .80 BaxtrLab .16 BayukCig .50 Bearings .80 Beat Fds 1.65 Beat F pf2.70 Beck Shoe pt Beckman .50 BectonDk .30 BeechAlrc 1b Beech Crk 2 BeechLS 1.50 BeechLS pf 2 Belco Pet .50 Bel Hem .70b Bell Hovt .50 Bell Int ,.29f Beml^Co 1.60 Bend l x 1.40 "-Bendix pf 3 BenefFin 1.60 Bf+nflP pf4 Sft Bent IF pf4.30 16972 14% 2649 48 32340 57V 2023 85% 70 26701 44 27 —145 82V 1735 85 BenF 5pf2.50 ^377 45ft 36 Benguet 149908 9 2 Berkey i.09f 16832 52% 29 Berman Leas 25456 32% 5 Beryllium .60 12471 51% 29 4875 55% 36% 49 +10% Cruc Stl 1.20 11626 26% lift 17% +6ft CTS Corp .40 396 59ft 36ft 45 +8ft Cudahy Co 10512 27ft 10% 17% +7ft Cudihy pf 2780 23% 14 22 splitiCulligan .48 12400 81ft 54% 59% — 1ft Cuimmlns .80 9318 46ft 36 41 spilt CuneoPr .40g 3604 16 9ft 13 +3% CunnDrug \70 4538 35% 25% 27% — ft Curtis Pub 8162 65 45 62 +11% Curt Pub 3pf 465 74% 62% 70 CurPub .60pf Z3480 102% 80% 101%+28% Curtiss Wr 1 23164 81^% 42ft 62 +16 Curt Wr A 2 21764 63 39Va 60%+20% Cctler H 1.20, 16385 53% 28 40%+12% Cyclops 1.8(T zl840 37ft 32% 32% —3% CyprusM 1.40 15948 57% 42Va 47 Vi +1ft 1363 57ft 48 52 — Vi , 30456 53% 17% 53%+35% Dan Riv 1.20 1733 22% 15% 21 +5% Dana Cp 2.20 29081 93% 52% 89ft+35Vi Dana pf 3.75 198 87% 70Va 71 Va —9ft 9 PJJJ* 12026 32% 21% 32%+ll% alf1 19286 39Va 27 33Va +2 20255 17Va 6% 17 +10%GoodVr 13 741 95’* 4»'*.M +34?+ 7583 81684 19% 7027 119ft 71 461 94 89 928 68 39 8587 42 24 14028 46 Goodrich 2.40 21106 75 56% 72%+ll%| utotr Ln }A0 161 50ft 45% 46ft 5805 45% 31ft 34% + % 1280 17% 10% 13% +2% 1411 17% Mlft 14ft +3ft GrandU 47815 20Vi 10Va 11% +1% 4938 75 35ft .48Va+13% G . . 1Q 1945 24% 12% 17ft +4ft 'i'0, „ 40551 31ft 17% 27% +9ft grant Pf 3.75 TliZ Gt A&P ' 1.30a GtNoIr 1.35g 35'/4i + 15%! 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Occident ,80b 181078 12'* 40?t tl0?++87?4 |Sl 54 17731 145 24?+ MO'A+lWVi 10927 28?+ 15 27'A+I2V+ 18650 207/a 14'* 17’* +3 |Oak Elect 387 94'* 78'* 83'* +6 47728 29'* 19'+ 29?t+10V+ 12231 31 ‘ „ - — , Vulcan Mat 1 Z4450 74 57 59 —8'+ Vulcan pf6.25 7890 45'* 32?+ 40'* +4V+; ' 3101 28?+ 22'* 24 +1 41050 35'+ 19'* 32'A+12?i 1133 49 3t?4 43 spilt Annual Over-the-counter US Govt Bonds 793 54?A 13042 14'* 6301 72V,SiHL^5^ ^?’?4-^^ 33194 .47++ 79# OT* «Pj»l ^111.^2.30 £+* mi*++SJJi Horillard pf 7 26'*—2'*iOgden pfl.87 383 65'* 54?* 65'* I 75'*—12?i [OhioEdls 1.30 15678 29?+ 24V+ 25'+—2?4 79'* 74V+ 74'*—11 ?+1 Oh Ed pf4.54 Z8730 S3 72 74 —11 ............ m+jOft Ed Pf4.44 ZSOll) 08’* 69V+--70_____121* JJIJ+^lsMbFIn 1.20 SeabF pf 2.75 51% 5% 9% +3% WabR pf +50 7% 8Va ; Walgreen .90 9 ?ft ....jWalkrH 1.20a 40% 48ft +8%IWallMurr .70 7369 28ft 19% 20% —3ft WallM pfl .70 184 62 45 46 —7 WallTler 1.10 2480 128 89 93V 42559 80 14315 28V Z3380 99 'a-F247/i 4+ 177/l 4 + 173,: Bond Strs 1 BookMth 1.60 Borden 1.20 BorgWbr 1646 25% 17% 1626 36% 23Vi 26499 42Vi 30 28C0 30% 25% 8^10 19% 12% 6670 45 36 ft 16390 26% 13ft 459 46 Det Steel DeVilbis 1.10 DiaSham 1.40 DiaSh pf C2 DiaS pf D1.20 Diamlntl 1.80 F 7 DianaStr 20b F4% Dlcfaph .80a split Diebold .40b iormanF .80 8B10 19% I27« 10% -F6% DIGIorglo .80 BOS EdiS 2.06 6670 45 36ft 39 —2% DinersCI .50b Bost Me Cp 16390 26% 13ft 22ft +8% Disney 30b BostMeCp pf 459 46 24vi 37%+13% Dist Seag 1 Bourns Inc 11779 28% 20Vi 25Va +2% DivcoWy 1.20 BranfAlr .25g 14113 84ft 40 46%—23Va DrPeppr 1.10 BriggsS 2.40a 3071 62 41 55 +13% DomeMin .80 BristMyer la 25259 83 52% 74 +19 DomFd 1.59g. BrisMy pf wl 621 AIVa 46% 50% Donnelley .60 BwyHale 1.40 1498 58 31Va 56%+ 23% OorrOliv .45p BklynUG 1.68 6522 31% 28 29Va +1% DoverCp 1.20 Brown Co .60 17128 23% 16ft 20ft +3% DowChm 2.20 20378 51 BwnCO pfl.50 5594 31% 24% 28ft + % Dresslnd 1.25 24993 42 BwrvShar 1.40 5194 40% 25ft 28ft split Dressr pf2.20 BwnShoe 2.60 1396 93ft 53ft 86%+30Va DrexelE 1.60 Brunswick 179514 17Va 7 16%+10 ; Dreyfus .80 Buckngh 1.20 2369 22 13% 19ft +5Vj DuffyMf 1.10 BucyEr 1 60a 16721 39% 23% 37%+14 Duke Pw 1.20 Bucy Erie wl 56 27 ' 23% 25 split Dunhill .50 Budd Co .80 , 30407 23% 13% 22% +9% Duplan .66f 73% —3Va duPont 5g 9% + % duPont pf4 50 8% duPont pf3.50 57 +27 Duq LF 1.66 29 split -Dq 4.20pf2.l0 41%+25% Dq 4.15pf2.07 2?ft +8'4 Dq 4.10pf2 05 55%+ 29% DuqLt 4pf 2 + 10Vi Dfl 3.75pf1.87 % D|i 2.1 Opt 2.10 6S 254 9Sk Gu,f s>u pf 5 zi910 97 4556 46% 23% 45% + 22% QuIfSU pf4.52 fl010 77 GulfSU pf4.44 Z660 86 J4 4 GulfSU pf4.40 119 89 It, 4 ~~6/% GulfSU pf4 20 Z2940 83ft GulfWIn 30b 165931 64% 9721 22 4730 23J. 14540 34’ -1599 105V 18560 22’ 1 1617 34', 29959 41V 1647 493 5467 197 7544 49': 5308 14> 21735 71' 17228 367i 4709 273/. 23706 49' 2101 63 1962 37' 7207 53V 2865 52 ,11071 58J/ 2492 34 16318 S0‘ 17200 35% 17% 28 7*245 61 831 88'a +5V 57ft 76%+17ft 20' ? 25 Va -1% 77’/a 78 —13% 77 79 ft—10ft 74% 70 68'/? 69V: 70 -10 -9ft LouisGE 1.38 Lou Nash 4a Lowenstn .80 Lubrizol .90 Lucky Str .90 Ludlow 1.76 Lukens Stl 1 Lykes SS la .Lytton Ftnl 150 114% 103 Vi 112V 35464 16% 8ft 13% +5% 24227 70 4) 48 +7% 115 138 109 110%—19 7608 34ft 25% 27ft -4% 2695 100ft 75% 77% —1ft 8311 *0% 15 17ft +3% 6218 81 ft 40 76%+34% 5868 34% 16ft‘*34%+17% 2572 60%ta35ft 50ft+ 15% 17851 43% 31% 34ft +3ft GulfW pfl.75 GutfW pf 3.50 Gu.lfW pf5.75 Gulton Ind +6V Hack Wat 2 60%+34% HallPr«f> 1.408 28% +9% Halliburt 1.90 25 +9% Hamil Wat 1, 48ft+28% Hamm Pap 1 55'/i split Hammnd .76 * 36 +5ft Handlmn 1.20 50ft+23 Handy H .50a 49 +19 HanesCp .90 56V? + 13% Hanna 1.40a 31ft + 10 , Harcourt 1 47% +9% Harris Int 1 + 10ft ,Harsco Cp 1 +27Vi HartSMx 1.10 87%+25’ 66 —7% 30% 59’if 25-96 185'/i+79ft! 22 235 +1°) Mac And F .60 H% —5% Macke Co .30 59Vi split Macy RH .90 Macy pf 4.25 in 4-71A, MadFd 2.63g Ti, ’ MadFd pfl.20 4% 163 194 1721 245 122 1539 87% 74 21114 67 44 H 1134 48 36V 1492 47 32^ 18553 65% 40' 6649 1 7Va 13% 15’% +2V 8553 34% 24 28’4 -3V ,15471 22ft 13 14% —4' 8438 54Va 17% 52ft +35* 5869 40 23Va 27V? 4972 28% 19% 23% + 2619 81ft 52 5397 121 81% 92V?+)0% 16641 68 * 28% 65%+37% 13165 30% 17V 4318 49% 30 Magna vx MallOry 1.80 ManShir .56b Manpowr .60 Marathn 2.80 79^4.97% Maremont 1 /T" ' Mw AA.M 1 iA DUUU V.V -OV . UV*U( Budd Co pf5 Z6750 85 Budg Fin .64 1904 1 2% Budd F pf.60 BuffFor 1.80a BuffForge wi Bullard f Bulova .70b BunkHIII 1.20 1389 2603 60% 30V 6 29% 29 10809 43% 16V 15077 33ft 21V 19979 57^ 3052 49 3844 52' i 14438 34% 3019 29% 5463 43Vi 4222 17ft 11231 26% 26963 181V? 1575 98 45ft + 12ft 54 +27ft 9% +IV5 Harv Al 1.20 48776 58% 25 2B'/i 38% +9 Hat Corp .40 3292 <12% 9 38Vi 44V? *; HatCp pf 2.50 Z3910 42 36 36Vi —2ft 28% 48%+2a HawElec 1.08 2869 29% 22% 25% + % 13% 34%+20ft HayAlb 1.80b 3045 52% 32% 50ft + 10%. 21 U +5 Hezelllne Co 21321 24'*s «'* 21 +14'*l 30 37 ~37* Heels M 1.20 1 0357 «2V. 42'* 50 +I6?*f 12'+ 17?. +5'+ Heinz HJ 1.40 12341 501* 30 47?. + 17?. 67* 254+4-18?. Heinz pl 3.65 Z2150 77'* 64'* 64'*—10'/. 145' 158'*+15 Helene Curt 16W1 17 10 15H +4?+| Hell Coll .60 20563 3»?+ 16?i 28V.+ 10?/. Mar Mid Marquar 25g Marq Cm .60 MarshField 2 Martin Mar 1 Md Cup .40b 14319 52 15611 10ft 5378 18ft 9' 8683 19Vi II' 396 38% 35 346 84 66 9130 30’% 21: 3877 33 24^ 42957 14'i 5 4051 65 49 102186 50 34 13780 67 46 1159 27 18 2582 43'4 32 13954 83' i 57 6823 31% 18 9478 32% 2T 29934 21% 12 8202 16ft II 4713 66V 4 39 82712 26v« 19 1721 57Va 39'/i 46 14% +4% Oh Ed pf4.40 229 87 69 70 —10 Oh Ed pf3.90 205 75% 60 62% —5ft OklaGE 1.04 10927 31 Vi 21% 26%—2% Ok GE pf4.24 -Z2320 83 66 67ft —9ft Ok GE pf.80 384 15% 13ft 13ft —1% 6362 23ft 19 20% +1% 32397 81ft 56% 72ft+13% 4583 38% 23% 28 380 22ft 19% 22ft ..... 1807 24%' 15% 21%' +5% 4344 30 24% 29% + 15238 50 37% 42% +4ft 52422 31 16% 29%+13% 6992 29% 15 25%+10% 3011 30ft 13ft. 28ft+16 9224 81% 58% 62 -4 21083 66 49 57% +3ft 921 91 67ft 69 —13% 2008 25% 14% 22% +7% P 40 22020 38 6288 20* OklaNGs 1.12 OlInMat. 1.80 Omark 1.17f OneldaLt .60 Opelika 1 OrangeR 1.04 Otis Elev 2 Outbd Mar 1 Outlet Co .65 OverTran .90 OwensCg 1.40 BJ3 "rj1v» Owenslll 1.35 35ft split Owenslll pf 4 67%—10Vi OxfdlndA .60 SbdWorld Air 77309 41% 23ft 26ft.+ ft Walworth Co Seagrve .40b Sear I, GD 1.30 Sears Roe la 22526 54ft 14% 40ft+26% W6rdFd 1.02f 9392 25 )7»/a 18% +H Z870 104 99 w Z6210 88 69 1508 45% 34 2798 34% 26% 30% +37' 11194 45% 26ft 35% +9j/ 193 75 46 56 +8 5689 54% 31% 38% +6’/ 16132 17ft 8% 17ft +9V 3Jb46 49ft 13% 46%+333 NEW YORK (AP) — Over the Counter U.S.. Government Treasury bonds 1967 price range. split 3%s 68 3ft s 68 3%s 68 Nov 2V?s 68-63 4s 69 Feb 2%s 69-64 Juri 4s 69 Oct 2%S-69*64-Dec * +6Vx Pac G El i +4% PacIntEx .80 a +2ft Pac Ltg 1.50 « +9% Pac Pet 15a —4'? PacPwL 1.20 « PacSwAir .60 a+193» oacT&T 1.20 • +9 PacT&T pf 6 4 + 2ft Pac Tin 604 a + 2'i1 Packard Bell i +2% PanASul 1.50 10400+' +23 iPan Am .40 139811 36% Seeburg Sellonlnc .45f Servmat .40b Sharon Stl 1 Shattuck .40d ___ .. Shell Oil 2.10 17129 77 ShellTr 1.17g ShellerGI .80 ShellGI pfl .35 Sheraton .50 SherwnWm 2 ShoeCp Am 1 Shu I ton .80b Siegel HI .68 Signode 1.20 Slmmn 1.20a Simp Pat .62 .Sinclair 2.60 28681 SO3? SingerCo 2.20 33995 80V 31% 35% — ft SkeTly Oil 1 5810 77 +4ft Skll Corp 11450 * ! 2223 60 32 56 + 24'+; 2i*s 72-67 Sep 493 27’* 22’* 25H +2?+ 2>*s 72 67 Dec 362 If 25?+ 27V+ 4, 73 ' 5474 22’+ 16?+ 18?. +2’+ 41+3 73 119 23?+ 20’+ 21 141+s 74 44661 7'* 2'* 67+ +4'* 41+4 74 2436 26 16?+ 26 +96+ 37/,. 74 13863 6 2'+ 4'4 +2 4, 8o 7530 33'* 20 28'* +8'* 31*5 gg 16243 26 13’* 15'* +2?+ 131/4, 33.71 1374 32'* 23 24'* + ?i 31,45 35 235 89 71 71 —11?4 4',is 85-75 Z1620 84'* 68'* 68'*—7 3>,,s »0 63 4581 36?+ 22?+ 35?++l3 |WstPtPep 7o 7456 64 37'-. — * , yj-00 27556 65 47V* SO'* —11+ WVPulp 1.90 14889 45?* 36?+ 44?4 +63+ 4*5 94.39 1418 Jl'* 19 2S +6V+ WVaP O1 4 50 Z3120 9)?i 77 77 -* 3s 95 ,4.. 24?* Tollt Westn AlrL 1 37359 59 31*+ 34 —10s*, 31*5 93 37 73 7J 25ft—12% Banc ,1.20 19492 33% 27 28 —2% j Prices quoted Iri dollars and thirty WstnMd 1.60 1312 41ft 26% 29% -F1% onds. Y 43 ""Ji. ! 4%s 92-87 50%+ 13%j 4s 93-01 975 27V 3219 44% 23% 6953 35% 25% 30* 166 47ft 37V* 39% — 27/ 916 31% 26% 2295 11% 14ft . _ . 24693 41ft 31% 36% —1 51250 32 23% 28% 1322 34% 27 S ~„7iWghABk 1.80 14303 45% 30% 37% +7% _ 15724 49 30% 44%+11%Ww,iEI 100 572S 2^ 46H 70 +22% Apr 1% 1968 3U V f4/2 nf38n 787 80 63% 66 °-7ft May 4ft 1968 620 ^ 75% 60'/i 60ft—10' i Burl Ind 1.20 30786 43% 27V Burndy Burroughs BushTar . Calgon .80 Cal Flnanl Cal LlqGs .60 CallahM -4JI CaiumH i.2o CampRL 45a Camp Soup 1 Can Dry .50 CaOry pf4.25 CanSou Ry 3 Cdn Brew .40 CdhPac 2.90b Canal Rand 1 Canteen .80 Cap C Bdcst Carbrun 1,30, 27156 43 5184 192 1204 26 C 6682 75 43J' 42646 81 a m 4176 26% 167/ 23549 19% 97/ 17881 49% 30V 9564 28ftyi 16^ 80% 185% 4-97: 22 68 70f f- 22 Dymolhd Dyna Am DynaAm pf 1 1.40 Eaglt 23'4 East Air su 18 +8 Vi EastGF 1.751 47'/?+ 16% EastS Stl .90 26ft +6% East Util 2 60 24941 34 % 25% 28% +1ft EKodak 1.60a 8291 35%, 19 31%,+4 Eaton Ya 1.25 Z5290 83 67 67 —9% Eaton pfl.19 Z3560 61ft 54V? 56V? - Va Echlin Mf .56 1921 8% 6% 7 + V* EdisBros 1.40 4121 73V* 51 53% +2% Ed Br pf4.25 1480 19 14ft 17% +3 EG&G 10 • 21620 28% 19% 24% +1% E las Stop I ■"10074 52V? 35 45% +7%,EIBondS 1.72 ^ 10792 70Vi 44ft 51 Va +6ftJ ElMusic .19g L 8216' 33 Z6740 41% Z3260 41 Z3990 41 666 4Q 79010 37 Z6620 41% 37558 30 54843 21% 136 18% E 5329 41% 50212 5357** 73 5729 21% 640 52V? 44' 40575 150ft 124: 2085ft 36 V? 24 625 36 26 ,6334 17% 12' 1838 69% 31 Z3600 85 . 73 18917 71 2847 60< 12962 58 34255 5! HeUerWE .50 29% 30V* — ft HelmePd 1b 32% 34 —4ft Helmrch .10g 34% 34'/• —3% Here In 1.20g 33 33 —5 HercInA 1.65 31ft 32% —4ft HershCh .90a 29' i 29% —3% I Hess 08.C 30 33'i 34 —4%'Heublein .70 18 24ft +5% HewPack .20 11 aift+10% High Voltaoe 16 ‘16ft + ft HiftnMot 1.30 1353? 68 Hobart 80a 1633 42V Hoff Electrn 17566 17ft 25'? 40%+13ft Holidylnn .30 7783 58 38% 46ft split HollySug 1.20 1 7626 39 44%/ 71 Vi split Homestk 80b 12887 69 13 ^1 +8 Honeywl 1.1ft 40022 117^ 48% Honeyw pf 3 952 130*: 49 +21 ft Hook ).40 18018 49’/ 33 +8% Hooker pf4.25 Z2630 83V 34% +8ft Hooker pf C5 Z3860 96V 14% +1 Vi Hoov Ball la 2743. 35V 66’/i+35 HotelAm .87f 20979 207 73V* 74 — 2V? Hotel pf k25 50% 53% &plit, Houdln 170a 34ft 59ft split Houd pfl.12 31% 57 + 25% Houd pf 2.25 3% 4ft +lVi!Houfl Miff .40 34151 15 4968 32V? 19% 30Vi + 11 18824 M% 9ft 27ft + 17% 20795 54ft 41V? 45ft +1% 125 172 140ft 160 +14% 5085 32% 24% 24% + ft 44321 39ft 22 Vi 34 +11 2116 35 30ft 32% split 15561 89ft 48ft 71 ft+20% 50742 34% 19% 28% +8 Market Highlights of 1967 Are Listed 34% — % South Co 88 -4ft SoulnGE 1.36 ■—.... jSouNGas 1.30 SoutPac 1.60 31498 35% South Ry 2.80 9892 57ft Sou Ry pf 1 5393 lift SouRy MO 4 Z2140 75% _ Swest PS .64 15785 17% 12% Spartan Ind 47063 26ft 16% __ SpartanA .40 28990 26% 16% 23 5P?r!®n ..C®r? .4471!^. JV* 13% +5% Wstn I WstnPac 2.20 27ft +1 WnUTel 1.40 16ft +1% WnUn pf6 16/i WnUn pf4 A0 Wn Un pf4.90 High Low Last 99.29 98.22 99.14 99.20 98.6 98.29 99.22 98.6 98.16 98 96.8 97.16 99.26 97.30 98.8 97.4 95.8 96.2 99.18 96.28 97.2 96 16 94.14 94.28 99.15 96.8 96.16 96.12 93.16 94.10 99.10 95.12 95.26 95 90.22 9?.4 99.28 93.18 94.12 98.24 92.20 93.22 98.24 92.26 93.22 93.4 87.20 89.8 98.14 92 93.10 92.20 87.2 88.16 92.12 86.16 ' 88.8 97.28 90.26 92.4 98.14 90.30 92.12 98 14 90.28 92.4 , 99.4 91.4 92.12 96.22 88.20 90.4 95.24 83.20 85.20 91 78.8 81.12 87.12 75 77.20 87.4 74.24 76.28 97 28 83.8 84.24 88.8 74.12 77.8 97.16 79.16 82.24 93.20 78 79.20 95.28 78.12 818 86.28 73.24 76.8 77.8 sec* 3941 38% 3T 32 33383 46% 30 35% — * 550 92 84% 85 J294 99ft 70ft 72 —117 140M07V? 81% 82% ANNUAL US TREASURY NOTES NEW YORK (AP) —US Treasury Notaa 1967 price range, Feb 5% 1968 6 26ft S^V ^ WestE pf3.80 287 80 63% 66 «-7ft May 4ft 2 42ft 2ft weyberg 1.20 1385 33ft 18% 29%+Hft Aug 4ft I 15% Weyerhr 1.40 16999 47% 33ft 39% +5% Ocf 1% ii tia'iWheel L J7S z330113 98 ?»]*—1«?+ Nov 5'* *00 OO —, * Clul 7+J+ ooa? 1+1+ 11* 4-1+k C.K C. .... , Wheelg Steel T?v, Wheel Stl pf 2244 +4,A Whirl Cp 160 WhlteCn isd White pfB3.75 15'* 68 +v7* ANNUAL STOCKS IN SPOTLIGHT 28 »37 ,+ 6'i \V/A +2% 53*4 spilt; 1967 on the New York Stock Exchanger Pan Am 37ft+ 15 the twenty-five most active securities Chrysler 38*'? 63%+21% accounted for 349,276,400 shares, or 13.8 Avco Corp '130938 65% 22% 65 +43% 2 J8% 61 22 V 65 22 5680 35% 18 252 39 21 210 40 32 2557 35' '•+42% per cent of the aggregate sales. Indl-*>+37% vidual volume, high, low and closing Atlas Cp +7% prices, with the, net change for the year Gt WFInan 'a — 5ft of ’ th^ 25 leaders are shown tn the fol- Gen Motors —9V? towing table. Sales ere in hundreds. jAm Photo 'a +9% Sperry Rnd 255505 65% 28% 63%+34% RCA + 14’4 Am Tel Tel 234672 62ft 49ft 50%— 4% Pan Am Sui Am Motors 200016 15% 6% 13%+ 7% Magnavox 33%+15 jBrunswk 21% 38'4+16% Gulf Wn in 32 32% —2%IMcDonn D 162119 59 24% 27% Occidtn Pet 161076 112ft 21% 54H+24% Int Paper 149908 9 . ' 2ft 147568 70% 59% 147267 165% 33' a 1 139811 36ft 23 138951 57 ’31ft 130938 65% 22% 127049 44 21% 1196*5 7% 2% 117717 18 Vi 8% 108124 89% 67% 107489 15% 5% 105359 65% 42% 104004 46% 15% 102186 50 34 ft 100153 82 ft 43 Vf 976M 37 26% 96942 32% 24ft » 93188 40ft 22ft Sperry Hut 1 1358? 37y+ 18'* 37 +)«'/* nme. SperryR lOo 255505 651+ 2SV+ 637*+34'* SporrR pf4.50 153 18'* 73 77 —tl4 Shilp«»r ok Sprogue .60, 23003 40’* 32?4 7214 24 W 15366 39?+ 104+ 4 IT* 47?+ 2071 40'+ 33?+ 11000 41' 191 70 1052 27' 1960 1960 . I .__ .I960 7347 22?+ 151* 10* +1?+ Feb 5H 1969 972 67'* 491+ 51?* —3?i Apr 11* 1969 16541 57 31?+ 51 +ir* Oct 1'* 169 25691 74'* 36'* 70 +301* Apr 1<* 1970 S3 30?+ 35'* 30?+ 6ct IV* 1970 300 40?+ 36'* 31'* +1?+ , Nov 5 1970 ... r. «. 88 33 21'* 32'* +4 , Feb 5?i 1971 SprlSSLfif 1 27216 lT W %% CP *88 94?? ^9“ M^y’sVwi '"el .31! 22 i ^WIcMlCorp 1 5294 307* II 2I9++10'* Oct H* 1971 +34+ Wllllemi Bro 15336 761* 34 76'* ipllt Nov 5?» 197 ..IWInnDIx 1.50 12706 35 26?* 20 —27* Feb 4'. 1972 Wi+EIPw 1.32 14035 29?+ 23 24?+ —3?+|Apr IV, 1972 -.. ^ )>7J Oct I'* 1972 N6v 5?+ 1974 SquareD .70* SquibbBh wi Staley |.4Qa SIBrend 1.40 SldBrd pt3.50 Std BrdPt .50 High Low Lilt 101JO 100.3 100.5 99* 96.16 99.4 100.21 99.20 99.25 100.3 99 99+ 97.20 95.4 97.14 100.1 99.11 99.22 100.1 99.24 99.31 95.30 93.21 95.21 95.2 92.1} 94.1 94 91 92.20 93.4 90 91.4 109.1* 97.11 97.20 100 90.15 99 92.0 18.20 *9.20 103.18 90.6 91.24 91.16 17.16 17.21"' 104.10 90.16 90.20 101.20 95.24 96 90.21 06 16.16 100.5 95.11 95.20 86.10 05 05.16 100.23 99.11 100.4 fJ'.T.JJ* StOiir+i - 7 so” Twn iili P', » «' “ TJT1 SubleO to Federal taxes but not i'J+IO4# IIS f-H J444 J4'41 62?* +2# wotvWW .50 20994 277* 14 91?+ +7+*l,St»t# IncoTpe taxes. 3# .SPilt g3+.ff 9 EL liJJJML iL. J4!'4 f 5# vyometco .62 3426 30?» 21'* 35 V,+14''. f _ 7------—L-, to 56'*+25?. ?,d?NJ 3*50 147560 70H »?. 67'* 4-4', KJmico £ itn inn o -ml /,,, ,,, , womeitu wi 6'*+ 31. StdOllOh pl 4 4«,. +2# Wobdwlr.,1.60 63'* 65 —9* woolworth I 94 103V. +5* world Alrwy ♦is !>'* +6'* Wrlglay 3a ■ Wurlltzar ^10 3 / 24 24 24 dpi It ,,|, nnnvw n 4270 / 34 23% .20 +4 60060 32?+ 19?+ 25'* +5»+ 'Advances 12309 41'+ 10 23'* split Declines 1261122V, 103'* 109 —5’* Unchanged ‘ * 11792 36 ll>* 23?+ +5?+ Total IssU+s ?U74L‘m97V. 303 +105'* An"ual~"«n 26?+ 31'* +5 NY Stocks 6301 23V* 17V, 21'* -+4'+ N^Y Bonds .— . . . l;=_,. _ _. . 11070 43?+ 20]* 351* +6'/, ArnWicsn Stocks M?+ -1?4 IZenllhR 1.20a 490/7 72'* 47® 37 +9'* Amarlcan Bonds 532 15?+ 12?* 147+ +1?.'Copyrighted by The Associated Pratt I960'Midwest Stocks + »'* Std Press .72 17070 J4?+ 22V4 67?»+44'* ++10V+ StPrudUn .66 21770 19?, OV, 19V,+ 10?+ 3619 43'* 2S?4 39'*+14 (XeroxCp 1.40 9546 19 SlarrettLS la 1734 51 StauHCh 1.00 12415 51 StaufC PfS.JO ,380 80?+ 10 |H> 1*54 1965 1113 252 904 386 1105 *1! ’ 214 137 21* 1713 1664 1640 bar at Tradtd istutii 1967 1966 1*45 17)3 1664 1640 1264 1069 1034 1067 1041 1034 ... 133 97 98 423 409 407 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY A. 1968 € Acme Hamll A.roFtowJO Aerolat JOa Atf-one* Inc AarosolT ,501 AerovOX JOP Aiken Ind Alleen Inc AltpexE •»> Alrwork ,12b AKU t-24g Alax Al«Pw (##•! UW11 tMoj i*7S m D HM Let* Lett Ch*. J«4 nvt itvt r «r-» + % I jii +m 1JV4 24*4+12% InvFund .Mb fnvRey 14* ePSv pU.to Ipco Hasp .44 IpcoHosp wl (Ml.) Hl|b Lew LMl Chi, 744 14% * — ^ lib 34% 40%+10*4 IroquoisInd Id Si* 2 + 13% Irving A .IJd Isram Corp 34* -4 +2%! ifr-t** JocksnM M ”* JMb+11 | Jeenn SI .341 3J* l»j* JaftLPat .Mb R& tf?1 LP Wt i*H +71* Jervis Corp 4140 12%'4% 13 +7% LTV Bloc %,928 8» mfoMfa..-'* it 25% 33% 41*4 31V* *<74 Hi* 4% 27%+23% «%+!«* 7% +4% niw YORK (AF» • Afflffcgn stock ■ ■xchano* y»dlna., tor _ Wj^ Tb* net1, (Mi.) h fi^SL/ri5?Rr *5 jKJSifr 1,VS«&. •" |fSSSR,^ff» Min A 5JW*I j*» 4% IombZ.,.. <.S‘) in Is&'ftSL * Abe* Pet .(tg* ^WlWlUS{* cutler b'J} 107N 14% 4% 14 +4%l / % D 27847 28% J6% M'A+Tm? .CO* 11235 7% JSni itoI io tst+itt Rom' Indus fS* 5% tMn n lm tSf +4H 2fi* SS*£ iWS TO* HI ’K2 1SV* 10% llfi lP»« 24217 1241*, 42V* liiv* 1MU 31™ )22 3M4+23HU 2*V.?A,2 ^ 14% iff* 17*4 HI 'a Bjj,g$g *. .1 i f H-,!>'»»«-. *840 44V* 341* 44%+2% OeJur^Jta* b 20*5 21% 14% IMfc iftSU1* «,nd MS ffi 144 4’* +4% ® ** r Bis EML I i 'l & S 8 258 During 1967 Is , H l(hdi.) High Lew Lett CM. (Me.) Htgl !?% t.'*‘!-iy Aero .40 2441* 40% 341* 44%+I7%!N El Wald .*0 143# 24V 34244 4f 5447 M1 MV* -17 «%•-!% LTVUng ,!4h 5447 341* 44H+3M* Lundy flee 14*37 44% 25 splH ynch Corp 14520 15% | Net dim 3P. J 41*7 17V* Hi *741 34% 22% 4% 14% +4 a% m +3*..-i '7 It » 10%+jVA AjaryClrPt fe 3% 10% +4% I AUaeo Cp .21 — — 3% 11% +(% | MasidSon .40 «m 11 4*» 22% 14% 21% +n* JMau IBros.25 2104 30% II' 2j%+12 *31*0 *4 44% M%—13% Meulalnd .30 *41 1% 4% f% +2% 3»0 20% 21% »% tp M MaxeonEI -20 10253 4t% 10% 44V*+23% 3400 33% 14% 31% »IH McCrary wt 45& 10% 3 10% +7% MS 5% 544 + V* MeCrar wt n p 10% 27% 34% +5% McCulO 1.00f 40035 2t% tele* . Nat \ (Me.) Utah Law Ld*l Cha. lot 2*% 13% 24%+ll Pap Bays t*50 104% 4% I04%+100% PepBILI 17004 14% 4 13%+0% PhllLj 3074 54% 14% Si%+30% PhILO 2403 10% 7% 7% ■—J* Phlllpt 72337 44 20 21'/*-17% Philip Ind .40 Ml! ]}v* 7% 13 +5% iPhllllpOcr .20 4433 14% .44* 13% 4+Vk Phopnlkf ,77? .1275 {% 5% i +2% Plaeackl Aire 14104 13V* 44* 12%+1% PMrca-6 40 4147 17%. 7 144* +7% I PlonerA ,20d 2174 53 27% 34% iPkinper Pla* 2827 M ft 25% eplll PitOteM 1.40 44754 4 2 , 3% +1 j Pit LPkeE 4a 3711 28% 15% 22% +7>* pittwayCp Wl 40013 12% 4% 1?% +4% PittwayCp )« 7rib 534* 75 +14% PHWV* tr*h 2J M% 23% 30_ + 13V* Plan Sureh Plant Im 283 24% 12% 23%+.,.. 4*3 12% 1% It +|% " 4% tll|; +1 J% ' ' M* 15001 14% 2510 137* 103*0 40% 1545 11% Mm :S' RIvlanaP .70 Roblntach I »i* i-3%) Roblln |t r' A +5% ;RochO PfP 4 gala* ■ N« (tide.) 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Trading on the New York Stock Exchange soared to a record 2.5 billion shares, showing that investors, large and. small, were participating more actively in the market. .★ ★ ★ On the final .trading day of the yeair, the exchange’s :volume rocketed to 14.95 million shares, second only to 16.41 million shares traded on Oct. 29, 1929, the day of the historic market crash, The market wound up 1967 with a traditional year-end rally. DOW JONES * For the year the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials advanced 119.42 points to 905.11. Sharp and, dramatic movements, up and down, highlighted ... the nervous and unsyre market. _____... 3254 14% 7% 14% +6% In-and-out traders found this to GaPw*pmjo *'*1* Is** 70% ??% -*% their liking. It was less com- vm i«* 25%+13% fortable for conservative, long’s^ i4%+1‘14 term investors. 3494 19 9 > 19 +10% 5757 39% 23% 35% 22*4 12% 7% 10 +2% 1174 II 12% J4% +2% Gala Ind JO GCA Carp IM GCComp ,10g 25847 41 Gtprhrf.lig 4273 12% GanAccap wt 417018% On Alloy ,10g 3015 0% Gan Bat Car 3WI 11% Gan Bum G Cinema .44 G El LM Jig Gan Inmrler Gan Plywood Gan Stores Genlsco ,22d Genungs .50 I1M1 20% 1% 19%+10 2021 20% J% 20%+13% 209* 21% 10% 12% +1% 510 17% 15% 17% ipllt 3041 14% 0% 13% +4% 3420 20% 10% 20% 14121 *1% 27% 55H+24 B 22% 15% 7% 12% +4% 4% 1*%+13% 4% 4% +2% 5 1% +4 5904 4% 1% 4% +2% 4503 40% 13% 40 +24 42 9 4 9 +3% 3441 27% 10% 25%+14% 14045 11% 7% 8% — % 10*99 4 TO 1 +1% ----- rk 24%+15 Sept. 25 peak, the Dow industrials climbed 157.39 points. This was actually a continuation of the great recovery movement which began at the Oct. 7, 1966, low when the average was down to 744.32 after a 250-point collapse in 1966. The rise from the Oct. 7 low to the crest on Sept. 25, 1967, covered 198.32 points, one of the greatest rallies in history. A “correction” of this rise was in the cards, regardless'of whatever , news occurred. Just as the 1966 stock market was squeezed by high interest rates, the 1967 market in ite early stages was spurred by reductions in interest rates, both ip the United States and in foreign countries, including . Britain, which cut its bank rate to 6 pier cent from 6 Vi per cent March 16. The Federal Reserve Board pared its discount rate to 4 per cent from 4V4 per cent April 6. * * * ; The year b^gan with President Johnson asking enactment of a 6 per cent surcharge on in-.and other large investors. Mar-come taxes but the president pn spok* of-“poisonous qualities asked, at the same time, for 'reminiscent in some respects of easier money. Meanwhile, business was putting on an uneven performance. The rate of growth slowed markedly. A large overhand of inventoried Trom 1966 brought production cutbacks. The housing market, weak from the start, rose during 1967 but from a very low level, contributing little to the economy. Corporate profits declined in 1967, but are expected to rebound in ’68. SPECULATION High-flying specialties in the stock market far outshone the blue chips, and this was noticeable early in the year as the Dow industrials were making an interim peak of 899.89 on May 9. Shortly thereafter Federal Reserve Board Chairman William l\fcChesney Martin warned against massive short-run speculation by some mutual funds the old pool operations of the War between Israel and the Arab Nations gave the market a big shakedown on June 5, but it rallied from an intraday low of 842.54 in the Dow industrials. The renewed uptrend carried the average up more than 100 jmiyrt ThorMkt .40g Tttriftf A 1.40 Tab laic .17g TobSecD 44g ToddShlpyd 2 Tel Ed 0)4.25 Tanka Cp .40 2% 16%+13% 32 44% . 2% 4% .+4% 1% 9 ' + % 19% 21% + % 4% 2 1-16 4 1-14 + % _ 11% 9% 11% +3% 3*29 51% 27% 50%+22% 80 63 43%—10% 4*312 1420 11% 1921 25 33 *___________ 2*17 24% 21% 22% aftR ToolRes 2.25) 34314 43% 24% 42%+H% Tran Beacon . 14223 ~ TmsCarlb .40 TransLx ,40b 2327 29% 13% 21% +7% Transalrco 3*52 5 2% 3%+1% Transcan (nv 43504 1* 1% II +14% 6% 20 +21% M Pi 4% 23 +{(% 39544 4* 33% 14 —14% 1211 80% 34% 57%+22% 1424 I 3 4% + % 1179 23% I7 1»% + % IM* 4% 3% 3% -i: 7335 13% 5% 9% +3% 1451115% 74% 105% ..... TWA wt Trl Cant wt, Trlang p ,10g Tropic Gas f Tubos Max 21 Brands .3* Tyco Labs u hedge against inflation by purchasing stock. As the year ended, Wall Street analysts expected that the stock market and business would turn up in 1968 despite high interest rates. ' w * YEAR IN STOCKS AND BONDS Following gives the range of Dow-Jonas doting averages for tbe year 1967. STOCK AVERAGES First High Low Last Net Ch. mn 704.41 943.08 714.41 905.11 +119.42 , . . „ _ . . . ...... 205.14 274J9 2*5.14 233.24 +30J7. points to the Sept. 25 top of uttis 134.24140.4312*97127.91 — 0.27 .. ■ j , 6 SStka 202.49 337J2 282.49 314.12 +32.33 948.08 in the Dow industrials, i -----—,—— , • - 'BOND AVERAGES . i&S, . + ★ ★ 40 Band* 50.93 83.54 74.42 74.44 — 4.25 JlSt RRs 72.32 7577 43.12 43.55 — 0.91 ANNUAL STANDARD AND POOR'S NEW YORK (API — Following give* the Annua) rang* of Standard and Poor's 500 Stack Indax: Nat High Low Close Change ++1? 50 utllltlas 72.59 62.21 44.00 — 3.27 500 Stock* 97.59 80.30 94J7 +16,14 niun luw viuov 425 Industrials 1*6.15 0.31 109.11 25 Railroads, 51.44 41.35 43.71 CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES Goldblatt .60 Goldfield Goodway Inc Gord Jly ,40b Granger, As Granite Eq Gray Mfg 17100. |% 51470 VU 40724 11% 1003 12% Sit 5429 24% Gritted 1 Jig U1MH* WHBlli GtLkRac .Old SrearHy.-’ * ,v#M m ‘ -k ■' The outlook for 1968, a presi-il% 19Vl '«% - %; dential election year, was gen-120442 i]% ’i% j‘+5%|eraUy optimistic, according to sow S’1 advisory services. As in 1967, however, big swings are expected. A stronger economy is anticipated in 1968, and the stock ihar-ket is expected to get continued support from the big institutional investors such as pension funds and mutual funds who are aware of the need to hedge against inflation. CastlaAM-.10 Castleton Ind 22040 CBK Ind ---------- CCl Corp CCI cp pfl.25 CenChtrg .40 CenMe pflJO CenPfcL pf 4 Cant Sac 2.95a C Sec pfBl JO C Sec pfCIJS Cenlry El JO Century 0*0 Centryln J4b Champ H .44 Charter Oil Chelsaaln .41 Cherry Burr ChlRIvt 1.40a Chief C Mng Christian Oil Cinerama CircFoll 1.051 CityGsFla JQ ClarkCbl M Clarostat Clary Carp Ciopay .24# Coburn Job Cobun- pfB.01 Colt Mat J0g 1341 59% 41% 51% 1516 137 11% 134%+43% 9330 43 H 51 114 97% 17% B -II 219041 15-14 9-14 13-14 + % 4511 32% 15% 21%+5% 124*2 34% 17% M% 2544 55% 33 53% MM 24 7% 24%+17% 4% 7% +*% 2% 4% +2% 3% 10% +7% 3% 11% +0% M 9% 10%+lf% v,.—» 2*5 14% 14% 15% + % GrocStr 1.20a 18325 20% “25 27 — % Grow Ch ,30b MW 24% 10% 22H+12H Gram Ind 11994 12% 4% o +3% GTI Corp 11749 11% 7% 1% —% GuardCh .50b 041 16 11% 13 GuSrdm nd 4319 14% 4% 13% +1% Gulf Am Cp 34094 13% 4% J +2% GuifRasre Ch 3W4 39%1S% fi%+17% GlfRasr pf.20 2130 M 32% 57 --- ‘ ' 7045 10% 9% +1% 1 1% 2*%+20% Harvard Ind 54% 76% 1% 13% +5% 52% 53 -4% Harv Rad .12 Hatvttr ,24a Hastings .50 Hoad ski Go 0044 10% 79400 27% 405 (0 2172 15% «§ 54. ■ Z3750 75% 51 I . . 2011 22% 15 19. +}% Z1525 41 34% 47%+llH 123 29% »% 1% ffff 2373 li U% »% +7% 10062 25% 9% 14, +7 1820 If 5% 10% +5% 1409 19 9 14%+7% 9744 53-14 «2% 4 516+7-14 4253 20% 7% 27%+20 1782 39% 23% 27% +2% 544 19% 32% 31 +«* 14244 7% 3% 7% +4% 15070 M* 2% 5% +3 44233 10% 1% X, tSSir—.............. 5442 24% 15% 25% +7%jHolMngr 1.20 1471 12 7% «* tSt Holty Carp 11124 IM 4% 9% +5% HolSrt, °Ab 4544 14% I .1%-^ HomaOA J4 MIPt HomeOf .154 Hormal 1.40a H HB Arner .25 59303 27% Hill Lfebip-----7121. 14% Hails Mrtor 1 Harnlschfr 2 4% 17 +12% ..... 4% 11% +7% 1404 23% 14% 17% Htfnlck* Inst HalenaR l.» .... „ Haller p#5JD z34M 93 Hrttor 4pf 4 Z1050 70 Htrc Gal .40) HlgbleM 1.20 HlttanHat wt Hltise ,15 Hltco p#A.92 Hoe A Co Haa Co A Ik HoernerW .02 Hotm indust 5103 39% 27% . 33% +5% 1231 11% 7% 10% +3 - 7% 1* +8% 4% 49%+41% 4 23%+19% 5% !9%+14% 7% 0% +1% 9% 11% +9% 4% 9 +4% 4% 10% +5% 30 45%+15% 00 (0 —5% 2874 19% 1WM 49% 7M5 34 1970 24 2142—9% 4015 24% 7272 10% 0130 13% 2315 B , +1% 20% 04% +3% 4% 33%+24% 4% 45%+30% 4W 42% »% 39% 15870140 27% 133%+103% 0544 1% 572 30 0300 34% 51443 45% ColeNatl .40b Coleman 1.20 Colon Snd .30 Comlgca 1.40 Coml MM .to Comw Unit A Commun DIs ComPSv 1.40 Compelnd .20 CompuDyi 30744 19% 4% im+im 47(5 12% 5% 12% +4% am p io% B%t2i% 009 35% IS 34%+24% 3991 39% 24% 20% ima ii% 4% im+«% 51(0 39% 14% 34%+20% 2220 45 20% 42%+12% 5282 11% 5% 10% +M4 1427 37% 25% 15% —2% 4510 25% 14% 10% + % 14405 14% 4% j]%+7% 0045 11% 4% 17%+ll% 1144 31% 11% 3m-j% . 3744 21% 9% 19% +9% no 43192 9% 1% - 5% +2% Comput Appl 29542 47% 14 421+911 ComputSe .10 30239 Computast Concham ,20 Condaa Carp conduqtran Connolly Can Conroy Inc Cn CdnF ,12p ConLaund .44 Con Leasing ConNtShA JO Con Oil Gat Consul Da .43) 42% IpHI SURTAX FATE Uncertainties befog the pros-pects" F6r'Tiext year. Among j them are the fate of the 10 per cent income surtax proposed by President Johnson; the course of the Vietnam War; and file position of the dollar in foreign exchange. The devaluation of Britain’s pound sterling Wfts by far the most dramatic single event Wall Street had to reckon with. The impact, of the news, however, while temporarily shocking, was quickly digested. After weather-big the news, stocks embarked 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 _ *v , -Source: Pap#, of tabor . - -JP of 60 stocks rose 31.4 points jmiust from the 1966 year end to their Aug. 9 peak of 342.6. At year’s end the AP, average was at 322.3, up 31.1 points for the year. President Johnson’s request in early August for a 10 per cent income tax surcharge, rather than the 6 per cent he asked in January, was another element in a confused monetary situation. A 50-day strike against 'Ford Motor C6. and a rise in MANISTEE JAP) price for 1968 model cars added Moines, Iowa, pilot ANNUAL NIW YORK BOND SALB0 Total 1967 ... ... *3,450,189,000 Total*1966 ................... *3.102,841,000 Total 1945 ............. ...... *2,960,207,000 Plane Cracks Up - A Des and his Horn Hardrt 4270 37 HornAH M 5 z63#0 Hoskins JOa HousaFb J5t House Vision Howalt .20* HubbalA 1.20 HubbrtB 1.20 HudAMan A Huttmm .74.. Hunt CM .11 asaw usm1 Hydronoaf 1215 39% 10% 24% +5% 3349 30% 16 16% —1% 19141 1% 1% 5 +3% 597 29 14% 24% +6% 22114 3% % 3 +2% 1294 40% 21% 29 +7 1159.24% 17 24% +25% 742 24% 10% 24% +4%, • „ 2143 70 27% 59%+si% ion a prolonged rally. * ★ * 104 10% 75944 15% M li#i ft Conf Con .SOb 13414 30% 2034 46% 35 split 12088 24% 11% 22%+im 3999 42% 32% fWb _ 5% 33%+37% 44 57% 17% 31% +m Ww "I? w% 3497 29" I lira 11% 1782 4% 1214 45 Iff 10% m 9 m 17%+im 4% 4 +1% 51% 44%+ll% 1% 10 +1% imptbc log 27* 15% 11% 1*. +JI %| ndtonHd wt 3*75 M% 0% »%+1»% f ont Malar if* 'indpljPL"ptt ririo «% * 2l%-rl9% (nd _EI Hard 12741 4% CeokElae .30 am, 14. CooprllarMo 3552 1$J ’ll* li" {ri* injind Hajj* Cora Ino Corrqp Ray | Cwmodyn* Cott Corp .24 Caurtlds .I3g Craoja 2.40* Craitmant ■ Crawley .40 m la 21V* + TO Inland CradH 20 15% apllt int Indus! ■ 7% 10% +1% Int Stretch 18B f% 3ij4 m+7;l* Intarphot. .40 a 4» 1 fflffii. — -177 7% 11%+10%'lnvOfvB .41 7*74 If TO 1Im 5393 13% 13344 35% 1197 7% 1944 14% !s% 93M 5|% ^5% 1114 B% 14% 4440 22% .7% 411* 41% 30 4494 10% 7% 45 -0% 1% fl% 10% +7% 33 +22% 7% +4% 13%+10% 5% 14 +1% 4 11% +3% 3% TO J% +3% 53%+39 im +*% 34% +4% 9% 4-1 The' market is frequently credited with ‘‘discounting’’ bad news far in advance, and it seems to have done so in the case of devaluation. The Dow Jones industrial average made a closing high of 943.08 on Sept. 25 then sank rapidly to an intraday low of 847.15 on Nov. 20, the first day of trading after Britain’s devaluation. Before that day ended, however, about 10 points of the loss were recovered and the market was off on a rally that lasted weeks. f From the Sept. 25 peak to the Nov. 20 bottoip, the Dow industrials lost 96.93 points, then the market rose “with the bad news out of the way.” * s*- From, the end of 1966 to the AP Wlrtplioft CONTINUED RISE—The relentless rise of prices continued in 1967. By late in the year, consumers were paying 811.78 for goods that could have been purchased about 10 yean earlier for $10. Tbe rising cost of medical care and other services contributed strongly to the higher living costs. Food prices, which led the advance in 1966, were fairly stable in 1967. Economists now foresee continued inflation well & 1968, with food prices likely to begin rising again. to economic complications. BONDS FELL ~ Interest rates began to climb long before the first half year was over. As the bond market fell, interest rates continued to stiffen, in some cases rising to their highest levels since file Civil War. This factor was important In the long slide from the Sept. 25 peak in the Dow. Britain’s devaluation of the pound to 82.40 from $2.80 was accompanied by a hike to 8 per Icent from 6ft per cent in the I British Bank rate. The Federal 'Reserve Board thereupon restored its discount rate to 4% [Per cent from 4 per cent. Major banks stiffened their prime rates to 6 per cent from 5 Vi per cent (the rate charged their biggest and best customers). ★ ★ 1 ★ f;. Price boosts for steel and other important products, however, encouraged many people to Unexcelled 13392 44% 30% 44% split Union Carp 10426 19% 10% 17% UGesCan .32 388 10 9% 14% +4% U Invest ,70a 164 14% 10% 13% +2% Un Slk Om 1 894 18% 14% 17% +1% UnAlrPd .S0g 16843 28% 9% 28H+19 Unit Asa ,07g 51349 8% 2 5-16 7H+1-14 UnltBdC -20a 3011 11% 5% *% +1% Unit Can OG 30*30 5 5-1* 2% 4 9-14 +1% JUKI) FdS .241 7454 16% 4% 15%+10% 12113 12 2% 11% +0% 9720 5% 2% 4 +1 3114 9% 2% 9% +4% 1344 (% 5% . 7% +2% 4903 14% 5 16%+11% 34393 15% 3% 14%+]0% 7125 14% 5% . 9% +4% 4922 27 10% 24%+14% 45% 4l%+20% Unit Imp inv UnltlndCp wt UnPlac* Dy* USCarm ,07g US Flltar US Leas .24 US Nat Gas US Polymer M _ USRadm .30* 17287 92 USRadct- .00g USRubR ,25g Univ Clg .0M U Contain .30 Unlv Mar .40 3449 19% 12% 16% 2799 14% 3% 13%+10% 2129 4% 2% 1% +1% 49*4 15% 4% 13 +l%- 7115 23% 12% 24%+11% 754S 23% 6% 21 +17 2043 17% 10% 14 +314 ValleyM 1,12# 14403 72 ” 24% 41 +11% ValyaCp ., Vans Ine Vemlfron , Vlctoren Jlf viawlax Vlkoalnc .441 ValronCC .30 Vlaual Eiectr Vito Fd .43d Vocallne .20 VolMerch .20 VTR Inc VulcanCp .40 10010 47% 23 17 +12% 1249# 42% 34% 40 . 41273 M% I 55 +47% 39453 1S% 6% 14% +7% 35545 21 5% 18+12 ; 7070 11% 10% 15% + % 7205 19% 10% 14% +5% 1501 29% 23% 24% 452 14% 12 14% +1% 1445 11% 1% 17 . . 141 19% 15% 18% +3% 581 11% 14% 17 apllt 11*7 9 1% 3% +4% 123 19% 14% 14% W 11974 21% 11 31% +9% 1108 39% 14s* 21% 3999 4% % 2% +2% . I IP ■ 101 4% 2% .4% +1% Walthm Free 12424 14% 2% 14%+I2% Warner 7Arta 10799 42% 19% fl%+14% Walt McL .10 271 27% 21 24% Welman Co r -3122 Wabosb .20 Wacknht .36b Walt) Band Walt) Snd p« weiman to , - zhz ni WaldTub An# 444 9% Wentwth .tog 1485 6 Wart Ch .90 653 21 W Tex PI4.40 Z840 15 Westota* Frt 44147 1% Westby Fash 19393 8H WnNuclr .20 17041 40 Westrn Orbls 2915 Police Chief Dies TRAVERSE CITY (AP) -Howard Lee Ritter, 54, chief of police since Nov. 1, 1966, died in Munson Medical Center Sunday after suffering an apparent heart attack at his home a few hours earlier. It was, his second heart attack in recent weeks. Funeral services are pending. Foreign Bonds for the Year FORBIGN BONDS Aktrshus 4*48 J 98% 94% *6% ......... 34 91% 92 *2 —1% 160 79% 73 73 —3% 30 101% 101% 101% . M 99% *1 91 —1% 135 H 19% 89% —1% 141 91% 09 (9 —2% Amstor 5%s7i Antloq 3s70 Austral 6%s77 Austral 5%$79 Austral 5%sil Auat 5%*S2Jan Auat 5%s82Jul Aust 5%s820ct Austral 5%s00 , Austra 5%rt0n Australia 5*72 Australia s*n Australia M3 Austral 3%s4# Austria S%*n Auatri as4%s!0 Brtgc 5%s71t Belgium |%s7t Belgium 5%*7* Belgium 5%s77 Baric 4%*70 (art pl 272 91% *1% 91% +% 144 19 1* ll 99% 04 04 —9 *4 iro 83 n •—6 ■ 57 99% *4 44 —TO 123 98% *0 *9 -1% 41 95% 18% 88% —1% 14 *0 90 —f toi 97% *4% 95% +1% 114 MIA 94% *5% 101 101 100 100% 4- % 35 87% 14 14 —2 33 51 40 50 +13 4 *9 97 99 , “ 13 to 97 / 90 ' 40 93% 91% 91% - 94 96 94 BrqxCR 7aS2it Caldaa 3s7S Canada 2%>74 . Canada 2**s7S 4 „ 97 *9 139 99 117 99 43 99 77 *0 911 94 9%' 34 99 98 9* .... 81 71 72 72% —4 17 13% 77% 77% -4% 30 01% 74% 76% —4% 31 79 R 11 J 1 51 SI St +4 3 51% S1% 51% —2% 2112 ’112 112 +9 1539 S2% 45% 4S% —4 745 99% «% 92%-*4 i4 *i ii ii% + % CopanT 5%»t* CostaR 3s72f CredltP 5%*79 Cuba 4%s77f Cundln 3870 Czech st4stoxf Danmark 6*85 Danmrk 5%s74 Denmk 5%s77 Denmk S%s7S ElSalv 3%s74 EiSalV 3*76 EntoNldr 4*11 Ertonla 7s47f BurepC 5%s75 Europe ■ JHslO Europe S%ill Finland 7|77 Finland 6%sl0 Finland 4*73 F niand 4s 74 Finland 6s79 German 5%s4t Germany }e8Q Oermenv4i72 H% II 94 91 95 57 91 II 11% 40 70 44% 49% 87 99% 94 99% . 199 22% 16% 11% + % 121 11% 73 73 '—4 34 30 20 20 —2% 4 94% 94% 94%-4% 24 99 97 97 .. .. 131 96 *j% 91% -3% 73 96 *2% 94% +4% 14 91% 91% 91% .... 2 90% 90% *0% ..... 1 94% 94% *4%...... 1 IS 13 15 +1 24 95% 94 95 + % 13 *1 92% OT —1% 15 91% 91 *1 +1 120 91 *4% 95% 227 97 90 90 —5>A '310 97% 93% 96%,+2% 100% OOm 3f72QC Gejm 3472De iee Greek 4s6l« Herpen 4%s70 Helsinki 6%s77 InTTSA 7%s77 ISE Fin 4%s04 itoICCoo 3*77 ItolPUt 3*77 ItalRep 3*77 Jamalc 6%s(t Jamelc J%*74 35) 93% 15% (7% 133 103% 91 126 )04% 90 14 99 95 It 19% 13 19 95 15 S3 49% 44% «% JapanDev 4t77 JapanDev 4>7» Japan f%a/4 Japan 5%el0 Japan S%(7l*t JugoBk 7*57x1 vIKreug 5s39xf 1617 114 97 91% 95%+4% 95 97 1,89% 89% — % I ug ppg MedalM 3s7l Mexico 7%lll Mexico 7il2 47 9914T 94 99% +5% 44 94% 89 90 —5% 20 100% 94% 99% — % 11 54% 47% 54%+17 “ 1% 1 1% + % + % 09 —1% 05 +10 *1% t* 122 40% 42% 44% +2 1 93% 93% 93% —1% 209 93% 81% 88% — H 550 104% 101 103 .... 8 112% 112% 112% 100 13 78 79% —4 84 15 71 IT —1 54 M 77 77 -4 315 92 If 90, + % 144 90*4 08 19% JapDeV 4%s|0 47 *9% 98*4 944* —1*4 JapenDav 4474 141 97% 90% 94 +4 I 78 02% 72 72% —9% 1802 102% 96 90 +1** 302 97 90 90 . ____417 90% 89% 90% —3** Mexico 4*4s78 1275 90% 90% 90% +- % Mexico 6%e 79 1051 96 08% 90 — % Mexico 4%lM 1087 95% 89 90% +1 1531 45 80 43 92% 89 22 15 70 . 7 75 73 532101% 97% . 3 99% *9% 99% 19 91% 07 17 —9% 34 91% 96% *1% — 1% 96 94% 90% 92% + % 90 47%o 93 96 +6 75 94% 92 94 + % 71 47%. 87 17 -I 350 44 04 90 —3% 57 47% 91% 93% — % Norway'5%s77 44 94% /at . 93% — % Norway 5%s73 , 25 98% 90 90% + % Norway 5%s7i , 88 93% 90% fl - % NorMunB 5*70 k 2 97 94 94 Orlanl ]%s4let ' 37 44% 99 Oslo 4%s77 04le 5%s73 Oslo 5%s77 Oslo 5%s7l Farnam 7s47st Para 4a80xf Peru 4*61xf Philipp 4%s80 Mexico 6%s79' Milan 5%t7i Mina* 6%s58st Minas 4%s59*t Montreal 6>49'' N Zeal 6%s79 NawZea 5%*76 NtwZaa 5%i70 NawZea 5%s<7 NIPPonTT 4*76 NlPponTT 4s77 Nlppen 5%s7l M% +5%1 Nippon 5%|80 *5 +10 Norway /3V»t7* ft — % 99% .. 99% 99% 9 94% 95 11 92% 90 3 09 89 17 84 76 5113 JU ... 4112,110% 110%-2% 187 09% 10% U +2% 92% +% 19 +2% 11% +5% 111 Poland IsSOxf Pol as 4%s43xt Poland 7s47xf Poi as4%s4li Poland 4s40xf Pol as4%s5Sxt PortoAl 8s61st Porto 7%s44st Portugl 5**s85 Rhodes 5**s73 RlodeJ 8s«4st RlodJ 6%s53st RloGdoS 6s4lst SatbsCS 8s62xf SarbsCS 7s42xf Silesia 7*58x1 -Silesia 4%s5lxf SoEurP 5'is82 talwn 5%s8lst' Tokyo 6s80 UnSoAf 5%s4t UnSoA 5%s68n Drug a|4%s7t Urug cv4 5-16* Urug a|4%*79 Urug ev4%*79 vi-ln ' bankruptcy - of receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or eocurttlos assumed by such companies. ct-Cortlflcato*. st-Stamped. t-Dealt in flat. x-Matured bond*, negitiaolllty impaired by maturity. nd-Naxt day datlvary. xw-Ex warrants. 49 13 8% 8% —m 99 It 8% 8% —1% 3 12 12* 12 + % 84 12V% 8% 8% —1H 1 10H 10% 10% + % 44 12 9% 9% - vs 6 80 80 80 +f 4 68 65 67 +1 306 91V4 89% 89% —2% 92 97% 85 It +2 24 88% 84 84 —3 77 7? 7] +|. 8 88% 88% 88% +5% 26 93 88 n +5% 33 90 80% 81 "J 52' 94 83% 94 +10% 30 56% 47% 56% f 18% 21 54% 47 54% + 12% 11 13 * 8% 13 +4 36 10 m 9 + Vt 145 95% 84 84 -to .15 00 96 100 140 95 90 90 —1% 59 100% 99 100% + H 33 101 99% 99% - % 23 96 89 93 +1*4 2 91% 91 91% —7% 1625 93% 83 83 -J1A 39 99 88 99 + 1 1351 97% 95% 96 —1*4 5 12 9 10% + 1V* 54 14 7% 7% - % Wort Un Inti Wheelab JOa Wheel pf 1.50 Whlppany JO Whltors .40 Whit* Eagle Whitehall El Whiting 1.40b three passengers from Illinois were-hospitalized today follow-:^“stkin^oig um 1% ing Sunday’s crash of-a small plane at the airport in Manistee. State Police identified the pilot as Frederic Lee Sponsler, 28. Passengers were Karen Byrd, 25, of Chicago; Faithann Ryanii, 23, of Aglonquin,' 111.,' and Thomas Ryann, also of Algonquin. Troopers said the group was believed headed for a ski resort near Manistee when the plane crashed on landing. All four were hospitalized. %• 9% 5 +2% 22% + % 41 4% +3 2% 7% +4% 16% 32%+14% 2% 4 +1% . ■H 13-14 + % 2857 44% 14% 44% 6211 39% 16% 38%+21% Z4400 99% 47% 99 +55 1016 13% 9% 11% +1% 1982 33% 23% 33% split 9074 4% 1% . 2% +1*4 3144 14% 10% 14 ...t 4041 40% 27 30% Wichita ROH 10240 4 1% 2%+1% WlebStrs ,20d 541* 27% 12 ..24%+1J% 674 24% li*4 24% split 41354 8% 3%. 7 +3 6144 39% 21 %" 21 4399 17% 10 11%—1% 3077 38% 23 37% ..... 3173 59% 42% ri% . ... 553 9% 7 8% + % “ 31 —3 . Wood Ind J5d 13281 48% 10 27%+17% . 1 Wmhousa Wllshlre .29) WHsanCo 1.35 Wilson Bros Wilson Ph .75 Wilson Spirt 1 winkolmn .40 WIsPL pf4.50 Z5440 84 4%- — •— jM*+M Woods .44b 7422 40 12% 34 +23% Woodall 747 21% 17% Wool Ltd .10g J91 2 15-14 21-14 2% + % Work Wr .40 K4491 24% 13% 22% +8% WrldColor .40 2400 *31% 13% 29%+14% Wright Harg _ , , . 20841 2 3-16 % 1*4 + 15-14 Wyandlnd .40 1434 22% 14 21% toll) Wl* Labs 12781 31% 14 29% .. Wyomlssg .40 940 13% 10% 11% — % X-Y-Z 17844140.4* 139, +14% 5g 3142 5% 3% 4% + % an 4118 45% 21% 44%+23 *4080 91% 20% 98%+4B* 10838 27% 9% 25%+15% 1822 1% 4% +1% Zapata OtISI Zero Mlg .1 Zion Poods _________________ ___________ of dividends In the foregoing table art annual disbursements Based on tho last quarterly or toml-tnnual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are Identified In tho following footnotes. a—Also extra or txtros. b—Annual rata plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1967 plus slock dividend, a—Paid last year. f — Payable In stock during 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dividond or ex-dlstrlbutlon dole, a—Declared or paid so tar this year, h—Declared or paid after stock dividend or spill up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative Issue with dividends In arrears, n—Now Hauo. p—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action token at last dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1944 Plus Stock dividend, t—Paid In IB ~ 1944, estimated cash value i or ox-dlalrlbutlon data. z—Salas In full. cld-Callad. xw-WIthout warrants, won With warrants. wd-Whon distributed, wi-when Issued. nd-Naxt day dellvery- yt-ln bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under tho Bankruptcy Act, or securltio* assumed by such companies. ct-Certlflcates. st-Stompad. f-Oeelt in flat. x-Moturod bonds, nogqHgblllty Impaired by maturity. nd-Naxt dax\dollv#ry. xw-Ex warrants. ANNUAL AMXBICAN ITOCK 0ALM AMERICAN STOCKS. i k Total 1967 .... 1,14J,112,332 Tortl 1944 ........... 490,514,821 L_._. Total 1945 534.402,090 OhOfOO, AMERICAN BONDI Total 1947 Total 1944 Total 1945 8140.071.1 Em ANNUAL AMBRICAN LBADGRO IADGR0 ,'llgh ,l< closing prle* and In* net Chang*, tor (OM* " an mo* ctiy* American Ixchongo ok* lor tho year 1967. Salo* ora m 2% 22%+11% >% f +M 2 5%+3% 4%+4% Oynalocl Cp 142422 14% Goldfield 120442 11% Nucloar Am 109119 4% Assd OH A O 90774 Burma Min 95502 llbonoy CP . 41403 Syntax ..JUfiO Fad Resrceo 8*837 Gt Am Ind 87100 Gala Indus! 11401 4? 1*1*2 49% TfatlS THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1968 ADMIRAL COLOR TV WITH 265 SQ. IN. PICTURE All *2 chonn.l UHF/VHF tuning. 265 »q. In. pin. Ror.-iorth phoiphors picture tub. creates mom brillianc. In oil colon* ' Top performance and dependability. Fro# dolivory, 90-doy REG. $399.95 SAVE $125.90 RCA VICTOR 14" COLOR TV PORTABLE tig 14* Color TV in o 102 tq. in. rectangular tcroon. Com poet cabin** weight juit 42 lbs. that you con move around easily for room-to-room Color. Hide-away handle. UHF/VHF. Freo delivery, 90-day service. -* RCA VICTOR . 18" COLOR TV PORTABLE Spoetacular low price for this trim styled beauty, tig T 80 tq. In. pix, Rectangular tuba. Automatic color purifiar. UHF/VHF. 2 built-in antennas for full range sound. Free delivery, setup and 90-doy soivico. ZENITH 22w DIA. DELUXE LOWBOY TV Unsurpassed clarity, depth and life-like quality. All'channel UHF/VHF. Spotlit# dial. Push-pull on-off volume central. 282 •q. in. pix. Prav. year's models. REG. $169.^5 GE 9-SPEAKER STEREO COMBINATION v Stereo Hi-Fi with AAA-FAR, FM-stereo radio. FoOturos 8-speaker system plus FR-t full range extension speaker. Solid state# A.D.C. Electronic FM switching. Free delivery, service. GENERAL ELECTRIC STEREO HI-FI CONSOLE Solid stata staieo Hi-Fi... no tubes to bum out! Instant soundl 4-speed automatic record ehbnger. Stereo sound control con-tor. Contemporary fine furniture styling in walnut veneers. Record storagie. Free delivery, service. MOTOROLA 18” UHF/VHF PORTABLE »• 172 eq. In. pictq^e. Compact cabinet. Front is all picture •.. yet has tuning controls and sound up-front. Disappearing handle. UHF/VHF. Lowest price ever. Hurry! ZENITH 18” DIA. UHF/VHF PORTABLE. Big 174 eq. In. Imagel Front-mounted 5"x3" speaker and handy top-carry handle. One of America's favorites. Zenith handcrafted TV chassis. All channel UHF/VHF. Prey, yearo models at big savings. ADMIRAL 13 CU. FT. CHEST FREEZER Stores an enormous 437 pounds of .food. Safa sero-degree ’• storage. Safety lid is easy to open /and close. Built-in key lock. Compact slimlina design. Free delivery, service. REG. $140 SAVE SIS <130 RCA VICTOR 23” COLOR COMBINATION Smart contemporary styling. Complete, home theatre features giant 29$ sq. in. Color TV with AM-FM, FM-stereo radio. Rectangular tuba. Solid stato. 6 speakers. Walnut woods. Freo dolivory, 90-day service. REG. $900 SAVE $f53 *647 *111 COLOR TV 'Color TV includes Free delivery end setup and 90-dny service. Free 10-day home trial. Try it at our expense. $499.93 ZENITH 265 sq. In. Color tubo. Oif finish, walnut wood commie. Prav. yr*. models............................ , OLYMPIC Color TV combination. 265 eq. in. with stereo Hi-Fi, AM-FM radio. A.F.C, UHF/VHF. ........ ADMIRAL 23* Color TV. 295 tq. in. rectangular tube. UHF/VHF. Sola priced^................... PHILCO 267 eq. In. lowboy. UHF/VHF. Sal# priced..................... $1,125 ZENITH 23M Color combinations. With stereo Hi-Fi, AM-FM, FM-stereo radio. Now A.F.C. tuning. Early American AAapfo •••... ••••'•••••••••........ $995 RCA VICTOR 23* Color combjna. tions with stereo Hi-Fi, AM-FM, FM-stereo ra dio. Spanish stylo wood cabin#! GENERAL ELECTRIC Color TV seta. 60 eq. in. picture. UHF/VHF. Big price reduction . .••.•••••••................ REFRIGERATORS e FREEZERS $119.95 5 cu. ft. table high refrigero- A|i|4| tor. Mico work top. Large freezer. De- tKQ luxe features •• ........ w m $168 ADMIRAL 12 cu. ft. chest freezer. 6ra AM Stores over 350 lbs. 9 ■ 3Q Sale priced.............. I ww $529.95 WHIRLPOOL 21-ft. tide-by- AH tide refrigerator-freezer. COMPLETELY FROST-FREE BOTH SIDES................. W M-% $269.95 PHILCO 16 cu. ft. 2-door ra- 6A AJb frigsrotorlkh giant bottom freezer. t"#B1bB Freezer holds 165 lbs. Vary deluxe •. . • , dflI raP wMF' $419.95 PHILCO 19* side-by-side ra- Axe mm wmm' frigerator-freezer COMPLETELY FROST- ^ K "W FREE BOTH SIDES8...................... > • W MP M , : •* $249.95 HOTPOINT 14' 2-door refrig- mmm orator COMPLETELY FROST-FREE. Top . p jfgj WHIRLPOOL 15 cu. ft. chest freezers. A a| mam ew FoWloft. flU Not Ip all stores...... ........... INrw i *• , • $269.95 WESTINGHOUSE 17 cu. ft. up- A|| right freezer. Quick frees# shelves. t^QD Built-in lock.... ......... dHlaPaw $279.95 PHILCO 16 cu. ft. 2-doer ra- < frigerator. Top freezer. 9*^ Very deluxe. ............... dP4lqr RANGES $129 95 MAGIC CHEF 30" Got range. Delivered yH ond installed......... $ 1 89.95 HOTPOINT 30* electric range. Fully automatic. Installed free per A mm mmgm Edison Co............................. 91 B $178 SUNRAY £ m jam mmm 24* aye-level gos range. 91 A P ’ Delivered and installed. • $269.95 SUNRAY 30* 2-even, eye-level A ra raw electric range. Installed free per Edi- 91 P $39.95 N AUTILUS £ wra rara Range hoods. 9^P^m 30" or 36" size....... ............ JmW WHIRLPOOL 2-CYCLE DRYER Fully automatic. 2 cycles. Temperature selection, large lint ■croon. Sava $41.50 wiring installation costs. With free installation par Detroit Edison Co. pregram. Free delivery, service. Prev.yrs. model. *90 HOTPOINT PORTABLE AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER Cushion coated racks. Single dial control of automatic cycles for wash, rinse, dry. Automatic shut-off. Silverware basket. Portable — on castors for rolling to table and sink. Free da-,livery, service. DETROIT JEWEL 30” GAS RANGE One of the most popular ranges we have aver sold, Built for long life .dependability. Oven thermostat control. Handy broiler drawer. Adjustable racks. Free delivery and installation. *85 *69 R0P BRAND 10 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR A top brand that wo can't name hero at our law price. $ cu. ft. A freezer at top for fraten food Storage. Full width chiller drawer. Adjustable cold controL Roomy storage door. Free delivery and service. *100 PHILCO 31” ELECTRIC RANGE INSTALLED FREE Exclusive TILT-TOP for jiffy cleaning. Giant full-width oven. Porcelain control panel. Dial-any-heat surface units. Lift-off even doer. Free installation and service per Edison Co. plan in their service areas. Free delivery. HOTPOINT 14 CU. FT. 2-DOOR REFRIGERATOR Clearance-priced for big savings kern Highland. Over 21 sq. ft. of shelf area. Separate freezer holds aver 100 lbs. frozen food. Tsrin porcelain crispers. Dairy storage in roomy doer. Model CTA-114. Free delivery, service. *108 REG. $199.95 SAVE $31 *169 IH0NIN8 MO AND COVER SET Foam pad and silicon# cover. One to a customer. WESTIMBMIISC VAC. CLEANER Powerful 1 H.P. cleaner for heme cleaning needs. With set of attachments. 12-TRANSISTOII AM-FM RADIO Powerful speaker. Rugged portable, antenna. Ecu phone and battery. 3-speed Mixmasfer. Powerful motor. Now, in car-ton*. Model H. V SOLID STATE TACLE RADIO Fully transistorised — Instant sound. Attractive table model cabinet in caters. WESTINGHOUSE Automatic Stereo 4-speed automatic flip-down changer. Twin speakers. $5** $3988 POL Id IAND Radio. 11 hm AM........... TABU RADIO. Solid Mil., Instant wind... GE 4-tp..d automatic pottobl. it.r.o hi-fi WESTINGHOUSE Clock radio. Wak. automatically .................... TRANSISTOR Wolkio-talkia. Rugged casus. Put pair................ ARV1N 4-.p..d automatic pottobi. hi-fi—. GE AM-fM Ttan.i.tor potto hi. radio... LIWYT Sturdy vacuum cluonor.. *....... GE CAnlstof vac. With tool. $18.81 $6.49 $31.87 $18.11 $7.99 $28.8$ $11.81 $14.81 $f3.11 BE CARTRIDGE WESTIROHOUSE TAPE RECORDER STEAM-DRY 8-tronsiftor. Remote con- Fabric dial and guide, tral mike. Solid state. With For Perrtta-Press fabrics,' batteries. too. $4387 $497 SUNBEAM Floor pali.har. With tool.. $| 3.TT REGINA Elactnkbroom. Only........... $15.99 SUNBEAM Vacuum cloanar. With EmIi.' $24.11 HOOVER Vacuum cloanar. With tool...' $25.77 GE Ebctdc carpat iwi.p.r. Only ,*... $18.$$ SUNBEAM 30-cup parly park.......... $10.81 SUNBEAM Hhdoma .Etillut*............ -u $12.88 GENERAL ELECTRIC Cotta, p.rk......... $8.88 GENERAL El(CT«IC Hi-dam. .kill.l... $12.88 WESTINGHOUSE Hand mixer. 3 ip*.ds.... $6.47 j PORTABLE TV ZENITH 12* portable with UHF/VHF. Handle, antenna. Prav.years modal .h.........#..!.... *85 Admiral 12* portable uhf/yhf. with built-in handle and antenna. Clearance *75 ZENITH 16* die. portable TV. 141 sq. In. rectangular. Handle, antenna. UHF/-VHF. Prav. yis.madelp. *100 ARVIN 9* portable operates on battery or Indoors on A.C. UHF/VHF. Battery optional, extra. ••••••#••••• • « *79 $169.95 ADMIRAL 20** portobl. TV. . V.ry d.lux. with hand!*, ont.nna. UHF/VHF.. *118 $139.95 ADMIRAL IjB* Portable TV wHh handle and antenna. Sale priced,#o#* *100 j CONSOLE TV *$199jF5 PHILCO 22* lowboy.282 sq. In. pix. UHF/VHF *169 $229.95 RCA VICTOR 22" wood consol. TV's. \ UHF/VHF. Nm in all .terai *157 $199.95 RCA VICTOR 20* weed console TV. UHF/VHF vl... *144 STEREO * HI -Fi $179,95 AUDIO Console stereo combination with AM-FIL FMoteroo radio. Early American Maple •••••••••> *100 $138 ZENITH Stata# HI-FI- lowboys. Walnut woods. 4 speakers. Floor models *97 $219.95 RCA VICTOR Sterao HI-FI lowboys. Walnut wood combinations with AM-FM, FM-stereo radio. Few left. *145 $399.95 Gl, 6-speaker, 40 watt stereo Hi-Fi combination with AM-FM, FM-stereo radio. Madam walnut cabinet. • . *24$ $699.95 GC sterao Hi-Fi combination with AM-FM, FM-staraa radio. French Colonial styling. $afopriced .••••••«». *457 $199.95 MAGNUS Electronic ergon. Prafotsional features. . Walnut console..j *151 $449.95 MAGNUS ELECTRONIC Chord organ. Top deluxe. Solid state. 16 chord!. 5 voice tabs. Harmony balanced, etc. -Walnut console ................... *287 WASHERS * DRYERS $209.95 HOTPOINT Fully automatic __ TOP BRAND 20’ SIDE-BY-SIDE COMB. Just 33* wide. Separate, true freezer Section holds aver 200 lbs. Full width freezer shelves. Dairy keepers, and ODD rack. Super storage door shelves. Free delivery, service. REG. $369.95 SAVE $80 <289 washer. 15-lb. capacity. 2 speeds, 2 cycles. Very deluxe;.............. $219.95 WHIRLPOOL Fully automatic deluxe washer. 14-lb., 2 speeds, 5 cycles. Sole priced............... $189.95 HOTPOINT Open front automatic portable dishwasher. ..Sole priced ...... $129.93 HOTPOINT Automatic electric dryers. Free installation and service per Edi ten Co. Only.......... WHIRLPOOL Wringer washers. Big family size. Prav. years models. On Hr................................ $199.95 PHILCO Fully automatic 2-•peed washers. 2 year service warranty. Clearance........ $259 95 ffOTPOINT automatic gat 'dryers. Automatic temperature central. tep ef ling.......... r........... SUNRAY 2-0VEN EYE-LEVEL GAS RANGE This modem eye-levOl "Riviera* model It an our "best seller* list. 2 evens for baking and .broiling together. Uft-up topi. Smokeless broiler, lye-high even. Clock and timer. Free da-livery, installation and service. % *187 MAGNUS ELECTRIC CHORD ORGAN mbtlc in just 60 seconds — without lessens. 