The Weather
U. I. WMfhtr Burtiu Ftnuil \ - ' ■ (6*unf p«,, t) . ,«
VOL. 125 — NO. 283
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Edition lr::*
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Cuts in City Services
Won't Oppose 'Hot Pursuit' by
U.S.--Sihanouk
FIRST BABY OF ’68 — Mrs. Richard Brooks holds her newborn daughter, Amy Leigh, who is the winner of the First Baby of the Year contest. Born Monday at 12:08 a m., Amy Leigh is the onfy child of Mr. and Mrs. Brooks of 747 Birdsong,, Milford. She was born at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.
j ByBOBWISLER
Cuts in city services ordered by the Pontiac City Commission two weeks ago will take place no later than Monday unless the Oakland bounty Circuit Court rules out an income tax election, Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., said last night.
This includes a $35,000 subsidy for.bus service in the city.
Mercury Expected tb Plunge Tonight
In Today's Press
Avon Cifyhood
Rochester, township officials |
£ engaged in verbal battle — I
PAGE A-4.
Milliken
i Role as stand-in for* Gov. 1 Romney is growing — PAGE B-8.
State Crime Unit Stiffer riot laws, limited wiretapping among recommends- L>
& tions — PAGE C-9.
Area News A-4 |
Astrology ................. C4 1
i Bridge .......................C-8 I
Crossword Puzzle .........D-15 |
Comics ................... C-8 I
Editorials A-6 §
Food Section ........C-l, C-5 |
Markets D-9 f
Obituaries B4
Social Security............A-7 $}
Sports .............. D-l—D-3 *
Theaters ................ D-8 «
TV-Radlo Programs ....... D-15 |
Wilson, Earl ............ D-15 |
Women's Pages ....... B-l—B-4
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K tea
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questing that he intervene in a suit brought against the city.
RESTRAINING ORDER
ested party would allow him to defend the validity of the petitions instead of the city.
The suit, started by a Pontiac fireman and a policeman, asks for a permanent
Related Stories, Page B-7
A hearing is scheduled tomorrow morning before Judge William J. Beer to argue the merits of petitions requesting a referendum election on the income tax ordered in October by the City Commission.
restraining order preventing the City Commission from setting a referendum election on the income tax question.
Orice Coon's request is filed it would be up to Judge Beer to determine whether he would allow Coon to intervene as an interested party.
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A hearing would probably have to be held on this matter and thus delay the hearing on whether the petitions are indeed valid. 1
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UP1) -Prince Norodom Sihanouk today issued a statement giving American troops freedom to chase Communists fleeing, Vietnam into Cambodia’s border jungles.
The chief of state, in the statement containing remarks made in a provincial speech Sunday, said he would not send his 35,000-man army against U. S. troops engaged in such “hot pursuit.”
t
Baby Bonanza Won
by Milford Parents
However, the hearing requested by the city’s director of law, Sherwin M-. Birn-krant, could be decayed. .
it it if
Robert D. Coon, a Pontiac attorney, said this morning that he would file today with Circuit Court a petition re-
Judge Beer last,week coo tinned a temporary restraining order total a^ hearing could be held. > ’■ ' •
PETITION VALIDITY
Sihanouk lashed “some Cambodian and foreign” critics of his decision to allow the Americans freedom of border action.
The suit names the City Commission as defendants because the election machinery of the city is controlled by the commission.
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Petitions requesting the election were circulated by a group organized by Cecil C. Mullinix of 571 Lowell. Coon said he was acting on behalf of Mullihix and the petition circulators.
Some 1,900 signatures were turned fit three weeks ago to the city clerk’s office, but, the suit brought Against the city charges that the petitions containing the signatures were not properly drawn up.
Winston L. Livingston, a Detroit at-t o r n e y. representing the plaintiffs, charged that:
Sihanouk said bis refusal to Oppose any such American ?hot pursuit” whs in no way an invitation for border Crossing by U. fi. forces in neighboring South Vietnam. -
The Cambodian leader said he would use his troops against the Americans if U. S. forces seize Cambodian territory and refuse to surrender it.
“Pretty hectic,” said Mrs. Richard Brooks about the activity around her .generated by her new title, mother of the first baby of 1968.
The Brooks, who live at 747 Birdsong, Milford, have named their daughter Amy Leigh. She was born Monday at 12:08 a.m.
CITY’S POSITION
An Arctic cold wave moved into Michigan today, leaving a trail of slowly but steadily falling temperatures.
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A temperature of 22 in the morning, before the cold wave hit, was expected tq be the day’s high.
The city- finds itself in tije position of being Charged with defending the validity of the petitions. But, the city officials would like nothing better than for the petitions to be declared invalid.
• — The petitions don’t contain endorsements of the names and addresses of three persons filing them, in violation of the city charter, and,
• — The petitions do not contain certification by the circulator that “he is qualified to circulate this petitioh ... and that each signature pn the petition was signed in his presence, ”in violation of the Michigan Election Law.
McCarthy to Enter N.H.,Dem Primary
Intervention by Coon as an inter- * (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4)
CONCORD, N.H. Iff) — Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., has decided to enter the New Halmpshire presidential primary March 12, his chief supporter in the granite State, David Hoeh, said
Forecasts for tonight and tomorrow call for mostly cloudy and colder weather with snoa^flnrries likely.
ers
Call
today.
Hoeh of Hanover said McCarthy will .seek a full slate of national convention delegates pledged to him.
Flash
McCarthy is opposing President Johnson on the issue of the Vietnam war.
The mercury in the area is expected to plunge tonight to a range from 5 below zero to five above.. ...
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Partty sunny and continued cold is the forecast for Friday. t
Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: 'today 40, tonight 30, tomorrow 20.
Twenty was the low thermometer reading prior to 8 a.m. The mercury recorded 22 at 2 p.m.
for Mediator in Wage Talks
The Waterford Township Professional Fire Fighters Association, Local 1335, has requested a mediator from the Michigan Labor Mediation Board to assist in the unit’s current negotiations with the Township Board toward a 1968 contract for firemen.
it if it
“We have reached an impasse with the board," said Lt. Donald D. Somerville, president of the association which represents all 21 township firemen with the exception of the chief and assistant chief.
duty time,” said Somerville. “So we are no longer providing this free service and will be shorthanded,” he emphasized.
Hoeh said he received a telegram from the senator last night.
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McCarthy had called off plans to tour Europe and Southeast Asia, Hoeh said, and would be lin New Hampshire within JJfe next two weeks to campaign “in excess of 12 to 15 days.”
The crux of the issue is that township policemen were offered $200 more in wage increases this year than firemen, who were to receive a $600 across-the-board boost.
“The board has created disparity between the police and fire departments,” said Somerville. “That's what we’re fighting.
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“Up to this time,” said Somerville, “we have always had parity between v the two departments.
HARMONIOUS RELATIONSHIP
“We have, in my opinion, maintained a harmonious relationship with the police department and would hope to continue this relationship,” he said.
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Because of the impasse in negotiations which began in September, professional firemen presently will no longer doiible as volunteer fire fighters.
it- ■ h *
“We (full-time paid firemen) will rtn frain from jnaklng fire runs on our off-
1m ui Sarins Mr OrsnS OMnlns—Houi* «f BM-rsomi. SM our Ml, Pogo S-l. —ADv.
UNTANGLE WRECKAGE-Pennsylvanla Railroad crews move In to clear the wreckage of 26 freight cars—many of them loaded with chemicals—after long-smoldering fires finally were quenched late yesterday at Dunrelth, Ind. The accident occurred New Year's night when two trains sideswlped, setting off a series of explosions In ammonia, gasoline and
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ners for two, gift certificates, a tire, a car wash and polish, slippers for mother, a ham, dry cleaning certificates and flowers.
The girl was born after a routine delivery at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Brooks drove his wife to the hospital the day before. >
Brooks, 24, is a technician in the noise and vibration laboratory at General Motors Proving Grounds in Milford. His wife, also 24, worked at Community National Bank.
Traditionally, the first baby born in the new year in ^iis area receives numerous gifts from area merchants.
. Gifts include a,case of disposable diapers, a savings bond, a savings account, cases of milk, baby shoes, a diamond baby ring, baby clothes, a silver cup, a baby blanket and a high chair.
For the parents are such gifts as din-
DR. ROBERT E. WALDEN
The County Health Department today issued a warning against eating cooked corn beef purchased within the last *72 hours from Bottle & Basket Restaurant, 190 N. Hunter, Birmingham.
Mental Health Leader Resigns
Numerous cases of food poisoning have turned up since New Year’s Eve and more cases were coming in today, said Dr. Bernard Borman, county health director.
ByEDBLUNDEN
One of the leading figures in Oakland County’s mental health program has resigned.
Dr. Robert E. Walden, 47, director of the program for the Oakland County Community Mental Health Services Board, was one of the highest paid county employes at $30,000 annually. He. was the center of a controversy for the last few months.
Criticism was leveled at Dr. Waldeft by employes of Oakland Training Institute in Berkley where some 40 mentally retarded children are cared for. The dissident group claimed lack of leadership for their program, among other things. 1
Twelve of a staff of 14 had turned In resignations which would have been effective today.
However, on Dec. 23 it was announced a compromise had been reached and 10 of the staff decided to stay. The other two reportedly are leaving for different reasons.
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The OTI group was given a pay boost and a consultant, Mrs A Rita Charron,
was hired, to see to their problems.
The OTI operation has had difficulties since it began about two years ago and four directors quit in 16 months.
Dr. Walden was hired to head all the
county’s mental health programs in June 1965. Oakland was the first county in the state to set up a separate organization of this type under new laws, ibis fiscal year its budget Is $2.2 million.
AP Wlrtpholo
oil tankers, forcing evacuation of the residents. Officials say the 236 residents of Dunreith will be allowed to return to their homes today when a deadly chemical compound is removed from a lank car left battered but unbroken in the wreckage. (Story, Page A-2.)
Dr. Walden came to the county after a nationwide search'for a, director. He had been superintendent of Lakin State Hospital, La-kin, W. Va.
He received his medical degree from M.aharry Medical College, Nashville, Tenn., and took residency in psychiatry from 1957 to 1960 at Brockton and Boetm veterans' hospitals in Maasachttietta.
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. I)
Social Security Expanded
SAN ANTONIO, Tex., (API—President Johnson has signed into law bills greatly expanding Social Security benefits. and federal aid to education—keystones to his Great Society legislative program.
He hailed the passage’ of the measures as triumphs for the nation’s poor. But he had nothing at all to say as he signed a third measure—the $2.29-billion foreign aid bill—which imposes the sharpest ^ dollar limit on total U.S. aid to other nations since the program began 20 years ■go-
Johnson said the expansion of Social Security benefits is the “greatest etepr forward” since the system was initiated .during the RooSevelt administration in 1935.
The next phase, he said, calls for close scrutiny of America’s welfare system which he branded “outmoded and in need of major changed r r~
He appointed a 19-member commission to “examine any and every plan, however unconventional, which £ould promise a constructive advance in meeting the income needs of the American people.”
Related Story, Page A-2
The President named Ben W. Heine-man, 53, chairman and chief executive officer of the Chicago and; Northwestern Railroad Co., to head the commission.
The education bill provides a record —$9^~billton for elementary and secondary, schools., The Social Security bill increases benefits by at least 13 per cent for 24 million persons, _ ^
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Social Security checks going out im March will reflect the new-increase# benefits. Minimum monthly payments Tise from $44 to $55. The maximum will
be $160.50, compared to the present $142. The average monthly check for husband and wife ovpr 65 increases from $145 to $165.
“One million more people will be lifted above the poverty line,” Johnson said, and 65,000 disabled widows and 175,000 children will receive benefits for the first time.
MEDICARE
Medicare benefits are expanded to include additional days of hospitalization. Outside earnings of $140 instead of $125 a month are permitted with no reduction TiTbenefltS.
There will be additional taxes, though, for worker and employer, amounting to as much as $52,80 in 1968 on earnings of $7,800 or more.
The new law-keeps the tax rate at 4.4 per cent in 1968, but the amount "Of salary -
on which the tax is levied goes up from $6,600 to $7,800. Eventually, the tax rate will rise to 5.9 per cent by 1987.
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The education bill continues until the middle of 1970 a program of aid to elementary and secondary schools, giving states more say in how the money is used.
BENEFITS OF LAW
This new law, he said, brings special educational and health services to nine million of our poorest children, sparks a new effort to prevent dropouts, includes programs for handicapped children, help for rural schools and sets up bilingual education programs for children whose first language is not
Johnson commented on the record of the 90th Congress, saying it was not as productive as he urged it to be arid ldft an agenda oL unfinished business.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
v-V i&i
Renewed in State
-LANSING (AP)—A handful ofjtion, left the lieutenant governor
citizens representing Michigan's most prestigious political church, civic and labor groups renewed a pledge Tuesday to light for a statewide open housing law.
Republican acting Gov. William G. Milliken, who led an un successful bid for passage of such a law last month, predicted that this time “we will be successful.’’
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The leaders met with Milliken for nearly two hours to map open housing strategy to be followed in the regular legislative session, which begins Jan. 10.
The meeting fell on the eve of the return of Gov. George Romney, who had added the controversial issue to the agenda of a special fall session.
Romney, a contender for the I960 GOP presidential nomina-
in charge of running the state and coordinating open housing efforts before leaving Dec. 7 on a month-long tour of Europe, the Middle East and Asia
MAJOR ROLE
With Romney tied up in presidential primary campaigns Milliken likely will play a major role in spearheading any future open housing move.
The special session bill, which would have outlawed1 discrimination based on race, color, religion or national origin in most real estate transactions, monopolized headlines last inonth, but failed in a 47-65 house vote. ★ ★ ★
“The bill, in my judgment and that of everyone present here today, is not dead,’’ Milliken said. “It’s merely waiting to be reactivated.” "*
Attending the meeting were the state Republican and Democratic chairmen and representatives of the Michigan AFL-CIO, United Auto Workers, Michigan and Detroit councils of churches, Michigan Catholic Conference, Jewish Community Council, State Chamber of Comrqerce and Michigan Association of Police Chiefs.
RIOT COMMITTEE Also present were members: of the New Detroit Committee, named by Romney and Detroit' Mayor Jerome Cavanagh to seek answers to last July’s djs-, astrous Detroit riots.
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Democratic State ■ Chairman Sander Levin said he and GOPj chairman Elly Peterson planned talks within the next two weeks concerning what can be done by both parties to pass the bill.
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Birmingham Area News
City Alters Boat-Trailer Code
BIRMINGHAM - After ex-iof physical factors such as sizelbeled B-2, but consent of fiQper tensive discussion, the City Com- of lot or building location. ' cent of all property owners wim-ipission last night passed an Under the amendment, trail- io 500 feet of the proposed site amendment to the city code qov- en and boats may not be stored must he secured first, ering proper storage of house at‘‘the front of a residential trailers, boats and boat trailers.!zone district, and may not be 1
Unaffected by the new ordf «tored beside a bouse between; nance will be owners of boats.the front and back of a district' at the time of the amendment’s f°f n,or* dlaB * days-passage, and owners unable to House trailer cami>s may be;48 HOURS comply with the code because {established in zoning areas la- Trailers, however, may b e
parked anywhere on a residen-
$uch a camp is the only condition under which fitted utility connections may be made to a house trailer, or under which it may be used for living purposes.
Indiana Town Sees End of Gas Threat
Kelley Recommends Anticrime Measures
LANSING (AP)—Higher pay for policemen, two-year grand juries, school- courses in law and order and state money for victims of violent crimes were recommended to the Legislature recomjmendATIONS
rhetoric,” Kelley said. “We can fight it with firm and even-handed law enforcement.” Among the attorney general’s recommendations were these:
today by Atty. Gen.
Kelley. /
In a letter to lawmakers, Kelley warned: “It is an indisputable fact that we are faced with a crime crisis.”
“We cannot fight crime with
Ground War Flares in Viet
Da Nang One Target of Attacks by Reds
Heart Patient 'Doing Well',
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (I) — Dr. Philip Blaiberg, the world’s third heart transplant patient, was “doing very well” today, a (hospital spokesman .said.;; 1^;-
The 58-year-old retired dentist regained consciousness last night and in his first words since the operation said: “I am thirsty. Please give my regards to my wife.”
The heart beating inside the white dentist’s chest belonged to CUve Haupt, 24, a mulatto, but there was no objection frbm the chief defender of apartheid-South Africa’s policy of racial segregation.
Said Prime Minister' Balthazar,^ Vorster: “I am very glad tojjjggr that the operation was successful,”
SAIGON (AP) - Heavy Communist forces launched a series of coordinated attacks in the precarious northern provinces of South Vietnam today, including a rocket assault on the Da ftang air base that destroyed three planes and ground attacks in which at least 19 Americans were reported killed, a ★ ★ w
As the groOnd war flamed up
• Boosts of local police salaries by 25 per cent, part of it financed by the state, coupled with higher education and training requirements for policemen.
• Making the job of county prosecutor a full-time job and joining together into single districts small counties where a [after a New Year’s truce which days to sign the cards and re-full-time prosecutor is not'U.S. officers termed “the worst|turn them to the clerk’s office
^ AF Wlrephoto
PRICE-BOOSTING HARNESS—Shoulder harnesses, such as the one demonstrated by model Lynn Ross, became mandatory on all new cars under federlTsafety regulations. All liew automobHesTolIThg off assembly lines in the U.S. yesterday wjere equipped with the safety straps. With the harness came a boost in car prices, generally ip a range from $23 to $32. (Story, page D-9):
Voter Suspension Cards Sent to695 in Waterford
DUNREITH, Ind. (AP) - Officials say the 236 residents of Dunreith will be allowed to return to their homes when a deadly chemical compound is removed from a tank car left battered but unbroken in the wreckage of two freight trains.
Two Pennsylvania trains side-swiped New Year’s night, setting off a seriies'bf explosions in
would take 8 to 10 hours for the team of experts to transfer the
tial zone district for 48 hours for loading or unloading.
The commission also approved the first phase of a program for interim parking provisions during the construction of the Lot 1 structure at Merrill and Pierce.
Flyers placed on windshields will notify parkers for one week prior to the lot’s closing, and
lethal acetone cyanhydrin to a the 12-hour limit on 25 meters in tanker truck. The compound,{Lot 7 at Merrill and Henrietta used in makihg plexiglass, pro- jwill be lowered to two hours, duces cyanide gas when ex-i * * *
ppsed to air. j jn other business, the com-
MAY FINISH TONIGHT mission set a date of Jan. 22
Officials said the transfer ^ confirmation of the assess-may be complete by tonight. ] merit roll on delinquent debts Many townspeople stayed with ;fr®m 1867.
other i Commissioners also expressed
Notice of suspension of regis tration cards were mailed to 695 voters yesterday by employes of - the Waterford Township clerk’s office.
The 695 electors who were notified have not voted in the past two years as required by state statute to remain on the active registration file.
★ ★ ★ According to township clerk officials, the voters have 30
is
needed.
• State-sponsored training programs for new prosecutors and annual seminars for incumbent prosecutors.
• Permitting prosecutors and the attorney general to petition a court for subpoenas or immunity-granting powers in criminal investigations.
• Increasing the maximum life of a one-man grand jury from one to two years while
yet,” Air Force pilots reported shooting two MIGs from the skies above Hanoi. North Vietnam claimed three U.S. jets were downed.
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Heavy fighting dotted South Vietnam, but it was in the five northern provinces of the 1st Corps Area that the action was hottest.
These actions were reported:
1. Red gunners fired a num-
in order to officially be reinstated as registered electors.
If they fail to comply, their names will be withdrawn from
making some provision for the^f1",0^ in*° a_Hn!*
protection of the anonymity of those called as witnesses before the grand jury.”
• Making it a felony for an unauthorized person to lend money at an interest rate higher than 25 per cent per year.
• Money payments to victims [ of violent crimes, “based upon the principle of giving to the victim of crime or his family at least as much care and attention as we provide td the individual who has been convicted of committing the crime.’
Social Security Key Provisions Are Outlined
WASHINGTON (AP) - Fol-
the active registration file and they will have to reregister in order to vote in this year’s elections in the township.
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Last January when the Jaw was new, notice of suspension of registration cards were sent to 5,713 township voters.
FOUR-YEAR PERIOD
Prior to the state statute, township electors could keep their registration active by voting once every four years.
Currently, there are 21,936 registered voters living in the township.
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Anyone with questions pertaining to his voter status is urged to contact the clerk’s office.
of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division bivouacked in the Quel Nhon Valley 25 miles south of [lowing are the major provisions Da Nang, then- followed with a of the new Social Security bill ground attack. India1 reports said 11 cavalrymen were killed,
70 were wounded and the fight was continuing. There was no report of enemy casualties.
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2. Earlier, before dawn, the enemy raked the flight lines at the big Da Nang base with 45 of the big 122mm rockets, destroyed a $2-million Phantom
Waterford JCs Set Tree Pickup
The Waterford Township Jay-cees announced today that they
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Cash benefits—Present Social Security recipients will receive increases of at least 13 per cent in their February checks due on March 3. Minimum monthly payments will go up 25 per cent, from $44 to $55. The top of the range for individuals will be I jet , and two light spotter planCsT*^®-50. compared to $142 now
signed Tuesday by President j wm hold their annual Christ-Johnson: mas tree pickup Saturday and
The Weather
badly damaged two other spotter planes and a twin-engine C47 and did minor damage to 20 other aircraft. Four 'Americans were wounded in the 10-minute
The'average monthly benefit for a man afid wife now on the rolls will be increased from $145 to $165.
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Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Cloudy and a little colder today, with chance of scattered snow flurries and with steady or slowly dashe white, 44, was hired in from tile safe, of a firm in theUp^g 19^7 a| an annual salary Pontiac State Bank Building by i0f |26,000. He is a University of a burglar who apparently knew Michigan graduate and was on the combination, it was reported the staff of Ford Hospital, De-
to city police yesterday The manager- of the Baxter-Livingstone Finance Co. , located on the building’s-fourth floor, told investigators he found the safe open when he opened the office or the safe.
troit.
Madole was hired in February 1965 at a salary of $13,500 a year after serving as the county envoy in Cali, Colombia, in an Alliance for Progress program.
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He said there were- no signs1 The* Mental Health Services Court Feb. 13 on charges of |of a break-in, either into the of- Board offers both inpatient and manslaughter and leaving the fice or the safe. outpatient care in conjunction
Officers said they later found with several county hospitals, a fourth-floor fire escape door it aids In operation of the three open and tracked footprints in county Child Guidance clinics
of $10,000 and $2,500 bonds on. the snow to a third floor window and operates or aids in operat-
the respective charges set at arraignment yesterday before Waterford Township Justice of the Peace Kenneth Hempstead is Gary Gillespie, 22, of 350 Third.
He was arrested about 4 p.m. Monday at North Telegraph and Walton by an Oakland County sheriff’s deputy while driving a car answering a description of the hit-run vehicle.
This was about 13 hours after Sherry Ann Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lane E. Knight of 203 S. Center . was killed and her escort, Alan Lengeman, 17, son of Mrs. Janet H. Lengeman of 3727 Gulfwood, Milford, was seriously injured by a car which struck them from behind
which was also unlocked. ing various training program* * * * for the mentally retarded.
Identification bureau officers The 12 board members are phecked the scene for finger- named by the County Board of prints, according to police. Supervisors.
Spring Parking Ban Due on Part of Huron Street
As part of a
provement of M59, parking will be banned this spring on Huron from West Wide Track to Perry.
Joseph Koren, traffic engi-„ . . . a®jneer for the city, said today the
WJaLked,?n ,t!!eJk0jicr °Nelimination of parking will al-Milford Road in Highland Town- jow for fjve traffic lanes.1 ship. I
Lengeman is reported in (air! remove
long-range im-be drtnc about the middle of March.
Koren said the street is wide enough for five traffte lanes — two In each direction with one lane for left turns — without widening of the street.
The state highway department and city agreed to changes in the street usage after meetings late last year,
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of two fire companies (12 men) I condition' in Pontiac General'lhe met*r" now on the streets
and closing of two fire stations, Hospital. «"a lh* State Highway Depart-- 0ff, , . hooefuMhat the
a reduction of overtime for em-| Deputies said the couole was ment w|N paint new traffic » *
The time of the accident will' If the petitions are declared ployes of the Department of apparently walking to the'*"e« and in8,«» traffic control be determined at a post-mortem by the court to be invalid, the Public. Work, and in recreation Knight home from Lengeman’s ?•«“ aa ,oon wearterj Huron during the rush hours%s-
’ » pecially between Saginaw and
He estimated the work would | West Wide Track.
freld today, according to deputies
cuts won’t go into effect and the city will take immediate
programs and shutting off some street lights.
Knight home from Lengeman stiflled car when the mishap occurred.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
Hot Pursuit' Eyed on
(E&ITOR’S NOTE - In folUnoing article, the distinguished'scholar Milton Katz, Henry L. Stimson professor of law and director of International Legal Studies, Harvard Law School, discusses the question of “Hot pursuit.’’)
/By MILTON KATZ Written for the Associated Press
“Hot Pursuit” in international law means different things in different circumstances. The doctrine has evolved primarily as a doctrine of maritime inter-national law. But on occasion states have tried to invoke it oh land.
In only one type of situation can its meaning, application and limits be regarded as approximately clear. Suppose that a ship of die state of Erewhon enters territorial waters of the state of Utopia where it violates Utopian customs, fisheries or other law.
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A Utopian patrol vessel pur-
the involving war and self-defense, on, sea and on land. / i Suppose that .Utopia and Erewhon are at war. An Erewhon merchant ship, fleeing from a Utopian warship encountered on the high seas, tries‘to escape into the territorial waters of a neutral state. Hie Utopian warship, pursuing, captures the Erewhon merchant ship in the neutral territorial waters. Utopia might seek to justify the intrusion on the ground of “hot pursuit.” ~
It appears to be at least the American and British view that the capture would be unlawful under international law in relation to the neutral state. Would it also" be unlawful in relation to the enemy state, Erewhon? On this, foreign offices and learned writers have expressed conflicting views, but there appears to be no established doctrine. MURKIER QUESTIONS The legal questions grow murkier when the scenario shifts from sea to land, and murkier still when groups of viryiflg and
sues her through the territorial .uncertain allegiance become in-Waters out into the high seas volved. American experience in this regard goes back a long
where it eventually captures her. Is the arrest lawful or-does it violate the freedom of the seas?
The arrest is lawful if the pursuit was continuous—“hot”— throughout; but the right of hot pursuit ends as soon as the fleeing ship enters its own territorial waters or the territorial waters of a third country.
PROCLAIMED ANEW
This doctrine evolved as a part of customary international law. It was proclaimed anew on April 29, 1958 in Article 23 of the Geneva Convention on the High Seas, signed by some 95 states, including the United States, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, France, the Republic of China, Thailand, Cuba and Yugoslavia. S
From time to time, some
way, with the United States on both the'giving and the receiving end.
In the Seminole War in 1817, Gen. Andrew Jackson pursued the retreating Seminole Indians into West Florida, then Spanish territory, where he captured St. Marks and Pensacola in which the Indians had taken refuge. Spain protested and demanded indemnity. The United States restored St. Marks and Pensa-j'cola to Spain, but justified Jackson’s conduct on the ground of “the total and lamentable failure of Spain to restrain, by force, her Indians from hostilities against the citizens of the United States,” in Secretary of State John/Adams’ words.
During an insurrection in Canada in 1837, the shoe was on the other foot. Defeated Canadian
states have tried to invoke “hot insurgents took refuge in the pursuit” to justify behavior in United States, where they ap-wholly different circumstances,'parently enlarged their forces
Reagan Is the Delight of Party Fund-Raisers
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Gov. Ronald Reagan, already a million-dollar-plus fund raiser for the Republican party, is collecting the kind of political IOU’s that helped Richard M. Nixon and Barry Goldwater win presidential nominations.
From traditionally RepUbli*
Related Story, -Page A-7
can Iowa to new GOP country in the Old South, party chairmen beam with delight when they land the California governor for fund-raising dinners. He is one of the biggest draws iifttepubli-can history—“the all-time champ,” according to Chairman James Halley of the California Republican Central Committee.
Reagan will test his appeal in the heartland of the East—the Establishment of Dewey, Willk-ie and Eisenhower—on a tour next month of New York, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C.
The name Reagan tq date has meant money te hard-pressed party finance officials in Oregon, Seattle, Houston, Dallas, Des Moines, Milwaukee and Columbia, S.C. Gratitude for similar favors created blocs of loyal national convention delegates
for Nixon in 1960 and Goldwater in 1964.
Reagan keeps insisting he is not a candidate and hopes only to head a “favorite son” delegation from California to the 1968 convention.
In answer to questions 1 at a Dec. 19 news conference, Reagan conceded that the backing of conservative Republicans who want him to run for president is “gratifying, there is no questibn about that."
★ ★ v ★
He added, however: “My position hasn’t changed at all. I’m not a candidate.”
Nevertheless, the remark by Gov. Tom McCall of Oregon that Reagan is “the hottest political property around” is becoming a favorite saying among Reagan watchers.
IN DOLLAR TERMS
In dollar terms, Reagan raised nearly $1.4 million in September and'October for depleted GOP coffers, says Tom Reed, a wealthy 33-year-okl former appointments secretary who handles the governor’s outf of-state political contacts.
■k k ★
National speechmaking tours are described by Reagan as “party chores that should be done.” He is well aware that such ventures heighten speculation they are fronts for a full-scale campaign for the GOP presidential nominatioii.
through participation by Americans.
From Buffalo, they harrassed the Canadian side of the Niagara River, using a small steamer named “The Caroline.” Canadian forces chased the Caroline into American waters, put fire to it and set it adrift over Niagara Falls.
U. 8. PROTEST
The United States protested the violation of her territory, but the British insisted their act was necessary as- self-defense since the United States had not effectively policed her own frontier.
In time, the affair was amicably settled. Britain apologized for the violation of American territory. The United States conceded there was a “self-defense” exception to the inviolability of territory, but emphasized that such exceptions arose only when the “necessity of that self-defense is instant,' overwhelming, and leaving no choice of means, and no moment for deliberation," in Secretary of State Daniel Webster’s words.^
Comparable difficulties arose later between the United States and Mexico when, over a period of years, armed bands from Mexico intruded into the United States and escaped back into Mexico.
A peak was reached in the famous pursuit of Pancho Villa by Gen. Pershing in 1916. Villa, a revolutionary deader or a bandit, depending on the point of view, attacked Columbus, New Mexico on March 9, 1916, burning buildings and killing Americans.
PRIOR UNDERSTANDING
American troops under Pershing went after him and hunted him in Mexico. There had been | a prior understanding between the United States and Mexico that armed forces of either country might cross into the territory of the other,to punish escaping bandits.
★ ★ ★
But the Mexican government showed uneasiness over the agreement, insisting that Pershing withdraw. Hie United States stuck to its pursuit, reaffirming a reciprocal right on the part of Mexico. .
★ ★ ★
The respective positions gradually hardened. The United States maintained that repeated bandit outrages from Mexico which Mexico seemed unable to control left the United States with no alternative in viewjpf its own duty to protect American lives and territory. Mexico replied that no excuse could justify entrance into its territory by foreign forces without its permission.
The particular difficulties were worked out, but the respective attitudes were maintained.
SUMMING UP
Perhaps a few statements can be made to sum up without distorting the picture through over simplification. International raw has established doctrines of the inviolability of national territory and the freedom of the seas.
There is one widely acknowledge “hot pursuit” exception to the doctrine of freedom of the seas, described above. Other al leged “hot pursuit” exceptions have been claimed to the doctrine of territorial inviolability! but the alleged exceptions have not found general support and have not become established as a part of international law.
* . * *
Contemporary events make it easy to imagine possible novel claims of a right of hot pursuit in situations far more complicated, confused and dangerous than any here described.
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3-DAY Only Sale at SIMMS
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Alaron B140P radio as shown operates on batteries or AC electrical plug-in. Powerful 14-transistor plus 5 diodes bring in Police Calls, FM and AM broadcasts loi/d and clear. Buy now Ot January clearance price — it's a regular $49.95 value.
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Cameras -Main Floor
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9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Hare at SIHMS
To start the New Year off right Simms is trying to clear out df) the left over merchandise and we also included some regular merchandise and all at low discount prices. Shop all day Thursday for these specials. Rights reserved to limit quantities.
13xl8-ln. Remnants Rpg. King Size or Filters Family Size ‘Stripe’ Famous SHOPCRAFT
Rug Squares lft:l Aft Cigarettes qis ha Tooth Paste Q<1 AA Oitital Sander 14| AA
IV rlilf tf Wide voriety of colors in ptush , pile and loop iqjemnants of high value carpeting. Ideal for small areas. —Basement •’nlllVV $7.00 value. Your choice of regular size, king size or filters. No. 100 or 101 mm at this price. Limit 2 ctns. Tobacco — Main Floor mt ? 1#W H Reg. 95c value. Big family size tube of Stripe toothpaste. The kind the kids want tause. Drugs —Main Floor Iff*If” Model 9151 oi'bitol\$ander-for . sotln smooth finishes. Qn plastic, metals, and wood. ' 2nd Floor
First Quality Boys’ Reg-10e Sellers 16-0z. ’Norwich’ 5-Sewn Household
Corduroy Pants Candy Bars Pepto Bismol Com Broom
2-3.00 16:1.00 1.00 1.00
Washable ebrduroy pants in olive Your choice of fresh 10c size candy Sturdy 5-sewn corn broom with smooth
Sizes 8| or tan in sizes 14 and 16. bars — Hersbeys, Baby Ruth, Milky 1 $1.69 value, 16-oz. size. The pink liquid wooden, handle. For all floor surfaces.
— Basement Way etc. Limit 16. Candy — Main Floor for that green, feeling. Drugs — Main Floor — 2nd Floor
100% Navy Blue Wool 4 Pick-Up Solid Body 130’s ’Parke Davis’ 15x27-ln. Sponge Rubber
Melton Jackets Electric Guitar Myadec Vitamins Fatigue Mat
4.00 38.00 4.00 9 2:1.00
Warm 100% wool melton with full zip- Our regular $49.50 seller. Solid body. $10.38 value. Hi potency vitamin and Soft sponge rubber mot that reduces
per front, 2 slash pockets, and buttoned cut away style electric guitar with tremlo mineral formula. From famous. Parke fotigue in the legs. For use at the sink.
— Basomont . ' Sundries — Main Floor Drugs - Main Floor stove or any work area. Limit 2. ' —2nd Floor
Boys’ Hooded Ladies’ TIMEX Electric 15-OZ. Score Liquid 6-Pc. Hardwood
Sweat Shirts Wrist Watch Men’s Hair Groom Canister Set
2.00 3100 1.00 3.00
Fleece lined, 100% cotton with Wdrm hood. Navy, grey, black or red. First quality and American made. Sizes S-M-L. — Basement Reg. $50.00-, seller, with 1 OK rolled gold cose, sweep second hand, and black leather strap. Sundries — Main Floor $1.79 value, 15-oz. barber size bottle. The liquid hair groom with the grooming action of a cream. Drug* — Main Floor Provincial^finished hardwood colonial style set includes 4 canisters for flour, sugar etc. plus salt and pepper set. —2nd Floor
Men’s Nylon Shell 750-Power ZOOM Microscope Kit a i New Pink Formula Renews Worn Finishes
Insulated Vests Creme SlURpO Antiquing Kit
3.00 13.00 $19.95 value. Model No.*5402. Com- 1.00 2.00
Nylon shell with DoCron insulation for - extra warmth. Variety of colors In sizes 1 S-M-L-XL. — Basement ^ pletely equipped for true scientific study and experiment. Includes frog for dissecting. Sundries —Main Floor, $2.00 value. In handy jar. New pink Lustre Creme for shiny clean and manageable hair. Drugs — Main Floor Complete kit .contains all necessary materials to antique furniture. Choice of red, white or gold. —2nd Floor
75% Wool Navy Style 17-Jewel Ladies’TIMEX Purse Size Free Approx. 11-Qt. Capacity
Men’s Pea Coat Wrist Watch Hair Spray Plastic Pails
8.00 14.00 1.00 2 1.00
75% wool with rayon lining and 70% innerlining make this pea coot extra , warm. With black or gold color buttons. Reg. $19.95 Model 60441 with round gold color cose, sweep second hand, plain dial and leather strap. "Sundries — Main Floor $1.99 value, 13-oz. size. Hidden Magic Hair Spray and you get a refillable purse size FREE. Cosmetics — Main Floor With bole handle. Will not crack or dent. Easy to clean. Use for scrub pail, paint'
i —Basement pail, etc. Limit 2. 2nd Floor
Acetate or Eiderlon Electric-Waterproof Men’s Choieoof 3Typ«s Fits Most Makes of Cars
Ladies’ Panties TIMEX Watch Pacquins Hand Cream Shock Springs
3 1.00 29.00 1.00 3.00
Slight irregulars of 59c values. Washable acetate or eiderlon pantie briefs or band 1 leg. Sizes 5 to 10. 1 Clothing — Main Floor Model No. 90252 — Operates on tiny battery, easily replaced. With sweep second hand, plain dial and metal slfetch band. Sundries — Main Floor $1.69 value, 10-oz. jar. Your choice of normal, extra dry or medicated formula.. Cosmetics — Main Floor No. 49 Fnjoy n safe ride. Rear auto shock springs that hold up to 750 lbs. Fits most makes of cars. — 2nd Floor
1 Assorted Cottons Mesh or Plain Seamless 9x18-In. Rubber Exercise and Massage
} Yard Goods ) A \ 1 AA Nylon Hose 0?1 AA Stair Treads mil AA ’ts* Conditioner 1AAA
| v * liUtl J Assarted prints, checks and solid colors I in 100% cotton yard goods. For quilts livU First quality hose in new fall shades mesh or plain style. Sizes 8 Vi to 11. O r liifU Black or brown rubber stair treads, help prevent falls and reduce wear on ItfivV Exercise and massage at the same time. With 2 padded cushions (the biggest one vibrates) and pedals and pulleys for
I Clothing— Main Floor Clothing — Main Floor wooden steps. * 1 — 2nd Floor exercise. — 2nd FloSM
98 N. Saginaw St. Downtown Pontiac
SIMMS**
Your Discount Store Since 1934
ffc.
ROY REWOLD Rochester Mayor
7 ■
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william McCullough
Avon Trustee
Charged is Fred Parkkila, 28, of the Wailed Lake area who is being sought by police.
‘ATTACKED BY 7 MEN’
State Representative Will Speak to PJA
ROCHESTER — State Rep. Donald E. Bishop, R-63rd District, will speak at 8 p.m. Monday for the North Hill Elementary School PTA.
Bishop will discuss recent Michigan legislation affecting all aspects of education. He will receive and answer questions from the audience,
The meeting has been opened to the public, according to Bernard Vosteen, president.
Cranbrook
Events
Following is a list of special events taking place at the facilities at Cranbrook on Lone Pine Road in Bloomfield HillS:
PLANETARIUM — Regular public demonstrations, Wednesday at 4 p.tn. and weekends at 2:30 and | 3:M p.m. The topic for the month * is “Telljng Time by the Stars."
ATOMARIUM - Public demon- | stration Sunday at 3 30 p m. or by a appointment. Admission 25 cents.
Rochester, Township Officials Air Views
AVON TOWNSHIP - The verbal battle over the election Jan. 15 to incorporate all of Avon Township Outside the City of Rochester is heating up here.
Both city and township government officials have released statements citing opposing views.
Mayor Roy Rewold of Rochester today related findings of the Rochester Jay-cees seminar seriek and the Rochester Area League of Women Voters which have urged a single unit of government lor the combined area.
“I would urge a ‘no’ vote,” said the mayor. “My reasoning fdr this is that some of the proponents of a favorable vote say that we could consolidate the two'cities at a later date." V'^ //
Mayor Rewold said that checking the possibility of two cities consolidating showed that it has never happened in state history.
“I will do all I can as a lifetime resident of the Rochester area and as mayor of the City of Rochester to encourage the annexation of the Avon area to the City of Rochester." ‘ .
Rewold’s statement followed an earlier one put out by Township Trustee William McCullough wherein the recently proposed development of the $25-miUion Fried-Jacobson property at Walton and Livernois and the projected R. P. Scherer Corp. pharmaceutical plant on former Parke-Davis property were cited.
Said McCullough:
• “Avon Township has an area of 34A square miles compared to Rochester’s 1.6 square miles.
• “Avon Township has a population
of approximately 20,000 as compared to the City of Rochester’s approxi- , mately 6,000, *
• “The growth potential of the township'exceeds that of Rochester. // I
* * ★
• “Unless Avon Township incorporates and adopts a charter of. its own' choosing, it could, because of annexation, be forced to a charter and form of government about which it has no choice.
“How sentimental can the taxpayers
of our township afford to be?" McCbt-lough asked. -
PROTECT INTEREST
, “They can b^st protect their interest in their property by voting ‘yes’ on the incorporation proposal.
“Once we have protected our bargaining posithftf by incorporation, we then can consider the advisability of eventual merger with the City of Rochester, because we then can go to the bargaining table as equals and not as country cousins."
JCs Feel Avon Annexation
/ . 6 *. * |||
to Rochester Is Best Answer
THE PONTIAC PRESS
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
A—4>
ROCHESTER — The Jaycees, an active group of community-minded young men in the Rochester-Avon area, has come ouriujavpr of annexation as the route toward unification of governments here. ;
An incorporation vote for 4von Township excluding Rochester is due Jan. 15.
Following “an extensive study of the existing atmosphere of local governments," thp’ group has adopted a four-point statement of conclusions which includes:
Man Is Charged With Try to Kill 2 Brothers
• They agree with the objectives of simplification by avoiding duplication of governmental efforts and the prevention of fragmentation of the total Rochester-Avon area.
• They believe that if the Jan. 15 election passes, in all likelihood the result would be the formation of two separate cities, excluding the City of
Rochester, to be fragmentation of the community.
• They believe that annexation of, the entire Avon Township to the. City -of Rochester, as requested in the annexation petitions now on file in Oakland County is the most logical route toward unification.
• Whichever course the voters of
the community choose, the Jaycees are pledged to study and work toward unification as long as it remains a possibility. "
★ ★ ,★
The statement of the Jayceek followed a similar one by thg Rochester League of Women Voters and another by Mayor Rov Rewold of Rochester.
Statements favoring the incorporation vote Jan. 15 have so far been issued by Harold Pepper, chairman of the Avon Township Study -'Committee, and by Township Trustees William McCullough and Philip Trimble. ■'
Troy Delays Setting Tax Vote
TROY — The City Commission last night tabled for the second time determination of the date for a half-mill tax election.
The proposed increase, to be used for construction of a city library, is still tentatively scheduled for Feb. 19, provided a tfity primary election is held the same day.
Fire Local Head Asks Vote
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Police ,here have charged a 28-year-old man with attempted murder of two brothers at a New Year’s Eve party at 6551 Drake.
The two warrants were issued yesterday by Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson.
The motion to table came because the Troy Board of Education, also meeting last night, was considering a new school millage election Feb. 19.
★ ★ ★,
-Friends of the Troy Library, a citizens’ group backing the half-mill hike, have urged that the two millage votes be set on different dates.
BUILDING CODE AMENDMENT
The two brothers injured are Randall and Thomas Ryan, both of 21355 Farmington, Farmington.
Randall, 19, who suffered stab wounds in theL back and a collapsed lung, is in satisfactory condition at Botsford Hospital.
★ * *
Thomas, 21, who earlier had been treated and released for stab wounds in the back and back of his head, is now in Selfridge Hospital in satisfactory condition.' \ «
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — The president of the newly formed firemen’s union here has applied for an election which may certify Local 1721 of the West Bloomfield Township Firefighters Association of the International Association .of Firefighters.
The request for approval to hold the election was made after the Township Board refused to recognize Local 1721.
The board wants to assure that the local does represent the majority of the nine full-time firemen and about 30 or 40 volunteers, explained Township Supervisor John Doherty.
has always bargained with a lawyer who said he was representing the firemen.
* ★ ★
Local 1721 president Donald Nelson made the election request to the Michigan Labor Mediation Board iri Detroit.
STATION ‘CLOSED’ AGAIN
Nelson reported that the Green Lake station was “closed" again Friday from 6:30 to 7 a.m. Saturday. He said earlier that die same station was also “closed” the Saturday before Christmas.
In other business, the commission approved ' a proposed amendment to the city’s recently adopted building code, dealing with swimming pdol safety regulations.
Instead of an “adequate enclosure-’’ as is specified in the present code, any pool containing over 12 inches in depth of water at any point must now have a chain link, frame or masonry enclosure at least four feet high.
Gates in the enclosure must have selflocking latches four feet high or other-
The station was closed both times because of a lack of manpower, Nelson explained.
The supervisor added that the board
The Ryan brothers, home on leave froms the Army, were attacked by seveii men in the parking lot after they arrived at the party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Barr, police said.
A third stabbing victim has been; identified by witnesses as Jack Watson, age and address unknown, according to police.
Also injured during the melee at about 3:30 a.m. New Year’s Day Was Charles Parkkila, 25, of 6782 Drake, a cousin of Fred Parkkila.
★ * *
Another man, still fnidentified, was reportedly beaten,- said oolice.
When two township policemen arrived at the party scene nearj 3:30 a.m. Monday, there was evidence of a large fight both inside and outside the home, 1 said patrolman Richard Lamphier. ^
Independence Rejects COG
According to Assistant Fire Chief Mel Jorits the Station was not officially closed although no man was in attendance in the building.
* ★ ★
The station was in operation because a volunteer next door was taking fire calls on his monitor and telephone said Jorits.
East Lansing Saga: Tale of 'Goldilocks and the 4 Students'
INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — A vote against seeking membership in the Southeast Council of Governments was unanimous here last night.
The Township Board qualified its motion, however, with a phrase, “at this time.” Clerk Howard Altman said, “I know they would never vote to join without considerable study ofithe issue.’
NOT ALL DOORS LOCKED
Not all the doors of the station were locked, added Jorits who made ,the decision not to have a- man on duty at the station.
Supervisor Doherty reported that for a 10-year period several years ago, the station didn’t have a man od duty in the building all the time but a man answered calls from his home..
* In other business, the board amended its zoning map in four instances to conform with surrounding property classifications.
Areas returned to a residential classification were a small grocery store on Sashabaw Road near Whipple Lake — to be kept as a nonconforming usage; an old synagogue in Woodhall Lake subdivision; and a home adjacent to some industrial zoning at the Clement and White'Lake intersection.
★ ★ ★
By actiop of the board, most of Section 18 in the Reese-Holcomb Roads area was left in an agricultural category. Suburban farms and residential had been proposed for part of the land.
Jorits explained that men weren’t at the Green Lake station because of, a wage dispute and not because of a manpower shortage.
* * *
He said the firemen believed they should be paid more than regular wages when they "work on their off days.
The fire department is under the ultimate authority of the township Fire Committee composed of trustees Walter J .Whitmer and John F. Warren.
EAST LANSING (*) - East Lansing’s Very own “Goldilocks" has red hair and green eyes and goes for bourbon instead of porridge.
Four Michigan State University students returned to their East Lansing apartment after a long holiday break and discovered someone apparently had been living there while they were gone.
Douglas Bailey, 21, of Walled Lake told police someone had been eating their food and sleeping in their beds. ....
And, he said, the someone had taken 500 pennies, three pints of bourbon, sweaters, towels, a clock, a pen, about 40 record albums, a check for $6 and a key to the apartment.
Police said neighbors reported hearing music during the students’ absence and seeing a girl with green eyes and red hair.
City Attorney Chosen 1968 Chairman by Avon Democratic Club
ROCHESTER — Pontiac attorney Joseph F. Kosik of Oakland Township has been named chairman of the Avon Democratic Club for 1968.
★ ★ ★
Other officers named recently are Mrs. Ellen Davenport, Avon Township, vice chairman; Mrs. Ix>uis Berklich. Avon Township corresponding secretary: Mrs. Don Healy. Avon Township, recording secretary; Mrs. F. E. Howe, Rochester,/ treasurer; Thomas Gray, Troy, sergeant alarms. . ,
Trustees elected wfere Mrs. William Tymkow, Avon Township; Glen Douglass, Avon Township: and Mrs. John Ireland, Avon Township.
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Pontiac Prill Photo
i STARTING THE SEASON — The Rochester Civic Center ice rink was initiated for this winter yesterday by (Henna Carlton (left 1. 122 Albertson, Rochester, a senior at Rochester High School, and Jake Martin, 2786 Gravel Ridge, Avon Town-shop.
wise inaccessible to small children from the outside.
★ ★ ★
The commission also voted 4-2 to deny a request from the Boron Oil Co. to rezone Lots 1-7 in John R. Gardens Subdivision from B-l to B-3 to permit the installation of a .service station.
mercial" and said he hoped the planning commission would study possible uses for such areas, adding, “I question whether there is any other use for that corner.” *
If no primary takes place, the millage election may be rescheduled to coincide with the regular City election in April,
CONSIDERABLE DEBATE
Since the intersection involved, John R. and Maple, has three service stations, which Were constructed before the area was rezoned from B-3 to B-l (forbidding service stations), the request brought considerable debate.
Commissioner John Kokalis, who cast a dissenting vote along with Commissioner Wallace B. Hudson expressed his feeling that the corner is “bound to go com-
In other business, the commission approved the special-assessed construction of a 12-inch water main on Square Lake Road from Coolidge to Glen-Moor Subdivision to provide an emergency supply for the well servicing that area.
★ ★ ★ * Also approved was the appointment of Joe Howey as a part-time city librarian on City Manager Paul York’s recommendation.
Howey studying for a master’s degree in library science at the University of Michigan, will work part-time for the city until his graduation in April.
School Board Puts Tax Hike on the Feb. 19 Ballot in Troy
TROY — The board of education last night approved the placing of a 7-mill tax increase on the ballot Feb. 19.
The proposed boost, to remain fin effect for two years, would bring in approximately $750,000 each year to brighten the district’s dim financial picture.
The new millage attempt come®, on the heels of two others, on June 12 and Sept. 11, both of which failed. As a result, the district will incur a deficit of $600,000 by the end of the fiscal year, despite cutbacks in many areas, according to Supt. Rex B. Smith.
The district cannot use present income to apply to expenses, Smith added, because of two loans received last year. One loan, he said, Was against incoming taxes and the other against state aid.
“By March 2,” he continued, "enough taxes wifi have come in to pay off the first loan, and we will have money to handle current expenses.”
The board also approved an effort to seek a $410,000 loan to handle current expenses. “We need more money to see us through till March,” Smith said. “As things are now, we’re going to run out of funds around Jan.-90.”
Orion Township Board to Meet on Tuesdays
ORION TOWNSHIP - The Township Board will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Township Hall, 571 S. Broadway.
Meetings have been put back to the second Tuesday of each month following a summer series of second Wednesday meetings.
Pruning Expert to Talk
MILFORD — James Smith, field landscape architect for the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, will discuss “The Pruning of Trees and Shrubs” for file Milford Garden Club and Senior Citizens Club at 2 p.m. tomorrow. The meeting will take place at the Milford Methodist Church.
More Gold Transferred
WASHINGTON (JK - The Treasury Department said today it has transferred another $450 million in gold from the nation’s money stocks to help cover the recent rash of speculative gold buying in Europe.
Avon Planners Eye $25-Million Project
AVON TOWNSHIP - A $25-million commercial - office - residential development for the southeast corner of Walton and Livernois is currently under consideration by the township planning commission.
The commission, due to meet in study session tonight, expects no formal action as yet, though it has received a letter from Vilican-Leman planning consultants of Southfield, which reports on ’ the proposed project as follows:
The developers told the Avon Planning Commission they would like to start work immedately once zoning problems were solved for the multiuse development.
HIGH-RISE APARTMENTS
No major zoning ordinance change, with the possible exception of high-rise apartment usage in the future, is foreseen by the planning consultants.
“We look for the hew developments (in the Walton-Llvernols area) to emerge as the major commercial‘center serving the region and for the (Rochester) downtown area to assume the rote of a marginal or fringe shopping area.”
Individual parcels of the 19-acre area would, however, have to be zoned ~to usage, according to township officials to permit the stores, the medical office building and the apartments now planned. \
Proposed by Martin and Paul Fried of Cla ridge Properties, Detroit, the development would feature a pedestrian shopping bridge between the projected Jacobson Stores development on the northeast corner of the intersection across Walton to the proposed new development.
Vilican-Leman visualizes the new development changing the character along Walton from the multiply housing, now planned, to commercial and office related to the new center. ,
★ * ' ★
The proposed development area lies now between the Rochester Senior High School and Crittenlon Hospital.
m.
Famous maker dress shirts
MANUFACTURER'S CLEARANCE
3.39 4.39 5.39
Check the labels and you will recognize that these most-wanted shirts are available at substantial savings. You’ll find* a selection which includes spread, button down and tab collars, long sleeves and short; whites, solid colors and stripes, smooth finished cottons, blends and many are permanently pressed. Not all sizes in all styles so get to Hudson’s early for first choice. Stock up now and enjoy these great savings.
Hud*on*» Men’* Shoe*, Pontiac, lit Floor; Men'• Furnishing*, Pontiac 1st Floor; also at Downtown, /Vprthland,. Eastland, W estland.
Pontiac, Northland, Eastland, Westland open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday Til 9 p.m. Downtown Detroit open Monday and Wednesday until 8:30 p.m.
: t .. . s THE PONTIAC .PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JAN I JAR V 3, 1968 J
Ip , j 1 , ■ ■ ' \ ," 9 ... ■ ■■ I. . .. r /(K.
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PiH1 i
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
4S West Huron Street *'?* "V\ ,
Pontiac, Michigan 48056
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
A. rttMlIUB Chairman of tha Board
John W. Bit«o*»«t» ti Executive Vice President and Editor
Bsnr J. Raw Managing Editor
JOHN A. RlUT Secretary and Advertising Director
Rzohasd M. PmossAto Treasurer and Finance Officer
Aslo McCULLT Circulation Manager
Q. Marshall Jordan Local Advertising' Manager
Paul Whiteman
A man who in the Twenties and and early Thirties set America’s feet tapping to a new dimension in inusic died at-77.
Denver-born Paul (Pops)- Whiteman rode the upswing of his rhythmic creation to become recognized as the “Jazz King” of his time.
His king-sized dance band that -numbered 46 musicians was J.he inno- whiteman vator for innumerable others whose notes soon filled the Nation’s glittering dance halls and luxurious restaurants.
★ *★ ★
In his heyday, Whiteman had 50 dance bands on tour under his name while his oWn aggregation featured the programs of top Broadway musicals and radio programs, and even breached the portals of concert halls with its semisymphonic classics.
Many future musical luminaries
Tito Shuffles Schedule of Yugoslav Workers
Yugoslavs began the new year working an unfamiliar time schedule. The Tito government decreed that they will report for work at 8:30 a.m. and quit at 5 p.m. during a Monday-through-Friday workweek. The change does violence to a hallowed Yugoslav worker tradition of arriving at 7 a.m. Monday through Saturday and leaving at 2 p.m., in time for a late luncheon, followed by a nap and perhaps a leisurely stroll.
The government obviously feels that putting Yugoslav workers on a time schedule with their western, capitalist neighbors is more important than tradition. The change offers one more shred of evidence that western business philosophy is taking root in Eastern Europe under Communist regimes.
★ ★ ★
Hungarian and Czech workers have begun to sound like their American union counter-
parts in demanding a bigger voice in economic affairs. Romania virtually had declared its independence from Moscow on economic matters. From Poland come reports that 23 years of Communist rule have been unable to quell the farmers’ bent for free enterprise. , '
It is not entirely clear whether Moscow is merely tolerating subtle practices of capitalism in the Cohi-munist states of Eastern Europe, or' whether Russia itself is leading the way. ,
★ ★
Since Stalin’s death, Soviet leaders have half - acknowledged, that some western economic notions have merit and might be adapted to their economy. They find expression in new emphasis on placating the- Rus-r sian consumer and a steady but cautious introduction of wage-profit incentives.
‘Round Numbers’ Belief Doesn’t Square With Facts
There’s a fascination about years ending with nice round numbers.
Take the year 1000, for example, which most of Christendom was quite certain would bring the end of the world.
★ ★ ★
Or 2000, about which scientists are predicting all sorts of things and which people are beginning to look forward to as marking a fateful and tremendous turning point of some kind or another.
But perhaps we attach too
much significance to such round numbers, suggests Glenn Sea-borg, chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.
Aside from the fact that most great historical dates have no zeros in them —1215, 1492 or 1776, to name a few, have you ever noticed where your car is when the odometer turns the thousand mark? he asks.
It’s usually a place you’d be least likely to want to stop for any length of time.
Editorial Dept. Outbowls Sports
It is fitting that the spirit of the victor reflect magnanimity toward the vanquished, Such is the one harbored by the Editorial Department of TTie Press whose football forecaster overwhelmingly defeated th$ Sports Department’s Supreme Swami in predicting the outcome of the six major bowl games played over New Year’s weekend.
For those who came in late, Mrs. James Wilson, 41 Oak Hill, little more than a month ago won Editorial's annual football contest, thereby gaining the title of Peerless Seer-ess for 1967 together with the winner’s award of a $500 U.S. Savings Bond.
★ ** *
But, you see, Sports’ panel of Swamis (four good men and true, but not necessarily right) customarily make weekly pigskin prognostications throughout the football season. Top predictor among them for the past season was Swami Fletcher Spears, with a winning percentage of 74.
At this point, interdepartmental rivalry reared its ugly bead, and certain anide re-
marks reflecting'' on the ae-cult powers of its - standard bearer reached Editorial’s ears.
So persistent was the calumny that the department, the ethics and gentility of whose personnel is self-admit-tedly impeccable, could bear it no longer, and issued the bowl-games challenge.
Sports duly accepted it, and the stage was set for the greatest grid guessing game since football players stopped wearing shin guards.
Well! What Seeress Wilson did to Swami Spears shouldn’t happen to a dog —er, swami. Of the games covered by the challenge, the soothsayers
picked the same outcome for two games, thus reducing the area of contention to four.
Our feminine fireball took the Orange, Sugar and Sun Bowls like Grant took Richmond, and just missed making it a clean sweep by losing the Rose Bowl when Indiana was felled by South-, ern Cal. i
There, readers, you have it. Editorial has emerged with its image not only unsullied but enhanced. We'd prefer not to comment on that of Sports, since The Press is a family newspaper.
★ ★ *
In recognition of the superlative performance turned in by Seefess Wilson, she and her husband will be Press guests at a de luxe dinner, accompanied not surprisingly by a representative of Editorial and his spouse.
* * a
A As for Spqrts, perhaps the j crow that one of the department’s Swamis, with more hope than wistjom, had staked out^folr Editorial to eat, will serws as the basic ingredient for Swami Stew for four.
; xs. v t HC!" • v • ,
'J&
used Pops’ bandstand as the launching pad to fame and fortune. These included such instrumentalists as the Dorsey brothers, Bix Beiderbecke and Joe Venuti; and singers Bing Crosby, Jane Froman and Morton Downey. »
Although,he immortalized a score of instrumental hits, perhaps his most outstanding contribution to the world of music \yas his commissioning George Gershwin to write “Rhapsody in Blue,” which White-man introduced in a-New York con-certjiall on Lincoln’s Birthday in 1924.
The impresario amassed "untold millions from his career of melody, which enabled a generous nature to support many^worthy causes, provide for friends and associates in distress, and. gratify his hobby for promotion of automobileTaicing and ownership of hundreds of high-powered cars.
★ ★ ' ★
A host of Americans, spanning two generations, are saddened by the loss of one who will long be remembered as the symbol of syncopation.
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You're No Kid If You Remember—
David Lawrence Says:
France to Feel U.S. Restrictions
WASHINGTON - Gen. de Gaulle, may be having some second thoughts about t h e United States, and the French people may be doing some new thinking about Gen. de Gaulle as a consequence of President Johnson’s announcement that tourist*, trade outside the Western Hemisphere will hereafter be substantially restricted.
No countries were mentioned in the plan to reduce tourist spending abroad, and no government was blamed for the crisis which has developed over the soundness of the dollar in world
trade. LAWRENCE
Viewing the whole situation retrospectively, however, the President might not have found it necessary to take such serious measures of limitation as were announced on New Year’s Day if France had wholeheartedly cooperated with the United States«after Britain devalued t h e pound sterling.
The French, on the contrary, officially and unofficially did everything they could to damage the prestige of the dollar and to start speculators in their drive to reduce the gold value of the dollar.
President Johnson, in his formal statement, spoke. of many things that are necessary to maintain the stability of the international monetary system of which, he said, “The U.S. dollar is the bulwark.”
* ★ *
He emphasized that the time has come to "engage the cooperation of other free nations, whose stake in a sound international monetary system is no less compelling than our own.”
While the business world regards some of the measures as painful, it recognizes that what the President outlined may be the beginning of a far-reaching readjustment in world trade.
Not Only are American In-vestment^ abroad to be limited, but apparently the United States is not going to be willing to reduce its own tariffs while at the same time foreign countries erect new barriers. Mr. Johnson’s statement said on this point:
"American commerce is at a disadvantage because of the
tax systems of some of our trading partners. Some Haitians give across-the-board tax rebates on exports which leaye their ports and impose special border tax charges on our goods entering their country.
"International rules govern these special taxes under the general agreement on tariffs and trade. These rules must be adjusted to expand international trade further.”
It is likely that the United States will endeavor to stabilize the imports of certain
products — particularly steel — which now are competing with American goods even within this country. There is no intention io'cut down such trade, but merely to limit the incoming quantities by setting up quotas.
There is a feeling in Washington that the President’s moves this week are preliminary to others, far more drastic, which may become necessary to keep the dollar from declining further in the money markets of the world. .
Bob Considine Says:
It’s Time to Examine the Calendar Foul-Up
NEW YORK-Did you wear that silly paper hat and blow that off-key horn in vain?
Did you solemnly swear m to yourself or others that you would op-crate this year under a stern set of resolutions? Indeed, was this really the dawn of a New Year?
What year
CONSIDINE
Verba! Orchids
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Huntwork of Marion, formerly of Pontiac; 56th wedding anniversary.
Harry M. Courtright of Bedford, Va.; 83rd birthday. Mrs. Mary Sears of Clawson; 83rd birthday.1'
Mrs. Martha D. Baird of Oxford; 87th birthday. Mrs. Charles Lawson of Livonia,
formerly of Union Lake;
87th birthday.
is it? What day? What hour? Quick!
Man, in his arrogant confidence, has laid down certain rules and regulations as to just where we are in our short-lived 1iVes, and defined the progress, 'if it can be called that, of our infifiitessi-mal satellite (earth) which is in orbit around one of the lesser of the stars (our sun), both flung near the edge of a relatively obscure constellation ridiculously called the Milky Way.
*nie day • night month - year rule we observe — we call it our calendar — has been so fouled up over the centuries that those who originally devised it would never recognize it, if reincarnated.
Christ may have been born in what we call May, for all we know. (Call Jim Bishop.) Easter may be .properly placed around Dec. 25. A July 4th orator could come to the conclusion, halfway through his dissertation, that he should have had his ghostwriter give him a Thanksgiving Day speech.
★ , ★ ★
This is whatever day you * decide it is because Pope Gregory XIII and two brilliant friends of his who were astronomers and , physicians, Aloysius Lillus and Luigi Lilio Ghiradi, plus a German jesuit and mathematician named Christopher Clavius, figured the whole thing out in 1582.
•ULTIMATE JOB’
But not, of course, to everybody’s satisfaction. Julius Caesar would not have approved. He thought he had done (he ultimate job 15 cen-
turies before, when he put a stop to the political control over the calendar.
His predecessors had fouled it up so badly, in order to shorten or-lengthen the terms of political appointees, that winter had become autumn and autumn had infiltrated summer.
But the Julian year, which begap about four decades before Christ; with a year of 445 days, was 11 minutes and 15 seconds out of tune with the celestial year. That meant the loss of an entire day every 128 years. Learned.men became disturbed over this and set out to correct matters.
Voice of the People:
‘Praise and Recognition Due Our Police Officers'
As a resident of Pontiac and a member qf B’nai Brith, I was one of the volunteers who worked with the Pontiac Police, Department Christmas Eve.
; 1 ■■ * ★
Enough praise and recognition for the young men who protect the citizens and risk their lives every minute of their shifts cannot be acknowledged.
★ ★ ★
My sincere appreciation and suggestion that every citizen be allowed a tour of duty with an officer. If medals are awarded, theirs are past due.'
CHARLES JACOBS 1059 CANTERBURY
‘Congratulations for the Christmas Issue'
The front page of your December 23rd issue is an exceptionally fine example of high quality color in today's newspaper. You and your organization are to be congratulated on presenting it to your readers. «.
ELMER E. WHITE MICHIGAN PRESS ASSOCIATION EAST LANSING
Let me add to the compliments of your beautiful Christmas ■issue. It was one of the prettiest I've seen and I’ve read them foe more than 35 years.
E. C. R.
‘City Needs Volunteer Police and Firemen'
Mr. Mullinix saw fit to circulate petitions for a referendum on thq income tax, postponing this revenue and causing the City to be in deep financial crisis. Now we must lay off City employes and cut back services because we will not be able to collect income taxes until July 1. If the people do not vote in favor of the income tax in February, we could not get the . benefit of a property tax until July, 1969.
★ ★ ★
We need more policemen instead of less. Riots and crime must be stopped. I believe some good citizens of Pontiac would offer their services as auxiliary police or as volunteer firemen. We need at least 100 volunteer policemen trained by our present police department and prepared to help in time of emergency or riot. We now have a small auxiliary police unit but we must have more.
* * * '-j y.
Because of our financial condition it is impossible to hire more full-time policemen. We must not let this forced postponement of needed City revenue obstruct this important service. I hope some of our able-bodied citizens will apply at our police department to become auxiliary policemen.
JOHN A. DUGAN CITY COMMISSIONER, DISTRICT #5
(Editor's Note: City Manager Joseph Warren suggests that interested parties contact Police Chief William Hanger or Capt. Harry Nye at the police department for full details.)
‘Appreciate Kindness of ^Postal Employes'
I’d like to express appreciation to all Keego Harbor Post Office employes. On the afternoon of December1 23, they were looking for me to deliver a package. I got the package after closing'hour. Since I am 9,000 miles from home, such thoughtful services has given me the most eherishable Christmas.
KAY HOLLOWAY & j 1700 BEECHCROFT, KEEGO HARBOR
Question and Answer
My husband has children by another marriage. Before we were married we bought a house with our combined savings. It is deeded in his name only, and all his insurance and bonds are in his children’s names. I’ve worked since our marriage and helped pay for these things. If something should happen to him, where would that put Ime and my children?
WORKED
REPLY
We cannot give legal advice for ind dual problems. We suggest you consult a lawyer.
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
Small Change ...
The Flint Journal
Previous spending on national election campaigns is almost certain to look like small change in comparison with what probably will be spent this coming year.
It has been estimated by the Presidential Commission on Campaign Costs that a total of $200 million was spent in the 1964 election for all offices. .
* ★ ★
A public affairs pamphlet put out by the Chase Manhattan Bank offers excellent example of what lies behind the size of this bill:
"The $156,000 total spent In the 1860 election campaign is about the price today of one hour of prime time on a TV network. A telethon, a favorite device in the windup period of a campaign, can run about $250,000.”
With the rising cost of living, the tfmell of success in the nostrils of many Republicans and the greater interest in the issues as compared to 1964, there is every indication that the final costs of the 1968 campaign will be nothing short of staggering.
★ ★ *
This mounting cost of get-. ting elected to office has.con-
cerned students of our government for some time. Last year, Congress sought to meet a part of the problem with a law providing a $1 checkoff on income tax payments, such money to be divided equally between the two major parties.
Second thoughts — made in the middle of widespread criticism of the policy from all shades of political thought — resulted in abandoning this idea.
The voter, however, will have to be persuaded that democratic government as we practice it is worth not only the time it takes to make his decision and cast his ballot, but also a small bite from his share of the pie provided in our affluent society.
An Exception ...
The Wall Street Journal
The truism still holds: Many Congressmen are all for Governmental economy— until it begins to affect themselves or their constituents. But It's nice to knoW that isn't always the case. \
★ * *
The Joint Congressional Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures is of course constantly
harping on Y»igh living in the Executive branch.
When the Committee lost its chairman, the late Senator Harry F. Bryd Sr. of Virginia, it had a small chance to show that it means what it says.
At that time the committee found that it still had a supply of envelopes carrying the postal frank of the Vir-gina Democrat.
# ♦ it
Though the usual procedure would be t6 throw them away, the committee instead is using them up by drawing a line through Mr. Byrd’s, reproduced signature and adding a sticker with the name of the new chairman, Rep. George Mahon of Texas.
It’s a tiny gesture, really no more significant than turning out lights in the White House. Yet we’re sure the principle is one that Harrv Bvrd would have appreciated.
Tht AnoclatM Plrni h sntltM •xcluilvvly la tha use for repubil-catlon ol all local news printed In IMS newspaper it well at all AP newt dltpelclwt.
Tha Pontiac Press It delivered by carrier tor SO cents a week! where mailed In Oakland, Genesee. Livingston, Macomb, Ltpoer and Waahtensw Count let lt & Stun a yeari elsewhere In Michigan and all other placet In the United Statee S3S.0O a year. All man eub-acripHont payable In advance. Pottage hat bean paid at tha Snd data rata at Pantlac, Michigan. Mam bar ef ABC.
?
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY
Ar^f- \
i s? Mi L.
Social Security—2
Bite for Increased Benefits Is Deferred
(EDITOR’S NOTE “— This is the second Df a series analyzing the changes currently, being made in the Social Security and Medicare regulations.)
By BRUCE! BIOSSAT, !ȣ , L t
NEA Publications
WASHINGTON — Only one in every four Americans at work will feel any increased Social Security tax bite in 1968 as a result of mgjor 1967 revisions in the law.
That does rrot mean that the many other millions of workers priying into Social Security coffers will be relieved indefinitely from paying a share of the higher cost of benefits due to be lifted an average of 13 per cent for nearly 24 million recipients with their March 2 checks.
The stiffer tax load for everybody else has simply been1 postponed for a year. ,
In 1969 more than 80 million working Americans will get hit harder in the;ir pay checks as Social Security tax deductions rise. (The actual work force is riot much above 72 million, but enough people are on and off the employment rolls in the short ruri, like Christmas workers," to account for the higher total.)
★ ★ ★ ^
Here is why roughly one in four Americans on the job will get .nicked a bit more in 1968:
The new law raises from $6,600 to $7,800 the level of annual earnings from which the Social Security tax is to be taken. But it does not elevate the 4.4 per cent tax rate in 1968. The net of it, then, is that people who earn more than $6,600 in 1968 will pay more than they did in 1967—but nobody else will.
RISING TAX RATE
In 1969 this will happen:
The earnings base from which the tax will be drawn will hold at the $7,800 level—as it will indefinitely thereafter. But the Social Security tax rate will rise from the present 4.4 per cent to 4.8 per cent. From that point on, every working individual will feel the bigger bite. g
Thai will not be the end of it. Five times more between 1971 and 1987, the Social Security tax rate will rise, until it reaches a scheduled peak gf 5.9 per cent.
The last four of these upward changes will come as a 4 result of slight increases in the charges for the Medicare * portion of Social Security—which even in. 1987 will still represent only about a sixth of the total Social Security tax.
All through this rising cycle, of course, youc employer will be paying in more, too, since he rfiust match your payments into the established benefit trust funds.
Reagan Recall Campaign Is Far Short of Signatures
SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The first effort to force a recall election on Republican Gov. Ronald & Reagan is going to fall far short of its sign-up target.
But Nancy Parr, a San Francisco registered nurse who started the campaign, says she’j5 going to keep trying.
The stale constitution requires 780,414 signatures, 12 per cent of the tual vote cast in the 1966 electhpi for governor, to force/dT'Scall election.
Miss Parr said in an interview that her campaign to date has corraled 500,000 signatures on recall petitions circulating in various parts pf the state.
★ ★ ★
She has until Jan, 18 — six months after she filed for the recall — to obtain the remain 280,000. It sounds easy, but it isn’t — because she actually must get about 400,000 assure that the petition vajid.
Generally, about 25 percent of the signatures on statewide petitions are declared invalid for a variety of reasons. ,
NO SUCCESSES
No recall move against a California governor has ever succeeded in getting the needed signatures.
Records in the office of Secretary of State Frank M. Jordan indicate former Gov. Frank F. Merriam had little trouble with a recall group in 1936. j
There were tour recall peti-1 tions filed against Gov. Culbert F, Olson, a one-term Democrat, and three against Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown, Reagan’s predecessor in the state’s No. 1 office.
★ ★ ★
; Miss Parr frankly admits she jwon’t meet the deadline, either but she plans to refile the petition in January — and start all over again.
DENY NOMINATION | The goal is one million signa-| tures by, July — right before i the August Republican national convention. Miss Parr says that | the group wants to recall Reagan and deny him the Republi-cawpresidential nomination.
Wei^ally want to get’rid of him as governor,” Miss Parr said in the interview at die group’s headquarters in suburban Orangevale. “But, something that is more important is to stop him from becoming president.”
Reagan repeatedly has said he isf>not a candidate for president.
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Self-employed persons, having no employer to match their own contributions, have always had to pay more as individuals and will continue to do" so. Their 1967 tax rate of 6.4 per cent holds through 1968, then escalates to 6.9 per cent in 1969-70 and rises five more times to a 1987 peak of 7.9 per cent.
The most a man at work could be taxed in. 1967, with a $6,600 base, was $290.40. The worker who makes $7,800 or more in 1968 will pay $343.20.
Thereafter his Social Security tab will rise to a maximum of $460.20 in 1987 and after.
For the self-employed, the 1967 figure was $422.40, the 1968 figure $499.20, and the 1987 figure $616.20.
ADDED LOAD
Clearly the millions who on March 2 will start getting fatter checks are, not getting bread from the sky. Working taxpayers are going to bear the added load.
Many of the younger ones, seeing retirement and other problems far off in the future, are bound to complain. For a good while they will be carrying the freight for many older people, including some who put little or nothing, into the Social Security reserve.
Social Security authorities havg some arguments, worth a later look, as to why the system is!nevertheless a pretty good, thing for today’s millions of young workers who will be paying the heavier Social Security taxes for a long time to come.
(NEXT: Raising the Cost of Living.)
A READER SERVICE—Information in this series, plus odditionol data ond tablet con ba obtained in book form by using the coupon below:
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 19(58
A—9
LRI Signs $9.3-Billion Education
SAN ANTONIO, Tex (AP) -President Johnson has signed a bill calling for the largest outlay of federal funds for education ever authorized in a single act.
The bill—extending to mid-1970 the aid program for elementary aQd secondary schools Johnson pushed through Congress two‘years ago—bears a $9.3-billion price tag.
★ : ★
Schools can make better use of the money if they know in advance how much they will get, Congress was told.
Another innovation in the law|rectly by the U.S. Office of Edu-will shift the administration of an important part of the program from Washington to the various states,
$1 BILLION
This program—designed to help local school districts establish supplemental education centers and develop new teaching methods—will receive more than $1 billion during 1969 and 1970. All of it, under the old law, would have been handed out di-
cation to local districts.
Now the money will go te the states to be distributed in accord with state-drawn plans. Under a compromise between the House and Sedate, 75 per cent of-the* money will go to the states in 1969 and all of it to 1970.
★ * *
By far the largest sums in the bill are for the improvement of eduational opportunities and standards for children in school districts containing large num-
1967 Riot Cases
bers of impoverished families. The wide variety of remedial and concentrated courses made available by the. program are open both to public and parochial school students. A provision that would have permitted individual taxpayers to challenge the constitutionality Of aid to parochial school students was stricken from the bill before its final passage.
The bill contains no provision dealing with school desegregation, but its passage through Congress was eased by a declaration of policy on the subject by John W. Gardner, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare.
Gardner said no school will
have its funds cut off during a school year for failure to comply with the civil rights laws unless it has received written notice of such a danger by the previous March 1 and notice of a hearing by Sept. 1.
The declaration was designed to ease fears of some southern educators that programs might be abruptly terminated in midterm.
* ★ *
Also extended uhtil June 30, 1970, by the law is the program of aid to school districts in areas where there are large numbers of federal employes. The program has been in existence since 1951.
PE603aes Jan. 3
BUDGET THREATENS BRITANNIA -Queen Elizabeth’s yacht Britannia may feel the economy ax of Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s government in its effort to save Britain $1.9 billion by 1970. Critics claim the 5,759-ton vessel costs more than $1 million a year to maintain but spends most of her time
AP Wlrepnoto
tied to a buoy. The ship is shown, passing under the American. span of the Thousand Islands bridge across St. Lawrence River at Kingston, Ont., in July 1967, during a tour of Canada by Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip.
By the Associated Press
The summer riots in Newark and Detroit took place nearly six months ago, but courts of both cities are still dealing with hundreds of the arrests which resulted from the outbreaks.
Clearing the dockets is likely to take at least until next summer.
In Detroit, where 4,200 per sons were jailed, the trials of 1,200 accused of felonies will commence next spring.