37 keys, ird buttons, Music sheet support. Smart walnut finish ionsole. Book of instructions Ond music book free. Big td action. . ^ *50 HOTPOINT 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC WASHER You can wash I ram 2- to 12 pound foods without sped tachments. Simply adjust for "Heavy* or "Regular* sodI select from hot or cold wetor wash tern peroturae and point does the rest... automatically. Prav. yrs. model. <134 Packers Chill Cowboy Hopes With 13 Seconds Remaining GREEN BAY; Wis. UR - The glacial 'Green Bay ‘Packers have maintained their icy grip upon the National Football League crown for a third straight year. And they used a red hot finish to do it. " . the temperatures was -13 at the start Sunday and Dallas was minus four points^ ' at the finish after the coldest afternoon in the history of NFL championship jday,-,' ^ J' . ■ 7? Quarterback Bart Starr won it with 13 seconds left by following guard Jerry Kramer’s blocking for a touchdown from the one-yard line to give the Packers a 21-17 victory. “I didn’t.feel that cold,” said Packer Coach Vince Lombardi, who became the first man since the NFL adopted a playoff system in 1933 to guide a team to three consectu’ive titles, “I didn’t feel It - at all.” SUPEfe BOWL NEXT Thr victory thrust the Packers into the Super Bowl aganst Oakland, the American Football League king. That game will be played in sunny Miami, Fla., Jan. 14. ★ ★ ★ The weather was bitter, and the Cowboys were bitter about the weather. ‘‘We were all suffering out there, and it got worse as the game went on,” said • Coach Tom Landry, whose Cowboys lost in the final seconds to Green Bay in warm Dallas a year ago. “Minns 13—it just isn’t a test of football, said Dallas ..quarterback Don Meredith. - .jf “It was just' bitter” admitted Starr, who at times seemed utterly immobilized by the cold. He fell under the Cowboy pass rush eight times during the afternoon. The Packers got to Meredith just 'once. TAKE BIG LEAD The Packers, at first seemingly ob-. livious to the cold—a record for Dec. 31 even in Green Bay, drove to a 14-0 lead on two Starr passes to Boyd Dowl-er. The first, from eight yards out, capped a drive from the Green Bay 13 helped along by two costly penalties against Dallas. WW W The second came from the 43 as the Cowboys defense worried about rookie sensation Travis Williams, who had just been inserted in the lineup. But Starr soon became aijiiost immobilized in the withering cold as Willie Townes stripped him of the ball at the Packer seven. George Andrie scopped it up and raced for a touchdown. Dallas added a 21-yard Danny Villanueva field goal after Willie Wood fumbled a punt at the 17. , The Cowboys puUed ahead on the first play of the final'period when Dan Reeves teamed with Lance Rentzel on a 50-yard option pass play. “We just fell asleep on that one,” said Lopibirdi. " w w w The slender lead appeared to be substantial enough as the Cowboys forced a Green Bay punt, and watched an at-temped Don Chandler field goal from the 40 go awry. GET POSSESSION There were only 4 minutes, 50 seconds left when Green Bay got the ball for the last time at the Packer 32. Starr passed to Anderson for six yards. Chuck Mer-cein, the New York Giaht castoff, gained seven around end. Starr hit Dowler for 13 yards. Now there was only 3:57 left. Anderson moved to his left on what appeared to be an option pass, bnt Jeth-eo Pugh was there and the Dallas tackle slammed him down for a nine-yard loss, . Now it was second down and 19, the ball was back to the Packer 49, and only 3 minutes left to play. * * a But Starr came back with a pass in the flat to Anderson, and the former Texas Tech All-American rambled for 12 yards. PASSES SHORT Now it was third and seven and only 2 mihutes were left. Again Starr passed short to Anderson and again Anderson ripped through for the first down. ★ ★ ★ Only 1:35 remained, but the Packers, had a first andN10 at the 30. Now came another key play. Starr flipped a safety valve pass to Mercein and the former Ivy League ace bolted for 9 yards down the sidelines. The ball was at the It, and there were 71 seconds left on jhe clock. Mer- t NaHanal liague At Green Bay — 50,Ml r ~ Flr« Downs ' ® Cawt"" . Rutting Yardage *j 1 j| S*»»lno Yardage 100 Its Return Yardage Passes Punt* Fumble, Lost Yerdi Penalized Cowboy, T* 0 It • 7—It Packer, 7 7 0 7—f| 'OS—Donrter I mm from Starr. Chandler kick. OS-Oowler 43 mm from Starr. Clwndler kick.” Da -rAndrle T fumble recovery: Villanueva kick. Bel—FO Villanueva 31. / . 1 1 k)0»l—Rwitzel so mm from Reeve,. Villanueva OB—Starr I run. Chandler kick. \ r Individual Laadan Rushing—Dellas, ™3l, Reeve, 1141, Meredith 1-7, Clarke l-mlnu, i, Baynham 1-minus 3i Green Bay, Andanen 11-35. Marcaln 4-30, Williams 4-13, Wilson 3-u, ftvr 1-1,, , Racelvlng—Dallas, Rentzal 341, Clarke 3-34, Hayas *-]*• Reeve* 3-11, Baynham 14/ Green Bay Oowlar 4-77, Dal* 344, Andarion 4-44, Marcaln 3-U, William* rWSSa, f’.'vr ■ jl t, , chin darted up the middle for .yards and 54 seconds were left, /.. The “electric blanket” installed to guard against frozen fields was over-come by the cold. The field was icy. Starr handed off to Anderson, who fought his way to the one. Again Anderson got the ball. He went nowhere. The Packers were now out of timeouts and almost out q! both time and ideas. There were only 13 seconds left. The ball remained mi the one. FOOTING BAD “The footing was poor and we udhe stumped for something to do,” said Starr. A failure on third down would force the field goal team Into action, if there was time to get the unit into position. * * * . __ JJjVJ ijfj — Starr was going to try it himself behind Kramer.. Kramer was having trouble getting leverage. “The field was frozen solid like cement. I dug my right foot in there. I was going to give it my best shot,” he said. ~W Kramer plunged forward and buried his right shoulder into Pugh’s^ midsection. Center Ken Bowman threw a perfect block on middle linebacker Lee Roy Jordan. Starr was in with room to spars “The whole world loves a gambler, said Lombardi, “as long as he wins.” * THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JANUARY I, 1968 D—1 MacGregor, Ullman Spark, Wings' Win AP Wirephoto, ARMS SIGNAL VICTORY — Umpire Joe Connell (No. 57, top photo) raises his arms to signal the winning touchdown and a jubilant Green Ray coach Vince Lombardi (bottom photo) responds with a similar signaWalter quarterback Bart Starr (15) of the Packers pushed into the Dallas end zone Sunday with 13 seconds to play. Trailing 17-14 with a third down and inches to go and no time Outs remaining, Starr called for a quarterback sneak and plunged over behind a driving block by guard Jerry Kramer (at the feet of the umpire) on the Cowboys’ Jethro Pugh. Chuck Howley (54) is the Dallas player on top of Starr while the Packers’ Chuck Mercein (30) provides added impetus on the plunge! By the Associated Press Bruce MacGregor scored two goals and assisted on a third and teammate Norm Ullman added more as the Detroit Red Wings humbled second-place Boston 6-4 in National Hockey League play Sunday night. The Bruins, who had to replace starting goalie Andre Gil], closed the gap to one goal three times, but never tied the game.. In other NHL action, Philadelphia drubbed Los Angeles 9-1, blanked Oakland and New York shut out Toronto 4-0. The victories for Philadelphia and Chi-; cago, both knotted in tight races for the Eastern and Western Division races, gave both teams a little more breathing room. LEAGUE HIGH Eight players .scored for the Flyers, whose total equalled the league high for the season. Los Angeles goalie Wayne Rutledge was sent to the showers for the second straight time in Philadelphia, and was replaced by Terry Sawchuk. * . it it it Chicago’s Denis DeJordy recorded his third shutout of the season and extended Oakland’s scoreless string to 10 periods. Dennis Hull, Doug Mohns and Pit Martin were the Chicago marksmen. ★ it it Linemates Vic Hadfield, Rod" Gilbert and Jean Ratefie each scored Once iiF' New York’s romp oyer Toronto. Ranger goalie Ed Giocomin had to handje only 22 shots in recording his third shutout of the season. -44—1 14—34—4 1-3* 3-3* Pistons Hoping for Fresh Start After Bad Spell DETROIT \JR Hoping their luc better at the start of the New. Year it was at the end of the old, the troit Pistons journey to New York a National Basketball Association test Tuesday against Baltimore. The Pistons played a close cot Saturday night with Philadelphia be the 76ers broke open file game and loped away to a 122-105 victory. Detroit held a 56-55 halftime edge, Philadelphia put together strings eight and seven points to take a c manding 86-74 lead at the end of third quarter. Wilt Chamberlain had 30 points the 76ers in the game played at S cuse, N. Y, Eddie Miles led the tons with 27. " ■«* rwnewtgvn 4 IV mwi Mill 4-44, nilllBIIIB Passing—Dell**, Meredith, 19-35-1, S* yard*. Reevee l-i-O, Mi Green Bey. tlarr 14*344, 1*1. * Cancer Brings Death • TORONTO (AP) - Charlie ComcI one of the great hockey playfere^of 1930s and a member of the game's hau of Fame, died Sunday in Toronto Gen-; eral Hospital. He was 58. Conacher had been undergoing;/ treatment for cancer for several months. Tomahawks Close 1967 With Win Against Chicago NORTH AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL LEAGUE _ Sunday'i Results Pontiac Tomahawks fl5, Chicago Bomber* 105 Saturday Scam Grand Rapid* 155, Battle Creek 144 Holland 141, Lansing 130 Columbus ,106, Chicago *4 (overtime) The last game of 1967 was the best for the Pontiac Tomahawks, who broke a five game losing strehk last night at Pontiac Northern where they defeat-* ed the road-weary Chicago * Bombers, 115-105, in an NA&L game. * The Tomahawks look to 1968 with a 2-7 record and a game at Lansing, Jan. 6 before returning for a home encounter with the same Chicago team, Sat. Jan. 20. Chicago held a two to seven point lead throughout the first half as the Tomahawks blew several opportunities to take the lead. LEAD AT HALF At halftime, the visitors led 52-50 when the T-Hawks missed a chance to tie with a turnover in the final second of the quarter. Tricky Paul Long again provided the spark on the court with his hustle and he hit the tying bucket to start the second half. From that point the game was tied 9 times and the lead changed hands 13 times. 10 STRAIGHT POINTS With the score 96-94 for Chicago, The Tomahawks scored 10 straight points to make it 104-96 on key buckets by Sonny Dove, Ernie Thompson and a beautiful underhanded layup by player-coach Bob Duffy. Chicago moved fr6tn a 77-74 deficit earlier when Porter Merrjweather hit two three-point field goals/ for an 80-77 lead. Dove led Pontiac with 32 while Thompson had 20 and new addition Ed° Burton had 19. Raiders Thump Houston, 4Q-T, on West Coast OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) — A lot of people deserve credit today for the Oils' land Raiders’ first American Football League championship, but none more than A1 Davis, the man who built the team, nursed it and then saw his hand* picked coach lead.it right to the Super Bowl. 4 , * * * "This is the greatest day in my life,” said the personable young man a few ftiinutes after his Raiders had annihilated the Houston Oilers, 40-7, Sunday to win the AFL title and a shot at the National Football League champion . Green Bay Packers on Jan. 14. “Please don’t give the any credit for this,”, he added hastily, hh voice choking with emotion. “The guys who playqj their hearts out are the ones you should be talking to. They did it.” HANDPICKED TEAM \ Alipost anyone close to the Raider scene would have" said “hogwash.” But that’s the kind of man Davis is — always giving the credit* to someone else. Yet, the 1967 AFL champion Raiders are Jiis club. He put it together from the ground up and instilled a winning spirit. ® it S' S S Even old George Blanda, the min Houston didn’t want, was signed Sp by Davis, now managing general partner in the Raider organization. Blanda. who kicked four field goals against his former mates three weeks ago to clinch the Raiders’ first Western Division title, booted four more Sub-day to lock up the club’s initial AFL title as well. TOUGH DEFENSE Blanda was most of the offensive show against the Oilers, but it was a rock-ribbed defensive unit, headed by tha Wit four of Ben Davidson, Ike i Lassiter, Tom Keating and Dan Bird-well, all Davis proteges, which turned the tide before a partisan, record 53,-330 fans at the Oakland Coliseum. +% * ' ★ Those four, plus linebackers Gus Otto and. Dan Conners, henunedf In Houston’s top runners — Hoyle Granger and Woodie Campbell — and forced quarterback Pete Beathard to throw while on the run. THWART GROUND OFFENSE The Raiders held Granger to 25 yards rushing and Campbell to 15. The Oilers totalled only 34 yards rushing for the game and that proved beyond anything else why'they lost out in their bid for a Super Bowl berth over a team which won its 11th straight and 14th of the season against just one loss. VictoVy in this one was worth about 37,000 a mail with a shot for $15,009 more in Miami. . * So methodical was the Oakland dismantling of the Oilers that Houston didn’t score until there was only 12:43 left to play, and that meaningless tally came on a five-yard flip by Beath-^ ard to Charlie Frazier. ★ it .it Daryle Lamonica, the all-league quarterback, threw 17 yards to reserve tight end Dave Kocourek on a fake field goal attempt and 12 yards to Bill Miller and scored a third TO on a one-yard sneak. Hewdtt Dixon added a fourth TD on q 69-yard gallop, longest in AFLT ▼P 90M9BRS (105) FO FT TP Long pov* : 7 4-6 18 Burks 6 m 12 * 14 4-4 32 Jones 11 10-14 3T Duffy > 7 0*0 14 McCollom 2 GO 4 Thompson 10 0-1 20 Merrlweelhar* 6 fm u Gaines i o-o 6 Robinson 11 3-5 25 Watson 1 04) 2 Bonds 6 3-5 15 Navels Burton 2 0-0 9 1-4 4 If Com 0 1-3 1 Pontiac Chlcege 5* 45—115 13 Urlll t Race Spectator Killed WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) - A spectator was struck and killed by i stock car racing vehicle Sunday as approximately 2.000 persons watched in horror at “the Palm Beach Fair Grounds Speedway. it it it The Palm Beach sheriff’s office said the victim, Robert Walter Bennett, 29, of Hollywood Fla., jumped onto the track and attempted tb run across it as the racer approached. it h /Rr • Bennett lost hla hat and stopped to retrieve it. 1 „ v w$ &-4 THE PONTIAC! PRESS. MONDAY; JANUARY 1, 1968 Athletes from the Pontiac area and Oakland County made big news on the national, state and local scene during 1967. Most prominent attention was given to former Pontiac Central student Micki King, who won the women’s national^ AAU diving championship and who is expected to be a strong contender for the 1968 Olympics. best in hurdles Bill Tipton, another Pontiac Central student, was called the best high school hurdler in the country after winning the top junior competition available. Tim Wood and Emily Fisher of Bloomfield Hills were prominent in ice skating and tennis respectively on the national scene in 1967. * * State publinx golf honors went to Pontiac’s Terry Hoy, and '-Pontiac Northern had frank Lafferty as state high school wrestling champion. ★ ★ ★ j Another former Pontiac Central golfer, Tom Deaton now assistant at Detroit Golf Club, took state PGA honors, while Stani Brion, a Pontiac resident and aide at Tam O’ShanteF won the national PGA Match Play drown last winter. These are the month-bymonth highlights of 1967: JANUARY 4 — St. Michael downs St. Frederick in basketball, 46-35. 5 — Tom Walters, local Class A League baseball player, signs contract with the Cleveland Indians. 6 — Mike Souchak takes head pro position at Oakland Hills, replacing A1 Watrous who re tired. 21 — Bloomfield Hills wins the girls, team ski title and West Bloomfield takes the boys’ team crown in the annual Interscholastic Ski Meet at Mt. Holly. 22 — Bucket O’Bolts, owned by Arlene K. Law of Berkley, gains the Pontiac Press Trophy after being named the top dog in the Pontiac Kennel Club Show. 23 — Stab Brion wins PGA Match Play championship in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. .* ★ ★ 24 — Pontiac Central’s Chiefs upset Saginaw, 65-50. SNOW TOUGH 27 — Snow forces local high schools to postpone games. - ★ it it 27 — Ron Shortt of Farming-toil sails to a pole vault record of 14-feet-7-inches in the Michigan Relays at Ann Arbor. 28 — Pontiac .Central’s Bill Upton makes debut on 1867 track by beating a national collegiate champion in competition at Ann Arbor. 31 4- Birmingham Groves and Waterford Kettering are ranked fourth-fifth in the state high school Class A basketball poll. 31 — St- Frederick drops 116 68 decision to Marine City Holy Cross. FEBRUARY 4 — Pontiac Northern downs Walled Lake wrestlers, 26-18. 4 — Oakland University trims Aquinas in basketball, 84-57. 4 — St. Mikemen falter In case action to Farmington OLS, 66-60. 6 — John Kaspar of Milford signs bonus pact with Cleveland’s Indians. 18 — Ortonville winds up on Ike short end of a 112-93 contest with Byron. 14 — Cass Lake sailors won all 10 races in ice boating at the DN Class national championships in Bath, N.Y. ★ ★ * 14 — Pontiac Central downs Pontiac Northern in overtime, 72-65; Clarkston trims Holly to clinch Wayne-Oakland League championship; Kettering halts Waterford, 51-46. If— John Manuel wins snowmobile championship In Ontario. 15 — Former Detroit Lion fullback Tom ‘The Bomb’ Tracy takes head coach post with Pontiac football team. 17 — Highland Lakes of Oakland Community College down OCC’s Auburn Hills campus in basketball, 96-83. 20 — Local semipro football team gets a name: Firebirds. 22 — Pontiac Northern downs Pontiac Central swimmers, 66-38 24 — St. Michael downs Farmington Our Lady, 67-53. TITLES TAKEN 17 — Kettering and Birmingham Groves collect basketball titles. .Jp I? /l II — West Bloomfield’s boys and Bloomfield Mils’ girls win regional skiing championships. SO — Earths Hickson and Lucille Sandow roll 1284 to finish :* tS. % JOEDUBY Cage Coach of Year FRANK LAFFERTY Prep Wrestling Champion BULL TIPTON U.S. Junior Hurdles Champ DICK ROBERTSON 4th in National Publinx MICKI JUNG Div National AAU Diving Champ first in the handicap doubles oft 17-Frank Lafferty of Pontiac! 15-Tipton wins high and low|tional High School Baseballformer All-America guard Bob the Pontiac Elks No. 810 LadiesiNorthern named the Outstand- hurdle events In the Mans--Tournament.. Daffy as head coach. National invitational Bowlinging Wrestler of 196667 and the fibld (Ohio) Relays. |- 36-Birmingham Brother Ricej ..Feather Frechette and Tournament. \ nod for Outstanding Swimmer 19-Bobby Jack Young named shares the Detroit Parochial R~^.hharth winCitv MixJ went to Read McCarty of Royal head football coach at Avon- League track championship RSffiKSLEiIS* CENTRAL FALTERS 24 — PCH failf to Flint Northern, 66-62, costing the team a share of the league title. 23 — Dan Fife of Clarkston flips in school record 52 points in .leading his teammates to a 100-58 nod over Brighton. 25 — Jerry Olsen of Michigan Christian scores 56 points against Baptist Bible to break the Michigan Christian Junior College scoring record. 25—Pontiac Northern’s wrestlers win regional crown. 24 — Kettering closes season with 160 record. 28 — Birmingham Groves (2), 18—Pontiac Boys Club junior | 1»-Pete Jackson of Birming-basketball team wins the state ham honored by tho Golf As- championship in a 34-20 victory sociation of Michigan as the state’s top amateur in 1966. 19—A freak auto accident leaves promising distance, runner Mark Kay of Pontiac Northern' recuperating in a hospital. * MAY 6—Mel Larsen, 30, named over Ypsilanti. 16—Taking the Pontiac Woman’s Bowling Association title was the team of Shirley Burpee, Gerry Weber, Violet Doyle, Mary Johnson and Carol Arnold. it it * 22—Tim Baughman of Detroit Cnnntrv Dav named to the AP IT*”"*.te—Simmons mxs */a,uuu no- Ah state Class C basketball athletic director at PontiaC'nug pact with St. Louis Cardi-All - State uass c oasKemau Catholic High s^oi. ante a team’ 1 9-Holly reveals plan foi 17—Pontiac’s Two-Ball Championship. ‘<i- ★ ★ ★ V- JUNE I 23—Donning Oakland County 1—Southfield blanks Roches- tennis crowns are Leon Hibbs ter, 4-0, to claim third straight (senior singles), Paul Young- Pontiac Invitational High School Ray Shearer (men’s doubles), Baseball Tournament crown. 2—Pontiac Central wins Oakland County track meet “for Mr. Wilson.” 14— Southfifld catcher Ted Simmons named All-County third straight year. .* 15— Simmons inks $75,000 bo- Rick Watson (men’s singles), Mike Yehle-Bob Beel (junior doubles) and Mike Van Guilder (junior singles), NAME COACHES 25—Pontiac Catholic names three coaches — Walt Wynienko (basketball), Jim Murray (track) and-Don Stuckey (base- Bill Tipton^- 23—Coach Bill Willson named leave the W a y n e-Oakland | smashes national prep marks in't-^nJ^L Michigan’s Class A Wrestling League to join a Genesse Coun- winning both hurdles in the ™ b U Waterford Kettering (5) and Coach of the Year. ty group. golden West Invitational; Clarkston (10) ranked among 23-Booth Homes downs the1, “""i/*, 7®*, u.JTina,ned meets top Performer- j - MaY Fvan. win, the top 10 Class A high school Amigo Celts, 69-67, to win the JjJ 2Snnott a^d Roger Sha- 1*-Ron Rothbart and Dick women’s Metropolitan Golf As- basketbal teams m the state. .Pontiac Class A men s recrea- fer r0„s 2646 to win fhe state Robertson qualify for berths sociation medal title. 28 — Clarkston beats Water-. tion basketball title ijunior championship for thertak 29-Emily Fisher of Bloom- fqrd in opening round of state! 24-Dan Fife and Mike Raf-pontiac Eiks Lodge No 810 Ichumpionship Ju 1 y “-15 tojfield Hillg wins Western Girls’ district tournament basketball.; ferty named to the Associated MARCH j Press All-State Class A basket- 3 — Tim Wood .of Bloomfield team-Hills finishes ninth in the men’s competition at the World’s Fig- 11—Dan Fife of Clarkston f^e; G*n* Bo»e a"? flips his third no-hitter of thej^"^ *■>&'** Nat,0,,,,, season, a 1-0 verdict over West 5^. 26—Booth Homes was knocked i Bloomfield, out of the state recreation tour- ure Skating Championships in nament by Flint, 74-64. Vienna, Austria. ■ *■ ■ ^ APRIL 3—Dorris & Son Realty claims 2—P o n t i a c ’ s Micki King its-third straight Pontiac Table qualifies for summer Pan-Amer-Tennis championship. On the ican Games by finishing second team were LeRoy Tibbetts, Perc Secord, Howard Heckman, Roy Dorris and Kathy. Jones. 4—Pontiac Northern’s wrestling team captures state high school mat championship. 6—Pontiac Central falls to Hamtramck in regional basketball action, 62-54. 10—George Bishop rolls a perfect ggme at Sylvan Lanes, the in the national three-meter div. ing championships at Arlington, Te. 4—Dale Remley of Pontiac rolls a 717 series to take the lead in the regular singles of the American Bowling Congress Tournament in competition at Miami Beach, Fla. 6—Alexander Mclnnes named to head football coaching position at Birmingham Seaholm, 16-And-Under tennis singles at Middletown, O 29—Ron Robevitaky of Claw- 12—Pontiac Central wins Saginaw Valley Conference track championship. 18^-Kettering wins second straight Tri- County League baseball championship. . 18—Waterford Township takes Inter-Lakes League crown. 21—Pontiac Central (Class A) and Country Day (Class C) win regional track titles. 21—Pontiac gains franchise in the North American Basketball League. 22—Mrs. T. M. (Sally Wer-jgop wins intermediate men’s sinner wins WDGA medal play at les in the North. American Roll-Orchard Lake with a 54-hole i ing Skating Championships at total of 247. j Lincoln,' Neb.* then teams with' 25—Detroit Lions Jim Gib-'his sister, Gall, to take the sen-bons and Dick LeBeau win ior pairs. Pine Lake golf invitational; Gary Beckman and Larry golfingiBackland team for city' best-ball title 'with a 64. J' JULY 4—Rick Pankey tossedj nohitter as Booth Homes beats Oakland University, 24), in City Class A baseball action, AUGUST 6—Diane Downing of Waterford Rolladium wins no vie# Ladies singles in North American Roller Skating Championships in Lincoln, Neb. 5—Mrs. Bobi Miller wins her fourth city women’s golf championship. - , 5—Terry Hoy of Pontiac wins 24— Rochester and Warren 5—Coach John Thompson of Fitzgerald share Oakland A Avondale resigns to take post'Michigan Publinx Golf Tourna-track crown. .with staff at Wlscoasin Statejment at Saginaw; Pete Jackson 25— ‘The ‘Most Valuable Sen-University at Superior of Birmingham wins Golf As- „ ^ »or Athlete’award at Waterford Pin. TaVp 800*800" of'.Michigan match 11 -. NorUr Farmingtoil wi^moved to an adnln, strata! po-|IWtertlg goes Dick Micli.L,^!.8 t'fZ-? P'»y championship at Grand first ever at that establishment.replacing Carl Lemle, who. state ^mnastics championship |sition. * ^ I . 25-Clarkston loses game, 61, ZZJZr 17—Coach Dave Smith of 6—BiH Tipton sets records In'an(j ^ wayne-OaklandPl®n8^*P- Walled Lake resigns* to accept the high and low hurdles a* League baseball title" to visitmg p^^Lffplayoff title in Pontiac Church an assistant coach’s post under Pontiac Central won the Cen- Nortf,vilie pace w m me oiaie g^gu League; Timberlanes-II Duffy Daugherty at Michigan tral Michigan University invite-, 28-Pontiac Central’s Bill Tip-atFUnt’ {wins National League men’s State. tional indoor track crown. 'ton wins high and low hurdles!SHARES FOURTH !softball playoff crown. 17 — Named to the Pontiac! n—Leo Folsom named head in pacing the Chiefs to a fourth- 17—Dick Robertson cards 290] 11—Firebirds open exhibition Press All - County basketball football coach at Walled Lake, place finish in the state track in National Amateur Publinx season with 28-13 loss to Ypsi-team Dan Fife (Clarkston), Al-replacing Dave Smith, who took meet. Tournament for a share of lani. Rapids. 11—Gloria Dei Lutheran wins ton Wilson (Pontiac Central), Charles Puckett (Femdale), Dave Cook (Seaholm) and Mike a position at Michigan State. I 28—Clarkston’s tennis team fourth place. I 11—Mrs. John Hume of Bir- 12—Jim Bovee of Pontiac wins regional championship. 21—Oakland Community Col- mingham wins Women’s Dis- posts a decision over a Grand! 29—Kettering pitcher Jack lege reveals plans for expan-jlrict Golf Association match Rafferty (Groves). Joe Duby ofBlanc boxer in one of 11 bouts McCloud tossed a two-hitter in gion of athletic program (to in-'play crown. Kettering named the AU-County on an amateur card at Pontiac beating Clarkston, 64), in the j dude football). I 12—Mike Souchak wins 47th coach. [Central. topener of the Pontiac Invite-; 20—Pontiac Tomahawks hire,annual Michigan Golf Open. RICK WATSON County Tennis Champ TERRY HOY State PubliiuE Champ MIKE SOUCHAK Michigan Open Champion TOM SHANNON Club Pro of Year HALLIDAY TWINS Top County Gr idders OCTOBER .JSft . 2-Formef PCH golfer Twim Deaton, an assistant at Detroit GC, wins Michigan PGA section. 6—Oxford burler Roger Miller signs with Cleveland. 6— Walled Lake nips PNH, Si-20; Waterford, Farmington in 32-32 standoff-- 0 t; 8—Pontiac Country Club wins Michigan Publinx team title led by Paul Bada's 73. 13—Pontiac Northern rolls past Waterford, 274). 19—Pontiaq, Central wins Saginaw Valley cross country championship for third straight time: Walled Lake takes I-L harrier crown. Tim Jones passes F-Birds to 668 rout «f Lansing. 23—Tommy Shaaaoa of Orchard Lake named Club Pro of Year in Michigan and Oakland Hills’ Mike Sonchak selected Player of the Yrej^by tho State. PGA. 'r j 27—Walled Lake edges Waters ford, 7-6, to claim ninth straight I-L grid crown — defeated four loop foes by a total of nine points; Dean Wilson leaves track coaching post at Pontiac Central to become driver education coordinator for Pontiac schools. 29—Orchard Lake St. Mary downs Royal Oak St. Mary, 25-0, to win Northwest Catholic League championship; Pontiac Central harriers capture regional meet. NOVEMBER 4 — Troy dons Oakland A grid crown; Pontiac Central falls, 26-6, to Bay City Central; Pontiac Northern knocks off Kettering, 25-7. 5 — Pontiac Firebirds run win streak to six with 46-6 victory over Downriver Steelers. 11 — Dave Smith of Pontiac takes first prize in The Press pheasant contest with a 4114-inch bird. 7— Ex-Wake Forest star Paul Long comes to Pontiac Tomahawks from Detroit Pistons. 8 — Sonny Dove, 6-8 reserve with Detroit Pistons, joins Tomahawks. 10 — Waterford Township romps past rival Kettering, 54-6, in football finale; Milford’s Bob McFarland wins county football scoring title. 18 — Hie Press names All-County Football Team — Dana Coin, Gene Pankner, Gar Thomas, Bill Rose, Bill Holmes, Pat Lynch, Gary Halliday, Jim Watts, Bob Luxon, Doug Halliday, Mike Vidor, Mike Shorters, Larry Froede and Coach-of-the-11—Al LaBairge, 72, win si Year Joe PaScuzzi of Brother Pontiac Retirees’ Golf Tourna- Rice. ment. 18 — Pontiac Central downs 15- jpontiac Central, Waters]Pontiac Northern, 134), to close ford, Walled Lake open grid 1967 football season, campaign with victories. 18—Tomhhawks fall to Grand 16— Pontiac Catholic’s foot- Rapids in opener, 132-129. ball squad debuts before home 21 — John Wojtys of Orchard fans in 268 loss to, Royal Oak,Lake St. Mary named to All-St. Mary, 'State Gass C team by Associat- J * . * ★ Jed Press. 16—Pontiac Northern opens 23 — Dana Coin of Pontiac season with 19-13 win over North,'Northern and Mike Shorters of Farmingron. Pontiac Central named to sec- 23—Firebirds fall to Mount ond team Class A by Associated Clemens, 37-7. [Press. 29—W ailed Lake, Pontiac j 28 —. Pontiac Central cagers Northern win, Rochester falls open on winning note over Rose-in grid action. |ville, 72-69. 29. — Auburn Hills of OCC upsets Flint Junior College in basketball, 105-90. DECEMBER "l—PNH, West Bloomfield start early basketball surges with victories. 2—Oakland Community - Auburn Hills set school cage scoring mark in 117-78 rout of. Schoolcraft; Oakland U. loses varsity cage debut, 115-109, to Adrian in double overtime. 5— Pontiac Northern swimmers outdistance Central, 61-44. 6— Robert Huebel Jr., Clarkston, named winner of The Press Big Deer contest with 208-pound buck. 8—PNH cagers chalk up scoring mark in J07417 romp over Farmington. JOE PASCUZZI All County Grid Coach ' 13—M.G. Collision downs de fending champtoh Teamsters, 5-3, to win City Class A championship. 17—Divtf Micki King wins Women’s ^Senior Rational AAU one-meter springtxiard title. 21—M.G. Collision downs Saginaw in two games to win state recreation district tile. it it it 21— Tom Hillsey cards a net 78 to pace the, junior golfers in city championship action. 22— Pontiac Slo-Pitch . champ Chalet Inn falls from state tournament play after losing, 4-3. ' 25^-Herc Renda named athletic director at Pontiac Northern. 26—Bill Tipton wins both hurdle events in U.S. Jaycee Champ Track meet at Des Moines, la., in pacing Michigan to team victory. 26—Tom Balliet wins city medal play golf championship. 29—C r e s c e n t Lake RLDS beats Our Lady of Lakes, 63, to take the Division A playoffs in the Waterford Church Soft-ball League. SEPTEMBER 1—Mrs. Midge Cova wins Women’s Metropolitan Golf Association match-play title. 3—Bud Stevens and Don Mead win Sadwoski Memorial Golf Tournament at Rochester County Club. WWW i 6—Charles L. Goffar of White Lake Township wins part of fish contest with 1814-pound pike. Richard C. Phippips of Clarkston wins bass contest with a 7-pound-2-ounce largemouth. 9—Firebirds upset Ypsilanti in MFL contest, 74) TOM DEATON State PGA Champion TIM WOOD U.S. Skating Team STAJTBRION PGA Match Play Cbatnp EMILY FISHER County Tennis Star TED SIMMONS MVI* County Baseball BOB DUFFY T-Hawks Cage Coech HAL MARSH Poatiac Open Keg Champ 16— Marty Mala tin and Ron Bemis named offensive and defensive most valuable players, respectively, of Poatiac Firebirds football team. 13—Oakland Community College trustees approve football. 17— OU student Harold Marsh wins Pontiac Open Bowling Tournament with 732 handicap (708 actual); Detroit Lions win 200th NFL game, 14-3, over Vikings; conclude season with 67-2 record; OCC Auburn Hills wins Concordia Cage Classic with 111-105 vietpry over Washtenaw; Dick Carmichael bowls 300 at Lakewood. 22—Birmingham Groves' regular season basketball winning streak ended in 39th contest, 74-42, by Southfield. 29—Pontiac Central upseta Northern, 8679, in double overtime; PNH repeats as county wrestling champion. KS THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAV, JANUARY 1, 19(38 SCORING COLLISION"- Michigan State University’s Bernard Copeland (45) collides with Memphis State’s Herb Hillard (24) as he goes up for a bucket in the consolation game of the Sugar Bowl tournament Saturday night in New; Orleans, La. Other Memphis flayers on hand are Don Smith (right) and Tom Quast. Memphis State won, 73-57. Behind UCllA, Houston - MSU Stumbles Twice 'f in Sugar Bowl Action NEW ORLEANS (AP)-Mjch-igan State’s venture^ ^outh for the Sugar Bowl basketball tournament proved anything but sweet, as the Spartans lost their first round game to Vanderbilt, 73-63, and its consolation content to Memphis State, 73-57. Ninth-ranked Vanderbilt went on to win the championship Saturday night by defeating number eight Davidson, 80-67.' * Michigan State lost, a chance for some glory Saturday night, when its leading scorefr, Lee Lafayette, fouled out with 9:46 left in the game. At that point Memphis State led 56-51, but the Tigers extended their margin to 12 points before the Spartans; could score. S j Lafayette tallied 18 points to lead the'-Spartan scoring attack. I Guard Mike Bolter paced; Memphis State with 26 points, i most of them on outside shots.; MEMPHIS STATE OFT O FT, 0 2-2 2 Holms 0 2-4 2 1 2-2 4 Edwrds .3 3-3 9 3 5-5 11 Lafayte 8 2-5 IB 10 6-7 26 Bailey 3- 3-3 9 7 4-5 18 stepler 12-2 4 2 1-2 5 Ward .10-0 2 3 M 7 Rymal 3 0-0 6 Gibbons1 1 0-1 2 Copeld 2 1-2 5 Totals 26 21-24 73 Totals 22 13-20 57 Michigan Stato 35 22—57 Memphis Stato 41 32—73 Fouled* out—Michigan Stale, Lafayette j and Stepter. Memphis, State, Beveridge. Attendance 4,100. * Shakeup Ahead in Rankings j By the Associated Press .opponents en route to the Los was 1-2 in'the Holiday Festival The national college- basket-1 Angeles Classic championship in New York, ball rankings are in for a major an d Houston beating . three CHALENGERS revision in the wake of the an- others on the way to the Rain- Among the host of challengers nual holiday tournament whirl—|bow Classic title in Honolulu. ; for spots in the select list are five of the Top Ten teams suf-l But third-ranked Indiana lost;Oklahoma City, New Mexico, fered defeats-but UCLA andltwice, No. 4 Tennessee and NoJNebraska and perhaps Temple, Houston don’t figurfc^to be in-!7 Utah had 2-1 records for/the all tournament winners. Colum-volved. jweek, Nov. 8 Davidson split a bia, winner of the Holiday Festi- The awesome Bruins and1 pair and No. 10 Boston Collegejval in New York, is an extreme Challenging Cougars continued' their methodical march toward a climactic showdown in the I Houston Astrodomei Jan. 20, with defending national champion UCLA' bowling over threej Caz' Brother, i - - i ** Team Victims of Wolverines Capac '5' Wins Tourney Crown darkhorse. | . ' ★ ★ j UCLA, with Lew Alcindor, [Lynn Shackleford and Mike Warren doing the heavy work,j stormed over Wyoming 104-711 Saturday in the title game of the? | Los Angeles Classic. |j H The BrUinS earlier had beaten1 . 1 „ , |Minnesota 95-55 and St. Louis! Brown C ity Yale!10®*67 *n running-their unbeaten '[ string to 42 straight. Alcindor,! Roll in Consolations [the tourney’s most valuable! player for the second straight! jyear, scored 20 points in the Capac established its suprem- title game) Shackleford had 24! 'jacy in the Southern Thumb area an(j warren 16. UCLA outscored ANN ARBOR (AP) — Cazzie Saturday night by knocking off Ithe Cowboys 52-17 over one Russell never got to piay!Imlay City, 65-64, in the finalsfstretch. Russeu never goi to pray Holiday Tournaj . * * 4 in Michigan s new University J Evenfs Budding, bqt his broth-!™"1' ,, . . ■ _ „ NHouston now 13-0 for the sea- er, Don, got the chance and1 ^^ vjctory raised ^P^ ^ beat JBi^Il^ 69-52 and CarAe was on hand to watch record for the season to M- Marquette 77-65 before edging Shmdav The Chiefs are 3-0 in Southern North Texas State 45-43 in the Michigan beat Don’s team, Th“mb ^ague play and they .Rainbow Classic final. All Northern Illinois, 84-77 with a !;et.“rn **•*“? compet.t.onAmeruian Elv.n Hayes was rally in the final three minutes |Fnday n,«ht a8aJnst a visiting named MVP. play ? ! Anchor Bay squad. |FAR WEST WINNER * * * | In consolations of the Yale' No. 5 North Carolina won the Hie Wolverines held a 39 - 37itourney, Brown City smacked Far ^st Tournament in Port-edge at the half but fell behind!armada, 68-61, and Yale romped land’ Pre" taking Oregon 68-61 72 71 with 3:03 to play. Jim Pitts past Richmond, 81-56. {“ th« *nal game Larry Miller, ... _ .____,u ««i the MVP, scored 33 points m the hit a jump shot and Michigan; jn Northwest Suburban t:*ie mat„u went on to outscore NIU 13 * 5 Tournament, Ypsilanti squeaked - ____________- the rest of the way ^to even its pasj Livonia. ^Bentley, 53-50, to take.the title. season record at 4-4. Rudy Tomjanovich hit 23 * • * MSU Mof men points and hauled down 14 re-j In Northwest consolations, 7 \ bounds to spark the Wolverine j North Farmington turned back! Pl/yrC* ^vOrAfln offense. Pitts added 21'points. township rival Farmington, 81- ' KJv.“ JtrLUf U , Hawkins 2 0-0 4 Tomjanlc II 1-3 23 t 65, Southfield rolled past Livon 3 3-s 9 ia Stevenson, 60-57 BlalvMtt 2 0 0 4 Maxey Russell 6 5-6 17 Pitts Day 3 0-0 6 McClellan c6 2-3 t* , ley pinned a 68-49 setback on o m Jo | Redford Union. SrMnbtck 0 0-0 0 Maundrell 0 0-0 Blood worth 1 0*0 I past iilVUIl-j # mm, , and Berk-; m Tourney colharlr nn / (AP) Bloodworm i (Hi 2i At Memphis, Port Huron Cath- j* . .. . Illinois*n ””oi.77 olic rolled past Harbor Beach Michigan Statehadfouriniiivi- M.cHinan "® * jo 45Z14 rsi i u in tha' Finnic rw dual champions but finished sec-, Fou"ed out—Northern uiinois, Biaidseii. ®LLH in. the finals, 81-57. Dry- Iowa State for the team Totar3fouls—Northern mmole 10. Mich-'den trimmed host Memphis, 55- ond 10 .S -- , .. v crown of the Midlands Wrestlingi 50, in the consolation game. *jTournan,eilt. * , . • Iowa State had only two indi-! Michigan Goalie jvidual champions but its total of 96 points bettered MSU's 69 Wins MVP Honor in the tournament which ended; Saturday night. Michigan was; in IroTAiirnou fifth with.33 points and the| in ICC f uume/ Michigan Wrestling Club i»as| 'seventh with 28. NAMED MVP Loses Tourney T*ROY, N.Y. (AP)—McMaster! Michigan goalie Jim Keough of Hamilton, Ont., has emerged was voted the most valuable as the winner of the* Rensselder player of the first Big Ten Hock-Polytechnic Institute Invitation- ey Tournament but the Wolver-al Hockey Tournament, despite jnes had to settle for secpnd the fact’ Its 2-1 record wasp|ace behind Minnesota, matched by Michigan Tech; Minnesota won the champion-and RPI. {ship at Minneapolis Saturday McMaster, which defeated night, 3-1, and it was only the Yale 6-4 in the first game of tin*!brilliant performance of Keough final round 1 Saturday, was that kept the Gophers from win-judged the victor on the basis of ning more handily Dale Gable of Iowa State, named the most valuable for the second straight year, won his 137 - pound division by defeating MSU’s Gayle Anderson 2-2, then 6-2 in ah overtime. MSU’s champions were Greg Johnson, 115 pounds; Dale Carr, 145-pounds; Mike Bradley, 177 pounds, and Jeff Smith, heavy- inosit goals scored in three Keough made 30 stops conf-iweight -games. pared to the 22 saves by Minne- Jonnson pinned Toledo s Dave RPI rallied from three goals Sota goalie Murray McLachlin. Keller in 6:09; Carr defeated behind Saturday night to upset Although Keough was named Eastern Michigan’s Bill Johan-favored Michigan Tech of most .valuable, McLachlin was sen, 5-4) Bradley defeated Iowa Houghton, 4.-3, * picked as the AH - Tournament State’s, Don Buzzard, 7-7, 6-0 ov- i Tech aqored all its goals in the team goalie. ^ ertime. and Smith defeated T<>- first period. RPI fired in one The Wolverines \ finished just ledo’s Paul EJzey, 5-3. goal In the first period, two in ahead of Michigan State’s Spar-I In another champoinship the second and one in the third, taps, who claimed third place match, Masaaki Hatta of the GoaUe Tom Nichols of RPI Saturday by edging Wisconsin,! Michigan Wrestling Club lost' to had 36 saves, with Tech goalie 4-3, In a come-from-behlnd vic- paley's Bob Behm in the 130-Bill Hughes with 20. t . itory. ipound divisioh. ^ Auto Racing Riverside 500 — Pamelji Jones, Torrence, Calif. Daytona 500 — Mario Andretti, Nazareth, Pa. V Atlanta 500 — Cale Yarborough, Charlotte, N.C. Rebel 500 — Richard Petty, Ran-dleman, N.C. Daytona 24-hour Endurance — Lorenzo Bandini, Italy, and Chris Amon, New Zealand. Sebring, Fla., 12 - hour Endurance — Andretti and Bruce McLaren, New Zealand. Pikes Peak — Wes Vandervoort, Colorado Springs. Indianapolis 500 — A. J. Foyt, Houston, Tex. Carolina 500 — Petty. Charlotte 600 — Jim Paschal, High Point, N.C. Daytona 400 — Yarborough. Southern 500 — Petty. National 500 — Bobby Baker, Charlotte, N. C. (American 500 i- Bobby Allison, Huey town, Ala.- LeMans 24-hour Endurance — Dan Gurney and Foyt, U S. U S. Grand Prix — Jim Clark, Scotland. Mexican 1000 Rally—Vic Wilson and Ted Mangels, Costa Mesa, Calif. Dixie 500 — Dick Hutcherson, Camden, S.C' Riverside GrancPPrix — McLaren. Trenton 300 — Petty. Stardust Grand Prix — John Surtees, England. * ' , USAC—Foyt. Stocks: Don White, Keokuk, Iowa. Sprints: Greg- ■ Weld, Indianapolis. NASCAR Grand National — Petty. Modified: Carl Steven^, Rehoboth, Mass. Sportsmen: Pete Hamilton, Dedham, Mass. U.S. Road — Mark Donohue, Stoney Point, N.Y. Canadian-American — McLaren. World Formula 1 — Dennis Hulme, New Zealand. IMCA — Ernie Derr, Keokuk, Iowa. ARCA — Iggy Katona, Chicago. Baseball St. Louis Card-Boston Red World Series inals. American League Sox. National League — Cardinals. Leading batters — American: CARL YASTR2EMSKI Triple Crowd in Batting Carl Yastrzemski, Red Sox, .326. National: Bob Clemente, Pirates,.357. Home Runs — American: Yas-trzemski and Harmon Kille-brew, Twins, 44. , National: •Henry Aaron, Braves, 39. Runs batted in — American: Yastrzemski, 121. National: Orlando Cepeda, Cardinals, 111. Leading pitchers — American: Jim Lonborg, Red Sox, and f, Earl Wilson, Tigers, 22. National: Mike McCormick, Gi-«ants, 22. Earned runs--American*: Joel Horlen, White Sox, 2.06. National: Phil Niekro, Braves, 1.87. International — Richmond Braves. Playoff: Toledo Mud "Mens. Pacific Coast — Eastern: San Diego Padres. Western: Spokane Indians. Playoff: Padres. Texas — Albuquerque Dodgers. Southern — Birmingham Athletics. Dixie Series: Athletics over Dodgers. Eastern —, Binghamton Triples and ‘Elmira Pioneers. a COLLEGE AAWU - Stanford. Atlantic — Clemson. Rig Bight — ♦Oklahoma State. Big Sky — ‘Idaho. Big Ten — ‘Ohio State. East — Dartmouth. j . Mid-American — *W. Michigan. Mid-Atlantic Rider. Missouri Valley — Cincinnati. NAIA — N. Mex. Highlands. NCAA — Arizona State. Rooky Mountain—‘Colo. Stale. Southeast — Auburn. Southern — West Virginia. Southwest — *TCU and ‘Texas tied. * Western AC — Arizona State. Yankee— Massachusetts. Basketball AAU -r Akron Goodyear Wing-foots. Women: ‘Nashville Business College. -NBA—Philadelphia 76ers. COLLEGE AAWU—UCLA. Atlantic—North Carolina. Big Eight—'KANSAS. Big Sky—Montana State arid 'Gonzagq tied. Big Ten—Michigan State and Indiana tied. Ivy—Princeton. Mid-American—Tdledo. Mid-Atlantic—Temple. Missouri Valley—Louisville. r, NAIA—St. Benedict’s, Kan. NCAA—UCLA. NIT—Southern Illinois. NY Festival—’Providence. Rocky Mountain — 'Colorado State. Southeast—Tennessee. Southern—West Virginia. Southwest—'SMU. Western AC — Brigham Young and Wyoming tied. Yankee—‘Connecticut. Bowling ABC—Classic Singles: Lou Man-dragona, Miami, Fla. Doubles: Norm Meyers and Harry Smith, Los Angeles. All Events, Bob Strampe, Detroit. Team: Balancer Glove, Fort Worth, Regular Sin-Q gles: Frank Pen-y, Lorain, litsch and Ron Wheeler, Milwaukee. All Events: Gary L e w i s, Chicago. Team: Pinky’s Bowl, Milwaukee. Mas ters: Lou Scalia, Hollywood, Fla. WIBC—Singles: Mrs. Glorian Paeth, Port Huron, Mich. Doubles: Mrs. Elaine Liburdi, Union City, N. J| and Mrs. Jdan Oleske, Lyndhurst, N. J. All .Events: Mrs. Carol Miller, Milwaukee. Team: The Orphans, Los Angeles. Queens: Mildred Ignazio, Rochester, N. Y. Boxing Heavyweight—Vacant. Light Heavyweight—Dick Tiger, Nigeria: Middleweight—"Emile Griffith, New York. Welterweight — 'Curtis Cokes, * Dallas. Lightweight — 'Carols Ortiz, New York. Featherweight — 'Vicente v Saldivar, Mexico City. Bantamweight — ‘Masahiko Harado, Tokyo. Flyweight — Charchia Chionoi, Thailand. WBA: Horacio Ae-cavallo, Argentina. Football AAWU—'SoQthem California. Atlantic—Clemson Big Eight—Oklahoma. t ,-Big Ten—Indiana, Pursue and Minnesota tied. Ivy—Yale. Mid-American—Toledo and Ohio f tied. Mid-Atlantic—Temple. Missouri Valley—'North Texas State. Southeast—Tennessee. Southern—West Virginia. Southwest—Texas A & M. Western AC—‘Wyoming. Yankee—'Massachusetts. Golfing Alcan—Gay Brewer, Dallas. American Classic—Arnold Palmer, Latrobe, Pa. Atlantia Classic — Bob Charles, New Zealand. British Open—Roberto DeVin-cenzo, Argentina. Buick Open—Julihs Boros, Mid Pines, fi. C. Canadian Open — Billy Casper, San Diego. Carling Open—Casper. Citrus Open—Boros. Cleveland Open—Gardner Dickinson, Lost Tree Village, Tex. Colonial—Dave Stockton, San Bernardino, Calif. Crosby — Jack Nicklaus, Columbus, Ohio. Dallas—Bert Yancey, Chipley, Fla. Doral Open—Doug Sanders, Ce-dartown, Ga. Greensboro Open—George Archer, Gilroy, Calif! Hartford Open—Charles Sifford, Los Angeles. Hawaiian Open — Dudley Wy-song, McKinney, Tex. Hope — Tom Nieportc: Locust Valley, N. Y. Houston Chariipions ■— Frank Beard, Louisville. Jacksonville Open — Pan Sikes, Wildwood, Fla. Los Angeles Open—'Palmer. LPGA—Kathy Whitworth, Jalj JACK NICKLAUS Set U. S. Open Record N. M. Masters—Brewer. Minnesota Classic — Lou Graham, Nashville. New Orleans Open — George , Knudson, Toronto. PGA—Don January, Dallas. Philadelphia Classic—Dan Sikes. Rdyer Cup—‘U.S. Sahara — Nicklaus. Texas Open—Juan Rodriguez, Puerto Ricd. Thunderbird—Palmer. Tournament of Champions — Beard. U.S, Open — Nicklaus. Women: Catherine Lacoste, France. Westchester Classic—Nicklaus. Westchester Classic—Nicklaus. Western Open—Nicklaus. World Cup — 'JU S. Individual: Palmer. World Series—Nicklaus. AMATEUR America’s Cup—'U.S. British—Bob Dickson, McAlester tp Okla. U.S. — Dickson. Women: Miss Lou Dill, Deer Park, Tex. USGA Junior — John Crooks, Winston - Salem, N.C. Girls: Elizabeth Story, Oriskany, N. Y. Walker Cup—U.S. COLLEGE AAWU — 'Southern California. Atlantic—Wake Forest. Big Eight—'Oklahoma, State. Big Sky—'Montana. Big Ten—Purdue. East—'Penn State. Ivy—'Yale. Mid^American—Ohio. Mid-Atlantic—Btrdcnell. Missouri Valley—Memphis State NAIA—'SW Louisiana. NCAA — Houston. Individual: Hale Irwin, Colorado. Rocky Mountain — 'Colorado Mines. Southeast—*LSU. Southern—‘Davidson. Southwest—Texas A & M, Wes’tern AC—New Mexico. • * Yankee—Rhode Island. Hockey Stanley Cup — Toronto Maple ■ Leafs. National League—Chicago Black Hawks. Leading Scorer—Stan M i k i t a, Black Hawks, 97 points. American League — East: Her-shey, Bears. West: Pittsburgh, Hornets. P.layoff: Hornets. Western—'Portland BuCkaroos. Playoff: Seattle Totems.' Central—Oklahoma City Blazer Playoff: Brazers. COLLEGE Big Ten—Michigan State. Ivy—’Cornell. NCAA—Cornell. Racing American Derby—Damascus. Aqueduct—Damascus. Aqueduct Futurity — Captain’s Gig. Arlington Classic—Dr. Fager. Arlington-Washington Futurity— T.V. Commercial and Vitriolic. , Belmont—Damascus. Champagne—Vitriolic. duPont—Exceedingly. Flamingo—Reflected Glory. Florida Derby—In Reality, Garden State—Bugged. Gardenia—Gay Matelda. Gulfstream—Pretense. Hawthorne Gold Cup—Dr. Fager. • Hollywood Derby—Tumble Wind Gold Cup: ‘Native Diver. Juvenile: Jim White. Hopeful—What a Pleasure. International—Fort Marcy. Jersey Derby—In Reality. Jockey Club Gold Cup—Damascus. Kentucky Derby—Proud Clarion Matron—^Queen of the Stage. New Hampshire Classic — Dr. Fager. Pimlico-Laurel Futurity—Vitriolic. "Preakncss—Damascus. Santa Anita Derby — Ruken. Handicap—Pretense. .Sapling—Subpet. ! Seiima—Syrian Sea. Suburban-^Buckpasser. Travers—Damascua. United Nations^-Fllt-to. Widner—Ring Twice. Woodward—Damascus Horse of the Year—Damascus. Leading Money Winner—Damascus, 8817,941. HARNESS RACING Can Pace—Meadow Paige. Dexter Trot—Flamboyant. , Futurities—Westbury: Fulla Napoleon. Yonkers: Pomp. ! i Hambletonian—Speedy Streak -International Trot—Roquepine, France. "Pace: Romeo Hanover. mm Little Brown Jug—Best of AH. United Nations Trot — Perfect Freight. Realization Pace—Romeo Han-, over. Trot: Carlisle. Sheppard Pace—Fulla Napoleon Swimming COLLEGE AAWU—‘Sduthem California Atlantic—'North Carolina State Big Eight—Iowa State. Big Sky—'Montana. Bit Ten—’Indiana. Ivy—'Yale. L Mid-American—Miami, Oxford, Ohio* Mid-Atlantic—Bucknell. Missouri Valley—'Cincinnati. NAIA—-Claremont-Mudd. . ' NCAA—Stanford. Rocky Mountain — ‘Western State. Southeast—'Florida. Southern—‘East Carolina. Southwest—'SMU. Western AC—'Utah. Tennis National Singles — John New-combe, Australia. Women: Mrs. Billie Jean King, Long Beach, Calif. National Indoor—‘Charles Pas-arell, Puerto Rico./Women: ‘Mrs. Kjng. Wimbledon — Newcombe. -Women: 'Mrs. King. -* t* Wightman Cup—'United States COLLEGE AAWU—‘Southern California. Atlantic—'North Carolina. Big Eight—‘Oklahoma. Big Sky—Hdaho. Big Ten—"Michigan. East—Yale. Mid-American—‘Toledo. Mid-Atlantic—'Swarthmore. Missouri Valley — No. Texas State. NAIA—‘Redlands. NCAA—'Southern California. Rocky Mountain — 'Colorado State. Southeast—Mississippi State. Southern—‘Davidson. Southwest—'Rice. Western AG—Arizona. Track AAU — Outdoor and Indoor: 'Southern California Striders. INDOOR 60 Yards—'Bill Gaines, Mullica Hill, N. J. 60 High Hurdles—'Willie Davenport, Southern U. 600—Jim Kemp, Long Beach TC. 1,000 — Preston Davis, Long Beach. 1 One Mile — Sam Bair, Kent State. Three Miles—Tracy Smith, Unattached. * r JIM RYUN World’* Fastest Miles Mile Relay - San Jose State (Ken Shackelford, John Bam-bury, Lee Evans, Tommy Smith). ,r < Mile Walk — Don Denoon, SC Striders. Long Jump—Bob Beamon, Texas Western TC. High Jump—John Rambo, Long Beach. Triple Jump—Art Walker, SC Striders. Pole Vault—’Bob Seagren, SC Strider^. Pole Vault-r'Bob Seagren, SC Striders. Shot Puf—George Wood, Southern Illinois. . 35-Pound Weight — Ed Burke, . SC Striders, , . “4 Retained Title ' > Q ^THJfi PONTIAC PKJtiSS. MUJNJJAY, JANUAKT 1, 19Q8 Titans, f*i . AP Wirephoto TITLE-BOUND—Tom Richardson (50) and Ralph Brisker (10) beat a couple of Niagara University players for this rebound in the first half of their game in the finals of the Motor City Classic Saturday night in Detroit, Detroit won, 102-91. Niagara players are Greg Hudecki (42) and Calvin Murphy (23). Ready to help out are Detroit’s Jerry Swartz-fagef (40) and A1 McIntosh (20). Michigan High School Basketball By The Associated Press Portland St. Patrick . Christmas Todrnamant Championship Carson City 47, Wllllamston 64 Consolation Portland St. Patrick 77, DansvWo 61 Memphis Tournament Championship Port Huron Catholic 81, Harbor Beach Our Lady of Lake Huron 57 Consolation Dryden 55, Memphis 50 , Yale Tournament Championship Capac 65, Imlay City 64 Consolation Brown City 68, Armada 61 Yale 81, Richmond 56 Northwest Suburban Tournament Championship ~ Ypslianti 53, Livonia Bentley 50 Consolation North Farmington 81, Farmington 65 Southfield 60, Livonia Stevenson 57 Berkley 68, Redford Union 49 Chelsea Tournament Championship Stockbrldge 71. Dexter 60 Consolation Ypslianti Lincoln 84, Manchester 64 Hanover-Horton 65, Camden-Frontier 48 Chelsea 767 Brlston 70 By The Associated Press Tournaments 9UEBN CITY LOS ANGELES CLASSIC Championship UCLA 104, Wyoming 71 Third Place f Iowa 80, St. Louis 77 (overtime) Fifth Place Tennessee 85, Utah State 66 Seventh Place Southern California 78, Minnesota 65 FAR WEST CLASSIC Championship North Carolina 68, Oregon St. 61 Third Place Utah 85, Washington St. 78 Fifth Place Princeton 77, Stanford 66 Seventh Place Oregon 70. Texas 57 AMERICAN LEGION TOURNEY Championship Texas ASM 77, San Francisco 75 Third Place Seattle U. 75, Colorado St. 68 Winston-Salem Holiday Festival ‘ DETROIT (AP) - Calvin Murphy, Niagara’s sophomore scoring machine,, finally met his match in Ralph Brisker, but still managed to [break two Motor City, basketball tournament records and win the Most Valu-j able Player award. ^Brisker, a 6-foot-2 senior guard, was assigned by Detroit1 Coach Bob Calihan to handle Murphy, who carried a 45-point■ scoring average into the tournament. * * * -l Mlirphy wound up with 29( points, his lowest output of the jseasoh, and Detroit walloped (the Purple Eagles, 102-91, Saturday. MAKES SWITCH The cat - quick, 5-foot-10 Niagara guard hit 19 points in the first half, 12 of thereafter Coach Jim Maloney switched him to forward and out of reach of Brisker. ★ * ★ The Titans switched to a zone defense in the second half, and, Murphy, playing with four fouls,I didn’t score another point until the final eight minutes and 13 seconds of /play. He hit 13 of 38 field goal attempts and three of four foul shots, However, Murphy broke two Irish Lineman Sparks East 11 tourney scoring records, hitting 41 ppints in Niagara’s opening night victory over Valparaiso and totaling 70 points id both games. Both records ^were held by former Titan Bill Ebben. Detroit fell behind early but extended a 52 - 47 halftime bulge with six straight points* at the. onset of the second half and never trailed again. ★ ★ ★ Larry, Salci, who hit 10 of 18 floor shotjf, topped Detroit with 27 points and Brisker and Jerry Swartzfager each added 21. t ALL TOURNEY Murphy was named to the all-tournament team along with Salci,. Brisker, Detroit’s Tortt Richardson, Dick Jones of Valparaiso and Manny Leaks of Ni-gara. Richardson tied Dave DeBusschere’s two - game tour-neyrebounding record of 47, including 25 against Niagara. * * . ★ Valparasio defeated winless Portland 63-52 for third place. The Crusaders overcame a slow start to take a 20-28 halftime lead and hand Portland its 17th' straight loss, including 11 this1 year. Jones topped Valpo with' 25 points and Jessey Perry was high for Portland with 13. Coach Defends Strategy in Tying Grid Bowl Foe ~ AF Wlrephoto QUARTERBACK IN TROUBLE — Penn Stdte signal caller Tom Sherman (25) is hit hard by Florida State defend sive end Floyd Ratliff (85) and the football pops free during Saturday’s Gator Bowl J.7-17 tie at Jacksonville, Fla. The Nittany ‘Lions’ Charlie Pittman comes up too late to prevent Florida State’s recovering of the fumble. Hardy Leads Defense in 16-14 Triumph Miscues Help Miners Take Bowl Crown Tennessee in Bowl Tills JACKSONVILLE, • Fla. (AP) — Monday morning quarterbacks will second guess Coach Bill Peterson of Florida State for a long time because he went for the 17-17 tie with Penn State in the tiatdr Bowl game Saturday. Peterson defended his choice doggedly, and his Seminole players backed him up. They felt the choice was tie or lose when Grant Guthrie hoofed a 25-yard field goal 15 seconds before the final gun. GOES FOR TIE But it was only the night before the game that Peterson, in a casual conversation, said he’d hever go for a tie in a bowl game. Early in the second ha went for the tie and kicked an wrtra point that gave FSU a 37-37 deadlock with Alabama. That decision probably had a bearing on giving theTrZ-l record team a spot in the Gator Bowl. ★ ■ * -★ vg. Never dreaming the decision would come up so soon, Peterson said he’d never do that in a bowl game. What changed his mind? “The way our kids came back,” he explained. “That was the whole thing that influenced my-thinking, I didn’t want to see that comeback wasted.” A it Although FSU had marched from Its 31 to the Penn State eight in the closing three minutes, two passes had failed and it was fourth down with five yards to go. First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing .Yardaga Return Yardagu Passes Punts Fumbles Yards Penalized Penn St. Florida St. UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 Min. From Downtown Pontiac QUEEN CITY Championship Drake. 