In Newark, where 1,300 were taken into custody on riot-connected charges, 330. cases remain to be heard.
Detroit disposed of misdemeanor cases arising from the riots within two to three weeks after peace was restored. More than 1,000 defendants pleaded
guilty to charges rangipg from] Jay Nolan, an assistant drunkenness to disorderly con- Wayne County prosecutor, ex-, duct. Most were sentenced to pressed hope the courts would, five to seven days in jail. |complete the outstanding trials]
Within the next five or sixj months, commenting: “We had barely cleared out our cases on the 1966 disturbance on Detroit’s east side when our 1967 troubles struck.” Grand juries in Newark returned felony indict-j ments against 809 of the 1,300] arrested there. Most were charged with looting, one with
About half of an original 3,200 felony cases in Detroit were settled by the prosecution’s acceptance pf guilty pleas to lesser charges if the defendants had no prior criminal records.
★ ★ ★
Still in jail are 40 persons ac? cused of serious crimes who
were either denied bail or were: murder. Investigations into 26 unable to find sureties for their 0ther homicides are still going release. jon.
Most of these were held in Faced With overcrowded jails high bail because they already'and jammed court calendars, had charges pending against the Newark prosecutor’office them for other crimes when'downgraded to disorderly con-they were arrested in the rioting'duct the charges against about and accused of such offenses as 300 persons indicted for more arson or attempted murder. | serious crimes.
n good
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THE PONTIAC,PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
New Device Offers Hope in Air Turhufence Detection
By Science Service
WASHINGTON - Clear air turbulence (CAT) is a mystery that meteorologists would love to solve- The sudden, violent phen-, omenon can tear1 a jetliner apart without warning.
One of 'the most promising ways of detecting CAT pockets: assumes that they are accom-
jpanied by a sharp-change in .1 temperature, which can be detected either by infrared or microwave detectors. S
[ A CAT detector patented last week senses' temperature far ahead and to the side of the aircraft by measuring microwave radiation put out by oxygen
| molecules, the i n t e n s i t y of which depends on temperature.
The remote temperature;1 is {compared with the temperature! at the aircraft itself, and when! a sharp change is noted, .am electronic circuit tells the pilot which way fo turn to avoid the1 | disturbance.
! The patent was assigned to
| Sperry Gyroscope Co. by the in-jventors, Benjamin R. F o w, Richard F. Hazel and Wayne D. Mount. A Sperry spokesman says the remote temperature radiometer-js being engineered by the company for use also in gir pollution studies, but the whole CAT assembly hasn’t been flown yet. *
One difficulty with the temperature sepsors is that the instrument has to be kept level.! Temperature changes due to different altitudes, which would be picked up if; the 7 plane tips, | give false alarms.
Regionally infant mortality rates are highest in the So'ut.i
Country Squire
&bop
Bloomfield Miracle Mile
fienu-Annual
STARTS THURSDAY (TOMORROW), JANUARY 4 th at 9:30
The event the entire greater Pontiac Area eagerly awaits. .Only twice a year can you save on nationally advertised quality clothing and sportswear from our famous makers including those below:
SAVE ON:
• AUSTIN LEEDS CLOTHING • MICHAELS’ STEM CLOTHING • MeGREGOR SPORTS WEAR • CRICKETEER CLOTHING • COSTA de MAJOREA RAINWEAR • G1N0 PAULI IMPORTED KNITS and SUEDES • OAKS SLACKS
• OERNHARD ALTMANN SWEATERS • MANY, MANY OTHER FINE BRANDS
Entire Stock of WINTER JACKETS Special Group of Men’s FINE DUALITY SUITS Special Group of MEN S SPORT COATS
20% OFF Regularly to 88 $129.50 SJL $29««
Special Group of MEN’S SUITS Entire Stock of BOYS’ WINTER WEAR Men’s Fine All Wool DRESS SLACKS •
Were to ffiyj^^^88 20% OFF 1' * * Very $1 088 Special JLtO
Special Group of MEN’S SPORT COATS, Italian Knit SWEATERS Men’s Zip-Lined ALL-WEATHER COATS
Regularly to $/|^^^88 20 to 40% OFF Dacron and $0188 Wool Blend aDJL
Men’s Quality OUTER JACKETS BoVhfl WINTER SUITS Boys* Entire Stock SWEATERS
0si™T «*1Q88 Group ■** Prep $0188 Sizes tOJL * 20% OFF
The above is just a sampling of the hundreds of values on Nationally Advertised Men’s and Boys’ wear.
We invite your charge - We honor Security Bank, Michigan Bank, American Express and Diner’s Club charge.
open every night til 9
START the NEW YEAR
' With A .
NEW FIGURE
Get Rid of Those
EXTRA POUNDS
Put On During The Holidays
Are YOU in Top Shape? Or are you unnecessarily TIRED? LISTLESS and out of condition?
SPECIAL BEGINNERS COURSES START DAILY!
FOR YOUR FREE TRIAL AND PRIVATE FIGURE ANALYSIS
Flotten your tummy . . . collapsed ob- —Slim hips ond thighs . . . The one place yon con't woo dominol muscles are restored to their especially designed equip* girdle . . . firm and tlende youthful firmness through treatments ment trims off hips . . slen* flabby tissue . . keep it ad recommended by your supervisor. denies proportionately. ond proportioned.
THE SPA (HYDRO-SWIRL POOL) AREA: EXCLUSIVE i . .Direct from Europe and Palm Springs. Relax in special seats while Hot, Whirling Mineral Water explodes against ^iou to give you the very finest in Modern Hydrotherapy. Stimulates entire muscular and circulatory system. Offers relief from arthritis, rheumatism, bursitis, aches and pains.
Call or Come By Today For Free Tour and Figure Analysis, Absolutely No Obligation
JOIN HOUDAY HEALTH SPA TODAY!
Open Monday thru Friday VO A.M. till 10 P.M.
Saturday, 10 A.M. till 6 P.M.
Sunday, 1 P.M. till 6
NOW ACCEPTING MEMBERSHIPS
Phone 334-1591
"COURSES AVERAGE LESS THAN 83c PER VISIT"
Lose up to 20 Pounds in a Just 20 Visits.
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0 Facilities far Men e Facilities for Women
MEN-WOMEN
For a FREE Tour and Private Figure-Analysis Call the Club Nearest You' or Drop by Today!
334-1591
OPEN TONIGHT THl 10
3432 W. Huron St.
Just West of Elizabeth Lake Rd.
Phone 334-1591
/
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
rUN. Peace Force Fights \ a War of Wits in Cyprus
- KYRENIA, Cyprus *- -ik
Fine quality nylon pile is durable, machine washable and dryable. Stays bright, wash after wash. Special Securi-Tee backing is cushion soft - for comfort, skid resistant for safety. Choose your favorite color now!
4x6-Ft.
Use Your Convenient Sears Charge
13.98 5x6’.,
18.98 5x8’.,
17.98 5x7’*,
22.98 5x9’*
27.98 6x9’*.
Sale! 11.88 Sale! 16.88 Sale! 15.88 Sale! 19.88 Sale! 24.88
4.98 2-Pc. Tank Set.... 3.97
* Special Order Siam
King and Queen “Twilight Flower”
Smooth combed cotton . . . 190' threads per sq. in. after washing. Softly diffused pastel background. Allover print on fitted bottom sheets and pillowcases. Panel print on flat sheets.
9.S0 King Flat or Fitted .................8.99
2 for 3.50 Pillowcases.......... 2 for 3.17
Rig. 1,50
Stars Bath Shop and Dowtstic Dept.
Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30
Sears
SEAR*. HOF RUCK A VO CO
Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171
get the Grandest Guarantee of them all. . .
j. All furniture may be returned within thirty days for a full cash refund if you are not satisfied for any 'tea-son,,
2 All furniture will be serviced at no charge for as long as you own it.
3 We will refund the difference in cash if you
should happen to receive a lower price somewhere else on the same furniture within one month. , . /
'
house of bedrooms
1716 S. Telegraph Rd., Bloomfield, Between Miracle Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. STORE HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY 9 TO 9. • CALL 334-4593
The important “sleeveless suit” in giant hounds tooth, whose front-pleated, easy skirt sashes wide at the waist below. A romantic full-sleeved blouse with fichu bow at the neck ... from Townley, by Chuck Howard for spring ’68,
\houW7
iif
BEDROOMS
Spring Designs Forecast Return tb Fit in Fashion
NEW YORK (UPI) — So your waistline’s grown flabby under the easy fit of the shift? Hurry up — Touch your toes, do sit ups, cut calories.
By spring, Dame Fashion decrees, body-defining dresses with fitted waists and bosom-accenting touches will be- the -order of the day and night.
* * *
Hie big fit in fashion was apparent at opening sessions of an 11-day marathon of new togs drummed in by the nation’s paCe-setting designers in New York.
★ * x *
The first shows for the fashion press corps are sponsored by the New York Couture Business Council^ the second Ones, by American Designer Showings.
RETURN Tb FEMININITY
The shape-up is part of a return to femininity. Other marks of the movements Lace, ruffles, dirndls of.61 full swingy circles of skirt. - S ,
* * ★
Typical of the ladylike look was a costume in the original collection. The fitted waist and bodice were accented by a belt; the skirt had an inverted-V pleat front and center. Fit continued in a matching jacket.
WWW
As the fashion event continues, watch tor:
—• A profusion of belts on dresses, skirts, coats, blouses ... in shiny patents, crushed leather, fabrics! and in slim Grecian wrap effects.^ Belts wander •— slim under the bosom, flat at the hip or wide at the waist and often fastened with big bold buckles.
★ ★ ★»**.
— Shirts. They have Mao collars, wide Buster Brown collars, military airs with epaulettes. They overflow with ruffles, ties or jabots. Sleeves mostly ar^
long and flowing, primly cuffed at the wrist: »
★ ★ ★
—Fabrics include silks. organdies, chiffons, jerseys, light wools and the new knit crepes that have a flowing look on the body.
LESS SHOCKING *
— Color tends to be less shocking, less stinging, with toned-down brights and a strong move toward brightened and whitened pastels.
— Coats and suits follow the trend to shape and separates. Biggest coat news is the shirt look and the fact that hardly a one- is seen without a belt — Empire, half-belted, hip hugging or squarely at
' the waist. Suits take up the separates’ lead with shorter jackets over full skirts. ★ ★ ★
— The only thing missing from the
Scarlet O’Hara look, as Hollywood of the thirties pictured her, is the hoop petticoat. The evening looks have ruffle-bedecked necklines, cuffs and hems.
Sleeves and skirts billow. Feathers add a touch of extravaganza on skirts, wraps.
_ rj ,★ ★ ★
r- Hemlines are as yotTTike it—short, long, sometimes slanting. The trend:
Most fashion conscious women probably -.will have in their Spring wardrobes mini, midi and maxi skirt lengths.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY ih T0«a B—1
Now Comes Punishment for Teen
Went Without Their Approva
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: First of all I want you to know that I’m 14, but am very mature for my age. Most people think I am 18.
Anyway , the eve-
game. never
ABBY done this but that
night I felt like it, so I told my 10-year-
From Larry Aldrich’s collection .. . the return of ruffles . . . the return of romance . . . Marie McCarthy spotlights re-embroidered white lace for spring ’68 in a softened shirtwaist silhouette, marking the waist
with a wide self belt.
old brother to tell my folks, that I would be«staying around town afterwards. (I couldn’t find my parents to tell them myself.)
Well, I came home at 11:45 p.m. and thes. way my folks carried on you would have thought I had committed some kind of crime or something. You should see the list of punishments they gave me.
No dances or parties until 1968. Not eVen for Christmas. And I can’t talk to my .best friend on the phone until 1968.
^1 am not a run-around, do not date, and do not have a bad record. I can’t figure out what I did that was so wrong,-can you?
DESPERATE
DEAR DESPERATE: Telling your brother (or anyone else, for that matter) to convey a message is not the same as asking for — and getting permission.
Since you never before had your par-
Calendar
1 , THURSDAY 1
S* ' ■ f
f Friendship Circle of Welcome |
1 Rebekah lodge No. 246, noon, home | | of Mfs. Leona Kugler of South ? I R o s e 1 a w n Street. Cooperative 1 1 luncheon.
j| Oakland Writers’ Workshop, 1 |
f p.m., YWCA. Regular meeting.
FRIDAY
Bonneville Junior Duplicate g f Bridge Club, 7:45 p.m.. The Pon- h | tiac Mall. All beginning and inter- 1 | mediate bridge players may at- 1 ! tend.
SATURDAY
I Bonneville Duplicate Bridge Club, I | 8 p.m., The Pontiac Mall. All 1 I bridge players may attend.
ents’ approval to “stay around town” after the game, perhaps they feel that you didn’t try harder to find them because you feared they might have said no.
★ ★ ★
CONFIDENTIAL TO ABE: I’m with you. I’ve always been just a. little wary of people who treat dogs like people and people like dogs.
★ *
Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abby, •in care o7 the Pontiac Press,, Dept. El-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 for Abby’s booklet, "How to Write Letters for All Occasions.’*"
g* *
Troubled? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P:0. Box 9, Pontiac,, Mich. 48056. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Brannack of Lakeward Lane announce the betrothal of their daughter, Barbara Josephine, to John C. Stewart. He is the son of Mrs. Leonard Stewart of Detroit and the late Mr. Stewart. Miss Brannack, a graduate of Stephens College, Columbia, Mo., is presently a senior at the University of Michigan, Her fiance is a student at the Detroit College of Business. A June wedding is planned.
Bands of Lace on Peau Sheath
MRS. DAVID D. ROBINSON
A white sheath gown of peau de soie handed with lace at hemline and Empire waist fashioned a bridal ensemble for Sheila Ann Black recently in First Presbyterian Church of Defiance, Ohio.
★ ★ ★ 1
, Completing her outfit, as she repeated vows with David D. Robinson, the bride wore a floor length veil of illusion and carried a bouquet of white roses and Stephanotis.
* ★ *
Parents of the couple, who later greeted guests in Kettering Country Club, are Dr. and Mrs. Coit A. Black of Defiance and Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Robinson of East Iroquois Road.
★ * ★
After a wedding trip to the Virgin Is-larids, San Juan and Puerto Rico, the f pewlyweds will reside in .Columbus, Ohio where the bridegroom is completing his doctorate at Ohio State University,
S-s-h-h. It’s our Grand Opening and we’ve been up nights getting ready to give you a rousing welcome. Refreshments and gifts are on The House (of Bedrooms, that is) and we promise to be wide awake to greet you. Bring the family and stay awhile.
A beige Desiree (silk and worsted) coat takes a belting for fashion’s sake .. . pulled through the flaps of patch pockets on a slightly lower waistline. Front paneled beige and black silk linen print dress beneath completes the ensemble. From the Branell spring ’68 collection.
Come take tlie Grand Tour during our Grand-" Opening
We think you’ll find-it a most rewarding tour as you browse through our vast House. 114, count ’em, 114 new and exciting bedrooms to see, from mellow Mediterranean to comfortable Colonial and everything in between, Whether it’s the teen scene or a bed for a queen, your Grand Tour will take you there. You’ll recognize America's most famous bedroom furniture names and the best in bedding accessories like Simmons and Serta mattresses and boxsprings. Incidentally, we thought we’d make a lot of new friends by offering- very inviting Grand Opening prices.
QnnnH roacnnahlp? It IS.
B» * -2
THE 1H)\T1AC I’KKSS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY a, 1968
He Went for a Pair but Drew a Flush Instead
BRISBANE, Australia their father, Roger Braham, ■— Hie father of Australia’s first ^> sa'd today that his wife, Pa-, r L. j iau 11 ..j„ tricia Mary, 36, had twins a
quintuplets insured with Lloydyear ago and when she became of London against a multiple * ' *
birth—but he doesn’t know . ....
whether he will get $400. j Hibachi Utensils
./• .*.'•* a . j '*!,/■■ ■
A clause in the policy said! For the cooks who like Ori-that it would be invalid if thejental touches, there is a special children were born more than!three-piece hibachi tool set of six weeks before the stipulated mini-size fork, tongs and spatT date. The quints were born Sun-jula. They’re of stainless steel day,' six weeks and a few daysjwith blackwood handles and prematurely. ^scaled to hibachi cooking.
pregnant again, he insured against a multiple birth, he said he was thinking in terms of an-oTher . set of twins and insured for $400 to help meet the extra expenses. The possibility of quints riever entered his head, he said.
Braham, a lawyer from Ten-terfield, New Soqth Wales, has not yet been able to check with the insurance firm.
The quints, now in their fourth day, are doing so well they may
I leave the hospital before the ex-ipected six to eight weeks. A hos-Ipital spokesman announced today: “The condition of the quints is satisfactory and the I mother is very well.”
[• In/her first public comment /on the quints, Mrs. Braham said Tuesday night: “I saw the ba-j bies again today and l am abso-j lutely thrilled. They look won-i derful. Please thank everyone; for their kindness and congratu-; lations.”
Prime Minister John McEwen was -among the .scores who sent congratulatory messages.
Pattern layout
When cutting out a velvet garment, place an the pieces of the pattern so that the fabric runs up. But when cutting velveteen, corduroy, and napped; woolens, always place the pattern pieces so the nap runs down.
Canadian Honeymoon Follows Remillard Vows
A honeymoon in Canada fol-jquet of white tea roses sur-lowed vows Saturday between, rounded by white carnations. Pamela Diane Call and- _ * * *
Laurence Michael Remillard in: The daughter of the Geralo St. Lawrence Cathplic Church,|D. Calls of Ann Maria Lane, Utica. I ' [Avon Township! was attended
For the morning rite, the'by the bridegroom’s sister, bride chose an Empire style!Carol Perreault of Lake Linden gown of satin peau de soie ac- as maid of honor.
cented with French Alencon lace and embroidered with seed pearls. A lace petal headpiece held her elbow length veil of!
Bridesmaids were Deborah Call, Sharon Neilson, and Patricia Call.
Joseph Perreault of Flint
M. REMILLARD
Polly's Pointers
Keeps Bag Handy
illusion. served as best man for the son
She carried a traditional bou-jof the Wilfred Perreaults of i Lake Linden. . wsMsaj1 ★ ' ★ ★
1 Donald Hiltunen of Detroit, I David Call and Paul Call ush-I ered.
| The newlyweds greeted guests I at a reception in the Champion ¥ Hall in Rochester following the It rite.
DEAR POLLY - Here’s a Pointer some of your readers might like to try. I placed a large plastic bag (or a cardboard box would-do) in a cor-Iner of my basement. Each time | I clean out drawers and Idosets, I place all unused and j outgrown clothing, household items, etc., into this bag.
In the spring and fall many organizations in our town send out pamphlets requesting used clothing and household items for underprivileged families'. Not only can* I” get the bag for them at a moment's notice but-this helps keep my drawers and closets fairly straight at . all tunes.—GLORIA . ' ^ j
DEAR PLOLY - I use not iOnly the plastic lids from I coffee cans but the metal top ! that is cut off and the can, too.1 The metal top, when cut off, is
it's so Logical to live at Axteii Road Apartments
covered with foil and used to set hot pans on when I am cooking. I use the plastic lids for small bowl covers and also! for putting under my flower; ipots.
A can holds bacon drippings! and, when painted with gold; paint, makes a pretty flower | pot. Rice, macaroni, dry beans: and cookies can be put into the] cans after they are washed and: dried.
Put the plastic lids back onj and you can see what is in them- with a glance. They also hold my husband’s nails so he can see the size with one look.
I fix treats for my small granddaughter to take home after a visit and then she uses them for storing her small playthings. After drying flower,, seeds, I store them in one of the small cans and they never get lost from one planting until the next.
We also use them for cleaning paintbrushes. That type coffee can should get a gold star for its many, many uses.
I have never found any other
can so handy. s
—LILLIE
A twin tube subway tunnel to be used in San Francisco is befog .prefabricated in sections nearby.
A mid-July wedding is planned by Margaret Ann Brown and Randall Dean Morell. The bride elect is the daughter of the Lealand Browns of King Circle, Orion Township. Her fiance is the son of the Arnold Mor-ells of Oxford.
we COULD USE... m WALL-TO-WALL CARPETING
■ AIR CONDITIONING
■ BALCONY
■ ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED (Except Electricity)
■ SWIMMING POOL and CLUBHOUSE
FO«ONlY$ 165 OR 2-BCDROOM AH.
fORONlY$180 M<5.
so, irrs cau ...
647-6396
MODEL OPEN U TO 7
COOLIDGE AXTEU 1 AXTEU R0. ■■apartments
O
♦X E MAPLE (IS MILE RD.)
ipd by Schostzk Bros. 1 Co.
UN M $ I
Made to Measure
Drapes
to fit your windows
180 Samples to Choose From
Arden
Shops
The Pontiac Mall
Open Every Evening 'til 9
Dupnmy Used for Teaching
! WARREN, Mich. (AV-Muriel Linton, director of the new ( Community Child- Cam Center here, became a ventriloquist as a means of helping children [learn by first arousing their interest. Having worked with youngsters for many years, she realized that the iidtial’step in a learning process is to com-mand attention.
j “I borrowed a book from the library,”, she recalls, “and every day on my way to work and,, while driving the car, I practiced talking without moving my lips.” After a year she perfected her style and had “Candy,” her wooden-headed assistant, constructed.
Rinse Shampoo Bottle
Rinse out a shampoo, bottle to get the benefit of every drop of the product.
Everything Reduced from Top to Bottom
Modern, Transitional, Contemporary and Mediterranean
WERE SALE
*199 to 1059 ............SOFAS ......... 157 to *788
,* 79 to 419.......... CHAIRS ............... 49 to *289
*399 to 1299i..........DINING ROOMS...........239 to *988
*229 to 1199..............BEDROOMS..............197 to *799
* 49 to 169............... TABLES------------ 28 to *137
* 39 to 219 .................LAMPS....... 15 to_*179
* 795 to 1895 ........CUSTOM CARPET.......... 495 to *1495
j r . • Sq. Yd.
^Professional Design and Interior Decorating Service / Terms to Suit You
, = ir=J 2600 N. WOODWARD, BLOOMFIELD
Near Square Lake Rd. - LI 8-2200, FE 3-7933 OPEN: W«d„ Thurs., Fri„ Sat. 10 to 9 (Mon., Tu«s. 'til 5 P.M.)
SPECIAL COUPON
Good At All 3 STORES
Extcutivo v Shirt Sorvico
Hat* Blocked . and Cleaned All Typos Of Leather And Suede Work Alterations end repairs.
Dry Cleaning Special
3 dais
0NLT
Clip And Bring With You
Tues., Wed., Thurs., Jan 2-3-4th
i
Good thru Jan. 4th
No
Limit
COUPON
ANY 3 GARMENTS $098
Suits, Coats and Dresses
Count as 1 Garment
l
With Coupon | ___ _ I
ONE HOUfc MARTINIZING Miracle Mile S.G.
Phone: 332-1822
Open Daily
.Sajttij 'B/tmt CUbjuum
(formerly One Hr. Valet)
TEL-HUR0N S.C. Phone 335-7934 Open Daily:
One Hour Martinizing Elizabeth Lake S.C.
MIT Elizabeth Lake Rd.
Phone 332-0884
Open Daily:
HOURS: (At All Stores)-7:30 A.M.-7:00 P.M.
THE PONTIAC §>RESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968 __ . , ... / B—g
Mr. and Mrs. BeYnie Gracey of Lakewood Drive announce the engagement of their daughter, Karen Marie, * to Pvt. Perry Eugene Harrelson USMC, son of the Leaun Harrelsons of Percy King Drive. Miss Gracey attended Ferris State College.
Diane Joyce Tee and John Mitchell Kinzie are planning July vows. Their parents are Mrs. Shirleyan Tee of HUlen-dale Drive, Avon Township, Donald Tee of Rochester and the John Kinzies also of Rochester.
At a family brunch Sunday in Orchard Lake Country Club, the engagement of Mary Barbara (Bonnie) Martin to Lawrence Kevin Heintz was announced. Her parents are'Mr. and Mrs. Jamie M. Martin of Bloomfield Village. He is the son the Lawrence S. Heintzes of Birmingham. Miss MartirTis a junior at Hood College in Maryland and her fiance is a graduate of University of Detroit. A June wedding Isplanned.
Officer Wins With Recipe
PORTLAND, Ore. UP) - Norman L. Simmons, 260-pound traffic patrolman and veteran of 10 years with the Portland Police Bureau', is also a prize-winpingcqok.
The husky policeman, who likes to prepare meals at home and to experiment with his own recipes, was named state winner in the Men’s National Cooking His entry: “Peachie Tater Chip Loaf.”
RICHARD’S
RfHifOt/
The engagement of Christine Mary Sfhed-deh to Robert Charles Green is announced by her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis R. Shedden of Lakeside Street. Her fiance, son of the Alvin E. Greens of Eason Street, is a student at Oakland Community College.
BOYS' and GIRLS' WEAR Famous Name Brands
THE PONTIAC MALL
CHARLES COPPERSMITH
THE LEGEND OF THE FIRST FLOWERS
Flower*, nature’* most beautiful and VronderfuLcreation . . . where did they come from?
According to. legend, when God created the earth .. . and it waa finished, He made a large rainbow. All the angels walked out onto the rainbow to look at
VARTAGE
WATCHES
IT Jewel
2”»o IB95 NEISNER’S
WATCH REPAIR
42 N. Saginaw
earth. Their weight caused The rainbow to Crack, and small fragments fell on the earth .. . these tiny bits were the first flower*.
We will be writing this column titled "Flower Talk.” each week in this newspaper. Our writing will be about different flowers and how you can effectively use and enjoy them. Won’t you join us each week? — and in the meantime if you need flowers call us at FE 2-0127.
PEARCE
Eloral CO.
559 Orchard Lake Ave.
Personalized Pins Accent Fashions
Pins are a big plus to fashion. Worn in so many different ways on a hat,, a scarf, a cuff, a pocket, a lapel, doubly effective in pairs or teamed with gleaming chains, they provide a unique personal touch for every costume.
A h ★
Bold, ' delicate, elegant, dramatic pins in sculptured shapes, dimensional effects, spun wire fantasies, exquisite leaves, flower bursts, bows, chatelaines and whimsical creatures would suit any woman’s fancy.
Various Factors Are Involved In Accident Rates
CHICAGO (UP!) — There are about 102 million drivers in the United States, reports the National Safety Council,
| Of the total, as of last year, some 61 million were males. They are involved in more accidents than the 41 million women drivers, but the difference is due in part at least to differences in amount of driving done by each sex.
i The council says another factor in the accident rate is the time, place and circumstances of the driving.
Spray On—Wipe Off-Spot is Gone
with: SPOT-B-GONE
Use On Wails, Whitewall Tires, Plastics, Etc.
1-Pt. Bottle with Re-usable Spray Gun
WHhThis Ad 1
35
PONTIAC 852-5033
JANITORSERWCE ^„rI1 Rd
^SUPPLY COMPANY Auburn Heights
STAPP'S
annual mid-winter
TIME
YOU’LL BE I PROUD OF ;
t • , (%r pride In being able to offer Omega watches
to the customer* of lifts store is two-fold. First, only the finest jeweler* are privileged to offer these exceptional timepieces. Each jeweler la selected on1 the basis of high technical standard* and it* reputation for integrity. Second, the expert watchmakers in our store proudly recommend Omega watches. They know the inside facta and why it takes many time* longer to make an Omega than an ordinary watch. Every Omega movement undergoes 1497 qdality-control inspections from blueprint to final assembly to assure peerless accuracy and long service. Sold with a world-service guarantee...honored in 163 countries, Omega watches for men and women are priced from $65 to over SioOO. Ask for free style brochure.
REDMONDS
Jewelry
81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC free Parking in tlear of Store
Authorised Omega Agency ...the World's Most Wanted Watch
Qknoc: Infants:
vJM ILJCFO CHILDRENS
from oiir regular GIRLS
q^.*;±r BOYS . DRESSY PARTY SHOES
Black patent, straps and pumps for girls and young misses. Sizes 6-3 and OO
growing girls in size! 5-8.1 Regular ' j d prices from $6.99 to $9.99, ^
Boys' and Girls' SCHOOL SHOES
A wonderful value groupl Oxfords, loafers, straps, • leather boots, etc.
Variety of styles and colors, sizes 8Va through 3. Regular prices $7.99 to $10.99.
STRIDE-RITE Discontinued Styles
Value bargains. Buys In boys' and girls' styles, oxfords, loafers, straps, and party shoes. Variety of syles and colors. Sizes 8!A through 3. Growing girls 5-8. Beginning at $6" pr.
Big Boys', Mens' Bargain Group
Black oxfords, variety of styles and patterns. Loafer with gorded sides. Famous makes at sale prices. Sizes from 3Vb through mens size 10. Regular price $10.99 to $12.99. *6?
' STAPP'S
PONTIAC STORE 931 W. Huron at Telegraph
For Evening Hours Plaai# Call 332-3208
$099
pr.
$599
PEGGY’S
MIRACLE MILE
all remaining formats 1/3 off
White Stag
Jackets and Car Coats
1/3 off
Perma-Lift and Peter Pan bras and girdles
now on sale
SAYINGS UP TO 50%
$
coats
mink trimmed coats Were 125.00 to 250.00 now
89... 185.
Save 35. to 65.
warm winter
car coats
were 25. to 50. now
1890 .. 3490
dresses
were 18. to 80. now ,
1290 to 5990
famous make fine quality
wool pants
re*. $14.95
$990
coats
fur trimmed coats untrimmed casual coats warm pile-lined car coats savings you have been waiting for
untrimmed casual
coats
were 50. to 90. now
3490 i 6990
—
sn
B-—4
TIIE PON/l’IAC TRESS. WEDNESDAY,.JANUARY 8, 1968
f Evening Rite ! for Vows of l the Adamses
.row Old ?
ofeScPMM* /OMUHA/
Double ring vows were ex- I Just have to print two more (think of things for Mm to do to changed recently by Deeona letters from women whose hus- keep him happy end occupied, teeJ3aldwte and James Lee bands have retired, for his sake as weU as mine
Atoms There parents are the I Dear Mrsi Lowman I I felt Hke1 was supervising
naniel W Baldwins of Christ-' My husband is retired. He had ward activity. He would take Ian™Hills Drive, Avon Township no hobbies. I kept trying to garbage out, do the shopping,
and the James Adamses of Linabury Street.
,* * ★
For her wedding in United Missionary Church the br:de was gowned in rsembroidered lace over taffeta. A crown of seed pearls held her shoulder veil and she carried a cascade of white roses and Stephanotis.
* * ★
Jenny Baldwin was her sister’s maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Shirley Adams and Mrs. Larry Spieser of Defiance, Ohio.
★ * ★
On the esquire side was ! James Mortiermer as bestman with Dale Adams and Harold Brennan as ushers.
A reception in the Champion Building, Rochester, followed.
MRS. J. L. ADAMS
SEW SIMPLE
By Eunice Farmer
-1 take the laundry out, paint and do a little carpentry around the house and then lode at TV.
Then I saw the light and suggested that we buy a boat, any kind of a boat so that he could have an interest of his own and have some privacy. At first my-husband , insisted that I go along. It was fun but I realized that I couldn’t go every day.
BOAT FRIENDS Now he has his fishing and jboat friends, and I am learning | to play the organ. We both have our individual interests as well as our mutual interests. There is peace and harmony in the
hOUSe. | £ c .:----- - ........
-Now I am busy doing the shopping and laundry and going to weight watcherrlo lose the weight my husband’s cooking has put on me.
I have lost' 17 pounds in a few weeks, and am practicing do, re, me, fa, so, la, tee, on the organ
AP Wirtphoto
Mrs. James Hipp of Mt. Prospect, a Chicago suburb, feeds tier son John from a bottle while his twin, Joseph, gurgles in his crib: Doctors Say the twins are the first to survive intrauterine blood transfusions to combat the RH negative factor in their mother’s blood. The transfusions were made three days before their birth, Oct. 23,1967. The hospital used an x-ray with an image intensifier in the procedure.
Toy Workshop on Day's Agencfyi
Starch for Stains
A grease stain may often be removed from the wallpaper by applying liquid starch froqi a pushbutton container to the spot and letting it dry. Wipe off
A salad luncheon and toy workshop in the Bloomfield, I
This winter ‘I guess we will Hill, hnm. nf Mrs. WiHiam!^targ|l ^ittl a clean v^en put the boat Ip the back yard Wood . slatKl Friday allias'’*" '11 t#S1tom ta ‘ “y and maybe he will make some
All columnists take the opportunity to say Happy New Year gadgets for it so that it will be ^'m‘ or - t ^ to their readers, I don’t want to miss the opportunity. This is the ready for next summer. nesota Women s Club,
time of year when we begin trying to mend our ways and make ★ ★ ★
all sorts of New Year’s resolutions that are quickly forgotten
For those of you who have thought of taking up sewing because some of your friends are making beautiful clothes, this Is the time to do it. Don’t procrastinate any longer.
If my music doesn’t improve, he may even sleep on the boat! Another:
Dear Mrs. Lowman,
My husband retired -about five years ago. He had no hob-
The time of year just after the holidays is usually a little sad, and we have a let down feeling. What better time to spend bies. His work for the past 50 Unrnina to sew and by spring and summer you will have some-lyears had been his hobby so we ' I took it from there.
, ★ ★ ★
Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. G. E. Graves, Mrs. Harold Helgeson, Mrs. Joseph Schroeder and Mrs. Robert Cunningham.
Mrs. Nicholas Kenjoski, chairman of College Women’s Volun-
thingtowear. “ , teer services, will conduct the
Please remember that sewing is fun if you make it that wayJ When a young couple marry, workshop |
Laugh at your mistakes as you repair them; you must have a they face the fact that things * ★ ★
sense of humor to sew. You can’t expept to be a master over- will be different. What gets me Reservations may be ma^e night. / is, why d° peopleput so much th „ Mrs. John Strang of
stress on not wanting things to D. V» .1.
Choose a very simple pattern in a gay overall print in a change? Are they so dull that R ® r »'
rather firm fabric. The print will hide errors and firm fabrics they want to stay in' the same ° rr^ '______ -
rip better (yes, ripping is part of sewing, accept it). Perfection 0id rut? Do women forget how comes with practice. j nothing their hoirie and their
Whatever you do. don't be dkteour^d. It don't Ilk. ,lg"S» ***** ‘ dress after you have finished it, remember that everyone has a ★ ★ ★
repeat the treatment.
A home hair dryer has been developed which has a built-in radio in the hood.
Make Your Appointment Now!
PERMANENT and HAIR STYLE
Tinting—Bleaching Cutting
IMPERIAL
BEAUTY
SALON
158 Auburn Ave. Park F ree-r FE 4-2878
Edyth Stemon, owner
I thought, “If my husband’s j work had been his hobby, how! can he put it to work in retire-1 ment?” I remembered that
ready-made dress in their closet that hasn’t been worn because you didn’t like it after you bought it and took it home, Tills will happen less and less when you sew because you can choose exactly the color and pattern you have in mind.
Let me hear from you beginnm. I’U help and encourage y°u ™ gh ^ ‘^ars ‘'5Thad“re-any way I can! Today, sewing is the in’’ thing to do. Many very,^.^ compliments on
wealthy, important women in the world are making their own Ws interesting letters t0 busl. clothes and proud of it. . n)ess friends and personal
Dear Eunice Farmer, | friends. I suggested that he en-
Is there any way to remove the pin marks from the seams roll to a correspondence course on velveteen fabric? I have just finished a velveteen dress that j to writing, looks very professional except that there are -crushed marks CORNER OF ROOM wherever I have sewed over the pins. Mrs. M. W. He did ^ x fJxed up a cor.
Dear Mrs. M. W.: !ner of the Bvin8 room *er W*
These marks are almost impossible to remove. You should • always remove the phis on any napped fabric before stitching 1 over them. I would suggest steaming the seam very well, taking ; a rather stiff brush and trying to bring up the nap in this way.
Perhaps a firm tooth brash would do the job.
Set-In sleeves take perhaps more, skill than any other oper-tion in dressmaking. If you would like my booklet “AH About .Sleeves” which gives you illustrated instructions for professional looking sleeves, send 18 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Address to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. El-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
rrrmrrrrrrTnrFm^
CONNOLLY'S
OF THE WEEK!!
Ons of th« loveliest selections you could moke. A Marquise engagement ring ninety-eight points with on aura of grace and glitter — a diamond of exceptional fire and life. $950
Credit May He Arranged
ISJJJJUCr
study. I found a second hand desk and we put Up some book- j cases which acted as room divider for that corner. I
The project to date is 100 per cent successful. He made fine marks to the course and is still j learning. He has sold a few | things already but more important his mind is growing big-! ger and better every day.
When we started retirement, it seemed that we had nothing *•*# |to common, but we weren’t
thinking. Then we set aside one day to go exploring. With a picnic-basketful of food and a car full of gas, what fun we have had!
★ ★ ★
We select good books and take turns reading aloud. I could go on and on but the pic-1 nic basket and the car are waiting right now.
Just o Few Weeks Away from
HIGHER PAY
IN A MODERN CAREER IN
Card Punch
flh KEYPUNC.. M
I iumkkt GIRLS ... gat a good job,
J muMnwimwinm earn good monoy. Loam
tho language of computers. You can learn operation and programming of the IBM Card Punch in TO weeks! Class size limited to six.
Come in for an immediate aptitude analysis. This will tell you, at no cost and with no obligation, whether you .are suited for a Card Punch career.
JANUARY CLASS NOW FORMING
18 W. Lawrerice - FE 3-7028
Paper Pressing Cloth
Wet a brown paper bag with1 cold water, then wring it out and your havd a fine pressing cloth with which to set the crease in men’s and boy’s trousers.
rrrrrrm'rrrrrnrrirrnrrmrrrrTm^^
ONLY Complete DRAPERY FINISH
Ufoi/b-'W
PROCESSING
Ultra-Tone Professional Care Protects Your Drapery Investment
We are proud to be Pontiac’s first cleaner qualified to recommend and offer Ultra-Tone — The finest drapery care th^ textile maintenance industry can provide.