85, Canlsius 48 Cansetetion Rice 61, Iona 60 QUAKER CITY Championship TOfnple 83, St. Francis, Pa., f 5 ' < Third Placa Duquesne 76, Wisconsin 66 Fifth Placa Championship Gannon 80, Adelphl 48 Consolation Central ^St.» Ohio, 97, :New Hampshire KODAK 0 , , ,, ..ChampIs... C^nell S4> Rochester 5. . ,y Consolation Holy Crosi *6, Navy 77 CLASS l< plonship ter 57, ECAC HOLIDAY FESTIVAL Championship Columbia 60rSt. John's, N. Y., 55 Third Place Louisville 81, Boston College 74 SUGAR BOWL Championship Vanderbilt 80, Davidson 67 Consolation Mississippi 65, Hardln-Sirhmons 63 Consolation Clomsbn 78, Furmaa 53 ' BIO EIGHT ChaniBlMMMp \ Nebraska 66, Kansas St. 62 Third Placa Oklahoma St. 65, Colorado 59 Fifth Placa Kansas 63, Missouri 47 Sevtnth Placa Oklahoma 76, Iowa St. 61 ALL-COLLEGE Champlohiitip y 91,-Brlghar Thin) Placa Auburn 76, Virginia Tech 61 Fifth Place Fordham 01, XOVler, Ohio, 70 PURDUE-CALUMET TOURNEY Championship Purdue-Calumet, Ind., 96, Grand Valley St., Mich., 75 MOTOR CITY Championship Detroit 102, Niagara 91 Consolation Valparaiso 63, Portland, Oro., 52 EVANSVILLE INVITATIONAL Championship Evansville 76, Florida St. 67 EL PASO, Tex. (AP) - University of Texas-El Paso coach Bobby Dobbs says it was hard (nosed football and not Rebel SAN FRANCISCO (JB — Kev-1 fumblitis that sent his Miners to Championship Hardy's indecision about his a 14-7 Sun Bowl victory over (JNION COLLEGE HOLIDAY TOURNEY Final Round Hope 68, MIT 60 Lehigh 52, Union 46 RAINBOW CLASSIC Championship Houston 45, N. Texas State 43 Third Place Marquette 80, Northwestern 67 Fifth Placa Hawaii 80, Ohio State 76 Seventh Place Bradley 72, Submarine Forces Pacific 1 COTTOH BOWL Championship Midwestern, Tex.* 84, Texas Wesleyan Third Placa J E. Texas Baptist 60, E. Texas St. 5? Fifth Placa Southwest Texas 84, Houston Baptist 57, ’ i. Consolation Semifinals Southwest Texas 96, Tarleton 68 Houston Baptist 84, Austin Col leg# 65 I future in professional sports; favored Mississippi. -I__1__1 in lllA ^ ^ ended Saturday in the East-West Shrine football game. OW Miss lost three of its four 6-foot-5, 275-pound fumbles and had a pass inter- Wayne state 103. Western Ontario *4 /Michigan 84, Northern Illinois 77' , /Michigan Lutheran 105, Cedarville (Ohio) 18 Motor City Baskettbalt Tournament . Championship r Detroit 102, Niagara 91 .Consolation Hardy, a three-sport star at Notre Dame was voted the Jack Spaulding award as the game’s outstanding defensive player in leading the East to a 16-14 victory. Hardy, a baseball right-fielder, said he has deliberated between pro baseball and football. But, “I kind of think this game settles my mind on football,” he said. “You’ve got to think about it after having a day like cepted with one bobble on its own 22 setting up the winning Ei Paso touchdown in the 33rd annual classic Saturday played before a record crowd of 34,865 persons. “Fumble recoveries were big breaks for Us,” said Dobbs. I “But if a team is really hit hard, they are going to have a few fumbles and our kids were really hitting them hard.” - * 7 * * ' 0 The El Paso; defense, led by PASADENA, Calif. (UPD — A [Oklahoma square off tonight in bright sun started to burn off; the Orange Bowl for the tightest an early-morning fog today as a (fit of the New Year’s football crowd of 100,000 converged on (extravaganzas, the Rose Bowl for the Newj ★ ★ ★ Year’s Day football game be-| Symbolic of a game that has tween Indiana University and everything will be the nose-to-favored University of Southern hose confrontation of two AIL California. ... Americas — Tennessee’s offen- I The game pitted the co-cham- sive center Bob Johnson and pions of the Big Ten against Oklahoma’s defensive middle the Pacific Eight kings and na- guard, Granville Liggins. tional champion Trojans of j . Tennessee, ranked second in USC. (the nation, is faWed by six I Indiana had never appeared it>s in the Rose Bowl before while an Oklahoma oilman of that, j USC is making its 15th appear- * ance in the famed stadium and! DALLAS, ,Tpx. (AP) It was had a record of 10 victories and difficult 1° build up a hot rival-, four losses. |ry f°r today’s Cotton Bowl foot-! I ball game between Alabama! and Texas A&M. There has been rain and pros-! Southern California remained a steady 14-point favorite to burst the Indiana! success bubble. The Trojans’ favoritism (stemmed from two factors — O. [this.” The All-America defensive ... end, who, also punted for the! second-team All-America line East threw West Quarterback lacker Fred Carr and defensive RHHM Gary Beban five times for 44 halfback Eugene Epps, held the UniT&$}-£ Round-RobinreBuketi»ii (yards in losses. Beban was the ®"cce ■*** pects of ice but Cotton Bowl folks hopefully clung to a weath-j -—f----------—------— - -• dr report that said it would be J. Simpson and one of the na-J coid—in the* 30’s—but with no tion’s greatest defenses. rain or ice at game time. There j ORANGE BOWL j will be 75,504 fans will be in the' MIAMI (UPD — Tennessee and stands for the 1 p.m. (CST) ----------------—^—----------kickoff. Tournament Schenectady, N.Y. Final Round [game s ! player. First Downs outstanding offensive!to only six first downs and 38 yards’rushing. Punt Return Ace Paces North Win West 99 Hope College 68, MIT 60 Sugar Bowl Basketball Tournament * New Orleans _ .. ^ 1 ■ Memphis State 73. Michigan Stata 57 Rushing Yardage Purdue-Calumet Tournament i Passing Yardage At Calumet, III. Return Yardage Championship ! Easfes Purdue - Calumet 96, Grand Valley ,, I State, Mich., 75 " Yards Penalized ,JJ. 7 .ij Consolation jSj®! ....................0 7 0 7^14 Eurkea. III., 107, St. Mary's of Niles. W?’st_FG Brady 19 East—Taylor 37 pass from Garnto (kick First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Return Yardage Passes ,2-24-1/ 17—31-1 ^Ss pena,iJed Miss. El Paso ^ la Fumbles Lost HOCKEY RPI 4, Mchlgan Tech 3 Big Ten Tournament Championship Minnesota 3, Michigan 1 Consolation Michigan State 4, Wisconsin : failed) West—Moses 37 pass from Beban (Lee kick) East—Davis 4 run (Brady kick) West—Odle 5 pass from Beban (Lee kick) Attendance 48,000. i Two State Preps on All-America 11 : & , • ., * * . NBA SCORES Windsor Raceway Won Lost Pet. Botiim Philadelphia ... 30 9 .769 Boston . 25 10 .714 3 Detroit . 21 1 19 .525 1 • 91* Cincinnati . 16 20 .444 12V* Baltimore 14 20 .412 13V*- New York 15 24 .385 15 Western Division St. Louis 27 11 .711 Son Francisco 28 .66/ . 1 Los Angeles . 22 17 .564 5 V* Chicago x2 27 .308 15Vj San Diego II 30 .268 17 V* Seattle 11 3J .262 IB Saturday'! 1 Results Los Angeles 106, St. Louis 104 Philadelphia 122, Detroit 107 Sunday's Results San Frvclsco 126, Seattle 124 Los Angeles 147, San Diego 118 Today's Games St. Louis at Seattle Baltimore at Chicago Tuesday's Games Baltimore vs. Detroit at New York Cincinnati at New York Boston at Chicago Lo$ Angeles at San Francisco TONIGHT'S ENTRIES 1st—$800 Claiming Pace; 1 Milet Jimmy Storm S. V. J. Junie Dorwood Lady Roberta Shadydale Gayboy Feme Johnston Dark Demon Magic Bonnie Rose ’ace; 1 Mile: Caliber Direct Irish Direct C. South Side Boy Colorado Ray Worldly Callie Bewitching Bob Flo's Son 3rd—$900 Claiming Trot; 1 Mila: Sneaky Pet# Sharchtowh Mr. Kuryfowka Hodgen's Star Jett Ida Titan Song Prince Eddie Bobby North 4th—$900 Claiming Pace; 1 Mile: Shirley Express Aggression Royal Victoria Chub Volo Spring Creek Edna Lady Eden N. Trefoil Gin , Skip McKlyo 5th—$1000 Claiming Pace; 1 Mile: Rendezvous Gold Golden Ernie Maud's Cookie Gordon Lee Thaddeus Frosty Travel Eclipse C. Key Car Llth 6tl>—$1400 Cond. Pace; 1 Milt: Pulaski Jet Terry Ainn Prince Khan Vic Greer | Northco Scotty I. C. Rainbow Doc Rogers 7th—$1200 Cond. Pace; 1 Mila: Guy B. Scott Chief Ar'mbro l. R. Win McCreary Pride Patty Mist Dream Adios Flashy Flic Sonny B. Russell 8th—Si tOO Cond. Trot; 1 Milo: i Cyclone Hazel Star Pupil [Trudy Hal Alex Hardy i Easy Ed Ace Spirit ! Fairside Son Frisco Guest 9th—$1000 Claiming Paco; 1 Milo: 1 Paramount Allen Weyblrd J Hanley Lad Trumpet Floyd's Honor Queen's Nolan Garland Gay %Miss Bud Grattan National League last Division. results Saturday W L T Pts. GF GA FIRST RACE $1200; CONDITIONED 18 10. 9 45 110 99 (PACE; ONE MILE: Phylis Ann Mite 13 70 6.70 6.00 Dearborn's Hal 6.60 4.80 Patriotic 4.00 SECOND RACE $1200; CONDITIONED PACE; ONE MILE: Pedro Wilson 4.20 2.70 2.60 Brown Hound 3fra' 2.60 Untouchable Pick ,l 6.00 DAILY DOUBLE (45) PAID $50.50. THIRD RACE $900; CLAIMING PACE; ONE MILE: 7 It , Willie'S Filly /11.50 4.30 3(30 Silver's Judge 3,00 Johnnie Thunderblfd ( 1 FOURTH RACE $3000; PACE/ ONE MILE: Forty Nlner Lightning Lad Freckle F#ce FIFTH RACE $1600; PACE; ONE MtLE: Harry Kerry 76,50 31.20 11 40 Timmy North 4.601 3.60 Mamie Queen 4.10 OUINELLA (3-5) PAID $116.00. SIXTH RACE $2400; PACE; ONE MILE: Grandiloquence Sunday* Red Amber Jet SEVENTH. RACE $1 PACE; ONE MILE: Kelvin Groove King's Black Joe Acewav Captain ■ NEW YORK (AP) — Michigan has placed two players on the three - team, 33-man All American high school football team announced by Parade Magazine. Jackson High School tackle George Trujillo made the conditioned!first team. 1.90 8.70 4.00l ★ ★ ★ 1 2,0 3301 Boy City Central’s end, Tom h claiming Huiskens, made the second 2.50 team. The squad was selected the recommendations of 4 50 6.70 4.oo:on eigh'th lr<ace4I$28M/° conditioned [hundreds of high school and col- FReside °Ad(iosM 1L ' 52.70 8 40 , 5.60 COacheS. Royal Adios 2.90 2.80 Lady Ohio 4.70 NINTH RACE $5000; INVITATIONAL PACE; ONE MILE: Fanny Mite 11.50 4.20 3.00 Bye time 2.90 2.50 Mr. Gaiphone ’ 2.70 TENTH RACE $1300; CLAIMING PACE; ONE MILE: Mr. Whislcers Senator Hudson Scott 3.20 ACTOR (4-7) PAID $124.60. 11.10 5 70 4.00 MONTGOMERY, Ala. W -All America Dick Anderson of Colorado scored two touchdowns on long punt returns Saturday to give the North a 22-16 victory in the Blue-Gray football game. The 6-2, 198-pound defensive back from Boulder, Colo., scampered 69 yards for one score in the first period and 62 yards for another touchdown in the final quarter. Blue Gray First Downs 9 t5 Rushing Yardaga 21 60 Passing yardaga 154 210 Return Yardaga 219 216 Passes ~ - 17—42—1 13-23—2 Punts 9—44 6—42 Fumbles Lost 0 3 Yards Penalized 25 10 Blue ................. 3 7 3 9—22 Gray ............. 0 10 6 0—16 Blue—FG Azzaro, Notre Dame, 26 Blue—Andersdn, Colorado, 69 punt return (Azzaro kick) Gray—FG, South, Ark., 35 Gray—Hyatt, Auburn, 58 pass from South (South kick) Blue—FG, Azzaro 32 • Gray—Hyatt 12, pass from South (pass failed) Blue—Anderson 62, punt return (Azzaro kick) Blue—Safety (Duhon, Tulane, tackled In end zone) Attendance 23,350. NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) — Wyoming’s Cowboys and the Tigers of Louisiana State met as strangers today on Sugar Bowl turf, but actually they know! each other quite well^-in a way.' Both squads have intently' studied each other’s game films since the Sugar Bowl selection; committee chose LSU and the undefeated, seventh-ranked Cowboys for the annual football classic. , Prep Slate SPORTS CALENDAR High School Baskttboll Tuesday W’aterford Our Lady at Ferndala St. James ..! St. Francis da Sales at Pontiac Catholic ■ Royal Oak St. Mary at Detroit St. Rita1 Royal Oak Shrine at Bishop Gallagher Brother Rice at University of Detroit High - High School Swimming J Wednesday Pontiac Northern at Flint Northwestern State College Basketball Tuesday 4 Michigan at Houston Indiana at Detroit Kalamazoo at Franklin (Ind.) Highland Lakes (OCC) at Kellogg Central Michigan .at Hillsdale Michigan Lutherari^at Olivet Chicago Loyola at ^Western Michigan .Macomb Community' at Auburn Hills 1 (Hazel Park HS) EX A1 . 19 11 4 4? 127 99 ..... 17 12 6 40 104 78 16 13 6 38 117 106 » 16 13 6 38 99 93 14 1 4 8 36 9$ 85 West Division 17 12 5 39 85 71 16 17 3 35 93 111 13 T7 5 12 15 7 12 20 3 II 23- 6 •turelay's Results 7 Oakland 0 St. Louis 1 a 5, Boston 4 3, New York 3, tie 86 97’ 31 75 95 27 67 92 20 f4 99 2.80 5.10 INVITATIONAL Detroit S, Pittsburgh 2 Philadelphia 2, LosJAngeles i Sunday's Results New York 4, Toronto 0 7.30 Detroit 6, Boston 4 Chicago 3, Oakland o Philadelphia 9, Los Angeles 1 No games m Today's Gi scheduled. 2.50 2.80 2.80 CONDITIONED IF YOU HAD CALLED WO 2-5660 YESTERDAY. YOU WOULD BE STARTING A CAREER IN ELECTRONICS TODAY. BETTER START DIALING. the government may pay you attend E.l.T. Classes now forming. Do yourself a favor . . . Call or writ* tor information today. Your new career may start tomorrow. Electronics Institute of Technology 2473 WOODWARD AVE. DETROIT, 48201 WO 2-5660 Get The L^CKN^G Deal 1968 Bronco Wagon 289 V8 engine, Heavy duty equipment, Limited slip axle, Mud and snow tires, Cigar lighter, Free running hubs. s $470795 JACK LONG FORD SALES 215 Main St., 651-9711 Roohaster, Mich. Announcing THE FIRST OF OUR 1968.PONTIAC DEMOS Now On Sale 1968 Catalina Station Wagon 1968 Ventura 2-Door Hardtop 1968 Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop Discounted up to $900.00! m JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 M24, Lake Orion 693-6266 DID YOU CHOOSE Y00R DOCTOR ON PRICE RL0HE? /oj Be Just As Wise On Transmission V- Repair Service! FOR: • Honesty • Guaranteed Workmanship • Years Of Experience Call Qn One Of These Transmission Specialist Of Pontiac PBAYTOII TRANSMISSION ^^SERVICE 2987 Dixie Highway at ScotTLk. Rd. FRALEY’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE 190 West Montcalm RELIABLE TRANSMISSION COMPANY 922 Oakland Avenue PONTIAC TRANSMISSION SERVICE * 3525 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. BEATTY’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE 197 South Saginaw Street THE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS ...BRANDY SPORTSQUIZ Q: What was the name of the first team to win La Crosse’s famed Mann Cup? A. The first team to win the cup was the ■ Young Torontos, in!910. SPECIAL OFFER Send 25* for your copy of The Christian Brothers Official Sports Yearbook) 96 pages of the latest information on all the major sports. A 50# value. Wrltei Brandy Sportsquiz, Box 15213, San Francisco, California 94115. The Christian Brothers took a masterful stand when they created a brandy of quality without compromise. You’ll enjoy its lightness and the round mellow taste. It’S clearly America** favorite; THE MASTERFUL BRANDY. Om Christian Intlitri of California SO Proof. Solo Distributor*! Fromm inO Slchot, Inc. Son Froncloco, Collfomlo THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JANUARY 1, 1968 Concession lids ! RQBlN MAU)NE By Bob Lubber* WEST *AKJ ¥748 ♦ K J 9 8 ♦ KJ4 . d NORTH 1 ♦ 87653 VK86 ♦ 8 ♦ AQ6 3 ' 1 EAST, • ♦ Q10 8 2 * ¥ J 10 .5 ♦ 74 ♦ 10 9 7 5 SOUTH (D) ♦ 4 VAQ92 ♦ A Q 10 5 3 2 ♦ 82 Both vulnerable* North East South 1* 1N.T. Pass Pass 2 ♦ Dble Rdble Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ K West LANSING (AP) - The Stafe Conservation Department Parks Division Is accepting sealed bids Oswald: “I also b)$ two dia-in and was.Ifft with the ace- untd ?* *eaS~ monds and West also doubled queen-ten of diamonds, and aHal Hart wick Pines, Lakepprt me, but there was a difference*" heartf There was no way for the and Sleeper state parks. Conces-Jlm: “There sure was. When defense to keep me from making sions up for bidding grossed you go. doubled, the B os s two of my diamonds for over- sajes year oI about 120,000 (Mary Zifa Jacoby) redoubled.” j tricks." v at Hartwtck Pines, more than Oswald: ‘‘It is nice to knowi Jim: ‘ Routine, as you say,' . ■ ., ' a - that after almost 38 years she However at my table South only:at Lakeport and nearly I still has confidence.in my bid- managed to make three odd.” $5,000 at Sleeper. ding’' ... t -™ T'*r THE BEWER HALF Jim: .“It takes a lot of confidence in both your bidding and. dummy play to redouble with a! singleton trump, but both were! justified this time.” Oswald: “fhe play to make! two overtricks' was almost routine. Spades were opened and continued. I ruffed the secondl spade and promptly took thej ■ .——------------------------ Ljclub finesse. It was sure to sue-. By Oswald and James Jacoby jceed because West was marked i Jim: "Another year has gone with just about all-missing high by. Since 1967 is the year inwards. which you broke the 10,000 Mas- ^ "Then LTUffed another spade, 5 ter Point bar- ted • c,u^° s. a CBe’ rier.it might be ath,rd .flub ftJrS l„_ . hearts. The suit went around devote this three times- 50 1 had eight tricks JACOBY week to some of the hands you [liked best last (year.” -Oswald: “How about the hand \ J. written up Sports’ 111 u ♦+CRRDJ<?/*k,44 Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 1 A Pass Pass 2¥ 3 ♦ Pass Pass 3 ♦ Pass Pass . 4 ♦ ; Pass Pass 4¥ ? You, South, hold: grated that helped the Jacoby j 42WJ 44 K109543 *7543 family win the Dallas 'team that put me over that What do'-you do now? ■■■I I I A—Double: They may make game that put me over that this but if they have 10,000 mark?” j trapped you beautifully. You do „ .... .. . , . have two trumps, a singleton Jim: “You would bring up that one. I remember that I doubled two diamonds and South proceeded to make his contract with an overtrick. It Was a Cinch that we had lost the board.” spade and the king of diamonds as defense. « TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding two hearts, West doubles, fast passes. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow sociaies, cuwotruis. _ . . (Copyright, mi, Gan. Foa. Corp.) Al Daily manac fly United Press International Today is Monday, Jan. 1, the first day of .1968 with 365 to follow. This is New Year’s Day, the start of leap year. The moon\ is between its. n$w phase and first quarter. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Mars, Saturn and Jupiter. Born on Jan. 1, 1735. was Revolutionary War, Hero Paul Revere and in 1895, FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover. . ■* * ‘ * On this day in history: In 1863, President Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, In 1942, the United States and some 25 other nations signed a declaration In Washington forming the nucleus of the United Nations. In 1952, anti-British riots broke out in' the Suez Canal zone following Egypt’s decision to abrogate the Anglo-Egyptian treaty of 1936. * ★ * , In 1966, New York transit workers went out on a strike that lasted 12 days. The iongest nonstop commercial airline run is 6,462 miles from Buenos Aires to, Madrid. The flight takes 1D4 hours. By SYDNEY OMARR meeting may be •'W£J For Tutsdav -of what occurs behind-tne-scenes. b« "Tht wise man controls his dostiny... sensitive to feelings of others. You can »«55g“m»S*Win allies-If sincere. (Member this. Act! ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 1*): Utilize orlgi- accordingly, nallty to accomplish desires. Much of * ★ # what you want Is available. If your na- if TOMORROW IS YOUR BIRTHDAY lural pioneering instincts come to fore, you tend, to be moody, artistic. This year you’re a winner. I n vest In your own VOu will complete ma|or cycle. You grow abilities. up In many ways. Situation which has TAURUS (Apr. 30-May 30): Strive tor been a burden goes out of vour life. , compromise yv i t h stubborn individual. ★ ★ ★ Some who appear to oppose VOU are GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high merely ednfused. Prestige on the line. tor AQUARIUS, PISCES, ARIES. Special Don’t become flustered. Many In author- wor(J (Q V|RGG. cement relationships with Ity are on your side. . associates, coworkers GEMINI (May 31-June 30): Good lunar icunvriolit. ms. aspect accents communication from afar, travel plans, adventures of the mind. Means learn, envision potential. Don’t feel. trapped by circumstances. Create your own future. CANCER (June 31-July 33): Money, Investments, the ambitions of mate or partner are spotlighted. Be aware of. subtle nuances. Others are Intense. Do not proceed without complete and full understanding: LEO (July 23-Aug. 32): Change, travel, variety accented. Romance is in the air tor you. You'think of marriage, of close links. You reach out tor love, affection, comprehension of opposite sex. I’M VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Give attention to health, work routine. You may get message that some of your relatives! are on the move. Key is ’to strive for harmony and moderation. LIBRA (Sept. *3-Oct. 32): Favorable! moon aspect promotes romance, creativ- j ity, successful dealings with children. Key Is to know difference between promise and deception. Get to the heart of mat-tors. SCORPIO (Oct. 2£Nov. 21): Practical affairs dominate. You could make decision connected with family, home, property. Stick to. your guns. Any sign of weakness couid be detrimental to basic cause. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): In travel, taka familiar roads, paths. No day to change or challenge the unknown. Stick to. facts. Accent on visits, relatives,, messages. Be versatile but don’t scatter | forces. „ _ . I CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1»): Fresh outlook should bo welcomed with regard to possessions, finances. Accept challenge. Get money's worth. Emphasis on what you own, what your earning potential is likely to be. _. ! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. II): Emphasis on how you react to surprising events, challenges. Strive to formulate opinions,. policy. Means find out where you are going and why. Speak up. PISCES (Feb. )9-Mar. 20): Clandestine YEAH, I’M , (SOIkJSTOBUy SKIBAK1PA PAIR OF SKI POLES WITH THE MOMEV I got for CHRISTMAS/ MIMES ALREADY SPENT/ I HAP TO BUY-1MEAM, I BOUGHT A SHIRT, A PAIR Of* SHOES, AKl' TWO TICS --Ahl* I STILL HAP EKIOOBH LEFT FOR A LOLLIPOP/y-r-r-r-i--T I’LL CATCH IT FOR BEIW'SARCASTIC, SUT MAYBE NEXT TIME I SET A FEW BUCKS SHE'LL PQ30ME SOUL-SEARjCHIM’ AW’ LET ME SPEMP IT THE WAV' I WANT TO/ m m mm THE OLP COLLEGE TRY BOARDING HOUSE l-l i mt w H»A N». TM 1^ m. >«. on - By Howie Schneider ^ DR. BRITEBITE A IS STARTIAJG TO ) « OH, REALLY? I (LOUDER IL/HAT HE’S Go/AJG TO -v”I AW; 4 ^ADVERTISE ASA/AJl^/ f N^PO THIS TIME / -/ HEALTH * % J IS WffXT TO ^ ^ Mn MEK3TAL \ J. -0 ’ HEALTH v l 3^ _i hL i V NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM [IT WOULD ‘3TILL 6E 60IN6ON MUST YOU LOUT^TWATMUST HAVE)}IF WALDOS WATCH FOOTBALL ALL DAY ? YOU KNOW HOW1’ BOTHERED I AM, BY £ IN1US HEADACHES / BEEN ^OME PARTY AT THE ,OWL5 CLUB^-HE'S STILL NOT OYER IT/ WIFE HADN'T J PLAYED POOL COME AFTER’ HIM/ ,\ Sounds like a <£WIN6lN6 PARTY= w A HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM URN KNEE 'BUSH MILLER TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom Ryan TO BEGIN THE NEW YEAR, I AM INITIATING A NEW ERA OF JUSTICE IN GRIMY GULCHi FIRST, IN KEEPING WITH THE LATEST TECHNIQUES IN PROGRESSIVE CALABOOSERY, I HAVE RENAMED MY JAILHOUSEi =m GRIMY GULCH Institute^ ~r~ OF ; CRIMINAL— DETENTION &_ AND----- IfEHABIUTAnON <1 DONALD DUCK JsBl ®UCKi.,Ey I DIDN'T VOU, LIKE THE PICTURE?. VOU MEAN ) WHEN HE S CAUGHT THE RUSTLERS *—Y“ GRIMY GULCH INSTITUTE] .CRIMINAL^ DETENTION. ' AND jai WEHABILIWKM By Walt Disney 9 c '/Ql ‘ WHEN I s REAAEAABEREO VOU PAID FOR v THE TICKETS/ Wgli rbMMV VlmM Rigku H*eer»G4 * ; .) - p: • • ••• _ s *• ' ... • •• . > " ■ • , THE POMT1 AC i'KKSS, MONDAY, JAN UAKY 1, 1068 Ham Operator Hears 'POW Yule Greeting' irr Pontiac, Mrs. Otto A. Graff BARSTOW, Calif. (AP) - Service for Mrs. Otto A. What were believed to be short-. (Gladys C.) Graff, 78, of 127 wave Christmas messages from Mchawk, will be 1 p.m. Wednes-captured U.S. prisoners in day at Donelson-Johns Funeral North Vietnam were ,heard/by ,a Home with burial in Perry mired Army master sergeant Mount Park Cemetery. / late Sunday night. , ‘ Mrs, Graff died yesterday. Edmund Harris 52, listened She was a member of Bethany, with a tape recorder as a broad- Baptist Church and Pontiac Or-cast“ from Hanoi via Havana, der of Eastern Star No. 228. Cuba, beamed ftiessages to rela- Surviving are two daughters, tives of six prisoners or war. jMrs. Marion Bays-Howe and ★ .★ m Mrs. Glenn Bradford, both of Some of the names were un- Pontiac; two sisters, Mrs. N. A. clear but they were believed to Woodworth of Birmingham, and be season’s greetings from Air Mrs. I. J. Snader of Clarkston; Force Maj. Albert L. Stern of one brother, Riley Aldrich of California, Air Force Capt. Rus-Commerce Township; two sell Edward Temperley of New- grandchildren and six great-ton, Mass., ;U. (j.g.) Robert grandchildren of Cali Frank J. Justin Fishman of California, Nevada residents Maj. Ludwig E. May Jr. and Maj. Richard Allen Dut-’ > ton, and Lt. Cmdr. Clark Doug- R&|uiem Mass for Frank J., las Brown. Justin, 79, of 244 Draper-will be PREPARED TEXT----------■' 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Vin- All of the men spoke with cent de Paul Church with burial even voices and were apparent-1° Mt. Hope Cemetery, ly reading from a prepared A Rosary will be said t at statement, All said they were 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the treated well, Ivere uninjured sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, and were eating regularly; Mr Justin> a retired CMC Following the statements by Truck and coach Division em-by Ho Chi Minh was read by an p]oye, djed Saturday, the six men-divided up With Survivors indude {our daugh. Christmas carols-a statement Mrs E,don Yarno,d of TTT L I SLS Pontiac, Mrs. Pierce Ryan of about 15 sentences mentioned ’ ... „ , cu. North Vietnamese casualties Birmingham, Mrs. Jordon Shaf-and thanked those in the United f Uni«nT^e and Mrs Frank States “who are’giving us sup- Coluzzi of Utica, a son, Edward port.” |F. Justin of Lake Orion; a broth- ‘We shall win and so' shall «r! Seven grandchildren; and 10 ydu,” the statement ended. great-grandchildren. AAy* R Pnrrv an auto accident He was afrem- Mrs. oeorge k. rarry ploye o( Fisher Bpdy j^ant Service for former Pontiac Pontiac, resident Mrs. George R. (Mar- Surviving are his parents, Mr. garet) Parry, 83, of Highland and Mr.# CarlJVIitehell; two sis-Park will be 2 p.m. tomorrow ters including Vicki at home; at All Saints Episcopal Church, three brothers inChiding Larry with burial in Perry Mount and Ronald of Highland Tqwn-Park Cemetery by Voorhees- ship; and grandparents, Mr. Siple Funeral Home. and Mrs. Joseph Mitchell of Mrs. Parry died Saturday. Poplar Bluff, Mo. • She was a member of Guild 8, ‘ , . , All Saints Episcopal Church Edmund A. Muhlenteld and the Golden Age Group, wfflTE lake TOWNSHIP — YMCA. Service for former resident Ed- i _l D lunnnff mund A. Muhlenfeld, 82, of De-Joseph D. Ivanott xm win be 10 a m Wednesday BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP— at St. Patricks Catholic Church, Private service for Joseph D. Union Lake, with burial in Lake-Ivanoff, 78, of 7165 Old Mill will side Cemetery by the Elton be Tuesday. Black Funeral Home. Burial will be in Acacia Park He died yesterday. Cemetery,. Southfield by the A Rosary will be said at 8 Bell Chapel of the William « at the funeral U Hnn Cn * home. ,.J| Mr. Ivanoff died Friday. He . are a sister and a was a member of the Method- 0 r' ist Church, the ‘Cleveland Lodge No. 211 F&AM, and St. Bernard Commandery in Chica- HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -go. Service for Alvis E; Redman, Surviving are his wife, Pa- 72, of 134 McPherson, will be tricia A., and two sons James l p.m, Wednesday at the Rich-D. and- Richard ,T., both at ardson - Bird Funeral Home, home. Milford with burial in Ottawa Fmil F Karasek TovrasMo^617’ Inde,)endence By CHARLES C, CAIN were that the figure would be Barrucuda for a share of the cmil r. p\arase J', ... . AP Business Writer ; close to 7.6 million units, far be-sporty market estimated at a WALLED LAKE - Requiem „*“■ Kfdrnan DETROIT — The auto indus- hind the 8,611,776 built in calen- million cars a year. It also was Mass for Emil F. Karasek, 69, ”ad been ““P10**®. at yy, try ran into some rough going dar 1966 — and the record the only firm to drop a car, as it of 139 Welfare, will be 9:30 a.m3$f|{?- - .. .. Jfc* tin 1967 as labor problems andi9,329,104 cars built in calendar abandoned its Marlm line after tomorrow at St. Williams Catho- h“ W£’T ’la drop in sales of U.S.-built j 1965. four years of trying, to make it a lie Church, Walled Lake, with d ht’ M T-veta McMom!new cars to settle foril5 PCT. BEHIND . to?,,se.er; .. ' . , burial in Oakland Hills Memor-^ p Jf6 ,. Ithe third best calendar year h n mnnthq nf 1967 the Illustrating the way people 3glc of Fjillertbir, Calif, five |. | Through 11 months of l3o7, tne spending more money for ON THE LOOKOUT-A U.S. Marine, a bayonet affixed to his M16 rifle, prepares to enter heavy undergrowth in search of Vietcong snipers. The enemy had harassed AF Wlrepholo the Leatherneck^ column as it moved into the village of Phu Long on Ojjeration Citrus near Da Nang, Alvis E. Redman •• .** ... * Labor Woes, Sales Drop Hit Auto Industry in 1967 Mrs. Archie McDuffie Service for Mrs. Archie (Lorette M.) McDuffie, 58, of 4847 Curtis Lane, will be 11 a m. Wednesday at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, with burial in Lakeview ' C motery, Clarkston by the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. The Rosarv will be said at 7:30 p m. Tuesday at the funeral home. She died Saturday. Mrs. McDuffie was a member of Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, president of Our Lady Queen of Hope society,] Millc Price Hikedand a memt>er °f sigma Alpha. i . v j Surviving beside her husband is her mother, Mrs. James McNally of Waterford Township, [three daughters, Mrs. Richard Brondyke of East Lansing, ' Anne Marie McDuffie of Water* ford Township, Mrs. Luis Galindo of Rochester, N.Y., four i grandchildren and two brothers. Vote on Pact Set FLINT m - United Auto Workers Local 581 has scheduled a ratification vote Jan. 7 bn a contract agreement on local issues reached Saturday at the Fisher Plant No. 1. The plant has about 6,000 hourly employes. Local 581 President John Yorke, said he is confident the agreement will be ratified. The union’s 380,000 GM workers already have approved a national agreement. ^Aboid 85 million new cars *our aut® ,l‘rms their cars in the 1968 run, Amer- _ ____K^ob-in«l®'896,447 cars, about 15 per cent jcan Motors said that in the first a record-breaking] including 780,000 the U.S. market. * * * This figure ranked well behind the 8,105,299 assembled five weeks after the Javelin was imports, e e_so ' ^ first 11 months of 1966. introduced, purchasers spent an ial Gardens, Novi, by ^^ard*grandchildren; three great-son Bml Funeral Home, Walled two si^ere A Rosary will be said at 8 r> c* p.m. tonight at the funeral Roger D. otogner ine u a. niarsei. p H nrinpinni in«>r in thp , f .. r 4 , j -k -k * rord, principal loser in tne gvej.age of $3,053 per car for the Mr Karasek died Fridav He HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP b 'auto building r?ce estimated Javelin which had a basic price Mr Karasek died rrday. He {m Roger D Stogner.L.™8^"^ that the long strike had cost it of $0450 is a former employe ofihe Ypsi-18 f 3536 Jackson wjll be 1;30 hind the 1966 total of 9,088,488 about 485 000 cars and 90,000 ° ’ tonti Hydromatic Plant. Wednesday at Huntoon Fu- and th? recn0ord;s®t‘lng year $ trucks. W*0* C00LS Surviving besides his wife are ne , „ Pontiac Burjal wiU, 1965 when 9,313,912 were sold The furor over auto, safety two sisters and two brothers. be in Perry T ~ caioe ran» in «ayMy|nicB vmpm wav w» wwu tery, Pontiac. The youth died yesterday jn earlier. , I___________________ HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP — , an auto accident. He was an1 ,’I^ie bi8 factor in e auto]^" g ^ calendar 1967 its for 20 safety items to be added Service for Doyle'J. Mitchell,[employe of Beaver Precision Picture was a fourth best year. The figure was cars. 18, of 111 St. John Will be 1 Products and a member of As- w^e strike at ™ Motor Co ® topped only by 1966 (1,764,337); There was some grumbling p.m. Wednesday at Elton Black sembly of God Church. |U S- plants, followed by a _se-|1965 (1,885,109) -and 1964 from the auto companies but Funeral Home, Union Lake.! Surviving are his parents, Mr.[nes of laca| Ford plant dis-d 550,644). « ithey did manage to meet the Burial will be in Highland Cem-and Mrs. Thelmar A. Stogner; putes and similar' local' plantf ■ modified safety standards and etery. a sister, Mrs. Norma Huffman tie-ups at some Chrysler Corp The youth died yesterday in of Utica(; and a brother. (and General Motors plant NATIONAL AGREEMENTS Doyle J. Mitchell be in Perry’ Mount Park Ceme- Inl£r‘ * came to 658,123jed ^ strikeg ^ indications cooled considerably in 1967 asj - • m units in 1966 and 569,415 a year ■ ^ ^ would the federal government went jwind up with about 1.5 million ahead with its program cajl®8 KALAMAZOO UP) - Starting today, Kalamazoo area residents will pay one cent a quart more for milk. Spokesmen for local dairies say Kalamazoo and southwestern Michigan are the last areas of the state to Increase milk prices. 2 Stabbed, One Shot in West Bloomfield ★ ★ ★ . ■ » „ - , .include such items'as wmd- Despite the smaller number of sjjjejd vvashers and defoggers, cars sold in the U.S. duai - cylinder brake systems, The United Auto Workers yCar’bKye*S.L,bl wasjimpact absorbing steering col-The United A u to worKers expected to be about the same d _afptv door iafches on Union reached national con-|_ some $36 billion — because ofjjjg cars y And if anyone had any idea tract agreements with Ford higher price tags and more opr and Chrysler and ‘^"^tional equipment purchases' this'^'^enT intoesTto to General time around. !cu^ting & nation’s traffic death similar d e m a ad s ^o^=>o^=<3=| Ctrl GY. COoaeltoH F^0<=^0<=v^0^ J)onal<) 3£. Jolmi Judged by What We Do . . . ... not by what we say. The Funeral Director and his standing remain in the public mind by care and ability in the performance of his work. The Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is happy to have you ask the families that we have served, and to be guided by their appraisal of our services. Motors with indications GM | prices of 1968 models were , .. , ___ „ might be struck early in 1968, higher at introduction time than ihiS it wa^dis ! ,if it did not reach agreement.1 a year earlier. Ahother pricai^^JfT tt .. , „ , . . The new contracts generally boost by Jan. 1 seemed most1^11*1..m ^h *Jn c'| Two brothers, home on leave eral Hospital, Farmington, With carried a boost of about $1 an likely as auto makers studied P°rtation Secretary Alan b. from the Army, were stabbed a punctured lung. His brother hour over three years; the old how they could pass along to Boyd lssUed. 4] add,tl0.nal Pr°-] and a man shot during a New was treated at the hospital for contracts gaVe workers about consumers increased costs due P05611 ustandards covering cars; Year’s Eve party in West stab wounds in the back and the $4 7Q an h 0 u r in wages and to safety itemSi new through 1971. Bloomfield Township early to- head and released. fringe benefits scales worked out with the UAwlBoyd’ ^ho with Dr. -William j X attacks took place in a Police identified the man who . American Motors, meM* of mjd cwts Jr parking lot of a home at 6551 was wounded with a blast from ** J*’^ ^ V C°pper iis charged with enforcing the) Drake, according to West a shotgun as Charles Parkkila, asked the UAW for spec al PRICE COMPARISONS safety program, commented,; Bloomfield Township police. 25, of 6782 Drake, West Bloom- sideration .in ,coaIl^a^,!a s, ™ Figuring out auto price tag >‘We do not expect miracles ov- j Details of the fight are not field Township I completely known, said patrol- j N0T jjospiTAJJZED man Richard «Lamphier and Thomas Burke who first arrived at the scene. They later were ^ts0 1%7 {iscal year The comparisons “ one of th.e m°st erni8ht ” union took the matte/under ad-!®°ifpBcatedh Pr°iects ,a JJ* RECALL CAMPAIGNS They said he was hit in the visement. -* , Comomiies Shuffled Models Auto recall campaigns, in hand and chest with pellets but * ■ * * .Companies snuffled mod®ls wbich the industry called back »„vj, ...v. ^t Vincnitslisred . , [around and also juggle the wn'cn ,ine.inaus“y caueu assisted by police from Novi,|was not nosPliauze • The drop in calendar yearleq^p^jeut on cars from year, to autos for inspection in cases of Bloomfield Township and Walled [ Officers said that as far as sales bore out predictions of in-j ycar. j suspected materials defects, Lake and the Sheriff’s Depart'(they could feara the Ryans were |dustry leaders early in 1967 i -k ★ * [continued although, not in as ment. I attacked by six or seven men! that ^ iab«r talks, with ac-| Automotive News, a trade stron8 a spotlight as the recall The stabbing victims are Ran-!abou4 *-m-JU8t as they ar-;COmpanying Work stoppages, publication which makes a de-)cam.Pah?ns of 1968. About J.8 dal H. Ryan, 19, and his brother rived at “* P®1^* :would slow the rate of auto tailed study of price increases [ mdh°n cars were involved in Thomas W., 21, both of 21355 Parkkilla was shot in the sales. . ~ - each year figured that the sti6k-jsucl> recall chedcups in the first Farmington, Farmington. i parking lot, but police said they | * + + - er prices of 1968 models were upT* months of 1967 but the gov- 1 did not know the circumstances' Henry Ford II, chairman of gn average of $116.25 a car, or,eminent and industry agreed The younger Ryan is in seri- (Phonc FEDERAL £ 4-4511 ous condition at Botsford Gen- h» shooting jraAkin/j 4 On Our ^PreuiMs-z relatively ’ few defective cars were found. The industry, in addition to its CDombon- Aokm FUNERAL HOME W 855 WEST HURON ST, PONTIAC Officer Hurt in o Police Chase Crash Ford, said in December 1966 3 63 per cent over 1967 prices, that new car sales would come * ★ ★ Police said that as of 9 a.m. close to 9 million units in 1967 j That was based on a compari-no arrest in either the shooting if there was no strike. He, son of about 300 of the 1968 car; work i*1 safety field, also 0/ the stabbings had been made, added that the figure would be models on which the industry of- continued research in the field but that they are continuing closer to 8.4 million cars if ;fered comparable models in °f possible electric or turbirie-their investigation. jwork stoppages occurred. HoH 1967. in all, 357 models were P°wered cars, but there was They said they also have in-j did not know at that time that! available in the 1968 car line of general agreement such possi-formation that a man was bad- i his firm would be the UAW’sju.S. firms. j bilities were still years away ly beaten at the party, but theyfprimary strike target but he] Allowing for year-to-year!fromthestandpointoftheaver-have yet to find the reported vie- was on the mark with hia*8.4- equipment changes and dele-1 age motorist, tim. [million figure. tions. Automotive News figured! On the corporate front, two of The party, according to po-STOtlIclM, the 1968 prices were up $79.93 or 1 the four auto firms got new A Farmington city policeman H ^ ^.en b Ga6 Barr TRAILS 1966 m Wjwed shortly after 6 a caretaker Uving behind the1 The pace of 1967 auto sales per CEMETERY MARKERS Monuments S«a our largo display priced to lit your budget. Quality, crafts', manship and permanent baauty are found in avdry marker and monument wa salL Thby ora backed by tha industry's strangest guarantee. '** WINTER DISCOUNT1 SALE-SAVE 10% SELECT NOW FOR MEMORIAL DAY t COMPLETE INDOOR DISPLAY FOR YOUR SHOPPINQ CONVENIENCE Memorials for Over 75 Years INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry FE 5-6931 trania Plates far Memorial Park Cemeteries at lalaw Cemetery Prices speeds up to 90 miles per hour. chUrches At Botsford General Hospital, Farmington, for treatment of a possible dislocated shoulder is Officer Murray Switzer. He was injured when his scout car and another driven by Sgt. Richard Miller came together at high speed at the intersection head men. James M. Roche, —...........B — - —- - - ... , . r.D D„,,.rc president of General Motors, address'which is a meet- trailed that of 1966 through vir- ^EW car frills jrhoved up to the position of The Bureau of Labor Statist board chairman and Edward N. wag a.m. today as he pursued two g551 juveniles in a stplen car at jng p|ace f0r aa assembly of tually the whole year. In looking vice president, the president’s. Scrap Tells Story of a Bad Year for reasons for the decline, ob- tics estimated that new cartGd|e a qj^ servers listed the unsettled la-prices in the 1968 line were up- jnt0 bor problems as the main rea- 3.75 per cent or $87.54 per car. It|rbair son. Others mentioned frequent- said $26.95 of the increase was American Motors, Roy D. ly were J e auto safety issue, due to safety improvements and the war in Vietnam and tighter $11.20 to design changes to re- money. As far as Vietnam was con-SAN FRANCISCO UP) — San cerned, draft calls and enlist- of Orchard Lake Road and Franciscans who work in the menu took thousands of young Grand River. Both cars were [financial district traditionally [men out of the potential auto damaged but Sgt. Miller was not dump their old note calendars [buyers injured. out their windows on the final The two remained in pursuit working daY of the year, of the fleeing cat until it hit a] * * * deadend barricade at the Grand One scrap of paper in the ljt-Rivef cutoff near 1-96. CLOCK SPEED Chapin Jr., son of an auto pioneer, was named chairman of duce e™ss'dn exhaust pollu-Lbe. board of American Motors tanta. The rest was a pure price boost, the BLS said. A government decision late in 1967 to stick with ita original „ ^ „ unknown gent, Sgt. Dan Byrnes of the Farm- worth J54 104. ington police reported the tspeed ^77 516 « ’ of the fleeing car was clocked ’ ‘ at 70 miles per hour. It was totally destroyed but the 15-and 16 - year - old occupants of the-xar were reportedly not injured seriously market. I nd u stry,plan of requiring shoulder har-sources said these young menjnesses on 1968 cars after Jan. 1, would constitute a major buying] 1968 made it virtually certain force when hostilities cease in I that this $25 item would be Vietnam hut for the moment,[passed along to the car buyer in ter on Montaomerv"street was they have thin6s olher than new the form of a higher price tag. telltale Ta b^d year for an cars to occupy their minds. j In general, 196(1 cars are long- It said: “Net w w ier* l°wer and wider than 1967s total liabilities Reports that 1968 cars would There was a drop in the number have more safety features were of convertibles and station wag- _________ credited by some industry on offerings and an increase in sources With causing people to the nurriber of two-door hard-delay purchases during the 1967 tops, currently the hottest sell-model run. ing line, i The unsettled labor picture at: * * * Mable, .formerly of the Green General Motors was the biggest ] American Motors introduced They were examined at Bots-: Parrot, wishes all her friends [question mark in how the U.S.itlie only new car Of the 1968 line, ford General Hospital and re-happy New Year. See me now production total for the calendar the Javelin. It challenges' the leased for St. Clair County juv-!at the Pontiac Lake Inn, — AdV. year would finish? Indications!Mustang, Camaro, Firebird and L ’ • 1 ' - ■ and William V. Luneburg was named president as AMC continued its efforts to get a profitmaking position in the industry. News in Brief Employe dishonesty is costing hospitals 60 per cent more than it did five years ago. About $80 mil) ion . in cash and materials was stolen by hospital personnel in i960. Death Notices CLEMENT, eDMONDj 0*Cimb*r 31. !?«?: 431 Raeburn Street; ege n. beloved husband ot Grace Scnram; deer fattier of Loud Clament; dear brother of Mri. Aiwa Le Barge, wlgture service will be Monday* at I p.m. at ttia Melvin A. Sctuitt Funeral Home. Funeral service will be bald Tuesday, January 3, at JO a.m. at tha 51 Vincent da Paul CamUc Church, interment In Maunt Hopa Cemetery. Mr. Clement will lie In Male at the funeral (tame. Death Notices DANCE. MINERVA -E.; December JO. Iftf|. lit Codfroy, Monroe. „ Michigan) age. 59; beloved wM |c of Mark O. Dan cat dee r mother of Min Barbara Dancai am tur-• vlvad by two grandcnlfdran. Eett-, orn. Star Momorlal servlet will be paid Tuesday. January 3 at 7 p.m. at the Earle Uttle Funerei Home, US 6. Elm Street. Monroe, < Michigan. Funerei service wlH be held Wedndeday, January j *t i p.m. at the funeral home, interment >n Oeli Hill Cemetary, Pontiac. Mrs. Dance will lia in elate at the funeral tame. Street; ege S3; beloved husband of Gonevlovo Drake; beloved son ot Mrs, Fenny Egan; deer father of Mr's. Patrick (Deanna) Cbuley, Mrs. Gary (Linda) Heron, and Sgt. .Herbert M., Frederick J., Michael R., John F., Pvt. James R., Leona Drake; also survived by tt grandchildren. Recitation of the: Rosary ' win bo Monday; at I p.m. at the Voorhees-Slple Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January 3, at 10 a.m. at St. Michael's Catholic Church. Interment In Mount Hooo Cemetary. Mr. Drek* will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to S and 1 To 9 p.m.) GRAFF; GLADYS-CT) Docombor 31, 1947; 137 Mohawk Road, Pontiac; aga 71; dear mother of Mrs. Marlon Bays How# and Mrs. Glenn Bradford; dear sister of ''Mrs. N. A. Woodworth, Mrs. I. j. Snader and Riley Aldrich; also survived by two grandchildren and six groat-grandchildren. Funerei service wifi be-' held Wednesday, January 3 at I p.m. at tha Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetary. Mrs. Graft will lie In stale at the funeral home alter 7 p.m. tonight. . (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 end 7 to 9 p.m.) HODGES. HOWARD R.; December 39, 1947; at Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; husband of Lea J. Hodges; father of Wallace R. Hodges, of Rochester, Mich.; brother of Theodora R. and Hazel Hodfa*, of Detroit, also survived by tnrae^ grandsons. Funeral service at Bell Chapel of the wm. R. Hamilton Co., 930 East Maple Avenue^ Birmingham, HUBBARD, JACK ,N.; December 29, .1947; SS4 Lochaven Road, Waterford Township; age 33; beloved son pf Ralph H. and Leora Hubbard; dear brother of Mrs. Britt Hanke, Mrs. Robert Tinman, Mrs. Frank Porter, Mrs. George Lynn, Mrs. Fred Roberts, Carol, Margaret, Bonnie, Richard, William, Gerald,. Marvin and David Hubbard. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January 3, at 3:)S p.m. at tha Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Hubbard will lit in slat* at the funeral noma, (Sup. gested visiting hours 3 to 3 and 7 to 9.) ________. JUSTIN, FRANK J,; December <30,, 1947; 344 Draper Street; aga 79,-dear father of Mrs. Eldon Yarnold, Mrs. Pierce Ryan, Mrs. Gordon Shaffb,. Mrs. Frank Coluzzl and Edward F. Justin; dear brother of Wjlliam Justin; also survived by seven grandchildren. Recitation <o( the Rosary will be Tuesday, January 2 at 9:30 p.m. at tha Sparks-Griffin Funeral Horn*. Funeral service wilt be held Wednesday, January 3 at 10 a.m. at St. Vincent de. Paul Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Justin will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and / to 9 p.m.)______________________ KARASEK, EMIL F.; Docombor 29, 1947; 139 Welfare, Walled Lake; age 49; beloved husband of Angela (Dot) Karasek; dear brother of Mrs. Paul King, Mrs. Della Man-aghan, Edward and Tom Karasek. Recitation of the Rosary will bo held today, January I at 8 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with Rev. Father Raymond Jones officiating. Fuheral service will be held Tuesday, January 2 at 9:30 a.m. at the St. Williams Church, Walled Lake. Interment In Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mr. Karasek will lie In state at the funeral home. McDUFFIE. LORETTE M.i December 30, 1947; 4947 Curtis Lana Road, Waterford; age 59; beloved wife of Archie McDuffie; beloved daughter of Mrs. James McNally; dear mother of Mrs. Richard Brondykt, Mrs. Luis Galindo and Anne Marie McDuffie; dear sister of Leo H. and George V. McNally. Also survived by tour grandchll- , dron. Radiation of the Rosary will be Tuesday, January 2 at 7:30 p.rrf. at tha Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Funeral service will be htld Wednesday, January 3 at It a.m. a) Our Lady of the' Lakes Catholic Church. Interment in Lakevlew Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. McDuffie whl lie In state et the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to S and 7 to 9 p.m.) MITCHELL, DOYLE J.; December 10, 1947; 111 St. John, Highland; age 18; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitcholl; beloved grandson ' ot Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Mitchell; dear brother of Mrs. Richard Higgins, Vicki, Larry, Ronald and Erwin Mitchell. Funeral sarvlee will be held Wednesday, January -3 at 1 p.m. at the Elfon Black Funeral homa, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. Intermant in Highland Cemetary. Mr. MltChtli will lie in state at the funeral noma. MUHLENFELD, EDMUN D A7/ December 31, 1947; 2934 Ash, Detroit (Formerly of White Lake Township) age 82; dear brother of Mrs. Mary A. Limb and.Arthur J. Muhlenfeld. Recitation of the Rosary .will be Tuesday, January 2 at 9 p.m. at the Elton Black Funeral Home, 1333 Union Laka Road, Union Lake. Funeral servlet will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 10 a.m. at th9 St. Patricks Catholic Church, Union Laka. Interment In Lakeside Cemetery. Mr. Muhlenfeld will lie in stefe et the funeral homa. NEWMAN, DELLA E.i'" December 29, 1967; 3999 Voorhels Road, Wa- tarlord Township; aga 77; dear mother of Mrs. Lyle B. Saum, Mrs. Henry Karwat, Max E„ Erwin W., Wesley E. and Ward S. Newman; also survived by 14 grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January 2, at 1:39 p.m, at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Intarment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Newman will lie in slate at tha funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) .________ PARRY, MARGARET; December 30, 1947 ; 234 Highland Ava.i Highland Park, (Formerly ot Pontiac); age 13. Funtral service will , be held Tuesday, January 2 at 2 p.m. at tha All Saints Episcopal Church, with Rev. C. George Wlddlfletd officiating. Interment In Parry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrt. Parry will lie in stata al tha voorheas-Siple Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours 1 lo 5 end "to 9 o. m.)_______i Redman, ALVIS E.; December 3f, 1947)^134 McPherson, Highland; age 72; beloved husband of Time Rodman; daar (other of Mrs. Leveta McMbnagle end Elwood Redman; dear brother of Mrs. William Millar and Mrs. Ross Benner; also survived by five grandchildren end three greet grandchildren. Funerei service will be held Wednesday.'--Uenuary 3 at 1 p.m. et tha R cherdson-Bird Funeral Homa, Milford. In-terment ln Ottawa Perk Cemetary. Mr. Rtdman will lit In state at tha funeral home. STOGNER, ROGER DaLM; Decem-ber 31, 1967; 3534 Jackson Boulevard. Highland, Michigan; aga 19; beloved son of Tholmer A- and Mildred Stogner; dear brothor of Mrs. Normo Huffman and Robert Stogner. Funeral service will he held Wednesday, January l at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Intermant In Parry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mr. Stogner will lie In «tate at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours l to I end 7 tp 9 pjn.) wester berg, JUla W.i oecem- bar 29J 1997 ; 4790 Algonquin, watt Bloomfield Township; ego 81; beloved wife of Carl A. Westerberg; deer mother of Mra. Ragnar G. (Ruth M.) Peterson and Eric E. Westerberg; deer sister of Mrs. Ellen Glardrum end Martin R. Sadler; also survived by three grandchildren end five, greatgrandchildren. Funeral service will be hold Tuesday, January 1 et 1:39 p.m. at the C.rJ. God herd! Funeral Home, KOeqo Harbor. intormont ln Ottawa Perk Cemetery, independence Township. Mrs. Westerberg will lie In stale at the funeral homa. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 4 And 7 to t p. m. WHITNeyrDB. hLMiR~L.l~ijacaiyh i her 39, 1967 ; 2 Konbtrton Drive, Pleasant Rldga; age 91; husband of Ermine Whitney; lather of James J. Livingston; uncle of Or. M. L. Whitney and John H. Whit-nay; also survived By two grandchildren. Funerei service will be •viu iwwin 1 11 1 p.m. it the Bell Chapel of the william ». Hamilton c pm pony, ait Maple, Birmingham. f n "V TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY7. JANUARY 1, 1908 Otal 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Pratt Wont Ad* . rot UST ACTION A ' ■' Nona to AOVWTlSiis AOS tiCflVID BY TPM. WILL II FjJiLlSHID TNI FOLLOWING OAT. All •fMMt *hoyld bo raportad immoJiotoly, or n# loton than tha day following publication It no notification of *wch orror it mod* by that timo, it Will bo ottumod tb# ad it carroCt. Tha Pr#n attwmot no ro> ipontibility tor pfrart othor than to cancfl tho charges for that portion of tb# firtt intortipn of tho odvortito-mont which ho» boon r*nd*r*d value-lott through tho orror. Tho doadlmo for concollatlon of traniiont Wont Adt it 9 a m. tho day of publication tlt«r tho f'irtf miortion. Whan cancellation* an mado bo two »o 0ot your "KILL NUM BI«." No ' adjustment* will bo given without it. doting timo for odvortitomonft containing typo .titot larger than regular agate type it 12 o'clock naan tho day prawiout taMpubllcation. CASH WANT AD RATIS (when caih accompaniet order) Lina* I-bay 3-payi 6-Day* 2 - $2 00 $246 $3 84 3 2 00 3 60 551 4 - M 2 44* 468 6.96 1 3 3 05 5.40 • 40 6 3 66 Ml 10J38 1 4 27 756 n 76. t , *’ 4.81 • 64 13.44. 9 349 9.72 15 12 to 6 10 10 80 16 80 An additional charg* of 50 cant* will bq mad* for ui a of Fantiac Fiatt Itinumktn. The Pontiac Press FROM 8 A M. TO 5 P M. Utt oadPaowa I HdpW-fd Mult _ 6Hof»Woiited Malt ' & WMaibneao . rim. LOST ■ WHITE MALTBfHt POOOlC with black Mr*, answers to Char-toy, reward, fe 4-5174. LOST StMK1 l»fRAB0*. ' HI. trlaver, 2 years old, answers to name Royal, Vie., of Union Laka, reward, J4W395.__ lostTblack and tan German Shepherd, mill, red collar. Water-fora dog las. Believed to bo MTAft.NKW CAR CLEAN UP MAN NBEO-ed at once to work our OM Otll-ershlp, driven license apply In •gar, Homer High* Motor! Inc, ford, Michigan. vicinity of Square Lika or Sylvan I Michigan, -krlife .FE 0-3473. ■■ - . EXPERlE" salesmen needed tor Immadlala opening Inquire Warren atOUt, rail lor, T4ST N. OpOyk. Rg„ ___Pontiac, PE 5-6165 for lnttrv.Pvta ixPBRiiNcNb all -A”" an ,..............w-g-, ,,______... . burner serviceman, S4.R0 per hour, NIGHT COSif WANTlOe W TKtl flmo w for eyartlmt, O'irton 4. 6ZS-S370.__ ■■ ;■ .j Hooting, FI 2-2919. ' ONE MaVh AND OViR,''aM P'lfi EXPERIENCicTMCCHANlOfeb- “ — ‘ ed for GM Dealership. Please apply in person to Mr. Ernsf at Homer Might Motui Inc. Oxford, , . , „ EXPERIENCED A'JTO SALESMAN.' LOSTAT PINJE LAKE, PEKINGESE i to sell Chevrolet, Buie* arid Pon-llghl tan, "Charley,■’ wearing flea flics. All fringe oenetlfs. Apply *to collar, 682-2543. Reward. ____ Everett . Ernst, Homer High), LOST,''SMALL PEMALC~GiRMAN Motors ine., Oxford,' Mich. (Apply Shepard, tattoo In toft par, Baldwin in Person Only).___ ___ Longfellow area,, reward, PE FACTORY WORKiRS. LOC AXI H'lT. i i wood products plant is (poking for) . tlclnify of Gale and Teggger-dine Rds., last wads.. Reward. *25-3038. month. 074-0791 between 5 and I GpporTunity PIUS The Clark Oil and Rdf. Corporation has available at 444 Oakland Ave., Pontiac a < service station Oaalar Franchise. Wa specialize In gasoline sales only, wa offer $8,000 par year to start.. Excellent opportunity tor advancement, Hos-pitllizatlen, .Lite and Retirement Program, available. Ages 21 to, 60. For addlttonal Information _ond In-low call l 6 Htlp Wanted Femalg Manager ASSISTANT MANAGER Htfa Wanted M. er F. ... I .Sales Neb Male-Famale 8-A ALL RESTAURANT HELP; PART! and full time experienced help wanted. Good working conditions, good pay, apply In “person between 3 and 6. Great Dane Restaurant, 31646 Northwestern Hwy. end Mld-dlebalf. -v. i Help Wanted Maig $400-1600 FEE PAID ' MANAGEMENT TRAINEES in office, finance, ratal), sales but wUL consider anyone with sin-care desire to work. 052-2100. $500-1650 PLUS CAR * SALES TRAINEES In oil fields, age 21-20, soma college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1010 W. Huron Pontiac 334-4971 4 p.r In Memoriom 2 IN LOVING* MEMORY OP HELEN Rancher who passed away Jan- And are free from pain and harm; And now rest in peace and comfort In the blasstd Saviour's arms. Sadly missed by husband, children,! ^.and grandchildren._____ IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR lather Luther F. Wallace who passed away January 1, 1964, A PART-TIME JOB A married man* 21*34. to work 4 hours per evening. Coil 474*0520. n. to 8 p.m Tuesday $200 PER MONTH . ACCSUNTANT FOR LARGE ENGI-neering Co. able to supervise. Exc. benefits. $9500. Call Helen Adams. 334-2471, Spoiling 8. Spelling. _ ALUMINUM sTOERS* STEADY I year around work, experienced and I with equipment, good wages and E benefits, Gale Whlfford Footing ahd Factory Workers ' By day or week: Warehousemen; assemblers; machine operators; material handlers; common laborers; etc. Dally pay. Report any time attar 6 a m. Employers Temporary Service Clawson 65 S. Main Radford 26)17 Grand River Siding. 437-2446. ANALYST DETAILERS § Special marine equipment. Paid Blue; Cross, vacation, holidays and Insurance. JERED INDUSTRIES, INC. ^ -c- A... -c - -mm 1299 Ax tel Rd., Birmingham Though God has you in his keep* Ask for Mr. Chisnell Ml 7-1200 fng<t I - } An equal opportunity employer Sadly missed by Daughter and son-in-law, Marge and Bob Hicks and; Wallace Family. ._________ Announcements 3, DEBT AID. INC... 71S RIKER BLDG FE 2-0181, Raftr to Credit Advisors. 14-A ports clerk. Keego Sales and Service. 3080 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-3400. HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, lodges, church. OR 3-6202, PE 2 3838.________________________ Lose weight safely with Owx-A-Diat Tablets. Only 98 cants at Slmnja Bros. Brugt.______ VILLAGE LIVERY Horse drawn Hay and Sleigh rides along scenic Lake Trails, Open all year, 3200 edres, private club-room, picnic fecjiltiet. Relive yesteryear . at Kattlngton Antique 391-1570 AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE OPERATORS Excellent opportunity ■ with Troy manufacturer. Some previous single spindle experience preferred. Steady year round work with overtime and benefits. Phone 5*9-7432. AUTO MECHANIC TUNE-UP MAN $150 week guarantee, full benefits and retirement. Contact Mr. Giuliani. Ml 4-1930; _________ BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: C-15, C-39. Automobile 1 Ports Assistant FISHER BODY DIVISION Livonia Plant HAS IMMEDIATE Openings ‘ IN THE FOLLOWING 4EYMEN CLASSIFICAT PAINTER-GLAZIER ELECTRICIAN APPLY; 8:00 a,m. to 4:00 P.m. MONDAY Through FRIDAY . 28400 Plymouth Road Livonia, Michigan AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER tarvlew call LI a-7322 or FE 2-3017 attar 6 B.fft.. , 1 OPPORTUNITY MANAGE WANTED H and R. Sleek,' America's i*rg- u*|n ui.-twA c.-.u •st Incoma tax service, wants to titip wanted fOlHOIS locate a parson capable of hand-!'—---;------------ ling a vougnCNiami- "•* **,vt?!2 WAITRESSES. COOKS. FULL, Pert I Ime^ Super Chief PE 2-4151. for rwn person, wa main voy-For detals write M. and R. Block, R. o. Box ISI. Flint, Mich. 48501 of Stall Mr.'Edwards, 7*7-3540; Flint, Haig Wantid Male X-RAY | CHIEF X-RAY UAMArTD BLOOD DONORS m , tt MAINAvjllLn . URGENTLY NEEDED I echnicianiWanorond o*siitantmon-!ii|;HN^vM. agar for our new (Monanne .*•«<»• Fashion Shop) in tho, now o^:'C""* ^ an (Pontiac Fashion Malik Ex-1 w,ch.I°oaono^WeTtv .1 collont salary plus company ln ^Sgwiea Track or/w 44,47 benefits at no cost to you.j i g"*?-* glm4 p,m j Apply to Miss Stobbins / for bus oriVer.’ privatE school. ■risaouia^, 600 4016 Bloomtlald, Hills, highest wags In mtorjnewi 004-4“ i*. | „4t#, Cin Ml 7.0097, ;URTAIN AND DRAPERY SALES, top salary, downtown Birmingham. | Irving Kay's Draperies. 644-5280. EVfR CONSIDER A ponding Detroit area Hospital for oxgerlgncod: x-Rsy Technician Who desires a more responsible position. Liberal fringe benefit; lend complete resume, plus current salary, to Personnel Department. ' , Sinai Hospital i 8767 W. Outer Orlvt Detroit, Michigan 41223 ah equal opportunity tmployar positive AS nog. PART TIME 7| One man, married, over 21, $50, per week. 391-2336 between 12 ond 9 p.m. $60-$80 GENERAL OFFICE-TYPIST Ago 21 up. Must type 60 WPM INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1040 W. Huron, Pontiac 334*4971 PHARMACIST REGISTERED Noedad Immediately for expand-Ing Pharmacy Department (n Mod; arn Progressiva 400 bad hospital. Salary range, SI 0,000-812,000 annually. Shift differential tor after, ndon and night duty, 50c per hour, Weekend differential S2.50 on Saturday and $2.50 on Sunday for any 8 hour shift. Outstanding fringe benefits. Send Resume to Pontiac Press Box Number C-18. A TELEPHONE GlRL 11.75 per hour to start plus bonuses and chance tor advancement for experienced telephone solicitor. Call Mrs, patty 676-2231 9 a.m.-5 p.m ASSISTANT BOOKKEEPER, FULL tlm* employment, apply at Grin nail's Pontiac Mall._ MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN TO DO CURTAIN AND DRAPERY SALES,! housework and live In, good wages. 3ML7SBI.______________ _ NEAT, CONGENIAL, MATO R~i woman to assist invilld plus vary light housework. Mora for homo than wages. FE J-3025. NURSES AIDES All shltta. Good working conditions. Experienced ond Inexperienced! Apply in parson Tuesday and Wodnea-day tram 9:30 to It a.m. Seminole Hills Nursing Horn*. 532 Orchard Lake Avenue, Pontiac. * CAREER IN REAL ESTATE POSITION Nationwkto corporation naabt a man who can grow Into talas manage mom. We maasqra a mans value by his habits* ambition and goals* not by his lob or incoma. * plus stock options and security. , Wa art soaking a sincere man qvar 31 with a strong dasirb for tuccfst.- For private interview by appointment only, Phone: EL 6-9178 PERSONNEL OFFICE GIRL WITH INSURANCE axperlenc* In fire, and auto policy wrltlne and rating. Call Nina Martin, 6S1-7272. OFFltfs JOBS . . . . Temporary shorthand typing, tiling, telephone, dictaphone, statistical, bookkeeping, , keypunch comptometer, and general office assignments. Age If to 65. WITT Services, Inc. 642-3055 725 S. Adams Plaza. Rm. 126, B'ham PLANT MANAGER Aluminum and glass fabricator, building products, located west of Pontiac, having 20 tmpleyaes. Requires man strong in production control, Including purchasing, orders coordinating with customer, processing orders Into plant. Write Press Box C-15. PORTER - EXPERIENCED, NEED-ed at once, with good drivers II, cense, apply In parson to Spartan Dodge Inc.. 455 Oakland.___ ATTENTION Job openings In the following departments 1. Kitchen 2. Laundry 3. Housekeeping •4. Nurses Aides with txpsrltnce Apply at 50 W. Square Lake Rd. Bloomfield Hills 334-0345. BABY PHOTOGRAPHERS ...V« need high school graduates train as baby photographers for our department stort studio In Pon-, ORDER DEPARTMENT Downtown P<»nt!ac dfflce. Young lady to start immedlaftly. No ex* perierfte necessary. Starting salary ...JU5 per wk. For appointment call Mr. Templft* 332*8678. OUT GblNG/ ’ACTIVE YOUNG lady needed for ^ 1 girl office. Exc. bonus lystem* $275. Call Fran Fox, 334*2471* Snelltng & Snell Ing. We have recantly expanded our Imtructiom-Schools office facilities and now have room for several mere qualified people Interested In high Income. If you art presently selling real estate and are contemplating a change or possibly have never sold before, you could quality next training class starting soon.< We offer a fine building atrpgrsm,' $ "'"‘H S’arodiiates to!PART TIME CLERICAL H1LP.| Wt nead Wgh scfyj | Rights and waakends.' Good typist.1 GAS STATION ATTENDANT, ME-I chanics* wracker drivers, over 21-Local references* experienced only need to apply* 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily except Sunday's. Shell, Sta-I tion* Woodward and Long Lake Bloomfield Hills. Experienced Lincoln, Mercury, GAS STATION ATTENDANTS, PRE Ford preferred by fast moving fer experienced men but will tram dealership. Excellent position and Full or part tlnj. Days only. Sun future opportunities. dco* Telegraph^ Maple Rds._•__ _ ___GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX Please apply to Parts Manager oer|enced, mechanically Inclined Only. | local refs., full or part time. Gulf, HILLSIDE 1 LINCOLN MERCURY our department store studio 1. tlae No previous experience neter-T sery. Salary while In training. Minimum age IS. Great *|FPJr" tunlty for advancement. Call Da-trolt Collect. 272-4363. I PORTER !lABY SITTER nEeDED. S TO S:30 rurucis ; . da wk (or 3 small children,. Used car department. Must have >. our noma, Clarkston area. Old-valid driver's license, many bene- er person' preferred, must have fits, top pay, steady employment.! own trans., 425-4360. After 4 p.m. See DON WILSON. SUBURBAN .-S^TFTeb~T~rMiLD—3~l/\OS OLDS 431 « >.i BABYSITTER, 1 LnlLU, i mue. 7-511L Public Raltions Trainee $6000 to 5 p.m. 5 day wk. FE 5-2520. Payroll Clerk, Personnel Clerk 21-24, H.S.G., ideal training pro-' gram lor ambitious man, Mr. Fry, ISM 050. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lake REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WltH proven sales ability In real estate, automobiles. Insurance or other lines. Ample floor time and brok- {BABY SltfER, IN MY HOME. 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., S days, L<mts Lake area. Call attar 6 p.m., 473-7170.__________ BABY SltfER, 2 GIRLS, 4 AND k. uve In* own room, Deptnoa-hie, too. FE 1-3393, before j p.tn. BAfcY SITTER TO LIVE-IN, LlGin housework, 5 days. 332-7414. BABY SITTiR'TO“STAiRT IMMEDI-atety. Live In, Birmingham area. 2 children. 442-9269 ars assistance. KINZLER REAL- gABY SITTER, S DAYS, LIVE IN TY. 5219 Dixie Hwy. 623-0335. ________| or 0ut. 602-4475. ............... REAL ESTATE SALESMEN. !BAR MAID, FAMILY BARTpAYS, full time openings are available, over 35, steady, ref. FE 5-3677. Experience preferred. Generous1 eeTrpF 1C IAN.' —R EC ENT GRAD- commisslons on both new and used ..... .vVeiieM aoeortunltv, salary, homes. J. C. HAYDEN. 343-6604J O'^r ' ^ benefits. High volume salon. Ber-i nard Hair Stylists_ — Bloomfield,! Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 47. DONELtONJOHNS Funeral Home _____"Designed lor Funorals” 1250 Oakland BROILER MAN, DAYS, MUST BE! 4 dependable. Apply In person, closed I Sun. and holidays. Bedell's Ret-| — taurant, WoodWard and Square Lake. _____________• ' ___ I 44,'BORING MILL | ' HYDROTEL GENERAL CAR PORTER FOR! auto dealership. Must have driv*! er's license. Contact Mr. Reynolds, in person. Oakland Chrysler-Ply-mouth. 724 Oakland. Pontiac._______ Real Esfatft Salesmen ^ - B _ Ml 7.3M3 Birmmg. Ball real estate at tha Mall. OnaJ hlm. Miss Pat — Ml 6-6343. of the hottest locations In Oakland — f ^- cdT?—por XuTo Co. Lots of loads - lots OlrB^NG ^ERK FOR^auio ^^.M-vr^Itv^^b W U| $477“Call Helen Adams, 334- , train. Call von R—lfy» 882-5830. ^ | 2471, Snalilng & Snelilng. IROOFERS WANTED, NEW AND HE- =|L^|NG ci-ERK ~FOS PROMT*, cover, steady work year around. nent fjrm<i exJ). and typing skills Gale Whitford Roofing and Siding, ■ fltts call Fr~‘ 437-2446. ________________l excellent bonus and profit sharp >lng plan* plus a liberal commis-sipn schedule* in addition to ample floor and model tima. FOR A CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW CALL DICK BRYAN FE 4-0921 AT KAMPSEN REALTY & BUILDING COMPANY 1071 W. Huron St. Pohtioe ATTENTION AUTO MECHANICS DAY-NIGHT CLASSES STARTING JANUARY 22 ENROLL NOW—START TRAINING Auto Body Collision Acety-Are Welding WOLVERINE SCHOOL . MICHIGAN'S OLDEST TRADE SCHOOL APPROVED UNDER 61 BILL 11400 West Fort WO 3-0692 le-arn bulldozerSTgraders, dreg ITnes,,. screpyrsr BSCkhoes. FIELD TRAINING. GREER 444-7627. Gl app. _ ______ EXPERIENCED COOK. DeLISA'S FULL AND PART TIME, NO Experience needed, aga 14 to SO, 62 an hr. Call 334-4592. LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED, Work WanM Malt 11 must be 2S or over. Call ——— 2^9146. MAN DRAWING F.t in parking lot. 332-4468 M^ICAL TECHNOLOGIST ASCP A~' PAPERING, PAINTiN~G~ AND MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST, ASCP| mura|,( free estlmpta. 493*244: may Be eligible or equivalent. Full time, permanent position. Excellent starting salary, regular ' SALESMEN HELP! WE NEED YOUI Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac tor SO years 79 Oakland Ava._ FE 2-0t«9 C. J. GObHARDT FUNERAL HOME Kaago Harbor. Ph. 442-0200. SPARKS-GRIFFIN i FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Sarvlca"_FE >-*2881 Vporhees-Siple GUARD wc IUU1 , ________________________________________ For Utica* Mt. Clemens and Da- EXPERIENCED AND TRAINEES CHRISTIAN WOMAN FOR SALES troll area. Top Union scale Paid. Many'good jobs nead to be filled. | opportunity. Profit sharing 852-4131. Blue Cross, Vacation and (x»ll- We have the lob orders, now wt rf^ic—i pn NURSES AID. FULL day benefits. Call us collect. need you. Most tea paid, car, ax-^1"^,.{Time UL 2-2730. Bonded Guard Services - 44tl penses. Mrs. Piland. 1 f ...A. STTi n v E. Grand Blvd-, DETROITi INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL !COUNSELOR. IF YOU ENJOY LO 8*4150. ’ _________________ 1880 S. Woodward B'ham. 442-H26>! working with people and .nave ! HELPER TO WORK IN SHIPPING SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT,! »•'•* “Slinti'.i^rn* this "fleld Call Night shift. Top rates. Steady am-: and receiving. Towne 8, Country, starting pay $120 weakly, exparl-| RSL Snallino A ployment. Journeymen only. 1 Furniture, Bloomfield Hills. M2-| enced, part time, 81*85 hourly,; Angie rook, jj4 1 ■ ”> LIBERTY TOOL 8822. ! morning and evening shifts* avail- jneiung. 1 INDUSTRIAL-COMMERCIAL. SALES.................. manager. Experience In Industrial _________________________ _ end-or commercial real' estate. SERVICE STATION MECHANIC AT wts this,' $350. Call Fran Fox, * 2471, Spelling A Snalilng. CASHIER-TYPIST, WITH gSNER-1 Pontiac Press Box Number C-18 al office experience. Full time or part time. Apply Osmuns, 51 N. Saginaw. Wotnan with genaral office payroll or personnel experience. Must be detail minded, and have an aptitude for llgurts. The personnel position raqulres good typing skills. Apply Personnel Dept. 2nd floor. Pontiac Mall Montgomery Ward An Equal Opportunity Employer PHARMACISt REGISTERED Needed Immediately for expand-, ing Pharmacy Department In Mod- OPIENINGS, USHERS, CASHIERS, arn Progressiva 400 bed hospital, concession halo. Apply after 6 p m., Salary range, 110,000-512,000 annually. Shift differential tor aftor-non and night duty, 50c per hour; Weekend differential $2.50 on Saturday and S2.50 on Sunday tor any a hour shift. Outstanding fringe benefits. Send Resume to REGISTER NOW Day and evening Classes * Federal & State IncomeTax Course Licensed by Mich. State Board of Education MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 14 E. HURON 332-5498 -j. . -Vn -anog A-1 CARPENTER, ROUGH AND C.A. TO WORK <ln„h mj.5445. creases. Generous benefits Includ- HAULING AND ODD JOBS. REA-Ing, retirement plan. Contact Par-! sonable rates. 672-4723. i?n^LiD,riii7,r,M HAVfe YOUR OWfO^RIVATE AAAIfi Hospital* 1447 N. Harrison, Sag!-, finance man by the week* month haw, Michigan-_________" - - ■ . I or call. We paint and take cara NEW CLASSES STARTING—LEARN Real Estate now. For Information call 363-7700. ____ OPENINGS FOR CASHIERS, USH-ers and concession help, apply Miracle Mile Drlve-ln: & ENGINEERING C0RP. 2250 W. Maple Rd. Wailed Lake CAB DRIVERS, FULL OR PART time, FE 2-0205. ______ Punch Press Operators wanted Prefer e familiarization with pre* gressive . punch press operation. Day and night shift. Apply b* tween 6 a.m.-6 p.m. Employers Temporary Service able. Howards South Shall, Long COCKTAIL WAITRESS, NIGHTS, ■.■■p;l5..yi!n' .p0f Lake and Telegraph. ; Holiday Inn, Pontiac, 1001 S. Tala- ®ECEPTION ST IN ACTIVE SPOT ---------- ----------------1 graph. See Mr. Bronson- i typing duties, 5 day _wk.^ SM5, CALL 5 TO 7 P.M. Pert time help. 21 to 35. 482-4203- Sales and leasing necessary. Well tendant. Experienced. Opportunity DRUG. AND COSMETIC CLERIC, established company Is expanding to learn auto glass business. Wlth|. full or part_tlme. Russ country and offers excellent opportunity futur; partnership potential. Dray- CamotBry lots CARPENTERS custom homos* over time, 8 hour day, 2-year protect* 846-4431, eve-| nlngs. 682-8003 or 356-8275. ______ ________ ______ . re p for self starter who can direct ton Pis. and manage. Send resume or call 2593._____________________ . for Interview to the Thompson- STANDARD OIL CAR CARE CEN Brown Co. 3263 W. '12 Mile Rd • ----- — * ■“ -•— —- 476-4700. A$k tot Mrs. Goodspeed Drugs, 4500 Elizabeth Lake Rd. tor 4 p.m., 674-!drug clEEk, OVER 21, NlOHTS, ROUGH, fOR jANITORIAL HELP NEEDED AT ter has openings for full time gas-: ollne attendants. Hours 7 a.m.‘to p.m., off Sundays. Good pay,! good pay. Lake Center Drug, 2347 Orchard Laka Road, no phone calls. Call Donna Allan, 334-2471, Snalilng I. Snalilng_____________________ HYGIEN for de- AT WHITE CHAPEL Moving to Fla. Choice graves $95 ea. Thpsa Graves art privately owned Ml 2-3534_____________________ 4-A CHIEF PHARMACIST. IMMEDIATE opening In 300 bed acute general hospital. Salary to be negotiated. Assured Increases, generous fringe DRY CLEANER No exporionce nocdssqry* will train, I Paid vacation* paid holidays* good; working conditions. Janet Davis ___________ Dry Cleaners. 647-3009. | (STEADY EMPLOYMENT, U L L EXPERIENCED DAY WORXE*, once, apply 50 W. Square Lake Rd.'1' excellent conditions. Part time S Bloomfield Hills. J3A0345. i to 10 p.m., Sundays, 9 a.m. to 7 ............I....■ ■ ■■ ! p.m. Call Ml 7-0700. REGISTERED DENTAL 1st. Full tlma position pendable person with sincere In terest In dentistry. Call 343-4410, for Interview appointment. REGISTERED NURSES FOR DAY and P.M. shifts, in private psy chiatric hospital. Up to $8,400 Klngswood Hospital, 10300 W. 8 Milo, 398-3200. Saginaw General Hospital,’ Calf Kathy King, 334-2471, Snalilng * Snalilng Personals 4-B ______________________ -------• CAR WASH - ORYERS - ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING Huron - apply S:30 to friendly advMr, phone --------------—---------- ... . . . * 2-S122 before p.m. JOURNEY- 1447 N. Harrison, Saginaw, Mlchl-[ h/TT?TvT A T __ gan. 48402. Phone 517-753-3411 ext. M h l\l-All I ( J WANTED: FURNACE SERVICE 23*. J ■L'r"1—l-L ^ | man and Installer. Call 334-1029. MECHANICS time, good pay plua Incentive,, cleaning. Ironing, 1 day, Blrming-| Capitol Ratraadlng Ine., 824-3400. I ham «rea, al.50 - 82 par hour. Can: TRAINEE, GROWING FIRM 442-7900. needs you, exc. opportunity, SSSOO^FULL TJM^ WAITRESS, EVE- nlngs, Rocco's Drayton Plains. 1171 Dixie Hvyy. AVOID GARNISHMENTS! GET OUT OF DEBT! we can help you with plan you can afford. 'AnflHentlal CLERK, COLLEGE MAN, DAYS OR omiaomiai nlghtS| p,rt or (un tirne, must be neat. Hunter Mania Pharmacy, 455. E. Maple, Birmingham. a plan you can attoro. DEBT CONSULTANTS ,, OF PONTfAC INC. 114 Pontiac'Stato Bank Bldg. FE 8 0333 e-TSTE LICENSED-BONDED Open Saturday- 9-12 a.m. GET OUT OF DEBT ON A ~ PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAE AFFORD ■ _ TAILORED TOYOUR INCOME MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac Stale Bank Bldg. FE 1-0454 ! WELDER AND LIGHT MAINTE-nance, steady employment, apply m person. Michigan Building C01"' ponents, 1000 Decker Rd., Walltd Lake/ Set Mr. Thompson. PLAN NOW FOR OELIGHTFUL old fashioned alalgh ride. Ideal outing tor your duo or group, occasions of all kinds. Lovely club room and dining areas. Oaytlma or evening parties tor groups of 20 or more. Just .the spot for your' holiday party. Call for reservation!, 628-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM DEBT AID. INC., 711 RIKER BLOG. FE 2-Oiai, Rator to Credit Ad-visors. 14-A VIRGINIA: YOU MUSt RETURN ------------------- and ramortgaga home today or I PUBLIC HEALTH SANITARIAN II hava to declare bankruptcy and ($9,500-510,00); requires --------------- fit* divorce._________________ - BY COLLEGE GRADUATES v $7200 UP Management positions In all fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL loao W. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971 COLLEGE GRADUATES IN PUBLIC HEALTH - SANITARY SCIENCE - CIVIL ENGINEERING - ENVIRONMENT. AL- HEALTH — BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES. $8000-$10,000 Oakland County Is stoking quail-fitd men tb wor*k as field representatives for the County Health Department. Includes Inspections* testing* and Investigation .of an Assigned area and public relations PUBLIC HEALTH SANITARIAN I: $8*000-$?*000; requires B.S. degree or higher In public health, environ.-mental healm, civil engineering* sanitary scianca or biological sciences. APPLY Pontiac Motor Div. Employment Office GM Is an •quel opportunity tnjploytr WELDERS WANTED - UNION scale, steady work, group Insurance. — Apply at tnterpace, 70001 Howell Rd., RomeP. , FIRST BAKER Full time position available hospital dlatary dept. Must have solid background in baking procedures. We offer an exc. salary and new fringe benefit program. Reply Pontiac Press Box C-14. WELDERS-FITTERS EXPERIENCED EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS ARTCO INC. 3020 Indlanood Lake Orion I You Can Be In FULL OR PART TIME For women who ere Interested In having a geod steady Income, Experience unnecessary. AVON sells itself. Call FE 4-0439 or write P.O. Box 91, Drayton Plaint; full time Gleaning, days. Rocco's, 5171 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains.,______________ GENERAL OFFICE, HIGH SiHOftL grad for variety of duties In nice office, 5280. Call Kathy King, 334-3471, Snalilng 6 Snalilng, WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY Professional color. For trap bro-cure call 338-0079, anytime._______| LnY and Fmd 5 A REWARD FOR FRITZ SMALL shaggy gray dog, lost from tne White Lake area Dee. 24. Call 107-4035 or 335-4111 ext. 2587. ........______ degree es in 1 level experience end Mich- igan registration. Excellent fringe benefits Include paid sick leave, mileage, 10-20 vacation days par year, 10 legal holidays, retirement plan, tuition reimbursement, life insurance and full >ald family hospitalization. For Information or ap plications, contact: PERSONNEL DIVISION Oakland County Court House LAB TECHNICIAN, PERMANENT position with light appliance manufacturer,' no military obligation. Call Yaagto, Skuftlt Manuf. Co., Milford. 484-1415. MAN ' TO LEARN SHEET METAL trade. Apply MSS. Gutter Co. 4162 VW Waltan. Drayton Plains. MAINTENANCE MAN AND WIFE to manage apartments in Rochester, Michigan. No experience necessary but must have maintenance or mechanical background. Salary ' utilities end apartment provided. Call Mr. Bennett It 861-2400. Detroit for Interview. » Maintenance Mechanic Requires City of Detroit and FOUND:' FEMALE bIAOL'E. VI- noo N." Telegraph, Pontiac." 48053 dnlty of Pint Knob ond 1-75. 874-____________, 338-4751 ext. 495 _ ___________ J___________H8B ' IBERAL SIwaBB FOR LOST C^orkjng’°wlth^peod* and havejSuburbon First ClaSS Refrig-fawn and white boxer missing saias ability, there Is no limit to «Pn*nr Clnarntitr'c I ironco since Dec. 23, Middiebeit-Long Lk. your potential in this field, caii eroior operators License. RB-^Area.,Anaweri lo name ol Angle Rook, 334-2471. Snalilng * 40-h0ur Week, Overtime be- boots. CtlI 338*3645. __J | Sneflinfl. .__________i . . *. • , LOST DtC. 27: TOY POODLl* DESIGNERS AND OETAILERS^OR VOnd 40 hOUr$ CfljOy 00136-| - blaga color. Malt, fixtures and Machine tools. Super- {■. l nurrhnco Hie. Ml, I Dequindre. Re- lor Design Co., 7771 Pontiac Trill.TltS SUCn OS purCROSe OIS- ________________________________ «J«3oS!*cl<*r Rd" w*ll,d L,k*' |c o u n t s, Life Insurance, La?ey an^whito^sorewi^aniL °n°: bTsHWAiHER'” anB-bus BoV.lhospitalization, retirement to mane of "Shep", female. Lost, night shift only, good wages plus • :j hnlirlnva and lib- Christmas Day vicinity of Pioneer Mf benefits. Elies Bros. Big Boy. pian, paig nOliaays, ana HD Highland. Reward. FE 1-4547. Lost: in vi£initV o* Hiller and Commerce Rds. Small wooden box containing brushae and spurt, Reward. 812-3389. LOST: LADlfcs GLASSES iN PAftK-Ing lot behind tha M*M- 842-1070. j LOST IN VICINITY l»oNfE"R ' ilto Lk, Townohlp. Small Ttlagraph and Huron. Rd., White Electronics Trainee $5000 H.S.Q., electrical or mechanical background, with toma exp. Mre. Smith, 831-1050. _ . INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL STtt W. Maple Rd. Orchard Laka i pet. 363-7220. THEY'RE LOOKING FOR YOUR WANT AD , IN THE Pontiac Press Phone 332-8181 ENGINEERS $8,000-$l 5,000 POSITIONS IN ALL FIELDS INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL eral vacation plan. Apply In Person EMPLOYMENT OFFICE SENmBIll Hudson's PONTIAC MALL MARKETING TRAINED 1010 W. Huron, PonttpC \ 334-4971 esfiWori^ tractor specializing In dtalgn and Mr Frv. 'SSVTttO. .ir?rtr,a!:~f£.T.m*lrCri I INTERJiATJONAL PERSONNEL multl.lenqllv c-‘- ■ 5722 W. Maple Rd. $6600 car, no We, 1130, some college preferred,uNaftonel Growth Corp., send resume MECHANIC. ........_ eoce. full or part time. Ask tor Wally br. Al, Blrmlnflhsm.Chrysler 647-3211. ___ ____ M Thofti** Frenke 17?rch'afd*Cskt Comtructlon Co. 32M3 W. 11------ —^uDv^rpi—cypcpi Rd., Facniinoton* 48024. 474-5100. __ MECHANIC CHRYSLER EXPERI “EX-SERVICEMEN Wondering where to go? We have career opportunities In ell field!. INTERNATIONAL personnel 1040 W. Huron, Pontiac__334)8971 experience “New an6 used ... salesman, required Immediate. tor naw car .deelerihlp,. free demo, benefits, 'guarsnteel fop n#y plan, bonus, good traffic, no H* 724 Phans calls, appe Oakland Chrysler Oakland, Pontiac. experienced mopar Farts counter men, top weaes and bene < tils. Call or see Mr. Estes. Oak-! lend-Plymouih. 724 Oakland, Pan tlec. Phone 135-0438. National Corporation I NEEDS MEN 3 DEPARTMENTS 0PEH,- I Man accapled will be trained for • career position. Must be neat appearing end able to converse In-. telllgentlY with Willingness to work. Opportunity tor rapid advancement. Above tvireqa starting pay. I Transportation furnished. NO Ex-| PERIENCE NECESSARY. MUST BE ABLE TO START WORK IM 1 MEDIATELY. Call Mr. Fox 9 a m. lo 2:M p.m., 3144)319. ON THE GROUND FLOOR AND EARN IN EXCESS OF $15,000 PER YEAR YOUR 1ST YEAR THE GROWTH OF WATER CONDITIONING HAS BEEN TREMENDOUS IN THE PONTIAC AREA YOU WILL RECEIVE. TRAINING IN*THIS VITAL AND MOST NECESSARY FIELD AND WILL BE OFFERED MANY ' BENEFITS AS A FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE 1 CALL; EARL REICH BETWEEN IOiDO A.M. AND 12 A.M. ANYa DAY THIS WEEK 334-9944 Culligan Water Cond. GENERAL OFFICE $325-$525 Recetplonlsts, typists, accounting . clerks, many varied positions. Many fee paid. Mrs. Tanner. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1418 S. Woodward, B'ham 642-82 GENERAL OFFICE, THIS 15 THE lob for you if you- like to file and type, $390. Cell Pat Cary, 334-2471, Snelllnfl 6. Spelling, rn Supervisors and LPN HEAD NURSES NEEDED THAN AVERAGE DIAL 338-7151 Ext. 95 ________1:30 a.m. to 4 0.m, ____ RN FOR EMERGENCY ROOM. 12 noon till 1 p.m. Exc. salary and working. Conditions. Mrs. Gates, Avon Center Hospital, 651-9381. Pontiac Drlvt-ln Theater, 2435 Dixie Hwy. SHIPPING CLERK. MALE AND file clerk female. Beth positions require typing. ADI Beechcraft, Oakland-Pontlac Airport.____________ SHOULD YOU Michigan Bell STAY HOME. EARN 525-5100 P£F week. Potentially 5150 up. 338-2468 before 9 a.m. or after 6 p.m. Work Wanted Female 12 A-l IRONING. I OAY SERVICE. Maxine McCowan. FE 4*3867. DEPENDABLE WOMAN WOULD like to do baby sitting. Children bat. 2W-5. 482-2430. EXPERIENCED B A B V llttik and convalescent nursing. Birmingham, Bloomtlald vicinity. New subdivision Pontiac area. Good references. Call between 7 p.m. end 9 p.m. 8444250. ________ WANTED MANAGER FOR DRIVE-In rastourant. Must hava food ax-parlance. Will Interview either male or female. Call Mra. Heines FE 2-1740 mornings for appoint ment. WANTED ~ EXFERlENCEft travel agent, salary open. Call Collect Lee’ Travel Bureau, CE 9-5990, Flint, Michigan.. Seles Help Male-Female 8-A CAN YOU SELL? 1 If so, we have an opening tor 2 people Interested In makk ey. Real Estate experience but, not necessary, we have a good building program and an affrac-tlva commission tchadula. For In-tervlew call — Mr. Taylor, OR 4-0304, Evas. EM 3-7546. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Bon Real Estate needs 3 more salesmen tor the Utica office. Ex parlance not necessary — will train. Hospitalization and up to 1150 par walk to start. Call Mr. Campbell, 711-1018. SALAD AND GRILL GIRL, Experienced. Day work only. No Sunday's or Holiday's. Birmingham, 844-4331. SALES TRAINEES AGE 18-25 High school graduate. Neat appearing. Who would Uke to progress to learning operation of local business. Experience not necessary, SALARY DISCUSSED AT INTERVIEW of your minor repairs, yes wa also haul, all at a price you can afford Call 624-3814. ________________________ PAINTING, WALL WASHING AND any kind of work to get ready for the holidays. Rats, on demand. FE 3-7327. _______ MATURE BABY SITTER — NEEDS transportation. 338-6490. RELIABLE MATURE wb'MAN available for babyiittinB. Call aftnr 6:30, 442-9574.________________ Building Servicts-SupplietJ13 A*1 BUILDING MODERNIZATION ail work guaranteed, no lobe too small. >94-4722 or TY 5-5590, HUDSON'S HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER Call Hudson's Pontiac Homa im provemeot Center ror: SIDING ROOFING HEATING & COOLING BATH MODERNIZATION KITCHEN MODERNIZATION WATER HEATERS and many other homt Improvements. Convenient credit terms; no charge for estimates. All work according to city codes. 882-3232; ex tension 342 or 343. Hudson's PONTIAC MALL Help Wanted M. er F. 8 Help Wanted M. er F. L SECRETARY Experienced In office work. Must be -table to tspe. 570 week. 1 girl office, Clarkston area. 425-2874. 642-82481 SECURITY! SECRETARY WITH shorthand for top VIP. Exc. location, 1450. Call Donna Allan, 334-2471, Snelllnfl 4. Snalilng. GIRLS DAY OR NIGHTS. EXCEL-lent working conditions. Paid vacation. Apply Sherman Prescription 15 mi. and Lahelr, Birmingham. GRlU. COOK WANTED. APPLY IN leSon, Oave's Grill, 175 Baldwin. HOSTESS, APPLY. HOLIDAY INN, : Pontiac, 1(01 S. Telegraph, Sea Mr. Bapnson.________ . HOUSEKEEPER FOR MOTHER-less homer Carl tor lffjrear-old girl. 651-4952 betwetn 9 S.TP, and 7 p.m. or 651-0719 after 7 p.m. HO^tsEK^p^g-rrfcivs in. care 1-9448. SHIRT LAUNDRY N9- experience necessary* will Train. Paid vacation* paid holidays* good working conditions. Janet Davis Dry Cleaners- 647-3009. Telephone Solicitor Experl* enced. Choose own hours* 3 to 5 days per week. Apply In person to Spartan Dodge. 85S Oakland Ave. TYPING AND CLERICAL, MONDAY thru Frl.* 9 e.rti. to 5:30 p.m. Ap-ply at 49045 Pontiac Trail* Wlxom City Hall.__________ TYPISTS HOUSEKEEPEB-c.o m p I e t e charge* no children* 5 days week* *0wn frensportatlon. 681*0799. | ■ housekeeper. mature-Capa- Pra°i,a,Jl5Ula n^lSitia"*?*"••"’• ’ bie woman to, Wvi In* Interested InL-** • manpower 112 hira permanent home. 4 children* must I m-8386 be able to supply recent work or VALUABLE; TIME IS WASTING, Character ref. EL 6*8794. secretarial posit ons available now* h ^^.VE^fHEBS—1 SmHIInaV Snefl?ng. M‘V> 334 247’' weekly7* cjn ’it**12^5*150 WAITRESS, EXPERIENCE. AFTER-monthly? Pick up and deliver Fuller Brush orders near home. North of M-59 phone Linda Kratz, 334-6401. South ol M-59 photie Bat-ty Owen, MA 6-4193, IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR Clerk-Typist, In automoblla dealership, car billing axperltnca preferred, however, beginners with a sharp math background will ba considered. Salary apan. Call OL I-6800._________ ■ * KELLY'SERVICES 125 N. Saginaw 442-9850 338-0138 An iqual Opportunity Employer KEY PUNCH. BXTBNalVB IXFbE: lanes nacasairy, you qualify call kTTchIn HELP, APTBRNOONS, apply In person, Four Connors Restaurant, corner Walton add Parry. LADY FOR PMlilNG lR QUAL-ITy dry cleaners. Paid holidays, vacation, and othar fringe bana-flte. Top pay. Hxp. preferred — but will train. Apply to Ont Hour * Martlnlzlng. 1397 Elliaheth Lako ‘Rd., Watartord of call 483-0910. osk for Mr. Book. YOUNG MEN Hourly Inmo Call David Haust, PB 1-0159 batora 2 LPN NAME YOUR PRICE For full or part-llma work. Afternoon and midnight shifts. Union Lake area. EM 3-4121. j. MAIDS WITH CARS 20 NEEDED ’ 41.50 ho <2.00 par hour, 442-5530. M A NICURISTS, EXCELLENT OR-portunlty, salary, commission, high volumn salon. Barnard Hair Sfv-llsti — Bloomuaid, Miss Bryce, Ml 7-3031, Birmingham, Miss Pat Ml 4-1313. WAITRESS-BAR MAID. NEAT. LI 9-5019, Gay 90‘s bar. 3601 N. Wood ward, RoyaI Oak. _ WAITRESSES O CURB GIRLS TELE-TRAY OPERATOR Day A night shift, axcallant earn-Ings, profit sharing, Ira# hospitalization, apply In parson, r‘ ~ 20 5. Tolegraph, Pontiac, WAITRESS WANTED. JOB'S CON-ey^lilend, 1431. I. Ttlagraph. 331- WAiYhiSs WANtSo, no sundaYs no holldaye. Inquire 444-4420. - WAITRESSES. DAY WORK ONLY, no Sundays or Holidays, Birming-ham. 646-4333.__ WANT TO WORK PART TIME? Busy otllca needs switchboard gal, 119$. Call Pat Cary, 334-2471, Snall-Ing A Snelltng. _ WARM WELCOME WATTING' fOR Ing 8i Shilling WOMAN TO HOSTESS AND SUPER-vlse dining room, wt nttd a mature woman who has tha abirty to auparvisa. good wagai plus bf unfits, Big Boy Rattaurant* laia*. graph and Moron Straat., Intar- vlawr1*4 p.m / ___ WOMAN FAMILIAR WITH SHEET music, records and musical Instru manta, full time. Apply at Grln- nall's Pontiac Mall.__ WOMAN FOR COUNTER CLERK, hours 2 to 6 p.m. AppIv Pontiac Laundry and Dry 'Claanart* 540 $■ Taiagraph. LAST CHANCE!! To Enroll in Our 1968 ’« Training Course CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF ITS 1968 !. . "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN." ■, ,Fundamental Salesmanship • Preparation for Board Exams * * • Real Estate Law • Appraising THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS, STARTING JANUARY 8th. CLASSES WILL BE HELD AJ BATEMAN REALTY CO., 377 S. TELEGRAPJH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 P.M. FOR INFORMATION ON ENROLLMENT PLEASE CONTACT/ MR: JACK RALPH FE 8-7161 ” f) w A N A D' S 332 8 1 8 1 <*,r. .1 ^ D—8 THE PONTIAC PH ESS, MONDA V, JANUARY I, 1968 Credit Advisori 16-A GIT OUT Of DEBT AVOID OAR NISHM ENTS, R E POS-SESSIONS, BAD CRfOtT. HA- bassmbnt, bankruptcy and LOSS OP JOB. W» h»v» helr-^ v" — Want«d Miscellaneeus ihoutandt oMwoplq wim crwiFtw Wanted to Rent 32 prot>l*rns tojr providing • planned ----------------—— ------- riw^niTEATE’ ?33Rl,DEBTS <i|RL- PROW LAPEER- 0< YOU school In Pontiac ncMs Wanted Real Estate 36 SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH pond, or small lake for hunt club. Write BILL JENNINGS. Stall Grand Riveri* FarmInqton, Mlchl-gan or £811^476-5900, Apartments, FuritMted 37T1ZZY 2 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come, $25 per wk., with $50 dep., | Inquire , at 273 Baldwin. Phone 338-4054. By Kate Osann 2 OR 3 LARGE CLEAN ROOMS, i carpeted, adults, no drinkers, fe 5-3182. iram. LET ___________ . R DEBTS JV]™ PccnnS* MO Y|Tml?Tasr0tol to rent .or will help evenings.1 WHY NOT START OUT the new furnished, adults only. 75 ciark.; ^numberol cU“! R^-nc«. MO ^ or MO. 5™ rUoOMS AND ’*ATHTWT, 3 ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITIES! amount owed »nd..~..~~; - , men tors For this* who realize, "YOU 4-89W.________!------—r------- ; CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT WANTED: GARAGE FOR CAR, VI. OF DEBT. . ." j clnlty N. Saginaw. FE 4-8814. Home^/^jpoinunent Gladly Arranged | Short Living Quarters 33 No Coal or Obligation lor Interviews1------------------------- HOURS *-7 P.M.—SAT. 9-5 p m. MAN WILL SHARE HOME WITH DEBT AID j ’ family or couple. 332-0091._; 9lt Rlker BldO. FE 2-0181, MAN WILL SHARE 3-BEDROOM —"-----------a|-----~ AAi home with two men. Color TV, ••1 cooking priv., Cass Lk. 682-0651._ !womanT6~share HOME WITH LOCKWOOD MOVING COMPANY —| older woman. Minimum expenses. Meving and Trucking we will move or itere your furni-| More for companionship. 363-7460. M&72?SrfttSX,or wt,R,ntlslWanted Real Estate 36 Puinting ahdJDecoroting 23 _ _ PAINTING, PAPERING | VU Tupper, OR 3-7061______HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE PAR- PAINTING AND PAP ERIN G.j CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-Yrni'ra next Oryel Gidcumb, 673- ERT1ES, AND LAND CONTRACTS Mi _____________ .! WARREN STOUT, Realtor FAINTING AND GENERAL RE-;US0 N opdyke Rd. FE 5-8145- pair. Licensed. 625-2101 [ urgently nejBd for immediate Sale I 24. A Pontiac at Times Realty to handle your,- N d_, kers 154 N Perr„ real estate problems. We have! J^P™:rw every means available to you 3 ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITIES such as mortgage money, all paid. Drayton area, 852-1844. I FHA and VA closings In our OF ROOMS AND BATH, BABY WEL- flce. Investment buyers for home i come, *35 per wk., .with $75 dep., or acreage, and 18 capable sales-j an utilities paid by us. Inquiral at 273 Baldwin. Phone 338-4054. I 2 ROOMS, BATH, Clean, modern, quiet, j Upholstering AGED FURNITURE ALL CASH ReUpholstered, better than new at por homes any place In Oakland half the price. Big savings also* county, money in 24 hours.. on carpet and draperies. Call 335-1 1700 for FREE estimate In your home.________________________2 25 people to assist you. Call for] w your assistance now and we wllli have one of the ,following sales-jbacmcluk people at your door within 15 minutes from the time you call— 4U>3avu. ...........y..I Allen LaFdntaine, George Ver- KITCHENETTE APARTMENT ON not, Bert Hungerford, Florence Pontiac Lake, no pets or children.; Blimka, Don Genereux, Shirley Royal Apartments 8180 Highland Burton, Beverly Williams,, Rlch-I Rd. 673-7605._, _ • ard Williams, Tony Manzella, SHARP 1 ROOM. FOR MATURE Ray Hayward, Ray Hunter, Art person. *15 plus *35 dep: 474-1581. &'*n'oiiv°ebr, R*VSS Johnson ^yIWARM^R^NfTWrElT'DR Svetcos, Pat Flood. No oblige- children. FE 4-1735.__. _ tion, no high pressure, lust ai warm welcome. Thank You. Apartments, Unfurnished 38; 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY " 623-0600 Open 9-9 daily, 1-BEDROOM ON PONTIAC LAKE, $24 a week. EM 3-7-376 or \EM 3-5790. Transportation AAA Auto Driveaway Drive our cars ,to Los Angei»« San Francisco, Seattle, Dallas, Denver, New York, Florida, Ari zona, Iowa, Virginia. Ship your car insured, ICC licensed. 2316 Da-I _5— vid Stott Bldg. Detroit, 965-3456. _’ AAA-1 CALIFORNIA CAR DRIVE YOURSELF CARS WAITING. TO 5-5709, Detroit, 18018 Woodward CAR AND FUEL FURNISHED TO driver to Florida about Jan. .12. Ret. Call eves. 482-0434 YORK SPOT CASH , ... FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA,1 JrJ’i________I__ OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION 1 BEDROOM, HEAT, HOT WATER CAL L NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0758 OR EVENINGS FE 4-7005; __ WANTED—HOUSES TO SELL Call BREWER REAL ESTATE. 724 Rlker Bldg. FE 4-5181._ WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 4-0343 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton P.alnt ALL CASH 10 MINUTES We Need Listings Buyers Galore 1 BEDROOM. ADULTS ONLY. , ___130JEMINOLE I 1 BEDROOM, STOVE, REFRIGER-! ator, air conditioned, $1 T7>-month-1 ly, plus utilities, Union Latei * area, 363-7571 or 682-2144. 0&UI*/ © IBM hp NCA, l»c TJ4. !•«. U-S. Pet. Oft \ ' \ 1- 2-BEOROOM. NEW.-NEAR MALL s"ounCdar «nditioA™d.lanhMiedAir nSSi“Ytt. Herbie- ni caU her- She’s breaking her neck ;to hM no p«*»- Prom ii35.( get Here now—she thinks it’s Richards!” re D-ojoj. I , % • • Sale Haases 49 ‘ .: T L; . 'j-. Frushour 49 Sale Haases rrr 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. LO-cated In Edgewood Park Subdivision. Large wooded lot. IV, carj garago, attached. ^ Full basement, flnlshad. On Fflvata drive. Walking • , 1 . \ t'SSS^cS 83i^i7- mi0(00' bv; WEST SIDE\ \ \ -----|----1---------------- see THIS Lovely Cape Cod home, featuring, 6 spacious carpeted living room, with fireplace, formal dinihg room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, ceramic bath* plus extra bath, knotty pine recreation room and i Beauty . Rite Homes 1 7 MODELS FROM $21,400 Including lake-privileged lot. 2 lake front homes ready for immediate occupancy. Mddel on Airport Rd. at Pleasant Dr„ 1 Vi miles north of M59. Call 674-3136.. your Sals Houses 49 : IRWIN 5- ACRES Rich land and trssh air. Large 3 bedroom ranch hdme with aluminum siding and 2-caf attached garage. Located on "Sashabaw niar Seymour Lk., Priced at $16,200 witht $4,000 down on land contract. Better call now. - LAKEFR0NT 3 bedroom brick ranch type bun-galdw with large carpeted living room, fireplace with bar b-cue grill, covered patio, overlooking the nice Brown Realtors & Builders Since 1939 HIGHLAND ESTATES: Three bedroom brick with full basement and beautiful landscaping; large lot and fenced yard. House has built-ins;1 carpets; drapes end tub enclosure. 1304 Dundee. , PRICE REDUCED**- ' $100 this North CifV 7-room t-j story home. There .are 3 bed-) rooms, living room has' fireplace formal dining room, basement end| h-aA and outdoor bar-b-cue, 2'j-car garage. *15.900 — your). a house In trade. IMMEDIATE POS-| GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR SESSION. | . MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE W ‘Walton ______ FE 3-7883 LAKE ORION 3 bedroom, broad front brick ranch — large utility — JJka. new —-tri angular, lot — 200 foot fcopl — vacant — $450 MOVES IN. On FHA mortgage — for sale by owner—335-2801.__________ JACIORbSHOUR, Realtor |SM 5730 Williams Lake Rd. 674-2245 MLSI HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL C. SCHUETT FOR REAL ESTATE 1 8800 Commerce Rd EM 3-7188 j 5280 Dixie Hwy. ___FE 3-7088 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty BRICK RANCH j 3 bedrooms, living roqm, dining, room, kitchen with bullt-ins, m baths, fireplace, 2Va car finished j heated garage attached, on 3 nice! lots, with lake privileges on Pleas-1 ant Lake In Waterford Twp. Price1 $24,500, $5,000 down, $150 per month j on land contract. Everett Cummings, Realtor ^ , . 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD Let us build you a house that Is em 3-3208 363-7181 j out of the ordinary. Prices arr reasonable and our designs are Custom, J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. even if behind in payments or un-;Real Estate — Insurance — Building, der torclosure. Agent. 527-4400, 17779 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 4-0306 2-BEJ3ROOM,^ ^^STOVE \ j Evenings call EM 3-7546 -rJ> nr a r‘ nnl 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX, ,1 CHILD| . | 625^6iofurnished' Ca" 1 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 rMFrig- erator, alr-conditloning, balconyiCLARKSTON, 3 ROOM, UTILITIES, SMALL 2-BEDROOM, *25 A WEEK, overlooking lake, adults, no pets,| built-in stove and oven, adults, no pets, dep., 1 child welcome, convenient location, 625-1775. |K evenings 625-1865. ___ FE 2-5876. ______ . Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. (Across from the Mall) 332-4810 or 3340564 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES ' WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ave. FE 2-91411 Lady wants same to share qq you want your car expenses to FWT OR 4-0234. property SOLO? LADY DRIVING SOON WEST WE ARE In the market for 2 mo homes in Drayton Plaij area. Must have basement i garage., $12,000 to $18,000. CROSS‘REALTY ORCHARD CT. APTS. 2 bedroom apartments Adults Manager-Apt. 6. 19 Salmer Rent Rooms 42 carpeted. Refrigerator, and xtnve ^ 1 Manager-Apt. 6. 19 Salmer jCLEAN ROOM FOR ONE PERSON,| ! Welcome pets,, *165 monthly,. 417 SYLVAN ON THE LAKES 1 and »>4 week. 338-8644.___________________________________________ ] Parkdale. 651-75951 ; 2 bedrooms from *152 682-4480. GENTLEMEN NON - DRINKER-] Bmmm-^ or J57-4300. .... . —......_ moil*,, „ » , , .. AND INVESTMENT CO. Coast Fla. Wishes same to sharel We have the sales force, financing, -u. Sashabaw Rc) OR 4 3105 ...... —....1.1— ...... -1'*" We pay cash for U5ed homes ROOMS AND BATH, oakland:^^HBHHMHHBH Ave. fe 5-4878r333-7603. i i Rent Houses, Furnished smoker, $10 weekly, 673-3791 after 4. ride. 685-1071. RIDER Florida. ^901. Insurance 26 ARE YOU GOING HUNTING? LOW °cost hunters Insurance at Hempstead, Barrett & Associates. FE. 4-4724 — 185 Elizabeth Lake Road. Wanted Household Goods 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP-pllances, 1 piece or houseful. °ear-son*s. FE 4-7881. advertising, experience and even cash buyers. We work hard and get results. Call DORRIS & SON, REALTORS' for a free appraisal.i OR 4-0324._________’ J HAVE CASH BUYER FOR SMALL HOUSE ELW00D REALTY 682-2410________ P HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL A G ENT , YORK AT 674-1698 39 JUST LIKE HOME. KITCHEN, RE-j 3 ROOMS ON OAKLAND AVENUEI ’ 5^3- I ||flerator, washer, dryer, TV, W-f ^near Wisner School. Automatic! Strathmore. 338-2468 before 9 a.m.i gas heat, private entrance, rea-jl'BEDROOM COZY, CLEAN, CHILD after 6 p.m.________________________________i sonable. Inquire 900 Oakland. j .undv 6 -mbs. iwelcomed, no pets, large SLEEPING ROOM, MAN Pontiac, 852-4959. BUDGET MINDED? For just $1000 dbwn, we will-build you a. Basic-Bilt 3-bedroom alum, sided ranch on our ■ lot near Crescent Lake. Total price $10,650 on land contract. - Will furnish material to finish and add * to contract. SCOTT LAKE FRONT HIITER NORTHSIDE, 3 rooms and bath, | all furnished, $5,500 with $700-down, ! land contract. , * iWESTSIDE, 2 family income, 5-room ; apartment down, 3 room apartment up, .full basement, gas heat, $2000 » down, land contract, terms. j $12,200 we build, 3-|tedroom ranchers, oak floors, vbnity in bath, I full basemepts, gas heat, on vour I lot, to see model call HIITER REALTY, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Rd., I 682-8080 after 8 p.m., 682-4653._ Lauinger Owner says sell this 3-bedroom lake privileged, home. Extra eot, Woodhull Lake area. $12,500 terms. Green Lake Road. Orchard Lake mailing, brick ranch on corner lot, 3 bedrooms, full basement, 2’ 2-car garage. $26,500 terms. OFFfCE OPEN 9-9 SUN. 1-5 674-0319 - m____673-2168 -' LAZENBY Have a Happy and Prosperous New Year.- ____i_________ LONGFELLOW'" Asbestoes Ranch, , full basament. Aluminum storms and screens. Home reel clean. Immediate occupancy. FHA approved. Owoer Agent, 674-1649.________ ' LOOKING FOR A CAREFREE HOME? All new 3-bedroom elec, heated. Beautiful oak floors, 16' kitchen, formica cabinets, all aluminum siding, in White Lk. Twp. Near Union Lk. shopping, $11,000, terms. A. LANGD0N BUILDERS 682-0340 UL 2-2898 $30 wk., $90 dep., 682-3477. Apartments, Furnished 37j3 23?slvpl|e. ^bedroom h°^e'..af^omp^c; modern sleeping room for r ---------------rn 4 ROOMS AND BATHkSTOVE, RE-1 i9"*pr" ,st' S'75' Mfr’34U a,,er *1 a young working girl or lady, frige-rator and utilities Turn., 1 dr 2 0~«»e ~~p am/- $J—j-r~APP~Frnri 8-8284._■ ...... ■____ children welcomed. OR 3-0601. 2 NICE CLEAN ROOM FOR GENTLE- area, attached carport, family man, private entrance. 245 Nelson, w. HURON FE 4-4373. ._____________________________________- _________ OR 4-0358 iroomAwgarage, utilities furnlshM, $16 wk.‘, no smoking or drinking, 590 E. Walton Blvd, 11-BEDROOM MODERN. BY PON-tiac Mall. Adujts. FE 5-8585. 2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT, everything furnished, suitable for 1 or 2 working men. North end. FE, 4-3135. Cash for good used house-' listings needed hold goods. Hall's Auction Sales,! FARA^s*HOA5,E5;4.<i?fi2E MY 3-1871 RIDGEWAY, REALTOR — MLS___________________________338-4086 HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good furniture and appliances. Or whet have you? . S&B AUCTION a. 1089 Dixie Hwy.__________OR 3-2717 NOTICt Brooms and bath, quiet couple or lady, FE 5-|929. ROOMS IN PONTIAC, BABY welcome, 852-1975 way and attached garage. Prepare now for next summer's fun. $1,000 down plus costs, .$62.96 mo., plus tax and ins. Total $11,500. only. Laundry facilities. Utilities furnished. Refrigerator. 98 S. Mer-rimac. $28 a wk. Call after 6, 674-j 2730. carport, family 1130. mo., 1 r security dep., ayailable Jan. HAGSTROM, REALTOR MLS EVES. FE 4-7005 5 ROOMS HEAT FURNISHED UP-, pgr, $90 monthly, 682-5490. Royal Oak LI 6-9262 dr Detroit TU NICE SLEEPING ROOM PLUS! TU 3-4471. 'I meals and laundry if desired, old- er man preferred, no drinkers. Call FE 4-1019. LOTS-WANTED IN PONTIAC ________________________ Immediate closIng. REAL VALUE 2 rooms AND BATH, PRIVATE, REALT,Y, 642-4220 i attractively decorated, no children pets, 335-7942, 2-BEOROOM 1966 MOBILE HOME.I 12'x60' for rent or sell. $150 $ecuri-j------------------■--------- ty dep. required. For more in-jROOM IN NEW HOUSE, NEAR 5 ROOMS. MODERN, SUN ROOM,! formation, call 642-2195 or 332-901?. GMC Truck_ Coach. JCitchen 1-----------------------------------------------j— -----------------1 privileges. 335-6509, or 332-m)7. 1 child, $127.50 monthly, lease,)SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC-first and .last mohfh rent In ad- cupancy, $30 per week. Maid serv-vance, near Union Lake, call after| ice, TV, telephone. 7891 S. Wood-12 noon, EM 3-0134. j ward______________________• ■ AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS 1- and 2-bedroom, all modern conveniences, carports and all utiJi- BY OWNER Golf Manor Subdivision. Union Lake and Commerce Rds. 4-bedroom, IVfe bath. Living room. Dining room. Family room with fireplace. Kitchen with built-ins. Completely carpeted and draped. 2-car garage. Excellent condition. $29 363-5276. Highland Estates New Years in The Country A well built 3 bedroom all brick i pretty grey brick 3 bedroom ranch rancher with attached brick ga- ^ i,2 acrte |Jst north of Rochester, rag?. Ceramic .tile bath^ built in ,Has |arge paneled . family room, range, oven and hood. Full base-' bullt-ins iri the kitchen, new car-ment with small tear and good] peting, and spaciou* living, room, possibilities. 75x\50 lot, well land-! gaSy terms at $18,500. scaped and fencea-in rear yard. . _ . . Patio, paved driveway and sidewalks make this the home to see! Full price $21,500. •S'lSLOCK & KENT 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bid. ' 338-9294 ________338-9295 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR "ACTION" ______________!______________— included in rent. No children /-I adit ctam adc a uauc i at 2 ROOMS AND PRIVATE BAT H, or pets. C^D SACREAOEE OWNERS.' Being clean, adults. 221 North Cass. _ Manage^,on Praises__________673-5J68 your local Real Estate Ci. we 2 BEDROOMS, BATH, CHILDREN. | RIOOMFIELD ORCHARDS have many calls In this area for___________FE 8-0784._________| DLUU/ViriCLU LmLnttfxUj properties in this area. Please con- 2 ROOMS AND BATH, CLOSE TO „ APARTMENTS ♦act us before you list! I downtown, private, prefer 1 or 2 |dea||y $uated |n Bloomfield Blr. single men. 335-7942.-------- minghant area, luxury 1- and 2- 2re!* Kitchen. Basement. Oi\ HAtvERY NICE ROOM, LAKE OAK-1 heat. $150 month. One year lease, jan(j qr 3-7539. CLARK „ Clarkston Real Estate 12 bedrooms, inquire at 208 n 5856 S. Main _______MA 5-5821 Johnson, 682-9191 after 6. QUICK^CASTr^OR YOUR HOME. 2 ROOMS, NICE, CLEAN, ADULTS Equity or tend contract. Call Clark] only, prefer mlddleaged couple " Real Estate, FE 3-7888. 1 1 single. FP 4-4803. m SBHRCE NKCTMY Excavating ALUMINUM SIDING, ROOFING IN IBACKHOE, LOADER WORK, DRY stalled by "Superior" — Your wells, septjc fields, footings, dozer authorized Kaiser dealer. FE work, fill. 682-3042 or 334-8968. 31H. ______________________... Beets end Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family boating headquarters. Starcraft aluminum and fibergles Shell Lake and I.M.P. fiberglas. 3265 S. Woodward at Adams Road. Ml 7-0133. Sno-Mobile sales, service end storage._______________ END LOADING DOZER WORK. ■ septic fields, dry wells- FE 5-1081. Brick A Block Service___ BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT work, fireplaces specialty. 335-4470. FIREPLACES, WRITTEN GUARAN tee. EM 3-6879 Building Mudemization l-A QUALITY GUARANTEED, licensed, free estimates. Spring, ‘ field Bldg. Co.. 625-2128. REMODELING AND NEW HOMES. Deal direct with builder. Will supply ref. License end bonded. MY 3-7291. __________ ' i fencing PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5932 Dixie Hwy. 623-1040 Fleer Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND old floor sanding. FE 2-5789. R. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING sanding and finishing. FE 5-0592. Floor Tiling CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. LI-noleum, formica, tile. Carpeting. 741 N* Perry, FE 2-4090. Jantioriul Services Rental Equipment RENT FLOOR CLEANING' AND polishing equipment, heaters, misc. 62 W. Montcalm. 