GRESHAM
CLEANERS
SHIRT LAUNDRY •
1 Vltra.Tane pr.cirion-form. drapery f®M- •• no handj pin, can. It permit, Irnylh to be adjusted to .traiphi-accuracy, even ebrreetin, minor flaw* in imperfectly | hentpmi dntparim. : l
msmmua. # commirciu. a institutional
008 Oakland Avenue Pontiac FE 4-2579 Ji
^■nmmumiiminttititmnitmuimimmiiiiy
Todd's Mid-Winter
of Quality Shoes
VITALITY SHOES for WOMEN
CLEARANCE OF FALL AND WINTER STOCK
Regular 13.95 to 17.95
now $6 $10 $12 FLORSHEIM SHOES for WOMEN
DISCONTINUED FALL PATTERNS Regular 18.95 to 21.95
. NOW $1590
MANY OTHER OUTSTANDING BUYS AT A FRACTION OF THE ORIGINAL PRICE
20 W. HURON
DOWNTOWN
SHOE STORE
Open 9:30 - 5:3Q • Friday to 9 Serving With Quality Footwear„Since 1919
i -V
BIG SAVINGS
Reductions of 10- to 30% On l-of-Kind Gallery Furniture Selections In Fine Early A merican, Heirloom, Traditional and Country Styles—Many Reduced Yesterday!
$419 Camel-back sofa in bold stripe tapestry with cherry frame..$295
$350 Camel-back sofa in turquoise and dlive brocade, 1 large reversible cushion.....................$250
$250 Henry Ford Museum reproduction of round, drop-leaf dining room table, 60”xl8” closed, opens to 60“ round, solid maple150
,$207 James River, 5-drawer mahogany chest, 26”Wx37“ high........ .$140
$325 double dresser in mahogany, 8 drawers, 56“ wide . J........ .$225
$375 Triple wide ......
resser, 12 drawers, 66” ...........$275
79.50 Solid mahogany Queehe Anne Nite table.......................$50
^200 Large barrel chair, skirted, rust tweed, tufted backs (2), each....$129
$250 Chas. I china - bookcase, double glass door, distressed walnut, interior lights ....................... $200
One Olive corduroy chair, vinyl atms — from the American Review collection. Regularly $169.50, now 129.50
$135 Cane-back, fruitwood occasional chair. Fruitwood frame, gold damask t cover........................ ,69.95
$150 Occasional chair in stripe^ red velvet with cherry fruitwood frame .................... .79.50
$100.00 48’VAntique pine, drop • leaf harvest table..................69.S0
$185 Small green velvet chair . 99.75
$189.50 Small wing lounge chair, bittersweet fabric ............99.75
$347.50 79” 2-cushiOn sofa in turquoise print fabric...........179.50
$450 79” Quilted sofa in gold and bittersweet print, loose, reversible
$350 77” Wing sofa in Scotchgarded nylon. Choices of gold, green, red or turquoise.. ...... ..........$295
$150 Octagon game table, Mffdjjeiv ranean styling, as is..;.. .99.75
$99.75 Game table chairs in assorted styles and fabrics, each....59.50
$593 87” Gold velvet sofa, 3 cushions, loose pillow back............$400
$360 Discontinued mahogany sideboard, 41” high, 68” wide....$260
$525 Quilted camel-back sofa, 84” long, mahogany frame ....... .$325
$165 Med. size wing chair, Chippendale legs, red, blue and green Crewel print, 1 only.......... .129.50
$55 Pine schoolhouse desk with black iron, 1 only.'........... .29.95
$98.50 Bedroom chair, brown, blue check with swag gkirt.......49.50
$125 Charles I host chairs in gold and green stripe upholstery, now $100 ea.
$225 High back wing chair in gold Damask cover., .............$149
$149.50 Red Damask, small lounge chair, loose pillow-back and seat...................... .49.50
$269 Country French, 55” Loveseat in olive Toille ............ 150.00
$300 Italian provincial gold cocktail table, round, 36” dia., top with world map....................$150
$113 Weiman mahogany end table with 3 shelves........... $70
$175 Printed linen, large wing colonial
cushions ................... .$350 loqnge chair................... .149.50
All Itenu subject to previous sale'
W1GG
BLOOMFIELD STORE ONLY 4080 TELEGRAPH ROAD At Long Lake Rd. —644-7370
Mon., Thun, and FH. Till 9 P.M.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3,1908
I i
x * ; »■■■ .1 < \ • ■ ■■ \
BALBOA, Panama Canal ,Zone (AP) — Puffing on the day’s fifth cigar, Raymond Kiel-hofer used two small, darkly veined hands to lift a 9,000-ton Russian freighter.
He saw the Novorossisk’s captain wave from the, bridge while women crew members flashed broad, proletarian smiles from the railing.
* * *
Down here, you lift boats by moving four chromed knobs on a long horizontal panel. This puts in motion a $72-million-a-year operation involving two giant man-made lakes, some 20,000 civilians, 28,000 troops, two governments and, once in a while, a lot of- angry dispute.
Kielhofer is senior control house operator on the Panama Canal locks which pass 13,000 ships a year on their way to and from the great oceans. •
FILLING, EMPTYING j His job is filling and emptying vast concrete chambers, 1000 feet long by 110 feet wide, to a depth of 42 feet with 52 million gallons of water. That’s how ships are lifted, or lowered, 27 feet. It takes longer to empty some bathtubs* than to fill one canal chamber—eight minutes flat.
How this is done is just one of the samples of the engineering marvel the Panama Canal represents even in the space age. Now in its 54th year, the thin, 50-mile Waterway between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans is operated with mostly the same equipment that went into it at an initial cost' of $380 million in 1914.
★ ★, '★
Kielhofer ijs one of some 50,000 U.S. citizens in the Canal Zone related, one way or another, toi the canal’s operation. In many ways he’s a typical “Zonian.”
He puts in an 8 to 4 dpy in a small two-story control house on a concrete island in the middle of the steamy locks. He makes ,more than $10,000 a year and lives the quiet life of his suburban stateside kin, except that his expenses are about 10-15 per cent less.
fer has been a senior operator raising and lowering ships through the locks. Error and disaster are ever present dangers.
Through a miscalculation’, a carrier’s overhanging deck once' sheared off steel light poles imbedded alongside i. canal lock. During the war, a battleship got stuck, Its, gun shields extended too faf over the sides to clear the ^control houses. They were cut off with acete-lyne torches and were welded on again after the trip through.
“GAS IN THE OCEAN”
More recently, a tanker smashed a hole in her side and dumped a six-inch layer of gasoline on the waters near the locks. Kielhofer recalls: “No Smoking orders went out over
the loudspeaker system. We decided to. proceed with the lockage (putting the boat through) then ran two empty lockages to get the gas out into the ocean.” That meant 104 million gallons of unused water lost to the sea. ■ i
1 w ■ I ',.A
Water, the canal’s lifeblood, is one of its more serious problems. In Panama the rainy sea son normally runs eight months. Water is stored in two-great artificial lakes created ay dam-
them from one ocean to the oth* On „ "r . ' .
Earth slides are another headache. More earth has been removed in the 54 years since the canal was finished than in all the digging to build it,
300 SHIPS TOO BIG
A 'third problem is shipping. The waterway is still some distance from becoming obsolete, but the question has arisen as to the wisdom of investing more money in an operation that
route through Manama or a neighboring country. Studies were intensifed following an outbreak of violence over U.S. Jurisdiction in the Canal Zone in January 1964.
★ ★ w
ming a river. An extended dry’eventually will have to be reseason, lowering the lake levels, placed or altered radically to can be troublesome. Water cOn- satisfy merchant fleets. More servation measures are then im- than 300 ships now are too big to posed to maintain the steady get through the locks; 900 others flow needed to operate the locks cannot make it across fully that raise ships 85 feet above loaded, sea level, through a - shallow The most discussed ^alterna-mountain range, in order to get five is a new sea-level canal
Panama wants a larger voice in canal / operations and the elimination of the zone concept in its present form. A new treaty, considerably altering the old one, was negotiated earlier this | year, but it has been shelved in ! Panama after much political 'sniping.
The zone, a 10-mile wide, 50-mile long strip of lush tropical greet) sandwiched in the middle of tlie Republic of Panama, is the Only home many Americans have known. To some the idea of putting it under full Panamanian sovereignty is almost
equivalent to giving Connecticut back to the British.
Others feel they will be forced to leave under a dark cloud of unfair censure from Panamanians and nonresident Americans. In the infrequent angry moments of Panama-U.S, relations, Zoriians have h been, accused of “plantation boss mentality.”* Zonians dispute this with statistics about the zone’s social, cultural and .economic contribution to Panama.
★ ★ ★
“It bothers me,” said Kielhofer, the boat lifter, speaking of the fading American presence here. “The canal’s too important a thing to give away. Grant that we can’t stop progress,. But I don’t believe in the giveaway. Give, give, give. No one really appreciates that.”
MKUND COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Community Services Olvision Office ft Qeitural Affairs
AmoUNCES
RENAISSANCE MIT
This four session Sjiort Course is devoted to the Renaissance and it* significant contnbutio'n to the development of contemporary music, literature, science and art. « /*
Tuesday, Jan, ^ 9—Jkteciai Concert featuring 'the Arnafuance Quartet—a New York-bated group competed of lute, viola da gamba, recorder end tenor.
Tuesday, Jan.A t>-"Importance of RenaUeanco Art"
)»y Hellen Sherman, Wayne State Unlverttty
Tuesday, Jan. 23 — “RenaliMunce Literature"
by Father Herman J. Miller, Univertity of Detroit
Tuesday, Jan. 30—"Science in the Renalttance"
by Herbert Odom, Univertity of Michigan
Co-sponsored by the Detroit Chapter, The American Recorder ,$ociety
8:00-10:00 p.m. Bloomfield Hiiit Andover High School Long Lake Road, juct west of Telegraph Fee. $5.00 (Tickets for Concert only, $2.00)
CALL 642-6210 TO ENROLL
•A LUCKY ONE”
He came to the Canal Zone in-1940 “for two years,” he says with a grin, and stayed. During the war he suffered a malignant tumor. It was removed and although on the frail side now—he is 60 and weighs 120 pounds—he looks healthy and vigorous.
“I’m one of the lucky ones,” he says.
* a • a
For the last 10 years,. Kielho-
Snafu in Idaho Leaves Marriage Cost a Puzzle
BOISE, Idaho (AP) - The cost of marriage went down in Idaho this week. Or did it?
The state’s new commercial tcode, passed by the 1967 legislature, was effective Jan. 1 and sets marriage license costs at $3.
a . a, . a
However, the same legislature’s new marriage law—effective last May—retains the old fee of $4.75 per marriage li-j cense.
Idaho Atty. Gen. Allan G. Shepard has been asked to rule on the snafu. In the meantime, most county officials in the state say they plan to ignore the commercial code’s $3 stipulation in favor of the higher rate.
s-h-h
it’s our
Grand
Opening
Cmon-a-my-house, I’m going to give you nice free gift. See our ad on page Bl.
house
of
bedrooms
Here are 20 reasons
why you should go
to Osmun’s great
January sale.
1. EAGLE % PETROCELLI
3. PHOENIX
4. FASHION PARK
5. MARTINELLI
6. RONALD BASCOMBE
7. AMBASSADOR
8. FRENCH SHRINER
9. CROSBY SQUARE
10. M’SIEUR SUCKS
11. SUITS
12. TOPCOATS
13. SPORTCOATS
14. DRESS SHIRTS
15. SPORT SHIRTS
Famous-maker 1-and 2-pants models. 1-, 2-and 3-button. Reg. $65 to $185
Famous-maker twpeds, sharkskins, Cashmeres, etc. Reg. $65 to $145
Famous-maker blazers, tweeds, etc. 2- and 3-button
models. Reg. $35 to $95
Famous-maker Dacron, cotton, wash and wear white shirts. Reg; $5 and $5.95
Famous-maker quality shirts. Great color selection. Reg. $6 to $29.95
NowM9"tol149*1 Now’49” to T19" Now'29* to 99" Now 2 for'9 Now’4"to523*
rs
16. DRESS SUCKS Now '1 3" to '23*
FRENCH SHRINER Wingtips in Black or Brown.
17. SHOES
18. SWEATERS
19. ALL-WEATHER COATS
20. COTTON SLACKS
Reg. $32.95
Famous-maker. Lots of colors.. Lots of styles. Wools,
Alpacas, etc. Reg. $14.95 to $40.00
Famous-maker zip lined. Dacron and cotton in plaids
and solids. Reg, $39.95
Famous-maker'permanent press slacks. Lots of colors and checks. Reg. $9
Now’21" Now’11"to’32" Now’29” Now’5"
e pari oI Pontiac tinea 1931
OSMUN’S
• TORES FOR MEN A YOUNG MEN
t. ' 7; M:
/
FREE PARKING at ALL STORES ■ Downtown Pontiac Optnfri. 'til 9 ■ Tel-Huron Center in Pontiac Open Every Night 'til 9 U Tech Plaza Center in Warren Open Every Night 'tit 9
jf^ aiming ■
» • -*'•■•'' r .•■' ■■■ '■■■:'■. -i. v' ‘V' ' ^ ' v '
I'ijtJB; PQNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY .‘3, 1968
Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas
miw^in-rr
Mrs. Leo A. Benedict
' Doyle J. Mitchell
HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Doyle J. Mitchell, 18, of 111 St. John was to be 1 p.m. today at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Burial was to be in Highland Cem-
LEYVIS W. WARD
olic Church, Pontiac, and the was a self-employed painter-stepfather and mother, Mr. and Holy Name Society. decorator. Mrs. John L. Hall; a sister;
I Service1 for former Pontiac; Surviving are two daughters,! Surviving are his wife, Bea-and two stepsisters, Mrs. Mona resident Mrs. Leo A. (Edith M.) Sister Dorothy I.H.M., a teach- trice; a son, Darwin of Lapeer; Bishop and Mrs. Betty Mitchell, Benedict, 73, of Baldwin Town-er af Marian Catholic High two daughters, Mrs. Daniel Pow- both of Lake Orion ship, Iosco C6untv, will be 10:30 School, Birmingham, and Mrs !ell and Mrs. Donald McCay, a m. Friday at Doridlson-Johns|Viliam Thiel of Pontiac; a both of Lapeer; eight grandchil-jFuneral Home with burial in!son Morton of Marine City; a dren; a brother, Carl of La-Roseland Park Cemetery. isister; four grandchildren; andipeer; and five sisters, including | Mrs. Benedict died yesterday. ja great-granddaughter. I Mrs. Zola Simpson, Mrs. Elea-
j Surviving are her husband ;j |nor giiiott and Mrs. Frances
two sons, Kenneth F. of Pontiac Thomas J. Sopp !Chubb, all of Lapeer, and Howard A. of Roscommon; rr i , . '
10 grandchildren; 10 great- Requiem Mass for Thomas J. Graham F. Diedrich Hi children; and a sister. Sopp. 83, of 5194 Farm, Water- •' - . |etery- ^
ford Township will be 10 a.m. ROSE TOWNSHIP — Service The youth died Sunday in an Mrs. Forest Cummings 'Friday in St. Vincent de Paul for Grahani F. Diedrich, 61, of auto accident. r r 1J .. „ ' ~ Catholic Church Scripture serv-131 Franklin will be 2 p.m. Fri-; Surviving besides his par-
Former Exec | ^oresft 'ice will be 8:30 p.m tomorrow day at Dryer Funeral Home, ents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell
4,6’ H°f 15» N ^0Selaw" in the Melvin A. Schutt Fun- Hol,y- Wlth burial in Rose Cen’iare four brothers, including Hii/ died yesterday. Her body is at _ , Home ,ter Cemetery. jGary, Lafryand.Ronald of High-
Qf lOnr/OC L/l V.. Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. c • . nt ct Mr. Diedrich died yesterday..land Township; and two sisters,
, 1 Mrs. Cummings ; attended Mr. opp, a me ' He Was employed1 at Fisher I including Vicki at home,
Ic Danrl nt 7*) First United Missionary Church Vincent de Paul Church, died Body Plant No, l in Flint, fo L/CUU Lll / « land was a member of Welcome 1 yesterday. j survivjng are his wife Mar-
* j Rebekah Lodge 246. | Surviving is a daughter, Mrs.||an; two sons, Daniel ofRoyali coirrHFfF, n _ w'w fn,
Lewis W. Ward, general sales Surviving are her husband; Mary Abare of Pontiac. jOak and David of Lansing; two 10scar j Reed 76 0f 21159
manager for Pontiac Motor Dl-her mother, Mrs. Sarah Hahd-„ William Stout iacludin8 nest °j Poinciana will be 2 p.m. tomor-
vision from 1946 to ^952, died ley of Gadsden, Ala.; five; mrs. vyniiam oiuui Rose Township; and three grand „w Heenev SnnHmikt Fn Sunday. H^was 75 * children, James E. with | the, prayer service for MrS. Wtt- children. T ™al Home! Ir'Sr Buri-'
Service was to be 1 pm. to*Army, and Marl! S., Sharon,E., ]jam una e.) stout, 81, of 86 Memorials may be made.to aj wjjj in Parkview day at" BeirChapel of the Wil- Donald F. and Stacy R,, ail at waterly, Waterford Township, the Holly Branch of the Michi- Cemetery Livonia sS liam/R. Hamilton Co., Birming-home; two sisters; and three wHi be 8 p.m. Friday at Don-gan Cancer Society. Mr RppH rpH . ma . Inp
ham. Entombment was to fol-brothers. , elson-Johns Funeral Home. | _ , _ | ^ Sr at SacMm^
low at White Chapel Memorial . ; _ _ Satur_ Mrs. Fred E. McCleary ™pair ad.r. p°nt
Cemeterv Trov F mer J Hawkins Service will be 1 p.m. satur, r Division, died Monday,
cemetery, irov. timer j. nawmiii day at the Methodist Church in, BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Serv- Surviving besides his wife,
Ward, currently president of, Elmer J. Hawkins,, 42. of 75 Cedar Springs with burial there ice for' Ms. Fred E. (Anna W.) Gail A., are two sons, Clarence
Product-Sol, Inc-. of Birming-Eafayette, djed this morning. ,jn the_Elmwood Cemetery.____[McCleary, 85, of 1312 N. Wood-E. and Glenn 0. both Of South-
ham, lived at 3941“ Quartou, Hjs rata js at the Huntoon' Mrs. Stout, a member of First ward, will be 1 p m. tomorrow field; a daughter, Mrs. Ray-
Bloomfield Hills. j Funeral Home. Methodist Church , Pontiac, died j at Bell Chapel of the William R.lmond Barnum of Livonia ; three
He was a member of the! Mr'Hawkins was a welder this morning. Hamilton Co., Birmingham.Bu- brothers, including Archie E.
Bloomfield Hills Country Club,;at Pontiac Motor Division. [ surviving are three daugh-|rial wiU be in WoodlawnCeme- 0f Farmington Tovynship; 11 the Detroit Gun Club and the! Surviving are a sister and t Mrs James Sorenson o{ tery, Detroit.
Murder Exam Set for Man, 53
A Pontiac man accused of
Fire Damages Area Home
A fire to Independence Township early this morning caused an estimated $3,000 damage to a basement, its contents and
TVs Recovered
hours later. She had been shot once in the chest, according to police. fylS
The incident followed-an alleged argument during which Mrs, Humphreys fired a re
Burglars made off with some 50 long-play record albums an open1 Th® blaze, believed to be elec-ifrom a Pontiac firm late yes-^ trical, broke out at 3:20 a.m. , , . ... .
* ’ ‘ terday, but police recovered
two‘Stolen television sets near the scene.
Officers # were dispatched to the D and D Radio and Television Shop, 319 Prospect, short ly. before midnight and found that the intruders had, smashed through the front door glass.
★ ill . *
A spokesman for the firm said at least 50 albums valued at
the fatal shooting of bis wife!' .. .,
Friday fades preliminary exami 0 s e nation Jan. 10 on
charge of murder. [today at the 4936 Neosho home
Robert Humphreys, 53,, of 229 ! f M d Mrs Robert Slhsher. E. Walton was arrested at his injured the fire>
home shortly before midnight. ^ ^puty f ire Chief Tink
His wife, Earline, 50, died inlRonk.
Pontiac General Hospital a few
Local Club to Hear Rep. McDonald
volver. later confiscated by of-R [^District will be the key more than 5300 p us* lhe te eV1' ficers, three times, a witnessj^XJat^Fri-^ I sion sets, were missing, said
Oscar J. Reed
★ * *
| Police said they found six spent ’ cartridges on the premises.
Humphreys is free after posting $2,500 bond set at his arraignment Saturday by Muni- ^ a question. cipal Judge Maurice E. Finne- a n d . answer
®arh_ r- - period after the
luncheon.
day’s meeting of the Pontiac Exchange, Club.
He will discuss current national
■k ★ ★,
Police said the sets, both portables, were found hjddent under vehicles parked across the street, apparently left there by the burglars in a hasty escape.
two brothers.
Detroit Yacht Club.
★ ★ ★. j
Surviving are his wife, Lillian; Mary L. McGraw EL; a daughter, Mrs. Allan L®d-| servjce for Mary L. McGraw
Baby Boy Re wo Id
Foijtiac, Mrs. Stanley Weller of Mrs. McCleary died yesterday.
Kalamazoo and Mrs. Kenneth She had been an active member Barnes of Wyoming, Mich.; a|of the Birmingham First Meth-_______________^ _________ T son Horace Linderynsn ■ of!Cnurcn.
ford of Honolulu, Hawaii; eight 83 o{ 118 e chicago will be iiBridgeman, three sisters- a' Surviving are a daughterrMrs,J ROCHESTER >*- Service for grandchildren; and four great-p m tomorrow at the Elton1 hp(JL- ii oranHrhildrpn-’andIJohn E- Laile of Birminghambaby boy Rewold, infant son of
YtronJr.hilrlran ol i. r*________i ti___ t.-t UlOlliei, 11 gl dliut-llliutctl, anu. nvonrlnhilHron • and fmir Mr and Mrc Waltor Rmi.nld POI
grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchilden.
grandchildren.
Waterford Twp. Blaze Causes $1,300 Damage
Black FuneraUHome, Union ....' "~|tour grandchildren; and four^r. and Mrs. Walter Rewold, 801
Lake, with burial in Perry*108 8 |great-grandchildren. j Ludlow, was to be 11 a.m. today
Mount Park Cemetery. \\ Mrs John Brown nu ni-ll-J at PixIey Memori?l Chapel, with
Miss McGraw, a retired em-! crown Robert E. Millard burial in White Chapel Memori-
ploye of the J. L. Hudson Co., I BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-1 LAKE ORION - Service for al£em.et.ery’ 3™?' died Sunday. Service for Mrs. John (BeulahjRobert e Millard 53 of 243 Tbe infant dred at birth yes
Surviving is a sister. B.) Brown, 82, of 50 Square,,Hauxwe„ wil, be 2’p m’ tomor-'
Mrs. Brown died Monday. Surviving are two sisters.
' Elvin G. Coulter
LAPEER
iLake will be 1 p.m. tomorrow Robert J. Peltier jgt Donelson-Johns Funeral
Fire broke out at the Thomas] Requiem Mass for RobertjRo!?e’ ^
Brown home,' 6450 Anderson-]J. Peltier, 81, of 765 Robin- “ Parry M°unt Park C6metery, ville, Waterford Township, yes-wood will be 11 a.m. Friday in ]Po,a_5ct terday afternoon, causing an Holy Cfoss Catholic Church, estimated $800 to the building Marine City, with burial there and $500 to the contents. . jin the Holy Cross Cemetery.
★ * * j The Rosary will be recited
Township fire fighters, who at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow
responded to the alarm at 4:20 in the Bower-Rose Funeral vin G. Coulter, 71, of 744 Tur- member of the.Lake Orion Meth-
and returned to the station at Home in Marine City. trill will be 2 p.m. tomorrow.odist Church, the Masonic Lodge
4:54, attributed the fire to a! Mr. Peltier, a retired em-1 from the Muir Brothers Fuheral. and GES No. 340. pan left cooking on a stove, jplove of Detroit Gasket Manu- Home, with burial In Stiles Cem-j Surviving are his wife, Bea-
★ ★ ★ jfacturing Co., Marine City, was etery, Mayfield Township. ' trice, a daughter, Barbara, and.
The fire at the one-story, j a member of St. Michael Cath-| Mr. Coulter died Monday. He] son, Bruce, all at home; his
$30,000 brick home -was confined to the kitchen, but smoke damage was evident throughout the house.
row at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Eastlawn Cemetery,
Orion Lodge No. 46, F&AM, will conduct a memorial service at 8 p.m. today at the funeral home.
Mr. Millard, head custodian of the Lake Orion Junior High Service for El- j School, died Monday. He was a
terday
Surviving are his parents, a Sister, , Wendy, and a brother, Brad, all at home, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rewold of Rochester and Mrs. Robert Wallace of Hubbard Lake.
Police Action
Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 73 reported incidents and made 12 arrests the past 24 hours.
A breakdown of causes for police action: Vandalisms—7 Burglaries—13 Larcenies—16 Auto thefts—2 Bicycle thefts—1 Disorderly persons—4 Assaults-*-^
Obscene phone calls—2 Bad checks—2 Rapes—1
Traffic offenses—6 Property damage accidents—9 Injury accidents—4
A British research labora-! tory has devised a machine capable of printing all of Shakespeare’s plays in little more than a minute. It can print more than 60,000 characters a second.
Pontiac Mari Is Bound Over in Road Death
A 33-year-old Pontiac man was bound Reiver to Oakland County Circuit Court yesterday on. a charge of negligent homicide in the traffic death of a Commerce Township man last Nov. 3.
Roy L. Scott of 170 Florence is scheduled to aopear before Circuit Judge Philip Pratt for arraignment at 9 a.m. Jan. 17.
The charge against Scott was reduced from manslaughter to negligent homtotde by Waterford Township Justice Patrick K. Daly who conducted the preliminary examination.
The victim, George P. See-dorff, 52, of 2105 Union-Lake, allegedly was struck by Scott’s car on lhe shoulder of 1-75 near Sashabaw Road in Independence Township as he was getting tools from the rear of his vehicle to repair a flat tire.
Seedorff was pinned between the cars and was dead on arrival at Pontiac/General Hbspital, according to Pontiac State Police.
The driver who struck Seedorff then left the accident scene. The suspect later was arrested in his home by Pontiac police.
NOTICE OF~ANNUAt. MEETING, Notice, is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of the members of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland will be held at the,,Main Office of the Association, 761 West, Huron street, _ . . ». haatav n iPontiac*. Michigan, on Wednesday, the
noon luncheon, MCDONALD ! 17th day of January, 1968, at 2 Pr-M., according to Pontiac Chief of]Xnhfhl>0,ro(!?owi^!cons'der,no *nd vo,lnfl Police William K. Hanger, i ,Uc„ „h,r
president i business as may legally come before
y , . n *he meeting.
The luncheon IS open to EX-j First Federal Savings and
, , , j Loan Association of Oakland
change Club members and meir,( james clarkson,
„ ...1. President
guests. .1 December 27, 1967 and Jan. 3, 1968
Ohhh, Are We Happy . . . Help Us Celebrate
(We’ve Conquerored Our Water Damage Problem)
Let's Celebrate Tonight and All Day Thursday
Dinner Specials
CHUCK WAGON SIRLOIN
Reg.
$1.49
$1.29
’ 2 lb. of chopped sirloin char broiled.
Childrens Portions Reg. 89c, now 79c
FRONTIER FILET
$2*59 $2.39
Tender filet of sirloin custom cut for perfect broiling to order. All dinners are served with ranch house toast,, crisp tossed oreon salad with choice of dressing, your choico of baked, whipped or fronch fried potatoes.
► FAM/LY
resfautQtife
ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL
If You Need a Loan, "You’re Not Alone.
Valuable Information for Burglars
Little Lessons in Larceny No. 5
WARNING
These Premises Protected From Burglary By
AN
INTERSTATE ALARM SYSTEM
PASS ON BY
We put these little decals on entrances of places having any of our new electronic intrusion alarm systems for YOUR benefit. We tell you in advance how tough it is for you inside. Go find a place that doesn't have these little stickers on the door*. Chances are, you'll fare much better.
Sometimes we cheat. We hide the Sonic Tranducers where you can't find them, even when you case the place. We send the silent intrusion alarm directly/ to the police by phone or radio/ Then we leave the little warning stickers off. If you hate us with a passion, we have ft coming.
Interitnte Alarm Systems -
673-7555
Thousands have borrowed money from us in the past year.. . Helping people work out financial problems is one of the reasons we are here. We know how taxes, medical bills or car repair bills can wreck the soundest budget. And we've seen how successfully thousands^ have weathered the problems with a Pontiac State Bank Loan ... If you need money for any worthwhile purpose see us.
The Bank On The “CKOIF”
mm Pontiac gg State Bank
; i ' ' . t
12 Co nvenient Offices... Main Off lea: Saginaw at Lawranca,.. Opan Daily • A.M.
Member Federal Oapesit Insurance Corporation whoro each Depositor Is Now Insured to $19,011 by F.O.I.C.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
B-f 1
Lot Purchases OK'd
to
at Pontiac General
City commissioners last night expansion of Pontiac General authorized purchase of three Hospital's parking facilities, more properties on Seminole for' Purchases are part of a continuing program to purchase
the entire block bounded by West Huron, South Johnson, Seminole and Menominee fof hospital use. I
i The city presently has option on the properties at 91. 95. and 99 Seminole for $30,000. They! ■ — —, — had been appraised at $28,400.
DV POO BY I HaroW B- Euler, hospital
v^i-^ i jadministrator, said the price is | comparable to prices paid for A request to deputize 12 per- similar purchases in the same sons'as yote registrars in a block. —
voflr registration drive met * * *
with little-enthusiasm by city ! 1° other action, the commls-officials at last night’s City sioners turned down a request, Commission meeting. after lengthy discussion, to
Spokesmen for the Pontiac*1™1 a special permit to-;West
Voter Drive Limits Hit POOBY
Viets to Stop Impounding U.$. Vehicles
SAIGON (AP) — The U,S.
I Mission has reached a tentative agreement with the South Vietnamese government to end the impounding of official American Icars and trucks which aren't iproperly registered.
Vietnamese police started hauling vehicles in by the score Tuesday, forcing some1' U.S.
registration*so they could appre-fthe forms submitted before the hend Vietnamese driving an es- deadline. Thus most of the offi* timated 20,000 American cars cial cars were liable to im-with illegal “TN” plates to es- pounding, eppe import and use taxes,! The agreement reached today which are high. is that if the car user can pro*
By the Dec. 21 deadline, re-;vide a certificate proving that registration forms for only 6,000 the car is being used officially, of the cars had been submitted, it will not be impounded or it But the Vietnamese policefwill be released. ’ ^
were swamped with those and Sixty-eight pfflcial vehicles
Army colonels and AID officials were no{ ap]e to keep up with have been released, to walk or take cabs. One U.S.
AP Wlr(Photo
MAY GET ASYLUM — Four U,S. Navy deserters are shown this week in Stockholm, Sweden, where officials are considering granting them asylum. The four are (from left, seated rMichael Lindner, Craig Ander-
son, (standing)\ Richard Bailey and John Barilla. An advisory government body has recommended that the four Americans be allowed to remain ip Sweden fop “humanitarian reasons.’’ __
official termed it “an administrative mess that defies the imagination.”
★ ★ ★
Some 300 of the official vehicles have been impounded, j
Many trucks used to carry I goods from the Saigon port also have been impounded, and the port has begun to clog up, officials said.
The estimated 10,000 U.S. Mission vehicles in south Vietnam were supposed to have been reregistered by ■ the first of the year. They display special “TN” plates,* and the Vietnamese police ordered the re-
"YOUR HEALTH"
SEVEN DANGER SIGNALS
1. Recurring headaches 5. Backache or leg pain
2. Neck pain or ‘crick*
3. Grating and popping noise when turning head
t4. Pain between shoulder blades
6. Nervous tension and/ or dizziness
7. General body muscle tension
WARNING
If any of these symptoms persist CALL YOUR CHIROPRACTOR
Dr. H. H. Alexander ,&SS?K£fttan
J
n_____. .. t oi i u Side Lanes, a bowling establish-,
uk' *“•'
has the taw price!
the city cierk was arbytrarilv ^6^5’ 1° allow servingjUdctK-uie cuy ciers was armtraruy hoUc tfeverages on the con-
setting a limit of four registrars course where bowlers bowl. . | — who would be named by i POOBY — instead of 12, the * IN FAVOR number they prefer. | The vote was 5-2 for denying
, , , ,,,4 the request with only District 2
at? commissioners to* Robert C. I^win
2* L?Ven ‘UT , ^ District 4 Corqmissiroer
iWve which would include a UsU H. Hudson in favor, house - to - bouse registration! -
campaign, provided those depu-< An atorney for the business, tized would receive training and Stanley Kurzman, said ail other be under the authority of City establishments in the area have Clerk Olga Barkeley. ®ucl1 Permits.
Mrs. Barkeley said she was' H« said,thf 0WIM* fa ‘n not in favor of house-to-house P°s‘°«! of °a“* leafes t0
registration at all, but noted competing establishments.
she could properly supervise ★ ★ ★
four persons in the legalities of Noting that during seven voter registrations. yfears of operation, the business
★ ★ * » had not had any trouble with
City attorney Sherwin M. the Liquor Control Commission! Birnkrant advised the commis-or police department, he said sion that it could not direct the K would be the responsibility, city clerk }n this area since!?* the management to ensure the clerk’s office is responsible dmt nbnors were not able to
to the Michigan secretary of procude any drinks on the constate in election matters. course. ■ '
„ Commissioners who spoke
LEGALITY OPINION 'against such a move said they ;
He said he was not sure of preferred tha t drinks not be; the legality of house-to-house served in areas where minors registrations. City commission- could be mingling with adults, ers asked the clerk to seek an; ---------------—------:----
Thai Soldiers
opinion from the Michigan sec-, retary of . state to determine if they were legal.
Mrs. Barkeley said house-to-house registrations had been conducted in the past with up to 20 registrars for short periods preceding national elections.
But, she submitted a report which showed the Michigan Association of City Clerks as against such drives with a flum-j
ber of reasons for being op- J BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — posed. (Thai soldiers are reported fight-
5 * * * ling a series of running battles
She said the clerk’s office,Communist terrorists in
gl*i t0 work.?th mountainous jungles of northern
POOBY in setting up registra-
Jungje Outposts Hit by Terrorist Patrols
tion offices in any school or building that could be utilized for particular areas desired.
Pontiac Div.
Appointment
%
Is Announced
Thailand.
A Thai television news team which returned from the north Monday said military commanders in ihe area believe North Vietnamese and Communist Laotian forces have moved a battalion'into Nan province, which borders Laos.
They said Communist attacks on government outposts had caused heavy casualties, and Thai units sent deep into, the Philip I mountains were being am-
The appointment of .
Western as Pontiac Motor Di-j bushed by Communist patrols, vision’s national used-car man- Gen. Praphas Charusathien, lag®: was an-commander in chief of the jnounced today i have been killed in 16 current fby Thomas L.|°Pera**ons a8atost Communist VW forces ln northern Thailand in
King, general; ^ today said 20 soldiers
j sales manager. jg,e pas^ weejj three Communist Western, who terrorists were killed, 26 cap-Ifor the past two'tured and 16 surrendered, most-lyears has been lv in the north and northeast I Pontiac’s owner Provinces!* he told his weekly relations man-|news inference, ager, succeeds |N. VIET BATTALION
After a visit to Nan, Charusathien said last week that a bat-1 talion of North Vietnamese troops, sprinkled with Pathet Lao and hill tribe forces, was trying to cross from Laos. Thai
WESTERN Robert B. Haley, who recently died.
Western joined the division in 1936 at its main assembly plant in Pontiac He became a service adjuster In the Pontiac zone in 1947 and later that year he assumed the same position hi St. Louis. He also served as a service instructor and district manager.
In 1951 he returned to Pontiac bunkers, the televisiomnewsmen as zone service manager and in reported.
1951 he was promoted to assist- ★ # *
ant zone manger. He accepted Women and children have his owner relations assignment been evacuated from villages in 1966. (near the Laotian border.
★ * ★ | . ' r-----------:—
A 1941 graduate of the Gener-1 The health industry of the
al Motors Institute, Western of (United States is. a $50 billion Royal Oak is married has has d* year combination of hospitals, two boys and two girls. I clinics and laboratories.
WHITE SALIC
THICKLY TUFTED FRINGED CHENILLE
army units were sent in by helicopter.
The Thai troops found the terrorists were using booby traps and building cleverly concealed
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TIIE^PONTIAC PRESS, WEDyteSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
as
r, LANSING, Mich. (AP) -Shortly after Michigan Gov. .George Romney left on his four-week world tour, Lt. Gov. William Milliken; filling in Romney’s absence, was asked how he liked the governor’s office.
Milliken replied: “I think it’s a nice place to visit, but I’m not sure yet whether I'd want to live here ’’
Asked how he liked it nearly ■ four weeks later, on the eve of
■Romney’s return, Milliken said, jin jest: “It’s fine. I like it. I’mj going to come back from time| to time,”
j If this fall and winter are any: indication, Milliken will be back1 quite a bit. ,
■ t ■+ * /* A
Milliken has filled in for Romney numerous times since first being elected in 1964.
But his stints as acting gover-S nor have increased sharply! since Romney launched his
campaign for the Republican criticism from a. number of presidential nomination. j Democratic legislators. They
Romney, has been away fre-j wanted him to stay in Lansing quently in recent months, twice [and fight for the states highly on long trips. Early last fall he controversial open-hodsing bill, made an extended tour of the During Romney’s tour of riot ..
nation’s riot dreas. Tonight he'nreaS, 3, four-man delegation of I session,, which pdfpns Jan: 10. / returns from his world tour. j Democrats met him in New! MAjq| ROLE SEEN , 7 During the governor’s ab-l^j**®** and apV With Romney tied up in,presi-
dential primary campaigns,
vanagh to seek answers to last July’s disastrous Detroit riot.
The leaders met with Milliken for nearly two hours to map open-housing strategy to be followed in the regular legislative
...c governors wm ......
sence, the lieutenant governor Pea*^ r®*urn^
becomes acting governor and assumes the governor’s full constitutional powers
, „ ' , rw_„u Milliken likely will play a major
Letters to the editor in Detroit ro)e headi future
newspapers f» hf« c"/.^l0pen-houstag move Romney’s absence has drawn B°mney i°r Payin8 t | tv,o , ia_VMrjnu
(People in
& $
By The Associated Press
“Johnny! Johnny!” shouted a woman autograph hunter as she ran down the studio aisle during the taping of the Johnny Carson “Tonight” show.
The commotion occurred last night while Carson was delivering his opening monologue before the National Broadcasting Co; television cameras in New York.
An NBC spokesman said the worrian, unidentified, had been sitting in the audience. She was stopped before she reached the stage and escorted from the studio. No charges were ■rMBI brought.
The incident was not edited from the film, ’* CARSON the spokesman said, but the only on-screen indication that something was happening was a stunned expression on Carson’s face.
Yachtsman Plans Seabed Survey
Japanese yachtsman Ikuo Kashima, who has sailed ■across the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, announced today in Tokyo, he will lead an expedition around the world to survey the sea bottom.
Kashima, 38, and five other persons, including a doctor and biologist, will leave in November aboard a 20-ton yacht, the Koraasa in.
Kashima said the voyage would take two years. It would cover Southeast Asian waters and the Indian Ocean, Red Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Atlantic Ocean and Strait of Magellan and waters around South Pacific islands.
Kashima sailed alone from Long Beach, Calif., to Japan last summer aboard the Koraasa II. In 1965 he crossed the Atlantic from Genoa, Italy, to New York aboard the Koraasa I.
Chief Justice Is Praised
U.S. Chief Justice Earl Warren has heard the achievements of the Supreme Court under his leadership praised as “awesome.”
Provost Edward H. Leiv of the University of Chicago offered that assessment yesterday during the dedication of a legal center named for Warren at the University of California Law School in Berkeley, Calif.
Levi said the record of the court under Warren “is unparalleled in the effective attention given to the development of constitutional doctrines to safeguard the dignity of the individual.”
Warren, three-time governor of California and an alumnus of the law school, attended the ceremony.
WARREN
Asian Flu Spread Feared With Return to Schools
ATLANTA (UPI) - Health officials feared today that the return of children to school from the holidays will give momentum to outbreaks of Asian flu that apparently are affecting | more than half of the nation. j
The National Communicable! Disease Center (NCDC) reported yesterday that 12 states havej documented outbreaks of Asian! flue, three states have “probable” outbreaks and ,12 others are listed in the “possible” cat-t egory.
Doctors said the intensity of the current virus appeared to be remaining relatively mild-
NCDC experts said that the! most exact view of the scope of Asian flu is gained through a c h o o 1 absenteeism figures, which have been blank for the past two weeks because of the Christmas holidays.
★ ★ ★
Medical authorities in several states viewed the reopening of schools with apprehension.
ABOUT A WEEK
“After the kids get back together, I expect the roof to blow off in about a week,” said Dr. Paul White of the Virginia Health Department. Virginia schools reported as high as 20 per cent absenteeism before the holidays.
“We anticipate that any flu
virus that’s around will gain momentum as school resumes,” said a spokesman for the Massachusetts Health Department.
| NCDC officials said that much of New England had been spared the epidemic so far, but predicted it would strike the area before winter ends.
it it , It
The western United States will continue to be spared, the NCDC said, because of immunity built up in a 1964-65 outbreak. The California Department of Education said yesterday that absenteeism was running about normal with no evidence to indicate that flu is a factor in the absences.
s-h-h
it’s our
Grand
Opening
C’mon-a-my-hou*e, I’m-going to give you nice free gift. See our ad on page Bl.
house
of
bedrooms
tentlon to running the state. The open-housing
The ■ 49-year-old lieutenant measure i governor, seen by many Repub-
i a u« D ,u„ „ ’ licans as the most likely sticces-
placed by Romneyton toe agen-, ^ buttonholed
da of a special legislat ve ses- < * House mem-
sion between Thanksgiving and . f - ■ ,■ . „ , _
Christmas, failed in tfie House 2*^*2$!!"** of Representatives and never got to the Senate.
BOGGED DOWN
during the special session.
Milliken said he believes Romney “will be here and will continue to work" for open
A number of other controver-j housing during the regular ses-sial measures, among them a sjon.
lower court reorganization bill, also bogged down while Romney was away
Romney’s Washington campaign headquarters says the governor js scheduled to fly to
WILLIAM MILLIKEN
Citizens representing^ Michi-jNew Hampshire, site of the na-gan’s most prestigious political,;tion’s first primary, on Jdn. 11 church, civic and labor groups after delivering his State W the renewed a pledge Tuesday td State message. ' *
fight for the open housing law. j * * *
Among those present. were! Campaign plans reportedly inmembers of the blew Detroit1 elude New Hampshire trips on Committee, named by Romney Jan. 12-17, Jan. 25-27 and tenta-and Detroit Mayor Jerome Ca- tively again Feb.\5-7.
Negro Greeted but Sits Alone
JACKSON, Miss (UPI) - The first Negro to serve in the Mississippi legislature since. Jefferson Davis’s former slave helped draft the 1890 state constitution says h® hns beenj (“warmly” received by his white] colleagues.
But no one wants to sit beside him.
Rep. Robert G. Clark, 38, who won his seat as an independent candidate in the November general election, yesterday became the first Negro permitted on the floor of the house in the memory of veteran observers. The occasion was the opening of the 1968 legislature.
Several legislators nodded to Clark as the educator, wearing a gray business suit and black tie, walked down an aisle and took a seat at a double desk in front of the chamber.
★ - * ★
He still was sitting alone after the formal allotment of seats for the new session. Two mem-! bers normally are assigned to a double desk.
Swedish naval engineers havej blasted out huge underground' bases jn the rocky walls of cliffs along the natiqn’^ coastline. !
City Schools Preparing for Annual Clothing Drive
Next week will be the time to give away old clothing for heedy children in the Pontiac School District.
Pontiac public schools will hold their 13th annual clothing drive Monday through Jan. 12.
The goal This year for all of the city’s schools is 24,000 pounds of clothing, an , average of one pound of clothing per child, said' drive chairman Don DeVoe, assistant principal of Lincoln Junior High School.
More than 39,500 pounds of clothing were collected last year, DeVoe said.
INITIAL DRIVE
The drive was started in 1957 to. aid needy children in the district. Some 6,500 pounds were gathered that year.
Clothing collected during the one-week drive Is delivered by the school system’s maintenance department to two local charitable organizations.
Acting as clearing agencies for the school system are the Salvation Army, 118 W. Layrrence, and the Dorcas Society, Seventh-day Adventist Church, 168 University. «. ,
★ ★ '■ ★ .
DeVoe said children in need of shoes or clothing usually are identified by their teachers or principals. The parents M a needy youngster are contacted and given a requisition'slip which can be exchanged for articles at one of the two agencies, , ‘
H Last year, 325 requisitions were issued, he said.
Persons who have clothing to contribute but have no children in school can contact the nearest school and arrangements will be made to have the clothing picked up.
★ ★ ★
Pupils at Eastern Junior High School were the top contributors last year with 5,972 pounds of clothing, an average of more than six pounds apiece.
Sears
SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO.
Starts Thursday, Jan. 4* IN-THE-STORE
Clearance
5-Piece Sectional, Was 259.95
199
Add pew charm to your living room. A full 16-foot around the walls. Reversible polyfoam cushions. Upholstered in durable tweed cover.
Sale! 2-Piece Suite, Was 199.95
$158
No Monty Oown
Here is a modern style sofa and a chair graced by sloping arms. Both pieces have reversible foatn latex cushions. Choice of decorator colors.
5-Pe. Maple Dinette, Was 139.95
*88
No Monty Down
Colonial style 40-in, table opens to 50-in. with one 10-inch leaf . . . mar resistant top. Complete with 4 matching hardwood chairs. Save 851.
No Monty Down
2-Pc. Bedroom Set, Was 140.95 Traditional Sofa, Was 199-95
Includes panelbed and double dress- no Fits perfectly into that special place ~m og A
er with mirror. Danish styling comp- in your living room. Smart pillow I
lemented by rich satin walnut finish. effect back. Quilted fabric. ^ Poly- MRwRF-
S6D Matching 4-Drawer Chest ... Sale! 47.88 No Monty Down urethane foam cushion. Choice of No Monty Down
colors.
219.95 Divan Bed .................... .Sale! $ 158 70.80 Mis-matched Hollywood Bed . .. Sale! 47.88
39.95 40” Steel Wardrobe %............Sale! 29.88 19.95 Dropside Crib (take-with) ...............16.88
39.95 Baby Carriage . ........; . . . . Sale! 19.88 16.95 Crib Mattress....................Sale! 13.88
Sears Furniture Department
or Box Springs
Were 29.95 to 34.95
Twin O/i Only
Were 39.95 to 49.95
Twin OQ or Full
Were 59.95 to 79.95
39
88
ooeh
88
each
Twin or Full
88
••eli
Moor samples mis-matched, slightly damaged, some are brand new. While they last!
NO MONEY DOWN On Sears Easy Payment Plan
Z1G*ZAG Sewing Machines
Sale Price
46
-4k
SEARS WAREHOUSE SPECIAL ... NATURAL COLOR PICTURE
C-O-L-O-R Consolette TV Sale Price
No Money Oown on Sears Easy Payment Plan
Sew on buttons and make buttonholes. Embroider and monogram clothes. Mend, durn, baste, and overcast seams. In sturdy portable base.
Sear*
Sewing Machine Department
Canister Vacuum
*22
Sale
Price
Powerful motor. I ses disposable paper dust bags ... no me*-. Altarkniant* for-, rlean-ing rugs and bare floors.
Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5 i.lll
IO% to 40% OFF
Sewing Machines, Cabinets, Chairs, Vacuum Cleaners and Floor Polishers. Demonstrators, Floor Sample^, Some -1 -of-a-Kind! Hurry in for Best Selection.
No Money Down
• 18” pictured measured diagonally
• Consolette has removable legs for use as table model
• Colorguard eliminates color impurities, stray color in black and white pictures
• Tinted safety shield reduces glare from room lights
Sear* All-Channel Portable TV.....Sale! $88
VHF Outdoor Antenna.......... . Sale! 12.88
37-Key, 18 Pre-Set Chord Organ . . .Sale! $98
41
SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO.
Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171
TIIB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
Romney Will Return Briefly Before N.H. Stumping Tour
DETROIT (AF)—Gov. George.the 1968 GOP nomination, al-jwill begin his campaigning the Romney returns to Michigan to-Jthough farther Vice President!next day shaking1*hands at 8:30 night after a month-long world Richard M- Nixon is **Pected a m. with factory workers at a
. . k,,i l. _i_n . . . ito make his campaign official plant gate in Nashua, N. H.
tour, but he plans to leave again'thjs month „ “ mNFRARV
next week far New Hampshire * * * , . uA » S lllNKRAHY ,
in his tjuest f$r the 1968 Repub- Before leaving the Indian' $over**®r |rtans a n**Jj lican presidential nomination, capital Tuesday, Romney was con erence n Concord befor® Romney'left New Delhi late! introduced lo Karan Singh, an Payinf? his filing fee at the Tuesday en route to Paris on his I Indian who is employed by Ford I secretary, of state’s office at way home. j Motor Co. In Detroit, and his mid morning. His first-day
* * * wife of three days, Abha. Singh! itinerary also calls for street
He is to arrive at Kennedy vacationed in India to get!campaigning in Manchester,
Airport in New York at 6:30; married. j afternoon openings of neighbor-
p.m. and at Detroit Metropolitan! * ★ * . hood headquarters in Somers*
Airport at 9:30 p.m, | They were introduced to Rom- worth, Durham and Portsmouth
Romney will deliver his State ney by Bhagwan Singh, the and an evening speech at Exeter
of the State address to Michi- girl’s father who is chairman of Academy in Hampton. He will
gan’s Legislature, which con- the Indian Tea Board. Bhagwan spend the night in Hampton.
venes Jan. 10, before leaving Singh gave the Michigan gover- + * *
Jan. 11 for New Hampshire. nor a . hand-carved walnut tea yis Washington campaign
STUMP FOR VOTES 'chest fiHed with Indian tea. j headquarters said the details
He will stump for votes in;R°?1?ey the coupe afar Jan. 13 were still tentative,
He win siump ior votes m metal medallion. un, thnt h ij rpmajn nver.
New Hampshire Jan. 12-17, Jan. „ ... . „„„ , hat he woud remain over
25-27, and tentatively again on . Ro™ey sa,d V* ,S mght ,n Portsmouth-
Feb 5-7 ' I in India, particularly in agricul-, # if-
He also plans visits to Port- f^f’ JP?? *j**jPj LpPlH He also will attend a dinner3
land; Ore , and Seattle, Wash., T at Albany, N. Y„ Feb. 5 where
Feb. 23-24, and possibly to Wis-._ P® P • he is to be introduced by New
consin on Jan. 20. j A ★ ★ York Gov. Nelson A. Rocke-
★ * * | Romney has scheduled staff’feller, who has been running
New Hampshire’s primary meetings, in Michigan from ahead of Romney in popularity
election March 12 is the first in Thursday through next Tuesday.!polls although he is an avowed the nationr Romney is the onlyt He plans to spend the night of , backer of the Michigan Repub-major announced candidate for: Jan. II in Manchester, N. TL He! lican.
N—9
ives
:
LANDING ZONE BURT, Vietnam (AP) — Sgt. Mark Rldey and his 12 men were caught in the middle, 450 yards from their lines, when 2,500 enemy soldiers hurled themselves at this Amer ican infantry# post in the bloodiest Communist violation of the New Year’s truce.
}‘The Lord, was with us. I can think of no other reason that we came through,” said Ridey, a soft-spoken Texan from San Antonio. Six of his, men were wounded, but none was killed.
Ridey led his 12-rqan patrol out of the landing zone perimeter near the Cambodian border at8Monday night, 10 hours before the allied cease-fire expired and five hours before the end of the Vietcong
The. U.S. commanders said 374 of the enemy were killed and five captured, while American casualties were 23 killed and 153 wounded.
★ ★ ★
“We got set up in our ambush position about 450 meters east of the perimeter and then I heard their rounds hitting the brigade,” Ridey said. 11 The enemy followed the mortar barrage with a ground at tack, right past Ridey.
‘WE GOT THEM*
“We saw three NVA (North Vietnamese) soldiers coming from jh? direction of the perimeter and I gave the order to open up. We got them,” the sergeant ctmtinued.
truce period, to set up an am-. ‘™en( 1 another two h.,«h against anv nff«>n-ihead,n8 toward the penmeter- I
bush against any enemy offensive that might develop.
"could hear a hell of a lot of movement. I estimated from 250 to 350 NVA in my general area." " t $^4 dgS He radioed this information back to the command post and the brigade commander, Col. Leonard Daems of Bozeman, Mont., told him to call in strikes from circling U.S. warplanes, /the ’sergeant called the strikes in close.
WWW
“One NVA kept firing at our helicopters,” Ridey said. “I thought he was about 25 meters away but when I called strikes on him, and he. moved, he turned out to be only 10 meters away.”
CLINGING TO EARTH Ridey and the patrol remained clinging to the earth,
AP Wlrephoto
WITH TENDER CARE — It’s usually rugged going for troopers of the 1st U.S. Air Cavalry Division, but these two GIs find things unusually rough as they pass a Vietnamese baby across a monsoon-swollen stream in Que San Valley during New Year's weekend. Troopers are members of a troubleshooting helicopter force. They formed a human bridge to get the baby and other Vietnamese civilians over the water. The Vietnamese Were he*n8 resettled outside the valley where the U.S. troops and a. North Vietnamese division were set for a showdown battle.
threw a grertade and blew them calling in air and artillery hoHa iapart. Another one came, andjstrikes until 9 am. Tuesday, n 6f m «h vtetnampcp rpon we *h°t him, but before he diedjwhen the enemy broke contact. IT La'“StSE he crawled over to his RPG; A company of infantrymen , ’ , , afta,.i,?UnDainctprocket launcher) and shot off a came out to escort Ridey and
tht ReTd position of the U.S ™und “d the Perimeter. his battered patrol back to the 25th Infantry Division’s 3rd Brif^n NVA came trotting, by penmeter.
miles northwest of and one of my mep °Pene®up * * *
with his M16 on full automatic! "Man, was I happy to see
and split him.” them.” the'sergeant said. “I
It wasn’t all one way, though, was frightened, but I tried not “Several rifle grenades came in to show it to my men.” hours before the Vietcong’s on us «and wounded half my Col. Daems saidTie was going truce ended at 1 a m. Tuesday, men,” Ridey said. jto recommend Ridey for a med-
and the enemy assaults contin- As the enemy regrouped for j al. "He did a fantastic Job,” ued until after dawn. another attack, Ridey said hejDaems said.
gade some 60 Saigon.
FIRST CHARGE The first charge came two-
On* Mete Construction
48” Pool Cue legtlJI 99*
On# piece laminated con-(traction with bnffalo tip. 12" Peel One, Was2.S8...141 81" Pool Cue Was I.M.. .1.11 Soon Sporting Good* Dept.
I'll’Size
Peg Board
Nrfaratai 4 Qc
Reg. Mo “-'••ah
■Vi" thick perforated hard-board. Unpainted. Ideal for hoaiehold n»e. Limit 6. Sean Hardwore Dept.
Detergent 3-lb.Rog.8lo CQe Limit 2 .
See how eleaa and fresh a waah can ^>e. Economical ».. only Vi to cup per load. * Sears Homewares Dept.
All Weather
Motor Oil
1-Quart, Rog. 42o OQc Limit 12
Formicated from high quality base' oil* and tonified with, new, additives. Lubricates in all weather.
Sean Automotive Dept.
Sin “D" Batteries
Limit II ^ each aled in Steel to mint-ice leakage and give long ;e. Factory fresh aeaL Stock > now.
'Sean Electrical Dept,
H"x1W
Stair Nosing
Reg. 1.M POc
Limit II •>©
Brignt polished aluminum finish with an extra wide face.
Sean Floor Covering Dept.
Man's Rylon/Cotton
Work Socks Rag. 3/148 O rjQ* Limit 12 J P••••• $135 "Installed 30" Electric Range .......... .$129
Sears Range Dept.
^Normal Installation on Drtroit Edison Co. Linos
Sale Price
*36988
No Money Down
Frostleas refrigerator - freezer means no defrosting for you. Egg basket, but-. ter compartment and door shelves.
14 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator-Freezer.... .$195
14 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator
(bottom freezer) ■................. .$221
15 Cu. Ft.
*177
No Money Down
Features 3 grille-type shelves, bottom storage, flush-door ninge for built-in look., Save.
15 Cu. Ft. Chest Freezer .......................$159
5000-BTU Air Conditioner................. .$98
Searf Refrigerator-Freezer Dept.
Was$4T
3997
*
ened doors. One j •ink top of heavy
*Faucat and Strainer Extri
Rigidly welded frame construction with fully insulated sound-dead-i jpii M .
____P steel. White
porcelain finish.
64-in. Steel Sink end Cabinet, Wae 887* IS J1
68-in. Steel Sink end Cebinet, Wee $81* ..........1141
Deluxe White Steel Well end Base Cabinets... M% Off
Sears Kitchen Planning Dept.
Sears
-Sears Roebuck and Co.
Starts Thursday, Jan
In-The-Store
NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan
Sale of Space Heaters
2-Speed Washer With
18-Lb. Capacity
$177
No Money Down
'Sale
Price
Sale! Kenmore Installed*
Clothes Dryer
*87
No Money Down
2- Temperature Electric
Washes, rinses, spin-dries and shuts off. Has regular speed for vigorous washing action and alow speed for delicate fabrics. With 6-vane <. agitator and built-in lint filter.
2-Speed Washer
*139
No Money Down
2 cycles for regular and delicate fabrics. 6-vane agitator loosens stubborn dirt. Built-in lint filler.
Ssora Kenmore Washer and Dryer Dept.
Use “Heat” for drying regular fabrics and "Air-Only” for fluffing sweaters or drying plastics. With 3-hour timer to give you flexibility to dry any load. Handy load-a-door. Installed* 'Sett-Neat' Elactric Dryer.-147.88
Installed * Gas Dryer
*97
No Money Down
Two temperatures with 3-hour timer *nd handy load-a-door. Safety iwitch slop* tumble action when door i* opened,
' *.\ermnf installation on Michigan Consolidated lias Co. tAnos or Detroit h.diton Co• Linos* Venting ie extra.
Open Monday, Thursday,
Friday, Saturday 9 ^ 9»
Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30
TILT-DOWN 0PENINQ FOR EASIER LIQHTINQ
75,000 BTU OH Heater
*83
Were
99.95
No Money Down
is
Features rust-resistant burner .rings, a front mounted fuel knob and a high heat-resisting vaporizing burner and heat economizer to proyide maximum clean burning heat. Burns 8 hours on a gallon of fuel at low fire, 1% hours at high fire,.
190,080 BTU Oil Heater, Wes 119.95 ........................$91
88, 800 BtU Oil Heater (electric ignition), Was 159.98.. 4133 88,000 BTU Oil Heater (counter flow) Was 199.98 . . . $163
Automatio.,. Just Dial the Temperature You Want
Vented Gas Heater
Was”
114.95
$88
65,000 BTU
View flames safely through bark-textured perforated lower panel. Stainless steel mesh above flame glow® cherry red. Safety pilot turns unu off if pilot goes out. Draft diverter helps keep downdrafts from blowing out pilot. Walnut brown and beige baked-ott enamel cabinet with gold color trim.
10,009 BTU Gas Heater, Was 129.95 ...............4151
Sear, Heater Dept.
Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND, CO.
• ' I ' '; ■' } ■. . ' r» ■ * ■••••..- ' 6 . . ■ • .... *>. •’ ■ 0 , g£
THE PONTIAC PRESS,.■ WEDNESDAY/JANUARY 3, 1968 .^ . ■-
... v---;. - ■■■ V ’-.V,'
WHITE MUSLIN TWIN SIZE SHEETS
Fitted or fiat, twin size bed sheets in Cannon high quality type 128 white cotton muslin.
ItxIM” OR TWIN FITTED
DEEPTONE STRIPE
434 2s*
72*108” OR TWIN FITTED
01*108” OR DOUBLE FITTED
AP Wircphoto
LION ON THE FLOOR — James Wieczorek frolics with his pet lion, Brand^on the front-room floor of his apartment in Chicago./Brandy, only 6 months old, consumes four pounds of horseineat a day .and is still growing. Wieczorek says his apartment is getting a little too small and is looking for a home ibr his pet-one with a large back yard.
Maine Is Trying to Stem Declining Lobster j
. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)I They have chosen a first ex-■ _ Aided by ideas from aero-'perimental site to see if shore-space industries, the State ofI line coves can be warmed ar-Maine is laying scientific | tificially by discharge from groundwork to turn'the tide on mother nature and stem a de-
clining lobster supply.
Experts claim a gradual drop In ocean temperature over the past few years has caused the .annual Maine lobster catch to dwindle.
Heart Surgeons Examine Ethics
Transplants Stirring • Questions of Morality
By Science Service
NEW YORK — While Louis Washkansky fought his losing battle against death in a South African hospital, an international panel of heart surgeons was meeting here to thrash out the ethical implications of his heart transplant.
The Ameriacn heart surgeon,
Dr. Jacob Zimmerman of St.
Barnabas Hospital here, told reporters and his colleagues from Switzerland and Great Britain,
“I will never participate in such surgery.”
To which Dr. Donald Rose of The National Heart Hospital,
London, and pioneer in transplantation of heart valves, from the dead Hi the living, rejoined,
“But you will, we all will.” j
Asked if a heart transplanta-l _ . I , .
tion were imminent in Zurich, ***? and , Canada have had Swedish-born surgeon, Dr. Ake| SUTUlar problems.
power plant coolant systems.
If successful, other coves along the northeastern United States coastline may be heated to improve the over-all lobster crop.
* * *
“We propose to apply in thej field the information we have gained over the last 20 years,”! said Robert L. Dow, director of research for the Maine Depart-* ment of Sea and Shore Fisheries. “We think we have enough background to develop information on how lobsters could be produced in greater number at reduced cost.”
BEST TEMPERATURE
Ideally, the best temperature for Main lbbsters, Dow said in an interview, is between 47¥2 and 49*/i degrees. For 1967, however,1 the average water temperature Will be between 4414 and 45 degrees, he predicted.
Scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology blame the cooler offshore waters on a change in solar activity, which has shifted zonal wes-1 terly winds to lower latitudes.
They claim it may be another 20 years until a warming trend begins.
★ 4r
“The cooler water has not only affected lobsters,” Dow said, “but other shellfish — oysters, clams, shrimp and scallops. And it is not only peculiar to Maine. Other northeastern
Senning replied with a reluctant yes.
Dr. Senning, who has repaired defective valves joining the heart’s left ventricle with the major body artery, the aorta, using connective tissue from the patient’s hip, said he was most
concerned about the physician’s __ , .... ... . „
judgment as to when a patient’s **** ** shells
heart is fatally damaged or de-!But molt ' - or ~ fective I *eSs °>ten >n colder water. As a
* if ^ .. jt result, there are fewer lobsters
Neither he nor. Dr. Ross felt j around of legal size, Dow ex-that heart transplants posed a plained.
STATISTICAL STORY Statistics tell the story. In 1957 Maine’s lobster catch totaled 24V4 million pounds. In 1965, it was down to 19 million pounds. Dow predicted the 1967 total will be about 15 million pounds.
The large marine crustaceans
greater hazard of rejection by, body defenses than do today’s
In an experiment to see if the tide can be turned against moth
with a diseased heart ordering the execution of a political enemy to obtain the organ for transplant. ‘‘A million dollars,” he continued, “could buy a patient almost anything ing a new heart ” s
^ if it
On Dec. 3,T>r. Chris Barnard I"1 addltion to engineering of the Qrdbte Schuur Hospital Pr0*)*ems created by the task— in Capetown removed the heart complicated by ocean tides of a 24-year-old female auto ac- whlch g've the cove a 100-mil-
ACRILAN - SLEEPING BAG
Discount Price —
Charge It
72x84” adult sleeping bag is filled with two pounds Acrilanl acrylic, lined with polished cotton. Print cotton cover. Zipper. *
^Chemitrand Corp., mg. t.m.
COTTON PERCALE SHEETS
Discount Price M Charge It ™IN fitted
2.03
Ultra smooth, type 180 snowy white cotton percale sheets. Save!
81”x108” OR DOUBLE FITTED TYPE ISO PERCALE SHEET. 2.23
fairly common kidney trans-jer nature and in favor of lobster | plants. In fact, they suggested fishermen, the Maine Depart-that the heart is probably better |ment 0f gea and shore Fisheriesf able to withstand the attack of, is considering plans t0 raise the white b ood cells and antibodies :water temperature in a cove on «ran either the kidneys or thejCousins Island Casco Bay> by
distributing heated water idis-CONCERN EOR DONORS charged from the coolant system But Dr. Zimmerman was of a nearby power plant, more concerned with the donors. * * ★
“It is medically and morally j Heater water frojp the plant wrong,” he said, “for us as doc- now rises to the surface of the tors to stand by a dying pa-cove, the director noted.
tient’s bedside hoping he’ll get! „_______________________
it over with quickly so we can! SUITED T0 COMFORT g^ab his heart.” j The problem will be to dis- j
The heart surgeon even en-j tribute this heat so tempera-! visioned a despotic ruler doomed tures on the bottom are suited!
to the comfort and happiness of j the lobster population there to! promote molting, growth and re-! production. Only a few degrees change^ from the present water includ-1 temperature would be necessary for this to occur, officials said.
Fruit of the Loom Patchwnk Print RUFFLED QUILT
Discount Price
4.44
Charge It
72x82” cotton quilt. A choice of several patchwork pat* tern*.
Quilted Cotton
Mattroos Pod, Twin ..... 141 Quitted Cotton
Mnttreos Pad, Doublo .... 143
Sleep Pillows In Soft
Plump Aciylan
Our Regular 2.96
2.27
Charge It!
20”x26” Bed Pillow io filled with 100% acrylan fiber. Floral print cotton ticking, cord edge.
A. 2.63
S0UD OR STRIPE TOWELS
Discount Price Charge It
■ATH
TOWEL
44t
94
22x44” bath towels in luxuriously thick, soft cotton terry.
SOLID OR STRIPED COTTON TERRY FACE TOWEL......210
SOLID OR STRIPED COTTON TERRY WASHCLOTH ...... 14o
BEDSPREADS AT DISCOUNTS |
A. ,Double <92x106), Twin (78x106) .
quilted-to-floor acetate spread. JW ^6 Jw
Rounded corners. Rich colors...
B. Fringed viscose rayon chenille Twin 78x105’% double 96x105” sizes.
White, colors......................
C. Double (96x108), twin (78x108).
Cotton chenille in Wedding Ring Pattern. Fringed.
D. Cumberland Textured Sculptured Design. No pressing ever. Double 96x108, Twin 80x108.............
E. Cotton “Cordarib” spread in deep-
tone colors. Double 88x110”, twin 74x110”.......................
3.67
5.94
7.33
5.88
BUNDLE OF 8 COTTON TERRY WASHCLOTHS
Discount Price
86t
Charge It
Tony Kitchen Towali/Cdl. 2.. Ilo Tarty Dithcloths/Odl. 4 ..... lie Waffio-Woavo Cotton Dishcloth, ■uadioofl.,..,77o
BLANKETS AT BIG DISCOUNTS
A. Napped Thermal Blanket. 30%
rayon, 30% cotton, 40% nylon. 46 jr d) 72x90”. Many colors.... ......... Jmm\Igf
B. Plaid Napped'Thermal. 72x90”.
55% nylon, 45% rayon. Red, blue or 6 ■ ■ brown colors. WDw M
0. Nylon Blend Plaid. 55% nylon,
45% rayon. 72x90”. Red, blue or brown..........................
Da GE Electric Blanket, Double size;
•ingle control. 80% rayon, 20% cotton. 72x84”.. ......................
3.34 | 10.96 I
cident victim and within less than half as hour transferred it the cheat of Louis Washkansky, a 55-year-old man dying of heart failure.
lion-gallon capacity at low tide and 200-million-gallon capacity at Mgh tide, there is also the problem of fetting federal fundi to finance the project, Dow said.
Kmart Carries Only “First 99... No “Seconds
GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD
/
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
B—11
DAILY 10-10, SUNDAY 11-6
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
,K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE, MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEa rr kK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEa rr
While Quantity Lailt — Jan. 4,5,6
Woman’s &V2-MV2 MESH HOSE
2152‘
Our Reg. 2176c 3 Day* Only
LIMIT 4
Seamless.'colort. 8'/a to 11 Vi.
Mono Sold to Doctors
| While Quantity Lasts ~ Jan. 4, 5, 6
1 GIANT BAR 1 CHOCOLATES
Our Reg. 37c 3 Day Only
LIMIT 3
8»/2-9V* oz..* Nestle.
•Not wt.
Nono Sold to Doolors
While Quantity Lasts — Jan. 4, 5, 6
HOUSEHOLD
PLASTICS
53£
Discount Price 3 Day* Only
LIMIT 4-
I 6 avocado iteips . to choose from.
While Quantity Last* — Jan. 4,5,6
WOMEN’S
PANTIES
4
Reg. 33c-37c 3 Day Only
m LIMIT 6
1 I Briefs, bikinis, % | double backs. S-XXXL
I
While Quantity Lattt — Jan. 4,3,6
GIRLS’ 4-14 POLO SHIRTS
67*
Our Reg. 97c 3 Day Only
LIMIT 3
Strif ton I
*ipe, solid cot-knits, velours.
K MART COUPON -CLIPand SAVE AK MART COUPON - CLIP and SAVEA.K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE AK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Lailt—Jan. 4, 5,6
GAY PILLOW CASE BORDERS
3& 97*
Our Reg. 38c 3 Day Only
LIMIT 6 YDS.
Cotton percale pillow case borders. Colors.
While Quantify LatW— Jan. 4, 5,6
13-0z. SIMILAC BABY FORMULA
4 * 88*
Our Reg. 2 Sc ea.
3 Day Only
LIMIT 12
Nutritious formula ll-oz.* Enfamil. .4/S8c**
While Quantity Latt*
1-Lb. Kmart
POTATO CHIPS
44
Discount Price 3 Day Only
LIMIT 2
Crispy, fresh cnips.
While Quantity Latte — Jan. 4,5,6 amm
m
GIRLS’ 4-12 PANTIES
22*
Our Reg. 33c 3 Day Only
LIMIT 6
s White cotton. Guaran-* teed for 100 washings.
KMART COUPON * CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Latt* — Jan. 4, S, 6
Women’s Nylon PETTICOATS
1.00
Our Reg. 1.58 3 Day Only
LIMIT 2
Mini, short, average lengths. Jr. petite, S>*
K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEAK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEAK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEAJt MART COUPON * CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Latt* — Jan. 4, 5, 6
Kmart Brand Aluminum Foil
17*
Ditcount Price 3 Day Only
LIMIT 2
12”x25* aluminum foil for cooking.
Nom Sold t« DaaUra
rh
| While Quantity Lain — Jan. 4, 5,6
I 10-R0LL
i TOILET
i TISSUE
66*
I Our Reg. 88c 1 3 Day Only
LIMIT 2
■ 2-ply, 250 4Vix4Vi • sheets per roll.
Wlfie Quantity Lasts — Jan. 4f S, 6
8-oz. Metracal!
DIET DRINK j
6 Cans <■ 32 |
for I
Our Reg. 27e 3 Day Only
LIMIT 12
Chocolate, choc, marsh-; mallow, fudge.
•fluid On.
Non* Sold to Doolort
I
| rtChocoSe/ | IS1 ml
Stalled/! S|l
:j 1
INfetreeal ^1 it!
w
While Quantity LAsts — Jan. 4, 5, 6
BOYS’ SHIRT/
SLACKS SETS 276
Our Reg. 3.97 ■ / 3 Day Only ,
LIMIT 2
Corduroy* or twill* pants. Shirt.
•Cotton
fm „
HUP
I-
I-
f .R
K MART COUPON-CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Latt* — Jan.
YOUTHS’ NOIRON JEANS
3»6
Our Reg. 5.97 3 Day Only
LIMIT 2
Cotton corduroy, fast back..
K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE^VK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE AK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEA.K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Latt* — Jan. 4. 5,6
100-SLIDE ROTO TRAY
1.87
Our Reg, 2.36 3 Day Only
LIMIT 1
Sawyer tray holds 100 slides. Save.
While Quantity Lasts — Jan• 4t
i Kmart *Supreme| SLIDE SORTER |
3.97
Discount Price 3 Days Only
LIMIT?
Holds 35, 2x24’ slides. „ Charge It. . ■
While Quantity Lasts — Jan• 4, 5, 6
1 Women’s Smart Sport Casuals
1.50
Our Reg. 2.86 3 Day Only
LIMIT 1 PR.
Brown vinyl uppers. Choose sizes to 10.
While Quantity Lasts — Jan. 4, 5, 6
i Boys' Thermal i UNDERWEAR
i «*
»< ,» .it. —
Our Reg. 97c 3 Day Only
LIMIT 4
s “Van Cort” long draw-* ers, shirts.
K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEAK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEAJC MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE.AK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Latt* — Jan. 4, 5, 6
HI
1-POUND SALTED NUTS c
Our Reg. 97c-$1.17 3 Day* Only
LIMIT 2 LBS.
Delicious cashews or pistachios.
While Quantity Lasts — Jan. 4, 5, 6 mm
WOMEN’S TENNIS SHOES
1.00
Our Reg, 1.76 3 Day Only
LIMIT 1 pr.
Black, red, blue or white. Sites to 10.
!
KMART COUPON-CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Latte — Jan. 4, S. 6
WHIMSEYS and RINGLETS
1.00
Our Reg. 1.78 3 Day Only
LIMIT 1
New winter colors. One size fits alb
While Quantity Lailt — Jan. 4, 5, 6
WOMEN’S 6” SNOW BOOTS
1.33
Our Reg. 2.76 3 Day Only
LIMIT 1 Pr.
Black, water-repellent I uppers. Sizes to 10.
K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Latte — Jan. 4, 5, 6
40-H0UR Alarm CLOCK
Our Reg. 1.96
1,88 . 3 Day Only Charge It
Westclox nap alarm clock. Loud bell, sweep alarm indicator. Ivory.
K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE AK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE A,K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVEAK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Lasts^ J°n. 4, 5. 6
AMD HAM
99
Our Reg. 1.17 3 Day Only
LIMIT 2
1-nound.canned V Holland Ham. Ideal > for snacks or main dish.
While Quantity Latte — J an,
I 20-GALLON I GARBAGE CAN
HOLLAND
u»AMj
1.74
Our Reg. 1.97 3 Day On ly
LIMIT 1
Galvanized garbage can with lid.
Non* Sold to Ooolort
While Quantity Lasts — Jan* 4, 5, 6
While Quantity Lasts — Jan. 4\ 5,
RAYCINE HAIR CLIPPER SET
497
Our Reg. 7.57 3 Day Only
LIMIT 1
8-pc. set with instruction book 3
|l SPORTSTER ' CAMP STOVE
! 847
Our Reg. 9.33 3 Dart Only
$ I LIMIT 1
I Coleman single burn-1 er stove . .. dependable
K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Lain — Jan. 4, 5, 6
SPORTSTER HEAT DRUM
1.62
Our Reg. 1.91 3 Day Only
LIMIT 1
Coleman heat drum
provides radiant heat. N a
K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE
While Quantity Latte — Jan. 4,5,6
LISTERINE MOUTHWASH
66*
Our Reg. 76c 3 Day Only
LIMIT 1
Family size, 14-oz.* mouthwash
r!
Quantity Latte — Jan. i, 8, 6^^—
K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE A.K MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE AK MART COUPON - CLIPand SAVE
Colgate, Crest TOOTHPASTE
53;
|t.
Our Reg. 78c 3 Day Only
LIMIT 2
6-%-oz. Colgate or Cntt Toothpaste
: (I SHel Wt.
Non, Sold It OhIid
While Quantity Latte — Jan. 4,5,6
flSK#1034 AUTO BULBS
For puking, dlnctlon.1 rignsl, tall, snd stop lights. Perfect n-pl.cm.nt bulbil
I OAYS ONLY!
* CARO OF TWO
I
While Quantity Lain — Jan. 4, 5, 6
3-oz.* TUBE BATH CAULK ic
REO. PRICE W
WITH COUPON
COUPON EXPIRES JAN, 6,1968
33c
99
Our Reg. 1.57 3 Days Only
LIMIT 3
Long lasting, mildew resistant.
•N.I W».
mm
GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD
B Mf .
B—12
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
jtyMB Mq
,that scrambled word game for hide!®
LBJ's Globe^Hopping Tour Seen as Political Move
\ "\ ■ ■o' '■■ \ ■ ' '■ PI I ■ • •• • idatiS/Km s 5
by HENRI ARNOLD and BOB LEE
These funny-looking nonsense words are actually REAL words, but their letters have been mixed up by someone. You must put t heir letters back in-* to the right order so that they make or-
dinary words that you can find in the" dictionary. WRITE THE LETTERS OF EACH WORD UNDER EACH NONSENSE WORD-BUT ONLY ONE LETTER TO EACH SQUARE.
f
- ZED
SYP
MOWR / ./
□ //\
TUIQ/
'Jl f s
Now you are ready to find the FUN^YANSWER to thispuzzle. The picture above will give you a' hint. Study it carefully. Then take the let-
ters that appear in thecircles and play around with them. You will find that you can put them in order so that they form the answer you are looking for.