332-9271. Jack-son's. Roofing A-l NEW, REROOF — REPAIRS r-Call Jack. Save the lack. 338-6115, OR 3-9590. QUALITY ROOFING. NEW AND reroof. Bonded material. Free estimates. Reasonable. 682-7514. WOMACK ROOFING, RE ROOF Complete ins, coverage. Free estimates. 338-4545. , Sign Painting SIGNS. HAND PAINTED. MADE TO order. Indoor and outdoor. Compare our prices. 335-3369. Two bedroom bungalow. Living.' . and dining area. Kitchen, Gas Rooms With Board’ wall furnace. Garage. $120 month. One year lease, references,' se-1 curity deposit. Two children. 43 GOOD HOME FOR NICE PERSON, Write Pontiac’ Press'* Box* No C-2 \ private room, middle-aged man INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP: 3-bed bedroom apartments available to*Preferred. 682-8152. Immediate possession from $135-PARTLY FURNISHED 1-BEDROOM ppTrriyp pooaa—hdmF-cookED per month including carpeting, house, and garage. Pontiac area. P^VATe roOM. HOME COOKED Hotpoint, air conditioning and ap-| 822-2805, Detroit. ________ meals. Close to plant. 335-1679J _ swfmmfng pooTand3 i^rge s^^deck Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 Rent Office Space 47 — All utilities except electric. No , - • - f detail of luxury has been aver-!2.BedroOM BY MALt, NEWLY' In Rochester ooked In Bloomfield Orchard Apts, decorated adults oniv ff s-nsns 11 .. ....... located on South Blvd. (20 Mile ? v'.-NEW COMMERCIAL OFFICE CEN-i Multiple Listing Serv.ce Rd.), between Opdyke and 1-75 ex-;* BEDROOMS, BASEMENT, 2 CAR fer spaces from 400' to 8,00Q sq. pressway. Open dally, J9 to 8 p.m.) jL®T®fl®^Near Northern. $115 mo. ^ ideaj^ for Barber, Beauty Salon, RELOCATE YOUR BUSINESS: Large 7-room home zoned com-' mercial, approxiiately 2400 sq.| I «, ft. floor space on 1st and 2nd■ IVi acres In West Bloomfield Town-level. Full basement, plenty parking area. Full price $20,000 contract terms. room ranch on V acre of land,; hardwood floors, gas heat, basement, near 1-75 also zoned commercial in immediate area of! shopping center. $5,000 down on contract terms. price tag of just $31,600 terms. WARDEN REALTY CLARK REAL ESTATE 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac* 333-7157 1362 W. HURON ST. . FE 3-7888 Shepard Real Estate 651-8503 NEW HOME ' 3 bedroom, brick and aluminum ranch. IV* baths, full basement, 2 car garage, thermal Insulated winr dows. Large lot with trees. Drayton area. Full price $20,400. PRESTON Built homes and Realty 673-8811_______ New Model OPEN ANY TIME BY APPT. 3-BEDROOM BRICK TRI-LBVEL Williams Lake Rd. I block nqrth ------- . of 'Union Lake Village. Choice of ship with a beautiful all brick 3 elevations, $19,400 to $20,200 plus rancher, about 60 fruit trees, j |0f Upper Straights lake privileges. 1 alsq WE BUILD: Has excellent room layout, 2!.3.B£0ROOM TRI-LEVEL with IV*-natural fireplaces, walk-out base-, car garage, $13,600 plus lot. ment^with large rec. room, attached plastered garage} much 3-BEDROOM RANCH with 2-car ga-more. BIG VALUE with small rage, $15,700 plus lot. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY AREA } bedroom, plastered walls, oak floors, carpbted living room, gas heat, 80'x260' lot. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyke___3ff-0156 i OK FOR ‘ I HORSES STATELY 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL with 2Vi baths, formal dining room and 2-car garage, $29,200 plus lot. PONTIAC—VACANT PE 2-2064. Sunday, 12 to 8 p.m. For information: UN 4-0303. Mgr|. 335-5670, 3 BEDROOM, 1 Real Estate. Insurance Office. BATHS, BASE-! Plenty Of rarking. Call 651-4576 ment, family room 2 stall garage, or 731-8400. FE 8-0770.___________|___________ ELIZABETH LAKE SHORE APART-! earpetlng and draperies, builtin, RENT OFFICES—$35 AND UP. 4540 ments. 1 bedroom. Lease. Electric1 g°°d location, fe 4-ni27.___________0,xie Hwy OR 3-1355. heat, boat dock, beach inc. Adults, FOR LEASE — LARGE 3. BED-no pets. 5375 Cooley Lake Rd Crestbrook | MODEL OPEN! room 2 story brick home, iv* Rant Business Property 47-A baths, with entrance hall, dining -| room, full basement^, gas heat, 2- j car garage; all in efftellent edndi- oc onn cn ct tion. on Extra large East Suberban ZDfzUU jIjI. rl. lot, for small family who will two adjacent bldgs, across from maintain It as is. $150 month with Osteppathic Hospital- Will remodel security deposit. UL 2-3463. * 'to suit tenant or will provide new 5 ROOMS ON CLOVERTON, W/C- building with parking on site 120x-terford, $100 a month, $100 dep. 140. Contact Bruce Annett personally . PPm Mm im ________________________I- Annett Inc. Realtors ref^erator^ utlTltiesT Adult* only! CONNECTING WATERS TO CASS j, E. Huron St. 338-0466 »t us dispose of your present homo and place you In a new home for 3-bedroom Cape Cod, full base-1 ^ ment, gas heat, full dining room,! garage, 0 down about $85 per! month. Owners Agent. 674-1649. 1363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59) RHMHHhRI mile west of Oxbow Lake TUCKER REALTY to. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor EMBAS5Y EAST APARTMENTS One bedroom, air conditioning, $130 per mo. See caretaker ar Embassy West Apartments, 5367 Highland Rd., Waterford Twp._ ___‘ p*II v io o W QUICK SALE UAlLT IZ-0 Houie at 907 Emerson near Pon-| 3-bedroom, family room and 2-car! tiac Northern, 2 bedroom bunga-,903 Pontiac State Bank garage, priced at only $16,400 plus; low, full basement, automatic heat.; TWO LEFT $800 down plus closing to new mortgage. WRIGHT REALTY 382 Oakland, FE 2-9141 , Cc3h for all types of property 334-1545 lot. Located in new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and . city water. Drive out M59- to Crescent Lake Road, turn right to Crestbrook Street and model. DON Lake Vista Apartments 3 rooms ang bath, carpeted. Stove,I 5366 Cooley Lake Rd. Office Ooen Evenings 8, Sundays 1-4 ROCHESTER MANOR APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM, $140 2 BEDROOM, $165 immediate occupancy, ^ spaCious, SMALL HOUSE, 1 BEDROOM child welcome, FE 4-2288. ref, and deposit req. 3165 Kenrick, MODERN 4-ROOM, 1 OR 2 CHIL-dren welcome. 681-0860. RENT — SELL ................................R ________Hi____________ arage, Ik. prlv. 1 child, large fog, O'Neil Realty OR 4-2222. 30,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH BEDROOM,; 18 ft clearance, and railroad sid- 1 3-5158. GIROUX REAL ESTATE I Highland Road (M59) 673-71 EASTHAM RHODES W. WALTON. Good 2-bedroom home, full basement, gas heat, 60' lot, REAL ESTATE ' near bus line, ideal for retired 4511, Highland Road (M59 ) 673-7837; couple. Only $7,650: 'Can br purchased^ Gl terms. MARSHALL.. Nice 2-bedroom home, excellent condition, 3-bedroom homes in Orion area, full basements, garages, m bathr One has large family room and fireplace, walkout basement. 10 per cent down plus costs. Also hava lots available iri Union Lake area. Call Nelson Bldg. Co., OR 3-8191. UNION LAKE. 3 ROOMS AND bath, $45 per month after down payment, on land contract. Ga neat, large lot. Immediate pot session. 363-5098. TO LEASE BUILDING, LIGHT IN- ihi\/CCTnDC dustrial area, 4,000 square feet, 11; IIMVcj I UKj 'miles northwest of Pontiac, on M59.J Carpentry Lumber Snow Plowing ROBERT.SCOTT. SNOW PLOWING. 338-6779,_______ SNOW PLOWING AND TOW SCftV-Ice Fffl, 5-7655. snowPLowing and removal Elmo Lynch 335-7578. 1 hvH/nnir hMi Air Vrtn- cnnq welcome, rc _______________ mi|es northwest of Pontiac, on MWJ d?tioh?nu? kitchen swim-!SMALL HOUSE. NO CHILDREN OR! Reprv Pontiac Press Box C-37r[ mtng pool many extVls. In'.' Tttt. D«P- FE 3-6566 or 391-3677., f Pontfac Michigan.;_____i________ . quiet park-like atmosphere, close UNTIL MAY 31ST. 3-BEDROOM D.Mf MiscelioneOUf 48 to shopping, churches. Lease op-j house, 9011 basement, Pontiac. Im- ......... ____________^ i tlonal. 812 Plate oft Parkdale. 651-j mediate occupancy, $16Q unfur- i-i criD 3044 ! nlshed or furnished. 332-9562. ,2-CAR GARAGE SUITABLE FOR _______________:______________________________—I—------------------ storage. FE 2-5876. _______ I Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Sale Houses_________________________________49 ~ !, 3 OR 4 BEDROOMS, NEWLYl decorated. $49 down. Art Daniels: Realty, 3100 Ford. KE 7-7500, KE| 7-7220. Here'$ a nice 2-family Income i.f™ATi?S that's grossing $279 per month;) — - - Located in a good rental area,] you'll recognize this one ’ as ~ UNION LAKE FRONT bedrooms — full basament, P . i a car garage — large gla basement, gas heat, IVa-car ga- Jnclosed^porch — a fina baa ragew Only $13,000, $100 down, bal- Terms ance low FHA terms. 1 num bi-level home in excellent! FLATTLEY REALTY condition, 3 bedrooms, large fin-1*20 Commerce Rd. 363-6981 ished family room, fenced yard, ——-------------------------— ' bought on a land contract Bill Eastham Realtor MLS blacktop street, community water Only $18,000, $750 down, balance low FHA terms. ! A. J. RHODES, REALTOR IFE 8-2306 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712 673-6986 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR - TALBOTT LUMBER Family roums, rough or finished;'Glass service, wood or aluminum. _______________ _________ dorn-rrs, porches, recreation, Building and Hardware supplies. IsNOW PLOWING. REASONABLE rooms, kitchens, bathrooms. State iw, Oakland_________ FE 4-4595 rates. 674-3504. licensed. Rees. Cell after 5 #.m —aa-.i ,.T____________ I---I------------------------------ 682-0648.,________ \ Moving, storage i carpentry an6 painting \ % i ’ ' '. | Tree Trimming service New end repair. FE 5-1331 CARPENTRY . AND CEM ENT work. Free estimates. UL 2-5252. CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR Free est. 335-6529, 335-7585. ____ BASE- SNYDER BROS-, MOVING CO. WE]~~ move anything — PIANOS. Mov-'a.t ing Experts, 852-!— 2-2410. TREE SERVICE BY B&L Free estimate. FE 5-4449, 674-3510. Painting and Decorating^ \r*f% trimaaing and remov- ai. Reasonable. 391-1666. CUSTOM CARPENTRY, BASE-. A-t PAINTING AND ments finished. Paneling, celling, PAPER HANGING tile, formica work. Reasonable. THOMPSON FE 4-8364 673-1375. _______ Trucking _____........ I A-l PAINTING.. WORK GUARAN INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS , - Free estimates. 682-0620. WOOD ART — INTERIOR sign, family rooms, bathroom vanities. 673-2976. Cement Work ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK I OR 4-3267 KLOCK AND C E W E N T WORK.I Pontiac, 391-1173-_____________ Commercial Bldg., Modernization COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL remodeling specialists *“ GUINN'S CONST. CO. ________334-7677 or 391-2671 Dressmaking, Tailoring •1 LIGHT moving, trash __________________________________ hauled reasonable, FE 4-1,353. A-i QUALITY PAINTING'. REASON- CAREFUL MOVING, FREE ESTI- able. 628-4623.________________!_____males, reasonable. 338-3570._ cabinets. COMPLETE DECORATOR SERVICE HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME have your home custom styled your pr|ce. Any time. FE 8-0095. - | and color coordinated by proles- |~i7-*im.iA’ amC«etfu~rJ! stonels. Carpet, draperies, LIGMT HAULING AND M O V I N G , furniture, custom designed furniture_ct any kind, reas. FE 5-7643._ by our own craftsman, reuphol- LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, stery, appliances. Appointments in garages cleaned. 674-1242._ your home. Don Frayers, tht com- light AND HEAVY TRUCKING, plete service furniture store, 1108 rubbish, fill dirt, grading and gray- W. Huron, 332-9205._I_______| el and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. EXPERT PAINTING AND PAPER LIGHT HAULING, MOVlifGrREAS1 hanging. Call Herbie, 673-6790^. 332-7516 ) PA INTI NG~ PAPER I N G# WALL ^ cleaning, paper removal. B. T. Sandusky. FE 4J448. UL 2-3190. I TUCK Kentdl QUALiTY WO'RK ASSURED. PAINt- ' Si”* **“ Tninlcs to Rent Photography WTon Pickups Hvfon Stake TRACTORS ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT NEED., A COMMERCIAL/ PHOTO-1 dresses, leather coats. 682-9533. GRAPHER? Cell DONOVAN! That's M&S DONOVAN, 857-2351 Grand Prix Apartments 1-2 Bedroom Apts., from $125 per month 1-2 Bedroom Apt. with carpeting, from $135 per month All utilities except electricity • Private Poof and Recreation Area • Huge Walk-in and Wardrobe Closets • Insulated, Sound-Proof Vyalls • Electric Kitchens • Ceramic Tile Baths • Private Parking • RCA Master Antenna • Air Conditioning • Aluminum Sliding Windows 315 S. Telegraph Rd-Pontiac See Manager Apt. No. 1 Phone 334-7171 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Orive out M59 lust west of Cass Lake Rd. to Candelstick. Directly behind the Dan Mattingly Business Center. DAN MATTINGLY FE 5-9497 _____OL 1-0222 3-BEDROOM BRT&K, PONTIAC W. side, prefer trade up or down for . house on large lot in lake area. Price Is $23,500. FE 2-7819._ 3 Bedrooms low down Payment no mortgage costIT MODEL OPEN 285 Fisher « 1:30 to 5 p.m. — 6-deV week WESTOWN REALTY . CACTCint DAD, — ROCHESTER AREA—COZY 2 BED-cAjIjIUc tAKK ,j room bungalow* enclosed porch, Vacant 2 bedroom ranch, gas heat,i quick possession, $7500 cash. Nix, futl basement, carpeting and panel-) v Realtory. 651 -0221 r 852-5375. _ Ing, attached aarage, ZERO down,]ROCHESTER SUBURBAN owners agent — 4-H REAL ESTATE LAKE PRIVILEGES Elizabeth Lake Front MOTORWAY DRIVE 26' living room, new carpeting, beautiful (trapes, 2 extra large bedrooms, breakfast room with scenic view.. Kitchen with loads of cupboard space, large dishwasher, full basement, completely panelled with divided area for additional bedroom if desired. Two-car garage with divided space for cookout. Large patio, automatic sprinkling system. Excellent beach, many other features. Immediate possession. Only $45,000 with reasonable | down payment. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor ■ 2339 Orchard Lk. Rd. 6682-0900. FINE NEW HOMES BY ! ROSS _ _ Ml_________ _ NEW 3-bedroom aluminum rancher Family room. Basement. 100 ft. lot. $16,900. WE TRADE. Nix, Realtor. 651-022J, 852-5375. VAN , , 548-6217 . 4-bedroom ranch. In the city of Lake Orion, 2-car garage, 6£'x]2!5 fenced lot, $13,900, Gl or p.H.A. terms, evenings call, 628-1738. WALTON-BALDWIN AREA Like new ranch has all conveniences Including built-in oven, range and refrigerator. Carpeting and garage. Only $400 down on FHA. DRAYTON PLAINS Older home conveniently located near schools and shopping. Has full basement on large lot. Full price only $13,-200, can be bought on land contract. CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. 3487 Sasjiabaw Rd. We pay cash for used nomes ON BETTY JO'S DRESSMAKING - Weddings, alterations. 674-3704 j Dressmaking “and altera- -* tlons. FE 4-J139._____ Drivers Training APPROVED AUTO DRIVING school. FE 8-9444. Free hom ' pickup.__________________i Drywall Piano Tuning DRYWALL SERVICE, OLD AND n,w. 627-32*9. ; _________i iavestroughing MBS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE ] eeveslroughing service free est. 673-6866. Licensed — bonded '*-Ton Pickups TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailer* . Pontiac Farm and _____0 Industrial Trac*cr Co. _ 1 825 S. WOODWARD PIANO TUNING * REPAIRING FE ’4-0461 FE 4-1442 OSCAIg. SCHMIDT FE 2-5217 ___Open Dally Including Sunday_ ______Wos,efi"9 Servic* « I Water Softeners A t PLASTERING, NEW AND RE-piar. 338-2702. SALES AND RENTALS PLASTER" REPAIRS* Culllqan W«t«r Condi. ...334-9944 Prompt service. 334-3715 _ Wall Cleaners BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Wall* cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631. WALL WASHINGTTREASONABLE ___FE 4-8306, 673-8797 WALL WASHING, fl YEARS 6X-perience, reas. FE 2-9015. Plumbing & Heating Restaurants Excavating 'BIG BOY DRIVE-IN. OIXIE AT ~ __Silver 1 ake — Telegraph# t Huron. I JACKS DRIXAE INN ' - Cor Baldwin & Montcalm FE 4 7882 2' Frank and Jeanette Slaybaugh Props. Well Drilling WELL DRILLING, POINT changed, 8< pump service, UL 2-1831. lllfi DARLING COURT New Luxurious AIL'ELECTRIC APARTMENTS Awarded the Gold Medallion by Edison for excellence in All-Electric Living 1- and 2-Bedroom Apts, from $165.00 per month Including^AII Utilities PLUS • Clean Electric Heat • General Electric Kitchen Including Washer/Drvtr, Dishwasher, Garbage Disposal, Refrigerator, Range and Oven . . . Plenty of Formica-Top Cupboards, Lazy Susan Pantry. • Insulated Sound-' / proof Walls • Central TV Antenna • Private Paved Parking • Central Air Conditioning • All Rooms Fully Carpeted Including Spacious Living Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Bed* rooms. Hallways and Closats. • Storage Area in Each Unit a Close to Xways. and Pontiac Mall • Furnished or Unfurnished "Immediate Occupancy OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M. 3440 Sashabaw Road ' (South of Walton Blvd.) Waterford Township 674-3136 LOTUS LAKE — 2-bedroom bungalow, alum., siding partial basement, gas furnace, large all purpose breezeway, 1-car garage. Vacant. Quick possession. Price $10,500 — $78 md. total payment before Jan. 1st. 5844 DIXIE HWY; 623-1400 AFTER I P.M. y OR 3-2391___EM 3-0148___OW. 3-0455 $11,590 BRAND NEW. J-bedrm. ranch, on your lot, full basement tutiv INSULATED. family kitchen. No money down. MODEL. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, 334-3830 S3VJ W Huron M. _ A NEW YEARS START AT j WAITERS LAKE CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA SPLIT FOYER — 2,000 sq. ft. of "living" on I acre country siff $30,000 — 10 per cent down. Immediate occupancy. « | RANCH HOUSE — 14$$ «q ft-. fabulous view of country site. Ready for your paint and tile selection — $26,900 —• 10 per cent down. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION WATKINS HILLS I $26,900 I Off Dlxl^. 3706 Lorena, YMi baths, 3-bedroom split-level, 1690 ft. big. I $2,700 down. . BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS $43,900 Half mile N. of Bloomfield Hills. Huge 4-bedroom, 2Mi bath, colonl- •I 2571 Wendover. Just $4,400 dn. OrtonylHe, I acre building sites, $1800 Pick carpet colors. Oxford 10~ acre sites. Baldwin Road, .LAKELAND ESTATES . M00 per acr( 4/30 mile N. Walton Blvd. Qi *le Hwy. Shoreline Blvd. MODEL PHONE: 623-0670 ROYERI 0RT0NVILLE 3-bedroom ranch, near schools and shopping. Includes built-ins in! kitchen and 1-car garage. Full price, $14,900. MACEDAY LAKE Huge 32' X 64' ranch orf large ♦ WALTON BLVD. well landscaped lake front lot. acre with 2 bedroom ranch, at-Home Is sharp throughout, Clark-i tached garage and carpeting. As-ston schools. Call for details. r 5ume $75 pcr month payment. No I qualifying, 7 day possession. Own- CLARKSTON J,.JrJ_Agent, 674 1698 ___ 3-bedroom ranch, ceramic bath and WYMAN LEWIS REALTY a half, finished recreation room,, 389 Whlttemore _338-0325 , close to schools and churches im sharp neighborhood. $18,950, full i price. FE 5-8183 ____363-9398 =IRST IN VALUE Cease OXFORD .2 famljy incoifie. Ideal for re- BRICK BUNGALOW Two bedrooms. Carpeted living and dining area. Kitchen. Flre-1 plaice. Basement. Gas FA heat, i Screened summer porch. Twd car garage.. Sylvan Lake privileges. Terms. NORTHERN HIGH AREA Three for four bedrooms, Carpeted living > room. Kitchen. Utility Automatic' heat. Garage. Corner lot. FHA terms available. L0TS-ACREAGE WE BUILD-TRADE RENTING i $78 Mo. Excluding taxes and insurance j ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT . LARGE OINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS.; WIDOWS OR OIVORCEES. PEOPLE .WITH CREDIT PROB-LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. NOW AVAILABLE — select choice OPEN'DAILY AND SAT. AND SUft.i or come to , 290 W Kennett Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220 FREEDOM OF CHOICE 628-2548 j 823 S Lapeer Rd. (M24? Oxfc Office Hours 9 to 9 except Sun. STRUBtE NEWLY DECORATED 2-bedroom home on large lot with, new l’?-car garage. Fenced back, yard, Waterford school area Cam be sold on Gl or FHA low monthly payments. Call Now. AUBURN HEIGHTS Real sharp 3-bedroom home on 3 lots. This is a 6-room heme for easy family living, close to schools I In a good area, priced at $12,900., Will sell fast. WEST SUBURBAN Two bedroom. Living and dining area. Kitchen. Part basement. Gas HA heat. Breezeway and attached garage. Vacant. Terms. LAKE FRONT One bedroom bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchen Breezeway and attached garage. Gat wall furnace. Vacant. Terms. Eve. call Mr. ALTON 673 6130 Nicholie & Harger Co. i W. Huron St. FE 5-8183 "BUD" building sites. Homes now under construction by; 1 - Dan Mattingly 2 • John Voorheit 3 Herb Sml|h '4 • Daryle Adam* 5 ""James Raisin MILO STRUBLE 674-3175 IVAN W SCHRAM ALL BRICK s, CASS LAKE Ml* CANAL FRONT I 90 feet on the weter, excellent v— 2-bedroom ranch home, spacious rooms, beautiful view from * large picture window, big kitchen end dining area, loads of closet space, 14' , x 15' bedrooms, 15' x 25' glassed and screened porch, 24'x-25* attached garage, cyclone fencing, big oak trees. Priced at $21.95000. see It today. SYLVAN REALTY 673 2488 '"334-8222 j,.* Attention Gl Mortgage costs only, down By owner, pleasant Lake Front,' 2 bedroom, modern, large living room, plus family room and dining room. Wet plaster walls, harowood floors, 60' good beach by 120' plus depth. Excellent neighborhood, only $17,500, Immediate occupancy or will sell on land contract with 15.000 doWn. Phone OR 4-0306 — evenings j FE 2-8910 ask for Mr* Taylor. | 3-bedroom ranch with 12 living and dining area, 8 . kitchen, full basement with gas ” heat, close to Northern High. G 1120b wily move You in. }5 OXFORD-ORION AREA color of kitchen Cabinets, 2 ca garage, and thermo-sealed glass windows. Home under construction, move in 30 days. Directions: 5 blocks North of Walton Boulevard and East off Sashabaw. At 4148 Pomeroy. PRESTON BUILT-HOMES AND REALTY 673-8811 2 bedrooms, 10x121 each, living! and dining area, 17x19, on cor-! ner lot 50x160. In heed of re-! pair. Best offer takes. OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY List With SCHRAM j And Call the Von 3-bedroom tri-level,' good condition, nice size living room, new carpeting, tile bath with Vanity, larQe kitchen and dining ires, dandy family room, with fireplace and built-in bar, ges heat. Priced at 1l6,900.00, terms, 30 day possession. N'ICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 49 University Dr. FE 5-1201, ■ after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 gilt Houses brick terrace 5-roorrf — 7-badroom, with bay*■ ______________ H mant, In the city, good condition, \ orated homy, featurin' Soli Housss 49 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR WEST SUBURBAN land contract for mil aluminum sided newly dec-iSPSS ,—- —.-r - - ... orated home, featuring new kitchen* immediate possession, $6,900* with I refinished floors* full basmt., gas hr 580 down,, on land contract heat, garage, 2 lots and lust $15,950. terms* or $5,000 cash. • ' * *• A lovely new brick ranch* one of IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. 3-bed- the finest In this exclusive, section iinRII C HOMF nroorn brick In new condition fee- it boasts three huge bedrooms* * /ViUDiLC nvms . 'turjng cerpeted living room* tiled1 ceramic baths* a spacious living Approximately 1900 moves you Into both. Lovely finished- basmt. with room, ultra modern kitchen* spacious this 4-bed room 12x58' 196a mddeli finished rec. room. Large corner; family room with big fireplace where Riehardeon Ardmore mobile home, I lot, 2*car garage. Ready for the winter comfort and summer leisure with fu,rr»lture all Included. Low!Particular buyer. $16*950 on land can be thoroughly enioyed. It Is contract. t j truly one of the batter homes In r j i the Fox Bay araa. Priced at only INCOME.. PROPERTY. INVESTORS $29*900 With Immed. possession Sale' House* 49 O'NEIL monthly payments. MADISON JR. HIGH AREA only SI.000 down on lend contract for thl* 5-room ranch home. -Call tor en appointment today, ^thls.ona won't last. Clauds McGruder Realtor Ml Baldwin Ava. FE 5-6175 Multiple Listing Service Open 9 9 A VERY “HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR FROM ALL OF US AT ARR0 REALTY WHY NOT TRADE? WHERE LIFE IS WORTH LIVING 1’HK PONTIAC PHjBSS, MONDAY, JANL’AHV 1, 1968 By Dick Turner Sale Household Goods AS D—9 Income Property Starting Soon New luxury, 8 unit apart ment buildings for sale. -Required / cash $28,900, L bal. mortgage. For full details call 674-3136. Model at 3440 Sashabaw, S. of Walton Blvd. I CARNIVAL LOOK! This 9-room home on North, side of city. Nice condition with 5 Mots. Ideal for new Incomes* gas heat* full basmt. plus lots more. ' FE 2-0262 670 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 No. i-W JUST LISTED—JUST GREAT Excellent 7-room ranch offers living room* dining room* large kitchen* 3 extra large bedrooms* 1V$ baths, paneled family room with door-wall to patio plus sdml finished base* ment. 2-car garage. All this on 2 lots in beautiful Sylvan Village, Priced at $24,900. No. 6-41 YOU WILL FEEL at home In this charming lake Property BUNNY $UN * LAKE FRONT HOME Attractive In.’, appearance, has room, Inclpeed porch, portioned basement, attic* attached garage. I Nice high 5Q- x 110 ft. tot in ; neighborhood of well kept and! new homes* . Nppds some work and interior redecorating, $10,750. t A. WEBSTER, Realty KINZLER OFF E. WALTON In Walton Heights and close to 1-75. Delightful newer 3-bedroom ______ frame ranch in an area of better; if yog need 3 bedrooms, 2 full ? r RAN BER R Y1 LA ICE_DEER lake home*. Mas family kitchen and III* baths, large dining area and de" MS 100 x ISO'tVs ro blk too bath, gas heat. Water and iewer than sea this attractive rambling Rd na,ura| g<>. open Son Bloch connected. J-cer garage and nice rancher. Attached two-car garage.! Bros. 623-1333, FE 4-,500, 5660 Dix-fenced yard. $14,990 with $!499iE*tra large lot. $21,950. Excellent' la Hwy.. Waterford, down plu* .e^ts. .f| financing available. No. 3-50 LA*E FRONT HOMES^FlEW^ AND FAM LY ROOM J'u/rcT cine a ocai used - J. L.Oally Co. EM 3-7714. With fireplace In this new large; Wti I ilUt—A KfcAL reatlon. Oak floors, colorfully dec-;8-room bungalow with spacious llv-orated, double glass windows and'log room .with fireplace. Formal din-gas heat. Low taxes. Well located I jog room- Like new carpeting, 4 on high scenic lot off Clarkston-i large twdrooms, country style kjtch-ion Rd. 10 per cent down olus ®h *18* rabin.fs galore with a ; breakfast nook. This should be the JOHN KINZLER, Realtor ' with good credit and steady |ob FENCED “REAR YARD end garagel”'* Dixie Hwy. 623-0355 move. In tor SSS0 down._Month; • ... • _ a a l. _ X. Arrnct frni with thlt neat 2-bedroom ranen. handy kitchen, aluminum storms and sCTtens, privileges qn Union Lake, dose to shopping center. $12,950. Terms. CLOSED JAN. 1 PHONEt 682-2211 5143 Cass-Ellzabeth Road S OPEN DAILY Across from Packers Store ’.hr Payments less than rant. No. 7-29 Mul,lpl..LI„.nfl Service Open™;^^ AR£A This ranch home has 3 bedrooms with carpeted living room, dining area and hall, also a 2Va-car garage, located on a beautifully landscaped i today. Only $14,900. No. 5-27 STOUTS Best Buys Today ORION AREA- 1947 built end containing over 100 feet of living arte. Brick and frame with full bksimtnt, gas heat and hot water. 4 bedrooms and IVs baths. Stove, refrigerator and drapas Included. LOTUS LAKE FR0NT- Excallant location for this aluminum ranch style on tha lake. -Over 1300 feet of living area plus tha 2Vs-car garage. GAS heat. Lot $0 x 213. Kettering School „ at Lat ua show youl NEAR JOHN R- lf you ara handy hero Is tha homo that naads soma loving care. Located In Avon Township, 5-room and bath bungalow on corner lot 24x36 on the foundation. Only $1250 down on land Contract. Warren Stout, Realtor $430 N. Qpdyke Rd._____FE S-8165 HALL brick and aluminum exterior Home features loads of closet room, IV* ceramic baths, country kitchen with beautlfql cabinets WELCOMe 1968 — In this clean and near 3-bedroom ranch, with brick front. Located close to Northern High, Home has large bedrooms sparkling tiled bath, newly car ‘ peted living room, large anchor fenced lot. $12,500 total price. Zero down to ex Gl's or, 5400 down on FHA plus costs. S-BEDROOM BUNGALOW — Vacant and waiting tor new owners, cated In Clarkston area. Featuring 1M» tiled baths, newly carpeted living and dining room, beauttfu' new kitchen with suspended cel Ing and Indirect lighting. Alto full basement. lVa-car garage, large anchor fenced lot. Let us show - you this beauty. TRADES ACCEPTED B. HALL REALTY 6569 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 dally 623-4116 Val-U-Way HAPPY NEW YEAR 220 W. STRATHMORE 2-bedroom home with full basement Off Baldwin near Fisher's. Lsrge .living room with dining sred. Remodeled modern to the minute- kitchen. Basement partitioned, tiled and finished Into an axtra room, (bedroom, recreation, • etc.) Carefree aluminum siding and perma-stona front. Awning covered entrances, fenced lot and cement .drive. Really a lot for the money. Only 12300 cash for sellers equity or $500 on a new FHA. mortgage. 148 PERKINS ST. 2-famlly, Urban Renewal area, rooms and bath, first floor; rooms and bath apartment i Basement, gas . heat, 2-car c raga, fenced lot. Wowea folks, believe It or not, ho down payment required. Lest than $500 closing costs pays all. R. j. (Dick) VALUE! REALTOR FE 4-3531 $45 Oakland Ava. Open 9 to ANNETT West Side-Vacant Newly decorated 5-room ter race near the Mall. LR* DR and kitchen on main floor 2 bedrooms and bath up Full basement. $10,000 tarmt. 4-Br. Brick Ranch Near Sylvan Shopping Canter In W. Bloomfield Twp. Extra large family room with fireplace, IVa baths. Nicely landscaped lot. Im- IRWIN ] yard. Sea this INVESTMENT; Northern Property SI-A FURNISHED — NORTHERN PEN-1 Insula — Move in on Old Highway. No. 2 house and garage — large lot'— Hunt — fish and play. $1,8001 cash. Call 363-5477 Hackett. I CUSHIONS Custom Made (or Danish, Colonial and Confemjwrary chairs- <and sofas. Special * prices on close-out fabrics. Expert workmanship. Phone 335-1700. , , ELEC7~ST6vI'. $25; GAS STOVE, FREIGHT DAMAGED BEDPOOMS - and living rooms. Save almost bait - LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE, Baldwin at Walton, FE % 6862, _ . « frigToairs "refr IGERATOR, good condition, $20. 673-6528. FURNITURE FOR SALE. 27 N. Sanford. 10 a.an. to 4 p.m. _ GAS STOVeT FULL-SIZE, COPPER tone, used 2 mo,; $149. G. A Thompson, 7005 M59 West.________ HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL living room suite, 2 step tables, I box spring and 2 vanity lamps, -piece dinette set with - 4 chr chairs and table. All for $399. Your | credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17% HURON,, V i/IDDV hi l'w HU. he. TJk Iw- It. N. OW KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - $50 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 26)7 DIXIE HWY. 674 223 LINOLEUM RuGS, MOST SIZES $3.49 up. Pearspn's Furniture^ 21 E. Pike St., FE 4-7881. Lots—Acreage 54 “He said I had symptoms they haven’t even got specialists for yetU” For Sale Miscellaneous 47 Store Equipment 7$, - ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES FOR all rooms, 1967 dqslgns; pull down baloons, star*. Bedroom $1.19, porch $1.»> Irregular*, samples! Price* only factory can jlv*. Michigan Flourescent, 393 Orchard Lake. FE 4-8462—19. GRILL AND DAIRY BAR EQUIP-man*. Exc. condition, FE 2-9338. Sporting Goods 7<ft*- 1 USED SKI-OOO, 1966 MODBjU SUPER OLYMPIC. I4W H.P. WmJ COVER, LIKE NEW, ONLY' <695. 1 USED POLARIS, 1968 MODEL, 15 H.P., LIKE NEW, ONLY $895, KING BROS. * - FE 4-1662 * ■ . . FE 44OT§" Pontiac Rd. at opdyka FLOuR MODEL BATH TU^ Carry with, $25. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M59 W. ' ' For The FinestJn v* ’ Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At *■ > Montgomery Ward Pontiac Ma|l ' 2 TCE^fTsHING SHANTIES AND stove*. FE 4-1*57. 5-V GUNS-720 W. HURON. 334-t*St, Exc. selection of used guns. 1967 15V* HORSE POWER'SNGW mobile, 1 only. paw. Dealer coaL Triple H Collision. 2634 Auburfi Road. , .r; HIDEABED newly profession-ally upholstered. Creme Nauga-hyde* $125. MA 6-3287. HOT WATER BASEBOARD RADI-ators, $1.39 per lineal ft. G. A. , Thompson* 7005 M-59 W. NOT WATER HEATER, 30 GALLON gas, Consumers approved. $89.50 value, $39.95 arttt $49.95, marred. Also electric and bottle heaters* these are terrriflc values In quality heaters. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 ! Orchard Lk:* FE 4-8462-^-16. KiNMORE S E Mf AUTOMATIC ! washer, $20. Combination planter j and room divider, $15> like new floor polisher, $15, high seat upholstered swivel Ghair, $7, Admiral 21" TV, $30, 18' round pool with f- all accessories, $45 used one sea-1 son. 624-3814. GIFT IDEAS FOR THE WHOLE F AM 1LY! 1 Compact 1966 folding 3 hp. EVINRUDE with carrying case. See the AMF SKI DADDLER « power sled. Fun for everyone. SUZUKI CYCLES 50cc-250ccx6 Hustler. RUPP Ml l-blkes from t12f Specials oh boats* motors and trailers Lay-a-way now for Wg savings. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridgo RcM to Demode Rd. Left end follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT , TIPSICO LAKE. 629-2179. BOWS AND ARROWS—334-6349 GENE'S ARCHERY—714 W. HURON j FISH SHANTY FOR SALl. WITO* stove. UL 2-5156. ford class ring, $17. C8II after 6,335-9624. M1 SC E LL AN ECUS HOUSEHOLD furniture and appliance', coal st ve * misc. hand tools: 5905 Waldon* j Clarkston. HEADQUARTERS for Rupp Sno-Sport * 1 Polaris, Scorpion SNOWMOBILE j Buy early and save „ I $0 DOWN* EASY BANK TERMS J NEED A COMMERCIAL PHOTOG-1 rapher? Call DONOVAN! That's I H8.S DONOVAN, 2878 N. Adams * 852-2351. 10 ACRES FOR PRIVACY, PLEAS-FE 2-2144. L.I Lots—Acreage 54 Wanted Coirtracts-Mtg. 60-A ip-58 ACRES. W O O b E D RIVER HIGHLAND - MILFORD AREA Two family located In Huron; WHY RENT brooms w-™iy . will buy' thl, ,ove.y BBSS room?"gas r*eat*j Walklhg distance to shopping, " Midd^e#nltVa?ts 5 Lake* Waterford .chools. B&SSE-JS, JESS. V.\k® I frontage, Oakland - Genesee Livingston counties. Mr. Fowle EM 3-9531* EM 3-6683. WEST SIDE: Very attractive* 6Vi room, fVa room, l’/> baths. Brick home. One bedroom down — 2 bedrooms up. Full basement. Neat and clean. Immediate possession. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS TIMES FOX BAY MODELS OPEN Sat. & Sun. 2-5 p.m. * Drive out to Fox Bay on the Huron River and visit our model homes. West on E^fz. Lake Road, fight on Perry Blvd., left onto Fox Bay, right to Marla Drive. Priced from $25,50(7 including choice lot. LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY For 3. Good Repsons We Think Our Sense of Values Our List of Good Prospects And Our Tireless Efforts Will Make Your Glad You Called — For family fun and fortune Is RAY O'NEIL REALTY what we'ra offering with the ■Koopontijir *i» Road purchase of this ^bedroom cojOR ,.2222 MLS EM 3-0531 lonial styled home. “You will--------------------—*——------------------ surely en|oy the large fireplace, the glass enclosed front room, the beautiful view of the lake, the full basement and IVa-car garage an<$ many other good features that are hard 'to come. ... tlaat mawf liaii/ by for the price of only $15,900.1 MAKE TKAT MOVE NOW Call ^ for your personal appoint*,anCj enjoy the holiday in this cozy home, spacious carpeted living 157 Acres-Clarkston High rolling terrain. Ideal for developing or recreational purposes. Considerable double road frontage. $625 an, acre* terms. 150 Acres-Hadley Area 4-bedroom alum, sided home, needs some finishing. Barn 50x90 with 44 stanchions, shipping grade A milk, 2 sheds, 30x80 and 20x50* chick- LAKE FRONT Wideman ment. START The new year out right by moving into your own new home and what pleasure you will have in this 3-bedroom aluminum sided ranch with gleaming oak floors* full basement, gas heat and decorated to perfection. Only $16,950 with land contract terms available. We have the key now. CAPE COD Lake front near Keatlngton having the rough studding and ,plumbing plus a good share of the necessary materials to finish this home. However ypu look at this all brick-crete home you have to admit It's a real i buy for only $15,500 and it can be purchased on land contract. THE OFFICE OF TIMES REALTY will be closed from 3 p.m. Friday, Dec. 22 to 9 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 26. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU “JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES0 Times Realty acre lots. $2450, $25 mo. Near | Lakes. 20 min. Pontiac. Open Sun.! Bloch Bros. 623-1333, FE 4-4509,! 5660 Dixie Hwy., Waterford. Sale Farms 56 80 to 800 ACRES In lower Michigan. Dairy, gralrvl beef or ’hogs!. Name your farm needs, we. have** It at one of “Michigan's" Farm Real Estate Cold water, Michigan. Dale A. Dean Farm Brdkar and Auctioneer. Write or call 517-278-2377 - days i Headquarters — Dean Realty Co.* j or 517-288-6127 - nlghfs. ___ 1 Million LUMBING BARGAINS. FREE standing toilet; $16.95; 30-gallon heater, $49.95;3-oiece bath sets, $59.95; laundry tray, trim, $19.95; shower stalls wltn trim, $39.95;; I 2-bowl sink, $2.95; Ja^., $2.95;;4667 pixie Hwy. tubs, $20 and up. Pipe cut andl 1Q3 „ E. Montcalm ly used, $75. FE 2-9387. MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE for sale, reasonable. 673-2132, NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Zlg Hg sewing machine — cebl- Ems^tL^I. "I'm mode? Take over payments of: $5.90 PER M0. for 9 mos. Or $5.3 Cash Balance MG SALES & SERVICE All'snowmoblle accessories FE 4-0905 520 ACRES en coop,.' milk house and 2 ,ln. tt|umb. area two miles from silos. Considerable road front’ age. Other acreage available. $37,500, terms. Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 Office Closed New Year's Day town. Part tillable, large room home, unusual barn. Perfect for hunt club or tax shelter Investment. An attractive, buy at $105 per acre. Terms. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS * Urgently needed. See us before you deal. „ . „ „ ________________-______I____ WARREN STOUT. Realtor IETWEEN ROCHESTER AND MARLETTE - SANDUSKY AND LA-i,irjj ij Qnrtyke o*) pc 4.8165 Orion -^80 acresjyith y^mjltof peer areas, country ..^pmeswlth S,1450 N* o^Eves.x'tII 8 p.m? 5 POOL TABLES 1965 S. Telegraph -*• Tournament. UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK I Supply. 2678 Orchard' Lake. 682- I 2820.____________________ j SINGER LIGHTWEIGHT PORT-4030 Dixie Hwy.* Drayton, OR 4-0411 K_. •uliimhimi . able. Beautiful, portable sewing1 Open Mon.-Sat. 9-6 'ourciSse 4 bedrml'^S.........*»■«! mek«n'fen^nl.rtch'» "le,', S? «n9; Join The Sporting Fun cx. 4 mate eh.,. «Si nri"is JOHNSON'S SNOWMOBILE AT TOHV'S MARINE 682-3660 J0HNS0NJKI HORSE SNOW MOBILES Ice fishing tackle Tip-ups rods, augers, spears PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. ONE OF A KIND or purchase homes end vacant: Boston rockers $22.95 property tor cash, Thl, p h q.n e| pearson's Furniture number Is available to you 24 hrs.! per day. Call now for. personal<210 E. PIKE appointment. TEO MCCULLOUGH JR. 674-2356 NEAR ROCHESTER—77 acres with frontage on 2 roads. Land contract terms with 20 pet. down. AT ROCHESTER—120 rolling acres with plenty of road frontage. Ideal for new home, subdivision develop ment. Terms available. horse° ranches. W? fiTloS oSTfOR J-AND CONTRACTS, acres for country estates available j H. J. Van Welt. 4540 Dixie Hwy. with small down payment andj OR 3-1355. smdll monthly payments. For In- NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL formation call Mr. Smith eves, discounts. Earl Garrels. MA 4-5400. after 7 at 724-3545. ______ EMpire 3-4086. ___ room, spacious kitchen has dining .facilities, an abundance of. . cabinets. One carpeted bedroom, 718 W.» University________________851-8141 and 2nd and 3rd hardwood. Tile FOR LOTS AND ACREAGE IN THE bath with vanity. Full tiled bpse-; Clarkston area calL* ment. Brick exterior. Ahchor MENZIES REAL ESTATE fenced yard, good landscape. '625-5485 - 9230 Dixie 625-5015 ONLY $15,500y TERMS — IM-MEDIATE POSSESSION HARTLAND AREA WEST SIDE Two-story home featuring 3-bedroom large dining room and study, spacious kitchen with new cabinets, also new bath, fixtures. Basement* gas FA heat. Large garage. Central High and Pontiac General area. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. I. 0. WIDEMAN* REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 334-4526 EVES. CALL 673-5060 20 acres of rolling woods, spot cleared for good pond. Beautiful building site* near schools, and expressways. VA 3821. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 „ . _ , _ . ,, Money to Loan Sale Business Property 57 (Licensed mo* 61 Money Lender) 3a.(M0 SQ. FT. BUILDING with 18 , ft. clearance, and railroad siding, O'Neil Realty. OR 4-2222. Beauty Shop and Home Lovely brick ranch home with new modern beauty salon attached. Located on mainartery. Includes 2V4 acres of land. Doihg excellent business. Ideal location. Will sell real estate, business and equipment or will divide. Call J. A. Taylor, RealtoT, OR 4-0306._____ FE 4-7881 STOPWATCH Used by little old lady, to check length of .minister's sermons^on Sunday. New, cost $79.95. Offered at half price, $40. Pontiac Press Box C-16, Pontiac, Mich gifts, Pontiac Resale Shop Buy-Sell_____________________________________ Antiques, furnlturt. olisiwire,|STUFFED ANIMALS, toys, mlsc. 80 Lafayette, first street past, novelties, lay-aways. Liberal Bills Oakland on wide Track. 335-6932, 3265 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9474. Open 1(1 REBUILT. VACUUM CLEANERS.! »>n. to 9 p.m.___________________ $16.30 and up. Washer and dryer parts. MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CO. 3202 Dixie Hwy._________673-0011 TALBOTT LUMBER Va" Black and Decker drill, $9.99 Appliance rollers, $7.95 a pr. 4'x8'xW particle board* $3.75 ea 4'x8xVb" particle board, $4.95 ea„ ---------- _ .1025 Oakland FE 4-4595 Rf967 lcloSoutsRSsaveN rtentyNGOtSfi* TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY Joe's.C <Baldwin .7 Wa"Sn.L FE «5. G. A. Thompson. 7003 2-6842. CONDI- THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick* friendly* helpful. FE 2-9206 is the number to call OAKLAND LOAN CO. TED'S Trading LIVE RENT FREE In this 7 family home. 3 bedrooms, living room and dining room, full ceramic bath on first floor, 2-bedroom; living room and kitchen on second floor, separate entrances, 2-car garage, full basement, gas heat. Full price $13,500, land contract terms available. PRICE DROP w First announcement — attractive; 4-bedroom brick Cape Cod, full| basement, breezeway, fireplace and garage, lake privileges, full price $10,500. Terms or trade. TED'S CORNER Signs In our economy point towards a prosperous )96t. We can DORRIS RETIREE? Then this 2-bedroom home should fit you like a glove. This beautiful little home Is situated on i lot lOOxlBS tor the gardener and has a 24x24 attached garage that Is wired for 220, to, suit the handyman, completely re-inn,am modeled kitchen, separate dining!DKIAN room, 11x17 living room, new gas 5934 Dixie Hwy. HORSE LOVERS 30 ACRES I-7S, US 10 area, $S0O per acre. 2’/2 ACRES DRAYTON PLAINS 53 acres* light manufacturing 800' road frontage, 1800' railroad frontage. Terms. AL PAULY 4516 DIXIE, REAR OB 3-3800 EVES. OR 3-9272 MODERN 1-FLOOR MANU-facturing building, 10,120 sq. ft., 1.200 sq. ft. offices, 19 acres, 1.200 foot rail. Commerce Twp. W. Maple and Haggerty Rd. Call Lynn Morgan, 353-1000. BYRON W. TRERICE LOANS $25 TO *1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FEy 8-0421 SLIGHTLY SCRATCHED Maple Hutch* 30" width ...$69.50 40" width hutch ......... $89.50 Corner hutch ,.......... $59.50 Pearson's Furniture E. PIKE FE 4-7881 furnace* 8x10 breezeway and solid blacktop drive. $15,950. In NEED OF SOME WORK but FHA approved for more thao the sales price of $12,500. 2 bedroom, crawl space bungalow plus a den $1/2 x 14 C o rt v e r 11 b I e to a third bedroom, oak floors* gas heat* IV 2-car garage with a WE HAVE MANY PARCELS FROM 1 TO 10 ACRES ON EASY LAND CONTRACT TERMS. CALL TODAY. 623-0702 Waterford OPEN SUNDAYS ORION TOWNSHIP — LAND FILL permit on approximately 31 acres. Nix Realtor. 651-0221 — 852-5375 Business Opportunities 59 BEAUTY SALON cash deal. RENT BEATER. Neat and clean frame ranch home located off Ken-nett Rd. In very nice neighborhood offered at $13,900 on- easy FHA terms. Carpeted living room and master bedroom, handy kitchen with eating space, gas heat and garage. DORRIS 8. SON, REALTORS 2536 Dixie Hwy. 674-0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE "BUZZ" BATEMAN "SAYS" EQUITY IS CASH summer. FHA and or points are TRADE YOURS remah? In'Thls'* a’rea’0 (??“ awhile! I WATER FRONT Wi,h.«,lL.,h n..(ro®m.ar®n°P|.m»ko TO SYLVAN LAKE: This'neat 2-“ I?,dm vear Tind this should bedroom home with- full besement an election year ana mis snuuia . inr>tad in an area of nice <Sr°b^mess1. .°od £ homlH? blacktop st'reet, wltfT.ll aVe •.iik.buG^ wiJh.s you and your family in 1968. j|jjj ^ ,enceq . with lovely sAede trees. Just the home tor beginners, retirees or boaters. At only $14,950 you had better call for an appoinf-menf EARLYI look for a tax Increase the first of the year. The Federal Reserve banks will Increase the supply of money and it i&~ possible Interest McCullough realty REALTOR 5460 Highland Rd. (M59) MLS Open 9-9________ 674 KAMPSEN “IT'S TRADING TIME" mediate 'possession. ii*1 .Jm! 100 FT. LAKE FRONT ON terms. Sylvan Lk. Privileges 3-bedroom brick ranch In excellent condition In Pioneer Highlands. Full basement, . rec. room finished In knotty cedar and extra bath, ges heat. Screened porch, garage. Immediate possession. $22,500. terms. WE WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Office Closed New Year's Day 338-0466 Mattingly N. CASS LK. RD. this lovely 3-Mdroom brick home has family room plus a finished basement, drapes end carpeting 2-car attached garage, tencec yard, many more features you must tee to sppreclate. Priced at only $26,500, cash to mortgage or new terms. NO. IS SOUTH ARDMORE VERY DESIRABLE, 4 bedrooms, ivy baths, fult basement, gas heat land garage. FHA terms with lust ,$400 down plus costs will move you lIn It's real nice and budget-priced at only $11,950. Hurry, CALL TODAY! , WHITE LAKE This all brick lake front home no. 33 has to be sold so the owpers ony nc tuc MONTH! can go to Florida. Large porch*DU I Ur me muixi ns overlooking the lake. Has under- NO DOWN PAYMENT, If you quall-around sprinkling system. Full fy as a veteran on this city bunga-basement with bar and paneled |Cw, with full basement and gas rec. room. New gas furnace and heat. Extra paneled room In base- hot water system. Also Includes ment that could be used as 3rd. a boat house with cement floor, bedroom or a study, plus new lv»-A beautiful * package for only car garage. Convenient east-side 10-$23,500. Call now for an ap* cation close to schools ana extra pointment to see it. inlet. Priced at $12,950 with lust j closing costs to move you in. EVERY DAY IN 1968 !N0 u Will have It's rewardj for yeui Iir.-r AND HANDY and your family In thl* alun)l- INtAI AINU rlMINUl num sided thraa-badroom ranch- DESCRIBES THIS ' aluminum-tided er with full basemant and ge* a-badroom bungalow with batamtnt, heat, fn Waterford Twp. but na*'C|,y sewer, fenced yard and con- H0WARD T. KEATING 22060 W. 13 Mile* 146-1234 DIXIE lilGHWAY . Just off the freeway not far from Grand Blanc and Clarkston. 56 acres more or less. Spring-field Township. $1,000 per acre. Suitable for commercial — high rise — motel — recreation, etc. DIXIE HIGHWAY Corner of Holly Road and Dixie Highway* zoned commercially SOO* from highway. Old house with historical background (140 years old)* 4 other houses* can-dleshop. 1200 feet of frontage on Dixie Highway* many possibilities. $95,000. EDGE OF HOLLY 75 ecres, wooded, 7 acres cleared, epproximately 2.000 feet on the Shlewasee River, reasonably priced. C. Nelsey. Sales Agent, Davl*burg 313-625-3298 or 313-637-5730 Evening Call Welcome___________________ city water and sewer. Close to venient to schools , end shopping. - ■ - —I *|—Im The full price of this new listing Is lust $9500 on Gl terms, with KENT Established In 1916 DRAYTON WOODS No. 1 — beau tiful high lot surrounded by nice homes. $4*000 with $500 down. DRAYTON WOODS No. * — Lot 120 x 207 In north suburban location. Priced fight at $3,500 — Terms. NEAR 1-75 AND M 15 Interchange* surrounded by nice homes. A real boy at $4,500 — $800 down. Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph Fe 2-0123 or FE 2-7342 2 BEAUTY SALONS OR ION-OXFORD AND WATER-FORD-PONTIAC AREAS. Both well established, terms available. $500- and $8000 total cost of business. DRIVE-IN Restaurant, 10 stools, Inside, AVON TWP., ROCHESTER AREA, 6 months operation, could be year around, all set to go, stainless steel equipment, black-, ,, top lot 120x200. owner of u'Sale Household Goods years wants to retire. LOANS $25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 Mortgage Loans SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC ! Clothing, furniture, Appliances Zlg zag sewing machine — In;USED AND NEW OFFICE DESKS modern walnut cabinet — make* chairs, tables, files, typewriters, designs, appliques, buttonholes, etc. ......... Repossessed. Pay off: $54 CASH , or $6 per month payments UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER FE 4-0905 Join e teem end race your snowmobile on snow or straw* each Sun.* at 1 p.m. • starting Dec.* 24 to Feb.* 25. If you are between ages of 10-18 years of age. BRAMBLEW00D COUNTRY CLUBS WINTER SPORTS BASIN DIR: FROM HOLLY 1 MILES — NO. OF GRANGE HALL RD., ON FISH LAKE RD., THEN LEFT W 2154 MINER RD. HOLLY 634-9209 adding machines* offset printing presses* mimeograph, drafting boards and tables. Forbes* 4500 Dixie* Drayton* OR 3-9767 or Ml 7-2444. LIKE TO ROUGH IT? Like to punish yoursalf? Don't Ilka luxury? Then don't come and sea the most luxurious camping tralN^ ers on the market. Tha World'* largest selling line—Apache. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 625-1711 Just N. of Waterford Hill _________6507 Dixie Hwy. _____ POLARIS SNOW-MOBILES. $695 t end up. Perry's Lawn and Garden. 0615 Highland 'Rd.—M-S9. 673-6236. SOFA BED. EXCELLENT CONDI-tlon, $30. 686 Stanley Ave. | J house on right off Montcalm USED 80,000 BTU GAS COUNTER flow wall furnace with blower, 60,-000, BTJJ; two 104,000 BTU used oil furnaces, basement models; i used gas 60,000 BTU space heaters. Call 334-1239. WANTED: UPRIGHTS, GRANDS, Spinets and eentole pianos—at FE 3-7168 USED MAYTAG WASHERS (GUAR-anteed) ,839, Apartment Elec, range $29. Range hood with fan $10, 9x12 rig and pad $19. Pearson' Furniture, 210 E. Pike, FE 4-7881. 62 MONEY TO LOAN — FAST 24 HOUR SERVICE First and Second mortgages for everyone, even if behind. Widows, divorcees and people Witt) bad credit are OK with us. Call ALL' RISK MORTGAGE CO., Mr. Winn. 1-398-7902. ________________ WASHED WIPING RAGS, AS LOW as 19 cents per lb. 2S lb. boxes *o 300 lb. bales Industrial cafeteria tables, seat* 6. j 819.95 36‘ van trailers, can be used on the road or tor storage. Start at $250. Clark 4q-k lift truck, 4000 lb. $$9S. USED OFFICE CHAIRS, „ YOUNGSTOWN KITCHEN CABINET PRICED TO SELL. sinks, scratched/ 42" model $89, • 1 rh,nn-i value, $46.95 while, they last, ter-t,***|'d **?*)' anflle*' channel, rifle values on S4" end 66’' models, beams, plate, pipe. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard daiiics/add CIIDDIV Lk., FE 4-8462—S._______________ BOULEVARD 5UPPLY l500 S. Blvd. E. FE 3-7081 USED TV'S, $19.95 COLOR TVs, $299,95 Repo. Hoover Washer $99.95 SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. 422 W. Huron 334-5677 Antiques Swaps 63 65A i WHEEL CHAIR call between ' 1926 FORD MODEL T. FOUR-DOOR 5-51 *'------------------------------ ' "4 - | sedan. Best otter. 651-1102. . I.. . _ . ...._______ ,. hay baler and side de- CUstom antigue refinishing (Hand Tools—Machinery 68 Specializing In fine antique r*-.~;------------—----------------. finishing, furniture repair of all i_9-jnch LOGAN METAL LATHE, types, all work guaranteed. Harold 624-1973 Richardson, 363-9361. Mon.-Frl. ----------------- SKI IS, GOOD CONDITION 682-4756 SKI-DOO'S We have a complete line en dlipley.-AS LOW AS $695 Also e complete line of ekl-doe clothing tccess. and tralletT, Como In for a demonstration rlee now. Set and drive the lively one. CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROS.; PONTIAC RD; AT OPDYKE FE 44)734_______ SKI-DOO t SKI-DADDLER" Snowmobile - BUY NOW AND SAVEI CRUISE OUT INC. 63 E. Walton Dolly 9-6 PE 8-44M SKI BOOTS, SIZE 5, $10; SIZE 9, $25. FE 8-4402._ ■ / SNOW MOBILE RENTAL 10 new Machines, 60 eeree, across from Klngslngton Park, Milford, 68S 1363 or 685-1111. WANTED: DLDER USED FURNI-ture, dishes and mlsc. tor cash. 391-2267. F. Clark. _______ WE Buy SELL TRADE, | u: j: TU t Radios 66 Ice skates sporting goods, guns, i rl* _______" Barnes & Hargreaves Hardware, S? - 742 W. Huron, FE 5-9101. J2 - MONTH - OLD BEAUTIFUL 5’ stereo, sliding front panels with NORTHERN RESORT Owner has passed away and widow must sell. Michlgans best known flsning resort* includes 16 cot* tages* bar, restaurant* rental boats and fishing shanties. Johnson Motor franchise*' 3-bedroom ranch home. 600* water frontage* near Hillman. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641 ______After 5 gall 332-3759_ LIQUOR BAR With living quarters, forced sale. Only $40,00 with $19,000 dovyfi. Will consider trade. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 65 Vi WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 $2.50 per week s No payments during a strike. ' LITTLE JOE'S Bargain House 1461 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6842 21" SILVERTONE COLOR TV, 1-year-old, $250, 624-5381, after 6 p.m. 21-INCH CURTIS-MATHES COLOR TV FE 5-1397 PIECE SECTIONAL — BRAND new close-out, 1 beige 1 .blue, nylon covered, Foam cushion. Regular $229, now $139. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike, FE 4-7881._______ 4-PIECE BEDROOM SET ! S ! (Brand New) Lake Orion {39,00 $2.50 Weekly ______________________PEARSON'S FURNITURE LIQUOR BAR 1,0 E- p,k# FE 4 7M1 ONE OF THE BEST Near Troy, Utica and Rochester. Very best location, potential unlimited. Large sealing capacity, -finest of equipment, huge parking area. Perfect tor partnership setup. A golden opportunity for lust $16,500 down. HURRY. ' WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile .......... 7c ea. Vinyl Asbestos tile ....... 7c ea. Inlaid Tile, 9x9 7c ea. FloUr Shop—2255 Elizabeth Lake Across From the Mall'' lOtoT* ARGE LEATHER cheap, 625-2565 30" ORION TOWNSHIP — LAND PILL permit on approximately 31 acres. Nix Realtor. 651*0221 — 852-5375. schools* churches and shopping, Only $18300 with $1000 down or assume the present mortgage and save mortgage costs nothing down to qualified veteran, S with almost Immediate possession. f CALL TODAY I NEW HOMES IN SEARCH fenced OF A FAMILY Two distinguished colonials* family homes In the truest sense. In beautiful Lake Angelus Lake- ...