PiMthi FUNNY ANSWER here
I
JK.A
See Answer Page B-13
To U.S. Scholars in Moscow
Soviet Scientists Talk Readily
MOSCOW (AP) - A group of
American scientists neared the
end of talks with leaders of So-j I
viet science today, and one ex-1 pressed pleasure at being able! to maintain such contacts despite U.S.-Soviet friction- over1 Vietnam.
Harvard Prof. Paul M. Doty Jr., a chemist and leader of the seven-man^ nongovernmental American group, told a newsman political questions such as Vietnam and disarmament came up informally and “in a friendly way” in the talks.
★; ★ .
He said Soviet scientists seemed to show the “greatest tolerance” about discussing the Vietnam war this time, com-
pared with two previous visits Doty has made here since the start of major U.S. participation in the war.
Doty said the talks which began last Thursday on a wide range of subjects were “particularly pleasant, considering the circumstances” of limited U.S -Sov.iet contacts because of Vietnam tension.
EX-JFK AIDE
The U.S. group included Jerome B. Wiesner, former special assistant on science and technology to President John F. Kennedy.
Members were expected to comment later to U.S. officials in Washington on the talks, but Doty said he felt such reports
State Income Tax Forms Being Mailed
would contain “nothing newsworthy.”
He said scientific subjects in the talks with members of the Soviet Academy of Sciences in-l eluded exchanges of views on fi-| nancing of research and on efforts to forecast social developments.
Doty said most members of the U.S. group have left, but he and sociologist Talcott Parsons, president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in Boston, were staying for a final get-together with their Soviet counterparts.
•PUGWASfi’ PARLEY
The talks have involved past participants in “p u g w a s h Conference” discussions, in which unofficial representatives of many countries meet to consider disarmament and other world problems.
The Soviet' group was led by Mikhail D. Millionshchikov, a vice president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences^nd head of Soviet Pug wash teams.
TS •r\
PARIS (AP) **, French and German commentators agree that President Johnson’s pre-Christmas globe-hopping tour launched his campaign for re-election and may have bolstered his image at home.
“It was a performance which degraded Jules .Verne’s hero, who had circled the world in 80 days, to a comic figure,” said | Die Welt, the influential Hant-! burg newspaper. “It was a rushing, extravagant feat that ! mocked every rule of protocol.
i * *
! “In the short span of a few days the President attended as many events as would otherwise require weeks: South Sea ceremonies on Samoa, Memorial Ceremonies at Melbourne Cathe-jdral, political conferences at ; Canberra, Christmas with the j troops in Thailand and Vietnam,
| airport talks with President Ayub Khan in Karachi, and a [Vatican rendezvous that joined Pope and President Tor a quick j erfeounter like travelers in the waiting room between trains.”
| Die Welt said this “can only | serve his ‘image’ at the begin-ning of the 1968 election year, iHis political rivals got a first] taste of the fighting reserves still hidden in this dynamic man.”
[POLITICAL TEMPERAMENT j
Johnson’s ’68 campaign, said Frankfurter Allgemeine, “be-j gan this Christmas” with his whirlwind tour. “It would be an injustice to the man if one tried to find the insincerity of a professional politician' in this dizzying rush,” the newspaper went on. “It is rathe!- the expression of a strong political temperament, not made to give up.”
The satirical French journal Le Canard Enchaine, in a rare straight-faced article, commented: “President Johnson has just begun his presidential campaign in making a round-the-world trip. LBJ is rubbing his hands, convinced that he has done a good job and. awaits with opti-jmism the next public opinion poll.” ,
★ ★ ★
Other comments found by the Associated Press focused on Johnson’s general image or his relation to the war in Vietnam.
“From all evidence, President Johnson is one of the good men,” wrote Pierre Mathias, writing in a front-page column that appears daily in Le Monde of Paris. “He knows it and nev^ !er fails to mention it.”
LIMITS TERROR
Mathias asserted that in conduct of the war Johnson “reserves something of his reasonable goodness, because, to spare humanity from an irremediable catastrophe, he limits the means of his terror.”
Lord Arran, British Liberal
Party pear, writing In tite Lon-do see the Americans in Viet-i But an editorial In the Mont-don Evening News, described nam militarily, demonstrably real Star charged: “An enor-his ambitions for 1968 as “first.land crushingly victorious.” Imous amount of hypocrisy
clouds the whole of the Wash-ington-Saigon approach to ending the war!" '
Welcome to Auto Club
’68
• •
JANUARY S 18 T W t F s * 1 2 3 A ■ 5 5 Thousands of bill-weary members 'are 11 getting “Moneyt BackVlon their car " insurance'fjora, the Exchange at AAA. Sms* i FEBRUARY S Rft T W T F S 12 3 Round-the-clock fA A A Emergency Road Service is keeping members on the go despite the snow.!2 23 24 25 2S 27 2J 23 MARCH S M T W T F S 1 2 . Ski, swim, travel-protected by the AvAA’s Broad'.Personal >Accidenf Insurance policy^Children are covered^ 1K!25 26 2? 28 29 30 31
APRIL S St- T Hi T F S 1 2 3 A 5 fi * Time to new-car shop, with the added savings* of new A A A 'Mem be r Loari^ car financing.seryice.^ 20 27 i 23 '2$4-5®JP*r *1®® current rate. MAY S M T W T f S 12 3 A Plan your vacation with the personalized help of AAA worldwide and domestic trgv^services; 23 24 25 26 27 28 2 9 3ff 31 JUNE S M T -W t f S 1 . School’s out apd AAA 1 safety patrol boys^and girls 1 now'depend '"ondad-and 1 AAAIIo 'JiBring2Eih!BalR iii'if 25 26 27 28 29 39
JULY S M T W -T F S 1 ^ ** /? fz ; fj New4 A A A *Trave 1 er *s Checks protect your money while you explore Michigan or the world with AAA. «... i *»»i Cit tml ZB 29 30 3t AUGUST S M I W T F S 4 *» ■*% The AAA watchdogs of Bail Bond, .$200 Theft Reward and insurance protections guard your travels 2/ 28 29 33 3T SEPTEMBER S M T W T F S 1, 7 ? A £ S 7 I lime*to begin planning a 1 Fall Color Tour with AAA’s up-ttf-the-miriute ]foad!)and 1 mS-26 27 28 29 30
OCTOBER S H T W T F S * *\ - ;, n fZ. Maybe it’s time-to renew your car ‘insurance.,-Get with the Exchange at AAA; the choice of more Michigan drivers. ^ ^ ** ™ • ||f| *ff NOVEMBER S M T W T F S Motor News magazine tells members about the new cars. AAA MemberLoanfhelps members buy^’em with a financing savings," ‘ **** 16 23 29 3Q DECEMBER 1 $ JA T W T F S 1 < 1 1 A C 6 7 I Share* your 12 months Of 1 A A A services,!! savings and 1 protections ifRh 1AAA| gift 1 members^ipsj'or famUv and 1 friends! _. I 23 30 31 |
I / G. M. OLMSTEAD 76 Williams St. Join Now 1 itud tend the way with FE 8-9171 iSSSlJ
LANSING (AP) — Michigan’s three million or so income taxpayers will have not one but two form 1040s this year — the old federal standby, and a brand new form now being mailed out by the state.
State Revenue Commissioner Clarence Lock says the Michigan forms and instruction booklets are being mailed to every Michigan resident on the mailing list of the federal Internal Revenue Service.
★ ★ ★
The deadline for figuring and filing the new 2.6 per cent state tax on income received between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31, 1967, is next April 30.
The state forms can be distinguished from Uncle Sam’s by the “Ml” prefix before the number—MI-1040 and MI 1040A The shorter MI-1040A may be used by persons who earned income., only from wages, interest and dividends.
FEDERAL FIRST
Lock’s advice to taxpayers saddled with both forms is to hanlle the federal one first. The “adjusted gross income” entry on the federal 1040 is the starting point for the state’s calculations.”
To find out how much of your j income is taxable by the state,! take the gross income entry from your federal return and then;
• Add interest derived from., bonds issued by state government units outside Michigan.
★ * *
• Subtract any militarv pay. alimony and separate maintenance payments included in the recipient’s gross incorfie, and jn-terest earned on obligations issued by the United States.
• Wmn figuring your tax, •attract $300 for each of your dependents, including yourself; i beginning in 1009, the exemption i is $1,200.
It’s lower this year because the state tax paid this year covers only the last three! months of 1967 and not the full! calendar year.
This year only, taxpayers will be able to choose between two methods of computing their) state-taxable income and use the one that leaves them with the smallest bills.
. ★ ★ ★
They can figure out how muchj income they received during | October, November hnd Decern-i her and pay the 2.6 per cent tax on that, or they can take i their income for the full year,! divide it by four, and pay the) tax on that figure.
s-h-h
it’s our
Grand
Opening
C’mon-a-my-house, I’m going to give you nice free gift. See our ad on page Bl.
house
of
bedrooms
First Federal has it!
PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
ACCOUNTS
The rate of 4%% it compounded and paid 'quarterly; which gives an annual yield of 4.31 8, a / high rate of return paid on regular insured passbook savings.
$2,500
SAVINGS
CERTIFICATES
Earn the rate of 4%% when held for a period of 6 months.
$5,000
SAVINGS
CERTIFICATES
Earn the rate of 5% when hold for a period of 9 months.
$10,000
SAVINGS
CERTIFICATES
Earn tho rate of SV4% when held for a period of 12 months.
761 WEST HURON STREET
Downtown Pontiac—Drayton Plains—Rochester—Clarkston—Milford—Wallod Lake—Lake Orion-Waterford
THE PONTJAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
is.
Pentagon Identifies 20 Killed in Vietnam
IOUTH CAROLINA - Platoon Sgt. «u Trlgham CliV Jamos L, Brown. Taylor* '7^
TENNESSEE - Pic. Ray Taylor, Taj*. MARIN
if GEOf
yylon,
«
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pennsylvania - cpi. oPry l. Nor-Pentagon has issued a Vietnam ■•***■* °*"*-
casualty list~bearing the names of 20 servicemen killed in action.., gtef ' . , , M y J
They include^
ARKANSAS — Pfc. Ernttl May, Moro. V/C PrArletlfTTiBrl
CALIFORNIA-PIC. Goor«a X. Rocha. I L/VJY5 I IOC IU I IllCQ
^MARYLAND - Stkff Sat, Kanneth O. * 'sa; „
KraHck. BaUlmort') pie. Doan J. CraigJ LANSING (AP)—Acting GOV.
MINNESOTA — Itl Cl. Jerome F. ta; William Milliken has proclaimed Vatiaur Jr.. While Beer Lake. i— ..
NSSR '
Mitchell,
NAVY \,
Seaman Slavan L. Brudarer,
MARINE CORPS
, GEORGIA - Pic. Jamoi H. Both Jr., Stan Sot. Henry R. Garda. Guyton. . ' • l
Brooklyn.
OREGON Coot Say.
TEXAS -Bat ion.
Changed from missing to dead -hostile: n A
- pfc. Richard L. Dooley, Lance Cpi. Doyle L. Boll, I
,\ AIR FORCE Mai. Jamei F, Low.
Died not as a result of hostile action:
■ ARMY . . <‘ ; ftj
FLORIDA—Spec. a.Joioph Morgan Jr., Ran Gallia. • ™ ■
MICHIGAN—Spec. S Jawpa 0, Blandan, Detroit. ,W..-
MONTANA
Hare Appoints 2
LANSING (Af)—Secretary of
_new *Jersey _ spec, a Barry L. £arv«r Day in Michigan ini T6XAJ _ T Cox £ State James Hare has appointed
cpi. Richard A. HoU5,,;h(TrT ol ‘he NegroI ^clentist.jHGMaton „ iJames McClure, present chief
whitwbor* _______ and Jan. 22 as Ukrainian Inde- Missing as a result oL hostile1 ... . _fata „
FPNtAHOMA. - P»e- eioar a. camp- peiMjpnce j)ay laction: I assistant secretary of state, as
Mil. Ponca City.
* • , Answer to Puzzle Page B-I2
Jumbles: MET SPY WORM QUIT
Answers What pets make music? —— "TRUM-PETS"
deputy secretary of state, to succeed Richard Cook, who resigned. Howard Jones, executive secretary of the Branch Managers Association, was named to succeed McClure.
CUSTOM-UPHOLSTERED
- i SOFAS -
Select From A Wide Array of Decorator Fabrics!
All Styles Have Poly-Dacron Filled Cushions! Choose From Traditional, Contemporary or Colonial Styles!
Arm Caps Included. CCistom-Craft Quality! 94" to 96" Long!
TRADITIONAL SOFA
Authentic styling in a beautifully crafted 96" sofa. Select from fine decorator fabrics, including quilts, matelasses brocades and cottons in this-year colors. Exceptional Values!
COLONIAL SOFA , J x B ,
• Charming 96" sofa with winged arms and plaated skirt. Select
from distinctive colonial print fabrics, tweeds, quilted-cottons, 100% nylon fabrics. Arm caps included; Poly/OaCron filled cushions.
CONTEMPORARY SOFA
Sleek-lined 94" sofa in the contemporary mood for modern living Voomi or family rooms. Cu*hions are filled with Poly/Dacron; arm caps included; select your fabric from sturdy tweeds, nylons, textured styles.
OPEN
THURS., FRI., MON., 'TIL 9
1680 S. Telegraph Rd. nr. Orchard Lake Rd. Free Parking Front of Store FE 2-8348
CONVENIENT
TERMS
INTERIOR J DECORATING CONSULTATION
V j
(i
Kr-f * 1
Our FmOn Mill Sltfi Opin M«n., Thun.. M, and Sat. to 9 P.M. Tu««. and W»d. to 5:10 P.M.
309 N. Talagraph Rd., Pontiac
Our Birmingham Storo Open Thun, and Fri. to 9 P.M.
Sot. to 5:30 P.M. 1
300 Piorco St., Birmingham
Schaffner & Marx
(f , i ,.
now 7975 to 9975
Almost everyone has a sal© after Christmas—-but here's the one that offers clothing by the country's .top makers ... at very important savings. This group (which is just an example of what you'll find) features fine year-round fabrics—both impoTfed and domestic—in many weaves, colors, patterns. Among the suit group are 1 2-, and 3-
buttoni models in a number of style versions. The coats are beautifully tailored and detailed bf excellent/makers, and all are priced for sizable savings.
J
IIIIIS® fit #1
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B—14
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1038
AP Wlrephoto
^EX-PROTOCOL CHIEF DIES — John F. Simmons, a former chief of protocol for the United States, died at his Washington' home Monday, the day before his 76th birthday. Simmons greeted royalty and heads of state as chief of protocol from 1950 to 1957, when he retired.
NORCO, Calif, (AP) - Some 250 narcotics addicts interned at a state rehabilitation center seized control of the facility Tuesday, burning buildings and stoning guards uptil massed law enforcement officers quelled the riot.
Six officers were injured and
five of die rioters wounded, one fatally. Damage was estimated at $250,000 at the California Rehabilitation Center located 60 miles east of Los Angeles.' w ★ ★
“I would say the residehts definitely had control for a couple of hours,” said Roland W.
Wood, superintendent of the crater. “This is the worst disturbance since the center started in 1961.”
★ ★ ★
After 300 guards and law enforcement officers from, surrounding communities rounded up the rioters, 51 inmates were shipped off to the maximum se-
curity California Reception anti Guidance Center in Chintz
NO CELLS
There ere no cells on the 01 country acres occupied by the center. The addicts, who have been committed by civil court order for a minimum six-month stay, are called residents instead of prisoners.
Cause of the sudden riof was officially undetermined a day later. 'T can’t point to any one particular thing end' say that caused it,” one official said. ‘‘Whether it was prearranged we do not know.1’
Officials said they found no evidence that liquor, narcotics or race was involved. Guards
\
confiscated several gallons of homemade liquor four weeks earlier and noted rambunctious celebrations on Christmas and New Year’s Eves, but no liquor was found Tuesday.
Sulphur is a mineral used in the manufacture of an estimated 32,000 items.
Dearborn Tentatively Approves Ordinance
DEARBORN (CPD - The City Council of this nearly all-white Detroit suburb gave tentative approval to a municipal “stop-and-frisk” ordinance last night.
The ordinance, passed on a 7-0 vote, would give police the authority to search a person for a dangerous weapon should an officer “reasonably suspect that he is in danger” after stopping a suspect for questioning.
After the council vote, State Rep. Alex Pilch, D-Dearborn, said he plans to introduce the stop-and-frisk proposal in the Legislature when it reconvenes next week. One such proposal was Introduced last year, but has been tied up in a Senate committee.
“I'm hoping there’s a new attitude in the Legislature now, and maybe we can get something'through this time,” Pilch said.
★ ★ ★
Dearborn voters approved the Idea of a stop-and-frisk 1 a w less than two months after the July riot in Detroit. They voted “yes” on a 16,701 to 3,078 margin to the question: “Are you in favor of a law, local, state or federal, allowing police to stop, frisk and search any person suspected of carrying a concealed dangerous weapon, such as a gun, knife, blackjack, brass knuckles or any other object that could be used to inflict injury or bodily harm, and to seize and confiscate it on the spot”
N.Y. MODEL
The ordinance, introduced by freshman Councilman John Jay Hubbard minutes after he had taken his oath of officii, is modeled after the New York State stop-and-frisk law. Fifteen other states have similar laws.
★ ★ ★
“Our citizens want and deserve strong and vigorous law enforcement guaranteeing individual safety,” Hubbard said, “and we simply cannot provide them with this unless we give out police the tools they need to work with.”
\ ★ ★ ★
The ordinance will go into effect Jan. 25 if it wins final approval at the next council meet tag on Jan. 16.
it’s our
Grand
Opening
C’mon-a-my-bouse, I’m going to give yon nice free gift. See oar ad on page BL
house
of
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Our Own Private Label Qualityf
3-Day Sale! Men's, Boys' Underwear
3,p7
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MEN’S Reg. 3/2.57 Briefs, Toe Shirts, Shorts and Reg. 3/1.87 Athletic Shirts .
Underwear made of 100% combed cotton, designed fori maximum comfort and longer wear. Shrinkage control insures permanent fit. Reinforced at ,points of strain.
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3 Days Only - Our Reg. 79c Lb.
Peanut Butter Cups
A fine collection of prints ... still lifes, landscapes, etc. All beautifully framed in 11-5" to 3*-wide wooden frames. Several finishes included. 8 x 10" to 18 x 20".
Like Ilf Charge III
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U7
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AcetatePanties 540
Styled with elastic-leg, comfort-cut fine quality acetate panties in white, pink and blue. Sizes 5-10.
like Ilf Charge III
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BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE
“CHARGEiT" - At All KRESGE Stores
?4f'
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MEN'S THERAAAL SOCKS
Pkg. of 3
Keep feet warn tod comfortable in cold weather. Fine for work or sports. White thermal knit socks with cotton terry cushion lining. 10-13.
MANUFACTURERS CLOSEOUT
JEWELRY
c
Many Styles At Discount Savings
Desk Accessories
58
Make up your Own wood-look desk set: 16x21"' heavy blotter, pencil cup, pen and stand, indexed address book, note pad, open note book.
BOYS1
CREW
SOCKS
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
B—14
1 ■
iH
pf ■ j
Sixes 8 to 10
Reg, 4I$1
Now, more than avor, this wook . . . noxt waak . . . and ovary wook . . Kresge’s is
thd storo to shop first for a greater selection of specials at now low prkos
Thurs., Fri., Sat....
At Pontiac, Drayton Plains grid Rochester
STEP
Hdown
^nPRICES
■B
Authentic 1968 SCALE
MODEL
CAR
3 DAYS ONLY
1/2$ Scale models. Easy to customize! Authentic interior and exterior details reproduce in miniature the special features of each model. Choice of popular makes and styles.
Our Reg.
$144
Women’s, teen’s, girls! Soft vinyl soles, foam tricot lining. Pink or blue. Sizes 9-3 and 5-10.
Reg. 91*7
POODLE
CLOTH
SLIPPERS
96$
Reg. 94c
FRINGED NYLON
THROW
RUG
21 x 34-INCH
Stripes in fashionable decorator colors.
Women*» Reg. 29c
ACETATE
PANTIES
IN
EIGHT
COLORS
Reg. 2 for 47cI,
pr.
FRAMED
PICTURES
Contour cut, elastic-leg briefs. Machine washable^ run-resistance. White, pink, maize, mint, blue—with matching elastic; deep blue, rose and turquoise, with black. 5-8. ’ „
LANDSCAPES STILL LIFE FLORALS
mm
'mwm
m Wm 1Wmm
^ Reg. 7.44
"CORONET" TWO SLICE
AUTOMATIC TOASTER
Makes toast automatically as you like it.
Reg.
11.98
PROCTOR
SILEX
NEW
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PERCOLATOR
Watch tha , coffee brawing through thlf crystal cleor , glass. Features special -Flavor-Selector, 'Bowl Release' latch . . . bawl "lifts" out far srasy washing. Makes a lovely serving carafe, too. Just say Charge It!"
$094
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TIP TOP “ELF” BOOKS
Titles to suit every tot. Animal stories, bedtime tales.
2^25
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BOOKS 99*
PONTIAC DOWNTOWN TEL-HURON DRAYTON ROCHESTER
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mk
i
THE PONTIAC. PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
in
PAHOKEE), Fla. (AP) -Eighty sugar cane choppers were flown back to their island homes in Jamaica today and 52 more ' were jailed after riot squads intervened in a pay dispute Tuesday at a remold sugarj plantation in the Florida Everglades.
Palm Beach County Sheriff
l William Heidtman said the j inciting to riot and unlawful as-workers had threatened to de-j sembly. ,
stroy, their labor camp “if cpr- Dan Bradley, a representative tain dmands werd not met by pF the federally- financed ^iig-pay time.” ' rant Legal Services Program
★ * * Inc., an antipoyerty agency,
- Fifty-two were held 1 under j said rhost of the 360 cane cutters 211,500 bail each, charged with |-covered with soot from rou-
tine burn-offs of the field-> chanted in their Calypso accent, balked at working and claimed! 'The workers, about 9,000 of they were asked to cut twice as them imported each; year from; much cane as the pay covered.)the British West Indies for one CALYPSO CHANT , of the dirtiest jobs in American
agriculture, are paid according “Went more money, mon! (0 their productoin, but federal ; Want more money, mon!" they {law requires they receive atJ
least |1.45 per hour. Bradley said many deductions are made from the pay, including about $2 a day for room and board and 15 per cent for mandatory savings.
< h ★ i
The cutters burn off the fields-
between Nov. l and about May j Glades Sdgar (Imperative. 1, then move through hundreds [Bradley said uneven rows of of thousands of acres swingingicdne .led Jamaicans to charge
the razor-sharp machetes that harvest all of the cane in the South Florida mucklpnds.
Tuesday’s incident occurred at a! camp operated by the
they were being asked to cut two rows for the price of one. No spokesman for the cooperative waS immediately available for comment.
V
2 Thugs Kill Milkman on
Detroit Route
DETROIT (API - A Etetroitj milkman was sh'ot to death i Tuesday night after refusing to; open his delivery truck door to two young thugs.
Michael Marvin Kane, 58. was shot in the back while making a! routine-stop on Detroit’s East; Side. i
* ★ * ■ .J.
The would-be robbers, about 16 years of age, escaped. Police! later detained ..some juveniles; for questioning, but mr charges; were filed.
“It was just another senseless; killing. They probably got ex-
cited Jiecause they couldn’t any money,” said Police Charles McDermott.
HELPER HELD McDemjptt said one youth; held a gun on Kang’s helpbr.j 29-year-old Donald Williams,; who was getting milk out of the; rear of the Twin Pines Milk Co.1
van.
The other youth went to the side of the car and tried to open the door. Police said Kane, who had $175 in cash, kept it locked. ★ ★ ★
The youth holding the gun on Williams then fired twice through the rear of the van. One bullet crashed through the windshield. The other struck Kane in the back. ‘
He died at a hospital a short time later.
Williams said Kane was “a good boss, a very nice person. We never had trouble before.”
Income Tax Sought by Lansing Mayor
LANSING UP) — Mayor Max Murninghan Tuesday renewed his appeal for enactment of a uniform city income tax, defeated last year by the City Council.
In his annual State of the City message, Murninghan urged the city council to give top priority to the tax question in 1968.
★ ★ ★
“Adoption of the uniform city income tax represents Lansing’s only opportunity for true tax -re-’ form," he said. “It represents the long-term, farsighted and equitable solution to the everpresent problem of municipal finance.”
Library Director ■!. Named to Panel
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)-Dr. Frederick H. Wagman,; director gf the University of Michigan Library in Ann Arbor,! Tuesday was named by Presi-| dent Johnson to an 18-member j commission on obscenity and; pornography. The commission; will investigate the relationship! between such material and anti- { social behavior,, particularly in’ minors.
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Mirad* Mile Shopping Center
DETROIT • PONTIAC • PORT HURON • ANN ARBOR • FLINT
*/ #
/
\
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1068
If
a mm
c~r m
By JANET ODELL Pontiac Presa Food Editor All cuisines have some form of pancakes. They—may be called crepes, blini or cannelloni. Whatever their title, they’re versatile, attractive and delicious , .. /. . //7,
In the United States we are more apt to consider pancakes a breakfast item. We forget that sweet pancakes make excellent desserts, especially if the main course is on the light side.
Pancakes are used to hold other foods; for this, they are rolled or folded. They may be used as a base for creamed mixtures or'meat sauces.
within your budget, pancakes may be the answer....
There ought to be a recipe on this page to please every taste. Sometimes you bake the en
1 Me cups sweetened canned ' applesauce
V* cup red cinnamon candies Confectioners’ sugar For pancake, combine pan-
tire recipe in one pan, making ■* ■Plc?Jl
a giant pancake. Here’s one fttr bo*1' short-
winter/ entertaining that’s fullW- rotary beater
Now that the holidays are over and you are looking for Ideas that will keep your menus from getting monotonous, yet
of spicy applesauce,
SUPER CANDIES) APPLE PANCAKE
1 cup pancake mix .
Vi cup sugar
Vi teaspoon cinnamon Vi teaspoon nutmeg Vi cup milk
2 eggs
3 tablespoons melted or
liquid shortening
CANDIED APPLE FALLING 2 tablespoons butter or margarine # * ' ' *.'
until smooth.
Meanwhile, measure about 1 t a b 1 e s p o o n shortening into heavy 10-inch skillet. Place over medium heat To test skillet for heat, a few drops of water should bounce a second be-fqre evaporating.
Pour in batter. Bake about S minutes over, medium heat or until surface is covered with bubbles.
Place in preheated hot oven (400 degrees); bake about 5 minutes longer. Loosen pancake from skillet with spatula and
slip onto platter. Carefully fold over.
Spoon Vi of filllnl (see below) on bottom half of foldover. Sprinkle foldover with confectioners' sugar. To serve, cut in wedges. Puce remaining filling in serving bowl.
Hot 'Sandwich'
When, your teen-age sports enthusiasts come bi out of the cold clamoring for, “something to eat,’1 serve tasty franks-in-a-blanket. It’s a new twist to an old favorite!,.
CANDIED APPLE PANCAKE
Oat Cakes Are Good
Bonnie lassies, and laddies as Those cagey Scots know that well, respond to the call of oatmeal givfes more than a bon-“Highland Hotcakes” for break-jus in flavor. Its reputation for fast. Wee wonder, as they’re nourishment is well founded on made extra delicious with the the protein, thiamine and iron addition of rolled oats to thej it supplies, pancake batter. HIGHLAND HOTCAKES
★ ★ W
Quick and easy, you start with biscuit mix. Roll out a rectangle of dough. Lay down the franks. Cover with another rectangle of dough. Fork the edges, cut in peek-a-boo windows and bake.
Go Hawaiian
for a Supper
Polynesian Pancakes are thin, ginger-spiced cakes enclosing a delicate creamed crab filling. POLYNESIAN PANCAKES
Vi cup chopped onion
1 teaspoon curry powder
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 can (10% ounces) condensed cream of mushroom soup % cup milk
1 can (7 ounces) crab, flaked Vi teaspoon mace -1 cup pancake mix In saucepan, cook onion with curry powder in butter until tender. Stir in soup until smooth; gradually blend in milk. Add crab. Heat; stir now and then. •
Meanwhile, add mace to pancake mix andl prepare 8 thin pancakes as directed on label. Place >,2 tablespoons crab mixture on each pancake; fold in half and top with 2 tablespoons crab mixture. Makes 4 servings.
Vi cup rolled oats, (quick or old fashioned, uncooked)
1% cups milk
1% cups sifted all-purpose
- flour
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
2 eggs, beaten
% cup melted or liquid shortening
Combine oats and milk; let stand 5 minutes. Sift together flour, sugar, baking powder and salt; add to oats mixture along with eggs and shortening. Stir only until combined.
For each hotcake, pour about Vi cup batter onto hiot, lightly greased griddle. Bake to a
What gives extra zing to this cold weather special is a generous saucing with canned mushroom gravy sparked with onion, ketchup, and dill pickle. Thus, the traditional accessories are spooned on in one delicious swoop. As nibble food, include celery, carrot strips aim olives. Don’t forget the hot chocolate.
t i
For filling, njelt butter In small saucepan. Stir in applesauce. Heat thoroughly,' but do not boil. Stir in candies, just enough to swirl, but not enough to melt them completely. Makes 4 servings., . f ' g /
Orange-Date Pancakes
ORANGE SAUCE:
Vi cup sugar 1 tablespoon cornstarch Dash salt Vi cup water Vi cup orange juice 1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon grated orange rind
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
PANCAKES:
1 cup milk legg
1 tablespoon melted or liquid shortening 1 cup pancake mix Vi cup chopped pitted dates For sauce, combine sugar, cornstarch and salt in medium-sired saucepan.- Gradually add water. Bring to a boil, stirring
constantly until thickened and clear!
★ ★ w
Add orange juice, lemon Juice, orange rind and butter. \ Heat I thoroughly.
For pancakes, place milk, egg I and shortening in shaker or I bowl. (If melted, shortening is | used, add after pancake mix.) Add pancake mix. Shake vigorously 16 times or mix lightly until batter is fairly smooth. Somewhat lumpy batter makes
DESSERT PANCAKES
light pancakes.
^Pour batter onto hot, lightly greased griddle. Sprinkle each pancake with dates. Turn when tops are covered with bub bles and edges look cooked. Top pancakes with warm orange sauce.'
Chocolate Pancakes Are Dessert
P. S. Keep a supply of canned gravies — beef, chicken, giblet as well as mushroom-on hand, so you can whip up hot, sandwiches in short order.
Franks-in-a-Blankct 2 cups biscuit mix % cup milk 8 frankfurters Vi cup minced onion 2 tablespoons butter cr margarine
1 can (10% ounces) mushroom
gravy
2 tablespoons ketchup
2 tablespoons chopped dill pickle
Combine biscuit mix and milk
One of the most elegant desserts you’re likely to find, “Chocolate Almond Pancakes,” take a little time to make but the preparation isn’t difficult. In fact, you can bake and roll the cakes at your leisure, then reheat them just before serving; the same thing applies to the smooth sauce.
The ever-popular flavor combination of chocolate and almonds finds a most rewarding new outlet in these outstanding pancakes.
CHOCOLATE ALMOND PANCAKES
Vi cup blanched whole almonds
1 cup pancake mix 1% cups milk
2 eggs
3 tablespoons butter or margarine, softened
2% tablespoons cocoa Powdered sugar Vanilla ice cream Dream Sauce
2% tablespoons cocoa ^ _
2 tablespoons cornstarch Few dashes salt
1 cup water'
2 tablespoons butter or margarine.
1 teaspoon vanilla Finely chop almonds. Combine % cup almonds, pancake mix, milk, eggs, butter and cocoa; beat until smooth.
For each cake, pour % cup batter onto hot, lightly buttered griddle or 8-inch skillet; tilt to spread thinly. Bake until bubbles appear; flip and finish baking. Sprinkle with powdered sugar.
roll and place seam-side down on shallow pan.
When all are baked, place in 350-degree (moderate) oven until heated through. For each serving, place 1 pancake on dessert plate, spoon ice cream on top, ladle warm Dream Sauce over and sprinkle with almonds. Serve at once. ^
Dream Sauce: Combing sugar, cocoa, cornstarch, salt and water in saucepan; cook, stirring, until mixture comes to full boil and is thickened. Mjx in butter and vanilla; keep warm. Makes 10 servings.
Dream Sauce: 1 cup granulated sugar
golden brown, turning o n I yj as directed on package. Roll once. Serve with butter and out into 2 rectangles (12x8”
syrup. Makes 4 servings,
leach).. Place one rectangle on
"_______. j cookie sheet; arrange frankfur-
1 , ters across length. Top with
Brunch Pancakes other rectangle; crimp edges;
| slit top. Bake at 450 degrees for Vary those pancakes for Sun-15 minutes or until done, day brunch! Serve them with; * * *
creamed chipped beef or chick! Meanwhile, in saucepan, cook en, or with creamed mushrooms onion in butter until tender, and sliced hard-cooked eggs. Add remaining ’ ingredients. For a garnish, some parsley Heat; serve with frankfurters, parsley sprigs. {Makes 4 servings.
POTATO PANCAKES
For Man-Size Appetites
Thick, robust, rich with sweet country cream, tender diced potatoes, and expert seasonings, cream of potato soup becomes the base of an egg-rich potato pancake that’s a snap for crack-of-dawn meal preparation.
CRANBERRY SAUCED POTATO PANCAKES
1 can (10% ounces) condensed cream of potato soup
% cup flour $
3 eggs
2 tablespoons bacon drippings
1 can (1 pound) whole cranberry sauce
4 cup orange sections, cut up
1 tablespoon grated orange rind Cooked bacon
In bowl, blend soup and flour, beat In eggs and drippings until smooth. Pour Vi cup batter for each pancake onto hot, lightly greased griddle. Bake until golden brown on bach side; turn only once.
Gombine cranberry sauce, orange section, and rind. Top pancakes with cranberry mixture; serve with bacon. Makes 4 servings.
Spinach Is Filling for Tomato Cups
A tasty luncheon dish good to serve with meat.
Spinach Stuffed Tomatoes creamed spinach in pouch 4 medium-small tomatoes (about 1 pound)
1 package (9 ounces) frozen Cook spinach according to package directions. Wash and dry tomatoes. «
Cut slice off top of each; with small sharp knife cujt around top so as to remove inside in deep wedgeshaped plug.
With small teaspoon or fingers remove seeds from remaining wall of tomatoes; turn upside down to drain. (Save scooped-oqt tomato to use in soup or sauce.)
Fill tomatoes with spinach mixture, using 2 heaping tablespoons for each.
Bake in shallow pan in moderate (375-degree) oven about 15 minutes -- until just heated through and tomatoes are partially cooked. Makes 4 servings.
EMPEROR’S PANCAKE
Austrian Pancake Gives Base for Frozen Fruit
Kaiserschmarren or Emperor’s Pancake is a dessert of Austrian origin. It is made with a batter similar to that' of pop-overs or Yorkshire pudding and baked in a shallow dish of any shape.
KAISERSCHMARREN (EMPEROR’S PANCAKE)
1% cups sifted all-purpose flour Vi cup granulated sugar % teaspoon salt 3 eggs ?
1% cups light cream
1 fpasnnnn vanilla extract
2 packages (10 ounces each) frozen raspberries in syrup, thawed
Sweetened whipped’ cream (optional)
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Sift flour with sugar and saR into a medium mixing bowl. Add eggs, cream and vanilla extract to flour mixture.
Beat with rotary beater only until batter is smooth. Pour batter into weR-buttered or oiled 13x9x2-inch baking dish (oval or oblong).
POLYNESIA^ PANCAKES
Dinner Pancakes Are Hearty and Filling
When you want to serve pancakes for dinher, you make sure that some extra protein is included. Perhaps you’ll make corn meal pancakes to serve with canned chili.
Other days, your choice will be buckwheat flapjacks with a can of salmon, flaked and stirred into the batter. Both make main courses.
HOEDCWN DINNER
1 package (9-ounce) corn muffin mix
1 egg
1% cups milk
% cup drained whole kernel corn .
3 cans (15 or 15% ounce) chili without beans
% cup shredddd Cheddar cheese
Combine corn muffin mix, egg, milk and whole kernel com. Stir until dry ingredients are moistened. B a Jj^e 12 4%-lnch pancakes on hot, lightly greased griddle until golden brown.
Heat chili. Spoon about Vi cup chili on each pancake; roll up.
For each serving top 2 cake rolls with ip o r e sprinkle with cheese. ^Makes 6 servings.
SALMON BUCKWHEAT 4JACKS
7% ounce can salmon About 1% cups milk
2 eggs
2 cups buckwheat pancake mix
4 tablespoons melted butter Preheat griddle over medium heat.
Drain liquid from can of salmon into 2 cup measure. Flake salmon into mixing bowL Add sufficient milk to salmon liquid to make a total of 2 cups liquid.
Add milk mixture and eggs to flaked salmon. Add pancake mix and stir until batter is fairly smooth. Stir in melted butter.
Grease griddle lightly and poOr batter onto griddle, using about % cup batter for each cake. When top of cakes are covered with bubbles and edges are brown, turn to brown top side.
Serve with cream or horse-
radish sauce. Makes 12 cakes. Serves 4.
HORSERADISH CREAM SAUCE
In saucepan melt 2' tablespoons butter. Stir in 3 tablespoons flour and Vi teaspoon salt. Gradually stir in 1% cups milk and cook, stirring, until sauce is smooth and thickened. Stir in 2 teaspoons drained horseradish.
Bake 40 to 45 minutes, or until a deep golden brown. Remove from oven. /
While hot, fill center area with raspberries and about 1 cup of the raspberry syrup. If desired, pipe rosettes of whipped cream around edge and pass additional whipped cream for spooning over the dessert. To serve, cut into wedges or squares. Makes 6 to 8 servings.
(Note): This batter, may bo baked in a round or other shallow baking dish of similar size. Before baking, it should bo about %-inch deep.)
SALMON FLAPJACKS ’“l
HOEDOWN DINNER
Si *•-
HSMraHM 1
^ •, v
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ,8, 1908
if:wv—p
PI
pf$
■MBBSmeMB J %p& f,
jjf| | _ 'ajfiBS
“SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY
Sohu6 £cono price
BANANAS
lb
CALIFORNIA
Navel Oranges
DOZEN7
113
SIZE
Fit
im
Frash Broccoli 38* pinach. . 21*
Tomatoes e 49* Peppers^ 2 n 29*
"SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY
Pork Sausage “ 39
39.