--- ,— I -j view Estates* an area of fine 0id and sharper than new. Located homes. These homes offer warm , jn vvailed Lake area on a blacktop hospitably and Indoor-outdoor llv- close to like and all con- ing. Featuring *>ur generous venlences. Priced at $10,500 with NO. 46 MAXIMUM BENEFITS with e minimum of cojf end maintenance. Reel cufe end cozy aluminum rancher lust 3 veers NR. WATERFORD DRIVE-IN Mere we have a beautiful 3-bed room brick home with a largb land-| scaped yard, carpeted living room, | family kitchen* with a finished recreation room In the basement j complete with bar, workroom and this lovaly home today and arrange for convenient terms. ORION TWP. ' I yAor: thinking or selling your chance with this ell brick 2] bedroom ranch home located lust a quarter of a mile west of M24 on Clarksfon-OrIon Ad. Has car* pated living room* brand new kitchen and a large fenced corner lot. MODEL HOMES let us sell your present HOME AND DESIGN YOUR NEW HOME. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE- DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY l0„c$T K'f*' mli fb jwi 612 9000 — OR 4-35614 — OL 1-0222 Holiday Call ' 3'2;ni v > Ing room* kitchen has built-in ap- ^ wolverine Lake. CALL pliances. Dinette next to the kitchen., paneled family room MODEL HOM with v&od burning fireplace, ItnUMCL nuivi rear patio, full basement, at- COLONIALS* TRI-LEVELS AND t*cned two-car garage, sealed RANCHERS as low as $17,750 on glass windows, marbla sills; your lot with all custom leaKirts. u, i. u' v A25-2A15 Priced ai $33,950. Just trad* Shown by appointment and OPEN ...—JF*W9 your old home In. SUNDAY 1-5 p.m. Call tor appoint* WAtERFORD TOWNSHIP ment. YOU CAN TRADE OR TRADING HOMES - GET BATEMAN OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE YOU DM ClVIrtlv - s;'1 Htr#o Kamo- REALT0R-MLS SrtfcJSr Mailenbeck, Thu?- Pontiac Orlon-Oxford Br m»n Will, Dick Bryon or Elaln* Smith FOR PROMPT, EFFICI- PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" A TOP LOCATION STORE Over 2600 sq. ft. afbusy Intersection on Highland Rd. Large partially paved lot 150 x 260. Has hundreds of uses in this prime location. For an Invastment or your own Use — donlt wait. It's priced right for quick tale at only $40,000, 6n terms. ASK FOR BUSINESS GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. HURON STREET FE 4-3581 Open Wk. Nltes fill 9:00_ SAND & GRAVEL BUSINESS JUST OFF M-59 17 acres with 41*x61' steel building, loading dock, frontage on paved road. Owner leaving town. Sacrifice on land contract farms. UNDERWOOD brian 623-0702 5904 Dixie Hwy., Waterford THEATER 570 seats, excellent condition* good suburban location. Priced to sell. Send replies to Pontiac Press Box C-13. _ _ *________;__! ' WANTED TAPPAN GAS RANGE $59.95, Frlgldalre refrigerator, big freezer $69. Others from $39.95. 2 pc. living room >839. Ges dryer Ilka new $69. Wringer washer low as $24. Baby cribs SS.95. Bedrooms, chests, and dressers. Lots of used bargains at Little Joe's Trade-Ins. Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6842. BASSETT BEDROOM SET, EXC Condition 8)15. Walnut 7 plect dinette set, exc. condition $75. bar and record storage. AM-FM radio with 4-speed stereo changer, lovely walnut finish. Balance -due, $188.40 cash or $9.50 monthly. 335-9283, Household Appliance AIR COMPRESSORS. L U B R I C A-tion equipment, < hydraulic lacks, steam cleaners. Welding equipment. Etc. Pontiac Motor Parts, 1016 University Drive. FE 24)106. BRIDGEPORT MILL With Sincro Trace, 1 model J heads, punch press, No. 4 bliss, 887-5670. JARI-JR. 16 INCH SNOW BLOWER plus 28" cyclebar mower attachment, excellent condition, $75. 334-4242. _______________ NEW AND REBUILT ELECTRIC motors. Also rebuilt water pumps. Loyd, MA 6-2405._______ 21" USED TV 7 *79.95 Walton TV, FE 2-2257 . Open 9-6 515 E. Walton, corner ot Joslyn Musical Goods 71 ALL REMAINING^ 1967 STOCK OF colored TV, blick and white TV, phonos, close put at cost plus 10 per cent. Dalby TV and Radio. FE 4-9802. Off Walton Blvd. First St. W. of Joslyn, GE HIGH /BAND RADIO EQUIP-ment, 1 pass unit, 1 mobile unit, with antenna, call FE S-0571._ RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES / hard to find? See us — We have most all kinds Johnson TV—FE 8-4569 45 W. Walton near Baldwin Water Softeners 66-A HOT WATER HEAT AND WATER 1ST TIME OFFER FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON GIBSON, GOYA 8. EPIPHONH Guitars and Ampllflars Call right now 332-4163 PONTIAC MUSIC 8, SOUND 3101 W. Huron CHICKERING PIANOS Tha best — costs no mors. In tact — Its cheaper In the long run. You can own — • new Chickerlng Console Iss -low as $29 PER MO. 1710 S. Telegraph FE 4-0566 mile south at Orchard Lake Rd Dally9:30-9 p.m a«f tone r « a *peclalty! Condra GIBson BASS GUITAR. AMPLI- PlumblnQ 8$ Hooting FE 8-0643. | fj#r> jjOO. 624-2511.____ CLARlNtT WITfi CASE* GOOD condition. $35. FE 8-4402. For Sola Miscellaneous ^? Vk TO 14 HP SUMP PUMPS, NEW and used, also repaired, 12 to 24" 4x4 fireplace wood. Cone's, FE 8-6642^________________________ 1 NEW GAS FURNACfe, 100,000 BTU. We or you Install. Ponflac Heating - 674-2611 or 682-5574. 2 PRACTICALLY NEW FURNAfCES, 2,750,000 bfu. Made by United States Radiator Corp., sttam or hot water, gas lira. MA S-2161, 6335 Sashabaw Rd.____________ 9'X12' LINOLEUM RUGS, 83.95 EA. Plastic wall Ilia 1c aa. START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT — with a down payment on a large lot In Hi-Hill Village tor your future home — priced from $3375.00 with only 10 per capt down. LADY'S OF PONTIAC 3677 LAPEER RD.___________39T3300 ORION TOWNSHIP — 3 ACRES near Orlon-Rochaster Rd. Ideal building site. $6*000. GREEN ACRES 1469 S. Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion MY 3*6261 BEDROOM SETS: MAHOGANY* $95; maple, $65; walnut* $60; blond* $79. Dining room table* 4 chairs* china cabinet* buffet* $150; living room set. $75; end table set, $23; desk* $25; piano* $85; stove* $25; refrigerator* $25; dinette, $13. M. C. Lippard* 559 N. Perry._________ 5-2766. Building sites In Clarkston, Holly, and Pontiac areas. 100'x330' lots;— pieces available for only 10 per cent down on land contract. OA 8-4211 1120 N. Lapeer Union Lake Br. OL 14518 EM 3-4171 730 S. Rochester 1175 Commerce Rd. FE 8-7161 377 S. Telegraph Rochester Br. 4511 Located near Hospital Rd. In good residential area* parcel 250 x 240 that lays lust right. $4400. $ 5 ACRES - Brand now offer Ing In Oxford Township with lots of Country atmosphere slightly rolling. Over 300 feet of frontage. Only $1200 down. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 58165 Trash and garbage route with orj without trucks. 651-9513. _ Sale Land Contracti 60 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyks Rd. FE 5-816$ Open Evas. 'Ill I p.m, ) BRONZE 66 CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large - and small size (round, drno-leal, rectangular) tables in 3-, 5- and 7-pc. tats, $24.95 up. PEARSON’S FURNITURE 2)0 E. Pika FE 4 7881 BUNK BEDS Choice of IS styles* trundle beds* triple trundle beds and bunk beds complete. $49 50 and up. Pearson's J^urnUure.J110 E. Pike.__ CHEST' OF DRAWERS, ENAMEL white* 332-6751.__ , CLEARANCE SALE Apartment size gas range Kelvinator refrigerator GE dryer $39 Several other used dryers In excellent condition. Crump Electric Inc.* 3466 Auburn Rd.* Aubu Heights. L0WREY ORGANS Sea and hrar the naw Lowrey Rhythm section — before you buy. Also several good buys In used organs - PRICED FROM S295 SNOWMOBILES evinrude ON DISPLAY 2 1966 demo* . „ Walt Mazurek LAKE AND SEA MARINE * Woodward at Saalnaw FE 4-958? —: SKI-OOOS — SKI-DOOS all models In stock,. »•• m the mighty Super Alpine. 18V4 HP. Electric, with twin 13 tracks, full line of anowmachln* accassor- lM‘ OAKLAND COUNTY'* MERC-CRUSIER DEALER Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Canter 15210 Holly Rd.. Holly ME 4-6771 THE GREAT SNOWMOBILE SCORPION Built to perform and andur* tha most rugged terrain. ORDER EARLY AND SAVE STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M59)__682-9440 USED SKI IS AND BOOTS. DORNS, Ski Haus, corner Walton and Sashabaw.________________________ i vTsTt FEDERAL'S SKI SHOP, Drayton Plains Shopping Cantor. National Brand Ski needs. Cober Ski Poles, Presenlco Ski a from It-fy Copoar and Cubco Binders LaOolomlto Boots from Italy, plus complete ski clothing. Mention this qd and receive a tree gltt WE BUY, SELL, TRADE GUNS — ALL KINDS Opdyke Hardware______FE 8-668* Sand-Gravel-Dirt^_________76 l.A SAND AND GRAVEL, ALL areas delivered. 673-5516. WatorforA-A* STONE7 SAND "PRODUCTS. Road gravel \— daL all arjaj. SAW Trucking, 394-0042* 628-2563. PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SLIP* ply. Sand graval fill dirt. OR 3- 15*». Pets-Hunting Dags 79 1710 S. Telegraph FE 4-0566 Ve mile south at Orchard Lake Rd. ________Dally 9:30-9 p.m.____I p000UE CLIPPING, $3 AND PLAYER P8ANO BEAUTIFULLY up. stud service and puppies. FE restored* was $1,250 now $950. 338- 4-6438. - ____• ___ 0100 1---T/T5ACHSHUND PUPS' Celling tile - Wall paneling, cheap. TRUMPET, EXC. CONDITION, $85. ESTEI HEIM KENNELS* 391*1889 B8.G Tile* FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Huron --- ---------------------------------------------IU| 1967 SINGER Touch and Sew Model Practically new. Flat needli design. Excellent. Yours for new balance* $118* or pay $9 per mo. Call 363-6831—Northern Appliance. 105^000 BTU NEW GAS FURNACE, Installed with ducts, avg. $595. Also power humidifiers Installed*' raas. A 8. H Sales* 625-1501* 625-2537. . ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE S-7471 BASEMENT OF FURNITURE, Pictures, 2 antique organs, make otter. 373 Eileen, off Square Lake Rd.,315-4072.______ BRIDES -*BUY YOUR WOODING announcements at discount frorrv Forbes, 4500 Dixie. Drayton. OR 3-9767. ______________________ BRIGGS & STRATTON ENGINE PARTS, SERVICE We're authorized dealers For many others. _^02'2203-_________r-*-------i-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, llO USED1 PIANO, CHOOSE FROM UP- down. JAHEIM'S KENNELS. FE rights* grands, spinets and con- 8.953a. soles, Uprights from $69. - GRINNEIL'S Downtown Store ___27 S. Saginaw ___ WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS ANO INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332 0501 8197 Cooley Cake Rd. 363-5500 YES, WE~SENT INSTRUMENTS FOR SCHOOL BAND AND ORCHESTRAS S5 per month $10 for Saxophones MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd Across from Tei-Huron Want Ads for Action br6wnie,s hardware FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSTRE SHAMP00ER3 $1 A DAY 952 Joslyn __FE 46105! 2 PAYMASTER CHECK PROTEC BRUNSWICK p50L TABLE Va poodle salon BY-ARLEEN" - PE 8-8569 l-A ENGLISH BULL DOGS, OACH shunds, pooefles, tropical llihf pat • supplies and grooming. UncH Charlies Pet Shop. 696 W. Huron. 332-8515. Open Sunday* I to 5. SMONTHOtlD FEMALl LABRA-dor with papers. 628-3247. A DOZEN MIXED BREED PUP-plea. Free to god home*. 602-021$. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERDS. 674-2511. akTgIrman “shepherd^OH rare black, term*. OR 3-0002.__ AKC PEKINGESE PUPS, EM 3-3778. akc^german shepher puM; , $35, 625-5451._!____ E 2 0567| AKC B E A O L 6 sCTIRSKIIHt hunters, rabbit* or bird*. 08 3-8007. 71.A'a"KC,' CKC. ALASKAN MALAMUfl I pupa* show and tladding, champion bloodline* all allot*. Tarmi# 634-3923. . . __________ w I 'all pfeTTMOP, || wilLIamb# THEORY CLASSED STARTING JAN-j Fe 4^433, Parakeet* and Flnchf^ d?in o?7dCu*,rOR C Ch,K BASSET HdUNDTyWNTRS Ol6 - - -"—A----- with paper*, C*H aft»f 4 391-2151. - .,r,J Office Equipment 72 BEAOLi^XiPPIfiS, PURiaaiR Music Lessons ACCORDION, GUITAR, LESSONS Sales service, Pulaneckl, OR 3-5596. 8'. FE 5-8329, don^’T^mEPIOTbr i<5hT carpet* . . . Blue Lustre them . . . eliminate rapid rttQllIng. Rent electric thampooer. $1, Hud-on's Howe., 41 E. Walton. tors, new, $60 each. FE 4-7631 LARGE 49" METAL OESK ’ ’wTftt Call after 3 pm, 63>-‘ ...._ .. beautiful cbuTi fOrriII. ! receesed typewriter well, Included! CHIHUAHUAS, REASQNIIlRI , — upright Underwood Typewriter, . 363-317$. $30.603-6409. Irfinrrw pupfiai^aWc. nnnp ptf* ,r fri-nTTNoprisses-offset 5433 oi.lq* Waterford 633-03001 T gantleneet, WtolllffMKJ end booty, malde and fmalM^jn, MY Mnw / D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1968 DACHSHUNDS, ALN9nunu3> MINMTUKC. AKC. ?M5u„ blat* •nd ton mala*. A«»r 7 or ssaakands, mw*. . —DOO free to good home MA 5-540_________ ASM SALE' DACHSHUND- PUP. FB- ntot>. 574-3*53.________;___ ffllMAN SHORT HAIRFD POWt er male, IS mot., papers, alt shots, &MSSS, hatort 1 PM. ________ SlgftMANSHEPHERD PUPS, AKC. champjonlhiaSS0:__S2W^3L German shepherd ^ups, a*.c, beauties, terms. UL HU7. ___ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC and pedigree lnc‘1, temperament, tog 2536. weeks, good show quality. 482- Tnml Traitors It TRAVEL TRAILERS Your 'dppler tor X LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOO, tally HO 20 hew and used trailers In stock ALSO CORSAIR PICK UP CAMPERS NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie Hwv. 625-4600 Hungarian vizla retriever, • female. l-yr.-old, $50. 335-7481. | LABORADOR RETR IE VER PUP-Dies. AKC. 550. 3 mos. Ml 6-4311., LABRADOR, 6 MONTHS. FEMALE, with papers, shots, exc. health, reds./ 335-61 MINIATURE POODLE, male. 2 yrs. 681-0443. WHITE, TROTWOOD AT JOHNSON'S 517 E. Walton Blvd. FE 4-0410 FE 4-5853 WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees _ Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, Ritz-Craft Travel Trailers Skamper and PleasureMate Campers—7 & 8 Sleepers MIXED COCKER—POODLE Call 363-5490 or Inquira 1602 son, Union Lake. T~WEEKS.„ Holly Travel Coach 9_____________PH9 8 15210 Holly Rd. Holiy, ME 4-6771 Part COCKER PUPS, s WEEKS... t 0pen Daily and Sundays -__________ S5 and SIO. 335-3316.--■ >-— WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS PEKINGESE PUPPIES AKCMAL E S and sieepers. New and used, 5395 Boats-Accessorles 97 THE SEASON IS COMING. SO MAKE THE MOVE NOW . . . HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 7899 S 'Your Evlnrude Dealer" Telegraph 332-1033 PINTERS Starcraft-ThompsorvM FG Johnson Boats and Motors SNOWMOBILES NEW AND USED 1370 Opdyke 9-6 FE 4-0924 (1-75 at Oakland Univarslty Exit) Airplanes ^ ^ F.A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL — LET our Instructors teach ypu to tly. ADI Inc., Pontiac Airport. OR 4» 0441. New and Used Tracks 103 COME IN AND SEE Frank" Rocctssi For That Truck Deal John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4101 Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 ADKINS AUTO SALES. NEEDS transportation cars now. 738 Oakland, FE 2-6230/ ave. 338-6414. females. Stud service. 6^2-6721 -----POODLE BEAUTYF SALON Clippings—AKC Pups—Stud Service Pet Supplies--482“6401 or 682-0927 , POODLE CLIPPING, AND SHAM-pooing, by appointment. FE 5-4095. PUPS, 5 WEEKS OLD, DACH shund. 651-3638. ___ RED AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES, 4 female*, 9 weeks, 540 each. 624-4688.______________________. Registered toy fox Ter-rlers and Chihuahua puppies, also up. Also rentals. Jacks, intercoms telescoping, bumpers, ladders, racks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1J25 S. Hospital Rdi, Union Lake. '3-3681. Spare tire ca-rlers. EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the EMI then get the best" et : COMPLETE NEW SHIPMENT '68 JEEPS ' Ready for immediate delivery Complete line of plows* cabs and special equipment Ready to deal now at * discount prices. Grimaldi Jeep 9.00 Oakland Ave. stud servile. FE 2-1497. Mobile Homes 89 i Averill 1-A Beauties to Choose From I AUTO SALES RICHARDSON DELTA! FE 2-987S - 2020 Dixie FE 4-6896 MONARCH DUKE HOMETTE LIBERTY COLONIAL MOBILE 'HOMES __________ — FE 2-1657 623-1310 SIAMESE KITTENS. 12 WEEJKS, 25 OPDYKE 5430 DIXIE old. CFA reg. Lilac and Chocolate j Auburn Heights S. of Weterforc point, Male. 530. 851-2696. _-12X55 NEW MOON, iCARPETED, $T. BERNARD PUPPIES, PURE- furnished, 2-bedroom, 5600 down, bred, pedigreed, champion stock, | take over payments. 334-3607. papers. 781-7061. Washington, Mich |M, )959 VA-KA-SHIONETTE. VERYi 7Q.A i good condition. Must sell. 682-9425.; p:P 5.5900 ----11959 TRAILER, 10* X -45' FUR-:pRESS EMPLOYE WISHES TO PUR- . .... Rien CAGE AND STAND,! nished, sale or rent, to right party, CHASE CLEAN, Low MILEAGE LARGE biru a *1 $2,200, lor Information call Mllesl iicrd car—WILL pav iip to Ramsey 693-6092. Representing R END OF YEAR SALE 1957 Ford 6 Vj pickup 1955 Chevy pickup 1957 Ford 6 Ranchero 1957 Chevy 6 panel 1960 GMC Vi-ton pickup 1964 Chevy 8 44 pickup 1299 S. Hospital Rd. Union Lk. Dealer Pet Supplies-Service . HELP! We need i300 sharp Cadillacs* Porvi tiacs. Olds and Buicks- for out-ofstate market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD 0 AUTO SALES « 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 8-8825' MARMADUKE By Anderson and Leeming *. C INI NATS. Hm *>i>. Itw. 80 Hllter Realty. ’ 19x14x15, 520. OR 3-5742. Auction Sales |________________________^ —-—.— ------— ---------— - j 196« RICHARDSON"GLENHAVEN, , 1 AUCTION AT AUCIiONLANCH ,urn- *2'700' 852'4736' every Saturday- __________ B&B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ...... 7:60 P M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:00 P M. EVERY SUNDAY ...... 2:00 PM. WE BUY — SELL — TRADE RETAIL 7 DAYS WEEKLY CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION I EM9 Dixie Hwy. 5500 CASH. PREFER COMPACT EM 3-6!37 ANY- FE 4.3535 SPCECIAL 1966 GMC Vi-TON PICKUP GMC factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 ____ ; Auto Insurance-Marine 104 \ AUTO INSURANCE Terms Available CALL TODAY! | ANDERSON & ASSOC “Let’s see how long it takes Daddy to notice!” New and Used Cars 106 1EED A CAR? NEW IN THE area? Repossessed? Garnished? Been bankrupte? Divorced? Got a problem? Ball Mr. White FE 8-4080. WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIMMICKS—NO GIVEAWAYS Jl ST RIGHT CARS A1 RIGHT PRICES MANY MANY rrj CHOOSE FROM OPDYKE MOTORS 1044 JOSLYN AVE. cc t_^27 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 1965 FORD 4rPOOR. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, >OW« R EQUIPPED. WITH. RADIO, HEATER" ANO WHITEWALL TIRES FULL PRICE 5985. ABSOLUTE LY NO MONEY DOWN. Assure# weekly payments of 58.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Perk* U HAROLD TURNER FORD, 4-7500. •_____.______ IMS FORD GALAX IE 500 4-DOOR hardtop, with 595 down. Finance balance of only $1145. - .JACK LONG FORD ROCHE STE R OL 1-9711 - 1965 FORD Country Squire* power equipped* with factory air conditioning. Automatic transmission,. radio* heater, whHewalls. Full price $1,895, * ofily $49 down and weekly payments of $12.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC BIRMINGHAM _ Ml 4-7500 1963 CHEVY II NOVA WAGON* 33,-000 miles. Extras include mounted snow tires* power steering* auto., rack. $675 or best offer: Eves. FE 8-3418 days, TO 8-2146* 1964 CORVAIR 7Q0 4 DOOR* AUTO, 1,8,000 miles* $695. 391-1932, . 1966 FORD FAIRLANE 500 2 door hardtop, radio, heater automatic, red in color, only 5195 down, balance to finance of only • $1695 OAKLAND CHRYSLER — PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. . FE 5-9436 1966 FORD GALAXIE 500 4-DOOR, with $95 down* $1335 to be financed'! JACK LONG FORD ROCHESTER OL 1-9711 1966 THUNDERBIRD New and Used Cars 196 1962 OLDS CUTLASS CONVERTI- steerujg A® .S2k|sR $695 COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars nini*. Drayton Plains to 9 daily •TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS ' 1964 OLDS Holiday coypi. automatic. power steering, brakes, whitewalls, the buy ol the year. 51195. On US 10 at MI5. Clarkston, MA 5-5071. ______ 1964 OLDS 98 Luxury sedan, full power, factory alr-conditloning. Ilka 51495 SUBURBAN OLDS t.,' 635 S. Woodward Ml 7-5111 Birmingham j OWNER. 9 PASSENGER, Olds, red station wagon, good condition, 51400, call 651-4775, 1965 OLDS 88, 4 DOOR. A SEAL beauty. Holiday Special, 51395 KEEGO PONTIAC Keego Harbor___________ 662-3400 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1966 OLDS holiday coupe, with automatic, doy*er steering - brakes, whitewalls* maropn with black interior, ■ low miles* only $2195. On US, TO at ' M15* Clarkston, MA 5-5071. _____ PERKINS DALE-SERVICE-AUCtion-eer. < wprtz Creek Phone 635-9400 ivestock 83 MRST LESSON FREE. KLENTNER Riding Academy. 363-0089._______ IORSES BOARDED, BOX STALLS, Walled Lake area, 349-1904. • PONIES AND RABBITS. -______ 623-0473 Registered quarter Horse Sale. Buckskins and Palamlnos trained, terms. 634-3923. teats 83-A E CURE AND SMOKE MEATS Call FE 2-6155._____________________ 84 Hay-Grain-Feed JR SALE: HAY AND STRAW. 628-2056 VY AND STRAW 50 CENTS PER bale. North o» Rochester off Rochester Rd. 625 E. Buell Rd. irm Produce 86 D. 1 PONTIAC AND SEBAGO Potatoes. Middleton's Orchards, 1510 Predmore Rd., Lake Orion. MY 2-1961 attar 4. ______________' Farm Equipment 87 C FARM ALL TRACTOR WITH snowbtode and plow. 5650. 394-0278. CLARK'S TRACTORS AND MACHIN-ery. MA 9-9376 ROAD GRADER, TANDEM, GOOD shape, 52,750, owner. 673-3488. CLEARANCE SALE I USED TRACTORS AND SNOW SLADES - AS LOW AS $150 larga selection to choose from, KING BROS. r 4-1662 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd- at Opdyke Rd FORD TRACTOR,. WITH WAGNER ATTENTION! House trailer* owners or , ! 1963 .Ford, N-600 fully equi to handle any trailer. $1*095 John McAuliffe Ford Best Mobile Home Soles Open Daily—9 a.m.-fli p.m. Marietta Champion Royal Embassy Regent Squire Landola Delta Victor MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON DISPLAY - FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP-WITHIN 200 MILES.. * SPECIAL-, 2 ONLY — 1968 Champions 12 X 60* — 54995 ON DISPLAY AT: Cranberry Lake Mobile Home Village 9620 Highland Rd., (M-59) 2 miles West of Williams Lk., Rd. 363-5296 ____________363-5600 STOP HERE LAST M&M* ^ MOTOR SALES flow at our new location Wt pay more for sharp* late model cars. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 338-9261 “TOP DOLLAR PAID" .GLENN'S * FOR "CLEAN'4 USED CARS 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Foreign Cars ___FE^8-9238 ,A„ 1963 BUICK LeSABRE CONVERTI-1051 ble* black with white top* auto- Y964 CORVAIR CONVERTIBLE. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, W,ITHj RADIO, HEATER, AND WHITE-WALL TIRES. R.ULL PRICE $895, ABSOLUTELY NO MO.NfEYj DOWN. Assume weekly paymentli of $7.92. CALL CREDIT MGR.1 Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNERS FORD, Ml 4-7500. I Convertible, factory air-conditioning, automatic transmission* fullP . _ ... . - . power, with radio* heater and 163a S. Woodward^ .whitewall tires. Only $79 down or ‘.your old car* and up to 36 months! to pay at bank rates 1966 OLDS Toronado deluxe* full power, 6-wa/ seat, factory air conditioned, t»!t and telescopic wheel, like new at only. % $2995 ' SUBURBAN OLDS ML 7-51II Birmingham New end Used C«r» _J96 1965 PONTIAC 4 DOOR STAR 51450. Fi 5-S4S3. 'L __ . rtis'fe^sTr^-DooRrwoo or taka ovjr payments, FE 2*8684 after 4 p.nfc • : - RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC RAMBLER On M24 In Lak* Orion - MY 3-6266 1965"PONTIAC CATALINA 4-b60R hardtop, sllvermlst finish with matching Interior, power brakes, power steering automatic transmission, radio, heater, 1 year warranty, 51295. HILLSIDE LIN-COLN-MERCURY, 1250 Oakland, _ 333-7863.______m _ Pontiac Retail Store 65 University EE 3-7954 - HAROLD TURNER TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1961 VW with radio, heater, white- 1966 walls, in very good condition.~Only 5595. On US 10 at MIS, Clarkston, MA 5-5071.___________________ OPEL. 196-210 Orchard Lake, FE 2-9165._________________________________ BUICK RIWIERA SILVER green, 1 owher, exc. condition, full powr, 52495. 646-0173. brakes AS 11»55 CHEVVSS, V8, AUTO. TRANS-~ mission, 30,000 actual miles. Farm- er owned, used Only for pleasure. BIRMINGHAM 575 Union Lake Rd. EM 3-2610. FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. 1963 VW IN* SUPERIOR CONDI-tion, red, radio, whitewalls, 5650. Call 646-3622. 1964 RENAUL LOW MILEAGE, BACK, RABrO, 1966 VW STRAIGHT BACK WAGON, with 595 down, financ* balance of only 51275. JACK LONG FORD TOM WADEMACHER _ fEVY-OLDS 1966 BUICK) Wildcat* 4-door hardtop, with automatic* power steering, brakes/factory air condition, radio* heater, whitewalls* locally owned, new car trade* only $2195. On US 10 at M15* Clarkston* MA 5-5071. ROCHESTER OL 1-9711 FOR RENT* DRIVE AND LIVE INI Cruis Air motor home* sleeps 6, 363-2068.' HAVE A MERRY CHRISTMAS and buy a new 1968 Detroiter Mobile Home Now on display at BOB HUTCHINSON'S 4301 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) Drayton Plains OR 3-11 Wanted Sharp Cdrs! We Pay Top Dollar! Immediate Cash! All Makes and Models WE WILL -TRADE DOWN SPARTAN DODGE BILL G0LLING VOLKSWAGEN 'HOME OF THE L.V.W.1 1966 BUICK Riviera GS* factory air-conditlo» ing, with full power* very sharp. SAVE ON THIS ONE. $ave | BOB B0RST Lincoln-Mejxury Sales 479 S. Woodward 1 Ml 6-4538 1966 BUICK LeSABRE CONVERTj-, ble black with white top* power steering* brakes* automatic* a real nice car for only $1995. VANDE-PUTTE BUICK-QPEL, 196-21Q Or- HASKINS AUTO SALES 1965 CORVETTE convertible, with 4-speed, 327 engine, perfect shape! Save. 669S Dixie Hwy., Clarkston. MA S-,5071. HASKINS AUTO SALES 1965 CHEVY Impala 2-door hard-• top V-8, automatic* power steering, only $1495. At 6695 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston* MA 5-3112.________i TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1965 CHEVY Impala 2-door hardtop, with V-8, automatic, power steering* brakes* factory air conditioning, radio, heater, whitewalls* one oAkner, new car trade $1595. On US 10 at M 15* Clarkston, MA 5-5071. Michigan's fastest growing Volkswagen Dealer 1821 Maplelawn Blvd. Off Maple Rd. (15 mile Rd.) j Keego Harbor ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT T rOy 642-6900 JAGUAR 1965 XKE COUPE, EXC. r /-*\tl yrT”i condition* $3500. 731-3512.____i | p. C/JN/I T « chard Lake Rd. FE 2-9165, 1966 BUICK Le SABkc, 4- DOOR. One owner* Holiday special* $1695. KEEGO P0NTIA r 682-3400 860 1965 CHEVROLET Biscayne 2-door, radio* heater, and automatic transmission. A WONDERFUL SAVINGS FOR ONLY $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymqiuth Woodward Ml 7-3214 I MOTOR SALES , 1980 Wide Track Dr. FE 3-7021 HELP! DRAFTED Must sell In 1 wk. 10'x50' 19641 Wolverine. 2 bedrooms and furn.,| exc. condition. Pay $400; equity, 335-8994, anytime. We would like to buy late model GM Gars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-56Q0 WE'LL MAKE YOU A BETTER Offer on your used car — SEE — it K1H ........... .......I .. . .... DOWNEY OLDS, INC. loader, adjustable tires, rear blade, time. All sizes In stock. Also see ctn Oakland Ave FE 2-8101 exc. condition,..*?», perfect for)968 models on display now. l-ree 5sn oaK,ano Awe- AT LOST OUR LEASE TOLEDO, OHIO SALES LOT This means we are overstocked to the point where we must sell 20 NEW AND USED mobile homes. ALL AT A LARGE DISCOUNT FOR EXAMPLE -50'xl2', list price $5,185 OUR PRICE: $3,895 Don't miss this chance of a llfe- MIDLAND TRAILER SALES snow removal, 515-9431. _________ delivery and tree set-up within 300 HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS, J O H N miles. We will not knowingly || Deere and New Idea parts galore, undersold. Davis Machinery Co., Ortonville. 627-3292. - .. Yractors, Tractors,' Tractors Over 30 models to choose from, we have run out of room I Buy now and save at these OUT THE DOOR Special Prices. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 625-1711 Just N. of Waterford HIM ___________6507 Dixie Hwy. travel Trailers 88 $4795 CARS 5-9948. JUNK CARS - WRECKS WANT-ed — highest. pride paid. FE 5-3620. 1967 14' TRAVEL TRAILER dealer costs. One only. Triple H Collision, 2634 Auburn Road CENTURY YELLOWSTONE Travel trailers Quality at any budget Mon. and Tues.* 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. Wed. thru Fri.* 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Set. 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Closed sun. % STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 1771 Highland (M591 682-9440 1 RADLEY CAMPER, PICKUP, sleepers and covers. 3259 Seebaldt, Drayton Plains. OR 3^528 ‘ TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES CLEARANCE SPECIALS NEW UNITS 12‘x60‘ Suncraft 12'x60'Suncraft, colonial ... 55395 12'x60'Bahama .......... $5495 12'x52' Bahama ..............$4795 NEW,|i2'x60' Homecraft ... $5195 USED UNITS Used Auto-Truck Parts 10'x52' Suncraft 1966 ...... $3250;" ,-----1a6g 12'x52' Suncratt 1966 $3450(1958 CHEVY FOR- PARTS, Junk Cnrs-Trucks 101-A YOUR VW CENTER 70 To Choose From —AIJ Models— -All Colors— —All Reconditioned j- ___ Autobahn j mike savoie Troy's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1900 W. Maple 2 Miles East pf Woodward Ml 4-2735 1966 IMPALA SS 2-OOOR HARD-top. 396 engine. Turbo jet hydra-matic. Bucket seats. Console shift. Power steering brakes. Posi-trac-tion. Cruise control. Air conditioned. Push button radio, 7 wheels and /snow tires. Tinted glass. Exc. condition. Ml 6-7391 afternoon. 1967, Ford LTD. Hardtop 4 door with V-8, power steering* brakes* only - $2695; BEATT1E FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD __ 623-0900 1967 MUSTANG 2 PLUS 2 FAST-back, with 390 engine, cruisamatlc GT equipment with $95 down, finance balance of only $2405. JACK LONG FORD ROCHESTER______ , OL 1-9711 1967 Ford Galaxie 500 Hardtop 2 door, with , V-8, automatic, power steering vinyl rpof* only - $2445 BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY., IN WATERFORD 623-0900 WHY NOT SHOP AND COMPARE AT - ONE'STOP TRANSPORTATION DOWNEY 0LDSM0BILE t 550 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 2-8101 ^TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1966 OLDS 98 4-door hardtop, with automatic, full power with factory air- and' crusamatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, gold with black vinyl root, only „ $2395. On US t0 at ‘M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 1966 PONTIAC Club Sedan, automatic, power equipped, with radio* heater, and whitewall tires. Jpull price $1*788* only $49 down* and weekly payments of. $12.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500" 1967 Pontiqc . Bonneville Hardtop 4 door with power steering, brakes, . low mileage I Radio, now only - 1966 OLDS 98 Luxury, Sedan. Full power* with faqtoly air conditioning, and AM-,&PM\jradio. Vinyl top, like new throughout. $AVE SUBURBAN OLDS 635 S. Woodward Ml 7-5111 Birmingham MIGHT CHEVROLET - BUtCK - PONTIAC On M24 in Oxford, Mich, OA ,8-2528 1951 PLYMOUTH, SELL OR TRADE. 1961- Chdvy V8 automatic. 335-5(107. 1964 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP 2 door, belvedere with V-8, power steering, whitewalls, only $95 dotwn, finance balance of only - $995 OAKLAND 1965 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE ail white with black vinyl trim with black vinyl top* full power, premium whitewalls* spare never been used* a low price* one owner garage kept beauty. Warranty $2895. Hillside Lincoln-Mercury* 1250 Oakland 333-7863. 1967-CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, ... . ■ JJ full power, factory air conditioning, Gr, easy-eye glass* black vinyl roof. Premium whitewalls* with spare tire never used, 17,000 ohe owner miles. $4995. Hillside Lincoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland. 333-7863. 1967 CHEVY IMPALA I Super Sport convertible, with full power, automatic 327 engine, showroom new! Only — . $2595 Motors Inc. ** | Author!: ed VW Dealer 1 mile North of Miraclfc Mile >765 $: Telegraph , FE 8-4531 New and Used Cars 106 1 TO 100 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS,! free tow anytime. FE* 5-9044. 1, 2 JUNK CARS—TRUCKS, FREE1 tow anytime. eE 2-2666.____I FOR SOME COPPER - BRASS; RADIATORS— •starters and generators* C* Dix-son* OR 3-5849. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932 Guaranteed for Ilf e. See them and get a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales* 3098 W. Huron (plan to loin one of Wally Byam's exciting caravans). CAMPERS FOR PICKUPS PHOENIX AND VyiNNEBAGO , Trailers REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and Installed. HOWLAND TRAILER SALES AND RENTALS 8355 Dixie Hwy. Pontiac OR 3-1456 102 DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT OIXIE HIGHWAY 334-6694 Oxford Trailer Sales MARLETTES - SO- *0 63 long, 12 wide* 20 wide. Early American* Conventional and modern decor. Expartdo or tip-outs. Priced right* Built right. Phone MY 2-0721* mi. S. of Lake Orion on M24. Rent Trailer Space 90 Auto Service 93 Motorcycles 95 CHRISTMAS SALE Mini Bikes,- Go Carts 6 brands to choose RUPP - FOX — 'LIL INDIAN RUTTMAN — TACO — BONANZA From $119.95 UP $0 down or use your Michigan Bankard MG SALES & SERVICE glass and engine. FE 5-6908. 1961 TO 1964 HIGH RISE TRI-POW-; er complete* '61 to '64 4 barrel manifold* '65 to '67 alum., wheels, front only. 646-8659. _____| BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You- * Just Call Mr. Mason or Mr. Murphy at FE.5-4101 ________McAuliffe __ BEEN BANKRUPT? DO YOU NEED a car? Garnisheed? Got a problem? Divorced? New in the area? Call Mr. White FE 8-4080. King Happy New Year! From STANDARD AUTO. NOW Is The TIME Ta Save On A New Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 1955 CHEVY, REBUILT ENGINE, 852-4119____________ 1957 CHEVY 301, 3 SPEED, $300 887-4242___________ _ 1958 CORVETTE, XI MALLORY, Cam. Hurst lifters 3 speed tach, new tires, brakes, convertible, $550 firm. FE 5-6908. ___ 1961 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 4-' door, stick, radio,-heater, full price $184.97. KING AUTO, CALL MR. wi^TE. FE 8-4088._________________ 1961 CHEVY FULL PRICE $295. with $50 down, buy here - pay hare BILL fOX CHEVROLET OL 17000 £1 HAN0UTE Chevrolet Buick On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 1964 IMPERIAL CROWN COUPE, full power AM and FM radio* power bucket seats* Stereo tape unit* vinyl top* more/ A-l condition* call FE 8-1 lbl. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad-'-Big Lot , 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM We buy or will adjust your pay* ments to less expensive car.-; 677 M-24* Lk. Orion MY. 2-2041 *1962 DODGE, 2-DOOR HARDTOP, white with red bucket, seats, radio, heater* whitewalls* 6-cylinder, stk. balance due $217134. CALL "MR. WHITE FE 8-4088. KING. Pretty Ponies 1965 and 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO ■ CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And 39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 1966 PLYMOUTH Belvedere II* 2-door hardtop. V-8. Automatic transmission* with power. Maroon with black interior. $1695 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 860 S. Woodward M]^ 7-3214 1966 PLYMOUTH FURY III 9-PAS-senger station wagon* V-8* power steering* auio. trans., only 12*000 miles. .626-8213. 1967 PLYMOUTH GTX with 4-speed, vinyl top* all goodies* Ilka new! Only $2495 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester OL 1-7000 ADKINS AUTO SALES I960 Bonneville 2-door hardtop. Now only $225. 738 Oakland FE 2-6230 SHELTON PONTIAC BUICK 855 S. ROCHESTER RD. it 651-5500 . GO! HAUPT ■ PONTIAC NEW YEAR SPECIALS 1967 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtops | 4-door with bOtomatlc. power steer-Ing, brakes, factory off leal cars I $2795 HAUPT PONTIAC 6 On M-15 at 1-75 Interchange Clarkston MA 5-5500 I960 RAMBLER STATION WAGON, perfect Condition, no ruit, auto, muit sea to appreciate. FE 1-2969. 1962 RAMBLER WAGON Classic with radio* heater* fi price only $195 OAKLAND BIRMINGHAM 1962 DODGE DART, RUNS GOOD $725. Save Auto. FE 5-3278.________________ 1963 DART 6 2-DOOR. VERY GOOC(. ( Exc. tires. Standard. 363-0081. Deal- 1964 DODGE 9-PASSENGER WAG-on. Auto. Double power. Radio, heater, exc. running condition. 1750. 651-6778. KESSLER'S DODGE 1963 RENAULT CARAVELLE FOR parts, 674-0128. _ USED ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, rear axle, tr* powers, bell hous-l ing, body parts* etc. H & H Auto Sales, OR 3-5200. , New and Used Trucks 103 4 WHEEL DRIVE, CHEVY 1961, 84 ton* with snow plow* new motor and clutch* exc. condition will take trade* $2150* 549-3177. 32' TRAILER 1 TRACTOR GAB-, good condition* $2300. Troy 585-6700. 1948 FORD TRUCK. OLDS POW-ered. New tires. $150. 673-6723. By 4 p.m._______________________ 1948 INTERNATIONAL 14 STAKE OAKLAND CAMPER YEAR END SALE 10 ft. Karlbou ....... .....$1,695 $ It. Beeline ..............$1,265 . „ B . , > ft. Tour-a-Home $770 4M7 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plalm Still a good selection of covers and1 - Open 'til 8 p>m. 6 days wk. sleepers at similar savings. I MINI RIKFC >35-0634______ Baldwin at Colgate! mim DIM:.} PICKUP COVERS, $245 UP. ! Can.SY Paint' chrom9 tenders 10'6" cabcovers, $1,295 and up. T & R CAMPER MFG. CO. 1180 Auburn Rd. 852-3334 / Been Bankrupt? Had a Repossession? Need a Car? Call Today For Mr. Wyatt at. FE 8-4521 CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service aT j Oxford • OA 1-1400 fv/rfrTT-OI N/l ntnrc; 1966 DODGE CORONET 440 WITH 1VIGil V 1V1GJ IG>I o factory experimental 440 Magnum engine and 4-speed. FE 5-8329 or FE 4-9248.______________________________________J________. 1961 CHEVY BEL AIR,‘ AUTQMA?-! R^/A/^N„SnU.Ti?N ir Afl'7-9993 Riaains Dealer on> body good condition. • Radio, ic. 682-9223, Riggins, ueajer.—_— heater, power back window, snow tires. Needs engine. $110. Ml 6-5512. ____________________ 1967 Ford Custom 4 door with V-8. radio, heater, 8nlyJ- $2195 BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 623-0900 HASKINS AUTO SALES 1962 CHEVY wagon 9-passenger V-8, excellent condition, save. See this one! 6695 Dixie Hwy., Clark-ston, MA 5-3112.__■ Been Bankrupt HAD A REPOSSESSION? BEEN TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS? \ 1962 T-BIRD. GOOD CONDITION. $300. Call 363-5613, after 8 p.m. or 363-9232 daytime. ____ ______. 1967 Mustang 2 boor Hardtop /-%, automatic, bowc nly - $2495 BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1950" ON DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD 623-0900 Star Auto WE FINANCE safety throttle $149 with $5 down. MINI BIKE KITS - $119. ANDERSON SALES 8a SERVICE PICK-UP TRUCK CAMPERS 11645 S. Telegraph____________FE 3-7102 Del Ray, Homed, Zipper, Fleel. SUJUK' CYCLES. 5(^C-25^C "RU_PP wing. Over 20 different new 1967 Minibikes as low as $139.95 STANDARD AUTO. OF OAKLAND vino. noael Take dels to choose from pt close ojt prices. New 1967 Apache camp trailers. New 1967 travel trailers, $745 up while tl^ey last. New snowmobiles, $425 up. New 14' tipper boat trailers* $77. New 13' 1967 aluminum boats, $147. We are over stocked and need help. i BILL C0LLER Vi ml. E. of Lapeer .______City limits on M-21_____ Minibikes M59 to W. Highland. Right Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAin 9-2179.___ HON DA SCR AM BLE R. Exc. condition. 335-5507_ 19$2 JEEP, Va TON PICKUP. 4 wheel drive. 4 cyl. $385, also 1957 Jeep, motor* flat 6. $50. EM 3-6879.____________________ 1960 UNIVERSAL* SHARP, LIKE neyv, new top,v new paint* snow blade. A real money, maker, ready for snow GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 ________________ 1961 FORD ECONO VAN; GOOD DO YOU NEED A CAR? GOT 4 condition. Call between 9 a.m. and problem? Divorced? Been bank 7 p.m. FE 5-5158. I rupt? Repossessed? New In area: 1962 WHITE TRACTORS ,j -^oLheap^r^wSf- , (70 ) 9064's Auto Car, cabl Twin ECONOMY CARS screw, 220 Cummins: perfect for | 2335 DIXIE — FE 4-2131 I dump bodies, $5,995. Also '63 OCOF rrq—;-ri.r.\.>r ru‘»v,-,r Emery sleepers, $6,99^; M0 trucks, NEW FINANCE PLAN. IF ruevv mnnr «tirk Fleet discounts. Bank finance. 100 ..... r..c damvdiidt DO EVV / per cent warranty. Call or write. PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR shift, excellent condition. $5 down tor color photos. LA PINE TRUCK /-.DUICUCCrs \A/Arcc :r —only $3 weekly. SALES, 48M Warner Rd., Clpve-(GARNISHEED WAGE5, Wt FULL PRICE ONLY land. Ohio (216 ) 641-4260, CAN GET YOUR CREDIT RE-|mi FOrd g. ESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE THAT WITH YOU CAN BUY A CAR FROM US! BUY HERE! PAY HERE! HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES: 1962 CORVAIR Monza 2-door, coupe, with automatic, new tires, very sharpl $5 down - only $3 weekly. FULL PRICE ONLY $297 $2971 1962 Ford Sedan ..................!!!||427$ Dixie 1960 Pontiac Catalina ............ *1?? Open 1960 MERCURY 4-DOOR. V-8, AUTOMATIC. POWER STEERING AND POWER BRAKES. EVERYTHING WORKS. $99 COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 1963 TEMPEST CLUB SEDAN, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WITH RADIO. HEATER. AND WHITE-WALLS. FULL PRICE $695, ABSOLUTELY IJO MONE-Y DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $5.88, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1963 PONTIAC 6^AND PffTX, FULL power. Air. No rust. Ex^. engine. Mefamora* 678-2188 eve. _____ 19$3 GRAND PRIX HARDTOP. HOL-iday special, $795. KEEGO PONTIAC Keego Harbor 682-3400 1963 TEMPEST LEMANS. V| STICK, I buckets, $350, Ml 7-0296. 1964 4-DOOR' PONTIAC CATALINA,] power.brakes and steering, hydro-' • malic, posi-tractlon, low mileage ,,M, AHBA“A°°R JiiifE"! oversize premium tires. Original owner. Only $995. OR 4-0306, eve-nlngs, FE 2-8710. ' 1 64 TEMPEST )94J AMbassad0r 990 Sedan, ailto malic, radio* heater* full pow< convertible* 2 radio* heater, trim ) 6 engine* automatic* gold with matching $1088 Fischer Buick 545 S. Woodward 647-5600 1964 LEMANS, CONVERTIBLE. 3-speed, stick shift, $800. EM 3-6913. 1962 Chevrolet 1960 VX Station Wagon 1V62 Pontiac 1963 Chevrolet to 9 dally $19511964 MERCURY MARAUDER, 2-$495 door hardtop. V-8, stick, exception-$5951 ally clean, 332-9X5. 11964 COMET STATION W A G O N "404". A V-8 baauty with auto- PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS 8, CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (8"-27"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND A COLEMAN >091 W. Huron FE 2-3989 1963 CHEVY PICKUP. LOyy Good condition, 8795. 637-5641. 1963 DIESEL CHEVY (60 SERlES),|Lave oyer dQ f ADC 14' stake, air brakes, air horn,;nave over ou all new rubber, 920 tires, sPOkelfAM RP PURCHSED wheels, exc. condition.. UL 2-2792.1 . . . UIif,iIT rr\nr 1963 CHEVY TRACTOR. 60 SERIES,|N0 DOWN PAYMENT. COME fully equipped, with 28 ft. trailer,! iaj AMH . (flatbed) with $195 down. Balance l MrlU to finance only - «144?.__ I MGR. MR. IRV. SEE CREDIT SALE Fall Inventory Reduction 14* Frolic ...... ........... $1,495 U' Frolic .................... $1.895 W Frolic .................... $2,395 >1' Travelmaster ............ $3,595 24' - Boles-Aero $5475 All art tolt-contolned Good condition. 5500. 693-4632_ WINTER PRICES SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES on all motorcycles A few''67s left at huge savings. ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph . FE 3-7102 961 JACK LONG FORD . T T jr»ryr,r w T Trp^ ROCHESTER___________ OL 14711 T T A UTO 1963 FORD PICKUP TRUCK, V8 kj A ^ stick, balance due $610.92. Just as*!FE 4-1006 or FE 3*7154 sume payments of $5.07 per week.1 _____ 1940 W. Wide Track CHOICE OF 4 CALL MR. WHITE DIVORCED'? BEEN BANKRUPT? FE 8-4088 KING automatic, V-8, very sharp, down — only $2.25 weekly. FULL PRICE ONLY $297 _ _ Avenue EE 8-9661 . 1963 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 9-passenger station wagon. "352" V8, automatic* power steering. A 11 white with red vinyl Interior. Need lots of room In style? Here It Is., $995v Hillside Lincoln • Mercury* fo/r 1250 Oakland, 333-7863.________ ■ 1963 FORD FAIRLANE. 2 - D O O R hardtop, V8 automatic* red with red matching interior, radio, heat-1 er, whitewalls* balance'due $587.17/ Assume weekly payments of $4.22. CALL MR. WHITE FE 8-4088. KING._______________________ 1963 FALCON 2 DOOR, AUTOMATIC. WITH RADIO, HEATER, AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE, $595* ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $5.44. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD; . • c**U« turner ford, mi 4-7500. | lincoln-/V\ercury Soles 2-door hardfoo,j 1963 FORD CLUB SEDAN, POWER;479 S. Woodward Ml 6-453$ mafic* power steering and brakes. Beautiful golden finish with matching all vinyl interior. See It. One y#ar warranty. $1095. Hillside Ltn-coln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland, 333- 7863.____________ COMET CALIENTE 2-DOOR 202 engine automatic* power steering, radio* heater. Nicest one we have had in adbs. This one owner beauty* $1295. Hillside Lincoln-Mercury* 1250 Oak-land 333-7863.' 1966 COLONY,. Park Station Wagons. 2 to choose from, factory air-conditioning, both real sharp. $ove BOB B0RST TH€ NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham Area 1150 Maple, across from Barz Airport 642-8600 Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. ____FE 8-4079 _ YEAR END SPECIALS SELECT USED CARS automatic* v-8, power steering* power brakes, power windows* luggage rack*' * air-conditioning, tilt-wheel* and much moral Some new gar warranty .............$U95 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertible* automatic transmission radio* heater* power brakes* power steering, real luxury at real savings, 1 year warranty* $1095. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY* 1250 Oakland* 333-7863. 1965 PONtlAC CAtAUNA 2-DOOR hardtop, automatic transmission, radio, heater, power brakes, power steering* air conditioning* a steal at $1495, 1 year warranty, HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY, 1250 Oakland, 333-7863. $1095 1966 RAMBLER AMERICAN* auto-. mafic, radio, heater* new white- wall tires $1245 1965 AMBASSADOR Station Wagon* automatic* V-8, power steering* power i brakes, power windows* luggage rack* air conditioning* tJIt-wheel* and simulated wood trim .................. $1295 * UNDER $300 1962 AMBASSADOR WAGON, stick* V-8, radio* heater . SAVE 1962 CLASSIC SEDAN* stick* radio* heater, runs good . save 1962 RAMBLER SEDAN* automatic* radio* heater* good transportation $avb 2 USED CAR LOTS AT: 666 S. Woodward, Birmingham and 47 E. Maple, Troy Village , Rambler 196MJEBEL HARDTOP, V-8'AUfS. malic, radio, power brakes and steering, official car. Special at $1995. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP* Union Lake, EM 3-4155. SPEED VARSITY !B«ats-Acc«ssOrto* PAY HERE! BUY HERE! STANDARD Auto. Sales EQUIPPED, WITH RAOIO, HEAT ER AND WHITEWALLS. FULL PRICE $695, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $5.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1966 MERCURY PARKLANE Convertible, a bright rad beauty with matching all vinyl Interior, power brakes end power steering* automatic transmission, stereo tape. This Is not a run of tho mill convertlblo—It Is a 1 owner garage kept beauty* sold and serviced by us. Has the balance of tho new car warranty loft. $2195. HILLSIDE LINCQLN-MER- 1964 FALCON STATION WAGON, V automatic* radio, heater, whita-walls, deluxe rack. White w matching Interior* balance due ■ • -,-r- • • • j- -v„ $472.64. Just assume payments ofi CURY* 1250 OiWlito, $400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. t?J2.R!!I.w£!^CALL MR‘ WMITE block West orWest Huron (M59)l FE 8-4088. KING._________________ phi nnn a 1964 ford custom sob 2 b6bR* UO I -UUU4 Wjtft V-8, stick* only $695 SEE THESE VALUES TODAY I Jaeobson Trailer Sales M90 William. Lak* Rd. OR 3-5981 Open Mon.-Frl., 9 a.m«4 p.m. tat., 9 to 6, CHgad wMayi ~ lAORTCRAFT MANUFACtuftlNG ttaal tram* pickup iIkiwi .nd top. , 4160 Folay, Watartord, 623-0650 CLEARANCE 1967 MODELS BOATS AND MOTORS ^SAVE-SAVE SAVE I , CRUISE OUT INC. —63 E. Walton Daloy 9-6 FE 8 4402 $1-195 GLASSPAR, STEURY* GW-INVAD* •r, Mlrrocraft boats, Grumman canoes, Evlnrude motors, Pamco trailers, rake M-59 to W. Highland. Rlgh* on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 629-2179. INSIDE WINTER STORAGE KAR S BOATS & MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON RD. UkKjjj ORION ~ MY 3-1601 SAILBOAT — VIVACTIY, f W I N keel, 20', fully equipped* 4 berth cruiser, heavy duty tratnr. 692-5101 1 Union Lake HASKINS AUTO SALES 1965 CHEVY Pickup Vi-ton. excel-' 'lent shape! Save! 6695 Dixie Hwy.j Clarkston, MA 5-31 \2._ 1965 CHEVY SPORT VAN 6 CYL.* stllk* 9 passenger, take ovtr pay-1 menfl of $60.50. 673-6368. ^_ f?65 FORD SUPER VAN, 25,000 ml. Exc. condition, Ml 6-6780 after 6.___ 1967 FORD F-100 RANGER, WftH V-8, tinted glass, "rwtio, while-walls* $95 down, balance to finance of only — $1985. JACK LONG FORD ROCHESTER - _ OL 19711 BIG INVENTORY OF NEW 1968 JEEPS Buy Now and Save ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP Repossessed? New1 In area? NEED, I JACK LONG FORD A CAR? Call Mr. White FE 8^-4080.! 9‘?nSSEin‘ ROCHESTER OL 1-9711 GER STATION WAGON, white with1------------------ red Interior, deluxe chrome rack, 6-cyllnder, eu'jmatlc, P.S., PB radio* h* u whitewalls. Balance due $33' /4. Assume weekly p*' ments of $3 09. CALL MR. WHITE! FE 8-4088, KING.____ 1962 CORVAIR “ with radio, heater, whitewalls, good transportation at only $95 dowrt, ■ balance to finance only - $395 King._ WE HAVE A NICE SELECTION! OF COMPACT CARS. STICK SHIFTS, AUTOMATICS AND; 4-SPEEDS. RONEY'S AUT0,j 131 BALDWIN. FE 4-4909. WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED 7 1967 Chevy 4-dr., auto., V-8'», 2 1966 Ford autOv V-8's. 1 1966 Chevy auto., V-8* also 2 1965 Pon-tiacs. auto, with double power. These cars are’ priced to sell fast. No reasonable offer refused. Cars can be purchased down. 1964 FORD 4^door, automatic transmission, VI only $895 * BOB B0RST Lincoln-Mercury Sales S. Woodward^ _ Ml ^6-4538 !965~FbRDCOUN TRYSQUIR E ST A 1966 MERCURY. S«dan. powar aqulppad. LUCKY AUTO EW\ 3-4155! FE 41006 mafic transmission, power brakes and power steering* fadlp* heater, DAklAfSin need lots of room, here It is* 50.0W mile w a r r a n t y. $1595. CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH HILLSIOE LINCOLN-MERCURY, llh no monay lit Oakland Av,._________FE S-?«rt JJ50 Oakland Ava., 333-7143. |l$43 CHEVY IMPALA SUPER. T"BIRD ?-D00R LANDAU •port con war tibia 317 angina, 4-1 w|tfi full powar, txtra (harp: Only ipaad. 35.535 mllai, last yaan top. I $»t$. ntw tires, axcallant condition, out] IAEV I (IMP cnDD ot state, will ha haral only 3 daya. J«LIL IL/Ntj TUISU UL 3-U3J. . IROCHESTER , OLI->711 Town braaza-way window, automatic transmission, radio, heater, white-walls. Full price $1,4>S, only $4* down and assume wtakly payments of $12 *3. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. _____ 444 S WOODWARD,AVE tlon wagon, 352 V-l angina- auto-1BIRMINGHAM _ Ml 4 7500 GET A MERRY OLDS M0 DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 52$ N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN V*40 fiLblTMARDtbP. IXCICUEnt mechanictl condition. Make offer* 673-0171, aM(nM Chrysler - Plymouth - leep Rambler Oakland County's Fastest Growing Dealer 1961 Comet' 1962 Chevy tic, new tires* A 1 condition 1 Only — Bel Air 4 - door* automatic* powar steering Immaculate throughout. Only — $395 $695 1965 GMC 1967 leep %4-ton pickup. Asking only CJ 5 Universal* with snow plow, V‘® •n0lhf. ready for $1195 $2795 . ,1965 Dodge '65 Rambler ' 2 door hardtop Asking only 4 door 770, V i, automatic, poor •r stearing Asking $1295 $1195 ON DIXIE HWY -NEAR MIS CLARKSTjpN MA 5-2635 J . •Television Programs THE PONTIAC PRESS,. MQND AY, JANUARY 1* 1068 D—11 Program! furnlihed by itationt listed in tbit column aro subject to change without notice Chennstei 2-WJ6K-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-tV, »-CKLW-TV, 30-WKHXTV, S6-WTVS TV Features MIKE DOUGLAS, 7:30 pm. (2) ORANGE (4) BOWL, 7:45 ‘ONGE UfON A HUNDRED YEARS,’ 9:30 p.m! (9) CAROL p.ni. (2) BURNETT, 10 TONIGHT •:00 (2) News (C) (7) Movie: r’The Great Lover” (1949) Bob Hope, I Rhonda Fleming. (R) '•] (9) Dennis the Menace j (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) Friendly Giant 1:15 (56) Merlin the Magician (:30 (2) News—Cronkite (C) (9) Gilligan’s Island (R) (C) (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) Magic Door 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (9) Movie: “The Black Rose” (1950) Tyrone Pow. er, Orson Welles, Jack Hawkins. (R) . (7) Girl Talk (C) (56) News . jgj (9) Mr. Dressup 7:30 (2) (Special) Mike Doug-ie;io (S6) Of Cabbages and las — A tape-survey of| Kings opinions of the younger10.a5 (4)NewKC) jj B f generation includes inter- /n-r views with Hubert Hum- 10:31 *. Beverly Hi ibil ies (R) phrey, James A. Pike,! 4) Concenfration (C) Sen. Robert Kennedy, Bob J Donna Reed (R> 1 Hope, Ronald Reagdn and j Pearl S. Buck, (C), ia‘!S t?