‘SUPER-RIGHT" THICK-SLICED
2& 1
‘'SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS
Cube Steaks ....
"SUPER-RIGHT" I m
Beef live 49
CUT-UP FRYERS Ik. 13.
Whole Fryers FRESH LB. 29*
WHOLE FRYER LESS OR m
Fryer Breasts ATTACHkO LI.
FOR BAKINS OR BROILINO m
Halibut Steak .... LB49
"SUPER-RIG HF QUALITY
Spare Ribs
2 to 3 Pound Sizes
lb
NO rRICES I,
CHICKEN-NOODLE
Campbell's Soup
NET WT. 1014-OZ, CAN
15
CHAMPION
Saltiae Crackers
1-LB.
BOX
22
WI NS FAVOR, CUT JH ,
Asparagus ... 4 3
3ohu6 Cccno Price
Bright Sail
BLEACH
5.25% Sodium Hypochlorite
GALLON
PLASTIC
JUG
39
1-Ll.
1-OZ.
CAN
21
STOKELY, DEL MONTE OR
Green Giant Peas.
GREEN GIANT OR 1-Llt JO V t
Del Monte Com... «5- 21
HUNT'S NET WT. ■ ■ c
Tomato Sauce • • • • CAN
HUNT'S—WITH MUSHROOMS NET WT. -
Tomato Sauce * •.. can 14
■ ■ 1-la nn{
Baked Beans.... ^ 29
•ROOK'S MEXICAN STYLE NET WT MM,
Chili Beans......,S&J£ 16
CUT RITE
US FT. ROLL
HEINZ
Vegetarian Beans CAN 14
Waxed Paper....
Sc OFF LABEL
Handy Wrap.....
FOR THE BATHROOM
Dixie Dispenser..
BATHROOM (3-OZ.)
Dixie Refills....
NORTHERN—3c OFF LABEL -
Toilet Tissue.. 4
TOILET TISSUE
Scot 1000 Sheet..
KLEENEX—2-FLY
Facial Tissue....
zoo FT. ROLL
EACH
100
IN FKG.
ROLL
PACK
ROLL
25
39'
66*
39
30*
12*
17*
S.25% SODIUM HYPOCHLORITE
Roman Cleanser. # PutsTic
SPRAY DISINFECTANT
Sc OFF LABEL
48*
Lysol............ liS" 79'
AJAX AEROSOL NRTWT m
Window Cleaner. .,,m?z 49‘
12* # 1
Comet Cleanser.. ,‘Sf 19*
4c OFF LABEL M
Rrillo Pads...... off j4*
12c OFF LABEL _ _
SpicandSpan.... iff 67*
Dutch-Cleanser • • e plastic
3c OFF LABEL
J-------------v,
VLASIC
Sauerkraut
29*
QT.
JAR
J'
SOFT-PLY, 2-PLY
Facial Tissues
BOX
OF
200
19
S
YOUR CHOltC — 10c OFF LABEL
Cleaners
C ’
AJAX
LESTOIL
OR
MR. CLEAN
49
12-OZ.
SIZE
DEL MONTE
Tomatoes......
SLICED OR WHOLE
Del Monte Beefs..
AGP—SLICED OR WHOLE
White Potatoes..
TROFI HAI * NET WT. JM m
Mixed Fruit..... "Sff 31
DEL MONTE
Pencliec SLICED *r
rCHUIVB HALVES e e e e
1-LB.
CAN
1-LB.
SIZE
1-LB.
CAN
CAN
1-LB.
28
19
12
FOR FLOORS
1-FT.
SimonizVista85'
SPRAY SIZING
134 OFF LABEL
Gentle Fels
TOILET SOAP
1-FT,
4-OZ.
ITU
42*
iwibci i««r » bag mm.
Gay Bouquet.........V '35
21
Fruit Cocktail.... Stt 25*
A4P._ ■ 1AB. MR OOF#
Crushed Pineapple 42ff 27
DM. MONTI
CAN
10c OFT LABEL j.LB M Mm
Instant Fels............’SSff-64
20c OFF LABEL f^T< M Mg
Cinch SPRAY CLEANER # # . # $Jzi’ 44
FOR DRAINS ' m .
Liquid Plunir.... »» 69 Drano.................««• 73
Magic Touch..... iff 48'
FOR DISHES lu
Cascade......... % 67*
BISSIL SHAMPOO , pT
Rug Cleaner.......*2# 1”
Tide Detergent... % 74*
u. on uuu-nw III, m. AA,
Rinse................iff 99
•WASHDAY WHITINIR _ ^ _
Miracle White... . 39■ v
NU-SOFT—12c OFF LABEL f^T * *
fabric Conditioner 'ff
57*
PROVE IT TO
#v: J: - ''.'A'" f
gplr £ jm 1 WJ£K*T IMfPi
EMU**; V Mm Ml
THE PONTIAC I’RKSS. VVKDNKSDAV, JANUARY 3, 1908
n m
-Vry
Cut from Mature, Corn-fed Beef-“Super-Right”
FRESH 'JMi0%
Mushrooms »49
BONELESS! "SUPER-RIGHT
Rotisserie or
Beef Rump Roust
98
YOUI^ CHOICE ||
pili^bury4>r AUNT JEMIMA
Pancake Mix
FINE QUALITY
Log Cabin Syrup 32
WRAPPED IN QUARTERS ^ WKK
Nutley Margarine s 17
What do we mean <
Econo-PRICES?
A&P Hat Reduced the Prices on Thousands and Thousands of Packages, Cans, Bottles and Jars of Your Favorite Food and Household Needs.
Econo Prices add up to GREATER TOTAL weekly savings any day you shop. A
\t
Prove it to yourself. Shop A&P today and discover the great savings possible with ECONO-PRICES.
JIFFY
Baking Mix....,
ALL PURPOSE
Gold Medal Flour
2V4-LB. PKG.
5-LB.
BAG
SUNKIST
ORANGE
V
BETTY CROCKER—LAYER
Cake Mix
j I FfY—ALL FLAVORS
Cake Mixes
CONTAQINA
Pizza Mix.......
10-X. LIGHT OR DARK BROWN
Domino Sugar....
VACUUM PACKED COFFEE
Chock Full O’Nuts
I-LB. 2%-OZ. PKG.
NET WT 7-OZ. PKG.
1-LB.
PKG.
1-LB.
PKG.
1-LB.
CAN
A&P—UNSWEETENED
33
49
29
10
37
15
79
—V,
NETWT.
9-OZ.
S PKG.
1-LB.
4-OZ.
PKG.
33
49
BETTY CROCKER
Cocoa Puffs...
KELLOGG'S SUGAR
Frosted Flakes...
KELLOGG'S NET WT. ■ At,
Corn Flakes...... w 19
KELLOGG'S NETWT. 4A4A,
Apple Jacks..... 33
KELLOGG'S POP TARTS OR NETWT. A ■,
Post Toastems... 35
Quisp or Quake • • • Si 32
INSTANT NETWT. A
Quaker Oatmeal. a ’pkg* 33
BROADCAST
Corned Beef Hash
ARMOUR'S SLICED
Dried Beef.....
SUPER-RIGHT
Chili with Beans..
BOUNTY
Beef Stew...........
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE
Meat Ball Stew.
RANDALL—CHICKEN
Noodle Dinner...
SUNNYBROOK—ALASKA
Red Sainton.....
NETWT.
1514-OZ.
CAN
NETWT. 2 Vi -OZ. JAR
NETWT.
13’/j-OZ
CAN
1-LB.
3-OZ.
CAN
.1-LB. 14-OZ. •• CAN
NETWT.
15'/j-OZ.
JAR
1-LB.
CAN
39
49
29
49
59
35
89
Orange Juice
31(
,-QT.
14-OZ.
CAN
A&P (10-LB. BAG 97c)
Cone Sugar
5 49‘
J'
r
FRANCO-AMERICAN
Spaghetti
14‘
N ET WT. 15'/z-OZ. CAN
jf
NET wt; 10-OZ. JAR
| 09
83*
HILLS BROS.
Instant Coffee....
MAXWELL HOUSE NETW|.'
Instant Coffee.... *«'
NESTLI'S 1-LB. Mp.
EverReady Cocoa 75
ORANGE DRINK l-LB. (WBV.
Instant Tang..... «« 77.
WELCH'S 1-PT.
Grape Juice.........«*■ 33
DOLE 1-QT. Am,
Pineapple Juice.. «"■ 27
MORGAN'S 1-QT. jmjnrc
Apple Juice..... ’«» 29
. QUICK SERVING
Minute Rice
NETWT.
14-OZ.
PKG.
SKIPPY l.LB.
Peanut Butter. • • • Jar
HELLMANN'S
42 49
HELLMANN'S - m
Mayonnaise..........® 59
ANN PAGE NIT WT A.
Sparkle Gelatin.. % 8
VLASIC ‘ m mm,
Polish Dills..... Si 47
BLUE BONNET aa.
Soft Margarine... S 39
FROZEN—APPIAN WAY m .pA.
Pizzarinos 6 PMK 59
NET WT. B-OZ. PKG.
1-LB.
PKG.
NET WT. 15 Vi -OZ i CAN
KRAFT
Spaghetti Dinner
MUELLER'S
Elbow Macaroni..
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE
Ravioli.......
BETTY CROCKER NETWT.
Noodles Romanoff ,SPKG?’
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE NET WT. 40 mm.
Spaghetti \SS .. .. 'W 27'
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE NETWT. AA AA,
Beefaroni.. e... .cioz29c
RAGU (MEAT OR MUSHROOMS) ' NET wt aa.
Spaghetti Sauce.. 38
25
24
29
39
we care
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., JAN. 6th In Wayna, Macomb, Oakland and-Waihtanaw Counties
s
pane Parker Speciai
Apple Pie
39
SAVE
16-
£ 1-LB.
8-OZ.
SIZE
JANE PARKER
Giant Jelly Roll
Made with Buttermilk! Jane Parker a
White Bread 4
1-LB.
7-OZ.
SIZE
l'Vi-LB.
LOAVES
JANE PARKER BLUEBERRY
Muffins_______ **“•
NETWT.
Vi-02
PKG.
Vanilla Iced, Nut Topped—BABKA 1-LB
14tOZ. RING
Coffee Cake..
BAKE 'N' SERVE—JANE PARKER
Dinner Rolls... «<>
NEW! DANISH COFFEE CAKE 15-OZ.
FOIL* PKG.
lemon Whirl...
69‘
89
29
79
25
59
f . KRAFTV
Miracl te Whip ■ A A J
1 QT ^ in
1 '** m raj
RIVAL
Food
MB. 1 IO|c
0
Am
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1908
HIGHtTStomiM
SflNEST
. . For these who want tho FINEST in froth hoof... tho ultimato In flavor ... wo suggest Wriglay U.S.D.A. Choico Contor Cut Chuck Roott . . . only tio choico tt hoof it utod... your guarantoo of FRESHNESS and QUALITY It tho Wrigloy U.S.D.A. Choico Labol.
U S. choice bllF
Arm Roast ...................•», i
U.S. CHOICE SEEF
Boneless Chuck Roast...........b £
U.S. CHOICE
Boneless Beef Stew.............b 7
CENTER
CUTS
ui). tngi« stir cwnBT
Rib Steak ...m
U.S. CHOICE CHUCK
Swiss Steaks...
U.S. CHOICE SEEF STEAK
London Broil..
U.S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE
WHITE MICHIGAN
U.S. CHOICE BEEF
Chuck Steak
WHOLE FULLY COOKED HICKORY
FAMOUS BLACK HAWK SLICED
U.S. NO. 1-POTATOES
Dakota Redskins
U.S. NO. 1 LOUSIANA
Candied Yams ..
U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO
Russet Potatoes.
SOLID GREEN
Fresh Cabbage .
U.S. NO. 1 FRESH
Fancy Rutabagas
FRESH VINE RIPENED
Salad Tomatoes
CLEANED AND WASHED
Fresh Spinach..
LOIN CUT ROAST
Fresh Pork Loin..........
MR. PITT $ SKINLESS FRANKS OR
Sliced Bologna------------
FRESH
King Size Roasters ... ..
SLICED INTO CHOPS
1/4 Pork Loin Roast YV .**!*!•.
whole
SLICED AND TIED
lb. 35*
llllp
ftgREATWRIGLEY
GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS, TOOI
GREEN GIANT
Niblets
Corn
PIONEER
PURE
MEADOWDALE YELLOW CLING SLICES OR HALVES
California Peaches. ’___________
CANNED SPAGHETTI
Franco-American.................
WAGNER S DELICIOUS
Fruit Drinks....................
LIGHT CHUNK
Del Monte Tuna............
QUICK JIFFY
Cake Mix.......... .......
HUNT $ IN TOMATO SAUCE
Pork‘n Beans ...................
MEADOWDALE
AppleSauce...........
CAMELOT CREAMY
Tomato Soup.......
CAMELOT CRISP
SaltiiteCrackera ....
CREAM OR WHOLE KERNAl
Dal Monte Corn .....
LUNCHEON MEAT
Normal Spam.......
CAMELOT SMOOTH
Evaporated Milk ....
MEADOWDALE DELICIOUS
Pineapple Juice........
■REAKFAST CEREAL
Wheaties or Cheerios
FLAVORFUL FLO-THRU
Upton Tea Bags
GOLDEN AGE NO DEPOSIT
16-Oa. Pop .. - -
ROYAL SCOn.
Margarine.....
COUNTRY KITCHEN
ProshMilk.........
MEADOWDALE CREAMERY
Fresh Butter...
i-e».
boHl.
AMERICAN
CRAFTED
FBffi DBMERWARI j
THIS WICK: M
Serenade Cup |
You gut one of those lovely pieces for Juat 9C with each B5.00 food purchase. With a • 10.00 food purchase you get two pleooe for ISCaad so on ... there's no llnkltl «
SPECIAL LABEL '
Northern
Tissue
TWO PLY DOUBLE STRENGTH
Puff’s Tissue
These Wrigley Stares Open Until 9 p.nt., Mon. thru Sat. For Your Convenience.
2375 Orchard Lake Rd.. Sylvan Lake 8040 Cooley Lake Rd., Union Lakt 1495 N. Main, Rochestor 45 S. Telepragh, Pontiac
BLUE RIBBON GRADE "A'
Large Eggs
down {
WITH
THRIFT
TICKET
if ff,
i i/IHunX d
..Vi ! / e~n W *
mirrmw
nnimn
^ PURE > granulated
Pioneer Sugu
SOFT FACIAL
Puffs Tissues
with purchoM of four I-lb. 4-oi. loaves of Mel* O-Crust
White Bread
k Oood thru // V
jo*. §. // jgyj,
with purchase of one gal. of Country JCItckfa
with purchase of Farft-slenne Gourmet ware
4 Piece Skillet Set-.*
V Good thru // .
with purchase af any twa whole or cut-up
m thrift ticket
with this thrift ticket and *0.00 or more food iudchaao* Limit one par lailly please. Oood thru, . Jaa. S. /
Turkey Parte
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 8, '196$
Twelfth Night Ends Holiday
Here, some families take down the Christmas tree on Twelfth
Don't be disappointed if you didn't! get to entertain friefids during Christmas festivities. Invite guests for a Twelfth Night dinner party to wind ,up the Holiday Season. You can celebrate this special time of the year and!piece of cake with a
grees). Prepare roast according to package directions.
Night, but European families! I Meanwhile combine apricots,
DEVILED SCALLOPS AND CRAB *- A-casserole like this will be pleasing to the menfolk of the family because it’s chock-full of meaty chunks of fish and hard-cooked eggs. You cap be sure that you’re giving everyone his- much-needed ration of protein
Bake Scallops, Crab in Zesty Cream Sauce
with a supper dish like this scallops, crab and egg trio, too. Partner the casserole with a selection of crisp relishes, a pineapple-slaw salad and crusty French bread, and your meal will be complete.
If you’ve good part 1 trying to think of different dinner menus, why not consider seafood? There’s nothing like fish arid shellfish to help you change the pace of everyday meals.
A truly delicious sea fare dish Is Deviled Scallops and Crab.
Quick Rolls Are Seedy
, Here -is an unusual relish to
been spending • a It’s hearty and filling, a very make and serve with cold weath-your time lately satisfying treat to come home i er mea]s its main ingredient is to after a sledding or skating jraja|n< session or a hard work day for
even be more unusual
; * * . 7;'
You’re recuperating after the whirl of holiday activities so it should be one of the easiest parties; yet, the dinner must be elegant and fit the event. A glazed boneless turkey roast served .with delectable oraqge-apricot sauce is a perfect choice.
★ ★ ★
The two-and-a-half pound turkey roast practically cooks by I itself and is in keeping with the occasion. The orange - apricot sauce is just right for the season. %
Twelfth Night Is January 5, the eve of the twelfth day after Christinas. Epiphany, as it is called in many countries, celebrates the visit of three kings to Bethlehem: thus, in some countries Twelfth Night is the Three Kings’ Eve.
In England it’s also Old Christmas and was once a huge celebration with feasts and mer rymaking. Around the world it’s a time for parties.
cut a special cake. The Twelfth Night cake is white and threelayered with a bean hidden in each layer. Persons who get a 'bean are the three kings "(or queens) for the evening.
Make a Twelfth Night cake It’s easy with cake mix and prepared frosting. Don’t forget the beans and be sure to cue your guests about them. Decorate elaborately with candles or candied fruit. , \ \
On second thought, why not make fancy cupcakes with a bean in each' so that everyone can be a king or queen of the feast.
Tutti-Frutti Turkey Roast
1 (2 lbs. 8 oz.) frozen boneless turkey roast
1 jar (7% oz. k strained apricots with tapioca
V* cup orange jufce
1 tablespoon lemon juice
% teaspoon dry mustard
2 tablespoons butter or -margarine -
1 medium orange, peeled and cut into segments OR 1 can (11 oz.) mandarin orange segments, drained
orange juice, lemon juice, mustard and butter in a small pan. Cook and stir over medium heat until hot and smooth.
★ ★ ★
Ten minutes before roast has finished cooking brush top with' apricot mixture. Continue cooking. Brush 1 or 2 more times with sauce before end of cooking- i $ i
Heat remaining apricot sauce. Add fresh or mandarin orange segments. Heat 1-2 minutes longer. Serve over roast. Yield: 1% cups sauce. „
TUTTI FRUITTI TURKEY ROAST - Celebrate the final day of Christmas--Twelfth Night—with an easy-to-fix turkey roast. Serve it with a fruit sauce for a festive touch.
Meatless Spaghetti Sauce Made With Broccoli
Combine Spaghetti with fresh (drain. (Use stalks in some other
broccoli and dress this way Spaghetti Broccoli 1 bunch broccoli V4 pound thin spaghetti, broken Into about 3-inch pieces 3 quarts boiling water 1 tablespoon salt 1 dove garlic, peeled and halved
Vi cup grated Romano cheese V4 cup commercial sour cream 9ear, cut in 8 wedges. Cook uncovered for l'Q minutes more; stir now andy then. Makes 4 servings.
1
Thrifty Chuck Is Budget Stretcher in Meat Line
Just as Chuck is a friendly way of saying, “Charjes,” chuck! roast and steaks are friends to' the thrifty shopper.
Chuclc pot roasts and steaks are among the less tender beef cuts and must be cooked by slow, moist’cookery in order to be juicy and tender. Remember this and you can prepare meals that won’t even hint that you’re saving pennies.
Chuck steaks make wonderful Swiss steaks, and chuck roasts make the best tasting pot roasts.
The secret is to brown the
meat well and then add a small Pour into a well-buttered 1 Vi-!amount of liquid. Add seasonings
1-inch squares. kh«Ica a few! quart casserole; sprinkle with [and perhaps chopped onions, pieces at a time in a paper bag bread crumbs mixed with melt-[cook over low heat in a covered with- sugar or ground almonds ed butter. Bake at 450 degrees utensil until the meat is tender, until coated. Makes 4 dozen for 20 minutes. ,Makes 6 to 8 The drippings and liquid left pieces. . jservings. |in the pan make delicious gravy.
BUTCHER
BOY
" ALL BEEF CHERRY RED
10 lbs. PORK CHOPS 10 lbs. STEAKS 10 lbs. STEAKettes 10 lbs. FRYING CHICKEN 10 lbs. CHUCK ROAST
$0495
lbs. £0
Cash and Carry
PONTIAC PRIDE SUGAR CURED HICKORY SMOKED WHOLE OR HALF SLABS
SUGAR CURED HICKORY SMOKED
lb.
SLAB
BACON
SMOKED PICNICS 35?*.
CADII CDECU u’s- g°v’t inspected EfifiC IQ?
rAltM PlfEOll LARGE GRADE‘A’...!. EUUv W“oz.
■ RING OR CH0NK BOLOGNA ...... 39V
Hoffman’s Oakland Packing
(RETAIL DiVISIQN)
526 MOUTH PERRY STREET, PONTIAC
Serving the Greater Pontiac Area for Over 50 Yearn
FREE PARKIN? IN REAR FB 2-1100
SMOKED
KEILBASSA 53* lb.
OPEN DAILY
| A.M. to 6 PiM.:
■
THE PONTIAC PHgsi/ WEDNESPAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
jmmmmM, ■ IRBWirRi JRNjuiBL
Eit?PSW9j*;ffiF* ffil* 8® Sffif tfi® jggiiea NBA
$S
t’s « Pleasure to Shop and Save at
jy|merm|yrE|e
HOUSE
15H . ,a* . ' , wm„
5529 Sashabaw Rd. Km Knob Max* Car. Maybe* Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS
2886 Highland Rd.
Hyland Plata Cor. Duck Lake Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS
East Blvd. Corner al Perry OPEN SUNDAYS
ElitRbatli Lake Rd. at Huron It. OPEN SUNDAYS
1198 Cooley Lake Rd. Uaiea Lake VIHage OPEN SUNDAYS
T580 Highland Rd. M-59 Plaxa
M-59 at Williams Lk. Rd.
1200 Baldwin Ava. Corner Columbia OPEN SUNDAYS
208 Auburn Ava. CLOSED SUNDAYS
AM R. Pika St. OPEN SUNOAYS
810 Orchard Lk. Rd. OPEN SUNOAYS
SUNDAYS
OPEN SUNDAYS
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
nendiY Service
Everyday
rices •
FROZEN
Yu ctaps
piuiiK Ift
BEAMS
CHUCK
STEAK
mmt:
CUTLETS
taHJIWXPfe
PETERS
SLICED
BOLOGNA
IRE JAM
INSTANT
COFFEE
8-0une« Tubes
Fresh Frozen
KLEENEX
FACIAL TISSUES
2M-PLT |A( MI OILY BTr,„,
(limit 2 Pound*)
CHUCK
ROASTS
SuS
W*f°’
^VierM;
FCOD TOWN-PEOPLES VALUABLE COUPON
FOOD TOWN-PEOPLES VALUABLE COUPON
Limit 1 With Couponand $10 Purchase
Limit 2 with Coupon and $1QPurchata
QUARTERED
Coupon Expires Sunday. January 7, 1968 Nona Sold to Deftlers or Minor*
Coupon Expiroo Sunday. January 7, 1968 Mono Sold to Doctors or Minors
Limit 4
m(iM
PJTuKI
Food Town-Paoolaa Bamit Itama Oaosaa
Faad Town-Paoploa Bonus Stamp Coupon
Food Town-Pooplas Bonus Stamp Coupodi
Food Town-Paoalaa Bonus Stamp Coupon
Food Town-Paoploa Bonus Itama Coupon
Feed Town-Pooploo Bonus Stamp Coupon
Food Town-Paoalaa Banua Hawn Caunan
Food Tuww-Puoplae Banua Stamp Coupon
FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With PurohaM
of Any 6 Cam of
FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase
■ A FREE GOLD BELL )|J Stamps With Purchase
of Any 2 Pkgs. of
PORK SAUSAGE
FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purohase
FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purohase
FREE GOLD BELL, Stamps With Purchase
of 4 Loaves of
Cl! FREE GOLD BELL JU Stamps With Purchase
of Any 2 Com of
Room Deodorizer
FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase
FREE GOLD BELL
Stamps With Purchase
of Any Bog
of Any Bag of
GRAPEFRUIT
APPLES
8H
sSjyu
(Excopt Awreyt)
Coupon Expire* Subday, January 7. I960 None Sold to Dealers or Minors .
Coupon Expires Sunday. January 7,1968 Nona Sold to Dealer* or Minors
Coupon Expires Sunday, January 7, 1968 Noma Sold to Dealers or Minors
Coupon Expire* Sunday* January 7, 1969 Nona Sold to Dealers or Minors
Coupon Expires Sunday* January 7*1968 None Sold to Dealers or Minors
Coupon Expiree Sunday* January 7* 1968 Nona Sold to Doalors or Minor*
Coupon ExpOas Sunday* January 7* 1968 Non# Sold to Dealers or Minor*
Coupon Expire* Sunday* January 7,1968 Nano Sold t* Dealers or Miners
FOOD TOWN
SUPER MARKETS
FOOD MARKETS
Food Town-Peaples Bonus Stamp Coupon
Cfl FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase *
riRr
m
j / of two or more
FRYERS m
Cmptn Ixpli*. Sunday. January 1,196* [ Km* Sold hr Dualun ur Mlnar.
Wrf- ■
®' C*—8
tHE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1908
NORTH (D) 3
49 V A J 4 AK1086 4AKQ108 j
WEST east
4K87543 4 QJ106
V 7 5 V K 10 9 6 3 2
♦ QJ973 ♦ Void
4 Void 4654
SOUTH,,
4 A 2 VQ84 4 542 4J9732
Both vulnerable
West North East South 1 1* 2V 2 N.T.
Pass 6 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead—♦ Q
JAMES JACOBY For the luckiest hand of 1967 we have to fall back on our old friend, the l“unlucky” expert. We will let him tell the story in his own I words.
“I had t u t, Ithe worst play-] er in the game, | as usual; but I we had man-laged to get vul-Inerable. Our | opponents also were vulnerable when I picked up my usual collection of trash. My partner Joe opened one club and sat back like a man with a really big hand.
JACOBY
East bid two hearts and I! decided to bid two no-trump. A| terrible bid, but I did hot want! to pass or to* raise Joe in a' minor suit. Joe jumped right to six no-trump and theire I was faith no place to go but seven clubs, and I wasn’t going to goj there.”
“To add to my dismay, West
pened' the queen of diamonds. Then dummy hit the table and all of a sudden the sun was shining and the birds singing.”,
East showed out otr the first diamond, so I could finesse twice with” perfect safety. I wound up with one spade, two hearts, four diamonds, five clubs and 1,440 undeserved points. Maybe my luck *has changed.”
Our friend really was lucky. Even with a bad partner, the two no-trump bid was headed for trouble, while a three club bid should be all right. Then, ye note that North had a lot of better bids than she no-trump at his disposal. * /• " < j
I Somehow or- other when we hold two five card suits, we like , to bid them both. And of course, North should have started by bidding diamonds. If fie wanted to bid only one diamond we wouldn’t say he had made a real underbid, although we do favor an opening two.'
The real . luck came when South was able to make the no-trump slam. If North' had
played at a normal six clubs, East would have opened a spade. He could have made his slam by an immediate double finesse in diamonds, but we think he would, have taken the more normal play of leading out a high diamond first andJ blown the hand out the window.
w*CHRDjw*«*4
Q—The bidding has been: West North East 8entll
14 . Pass Pass
Dble Pass 2 W ?
• You, South, hold:
42 V J 4 4K 10 954 3 47543 What do you do now?
A—Pass. It is too dancerous to compete at the three level with this hsnd.
TODAY’S QUESTION You pass, as does West. North bids two spades and East passes. What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
ROBIN MALONE
By Bob Lubbers
~UNO»S6KVBP/ LB GRAND PORlOmiO SLIPS
our oFTmf I m
THE BETTER HALF
THE BERRYS
By Carl Gruberf
WE CANT JUST BLOW IT/ I'LL H/WE TO DECLARE IT AS PART OF MY INCOME /
“The Clarks are in Florida getting brown from the sun, and I’d turn green from envy If I weren’t so blue frofn the cold.”
BERRY’S WORLlf—By Jim Berry
THE BORN LOSER
WELL/DID 1 HAVEATlME
TRVlUfc TO FI HP A TUUlC ^TROUSER DRESS!
OF COURSE IT MAKES AT
DIFFERENCE/'WjDpNT j
HAVE TO WORK TOR
m
IT/,
By Art Sansom
I SHOPPED ALL OVER TOWN! 0/6N HACKLEHEAPS
mm have owe! mewr
romeSDPS AND--
ALLEY OOB
By V. T. Hamlin
ptroloeical Forecast m
I * hi a
o
Mp
•y SYDNEY OMARR For Thursday
"The wlso man controls his destiny ... Astrology points the way."
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Work and health art spotlighted. You are able to break through red tape. This helps In material and emotional ways. Aid forthcoming through dub/ organizational connections.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): You may bo taking for too much/ too soon. Check details. What appeals to be a minor discrepancy could trip you. Be aware. Do: tome research. Get basic tasks com-1 pitted.
GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20): Study TAURUS message. Learn rules before] you break them. One at home may appear overly ambitious. Be patient. Hold your ground. Prestige rises If you stand fall.
CANCER (June 2Kluly 22): Family get-together indicated. Special message or call could precipitate action -Involving ralatlVM. Be flexible/ versatile. Take nothing for granted.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Hold line ont Inflation. Personal finances are emphasised. Don't overspend. Temptation is to go beyond means. Overcome this. Be practical without skimping on quality. I
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent on! marriage/ partnership/ legal ties. Getj •olid Information. Avoid speculation. Key Is to IlstOn, observe. Synthesize, piece toifothor links. Come up with complete blcfuro. ,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Favorable nows may be in connection with work, special group Interest. What appears adverse tends to boomerang to your advantage* Complete task which nas been
promises/ especially where finances era involved. Bring forth creative resources. Member of opposite sex could express grandiose plans. Combine Imagination with common sense.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You got backing whore professional endeavors enter picture. Moral support forthcoming from home base. Heed first Impressions. Intuition likely to ring bell of accuracy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. (?): Emphasis On chango and travel. You are
TV Blackout Is Just a Goof
DETROIT (UPI) -There will be one very shamefaced em-j ploye showing up for vy.ork at the Michigan Bell Building here today.
He flipped a switch and turned off television for the city.
A minor. ruckus was created last night when all three networks—NBC, CBS and ABC — suddenly lost their power in the Detroit area.
The reason a company spokesman explained, must have been a maintenance man who care ! lessly turned off the switch con-| trolling the network feed' into the transmission room.
★ ★ ★
Time lost for viewers was; about three and a half minutes —and for the fast-fingered worker* some lost face. ,!
tempted by something at a distance. Be isure of facts. Get outline clear in your i ,mind. Relative could make confusing re-1 quest.
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THB PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8. 1968
By The_ Associated Press 1 Subzero cold siting a vast stretch of the country from the Rockies to New England today while snow, sleet or freezing rain hobbled motorists from Texas to New York, « ' '
The mercury, tumbled to 29 be-|16w zero at Hibbing, Minn., as
the latest in a series of Arctic invasions that Began before Christmas settled deep in the midcontinent. Denver registered 4 below before dawn, and it was 7 above zero at Kansas City. it. it it
The Weather Bureau had indicated Tuesday night that read-
ings of zero or below could be expectedin parts of 23 states.
Sleet or freezing rain brought travelers warning? for portions of eight states from Oklahoma and northern Texas across Arkansas, Tennessee and Kentucky to Maryland end the Virginias.
The storm of ice which hit much of the region Tuesday and continued today closed numerous schools in Arkansas, Kentucky and Tennessee. Scores of traffic accidents woe reported, and there were many reports of motorists being stranded on Tennessee’s hilly roads.
Light to moderate snow blanketed the region north of the ley-pavement belt and extended northeastward into Pennsylvania and New York.
*.
In contrast to the bitter cold numbing the plains and Midwest, unseasonaBly'mild, clear
weather warmed Florida., Temperatures climbed into the 70s and 80s Tuesday, and Fort Lauderdale registered an early morning low of 72 degrees.
The population of the Soviet Union reacted 235.5 million on July t, 1967:
KENNEDY VISITS BLACKFEET - Sen. Robert Kennedy, D-N.Y., talks with Irene Edmo (left) and Mrs. Reginald Gould during a visit to the Ft. Hall Indian Reservation yesterday. Kennedy, chairman of the* Senate Indian Affairs subcommittee, inspected educational facilities and toured the reservation and Blackfoot schools in Pocatello, Idaho.
Reagon^Wants
« ■ ■ . i
in GOP Nomination
- ' - ;• | candidacy beyond the first bal-, lot. But he said he Would not require the delegates to pledge themselves to vote as a single unit.
INTRAPARTY FIGHT In previous statements Reagan has said he hopes to avoid an intraparty .fight in the California primary between GOP conservatives and moderates.
In Washington, the Republican Coordinating Committee attacked administration policies on water pollution, indicating the GOP may try to make the In the past, Reagan told a;handling of the problem a na-news conference, "California tional campaign issue, has thrown away opportunities - * * ★
to have some influence on the The Republican leadership national scene” by not forming unit (.harged the federal govern a unified delegation.
By the Associated Tress California Gov. Ronald Reagan has made it clear he wants a leading role in choosing the Republican nominee.
Reagan — who insists he is not a candidate for the nomination—announced he has formed a statewide committee to pick members of the favorite-son delegation he will lead to the Republican convention at Miami Beach in August. He said the group will cover -“the broad spectrum of the party.”
★ ★ ★
He indicated he might hold the delegates to his favorite-son
Romney Points to 'Bad Press'
ment is polluting many of the nation’s rivers and lakes—the Potomac River in Washington, for example—while preaching water purity.
“If the federal government is going to legislate in the field of water pollution,” the committee said, “it must in its own activities adhere to exemplary practices in controlling inadequately treated discharges from federal institutions.”
TAFT’S PLANS I
Ohio’s Democratic Sen. Frank J. Lausche said he was “profoundly happy” over the announcement that Republican Rep. Robert Taft Jr. will se&k reelection to his congressional seat instead of trying for Lausche’s Senate seat.
Former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace planned to
PARIS (AP) — Gov. George Romney said today that his declining standing in public opinion polls at home is the result of a “negative” press;'
Romney arrived from India on the last stop of a tour to Vietnam and back. He said he thought Jie could change peoples’ minds when he starts campaigning at home for the Republican presidential nomination.
iti.c ‘ hold a news conference today in
JJj ^Ch'®rm^fU“iC*l^ Santa Monica, Calif. He gave no asked to comment on opinion . _ __.. . . ---
polls showing him farther be- Kj”*c« ?°"
hind former Vice President ?6 aboyt’ “ ™uld,rela* tol
Richard Nixon now than last?18 aPPar.ent sTU6cess J . his American Independent Par-
“Oh, I think that’s a ruction | % m CaUtmto’s 1968 jmHot. , of the press more than the people." I think the press has been very negative for a long time (toward me).
* ★ *
"There isn’t any question about that. Just be realistic about it, And I think when I indicate what I believe in and what I stand for that I can change that picture.”
Romney was scheduled to leave for New York later toddy.
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Hoosiers Third Setback
DETROIT iff) — Coach Lou Watson has to think up a gimmick to get his Indiana . Hoosiers back on the beam before opening the Big Ten schedule at Minnesota Saturday.
“We’ve lost our fire, we’re stale,” said Watson after his Hoosiers were outgunned 99-93 by Detroit Tuesday night.
The loss was Indiana’s third straight after six consecutive victories. The Hoosiers plummeted from The Associated Press rankings this week after dropping back-to-back decisions to Western Kentucky and* Southern Methodist in the Dallas Christmas tournament.
“We outshot SMU "by nine field goals and Detroit by three and lost both games,” noted Watson.
Detroit hit 29 of 42 foul shots to IS of 23 for Indiana, but had the lead -halfway through the first half and never trailed thereafter.
BEST GAME
“It was our best game this year,” said Detroit Coach Bob Calihan, whose team has won five straight and eight of 10 this year, all at home. “It was our best passing game. We kept hitting the - open man.” : .
The Titans ripped off a string of nine straight points halfway through the first half to take a commanding 29-21 lead, The Hoosiers cut this to 46-42 at the half, but never got closer than six points after that.
Detroit, with Bruce Rodwan hitting a season high of 36 points, led by as many as 16 points.
Indiana switched from a zone to a full-court press in the final 10 minutes, cutting the lead to six points several times. But the press took its toll in fouls, and the Hoosiers never caught up.
LATE SURGE
Sophomore Joe Cooke, who sparked the late Indiana rally with several steals, topped the Hoosiers with 20 pointy. Bill DeHeer added 15, but had only one field goal in the second half.
Batch'Joyner, who averaged 18 polnte a game last year when Indiana shared the Big Ten crown with Michigan State, played his first game in almost a month, scoring 14 points.
He started and played in spurts, taking frequent breathers on the bench. But he did not seem to be bothered by the leg injury he suffered earlier in the season.
Detroit outrebounded Indiana 56 tte 49, with Rodwan and Tom Richardson each hauling in 19.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
D—1
Pistons Eke Out Win Over Bullets
AP Wirepholo
OUTNUMBERED — University of Detroit’s Bruce Rodwan (54) was outnumbered in this scramble against Indiana under the backboard, but he came up with thq rebound during first half action of their game in Detroit last night. Rodwan bumps Hoosiers’ Rick Atkinson (42) in taking the ball, with a couple other Indiana players moving in too late. U. of D. upset the Hoosiers, 99-93.
Title Bout Also on Card
NEW YORK (ff) — The Detroit Pistons, surviving another rocky toad trip, managed to hang on for a 114-113 victory over the Baltimore Bullets Tuesday night; * • ‘ ’ ‘ .
The vietpry snapped a two-game losing streak and moved Detroit to within 5Vz games of the second place Boston Celtics, who dropped a 95-84 decision to ’ the Chicago. Bulls in the Eastern Division race. ■
OTHER ACTION
In other National Basketball Association action, Cincinnati whipped New York 125-119 and Los Angeles lost to San Francisco 119-118.
Detroit blew a nine-point lead going into the third quarter and managed to win only when Eddie Miles sank a foul shot with nine seconds to play. '
The Pistons led by 17 points at the end of the first quarter and carried the nine-point lead into the final quarter
Mathis, Frazier in Ring Date
... 7 0-2 14 Rodwan . 13 10-12 36
Schneider ... 3 1-2 8 Swartztger 4 3-8 -n5
DeHeer ... 6 3-5 15 Richardson ... 1 0-2 14
... 9 2-2 20 Brisker 5 4-5 14
, , 4 4-5 12 Said 4 11-12 It
... 4 2-3 10 McIntosh 0 1—3 1
Noland 3 1-2 7 Abramviout 0 0-0 0
Johnson ... 0 1-3 1
Nilei 1 0-0 2
Stanbarg ... ...2 (Ml 4
total* 39 15-23 91 Totals 55 29-42 99
Indian* 42 51 - 93
Detroit 44 51 - 99
Fouled out- -Indian*, Atkinson. Detroit, Richardton.