°? for Hea th . (7) Cowboy in Africa - w "/D\ The woman owner of an 11:00 ■ * Andy of Mayberry4R) oasis refuses to share her jl}| Personality (C) water during a drought. . I! TemP&h™ (,C> Anne Baxter guests. (C)| * (50) Little Rascals (R) (SltoveLuS (R 11:95 (56) Interlude 7:45 (4) (Specjaljl Orange!1^ fi (R) Bowl Tennessee Vols 11:25 (7) News (C) 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) How’s ,Youc Mother-in-Law? (C) 11:45 (9) Chez Helene vs. Oklahoma Sooners. (C) 1:00 (SO) Hazel (R) (C) (56) America Memoir 1:31 (2) Lucille Ball — Lucy < and'Ethei reminisce. Vivian Vance- guests. (C). (7) Rat Patrol—A wounded general insists on leading a mission to destroy a German pipe line. (C) (9) Defeat of the Armada (C) j£ «-jw. 7 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (C) TUESDAY AFTERNOON '12:00 (2) (4) News (7),Bewitched (R) (C) (9) Take 30 (50) Movie: “The Forbidden Street”' (1949) Dana Andrews, Maureen O’Hara. (R) Leather (71 Treasure isle { (9) Movie: "Lease of Life” (English, 1954) Robert Donat, Kay Walsh, (R) .'V ; 1 12:35 ( 56) Tell Me a Story 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:50 (56) Let’s Read 12(55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1:10 (56) Children^ Hour 1:25 (2) News (C) (4) Carol Duvall (C) 1:25 ( 56) Arts and Crafts’ 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Left Make a Deal (C) 1:55 (56) American History 2:00 (2) Love Is a Many Splen-dored Thing (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) (50) I Love Lucy (R) 2:20 ( 56) Book Parade 2:30 (2) House-Party (C) 44) Doctors (C) (7) Baby Game (C) (50) Make Rooir for Dad; dy (R) ■ . ’I#"* 2:45 (56) Spaoish Lesson 2:55 (7)-Children’s Doctor (C) 3:00 (2) Divorce Court (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (C) (9) Pat Boone (C) (50) Topper (R) (56) London Line 3:15456) Mathematics 18 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (C) (4) You Don’t Say (C) (7) Dark Shadows (C) (50) Ckptain Detroit (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (C) (4) Woody Woodbury (C) (7) Dating Game (€) (9V Swingin’ Time (C) (56) Business Roundtable 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) News (C) (50) Three Stooges (R) (56) What’s New 5:00 (9) Bozo the Clown (C) (50) Little Rascals (R) (56) Misterogers .5:30 (4) George Pierrot — “Tlje Glories of Spain’ (C) ' . (7) News (C) (9) Fun House (C) (50) Superman (R) (56) TV Kindergarten ACROSS I----tanned leather 4——leather ihoet t—-«ki« leather 12 Falsehood 1.1 Boredom U Harem ream U Unit of energy U—.hide . handbag » South African javelin -SO Hurrler* 21 Twitching* 22 Time deposit (eh.) UToweref mosque 20 Hindu UUe 0l respect 20 Adjust* 01 Mountain (comb, form) 12 Clergyman'* titleteb.) M Moslem tm* ol high respect » Feign eo To that degree 41 Stout cord 42 Twelve 40 Obliging 4t Homage 11 Roman household god 12 Noise M Savor U Hon product IS Individual MArab commander (var.) V Also DOWN 1 Olive genuo 2 Tunes 2 Small cask! 4 Ocean- • •• surrounded I Unfastens, as a shoe S. Asia Sees Ups\ying Sr* military service 20 Intrepid TDuet*(var.) 33 Advance la rank t Number (pi.) M Grumbler 0 Love to excess 30 WiUow genus 10 Aroma 37 Elbe tributary 11 Parts of bead 30 Give 17 Verdian heroin# 30 Extol w Nipa palm « Pedestal part 23 Roman war god « Norse war god 24 Concept 44 Encircling band NEW DELHI, India IB — For the first time in more than two years, economists in South Asia are talking hopefully of an upward swing in the financial pictures of their countries. No small amount of the hope is based on the premise that peace can be maintained. India and Pakistan have been able to 21 Natton’e •enforce 27 Abode 40 Fruit decay 47 Lake (Sp.) 40 Therefore Wilson Pours Out Thoughts on Manly Art of Drinking r" p r" 4 5 1 i1111 B id H ir \i 14 fT” ■t " f 16 4 17 nr TD to n • 21 22 23 24 25 5T 27 28 29 ■ ■ 1 1 ■ m 33 34 35 26 j f 1 39 S’«; n 4 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 bl. 52 53 54 55 55 - 57 1 to devaluation of the rupee in June, 1966, have not been Realized — in fact exports have continued to drop. * * o Indian officials found their situation so bad during the drought period that they wer$ forced to abandon their, five- . , , , year plan continuity. The keep their guns mauled since | pourth Plan was to have started September, 1965, and India has jn but instead planning has had no major border tremble |jmped along on a year-by^year with Communist China *lnc« basis and the Fourth Plan is not 1982. to start now until April 1, 1969, * * * iwhen government experts hope Some factors beyond the con-|jbe economy will have improved trol of the countries of South' en0Ugh to allow such long-range Asia have to be considered as thinking again well—devaluation of ,the British pound, the pinch which Vietnam is causing on American aid, and continuing good crop conditions. After two years of drought, India is realizing a record harvest, exceeding 95 million tons of foodgpins. Now, the gross national2* income will be the highest ever. As one Western economist put it, “Indians should eat more and buy more clothes than ever before.’' EXPORTS Exports have been the sorest disappointment in India’s economic picture. Expectations that they would* rise subsequent Secret Servlet * a Shares Secrets DETROIT (AP)-Getting into , the holiday spirit, the Secret Service shared some of Its . secret duties Tuesday. , An Associated Press newsman found a partially burned' paper from the service’s tiles lying on the sidewalk in front of the Post Office where the agency is headquartered. ★ * ★ A spokesman confirmed thatj. | the paper probably was part of some files which the service” routinely destroys, . “Make sure whatever yOu got „ !you burn right away, please,,r he said. „ '-Vi..'* \ A Look at TV Flora, Football Start '68 ceedings .of a protest inarch are profiled. 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith — Aunt ‘ 2 Bee gets a job on a TV cooking program. (C) (7) Felony Squad — Sam and Jim seek a man who has just killed his wife’s lover. (C) (50) Movie: “Life Upside Down” . (French, 1964) Charles Dennes, Anna paylor. 9:30 (2) Family Affair — Aunt Fran wants to keep the By EARL WILSON 4, children. (C) , ‘ I NEW YORK — Has the hangover disappeared? (?) Peyton Place (C) | There was a time when there was a great literary discussion (9) (Special) “Once Upon every year round New Year’s about the best hangover remedies, a Hundred Years” — A and everybody pitched in with his pet medicine, satiric and nostalgic look starting with the famous spoonful of olive oil at Canada’s Centennial before (he party. year. (C). . j Recently I'hear more and more people say- H (56) French Chef . ing, “I never have i hangover.” . 10:09- (2) Carol Burnett — Lynn If they don’t, why not? Their answers vary |g* Redgrave and Mike Doug-from "I don’t drink” to “I take a lot of vita-las are guests. (C) I mins” to “I drink a lot of Coke or Pepsi the p (7) Big Valley—N|ck and next morning,” to some rather extreme pre- p Heath, on the trail of no-ventives such as shooting yourself. ^ torious brothers who! The best hangover cure, in the opinion pf wounded Jerrod, find the old Dr. Wilson her^e, is not to get drunk in the pair are highly respected first place, and if the hangover has disappeared, its because men of their community.!a lot of people have just simply learned to drink. ■ Which sounds logical when you remember that there are 'plenty of universities and colleges now where drinking seems to ; be the main subject by both men and co-eds. I heard a Cali-Ifomia father say, “I sent my boy East to college to learn to drink.” Graceful drinking Is not taught on the regular curricula in James Mason, Claire Bloom. 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Movie: '“Flight Command” (1940) Robert Taylor, Ruth Hussey. (Part U \ Ilf . (9) Window on tlie World 1:36 (2) Harry S. Truman . (4) News (C) 2:15 (7) News TUESDAY MORNING m (56) Playing the Guitar 10:30 ( 56) Folk Guitar 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News (50) Lou Gordon U:3# jSJ^imnrlr SDain® the unirversities, but “certainly Modern Living could be profitably innp KpnnpHv (R) P ’ taught; and you could sneak drinking in for a half a semester (4) JohZ Car on (0) 'under the title of, “-Wine Appreciation.” m iSnZSHr i You could eventually get around to appreciation of cognac (9) S - md ln "W ^ U,>1'’ iUst ab^' ““ “ tween” (English, 1953) |dnnk*ng- . . „ The secret of great drinking is “drink-spacing.” Saloon keepers won’t like me for saying this but the present fad of ordering doubles and triples, while .good for the saloon bttsiness, Isn’t exactly what the best brains have in mind when they say, “Yon should space your drinks.” The one who wants a double or triple is being greedy, sort of non-gourmet, non-connoisseur, about the whole thing. It’s the sipper and the appreciator of the vintage and the aroma that marks the gentlerpan drinker, g The sipper can just, go sipping along through the night, taking it in easy strides, and never notice any huge' transformation of himself into the possessor of a whole new personality — which happens to the gulpers. . Avoid gulping — and gulpers. A gulper who starts out with doubles and triples can give you a hangover even if you’re not even drinking, just from watching and listening Ho him (or her). The advantage of drinking water with the whisky or other stimulant is good to point out at this season. Scientists on Broadway, USA, have discovered that even vodka can be drunk with water. It tastes exactly like “well water.” After three or four, you will notice a difference, however. A strange taste? Not as strange as others I’ve encountered. (Publiih*ri-Hsll Syndlcele) 6:06 (4) Classroom 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News (C) 1:30 (2) Sunrise Semester — Russian. Literature (C) (4) Ed Allen (C) (7) It’s a Wonderful World (C) 7:60 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show (C) 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 6:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (C) (9) Barney Boomer 8:30 (7) Movie: “Family Honeymoon” (1948) Claudette Colbert, Fred Mac-f Murray. (R) (9) Bonnie Prudden (C) 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (C) (4) Gypsy Rose Lee (C) * (9) Bozo the Clown (C) 9:10 (56) Let's Read 1:30 (4) PDQ <C) (56) American History 9:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:60 (4) Snap Judgment (C) By CYNTHIA LOWRY I AP Television-Radio Writer | NEW YORK - There was ai time when New Year’s Day was I a quiet holiday, devoted to healing the excesses of revelry ini ringing out the old year. But, with the advent of the j coaxial cable and network television’s affection for .scheduled! events held in predetermined locations, New Year’s Day has emerged as a living room festival of parades and football games. It is now a beer-soft drink-and-potato chip occasion, ★ ★ ifr Upwards of 60 million Americans will relax before their television' sets and watch for almost 12 solid hours the Orange, Sugar and Cotton Bowl games and their accompanying parades. The greatest interest iremains centered‘in the grande dame of them all, Pasadena’s Tournament of Roses Parade and its Rose Bowl game. 4r ★ ★ The Tournament of Roses Parade was a venerable southern California institution — over 40 years old—before most people in other parts of the nation were aware of its existence. Then in 1932, NBC began an annual radio broadcast of the event. Exactly 20 years later, the network focused its television cameras on the event for the first time, and two years later switched from black and white telecasting to color. 78TH ANNUAL This Tournament of Roses Parades will be the 78th annual event. Betty White, the dean of Tournament of Roses commentators after 14 consecutive years of heading up NBG coverage, says that while the parade is an impressive spectacle, the most interesting sight is the warehouses all over Pasadena temporarily transformed into floral workshops. * ★ * “It used to be that the rules required that every flower be placed on the float separately. Then it was impossible to get good skin tones,” Betty said. “They used to try by using blues-bachelor buttons arid del-phinium-but they were hard to get at that season and not right. Now they are able to use petals — and it is some sight to watch those people carefully and tirelessly gluing on one petal after another—they use chrysanthem- ums mostly because they stand up better — for hours and hours.” A power - operated window-washing scaffold that can reach every part of a building’s facade has been developed. It travels on tracks around the roof rim to reach the appropriate place, from which it lowers the scaffold. AVOID 6ARNISHMENT Let us help you . .. Wo pan gat yuu a frath start by consolidating your dabts into ant paymant you can afford. No liediit to tbo amount ewad or numbar of creditors. Not a loan. Call or atop in. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. Talaphona 338-1133 114 Pontiac State Bank Rldg. State Licontod mod Bondod Open Sat. 9 to 12 REMODEL YOUR BASEMENT Hero’s more room for the kids ... dr a bright new, dean and comfortable room for family recreation or entertaining. Let us d*si»t you in -your, home beautification plans with the newest in ideas and materials. , As Low As $350 Per Wiek FOR WINTER ENJOYMENT ... FAST SERVICE.. . CALL NOW! Everything In Modernisation KITCHENS e DORMERS • GARAGES ^ ROOFING e EAVESTROUGHtNG STORM WINDOWS • AWNINGS PORCH ENCLOSURES ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING Free Estimates • • . Planning • e • Decorator Service DAYS ... NIGHTS .. Ofeetlon Construction 6a . AND SUNDAYS CALL 1032 Wtst Huron 2 BLOCKS WEST OF TELEGRAPH 4-2S9T Radio Programs- WJR(760) WXYZO 270) CKLWfSOO) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ SOO) WHFI-FM(94.7) V It. TONiaNT • iSS-WJI. New*. Seort* WWJ, Rot* tew) (eenfe) W XVZ, N«fc»COp» CKIW, N(W*. Shannon -WJBK, Muilc. Sport* WCAft, N*wl, J«ck S*nd*r. WPON. New*. Sport* whfi, Uncle Jay Show 7 r 00—WWJ, New*. Muilc wjn, spKin n*w* WCAR. News. Rod Mllldr WPON. N*ws. Mu*lc whfi -.Dinner Concert rns-WXYJ, Joey Reynold*. Mutlc, Newt CKIW. Newt. Duke Windier ?1«»—WWJ, Ortng* Bowl 100 WHFI British Jett WJR. Specie! New* *i0*—WHFI, Jack Puller tliM—WJR. Newt, Sport*. » MUliC WPON. Arizona Wetton WWJ. News, Sports, Music TUISDAY MORN IN* tiie-wjR. Mutlc Hall WWJ. Nawa, Carlton CKIW, News, Bud Davies WPON, Newt. Muilc WCAR, Newt, Dalzall WJBK, Newt, Avary • WXYZ, Marc Avary Newt, Must* « 7i0» whfi. Almanac WJR. News, Mutlc Hall WPON. News. Bob Lawrence SiH- WJR, Newt. Sunnytldt jilt WJR. MCrsit Han t:0*—WJR, News, Harris WCAR, News, Davit Show WHFI, Uncle Jay CKLW, Joe Van WWJ, News. Neighbor 11;00—WJR. Haws, Good Music WXYZ, Breakfast Club WJBK, New*, Mutlc WPON, N#ws, Mutlc tlilS—WJR, News, K a Ulrto •cop* WXYZ, Pat Murphy Nawa, Mutlc TUBSDAY APTBRNOON 11:00—WjR, News. Firm WWJ, Review/ News) Market WPON, News, Music CKLW, Newt Dave Shaltr WCAR, Newt, Ron Roia WHFI, Newt, Encore WJBK, New*, Mutlc lt«S—WWJ, News, Marty WJR, Newt, Godfrey CKLW, Newt, Dave Shafer l.-as—WPON) Newt, Music WXYZ, Dave Prince Site—WCAR, News, Jack 1 WJBK, New*, Mntlc YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I r NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give youjrself 10 points for each correct ^answer. ' 1 The city of New Orleans has begun to oelebrate the 250th anniversary of Its founding ln 1718 by the..... > a-Germans b-Spanish c-French 2 News headlines referring to the Vietnamese NLF (usuallyconcern..... ; /- a-President Thieti’s political party b-the political am of the Viet Cong C-a federation of labor unions 3 The U.S. Internal Revenue Service has mailed 1967 - tax forms and Instructions to American taxpayers. The deadline for filing tax returns Is..... a-February 29 b-March 17 c-Aprll 15 4 Australia captured the Davis Ciqi for the 24th time. Our nation has won this .. trophy 19. times, followed by Great Britain with 9 victories. a-gdlf b-tennis c-saillng I 5 The ..... Bengals, the new team starting (lay ln the American Football League this year, acquired Quarterback John Stofa from the Miami Dolphins. a-Cincinnatl b-San Juan c-Amarillo PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1.. ...menorah 2....alien | 3.. .*.oust 4.. ...toll 5....log a-rejpove someone from his job b-cost c-record of. voyage d-resident of nation who la not a citizen e-a candelabrum used ln * Jewish worship PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. X...George Papadopou- loa 2 ..Gaylord Nelson 3 ..Houari Boumediene I 4 ..John Bailey > , 5.....Bayard Rustln VOL.XVII No.16 a-Senator from Wisconsin b-President, Algeria c-Premler under Greek military government d-Chairman, Democratic National Com- f mittee e-clvil rights leader * VEC, Inc., Med (ton, Wisconsin The Pontiac Press Monday, January 1, 1968 . Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. 1 I U.S. scientific base in Antarctica 2..... 6 ceqt stamp commemorates this President 3.. ... St. Louis showboat named U.S. historlo landmark 4 ... cost of this service rises Jan, 7.. 5 ... this leader marked 74th birthday ’ 6... observes 9th anniversary of statehood 7.. ... met with Pope Paul VI $ GOLDENROD I 8.... “Three Kings Day*» celebrated here Jan. 8 McMURPQ cauae of problems for Navajos 10... a symbol of Israel HOW DO YOU RATE? (Score Each Side ef Quiz Separately) 71 to CO pa Inf* - Good. » 91 to 100 points - TOF SCORE! 41 to 70 point* - Fair. 01 to 90pofht* - Excellent. 40 or Under???-HW family discussion question What la your favorite professional sport, and why? THIS WEEK’S CHALLENGE! no ksm What nations have controlled New Orleans during Its history? ANSWERS fl-0t iH-6 :0-8 *d-L -3-9 JG*S -[’Z !IT :Ziaf) r10HWAS . , 8-s lp-p !q-£ :*Z !>l JIH IHVi . Buttmoq eiMapajao[) o«{* o*S iq-f !e*g !p*Z *4*1 *11 XHYd *u;*dg *s3iirj { 530MaTTVHD }tl’S !>l *| XHYd 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1968 sell Save *20! Sears Electric Adder 69"7 Limit 4 Lists to 8, totals to 9 columns. Has an electric clear key, dual function add-subtract and minus-total keys. With .automatic digit indicator. Protective dust cover. Saars Office Supplies Dept. Vacuum Gleaner Paper Dust Bags R«g. $1 1 Hg. JExtra strong, extra fine filter action bags designed to fit all Ken-more upright and canistelr vacs and most other models. Limit 4. 16.000 pkg*. to till 2-piece Gro-Sleepers for Boys, Girls Tuesday Only 167 Coxy warm- 2-piece sleepers in heavyweight flat knit cotton yarn. Long sleeves with double rib-knit cuffs, warm bootie feet with plastic soles. 6 months to 4 years. 2-piece Gro-sleeper in sixes 3-6, Regularly 2.11........... 1.67 4,680 to sell—Limit 2 Saar* Infant's and Childran't Dept. TUESDAY ' I Soars Vacuum Claaner Dept, |§i . I ./ ; n I ' §| :'..y ONLY — from 9 a.m. to 9 p o phone orders, C.OJJ.’s or deliveries (except where noted) Usp Your Sears Charge Famous Name * Tarpoon Cloth & 99c - 6,000 yards to sell Cotton Tarpoon cloth in a selection of fasmonright stripes, plaids. Washfast colors. Flat folded in economical 4 5 • i n c h width. , Sears 'Yard Goods Dept. Reversible Ski Parkas for Girls Tuesday Only 6" Limit 2 Quilted 100% nylon parka in jaunty prints that reverse to solid col or s; for warmth knit cuffs and Orion1* acrylic pile trit^~on h o od. Girls' * sixes 7-14. 972 to sell Tuesday. Girls' Apparel Dept. Cottan/Acrilau Thermal Underwear Reg. 2.99 2,000 to sell Take your choice of short or lohg sleeve tops and ankle length drawers at I this one low price. They’re soft and absorbent . . . machine washable and dryable at medium temperature. W h i te. Sixes S through X^/ Men's Furnishings Dept. Zipper Front / Hooded Sweatshirt Reg. 3.99 997 100% heavyweight fleeced cotton, double fabric hood with drawstring tie for maximum warmth. Rib knit cuffs and waist for snug fit. Fine knit for better appearance and luxurious wearing. Navy, grelen and grey. Sixes S to X-L. 2,300 lo sell Tuesday Men's Casual Clothing Dept. Men’s Dress Shoes HANDSOME FULLY LEATHER LINED WING-TIPS Masculine styled brogues with hand-tailored leather uppers and soles; durable rubber heels. Take your choice of black, brown or cordo brown in men’s sixes 7 to 11, 12. Hurry in . . . only 1,100 to sell Tuesday. . Sears Shoe Dept. Reg. 16.99 >97 Charge It Save! PERMA-PREST WIDE WALE CORD JEANS FOR BOYS' 6 TO 12 Wide, wide wales plus yoke-back ,... . western styling... a great combina- um,T * tion in no-uon polyester/cotton blend. Zip fly. Wide belt loops. Medium blue, olive or brown. Regii- Ar ** * Jars and slims in 6-12. 3160 to selL 2.87 esmh Seers Soys' Dept. 2**5 21.31 no to Sell to Sell 22.17 220 ' to Sell Save! Ice Shanty EASILY ASSEMBLED, PORTABLE. LIGHTWEIGHT Tleavv 10-oz. canvas duck keeps out and weather. Center tip door. Inside tubular frame. Can also be used for storage shed, beach house. 14.99 Kerotana Hooter .. 11.97 Reg. 34.99 97 Sears adjustable heater, 3,000 to 5000 BTU. Uses white gas 23.97 “ Sears Sporting Goods Dept. Save! For Bed Beauty WIDE CHOICE OF TAILORED BEDSPREADS Sturdy, long-wearing rayon and acetate fabric. Polyester fiberflll is resilient and non-allergenic. All are quilted-to-the-floor. In assorted colors; solids and prints. Hurry in Tuesday, save! 1100 to selL Wei* 15.Tl to 2t.tr 12 68 Koch twla or fell Sears Drapery and Bedspread Dept. At Panty Girdles Reg. 2^99 2,171 to sell—Limit } Left . . . one. size molds and holds waists 22-30-in. Right ... white ny-lon/lycra spsndex with reinforced front end beck panels. Sizet S to XL. Sears Bra and Girdle - Dept. Cotton Contour Bras Reg. 2.69 J77 2,160 to sell—Limit 2 PERMA-PREST Dacron and cotton Mend contoured with Wonder-fill. White in sizes 32-36A, 32-38B. Closeout of Percales DECORATOR FASHIONED PRINTS—8000 TO SELL Choose a profusion of rose bios- Twla Hot er Pitted soms or a Provincial design printed yftrw 3.49 on white. All over print on fitted bottoms, cases; panel print on flats. ,199 4.49 Full Flat or fitted __2.99 JL 2/2.59 Pillow Casas .. 2 for 1.69 Limit 2 Sets Seam Domestics Dept. SpUH fiberglass Filters Save! Craftsman 4-in. BELT SANDER WITH DUST P|CK-UP ATTACHMENT This commercial belt sander has a heavy duty motor and extra-large brushes for big jobs. At high speed it covers 1300 surface feet per minute. Low speed covers 1230 feet. ^With 3 sanding belts, 10-ft. cord. Sears Hardwara Department Open Tucs., Jan. 2 ’til 9 p.m. Wednesday ’til 5:30 p.m. lhittSiyMs Sul. ’til 9 p.m. 'i Reg. 78.98 99 400 te Mil Save! Utility Light FLUORESCENT FIXTURE FOR WORK AREAS This popular hood model mounts against ceiling or can be hung. Housed in a white enameled steel reflector and comes complete with chain, hooks, 3-foot cord and 2 regular start 20-watt bulbs. U?x2*. 40-watt 111"x4') model, Regular 15.}$-.............. 10.97 ’Seers Elai Reg. 9.99 697 2,500 to sail Electrical Dapt. Sears j to Sell With Prices Save! Furnace Filters FOR BLOWER-TYPE FURNACES—LIMIT <6 Regular 47c ' 33*« • 10*20*1" • 15x20*1" • U(20x1" • 10x25x1" • 20x20x1” •14(25x1" Filter out dust, pollen and household particles with one of Sears filters. Glass fibers trap dirt. 20x25X1" or 25x25x1", Rag. 77a...,J7e Han# Said to Poolers Saar* Plumbing and Healing Dapt. Save! Battery Charger WITH V/i AMP SURGE... 6 OR 12 VOLT Charges at 6 amps,, then tapers to 2 -amps as charge builds. Has a dear-view ammeter, automatic reset circuit breaker, rubber insulated cords and a vented case. 7-ft. power cord and charge cables won’t crack. 8-ft. Capper Booster Cables 1.97 1J00 to telIf Rag. 17.98 97 4IP to sell Start Auto Accessorial Dapt.' SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown t ■ . • < Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 The Weather U. I. WMtlMr Bureau Foracast Cold (Mailt Pag* >1 w a mk •% _ ■■ 5PM .,vV’ 8^h • wflH Ks Day /> ion VOL. 123 — NO. 281 ★ ★ if ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1U08 ' ' ; sMiiiiSiS -AH PAfUf l! ASSQCIATSD PRESS * -40 i'AVarrua UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL IOC 10 p.m.... >2 3 a.m. .. .-5 11 p.m. .. .*3 6 a.m. ... *4 Midnight . *4 7 a.m. .. ,*2 Chilling cold put the damper on New Year’s Eve exuberance in the Pontiac area. ; - ★ a Temperatures ranging as low as -5 in Pontiac from about 2:30 to 5:30 a.m. and -12 i* 'Troy were recorded. *. Area police credited the extreme cold with a sobering influence on year-end drivers, despite roads glazed by snow which fell most of the day yesterday. Accidents in most areas were reported light and of a relatively minor nature. west, surpassed last January’s low of -3 recorded here Jan. 18. high was expected to range from I to 15 above. Three deaths were reported occurring from an accident in Highland Township, •a a a The cold, which broke previous weather records through much of the Mid- RECORD LOW Elsewhere, Chicago posted a record low of 10 below zero for Dec. 31 and another record of -9 today. ! Light snow combined with flitter cold is making driving hazardous today, and more light snow is predicted for all parts of the state today and tonight. The The Automobile Club of Michigan fS§>i ports that most major roads in the state I are slippery in spots, While secondary ? roads are snow-covered and slippery^ a a a Early this morning light snow was reported in only a few areas. In some, such as Ann Arbor, small drifts are forming on the highways. * Hit-Run Car Kills Girl 4 Die on UPPER PENINSULA In the Upper Peninsula, Calumet and Munising area roads are covered with light snow and are slippery. Those,, around the Soo are snow-covered, and slippery and the remainder have scattered slippery spots.1 Pontiac Frau Photo A 17-year-old girl became Oakland County’s first traffic fatality of 1968 early today when she and her escort were struck by a hit-and-run -driver while walking along Milford Road in Highland Township. Three 18-year-olds — two from Highland Township — were killed in a head-on crash in White Lake Township final 1967 traffic toll to 121 than in 1966. 33 less Oakland Highway Toll in ’68 Lilt Year to Data 0 —Sherry Ann Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lane E. Knight of 293 S. Center, Highland Township, was killed about 2:45 a.m. today when hit from behind by a car while walking on the shoulder of Milford Road near Highland. with Mitchell a passenger, according to polipe. ■y*• - 4 '■ a* .— peratures ranged friJm -28 at International Falls, Minn., to 88 at Key West, Fla. The deaths brought this year’s Michigan road toll to 2,075 — more than 200 short of the 1966 total'. * Local precipitation probabilities in per cent are:, today 40, tonight, 30, tonaor-row 10. At 12:30 p.m. the temperature in downtown Pontiac was a chilly 1L Low tonight was expected near 10. IF YOU SAY SO—Nine-month-old Heidi Lynn, daughter of Pontiac Press Photog- early yesterday to bring the county’s rapher and Mrs. Ed Vanderworp, prepares to celebrate the arrival of 1968 though she can’t really find too much to complain about from 1967. It was a great year for babies, she thinks. , Killed shortly after midnight yesterday were Doyle Mitchell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell, 111 St. Johns; Roger Stogner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer A? Stogner, 3536 Jackson; and Calvin For-see of Grosse Pointe. Australian Quints Listed Satisfactory Bob Hope Reportingj U S. Traffic Toll Is a Low 223 The Knight girl and her escort, Alan Lengeman, 17, son of Mrs. Janet H. Lengeman of 3727 Gulfwood, Milford, were walking toward her home from Lengemah’s stalled car when the mishap Occurred, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — Mrs. Roger Bfaham named her two-day-old quintuplets today — Annabel, Caroline, Faith, Geoffrey and Richard — then got up from her bed for the first time since their birth, took a shower and had her ‘hair set by nurses. ★ a a Temperature Roundup Trip Highlights Rehashed ‘ (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the last in a series of reports by comedian Bob Hope, whose troupe has completed another visit to US. fighting men in Vietnam and is homebound.) gineer. They met at Bearcat. They didn’t say a word — just grabbed each other and hung on. Phil Crosby will never forget one kjd (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) By the Associated Press Traffic deaths during the New Year holiday weekend today were running far behind the number predicted by the National Safety Council. ’ , Record-breaking cold add heavy show in some sections may have [flayed a major part in a lower death count by keeping* persona at home. He is reported in serious condition in Pontiac General Hospital. SOUGHT-CAR By BOB HOPE LATITUDE 19-49N LONGITUDE 157-26E — Tonight, as our 67 pooped pigeons climbed abaard"the big C-141 Starlifter at Andersen Air Base; in Guam, we all had the same feeling, ft was like coining home. * • v. In the past 15 days, our gypsies have {raveled over 25,000 miles by every form of transportation from a jeep to a carrier. They’ve worked 21 shows, and they’ve logged 11 combat hours. They’ve been shot at, dusted, blown ori, rained on baked and*catapulted off a carrier. The council made its estimate before the weekend began. Deputies said the hit-and-run car was apparently the spme vehicle that was Involved in a bumping incident with another car shortly before and was being pursued by, an unidentified driver, who discovered the Knight girl’s body and Lengeman and called officers. Dr. Grantley Stable, who slept at the hospital last night in case of complications, reported the babies in satisfactory condition and the mother doing well. , The children’s father is a 24-year-old country lawyer wha with his wife, Patricia, 36, have four other children including a set of twins. Unofficial tempertures recorded in Oakland County: Lake Orion ............. . -5 . Rochester .............. -6 Birmingham 1... .. -2 “ Bloomfield Township ... . . -3 Milford ................ 2 Holly -4 Romeo ...., .,,4., •&*£' Lapeer ........... 4%-. f f? Novi ... V..’. v, f Shelby Township ....... , -l| , Troy w ... u, . 3rd Heart Swap Eyed in $. Africa The toll reached 223 in a count that began at 6 p.m. Friday and will end at midnight today. ‘Hie safety council, headquartered ih Chicago, estimated that 460 to 540 persons would be killed in traffic accidents over the 76-hour holiday period. However, Investigators said they have no description of (fee car being sought. White Lake Township police said the accident yesterday on ]H-59 near Porter occurred about 12:20 a.m, Stogner was driving one of the cars The quintuplets are said to weigh about three pounds each. ★ . '★ For the next 10 days the, quints will stay in special cribs, kept at 97 degrees. Mrs. Braharn took ho fertility drugs before the first of the five were born 5:12 a.m. Saturday, six weeks premature. LBJ Spends Quiet New- Year's Eve By ajU rights they should be snoring in their seats as our big jet drones its way toward Midway Island. But it’s all too fresh. Most of them are standing in knots up and down the aisle, rehashing the trip as they will for years to come. For each member of the cast it meant something different. CAPE TOWN,, South Africa W — The diseased heart of a Cape. Town dentist, who could be the world’s third heart transplant patient, Worsened as doctors waited today for a donor heart. Dr. Christian Barnard, who guided a surgical team through the heart transplant operation^ on Louis Washkansky Dec. 3 at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, was en route home after a tour through the United States and Britain. NONHOLIDAY PERIOD The Associated Press counted 484'traffic deaths in the nonholiday period from 6 p.m. Friday; Dec. 15, to midnight Monday, Dec. 18. This year’s three-day Christmas weekend brought death to 685 in traffic accidents. Girl Leads For those who were on the highways, weather was a factor in many of the holiday collisions. Ail four of the major hospitals in the Pontiac area today reported the early arrival of New Year Day babies. Traditionally, the first baby born in the new year receives numerous gifts from area merchants. at 12:18 a.m., a boy to Mr. and Mrs. Gary Eisner of 655 Alpine, Rochester. AT 3:45 A.M. For Johnny Pawlek, our fabulous sound engineer, who has made 22 Christmas trips, “it’s the look on the faces of those combat troops at Lai Khe. Three thousand of their buddies had been sent out to the hills just before the show. They were so intense. Their eyes never left the stage.” a, a a Our Trombonist, Joe Howard made the whole trip hoping against hope that he might see his son, Dave, a combat en- The next patient, 58-year-old Dr. Philip Blaiberg, was described as “dangerously ill” at Groote Schuur from a coronary thrombosis. In Today's Press Barnard was asked in London if he was more confident of Blaiberg’s chances for survival than he \ya$ of Washkansky’s. The 44-year-old surgeon replied: “I think the main thing is that — the main differehce will be that We- will have more confidence now in that we are not going into the unknown.” All that surgeons at Groote Schuur needed to operate again was a suitable donor heart, which they - said probably would have to come from someone killed in a traffic accident that did not impair the heart. A California teen-ager was killed and seven persons were injured .when their car struck an icy patch and hit a bridge on Interstate 10 near McNary, Tax. _a + a The highest toll for any. New Year period, 564, was compiled during a three-day celebration at the start of 1966. The lowest total for a three-day New Year observance since World War ll was 269 in 1949. The traffic toll during the last three-day New Year holiday was 469. Any bdby born to married parents living north of 14 Mile road in Oakland County after midnight Dec. 31 is eligible for the prizes. Pontiac General Hospital reported a girl born to Mr. and Mrs. Earless Sing of 545 Bloomfield, at 3:45 a.m. JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) - President Johnson marked the arrival of 1968 with prayers for peace and the White House said he spent a quiet New Year’s Eve with his wife and close friends. a a a He had no special New Year’s Day statement. But he joined in a prayer for peace at year-end services yesterday in a small Roman Catholic Church near the ranch. Except for a press gathering, the Texas White House listed no official New Year’s Day activities for the chief executive. The earliest recorded.arrival unofficially was at St. Joseph Mercury Hospital where a girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brooks of 747 Birdsong, Milford, at 12:08 a.m. ★ Crittenton Hospital in Avon Township had its first birth of the new year born The first to arrive at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital was a girl born at 5:39 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wabegi-jik of 129 Norton. Teddy Is in Vietnam Entries in the first baby contest must be made through the family doctor by 5 p.m. tomorrow. a a a The information should be Sent to the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce in the Riker Building, Pontiac. SAIGON (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., whose Senate subcommittee has been critical of the progress of programs to aid the civilian victims of the Vietnam war, arrived id! Saigon today for a 12-day look at the “other war.” 1 : GM Payrolls in City Near Record Area Roundup 1967 highlights ar£ presented in picture, story form.—PAGES B-2, B-3. Sports Scene Big 1967 evepLs from world of sports are recalled.—PAGE D-2. Capitol Scene Top news stories of past year are reviewed. — PAGE C-7. Astrology......>......... D-5 Bridge D-5 Crossword Puzzle........ IMI Comics ............... D-5 Editorials ...............A-6 Markets C-9—C-ll Obituaries D-6 /Picture page ............ C-9 8jtofts 777,7. D-r—D-4 Theaters1 i______________C-8 TV-Radio Programs ...... D-ll Wilson, Earl D-ll Women’s Pages ...... C-l—C-3 90 VC. fataliti in Truce Incidents SAIGON UPi — U.S. forces weathered the first 24 hours of the allied-called New Year’s truce without losing a single GI despite at least 66 "incidents” and 98 Communists killed during the stand-down. “*9|------------- f-- ; The number of incidents and rising casualty *ate among the enemy and South Vietnamese government troops— with whom the Reds clashed in most of the incidents"—showed the truce period was only slightly less deadly' than the usual eyeryday war. Employe payrolls of 8321.9 million during 1967 were the second highest in history at the three General Motors plants in Pontiac* eclipsed only by the $333.8 million paid last year. GM’s 1967 purchases from area companies for goods and services added another |92.5 million to the Pontiac area economy. tiac’s sixth successive year of sales increases. • In February, the division introduced the new Firebird sports car and produced its 12-milUontii Pontiac later in the year. A new all-time monthly production record was set in October when 93,293 cars were built by the GM division. Fisher Body-Pontiac began construction of a three-year project to separate sewer, waste from storm water with the installation of a 42-inch storm sewer. The next two stages of the project will be completed in 1869. The project, being done in cooperation with the City of Pontiac, is to further purify water going into nearby lakes. GMC Truck & Coach introduced a new intercity coach in November. The 40-foot-long bus has seating capacity for 49 passengers. Its auxiliary rear axle assembly will permit the vehicle to operate in states which otherwise would forbid its usage because of low-weight restrictions. Production is scheduled for 1968. The Vietcong suffered <0 men killed when they attacked a Mekong Delta camp run by South Vietnamese marines. Nineteen government ' marines wore killed and 47 wounded. h The South Vietnamese reported that a U.S. flareship was unable to get permission from U.S. headquarters to turn its fast-firing guns on the Vietcong assaulting the camp. ’ The year-end statement was released jointly today by Martin J. Caserio, a GM vice president and general manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division; John Z. DeLorean, a GM vice president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division; and (Thomas F. Wicthom, Fisher Body plant manager. * N Combined GM employment in Pontiac averaged 35,900 for the year. Local GM employes invested more than $8.3 million* in U.S. Savings Bonds through payroll deduction. • a a a In addition, they were awarded $944,-916 for ideas submitted through the GM Suggeston Plan, an Increase of mort than 8213,000 ovor last year, Pontiac’s GM installations observed several milestones in 1987. During calendar year 1987, Pontiac Motor Division reported another all-time record with, the delivery of 841,000 units. This is Pon- JOHNl DELOREAN MARTJN J. CASERIO . 1 THOMAS F. WIETH ' ■ ■ « Horn Operator H#c^'POWf\ Yule Gree WS LowAwC. ‘ ; V M M ’ Until to i toi.Hi THE PONTIAC 1*HESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1968 — M inn Aft to- s t jHJi. «.( Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas pM^ I'.-Mi " -WASBItll Mrs. Otto A. Graff BARSTOW, Calif. (&) Service foe Mrs. Otto What were believed to be short-; (Gladys C.) Graff>‘78, of ii_. ri-inm* p Pnrrv I an auto accident. He was an em-Mrs- Geor9® K- rarry |£joye of Fisher Body PlanV Service for former Pontiac Pontiac, resident Mrs. George R. (Mar-[ Surviving are his parents, Mr. wave Christmas messages froiaj Mohawk, will be 1 p;m. Wednes- garet) Par?y> ^Highland and Mrs. Carl Mitchell^two^sis prisoners ■irijday at Dohelson*Jobns Puneral “** || *' A “* North Vietnam were heard by a, Home with burial in perry retired Army! master sergeant Mount Park Cemetery, late Sunday night. | Mrs. Graff died yesterday. Edmund Harris, 52, listened,She was a member of Bethany with a tape'recorder as a broad-1 Baptist Church and Pontiac Or- cast from Hanoi .via Havana, Cuba, beamed messages to relatives of six prisoners or war, ★ -_.it k Some of the names were unclear but they were believed to be season’s greetings from Air Force Maj. Albert L. Stern of California, Air Force Capt. Russell Edward Temperley of New. ton, Mass., Li. (j.g.) Robert Fishman of California, Nevada residents Maj. Ludwig E. May! Jr. and Maj. Richard Allep Dut-I ton, and Lt. Cmdr. Clark Doug-! der of Eastern Star No. 228. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Marion Bays Howe rand Mrs. Glenn Bradford, both of Pontiac; two sisters, Mrs. N. A. WOodworth of Birmingham, and Mrs. I. J. Snader of Clarkston; Park will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at All Saints Episcopal Church with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery by Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Parry died Saturday. She was a member of Guild 8, AH Saints Episcopal Church and the Golden Age Group, YMCA. Joseph D. Ivanoff BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP- onc brother, RUey Aldrich , of |pri te service for Joseph D Commejce Township; two f 7165 01d m wiU grandchildren and six great-j. _ ’ ■ grandchildren. , IDe 1 “esaay Frank J. Justin las Brown. [Justin, 79, of 244 Draper will be1..™ brother ters including Vicki at home; three brothers including Larry and Ronald of Highland Township; and grandparents,* Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mitchell of Poplar Bluff, Mo. . Edmund A. Muhlenfeld WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for former resident Ed mund A. Muhlenfeld, 82, of De. troit will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Patricks Catholic Church Union Lake, with burial in. Lakeside Cemetery by the Elton Black Funeral Home. He died yesterday. A Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Surviving are a sister and a PREPARED TEXT All of the men spoke Alvis E. Redman Burial wiU be in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield by the [Bell Chapel of the William R. ■ „ ■ ' . ,! Hamilton Co. Reqiuem Mass for Frank Jg Mr Ivanoff dled Friday. He was a member of the Methodist Church, the Cleveland Lodge No. 211 F&AM, and St. Bernard Commandery in Chica-j HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -go - Service for Alvis E. Redman, Surviving are his wife, Pa- 72, of 134 McPherson, will be and were eatine reeularlv I ■* . . * . ittfci*. A.| and two sons James |l p.m. Wednesday ..at the Rich- ™ „ s . y‘ ~ j Mr. Jiistin. a retired GMC D. and Richard T., both at ardson - Bird Funeral Home, Following the statements byj'jYuek and Coach Division cm- home. [Milford with burial in Ottawa by Ho Chi Mtnh was read by anjp]0ye djecl Saturday. I' . 1 4 'Park Cemetery, Independence the Six men—divided up with, SM4aMl. ^ h^hJ Fmil F Knrnselc iTownship. ;j______________________ Mr. Redman died yesterday. ON THE LOOKOUT-A U.S. Marine, a bayonet affixed to his M16 rifle, prepares to enter heavy undergrowth in search of Vietcong snipers. The enemy had harassed AP Wlrephoto the Leatherneck’s column as it moved into the village of Phu Long on Operation Citrus near Da Nang: 110 a.m. Wednesday at St. Vin-men spoke "with rent de Paid Church with burial even voices and were apparent- in Mt. Hope Cemetery, ly reading from a preparedj A Rosary will, be said at statement. AH said they. werejg;30 p.m. tomorrow at the treated well, were uninjured' Spark^-Griffin Funeral Home. Christmas carols—* statement! announcer. The statement of[ters' EWon Yarnold of: WALLED LAKE — Requiem uicu ycotci uay. abound sentence* mentiofirt!j^cA End? F. Karasek, 69,|^t^0been employed at Ford ing are his wife, Tillie; States “who are giving us sup-|C°k®a of Utica; a son, Edward;dc churCh, Walled Lake, with^ EbJood.^ a port ” |F. JUstin of Lake Orion; a broth-ih„pini in OnklanH Hills Memor-!daaghter’_Mrs Leveta .McMon North Vietnamese casualties P^'^dam, Mrs Gordon Shaf-|0f 139 Welfare, will be 9:30 a.m.j 2.*”’, and thanked those in the United^0 Union Lake and Mrs. Frank jtAmArvAnr- ^ c* williams rnthn-! ® tomorrow at St. Williams Catho- Labor Woes, Sales Drop Hit Auto Industry in 1967 “We shall win and so shall1®"; seven grandchildren; aqd 10]^ Gardens, Novif by Rich?rd-I^® °J. Jullerton’ Calif; five >' iho ctotomonf i great-grandchildren. L.. ^ unn» u/oiioHigranaennaren; you,” the statement ended. »/ . p»' . c ±\ Mrs. Archie McDuffie Vote on Pact Set * • Service for Mrs. Archie FLINT UR — United Auto (Lorette M.) McDuffie, 58, of Workers Local 581 has scheduled a ratification vote Jan. 7 on a contract agreement on local issues reached Saturday at the Fisher Plant No. 1. The plant has about 6,00(1 hourly employes. Local 581 President John Yorke said he is bonfi-dent the agreement will be ratified. The union’s 380,000 CM workers already have approved] a national agreement. 4847 Curtis Lane, will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery,' Clarkston by the Spafks-Griffirj J Funeral Home. The Rosary will be said atl HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the funeralfservice for uoyjg j MitcheU, ^ome 118, of 111 St. John will be 1 She died Saturday. Ip’m. Wednesday at Elton Black Mrs. McDuffie was a member son Bird Funeral Home, Walled^’3-* h r ■e e great-T-^ i grandchildren, and two sisters. A Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. tonight at the funeral home, s Mr. Karasek died Friday. He is a former employe of the Ypsi-lanti Hydromatic Plant Roger D. Stogner HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Roger D. Stogner 18, of 3536 Jackson will be 1:30 Surviving besides his wife are P'm' Wednesday Huntoon Fu-Surviving besides his: wite are j H Pontiac. Burial will two sisters and two brothers r ’ Doyle J. Mitchell Milk Price Hiked KALAMAZOO (#1 — Starting today, Kalamazoo area residents will pay one cent a quart more for milk. Spokesmen for local dairies say Kalamazoo and southwestern Michigan are the last ateas of the state to increase milk prices. of Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, president of Our Lady Queen of Hope society, and a member of Sigma Alpha. Surviving beside her husband is her mother, Mrs. James McNally of Waterford Township, three daughters, Mrs. Richard Brondy^e of East Lansing. Anne Marie McDuffie of Waterford Township, Mrs. Luis Gal indo of Rochester, N.Y., four grandchildren and two brothers. Funeral Home, Union Lake. Burial will be in Highland Cemetery. Carl Q)oh&Lum ={^0<:=^=O^ 3)oual<) 3t. Jolmt Ms Judged by What We Do . . . , i. not by what we say. The Funeral Director and his standing remain in (he public mind by care and ability In the performance of,his work. The Donelson-Jolins Funeral Home is happy to have you ask the families that we have served, and to be guided by their appraisal of our services. be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. The youth died yesterday in an auto accident. He was an employe of Beaver Precision Products and a member of Assembly of God Church. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thelmar A. Stogner; a sister, Mrs. Norma Huffman The youth died yesterday in of Utica; and a brother 2 Stabbed, One Shot in West Bloomfield (Phone Federal 4-4511 Patlcinq ^ On Our *1?remit el; CDombon- FUNERAL HOME 865 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Y era! Hospital, Farmington, with a punctured lung. His brother was treated at the hospital for stab wounds in the back and the head and released* ★ * ★ Police identified the than who was wounded with a blast from a shotgun as Charles Parkkila 25, of 6782 Drake, West Bloom field Township. NOT HOSPITALIZED They said he was hit in the hand and chest with pellets but was not hospitalized. Officers said that as far as they could learn the Ryans were attacked by six or seven men about 3:30 a.m. just as they arrived at the party, Parkkilia was shot in the parking lot, but police said they did not know the circumstances CEMETERY MARKERS Monuments Sm our largo difplay priced to fit your budget. Quality, crafti-manthip and permanent beauty are found in every marker and monument tell. They are backed by the industry's strangest guarantee. WINTER DISCOUNT SALE-SAVE 10% SELECT NOW FOR MEMORIAL DAY COMPLETE INDOOR DISPLAY FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Memorial? for Over 75 Years INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 8^4 N. Pfny f FE 5-6931 Brante Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries - ‘ . at Below Cemetery Prices Two brothers, home on leave from the Army, were stabbed and a man shot during a New Year’s Eve patty- in West Bjoomfield Township early today. The attacks took place in a parking lot of a home at 6551 Drake, according to West Bloomfield Township police. Details of the fight are not completely known, said patrolmen Richard Lamphier and Thomas Burke who first arrived at the scene. They later were assisted by. police from Novi, Bloomfield Township and Walled Lake l and the Sheriff’s Department.. The stabbing victims are. Randal H. "Ryan, 19, and his brother Thomas W;, 21, both of 21355 Farmington, Farmington. The younger Ryan is in seri-...... . ous condition at Botsford Gen-belund his1 shorting. ★ ★ * Police said that as of 9 a.m. no arrest in either the shooting 0.' the stabbings had been made, but that they are continuing their investigation. They said they also have information that a man was badly beaten at the party, but they [have yet to find the reported victim. , „ . . .. .. i The party, according to po- A Farmington city po iceman |,jc w£g ^ b Ga*r Ba£ was injured shortly after 61 caretaker living behind the a.m. today as he pursued two [gg^j address which is a meet-juveniles in a stolen car atu speeds up to 90 miles per hour. At Botsford General Hospital, Farmington, for treatment of a possible dislocated shoulder is Officer Murray Switzer. ' He was injured when his scout car and another driven by Sgt. Richard Miller came together at high speed at the intersection of Orchard Lake Road and Grand River. Both cars were damaged but Sgt. Miller was not injured. Officer Hurt in a Police Qhose Crash ing place for an assembly of churches. Bv CHARLES C. CAIN AP Business Writer * DETROIT — The auto indus try ran into some rough going in 1967 as labor problems and drop in sales of U.S,-built new cars forced* it to settle for the third best calendar year to date. About 8.5 million n e w cars, including a record-breaking 780,000 imports, were sold in the U.S. market. ★ ★ ★ This figure ranked well behind the 1966 total > of 9,088,488 and the record-setting year*of 1965 whe/i 9,313,912 were sold. Import sales came , to 658,1^3 units in 1966 and 569,415 a year earlier. The- big factor in the auto picture was a 50-day nationwide strike at Ford Motor Ch.’s U.S. plants, followed by a Series of local Ford plant dis putes’and similar local plant tie-ups at some Chrysler Corp. and General Motors plant NATIONAL AGREEMENTS The United Auto Workers Union reached national contract agreements with Ford* and Chrysler and then took similar demands to General Motors with indications GM might be struck early in 1968 if jt, did not reach agreement. The new contracts generally were that the figure would be close to 7.6 million units, far behind the 8,611,776 built in calendar 1966 — and the record 9,329,104 cars built in calendar 1965. '■ 15 PCT. BEHIND Barrucuda for a share of the sporty market estimated at a million cars a year. It also was the only firm to drop a car, as it abandoned its Marlin line after four years of trying to make it a top seller. Through 11 months of 1967 the WeJe^Sg m^monS? 1°*" . jf\ au*° ^ v their cars in the 1968 run, Amer- 6,^,447 cars, about 15 per cent jcan Motors said that in the first behind the 8,105,299 assembled j five veeks after the Javelin was m the fust H months of 1966 pUrchaSers spent an Ford principal loser in the avera of $3)053 car {or the auto budding race estimated Javelin which had a basic ke that the long strike had cost it!0f 450 about 485,000 cars and 90,000 trucks. ' FUROR COOLS Truck output also was affected by the strikes and indications were that the industry would wind up with about 1.5 million trucks for calendar 1967, its fourth best year. The figure was topped only by 1966 (1,764,337); 1965 (1,885,109) and 1964 (1,560,644). • * - - it -k k Despite the smaller number of cars sold in the U.S. market this year, the .car buyers’ bill was expected to be about the same some $36 billion — because of higher price tags and more optional equipment purchases this time around. Prices of 1968 models were higher at introduction time than year earlier. Another price boost by Jan. 1 Seemed most carried a boost of about $1 an [likely as auto makers studied hour ov"er three years; the old how they could pass along to contracts gave workers about $4.70 an hour in wages and fringe benefits. American Motors, smallest of the four major auto companies, asked the UAW for special consideration in contract talks in view of AMC’s $75-million loss in its 1967 fiscaL year. The union took the matter under advisement. k k k The drop in calendar year sales bore out predictions of industry leaders early in 1967 that the labor talks, with accompanying Work stoppages, would slow the rate of auto sales. ★ k k Henry Ford II, chairman of Ford, said in December 1966 tliat new car sales would come close to 9 million units in 1967 if there was no strike. He added that the figure would be closer to 8.4 million cars if work stoppages occulted. He did not know at that time that his firm would be the UAW’s primary strike target but he was on the mark with his 8.4-million figure. TRAILS 1966 The pace of 1967 auto sales trailed that of 1966 through virtually the whole year. In looking consumers increased costs due to safety items, new wage scales worked out with the UAW and increased costs of materials, especially steel and copper PRICE COMPARISONS Figuring out auto price tag comparisons is one of the most complicated projects id the American business economy Companies shuffled models around and also juggle the equipment on cars fromyear to year. ★ ★ * Automotive News, a trade publication which makes a detailed study of pride increases each year figured that the sticker prices of 1968 models were up an average of $116.25 a car, or 3.63 per cent over 1967 prices. ★ A k - . That was based on a compari son of about 300 of the 1968 car models on which the industry offered comparable models in 1967. in all, 357 models were available in the 1968 car line of U.S. firms. Allowing for year-to-year equipment changes and deletions, Automotive News figured the 1968 prices were up $79.93 or 2.28 per cent a car. ^NEW CAR PRICES The Bureau of Labor Statis- for reasons for the decline, ob-itics estimated that rifew car servers listed the unsettled la-'prices in the 1968 line were up Scrap Tells Story of a Bad Year SAN FRANCISCO UR — San Franciscans who work in the financial district traditionally dump then* old note calendars out their windows on the final The two remained in pursuit working day of the year, of the fleeing car until it hit,a ★ ★ ★ deadend barricade fct the Grand One scrap of paper in the lit-River cutoff near 1-96. [ter on Montgomery Street was telltale of a bad year for an unknown gent. It said; “Net CLOCK SPEED Sgt. Dan Byrnes of the Farmington police reported the speed of the fleeing car was clocked at 70 miles per hour. It was totally destroyed but the 15-and 16 - year - old occupants of ;the car were reportedly not in-! jured seriously. They were examined at Botsford General Hospital and released for St. Clair County juv-1, worth $54,104; $477,516.” total liabilities News in Brief Mable, formerly of the Green Parrot, wishes all her friends happy New Year. See me now at the PontiaC Lake Inn. —Adv. bor problems as the main reason. Others mentioned frequently were the auto safety issue, the war in Vietnam and tighter I money. . As far as Vietnam was concerned, draft calls and enlistments took thousands of young men out of the potential auto buyers market. Industry sources said these young men would constitute a major buying force when hostilities cease in Vietnam but for the moment, they have things other than new cars to occupy their minds. k k k Reports that 1968 cars would have more safety features were credited l)Y some industry sources with causing people to delay purchases during the 1967 model run. The unsettled labor picture at Genera}'Motors was the biggest question mark in how the U.S: production total for the calendar year would finish. Indications V. f v- » 3.75 per cent or $87.54 per car. It said $26.95 of the increase was due to safety improvements and $11.20 to design changes to reduce emission of exhaust pollutants. The rest was a pure price boost, the BLS said. A government decision late in 1967 to stick with its original plan of requiring shouldei* harnesses on 1968 cars after Jah. I, 1968 made it virtually certain that this $25 item would he passed along to the chr buyer in the form of a higher price tag. In general, 1968 cars are longer, lower and wider than 1967s. There was a drop in the number of convertibles and station wagon offerings and an increase in the number of two-door hard-tops, currently the hottest sell-, ing line. . ' k k k American Motors introduced the only new car of the 1968 line, the Javelin. It challenges the Mustang^Camaro; Firebird and The furor over auto safety cooled considerably in 1967 as the. federal government went ahead with its program calling for 20 safety items to be added to .1968 cars. There was some grumbling from the auto companies but they did manage to meet the modified safety standards and include such items as wind shield washers and defoggers dual-cylinder brake systems impact absorbing steering columns and safety door latches on the 1968 cars. And if anyone had any idea that the government interest in cutting the nation’s traffic death toll .of 52,000 .a year was only a momentary thing it was dispelled in October, wh6n Transportation Secretary Alan S. Boyd issued 47 additional proposed standards covering cars through 1971. Boyd, who with Dr. William Haddon Jr. the nation’s first highway safety administrator, is charged with enforcing the safety, program,. commented, “We do not expect, miracles overnight.” RECALL CAMPAIGNS Auto recall campaigns, in which the industry called back autos fpr inspection in cases of suspected m a te r i a Is defects, continued although riot in as strong a spotlight as the recall campaigns' of 1966. ' About 2.8 million cars were involved in such recall checkups in the first 11 months ot 1967 but the government and industry agreed relatively few defective cars were found. The industry, in addition to its work in the safety field, also continued research in the field of possible electric or turbine-powered cars, but there was general agreement such possibilities were still years away from the standpoint of the average motorist. On the corporate front,two of the four auto firms got new head men. Jarftes M.. Roche, president of General Motors, moved up to the position of board chairman and Edward N. Cole, a GM vice president, moved into the . president’s chair. At American Motors, Roy D. Chapin Jr., son q{ an auto pioneer, was named chairman of the board of American Motors and William V. Luneburg was named president as AMC continued its efforts to get a profitmaking position in the industry. Employe dishonesty is costing hospitals 80 per cent more than it did five yqars ago! About $80 million in cash and materials was stolen by hospital personnel in 1966. Death Notices CLEMENT, _ , IN7l 4tl ■ Hi btlovM hu Sehrtmt dear Clamant; dear ts bit La Saro*. Scrlpit . will ba Monday at ( p.m., at the Malvin A. Schutt Funaral Homa. illba — Funeral service will r, January 2, at to a.m. at Itia Vincent de Paul cSthellc Church, Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery, Mr. Clamant Wilt Do In ttalo at the funeral hem*. M Death Notices jWNBJIVA ' Deearntor Pfi 1w; QodiWf Monroe. . «g*'» Sh beloved wife . wti40o?icOf" door, mother of MIts BerbarnDance; also survived by two sriroenfidron. East* ern Star. Memorial service win . be held Tuesday, January 2 at 7 1 o.m* Little Funeral Home, 115 E. Elm Street. Monroe, . M'ChiflarL Funeral service will be now Wednesday, January 3 at 1 bain, at fne funeral, home. Inter* ment In. Oak Hill Cpvtirttry# p<m-tlac. Mrs. Denct wilt lie in state at the furteral home, v _____ ■ QImIkE, HERBERT Oacom- b«r M. \W!r <8# North Ferry Street), ago S3; beloved huaband of Genevieve Drake; beloved son of Mrs. Fanny Egan; dear father of Mrs. Patrick (Deanna) caufey. i Mrs. Gary (Linda) Horan, and Sgt. V Herbert M., Frederick J., Michael R.< Jphn F„ pvt. James R., Leona Ly Mary J., Raymond G., Nancy v., Paul G- pirol H„ and Mark A. Drake) also survived by n grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be’ Monday, at f p.m. at the Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home. Funeral service Will be held Tuesday, January 2, at 10 a.m. at St. Michael's Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hop* Cemetery, Mr. Drake will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting '' hours 3 to s and 7 to y p.m.) riRAFF7~GLApOYS C) December 31, 1967; IJ7 Mohawk Road, Pontiac; age 73? dear mother of-Mrs. Marlon Boys Howe and :■ Mrs. Glenn Bradford; dear sister of Mrs. N. A. Woodworth, Mrs. I. J. Snader and Riley .Aldrich; also survived by two grandchildren and ,six great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January } at 1 p.m. at the Donah. Son-Johns Funeral* Home. Interment in Perry Mount'Park Cemetery. Mrs. Graff will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours ,3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) ______ HODGES, .HOWARD R.; December 38. njt/i at Fort Lauderdale, f la.i husband ot Lea J; Hgdges; father of Wallace R. Hodges, of Rochester, Mich,; brother of Theodore R. and Haiei Hodges, df Detroit; also survived by three grandsons. Funeral service at Bell Chapel of the Wm. R. Hamilton Co., 820 East Maple Avenue, Birmingham, Tuesday, January 2, at 1 p.m.. •friends may call at Ball Chapef 2 to 4 fun. Monday._____________ HUBBARD, JACK N.t December 2*, 1967; 556 Lochaven Road, Water., ford Township; age 22; beloved sonJ of Ralph H. and Leora Hubbard; dear brother of Mrs. Britt Henke, Mrs, Robert Tllfman, Mrs. Ptank .Porter, Mrs, George Lvnn. Mrsr ■Fred-'Roberts, Carol, Margaret, Bonnie, Richard, William,' Gerald, Marvin and David Hubbard. Funaral service will be held Tuesday, January 2, at 3:15 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Hubbard will lie lit state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to-5 and 7 to 9.) • . 'JUSTIN, FRANK j.; December 30, 1967; 244 Draper* Street; age 79; dear father of Mrs. Eldon Yarnofd, Mrs. -Pierce Ryan, Mris. Gordon Shafto, Mrs. Frank. Coluzzi and Edward F. Justin; deaf brother of William Justin; also survived by seven grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be Tuesday, January 1 at 8:30 p.m. at the* Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home.* Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 10 a.m. at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Justin will lie ,in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to $ and ,7 to 9 p.m.) .w* KARASEK, EMIL F.; December 297 1967; 139 Welfare, Walled Lake; J age 69; beloved husband of Angela (Dot) Karasek; dear brother of Mrs. Fikll King, Mrs. Della Man-aghan, Edward and Tom Karasek. Recitation of the Rosary will be Held today, January V at 8 p.m. at the Rlchardsdn-Blrd Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with Rev. Father Raymond Jones officiating. Funeral servlet will be Held Tuesday, January 2 at 9:30 a.m. at the St. Williams Church, Walled Lake. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mr.. Karasek will lie In state at the funeral home. MCDUFFIE. LQRETTE M.; Decem-30, 1967) 4847 Curtis Lane Road, Waterford; age 68; beloved wlte of Archie McDuffie; Beloved daughter of Mrs, James McNally; dear mother of Mrs. Richard Brondyke, Mrs. LUIs Galindo and Anna Marie McDuffie; deaf si&ler of Lee H. and George C. McNally; . , Also survived by iraur grandcml-ww. Recitation of the Rosary will be Tuesday, January 2 at 7:30 p.m. at the Sparks-ariffin Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at II a.m. at Ouh Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, Interment In Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. McOuffle will Me In state 'at the -funeral home. (Suggested Visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 ,F.hi.). ' MITCHELL, DOYLE. J.; December 30, 1967; lit. St. John.. Highland; age 18; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell; beloved grandson of Mr. .and Mrs. Joseph -Mitchell; dear brother of Mrs. Richard Higgins, Vicki, Larry, Ronald and Erwin Mitchell. Funeral service win be held. Wednesday: January 3 at 1 p.m. at the Elton Black Funeral home, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. Interment , In Hlgniand Cemetery. Mr. Mitchell will lie m state at the funeral home: MUHLENFELD, E D~M U N D A.; December 31, 1967;. »36 Ash, Detroit (Formerly ot White Lake Township) age 82; dear brother of Mrs. Mary A. Limb and Arthur J. Muhlenfeld. Recitation of the Rosary wilt ba Tuesday, January 2 at 8 p.m. at the Elton Black Funeral Home, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January i 2! .!° ? ,h*' s*- Patricks Catholic. Church, Union Lake. Interment In Lakeside Cemetery Mr. Muhlenfeld will lie In stole at the funeral home. . .; NEWMAli, DELLA. E,; December 29, 1967; 2M9 Voorheis Road, wa-terford Township; age 177; dear mother ot Mrs. Lyle B. Saiim, Mrs. Henry Karwas, Max ,,E.. Erwin W., Wesley E. ana Ward- S. Newman; also survived by 14 grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren. Funeral service will, be held Tuesday, January 2, at 1:30 p.m. at the ..Donelson-Johns Funeral Homa. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Newman will lie in stele at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting houfs 3 to s and 7 to 9>L _______ PARRYj MARGARET; December 30. 1967; 224.Hlghland Ave.. Highland Park, (Formerly of Pontiac ); age 83; Funeral servlet will be held Tuesday, January 2 at 2 p.m. at the All Saints Episcopal Church, With Rev. C, George Wlddlfleld officiating. Interment in Perry . Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Parry will- lie In slate at the Voorheas- Slple Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting, hours 3 to 5 and 7 Ig 9 REDMAN, ALVIS E ; Oeeember 3», 1967; 134 McPherson, Highland; age 72; beloved husband of Time Redman; dear father of Mrs. Levels McMonagle and FI wood Redman; dear brother of Mrs. , William Millar and; Mrs. Ross Banner; also survived by live. grandchildren and throe great grandchildren. Funeral * service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 1 p.m. at the Richardson Bird Funaral Home, Milford', interment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Redman will lie in state at the funeral home. ' STOGNER, ROGER DALE; Decern-b#r 31, 1967; 3636 Jackson Boulevard, Highland. Michigan; age 18; beloved son of Theimdr A. and Mildred Stogner; dear brother of Mrs. Norma Huffman and Robert Stogner. Funeral servlet wll! be held Wednesday, January 1 at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funo'al Home. Interment In Perry Mt, Park Cemetery. Mr. Stogner will lie in state et the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 6 and / to t p,m.)_________________ wt! Srt R B14 g7 * Ola W.i ttecenv bar 29. (967; 47SO Algonquin, west Btoomtteld Township; age 83; beloved wlto ot Carl A. Westerberg; dear mother of Mrs. /Raonar 6. (Ruth M.) Peterson am Eric B. Westerberg; dear sister of -Mrs. Ellen Glerdrum and Martin r. Radlar; also survived by three grandchildren and1 . five greatgrandchildren, Funeral service will be held Tuesday; January 2 at 1:30 p.m. at the C. J. God-hard! Funeral Homo. Kaago Harbor. interment in ^Ottawa Park Cemetery, independence township. Mr*. Witter berg will lit In stole et the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours ] to S and / *■ • p.m. WHITNEY. OR. ELMliR. L.i Decern, bar 29, 1M7;. 2 KenMrton Drive, Pleesenl Ridge; dga I); huaband of Ermlna WhltiHryi father of Jamas J. Uvtngtpn; unci* ot Dr. • M. L. Whitney and Jonh H. whtt- 0 grand-wlll be Iwld Tuesday, January. 2 at 1 a.m. at th* Kail Chapel of th* William R, Hamilton Company, S20 E. Maple, Birmingham. The Weather U,». WMdwr SurMU Foracot Cold (Malta Ptf* l) VOL. m NO. 281 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY. JAN UAH Y l. i««8 -48 PAGES .. *3 Midnight . -4 6 a.m. 7 a.m. Chilling cold put the damper on New Year’s Eve exuberance in the Pontiac area.' * ★ * sp . • Temperatures ranging as low as 4 in Pontiac from about 2:30 to 5130 a;m. and -12 in Troy were recorded. Area police credited the extreme cold with a sobering influence' on year-end drivers, despite roads glazed by' snow which fell most of the day yesterday.' Accidents in most areas were reported light and of a relatively minor nature. Three deaths were reported occurring from an accident in Highland Township. ♦ ★ ★ The cold, which broke previous weather records through much of the Mid- west, surpassed last January’s low of -3 recorded here Jan. 18. RECORD LOW Elsewhere, Chicago posted a record low of 10 below zero for Dec. 31 and another record of -9 today. Light snow combined with bitter cold is making driving hazardous today, and more light snow is predicted for ail parts of the state . today and tonight. The Hit-Run Car Kills Girl 4 Die on County A 17-year-old girl became Oakland County’s first traffic fatality of 1968 early today when she and her escort were struck-_by a hit-and-run driver while walking along Milford Road in Highland Township- Three l&year-olds —• two fnsm Highland Township — were killed in a head-on crash ki White Lake Township IF YOU SAY so—Nine-month-old Heidi Lynn, daughter of Pontiac Press Photog- early yesterday to bring the county’s rapher and Mrs. Ed Vanderworp, prepares to celebrate the arrival of 1968 though she can’t really find too much to complain about frojtn 1967. It was a great year for babies, she thinks. final 1967 traffic toll to 121 than in 1966. 33 less Oakland Highway Toll in ’68 Last Year to Data 0 Bob Hope Reporting; Trip Highlights (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the last in a series of reports by comedian Bob Hope, whose troupe has completed ah* other visit to V.S. fighting men in, Vietnam and is hotnebound.) ' ‘ gineer. They met at Bearcat. They didn’t say a word — just grabbed each other and hung on. Phil Crosby will never forget one lyd (Continued on Page A-2,lCol. 5) By BOB HOPE LATITUDE 19-49N LONGITUDE 157-26E— Tonight, as our 67 pooped pigeons climbed aboard the big C-141 Starlifter at Andersen Air Base in Guam, we all had thO same feeling. It was like coming home. In the past 15 days, our gypsies have traveled over 25,000 miles by every form of transportation from a jeep to a carrier. They’ve worked 21 stows, and they’ve logged 11 combat houijs. Hiey’ve been shot at, dusted, blown on, rained on baked and* catapulted off a carrier. By all rights they should be snoring in their seats as our big jet drones its way toward Midway Island. But it’s all too fresh. Mtot of them are standing in knots up and down the aisle,- rehashing the trip as they will for years to come. For each member of the cast it meant something different. For Johnny' Pawiek, our fabulous sound engineer, who has made 22 Christmas trips, “it’s the lode on the faces of those combat troops at Lai Khe, Three thousand of their buddies had been sent out to the hills juSt before the show. They were so intense. Their eyes never left the stage.” ★ ★ ★ Our Trombonist, Joe Howard made the whole trip hoping against hope that he might see his son, Dave, a combat en- In today's Press Area Roundup 1967 highlights are presented In picture, story form.—PAGES B-2, B-3. Sports Scene Big 1967 events from world of sports are recalled.—PAGE D-2. Capitol Scene Top news stories of past year qre reviewed. — PAGE C-7, Astrology ............ D-5 • Bridge ____________ D-5 Crossword Puzzle....... D-U Comics ......— D-5 Btfaoritii*............ a-6 Markets ...... ..... C-9-C-11 Obituaries ......... D-6 Picture Page ........-,..,^09 Sports ...v............. D-l—D-4 • j§.....,..*.... C-K TV-Radio Programs ...... D-U Wilson, E«rl Dll Women's Paget ....... C-l—C-3 3rd Heart Swap Eyed in S. Africa CAPE TOWN, South Africa m - The diseased heart of a Cape. Town dentist, who could be the world’s third heart transplant patient, worsened as doctors waited today for a donor heart. Dr. Christian Barnard, who guided a surgical team through the heart transplant operation on Louis Washkansky Dec. 3 at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, Was en route home after a tour through the United States and Britain. ■ The next patient, 58-year-old Dr. Philip Blaiberg, .was described as “dangerously iU” at Groote Schuur from a coronary thrombosis. Barnard was asked in London if he was more confident of Blaiberg’s chances for survival than he was of Washkansky’s. The 44-year-old surgeon replied: “I think the main thing is that — the , main differehce_will be that we- will have morei confidence now in that we are not going into the unknown.” All that surgeons at Groote Schuur needed to operate again was a suitable donor heart, which they said probably would have to come from someone killed in a traffic accident that did not impair the heart. ~ . U.S. Traffic Toll Is a Low 223 By the Associated Press - Traffic deaths during the New Year holiday weekend today were running far behind the number predicted by the National Safety 'Council, Record-breaking cold tod heavy Show in some sections may have played a major part in a lower death" count by keeping'persons at home. The council made its estimate before the weekend began. The toil reached 223 in a count that began at 6 p.m. Friday and will end at midnight today. The safety council, headquartered in Chicago, estimated that 460 to 540 persons would be killed in traffic accidents over the 78-hour holiday period. . NONHOUDAY PERIOD The Associated Press counted 484 traffic deaths in the nonholiday period from 6 p.m. Friday-, Dec. 15, to midnight Monday, Dec. 18, This year’s three-day Christmas weekend brought death to 685 in traffic accidents. For those who were on the highways, weather was a factor in many of the holiday collisions. A California teen-ager was killed and seven persons were injured when their car struck an icy patch and hit a bridge on Interstate 10 near McNary, Tex. ★ _ The highest toll for any New Year period, 564, was compiled during a three-day celebration at the start of 1966. The lowest total for a three-day New Year observance since World War II was 269 in 1949. The traffic toll during the last three-day New Year holiday was 469. Sherry Ann Knight, daughter of MT. and Mrs. Lane E. Knight of 203 S. Center, Highland Township, was killed about 2:45 a.m, today when hit from behind by a car while walking on the shoulder of Milford Road near Highland. Killed shortly after midnight yesterday were Doyle Mitchell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell, 111 St. Johns; Roger Stogner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer A. Stogner, 3536 Jackson; and Calvin For-see of Crosse Pointe. The Knight girl and her escort, Alan Lengeman, 17, son of Mrs. Janet H. Lengeman of 3727 Gulfwood, Milford, were walking toward her home from Lengeman’s stalled car when the mishap Occurred, according to Oakland oCounty sheriff’s deputies. He is reported in serious condition in Pdntiac General Hospital. SOUGHT CAR Deputies said the hit-and-run car was apparently the spine vehicle that was involved in a bumping incident with another car shortly before and was being pursued by an unidentified driver, who discovered the Knight girl’s body and Lengeman and called officers. However, investigators said they have no description of the car being sought. White Lake Township police said the accident yesterday on M-59 near Porter occurred about 12:20 a.m. Stogner was driving one of the cars with Mitchell a passenger, according to pplipe. it ★ ★ The deaths brought this’year’s Michigan road toll to 2,075 — more than 200 short of the .1966 total. Australian Quints Listed Satisfactory BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — Mrs. Roger Braham named her two-day-old quintuplets today — Annabel, Caroline, Faith, Geoffrey and Richard — then got up from her bed for the first time since their birth, took a shower and had her hair set by nurses. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Grantley Stable, who slept at the hospital last night, in case of complications, reported the babies in satisfactory condition and the mother doing well. The children's father is a 24-year-old country lawyer who with hi* wife, Patricia, 36, have four other children including a set of twins. \ The quintuplets are said to weigh about three pounds each. - ir jfr ’’ * ■••.it‘'" it , ik .*.• . £ For the next 10 days the quints trill stay in special cribs, kept at 97 degrees. Mrsr Brabam took no fertility drugs before the first of the five were born 5:12 a.m. Saturday, six weeks premature. v high was expected to range from 0 to 15 above. The Automobile Club of Michigan reports that most major roads in the state are slippery in spots, while secondary roads are snow-covered and slipperyl ★ ★ * Early this morning light snow was reported in only a few areas. In some, such as Ann Arbor, small drifts toe forming on the highways. UPPER PENINSULA In the Upper Peninsula, Calumet and Munising area roads are covered with light snow and are slippery. Those around the Soo are snow-covered and slippery and-the remainder have scattered slippery spots. Across the U.S., early morning tom*' peratares ranged from -28 at International Falls, Minn., to 69 at Key West, Fla. Local precipitation probabilities in per cent .are: today 40, tonight, 30, tomari> row 10. < * **X 'M (At 12:30 p.m. the temperature in downtown Pontiac was a Chilly 11. Low to* night was expected near lp. w; Temperature Roundup Unofficial tempertures recorded in Oakland County: Lake ^ Orion ;...... Rochester _............ -6 Birmingham ..........*2 • Bloomfield Township ..... -3 Milford .. 777 ..... T... 2 Holly ....... *4 Romeo . •&-X; 'Lapeer ......*$ Novi ............... ,t Shelby Township .,..... .*11 Troy ............... ,..-12 Girl Leads All four of the major hospitals in the Pontiac area today reported the early arrival of New Year Day babies. Traditionally, the first baby born in the new year receives numerous gifts from area merchants. Any baby born to married parents living north of 14 Mile road in Oakland County after midnight Dec. 31 is eligible for tpe prizes. The earliest recorded arrival unofficially was at St. Joseph Mercury Hospital where a girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brooks of 747 Birdsong, Milford, at 12:08 a.m. ♦ ★ Crittenton Hospital in Avon Township had its first birth of the new year born at 12:18 a.m., a boy 4o Mr. and Mrs. Gary Eisner of 655 Alpine, Rochester. AT3:4^A.M. Pontiac General Hospital reported a girl born to Mr. and Mrs. Earless Sink of 545 Bloomfield, at 3:45 a.m, The first to arrive at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital was a girl born at 5:39 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wabegi-jik of 129 Norton, v Entries in the first baby contest must be made through the family doctor by 5 p.m. tomorrow. ★ ★ ★ The information should be sent to the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce in the Riker Building, Pontiac. LBJ Spends Quiet \ .V j New Year's Eve • y JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) - President Johnson marked the arrival of 1968 with prayers for peace and the White House said he spent a quiet New Year’s Eve with his wife and-close friends. ★ ★ it- He had no special New Year’s Day statement. But he joined in a prayer for peace’ at year-end services yesterday in a small Roman Catholic Church near the ranch. ■ Except for. a press gathering, the Texas White House listed no official New Year’s Day activities for the chief executive. > Teddy 1$ in Vietnam SAIGON (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., whose Senate subcommittee has been critical of the progress of programs to aid the civilian vie* tims of the Vietnam war, arrived in Saigon today for a 12-day look at the “other war.” GM Payrolls in City Near Record Wsmymrwaz-'+.mmm# 90 VC Fatalities in Truce Incidents SAIGON (JPi — U.S. forces weathered the first 24 hours of the allied-called New Year’s truce without losing a single Gl despite at least 66 “incidents” and 98 Communists killed during the stand-down. • ■ , • ‘ The number of incidents and rising casualty rate among the enemy and South Vietnamese government troops^ with whom the Reds clashed in most of the incidents — showed the truce period iwas only slightly less deadly than the usual everyday war. The Vietcong suffered 60 men killed whenthey attacked a Mekong Delta camp ran by South Vietnamese marines. Nineteen government marines were killed and 47 wounded. The South Vietnamese reported that a U.S. flareship was unable to get permission from U.S. headquarters to turn its fail-firing guns on the Vietcong assaulting the camp. Wei / \. * Employe payrolls of $321.9 million during 1987 were the second highest in history at the three General Motors plants in Pontiac, eclipsed only by the $333.8 million paid last year. GM’s 1967 purchases from area companies for goods and services added another $92.5 million to the Pontiac area economy. The year-end statement was released jointly today by 'Martin J. Caserlo, a GM vice president and general manager of GMC Track & Coach Division; John 2. DeLorean, a GM vice president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division; and Thomas F. Wlethorn, Fisher Body plant manager. v- Combined GM employment in Pontiac averaged 35,900 for the year. Local GM employes invested more than $8.3 million in U.S. Savings Bonds through payroll deduction. i it ♦ " ★ In addition, they were awarded $M4,-918 for ideas submitted through the GM Suggeston Plan, an increase of more than $213,000 over last .year. Pontiac’s GM installations observed several milestones In 1967. During calendar year 1967, Pontiac Motor Division reported another all-time record with the delivery of 841,000 units. This is Pon- tiac’s sixth successive year of sales increases. - -T--------3“ In February, the division introduced the new Firebird- sports car and Pr0~ duced its U-milUonth Pontiac later in the year. A new all-time monthly production record was set in October when 93,213 cars were built by the GM division. Fisher Body-Pontiac began construction of a three-year project to separate sewer waste from storm water with the installation of a 42-inch storm sewer. The next two stages of the project will be completed in.1969. The project, being done in cooperation with the. City of Pontiac, is to further purify water going into nearby lakes. GMC Truck & Coach introduced a new intercity coach in November. The 40» foot-long bus has seating capacity for 49 passengers. Its auxiliary rear axle assembly will permit the vehicle to operate, in states which otherwise would forbid its usage because of low-weight restrictions. Production is scheduled for 1968. , ' MARTIN J. CASERlO THOMAS F. An w TIJ E PONTIAC PH ESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1968 wL Wule&ceetitig* BARSTOW, Calif (Apt — What were believed to be short- (Gladys C.) Graff, 78, of 127 wave Christmas messages from'Mohawk, will be 1 p.m. Wednes-captured U.S. prisoners in'day at Donelson-Johns Funeral Swih wlefewn were heart! by a Home! with burial in Perry retired Army master sergeant Mount Park Cemetery, late Straw? night, • | f Mrs. Graff died yesterday. Mrs. Otto A. Graff Mrs. George R. Parry Service for Mrs. Otto -A. Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. George R. (Margaret) Parry, 83, of Highland Park will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at AH Samts Episcopal Church, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery by Voorhees- Edmund Harris. 52, listened-She was a member of Bethany with a tape recorder as a broad-!Baptist Church and Pontjac Or- cast from Hanoi Via Havana, Cuba, beamed messages to relatives of six prisoners’or war. it it k . Some of the names ware unclear but they were believed to be season’s greetings from Air Force Maj. Albert L. Stern of California, Air Force Capt. Hassell Edward Tqmperley of Newton, Mass., Lt. (j.g.) Robert Fishman of California, Nevada residents Maj. Ludwig E; May Jr. and Maj. Richard Allen Dutton, and Lt. Cmdr. Clark Douglas Brown, PREPARED TEXT All of the men spoke With even voices and were apparent-» ly reading from a prepared statement. All said they were der of Eastern Star No. 228. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Marion Bays Howe and Mrs. Glenn Bradford, both of Pontiac; two sisters, Mrs. N. A. Woodworth of Birmingham, and Mrs. I. J. Snader of Clarkston; one brother, Riley Aldrich of Commerce Township; two grandchildren and six greatgrandchildren. Fraijk J. Justin Requiem Mass for Frank J, Justin, 79, of 244 Draper will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at STT Vincent-de Paul Church with burial inMt. Hope Cemetery. A Rosary will be said at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the treated well, were qmnjttredj Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, and were eating regularly. J ^ Justin, a retired GMC D. and Following the statements by Truck and Coach Division'em-1 home. ploye, died Saturday. Survivors include four daughters, Mrs. Eldon Yarnold o f Pontiac, Mrs. .Pierce Ryan of Birmingham, Mrs, Gordon Shaf-to of Union Lake and Mrs. Frank Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Parry died Saturday. She was a member of Guild 8, All Saints, Episcopal Church and the Golden Age Gjr o u p, YMCA. Joseph D. Ivanoff BLOOMFIELD TOWNSH1P-Private service for Joseph D. Ivjnoff, 78, of 7165 Old Mill wiU be Tuesday. Burial will be in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield by the, Bell Chapel of the William RJ Hamilton Co. Mr. Ivanoff died Friday. He was a member of the Methodist Church, the Cleveland Lodge No. 211 F&AM, and St. Bernard Commandery in Chicago Surviving are his wife, Patricia A., and two sons James Richard T., both at by Ho Chi Minh was read by an the six men—divided up with Christmas carols—a statement announcer. The statement of about 15 sentences mentioned North Vietnamese casualties and thanked those in the United States “who are giving us support.” ‘‘We shall win and so shall you,” the statement ended. Emil F. Karasek WALLED LAKE — Requiem Mass for Emil F. Karasek, 69, of 139 Welfare, will be 9:30 a.m; tomorrow at St. Williams Catho- Coluzzi of Utica; a son, Edward|jic churCh, Walled Lake, with F. Justin of Lake, Orion; a brdth-1burial in Oakland Hills Memor-er; seven grandchildren; and 10 la\ Gardens, Novi, by Richard- Vote on Pact Set FLINT. (tPl -r United Auto Workers Local 581 has scheduled a ratification vote Jan. 7 on a contract agreement on local issues reached Saturday at the Fisher Plant No. 11 The plant has about 6,000 hourly employes. Local 581 President John Yorke said he is confident the agreement will be ratified. Ihe unioin’s 38MOO DM workers already have approved, a national agreement. great-grandchildren. Mrs. Archie McDuffie son Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. A Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. tonight at the funeral home. Mr. Karasek died Friday. He is a former employe of the Ypsi-lanti Hydromatic Plant. Surviving besides his wife afe two sisters and two brothers an auto accident. He was an employe of Fisher Body Plant, Pontiac. Surviving are bis parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell; two sisters , including Vicki' at home; three brothers including Larry and Ronald of Highland Township; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mitchell of Poplar Bluff, Mo. ,1 Edmund A. Muhlenfeld WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for former resident Ed mund A. Muhlenfeld, 82, of De troit will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Patricks Catholic'fchurch Union Lake, with burial in Lakeside Cemetery by the Elton Black Funeral Home. He died yesterday. A Rosary will be”said at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Surviving are a sister; and a brother. Alvis E. .Redman HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Alvis E. Redman, 72, of 134 McPherson, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Township. Mr. Redman died yesterday. He had been employed at Ford Motor Co. Surviving are his. wife, TilliP; q son, Elwood of Wayne; s daughter, Mrs. Leveta McMon-agle of Fullerton, Calif; five grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren, and two sisters. ON THE LOOKOUT—A U.S. Marine, a bayonet affixed to his M16 rifle, prepares to enter heavy undergrowth in search of Vietcong snipers. The enemy had harassed , AP Wiraphoto the Leatherneck’s column as it moved into the village of Phu Long on Operation Citrus near Da Nang. Labor Woes, Sales Drop Hit Auto in Service for Mrs. Archie (Lorette M.) McDuffie, 58, of, 4847 Curtis Lane, will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Our Lady of tne Lakes Catholic Church, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery,' Clarkston by the Spafks-Griffin Funeral Home. The Rosary will be said ati HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP — 7:30 p.mi Tuesday at the funeralvice for Doyle J. Mitchell, home. 118, of 111 St, John will be 1 She died Saturday. p.m. Wednesday at Elton Black Doyle J. Mitchell Milk Price Hiked KALAMAZOO (J» - Starting today, Kalamazoo area residents will pay one cent a quart more for milk. Spokesmen for local dairies say Kalamazoo and southwestern Michigan are the last ateas of the state to increase milk prices. Mrs. McDuffie was a member of Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, president of Our Lady Queen of Hope society, and a member of Sigma Alpha. Surviving beside her husband is her mother, Mrs. James McNally of Waterford Township, three daughters, Mrs. Richard Brondyke of East Lansing, Anne Marie McDuffie of Water ford Township, Mrs, Luis Galindo of Rochester, N.Y., four grandchildren and two brothers. Funeral' Hbme, Union Lake Burial will be in Highland Cemetery. Roger D. Stogner HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Roger D. Stogner 18, of 3536 Jackson will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. The youth died yesterday in an auto accident. He was an employe of Beaver Precision Products and a member of As-sembly of God Church. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and "Mrs. Thelmar A. Stogner; a sister, Mrs. Norma Huffman The youth died yesterday in of Utica; and a brother. 2 Stabbed, One Shot in West Bloomfield Gmrl (W. CDoHtliiM J)ouaU J£. Joint* ■ > Judged by What We Do . i % . , . not by what we say. The Funeral Director and bis standing remain in the public mind by care and ability in the performance of his work. The Donebon-Johns Funeral Home is happy to have you hsk the! families that we have served, and to be guided by their appraisal pf our services. 'Phone FEDERAL 4 4511 Two brothers, home on leave from the Army, were stabbed and'a man shot during a New Year’s Eve party in West Bloomfield Township early today. The attacks took place in a parking lot of a home at 6551 Drake, according to West Bloomfield Township police. Details of the fight are not completely known, said patrolman Richard Lamphier and Thomas Burke who first arrived at the scene. They later were assisted by police from Novi, Bloomfield Township and Walled Lake and the Sheriff’s Department. * The stabbing victims are. Randal H. Ryan, 19, and his brother Thomas W., 21, both of 21355 Farmington, Farmington. The younger Ryan is in serious condition at Botsford Gen- Ptuihinq On Our (P, run,ties =nii!i= it COombon-slolim FUNERAL HOME 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Y CEMETERY MARKERS Officer Hurt in a Police Chose Crash eral Hospital, Farmington, with a punctured lung. His brother was treated at the hospital for stab wounds in the back and the head' and released. * ‘k k Police identified the ihan who was wounded with a blast from a shotgun as Charles Parkkila, 25, of 6782 Drake, West Bloomfield Township. NOT HOSPITALIZED They said he was hit in the hand and chest' with pellets but was not hospitalized. Officers said that as far as they could learn the Ryans were attacked by six or seven men about 3:30 a.m. just as they arrived at the party. Parkkilla was shot in the parking lot, but police said they did not know the circumstances behind his shooting. ★ . ifr ★ Police said that as of 9 a.m. no arrest in either the shooting the stabbings had been made, but that they are continuing their investigation. They said they also have information that a man was badly beaten at the party, but they have yet to find the reported victim. The party, according to po A Farmington city policeman j jjce was gjven by Gary Barr By CHARLES C. CAIN AP Business Writer '2 DETROIT — The auto industry ran into some rough going in 1967 as labor problems (ind a drop in sales of U.S.-built new cars forced it to settle for the third best calendar year to date. About 8.5 million new cars including a record-breaking 780,000 imports, were sold in the U.S. market. * * * This figure ranked well behind the 1966 total of 9,088,488 and the record-setting year’of 1965 whep 9,313,912 were sold, Import sales came to 658,123 units in 1966 and 569,415 a year earlier. The big factor in the auto picture was a 50-day nationwide strike at Ford Motor Co.’s U.S. plants, followed by a series of local Ford plant disputes and similar local plant tie-ups at some Chrysler Corp. and General Motors plant NATIONAL AGREEMENTS The United Auto Workers Union reached national contract agreements with Ford and Chrysler and then took similar d e m a n d s to General Motors with indications GM might be struck early in 1968 if it did not reach agreement. The new contracts generally carried a boost of about $1 an hour over three years; the old contracts gaws. workers about $4.70 an h o u r in wages and fringe benefits. American Motors, smallest of the four major auto companies, asked ttye UAW for special consideration in contract talks in view of AMC’s $75-million loss in its 1967 fiscal year. The union toqk the matter under advisement. * * The drop in calendar year sales bore out predictions of industry leaders early in 1967 that the labor talks, with accompanying Work stoppages, Would slow the rate of auto sales. + k * Henry Ford II, chairman of Ford, said in December 1966 that new car sales would come close to 9 million units in 1967 if there was no strike. He added that the figure would be closer to 8.4 million cars if work stoppages occurred. He did not know at that time that his firm would be the UAW’s primary strike target but he was on the mark with his 8.4-million figure. TRAILS 1966 were that the figure would be Monument! large diiplay priced to fit your budget. Quality, crafts-) and permanent beauty are found in ovary marker and Hit wo toll. They are backed by the industry's strongest mm. WINTER DISCOUNT SALE-SAVE 10% SELECT NOW FOR MEMORIAL DAY COMPLETE INDOOR DISPLAY FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Memorials for Over 75 Yearn INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Parry FE 5-6931 Bronte Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries ot Below Cemetery Prices w * was injured shortly after 6 a.m. today qs he pursued two juveniles in a stolen car at speeds up to 90 miles per hour. At Botsford General Hospital, Farmington, for treatment of a possible dislocated shoulder is Officer Murray Switzer. - He was injured when his scout car and another driven by Sgt. Richard Miller came together at high speed at the intersection of Orchard Lake Road and Grand River. Both, cars were damaged but Sgt. Miller was not injured. Tiie two remained in pursuit of tiie fleeing car until it hit a deadend barricade at the Grand River cutoff near 1-96. - CLOCK SPEED Sgt. Dan Byrnes of the Farmington police reported the speed of the fleeing car was clocked at/70 miles per hour. It was totally destroyed but the 15-and 16 . year - old occupants of ! the car were reportedly not in-ljured seriously. They were examined at Bots-ford General Hospital and released for St. Clair County juv-^ • caretaker living behind the 655i address which is a meet-frig place for an assembly of churches. close to 7.6 million units, far behind the 8,611,776 built iq calendar 1966 •— and the record 9,329,104 cars built in calendar 1965. Barrucuda for a share of the Truck output also was affect ed by the strikes and indications were that the industry would wind up with about 1.5 million trucks for calendar 1967, .its fourth best year. The figure was topped only by 1966 (1,764,337); 1965 (1,885,109) and 1964 (1,560,644). ir if ★ Despite the smaller number of cars sold in the U.S. market this year, the car buyers’ bill was expected to be about the same — some $36 billion — because of higher price tags and more optional equipment purchases this time around. > Prices of 1968 models were higher at introduction time than a year earlier. Another price 15 PCT. BEHIND sporty market estimated at a million cars a year. If also was the only firm to drop a car, as it abandoned its-Marlin line after four years of-trying to make it a top seller. _ , A. , Illustrating the way people Through 11 months of 1967, the „ere Spendjng more money for four U.S. auto firms built cars in the 1968 run, Amer-6,896,447 cars, about 15 per cent;^,an Motors said that in the first behind the 8,105,299 assembled; fjve weeks after the Javelin was in the first 11 months of 1966. introduced, purchasers spent an Ford, principal loser in the average of $3,053 per car for the auto building race, estimated ,j;avelin which had a basic j>rice that the long strike had cost it!0f « 450. 1 about 485,000 cars ahd 90,000 trucks. 'J FUROR COOLS The furor over auto safety cooled considerably in 1967 as the. federal government went ahead with its program calling for 26 safety items to be added to .1968 cars. There was some grumbling I from the auto companies but they did manage to meet the modified safety standards and include such items as windshield washers and defoggers, dual - cylinder brake systems, impact absorbing Steering columns and safety door latches on the 1968 cars. And if anybne had any idea that the government interest in cutting the nation’s traffic death toll of 52,000 a year was only a momentary thing it was dispelled in October, when Trans- boost by Jan. 1 seemed most - . ... „ . .. c likely as auto makers studied fifE, Alan S' how they could pass along to consumers increased costs due to safety items,, new wage scales worked out with the UAW and increased costs of materials) especially steel and copper. PRICE COMPARISONS Figuring out auto price tag comparisons is one of the most complicated projects ii) the American business economy. Companies shuffled models around and also juggle the equipment on cars from year to year. k k k Automotive News, a trade publication which makes a detailed study of price increases each year figured that the sticker prices of 1968 models were up an average of $116.25 a car; or 3.63 per cent qver 1967 prices. ~ k k it That was based on a comparison of about 300 of the 1968 car models on which the industry offered comparable models in 1967. in all, 357 models were available in the 1968 car line of U.S. firms. Allowing for year-to-year equipment changes and deletions, Automotive News figured the 1968 prices were up $79.93 or 2.28 per cent a car. Scrap Tells Story of a Bad Y&ar The pace of 1967 auto sales, trailed that of 1966 through vir-jNEj'V CAR PRICES tually the whole year. In looking! The Bureau of Labor Statis-for reasons for the decline, ob-ltics estimated that rfew car servers listed the unsettled la- prices in the 1968 line were up bor problems as the main rea- 3.75 per cent or $87.54 per car. It | son. Others mentioned frequently were the auto safety issue, [the war in Vietnam and tighter ■ money. , { As far as Vietnam was con-SAN FRANCISCO t/B — Sanjcemed, draft calls and enlist-Franciscans wh6 work in the ments took thousands of young financial district traditionally dump their old note calendars out their windows on the final working day of the year. It it,- •ft One scrap of paper in the litter on Montgomery Street was telltale of a bad year for an unknown gent. It said: “Net worth $54,104; total liabilities $477,516.” —ji-------------------- News in Brief men out of the potential auto buyers market. Industry sources said these young men would constitute-a major buying force yrhen hostilities cease in Vietnam but for the moment, they have things other than new cars to occupy their minds. < kkk Reports that 1968 cars would have more safety features were credited by - some industry sources with causing people to delay purchases during tne 1967 model run. The unsettled labor picture at Mabie, formerly of the Green!General Motors was the biggest Parrot, wishes all her friends question mark in how the U.S. happy New Year. See me now production total for the calendar at the Pontiac Lake Inn. — Adv. year would finish. Indications said $26.95 of the increase.wak due to safety improvements and $11.20 to design changes to reduce emission of exhaust pollutants. The rest was a pure price boost, the BLS said. A government decision late in 1967 to stick with its original plan of requiring shouldei* harnesses on 1968 cars after Jan. 1, 1968 made it virtually certain that this $25 item would be passed along to the car buyer in the form of a higher price tag. In general, 1968 cars are longer, lower and wider than 1967s. There was a drop in the number of convertibles and station wagon offerings and an increase in the number of two-door hard tbps, currently the hottest selling line. * .# * American Motors introduced the only new car of the 1968 line, the Javelin. It challenges the Mustang, Camara, Firebird and Boyd issued 47 additional proposed standards covering cars through 1971. Boyd, who with Dr. William Haddon Jr the nation’s first highway safety administrator, is charged with enforcing the safety program, commented, “We do not expect, miracles overnight.” RECALL CAMPAIGNS Auto recall campaigns, in which the industry ealled back autos for inspection, in cases of suspected make rials defects, continued although hot in as strong a spotlight- as the recall campaigns’ of 1986.' About 2.8 million cars were involved in such recall checkups in the first ll months of 1S67 but the government and industry agreed relatively few defective cars were found. The industry, in addition to its work in the safety field, also continued research in the field of possible electric or turbine-powered cars, but there was general agreement such possibilities were still years away from the standpoint of the average motorist. On the corporate front, two of the four auto firms got new head men. Jaiies M. Roche, president of General Motors, moved up: to the position of board chairman and Edward N. Cole, a GM vice president, moved into the . president’s chair. At American Motors, Roy D. Chapin Jr., son of an auto pioneer, was named chairman of the board of American Motors and William V. Luneburg was named president as AMC continued its efforts to get a profitmaking position in the industry. Employe dishonesty is costing hospitals 80 per cent more than it did five years ago. About $80 million in cash and'materials was stolen by hospital personnel In i960. Death Notices .vra..ra CLIMENT, SOMONDl . btjWIbf n, iM7« 4» TSmim Siraotjt mm Hi bolovod Sfiijlpi ». Oroco schrtm) door <rf Wall Clomenti door brother ot Mr*. Al-ble Le Boroe. will' bo Mwtaoi . Melvin A. StouW Awwrol--Funeral service will be held Tuos-day, January 1- at 10 a.m. at th« si. Vincent da Baul Catholic Church. Informant IM Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr.' clamant wilt lie In stale at tn« lunoral home. , V Death Notices OAMCE. MINERVA *.; December 30, 1M7; ii; Oodtroy. . Monroe* >;. Michigan; age ' St I beloved wife |j Jaf■Hamm liMB*) Star mother ot Min BarberaDance; also aur- Michigan. Funeral service, will be held Wed need ey, January 3 at 1 P.m. at tha funeral home, Inter-. ment In Oak Htll Cemertery, Pen-. Hoc. Mrs. Dance wilt lie in stale at the funeral home. »- DRAKE. HERBERT Wt Sh.;' Decern* ' der It, 1M7) Of North Perry Strait) age S3; beloved husband of Genevieve Drake,- beloved son of Mrs. Fanny Egan) dear. father of Mrs. Patrick < Deanna) Cauley. Mrs. Gary (Linda) Moron, and Sgt. Herbert M., Frederick J., Michael - R„ Jghn F., Pvt, James R.. Leona Drake; also survived by II grand'-children. Racket Ion of the Rosary Will be Monday, at t p.m, at the Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January 2, at W a.m. at .St. Michael's Catholic Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Drake will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to t p.m.) GRAFF, GLADDYS C.; December 31, 1M7; 137 Mohawk Road, Pontiac; age 71) dear mother of Mrs. Marlon Boys Howe and Mrs. Glenn Bradford; dear sister ot Mrs. N. A. Woodworth, Mrs. I. J. Snader and Riley Aldrich; also survived by two grandchildren end six great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 1 p.,m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Nome. Interment In Perry Mount Park. Cemetery. Mrs. Graff wili lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to » p.m.) HODGES, HOWARD R.,- December s 38, 1387; at Fort-Lauderdale, Fia.,- ' husband at Lea J. Hodges; father of Wallace R. Hodges, of Rochester, Mich.; brother it Theodore R. and Hazel Hodges, of Detroit; , also survived by three grandsons. Funeral service at Bell Chapel of the wm. R. Hamilton Co., 830 East Maple Avenue, Birmingham, Tuesday, January 3, at 1 p.m., -Friends may call at Bell Chabel 3 to 4 pjn. Monday. HUBBARD, JACK N.; December 20, -; 1367; 5S6 Lochaven Road, Waterford Township; age 23; beloved son of Ralph H. and Leora Hubbard; dear brother of Mrs. Britt Henke, Mrs. Robert Tlltman, Mrs. garet, Bonnie, Richard, William, Gerald, Marvin and David .Hub-, bard: Funeral service will -be held Home. Interment in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Hubbard will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 3.) ~ JUSTIN, FRANK J.,- December 30, 1367; 244 Draper Street;, age 77; dear father of Mrs. Eldon* Yarnold, Mrs. .Pierce Ryan, Mrs. Gordon Shafto, Mrs. Frank Coluzzi and Edward F. Justin; dear brother of William Justin; also survived by seven grandchildren. Recitation of - the Rosary will be Tuesday, January 2 at 0:30 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffm Funeral Horn e-. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 10 a.m. at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Justin will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to S and 7 to 2 p,m.) * KARASEK. EMIL F„- December 237 1367; 133 ' welfare, walled Lake; /age 63; beloved husband Of Angela (Dot) Karasek; dear brother of Mrs. Paul King, Mrs. Delia Man-dghan, Edward and 'Tom Karasek. Recitation of the Rosary win be held Today, January 1 at 8 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird' Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with Rev. Father Raymond Jones officiating. Fyneral service will j* held Tues-day, January 2 at 7:30 .a.m. at the St. Williams Church, Walled Lake. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mr. Karasek will lie in state at the funeral ' home. mcduffie, lorette m.,- Decem- ber 30, 1767; 4847 Curtis Lane Road, Waterford; age 58; beloved wife of - Archie McDuffie; beloved daughter ot Mrs, James McNally; dear mother of Mrs. Richard Brondyke, Mrs. LUls Galindo and Anne Marie McDuffie; dear sister of Lee H. and George C. McNally; Also survived by lour grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be Tuesday, January 2 at 7.-30 p.m. at the Sparks-Sriffin Funeral Home. Funeral, service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 11 a.m. at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church. Interment in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. McDuffie will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested Visiting hours 3 to S and 7 to 7 .,P.m.) ; MITCHELL, DOYLE J.; December 30, 1367; .,111. St. John, Highland; age 18; beloved, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mltcnell; beloved grand-son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mitchell; dear brother of Mrs. Richard Higgins, Vicki, Larry, Ronald and Erwin Mitchell. Funeral service win be held Wednesday, January 3 at l p.m. at the Elton Black Funeral home, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. Interment in Highland Cemetery. Mr. Mitchell will lie . jn state at the funeral home.1 MUHLENFELD. EDMUND A., December ,31, 1367; 2336 Ash," Detroit (Formerly of White Lake Township) age 82;, dear brother of Mrs. Mary A. Limb ahd Arthur J. Muhlenfeld. Recitation Of the Rosary witl be Tuesday, January 2 at 8 p.m. . pt the Elton Black Funeral Home, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 10 a.m. at the St. Patricks Catholic' Clturclv Union Lake. Interment In Lakeside Cemetery. Mr. Muhlenfeld will lie in state 1 at the funeral home.__________. NEWMAN, DELLA £.; December 23, 1767; 2303 Voorhels Road. Waterford Township; age 77,; dear mother of Mrs. .Lyle B. Saum, Mrs. Henry Karwes, Max E„ Erwin w., Wesley E. and Ward S. Newman; also survived by U grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren. Funeral service will, be held Tuesday, January 2, at 1:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Newman will state at the' funeral home. PARRY, MARGARET; December 30, 1367; 224 Highland Ave., Highland Park, (Formerly ot Pontiac); age 83; Funeral servlet will be held Tuesday, January 2 at 2 p.m. at the All Saints Episcopal Church, with Ray. C. George Wlddilleld , officiating, interment In -Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Parry will lie In state at the Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting, hours 3 to S and ,7 lo 7 ... fcmjfT-f — REDMAN, ALVIS E,; December 31, 1307; 136 McPherson, Highland; age 73; beloved husband ot Time Redman; dear father ot Mrs. Leveta McMonagle and Elwood Redman; deer brother of Mrs. , William Miller and Mrs. Ross -Benner; alto survived by five grandchttdren and three great grandchildren. Funeral service will hi held Wednesday, January 3 at 1 p.m. at the Richardson. Bird Funeral Home, Mlliord. Interment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Redman will lie in state at the funeral home. STOGNER. ROGER OALE; December 31, 1367; 3S36 "Jackson Boulevard, Highland, Michigan; age 18; beloved son of Thelmer, A. and Mildred Stogner; dear brother of Mrs. Norma Huffman and Robert be _ at. 1:30 p.m. it the Huntoon Funo-al Home, interment In Perry Ml, Park Cemetery. Mr. Stogner will slefe at the funeral. home, visiting hours 3 lo S lie in stan Hr* vilrtfi. 7 to 3 QJTU _____ IrbBRG, EDLA W.t Decern-33, 1767 ; 4730 Algonquin; West deer mother oT Mrs; Ragnar C,. (Ruth M.) Peterson and Eric E. Westerberg; dear sister of Mrs. Ellen Glerdrym and Martin R. Radler; also' survived by three grandchildren end five great-grandchildren. Fyneral service ..Win be held, Tuesday; January 2 at 1:30 p.m, at the C. J Gad-hardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment In utlawa Park Cemetery, independence Township. Mrs. Wssterberg Will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours ] to 3 end I X • . prtn. - : WHlYNWi^'R^LMER. L-f Decem- ber 27, 1367; 2 Kentwftbn Drive, Pleasant Ridge; age II; husband of Ermine Whitney; tether et James J. Llvlngton; uncla of Dr. • M. L. Whitney and John H. Whit-, nay; alto survived by. two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January l at I am. at the Bell Chapel er the William R. Hamilton company, no i. Maple, Birmingham.