Total fouls—Indiana 25, Detroit IS.
Total fouls—India Attdhdance—3,109
Hikes Winning Streak
LOS ANGELES UP) — Southern California won its 90th straight swimming meet Tuesday, defeating Simon Fraser 68-45.
NEW YORK (ff> — Undefeated Joe Frazier and Buster Mathis will fight for New York recognition as world heavyweight champion and Emile Griffith will defend his world middleweight crown against I t a 1 y ’ s Nino Benvenuti in a March doubleheader in the new Madison Square Garden Center, it was learned Tuesday night.
The date would be in the first Week t>f March.
The news leaked after the Garden sent telegrams to newsmen to attend a 2:30 p.m. press conference today for “an announcement of extreme inportance.”
The package reportedly will cost the Garden $500,000 with Frazier of Philadelphia and Griffith of New York getting $150,000 each and the other two $100,000 each.
TOP PRICE
Ringside seats in the 20,000-seat arena would be scaled for a top of at least $100. a it h
The two 15-round fights also will be telecast nationally, most likely by closed circuit to arenas and theaters.
Frazier, 23,. ranked first by Ring Magazine, has a 19-0 record, including 17 knockouts. Mathis 23, unranked, has a 23-0 record including 17 knockouts.
Frazier is ranked seventhly the World Boxing Association. _
The WBA dropped Frazier from a No. 2 rating after he declined to participate in an elimination tournament to determine a successor to Cassius Clay-Mo-hammad Ali. Clay was stripped of titular recognition by both the WBA and New York Athletic Commission When he refused to enter military service.
RECOGNITION SET
Die New York Commission, headed by Edwin B. Dooley, has agreed to recognize the Mathis-Frazier winner a s champion, the AP learned.
A W ★
' Griffith and Benvenuti will meet for the third time. Did strong New Yorker whs dethroned by the slick Italian on a 15-round decision,at Madison Square Garden last April 17.
Griffith regained the crown by out-
pointing Benvenuti at New York’s Shea Stadium last Sept. 29.
Mathis, of Grand Rapids, defeated Frazier in the Olympic Dials in 1964. But the giant-sized Mathis, then a 300-pounder, broke a hand in training and Frazier1 replaced him for the Olympics in Tokyo. Frazier won the gold medal although he fought in the final bout with a broken hand,
FraZier, a 5-foot-U, 210-pounder, moved up swiftly by taking on name fighters. He became the first to stop George Chuvalo, the rugged Canadian champion.
Mathis, a 6-3, trimmed down 240-pounder, has been fed a series of soft touches.
Despite the low quality of his opposition, Mathis has expressed confidence that he could defeat Frazier in the pro ranks.
when Baltimore’s Gus Johnson sparked a rally which tied the' score at 103 late in the game.
Jack Marin of the Bullets scored two, clutch baskets, tying the score at 111 and T13, but then missed a pair of free throws with 32 seconds to play :
The Pistons brought the ball down-court and Miles was fouled. In a three-to-make-two situation, Miles missed the first two before sinking the game-winning shot.
LOOSE BALL
Die Bullets still had a chance to pull it out, but Tom VanArsdale picked off a loose ball and stalled out the clock.
Johnson led all scorers with 33 points and Dave Bing scored 31 for Detroit, 22 in the first half. Miles added 20 points.
The Pistons next meet the Cincinnati Royals jn Detroit Friday. •
Bob Boozer and Flynn Robinson sparked the Bulls to their first victory over Boston this year. The victory was the third straight for Chicago. Booker led Chicago with 21 points and Robinson added 20. Sam Jones was high for the Celtics with 19.
SIX STRAIGHT
Oscar Robertson broke open a tie game with six straight fourth quarter points and Jerry Lucas followed with another six in leading the Royals to victory over New York,
Warm Area for Title Tilt Backed by NFL Brass
DALLAS, Tex. iff) — The Dallas Times Herald quoted Commissioner Pete Ro-zelle Wednesday'as sayihg he was for playing the National Football League title game on a warm-climate, neutral field. i
Pro football writer Steve Perkins said Rozelle told him “I’m for it. I’ll work to get it moved. Under the conditions it was played last Sunday, the game is unfair to both teams.” >■
Rozelle referred to the sub-zero conditions and the frozen field faced by the Green Bay Packers and the Dallas
mmm
Pontiac Prtii Photo by Rolf Winter
OFFENSIVE MANEUVERS - Forward Tim Loviska of Pontiac Catholic leaves the floor while gunning up an unsuccessful s'it at the 'litans* basket during the first half of their meeting last night with St. Francis de Sales. Loviska broke loose from the defensive effort of de Sales’ Gene LaFave. Maneuvering In position for the rebound are Greg Gedda (35) and Jim Moss (21), of the Monarch*, and Pontiac’s Mjke Keller (54) and Steve Hoffman (44). The visitors’ John Fenbert (5) watches the play. (See story on Page D-2) 5
Cowboys' QB Not Sure He'll Quit
NEW YORK Iff) - Don Meredith, Dallas’ gifted quarterback, says he hasn't decided to quit pro football but will spend the next two months pondering Whether or not to return to the Cowboys next season.
Meredith, still “emotionally spent” after last Sunday’s 21-17 loss to Green Bay in the National Football League title game, denied Tuesday a report that he had made up his mind to retire.
“Maybe I’U play and maybe I won’t,” the 29-year-old Texan said. “I just don’t know. But I. definitely haven’t decided.” ..... ■ ^ j
Meredith reportedly told teammates and friends of his decision to quit during the plane trip home from Green Bay Sunday night.
★ ' ★ ★
The Southern Methodist University grad has just completed th# final year of a three-year contract estimated at $40,000 per season.
"If I decide to quit, I .won’t do it this way,” Meredith said in New York, where he. appeared on television Monday night. “I’ll call everyone in and announce it."
Michigan Easy Prey for Sharp Cougar Quintet
HOUSTON (ff) — Elvin Hayes tossed in 31 points Tuesday night as his second-ranked Houston Cougars whipped Michigan 91-65 for their 14th straight basketball victory of the season.
The victory was, Houston’s jstb straight including last year’s final game and its 47th home court triumph in succession.
* ★
Rudy Tomjanovich, a quick shooting 6-foot-7 soohomore, paced the Wolyerine offense with 20 points.
contributed 15 points for
Ken Spain Houston.
Michigan** could hit only 25 of 75 attempts for a 33.3 average. Houston connected, on 40 of 76 for 52.6 per cent.
Tomjanovich was the game’s, top rebounder with 18 while Hayes paced Houston^ with-13. Over-all, Houston managed a 53-51 rebound margin.
TIGHT SLATE
It was the fourth game in six nights for Houston and the Cougars appeared ragged at times.
However, only Tomjanovich’s deadly outride shooting late in the second half kept the Wolverines (4-5) within 30 points of taller Houston. * • ' .>
Sullivan
Pitts
Stewart
Tm'n'och
AAaxev
Mn'dr'll
Edwards
McClellan
Frau man
Henry
HOUSTON -3 •11 Loughery 6 0-1 12
Bing 11 9-11 31 Egan 2 3-3 7
Miles 9 2-4 20 Ferry 8 5-4 21
Varale 1 0-2 2 MOrin 2 0-2 4
Chappell 0 0-0 0 Manning 1 1-2 3
Patterson 0 0-0 0 McKenzie 3 5-7 11
T resvant 6 11 13
Walker 1 0-1 2
fotals 47 20-31 114 Totals 40 33-45 113
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Mtroit 19 2J 29 11 - 114
ialtimore 22 35 V 19 - 111
Fouled out Detroit, DeBuschere, Strawder, Tres->fnt. Baltimore, Loughery.
Total fouls—Detroit 36, Baltimore 34.
Eagle Owners Woes Continue to Mount
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Owner Jerry Wolman of the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League has been hit with some more financial difficulties. .
The city of Philadelphia Tuesday filed suit for $57,553 in amusement taxes allegedly due from the Eagles for October and November.
The suit said the club filed its, returns for the two months without remitting the amount due.
Cowboys in the Packers’ tingling 21-17 victory last Sunday.
Art ModellvNFL president and owqpr of the Cleveland Broyyns said the field site “will be discussed in no uncertain terms at our February meeting. I personally believe it should Le moved to a neutral warm weather spot. It was zero today in Cleveland. I wouldn’t like to have the game at Cleveland at five degrees or five below.”
Modell told Perkins he would propose a “two-year test” for the 1968 and 1969 title games at one of the four NFL warm-weather sites.
Rozelle said he had been “in favor of” the warm-weather concept “for several years” but that too many of the owners in the league were against it.
Under present league rules, it would take 13 affirmative votes to change the home-and-home arrangement which alternates yearly between the Eastern and Western Conference winners.
BOWL GAMES
Dallas Cowboys president Tex Schramm said, “When I saw the four bowl games yesterday, which were truly beautiful and great tests of the relative strengths of the teams involved, it was sickening to me that the greatest game of all could have been played under the same circumstances. The resulting comparison was not in keeping with the NFL.”
Three Dallas players suffered slight cases of frostbite in the Packer game, club officials said.
Grid Selection- Near
DURHAM, N.H. (ff) - The University of New Hampshire’s new football coach will be named at a news conference Thursday. The announcement by Athletic Director Andrew Mooradian said more than 125 men had applied for the job vacated When Joe Yukica left to accept the head coaching post at Boston Col-J°«e.
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TODAY
♦ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
Titans Lose to de Sales
WOLL
HIGH SCHOOL * * *
x«Av"Hr ub0r s*' Thoma5 ih Ec°r” The Lakers of Waterford Our ■ BSF&ftwil woods Lady hit on 49 per cent of their
•1s‘tWPL.°a,"S?h8rr«k«nridfl. 42 * shots in the first half in building
a 49-18 lead, and they held off Ferndale St. James in the closing half for an 83-63 victory.
Pontiac Catholic’s Titans, after faking a 40-33 lead at intermission, faded in the third period when they were out-
MICHIGAN COLLEGE Houston *1, Michigan 05 Detroit 99. Indiana 93 Kellogg CC 115. Oakland Highland Lakes CC 75
East
U. of Buffalo 98, MacMurray Coll. 94 South
Vanderbilt 67, Alabama 61 East Tennessee 98, Hardin Simmons 85 Yale 79, Georgia Tech 78 LaSalle 92, Mloml, Flo . 84 Florida .State 96,, The Citadel 75 Drake-76, Memphis State 75, overtime Jacksonville 71, William 1, Mary 69 Midwest
Wls.-Mllwauk.ee 97, Northern Aril. 86 Virginia Tech 74, Ohio- U. 65 Southwest
Texas AM 74, U. of Corpus Chrlstl 65 Trinity, Tex., 94, Sam Houston SI. 76
m
HOCKEY RESULTS
Highlander 5
by Kellogg
'National Laagua East Division
W L T Ft*. OF GA
Chicago ............ 18 10 9 45 110 99
Boston ............. 19 11 4 42 127 99
Toronto ............ 17 12 6 40 104 78
Detroit ............ 16 13 ;A.. 31,117 106
New York ........... 16 13 6 V 99 93
Montreal ........... 14 14 8 36 98 85
Want Division
Philadelphia ....... 17 12 5 39 85 71.
Los Angelas ........ 16 17 3 35 93 111
Pittsburgh ......... 13 17 5 31 86 97
Mlpnesina .......... 12 15 7 31 75 95
St. Louis ......... 12 20 3 27 67 92
Oakland ............. 7 23 6 20 64 99
Tuesday's Results No games scheduled.
Today's Gamos Toronto at Montraal Boston at New York Los Angeles at Minnesota Oakland at St. Louis
Thursday's Games Boston ht Philadelphia Oakland at Detroit Loo Angeles at Pittsburgh
A hot night In the shooting third stanza to wipe out the have a quick, department carried Waterfortj lead. jteam," he added.
Our Lady to victory last night, I VISITORSIN CONTROL The Titans aid outscofe the
but Pontiac Catholic stumbled .. controlled -j gJvhitarrfcl the
after a fast start in suffering its ™8fhirHi4 wasn 1 enough *° offset that
third xrtback in, J'd-dn- OSM ■
Parochial League play. ■ .. ___________I______1 * * *
* * * | | John F e n b e r t sparked the
^ winners with 21 markers and
teammate Gene LaFave added 16.
II Senior Dennis McCulloch had
Hnnn&n I OCC Ms finest night and junior Jerry
I IU/IUCU LUJO Yezblck made the most of his
first opportunity as a starter for WOLL’s Lakers.
McCulloch tossed in nine field Oakland Community College’s goals and made 14-for-14 at the scored 30-12 and wound aP"Highlanders never couid puttee throw line to finish with losing 84-79 to St. Francis de their office in gear Tuesday a careter high 32 points. Coach Sales1: night aiM dropped a 115-75.de- Mike Boyd pushed Yezbick info
In another Northwest game, cision to once-beaten Kellogg “ ® ^f^oUMsto
Detroit St. Rita (2-4) downed CC at Battle Creek. . HJSS JJjJ rni! 8
Royal Oak St. Mary (2-4), 50-39. The Highland Lakes^ campus re^e£ Mulcted^8 of his.
. . . - quintet tied the score at 9-9, but, vezoicK couectea io oi ms.
_ .. Kellogg moved in front lS-ITPoints in the first half to pace,
~ Guard Butch Finnegan, who and pUiled away to a 58-33 lead the- Lakers’ attack, with mostpaced the Titans (3-3) with 23 halftime ? of his shots coming on drive-ins.
points, teamed with Gary ' * -*• *
Roediger (11) and Steve Hoff- Thg winners’ well-balanced Lakers (2-4) went stale
man (16) in opening that half- attack inthe third, enabling St. James
time margin of seven points, in twin figwes ^Gj^ (W) to slice 12 points from the
but the fast-breaking de Sdfes y s y ■ defjc^ hut they regained the
(5-1) quintet took charge in the John oiander and Gordon upper hand in, the fourth.
Hamilton each notched * 16 to pace the losers. Hamilton pulled ST- JAfIVt3tp
New YORK (UPI) - Daryle Lamonica of the .Oakland Raiders, who Byed a success story this season that had to fire the imagination of every second
Lamonica, who rode the bench for the fourth straight season at Buffalo last year, finally got his chance to start after being' traded to Oakland
Banned Bowler Asks $300,000
Detroit Pro Suing ABC, GDBA
down 15 rebounds for the High- gjjjg, 0 J 2
Burt 3, 3-3 Woodqate 5 1-2
11
WOLL (13)
FO FT TP McCul'ch 9 14-14 32 Haskins 4 4-5 12 M. McCol 0 2-3 2
Sloma 5 4-8 14 LaBarga OB-1 0 P. McCol 1 1-1 3
Yezbick • 8-5 20
string 0 quarterback in football, I this season and he quarter-TucAday was named the United!backed the Raiders to the best Press International Player of [record in the history' of the the Year in the American Foot-'league. bpll League, i , loNE SETBACK
' fe, / J The Haiders posted a 13-1
j record while winning the West-jem Division crown of the AFL i ■ and followed With a 40-7 irounc-1 ing of the Houston Oilers in the championship game. The Raiders will now meet the Green Bay Paekers in the second Sup-|er Bowl Jan. 14 in Miami.
Lamonicb Was the runaway j choice for the honor in the bat . loting of 27 writers across the [nation — thrfee in each of the
_ ' . . . . [nine league cities.
Bv the Associated Press
The Pittsburgh Pipers, who Lamonica received 22 of the have been chasing the Min- votes and only Hewritt Dixon of nesota Muskies for a long time,: the Raiders received more than finally caught them. Almost. one vote. He got just two.
Pittsburgh’s 14th—straight vie- Buck Buchanan,, the Kansas fory, Tuesdav night, a 105-97 City’s defensive tackle, and heating of Kentucky carried the quarterbacks John Hadl of the ^etormin'-d Pioers to a virtual San Diego Chargers and Joe tie fdr first place in the Eastern Namath of the New York Jets
Pipers Run Winning | Streak to 14
NBA
SCORES
Bailarn Division
Won Loot Ret. Bohind Philadelphia .... 30 9 .769 -
Boston .......... 25 11 .694 3V9
Del roll ........ 22 19 .537 9
Cincinnati ...... 17 20 .459 12
Baltimore ....... 14 22 .389 4Vi
NOW York ...... IS 25 .375 15V,
Was torn Division
St. Louis ....... 28 IT .718 —
San Francisco . 29 14 .674 1
LOS Angolas . . . . 22 18 .550 6V7
Chicago ......... 14 27 .341 15
Son Diego ........ 11 30 .268 18
Seattle .......... U 32 .256 19
Tuesday's Results Detroit 114 Baltimore 113 Cincinnati 135, Now York lit Chicago 95, Boston 14 San Francisco 119, Los Angelos ill Today's Games Chicago at Baltimore Now York of Philadelphia *
Boston at Los Angelo*
St. Louis it Son Diego
Thursday's Gams
at. Louis vs. Son Francisco at Oakland
landers (2-5). Kellogg is 9-1. jMjjjj]
The game didn’t count in the ie«rv state Community Junior College yovomo
AA standings. |Mohar,,r_______ _______________
... Totals 36 9-17 63 Totals 17 21-37 13
* * W SCORE BY QUARTERS
Kellogg is 7-0 and leads the wVtortords our*T»dy 23 u it 2* — is Southwest Division. Highland .Junior.Varsity: St. Jomes 52, Waterford
Kegler Lakes is 0-3 in the Northwest and will return to divisional play Friday night against Flint Fenrert CC (2-3) at 8 p.m. on the Clif-, ford Smart JHS court. Gnlaner
CINCINNATI Iff) — Lawrence Carr, a Detriot professional bowler filed a $300,000 damage wrfoht suit in U.S. District Court here Hamilton » 64 i«
Tuesday against the American hopS 5 4-6 nthprs 1 Danieii
oiiiera, j ^A0ner
Our Lady 4b.
De SALES (M)
FG FT TP 7 2-7 16
received one vote each. RESERVE BACK
Until this season, Lamonica was just another reserve quarterback who claimed all he needed was a chance to start.
He played behind Jackie Kemp at Buffalo and while he did come off the bench to help
Gedda
H. LAKES J75)_KELLOGG CC J115)_
FG FT TP 3 2-6 8 Lewis
2-2 16 GibbV
P. CATHOLIC (74) FG FT TP Guillean 3 12 7
Larsen 4 1 -3 9
Finnegan 8 7-9 23 Roediger 4 3-7 11 Hoffman Keller ,
Loviska Gallagh'r
Cable Manag'rr 2 Pratt 8 Crane 6 Sleeman
0 Prinett 4 Smith
1 Vice Powell
FG FT TP
7 -4 13 Totals 36 13-29 84 Totals 30 19-33 79 8~ 12 8 SCORE BY QUARTERS
l~i I St. Francis do Sales 14 19 30 V — 84 4 Pontiac Catholic 18 22 12 27 — 79
}]. Junior Varsity: 69. Francis de Sales 71, J? Pontiac Catholic 68.
0-0
6 2-7 14 3 1-2 7
2 0-0 4
1 0-0 2
3 6-10 12
Pontiac Press Photo
TWO POINTS FOR TITANS — Pontiac Catholic’s “Butch” Finnegan (white uniform) puts up a layup Tuesday night against St. Francis de Sales as the Titans took an early lead in their Northwest Catholic League game at Madison Junior High School. The visitors’ John Fenbert wasn’t able to prevent the fast-break basket.
Scoring 'Rut' for Wings'Ace
Defenseman Spurs Wings' Attack
ABA
SCORES
■attorn Dlvtiten ,.
Won Lost Ret. Behind
Minnesota ...... 24 11 .686 —
Pittsburgh ..... 25 12 .676 —
Indiana ........ 21 18 .538 5
NOW Jersey .... IS 23 .395 10V*
Kentucky . ..... 12 23 .343 12
Western Division
New Orleens ... 26 11 .703 — y
Denver ......... IT 17 .553 SVk
Delias ......... 16 IS .516
Oakland ........ 14 22 .m>; \Wt
Houston ........ 12 22 J53 12V7
Anaheim......... 13 25MW
Tuesday's Results Oakland 141, Anenelm 121 Denver 91. Indiana 80 Dallae 112, MlnMaota 109 New OHeans 97, New Jersey 96 Plttsburah ul5, Kentucky 97 - Today's Gemss Indiana at Anaheim Denver at Houston Kentucky et New Jersey
Thursday's Games Ntw Orleans at Denver Pittsburgh at Kentucky Houston et Minnesota
Bowling Congress and claiming he has been blacklisted j^nwnant from participating in bowling 'walker leagues and tournaments. !
* * ★ 1 TA,i“
The suit also named the Bowling Proprietors Association of Greater Cincinnati, the Greater Detroit Bowling Association of the ABC and Erwin C. Hoinke Sr., and Erwin C. Hoinke Jr., of Cincinnati, members of the
^d the Cincinnati BP YORK'(UPI) — Gordie ^OS^y *5ecause seems to be g^ns, tile glib Bergman picked p*ay‘
The suit claimed the ABC and h ,« been foj- {he all°ver the place. up an assist and Sunday night, “That was a big win,” he
others have conspired to violate Howe is where ^s oeen W ine, He wffl roaming for the when ^ Red Wings outlasted said. “I think that could put us the Sherman Anti-Trust Act by past 18 .years m tne^tauonai Wjngs tomorrow night at Olym-t h e alleged monopolization of Hoo^oy Lea^ej— rfght^ among pja agajns^ Oakland.
The main plug of the Detroit
Jesse Branson’s two field goals with four seconds left provided New Orleans’ margin
x over New Jersey. Barry Lei-
DETROIT (ypf)—Gary Berg- it with his glove or it would the Boston Bruins 6-4, he was bowitz had put the Americans man is fast earning a reputa-have gone in.” credited with an assist when ahead, with a jumper nine sec- been in 1964 when he completed
tion as/fin over-all defenseman iwrnit’s next game a 5-2 Norm U1,man scored into an onds earlier. Doug Moe had 30 55 of 128 for 1,137 yards. His
tojb|p.MJ axowuyv. p>-ggg "« «“ a «W?i:
Division of the American Basketball Association, “l0 percentage [mints behind Minnesota,! which losf to Dallas 112-109.
In other AB^ action, New Orleans edged New Jersey 97-96,
Denver beat Indiana 98-80 and Anaheim turned back Oakland 141421. v .,
;; * jno pace the club to five victories
Charhe WUhams scored 28 ^ ^ could never beat out
nointe and Conme Hawkins add- K {or the starting job. 4 “rf 22_for Pittsburgh, which won K
on a • second-half surge. Lou[ Lamonica, though, finally got Damnier had 26 and Dare! Car-[his chance when the Raiders rier threw in 22 for the Colonels. | sent Tom Flores and Art Powell j Dallas also won on a second-]to Buffalo to obtain Lamonica i half rally, fighting back from an and Glenn Bass.
11-point deficit. John Beasley of I Lamonica developed faster the Chaparrals and Les Hunter [^jm even the Raiders had ever of the Muskies each had 22lboped
P0>ats- I This season he completed 518
SHORT SPAN I per cent of his passes, hitting on
220 of 425 for 3,228 yards and 30 touchdowns. His longest completion covered 72 yards and he had jyst 20 interceptions. His best previous season had
gins had 29 for Tiew Jersey.
bowling activities in the United i the top ten insedring, the com- ^ H R_______—
States. ** missioner s office said Tuesday, defense put his finger on the
Bernard C. Fox, attorney for^^tod ^sln8 i^anked!slump‘ng ^ings’ pr°b!ems Garr oairf Garr nartioinateri' in -.u,.sea , ’ !® “ recently when the club haddrop-
aTandfcan^ th^th^th • gu^ ® ^ ped three in a row and five of
a nanaicap tournament at the|and 32 points He-S tied wltb ^ . . .
Hoinke Bowling Lanes here in'jean Ratelle of New York s!x ,, 1 ,a_tie, or ‘ast
1965 and finished third. Subse-,63" +* * * Place 10 th«NHLs Eastern DlV1’
quently, Fox said, Girr’s purse stan Mikita and Bobby Hull s,on- # *
2? XenL™ f* .™Ca‘” "a”ks.« “Wh,t w, n»ed b' . party.-
had given fawe league average ^ at the top with 43 points^ ^ relatively high.sCoring
North-South Gridmen Drill Twice Daily
over the hump.” Detroit moved closer to the leaders in the tightly-grouped Eastern Division as the season neared its half-way mark.
it f ★ ★
The instantly likeable Berg-
2,499. '
j Besides compiling this, list of [impressive statistics, Lamonica developed into a real t^m leader for the Raiders and won the respect Qf his teammates and _____i coach Johnny Rauch for his
Different Lruara astute play-calling.
Lamonica is just 26 and has MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) a bright futui-e with the'Raiders
Sharp-Shooting Backcourt Ace
Soccer Coach Fired
in order-to build up his handi- eacb cap.
y/ -k ★ ★
The suit claimed that since that time, Garr has been forbid-1 en to compete in ABC-sane-! BOLOGNA, Italy UP tioned league and tournament jgentine Coach Luis Carniglia later, leading the Red Wings to ge“jor gowj tjjt bowling and that it has prevent-!was fired by the Bologna club of the romp they were looking for.; * *
ed him from participating in his Italy’s major soccer league profession as a professional Tuesday. The team is in 10th bowler. place in the 16-club circuit.
Australia Net Ace Inks Fat Pro Pact
USSR Ties for First
XVrd f^L lit1= knocked Bob Verga^ed .On season.
fourth in scoring among NHL 0,,t °[ ,he American Basketball |
, . defensemen with five goals and Assnoiotton scoMhg derby. Oak-_ MOBILE. Ala. AP) - A full 3Q assists for 35 pbintSi m ^ land’s L-vern Tart won t missj Bergman, whose shot-stojiping complement of players were to seaSon ^ him, but the Dallas Chaparrals i
antics draw cheers from Detroit report for double sessions todayi will.
fans. —morning and afternoon—in REALLY HELP?* Verga, the Chaparrals’ slick
more foggy and rainy weather The fourth - year lefty seems hackcourt man. is runner-up to So Bergman crystalized the as fbe North and South squads almost certain to surpass those Tart in the individual scoring ‘
Ar- party himself a couple of nights hggan work for the 19th annual figures this season, since he al- race with a 24.5 points-per-game NEW ORLEANS (AP) — John
~ ready has six goals and 16 as-;mark, according to the latest Newcombe of Australia, who
* sists with 39 games left to play. [ ABA figures released today; became the world’s top ranked
He rammed home the final An announcement was expect-! HavJng a guy ^ Bergman la'The Duke alumnus wiU begin a,tennis player as an amateur, two goals, one of them unas- ^ South Coach Hank Stram fronf 0f y0y really helps," said six-month tour of National [has signed a professional consisted, as the Red Wings snap- Kansas City Chiefs on Detroit goalie Roy Edwards. Guard duty this week. ; [tract which the promoter esti-
ped their losing streak with a whether fullback Ronnie Jenk-j t________ r _________/■ • * * * [mates might bring him $200,060
Jets' Assistant Moves
Rec Quintets Overcome Slow Starts
I WINNIPEG (AP) - wunaDonaldson( defensive line coach, Yet all he could talk about Jenkins a 225-nounder fromits with speed
champion Russia Wanked Swed-for the New York Jets, resigned after that game was how he Georgia wasalikelvstarterforimentasabackliner-
en 3-0 m the second game of the Tuesday to join Coach P a u lijust missed a hat trick, a rare a,- sniiaj in caturdav’sl 11 wasn’t that wa;
NEW YORK (UPI) - Jack NEARLY MADE IT World Donaldson, defensive line coach, Yet all he could talk about
Canadian International Hockey Brown's staff with the new Cin- occurrence for a forward, Tournament Tuesday night to cinnati Bengals, who begin play alone a defenseman, move into a tie for first place in the American Football Lea-! “jt was that close,” the bald
l with Canada’s National team, gue next season.
Two city recreation basketball men’s team overcame slow starts to post six-point victories Tuesday night.
★ ★ *
Defending city Class C champion Coulacos Insurance countered a 20-7 first-period edge by Town & Country Lounge with a 27-10 third quarter in a 64-58' triumph.
Local 596 trailed 11-10 after one session, but outscored the Pontiac Police In each of the final three quarters for a 52-46 decision.
Coulacoj fell behind as Dave Burhams hit 12 of his 24 points in a big first quarter by Town & Country. Then Bill Hayward notched 18 of his 23 in the second and third periods and the insurancemen took charge, 50-41.
Charlie Honchell added 12 for the winners, Skip Hall had 14 for T*C. f
Willie Peck’s 27 points paced Local 596. He had 19 and team-mate Odell Smith all 10 of .his pointa in the last three periods. Willie Graft’s 19 led the poliCe-IMB- A
5-3° trhmph^over *the Phfiadel- ins would remain in the lineup|Tart haS poured m 928 P°inta Year-I Dhia Fivers. after suffering a knee injury m ott Dy sioppmg snots. ( in 34 games — an average of j David F. Dixon of New Or-
Tuesday’s practice. tim,e ,°" the lce *s 27.3 per contest. Pittsburgh’s ■ ieans> president of World Cham-
* * * what the modest^rgman cred-!0^ Hawkins and New Or-|pionship. Tennis Inc.t said New
its with his speedy improve- leang. D0Ug Moe are next with|combe 23, and -his Davis Clip '23.3 and 23(2 averages, respec- teammate Tony '^Roche, 22, fourth ranked in the world, will compete with six others for 1 more than $1 million in prize money. *
[ The> pro tour, opening in Kansas City Feb. 1, will last about 40 weeks, with 80 three-day tournaments.
the South squad in Saturday’s! 11 wasn't tnat way as recent- tively.
let —» “ly “ tW0 YearS a8°'tTbe (iU*C1k! Th« .wd.no tcortrs
defenseman committed costly Rtaywn Toom o ro rtrn errors and dissatisfied f a n a J; vorga.°ooi
contest.
VOLS REPORT
■HavwM, .
ing 28-year-old said excitedly,! Quafterback- Dewey Warren,|Were asking why he was being J plt
[spreading his fingers about two|center Bob Johnson and linemanjkept around, inches apart. “He (Philadelphia! John Boynton, all of Tennessee, Red Wings’ fans don’t wonder [goalie Doug Favell) just tipped were to report for practice to- why any more, they just wonder pi—r— day after missing the first day[where Detroit can find more like because of their team’s Orange!bftn.
[Bowl clash.
★ ★ * : r I Also missing from practice were Indiana linemen Gary Cassels and Doug Crusan because of the Rose Bowl Game „ Both were to report to Mike
< AP > — Holovak, director of the North
5. Jackson, NJ
6. Daniels, Min
7. Grown, Ind . I. Jones, Den
9. Carrier, Ken
10. Lewis. Ind
-_______ * vO-
34 344 537 928 27.3 29 256 159 710 14.5
34 279 232 793 23.3 36 306 219 834 23.2
35 190 273 792 22V6
34 208 175 754 22.2
36 209 199 709 21.9
35 261 220 759 21.7 33 212 153 685 20.8
37 274 208 762 2 County by tie
and tha last-Wast Shrino gama.. In that# day*, tboro wo* no Ofango Bowl, no Sugar Bowl, no. Cotton Bowl, no Gator Bowl or any athof collogo bowl gama ... And tboro woront ovon any po*t-*oa*on gama* in pro football oithor btcauM tboro was |u»t ono loaguo ond on* division with no championship playoff.
★ ★ ★
Old you know that a taam from a foreign country one* played In ono of our post-suason football bowl gam*,? ... It wat In tho 1945 Sun Bowl gama at II Paso, Texas ... In fiat gama. Southwestern University of Texas mot tho' University of Mexico .., Mexico lost 33-0.
ft ft ft
Ham's ono that's hard to believe — but It's trus . . Did
you know a major collogo team wat onco selected to play in a football bowl game ovon though thuy losf more gamut than they had wonl... The team was SMU ... They wore picked forth* 1964 Sun Bowl game aftor winning only four gamut all season and .losing tlx ... That's th* only time that's Over happened In the history of major bowl gomos.
it ft ft ‘
I bet you didn't know that I960 makes th# 46th year thot
Hunting Area, Control Committee formed under a new state law. After weighing the evidence, the committee can close or leave open a part of a township.
* ★ ★
. Should the committee refute a request for closure, residents may petition the legislature as in tiie past.
: ★ ★ ★
The area in Orion Township
invoives Lake Orion and adja-
cent lakes.
The new “all, sides” requirement is expected to make it easier for conservation officers to locate shanty owners who violate the law by not getting their shelters off the ice before spring breakup.
Bids Being Sought
The Conservation D e p a r t-ment’s parks division in Lansing is accepting sealed bids until 2 p.m., Jan. 15, for concession leases at Hartwick Pines, Lake-port and Sleeper state parks which will begin ih 1968.
Carter Tim hat bean Serving tho Pontiac ama, Wa'm soiling sac-.
Jackpot $ing(es
Every Thursday, 9:30 P.M. UWl 80% *6 200 M«4 70% 4 200
ond and (bird generations of old cutfomisr*. Wo take pride In that!
Get Entry Blanks at Counter For Moro Information Call ,
CARTER TIRE CO.
Sfllinn Stiffly /.» \rnrs
370 S. Saginaw FE 5-6136 PONTIAC
anted.
4825 Highland Rd. (M69)
674-0428
t
After last winter’s starvation and 16 accidents involving munition trucks and deer on the ground, the arsenal officials figured the simplest and most humane thing would be to turn a team of expert marksmen loose to kill the dee/ and give the meat to the needy.
it it it"
Hundreds of persons raised howls of protest, however, and Quette it appeared the winter would pass without a solution to the problem.
The St. Paul Humane Society and other animal lovers criticized the plan to shoot the deer.
Archers then suggested bow and arrow hunters kill the deer.
This, too, was protested.
It was then suggested tranquilizer drugs be used to stun tiie deer so they could be moved but conservation officials said past experience showed this method killed most of the animals.
COURTORDER
The controversy reached a plant That a 1LS. District Court judge here issued a restraining order against killing any deer until Jan. 12, to permit a study to be made.
But Mrs. Ruth Deschane, executive director of the local Humane Society, suggested the new drugs.
The big hunt, however, may take much of the winter to complete.
It probably will take several weekends to get tiie bulk of the deer, and we know we never can get all of them,” Von Gord jer said. “And if it doesn’t work, we still may have to shoot and kill some of them.”
Johnson Back
on Commission
Carl T. Johnson of Grand Rapids, chairman! of the Michigan Conservation Commission has been reappointed by Governor Romney to the five-member board for a four-year term which expires Dec. 31, 1971.
His reappointment is subject to confirmation by the State Senate.
The 56-year-old insurance executive has been a member of the commission, which sets policy for the Conservation Department, since 1963.
lake before thevffio onto it.”
These words.af advice come from.James Hadley, head of the Conservation Department’s boat and water safety section. ft ft fr
A good place to start checking, he says, is right around the shore. Chances are a lake is not even safe for fishermen afoot if its shoreline ice is still squashy or broken up
In “reconning” each lake for safety’s sake, snowmobiler should pinpoint such potential trouble spots as spring-flow areas where patches of ice may remain thin all winter long. Ice conditions can stay especially hazardous around inlets and outlets of spring-fed lakes, reports Hadlay.
Dark spots in ice or places where the snow is discolored are reliable warning signs, but Had ley cautions snowmobilers that danger may lurk even where the ice “looks” safe.
“The looks of a lake can be downright deceiving,” he explains, “and it’s the heads-up sportsman who checks out the thickness of the ice and weighs all other factors, such as whether there has been a recent thaw.”
DEATHTRAPS
He particularly urges snow-mobilers to stay off lakes at night unless their machines are equipped with proper headlight ing to point out potential death traps in and on the ice.
Ernest Hall and Roger Rasmussen, the department’s regional forest supervisors at Mar-and Roscommdn, pass
your plans — just in case you get marooned in the boondocks
5) STAY ON MARKED TRAILS IN STATE FORESTS, Helter-skelter driving through the woods can ruin many young trees that are hidden beneath the snow. It con also be rough on your machine. Inviting as they may look, open fields can be filled with pitfalls.
6) KNOW YOUR WEATHER.
Hold off if you know a storm is"threatening. Don’t underestimate frigid weather; your speed will make it worse and can cause frostbite. <
7) DON’T LITTER. Lunch papers, cigarette packages, and other such debris can easily be burned. Carry non-deposit bottles and cans back home.
•maw*
UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave.
9 Min. From Oowntown Pontiac
ARMSTRONG
THE
SAFE
TIRE
SNOW TIRES
on Two Lakes
Lake Trout Opened on Cass, Also
along some other tips for safe ment under the special winter and sane snowmobiling, on l^nd I season covering air four ape-
and on lakes:
1) KNOW YOURSELF, This means knowing your physical limitations. A mechanical breakdown may mean some tough trudging through deep snow for you. It can be an exhausting experience and zero weather saps strength quickly.
2) KNOW YOUR MACHINE. Keep it in top-notch condition with regular maintenance; there is considerable vibration in snow mobiles, so it is well to check periodically for loose bolts and nuts, particularly around the motor mounts.
SOLUNAR TABLES
1 WHEN TO HSH OR HUNT
RSdisrd Aldsfl Knight
The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that each day has to offer,
Todev
Eastern Standard Tima
i« A. M. P. M.
. > * Min. Mai. Min. Ma|
to
Thursday
Friday ..........ll
aturday ........11
unday ...........12
Monday .........
Tuesday ......,,,.12
Wednesday ... 1
25 2:05 1:50 2:30
55 2:50 10:00 3:10 20 3:30 11:05 3:50 40 4:05 - 4:25
05 4:40 12:05 5:00 5:25 12:25 5:45 45 4:10 2:05 4:30 05 7:00 , 3:05 7:20
Splake are legal catches on Mapeday and Cass lakes for. the first time this winter.
Lake trout and rainbows also are< open on these and other designated^ lakes in Oakland County during January and February. Any browns lurking in these waters also are legal.
In addition, the following principally good lake trout and splake waters were opened Jan. by the Conservation Depart
WHITEWALLS It mra ptr lira
Larger Sizes 2 «er*26
EASY CREDIT NO MONEY DOWN
FREE M0UNTIN0
Proper track tension is also important. Carry tools and such spare parts as an extra drive bolt to make minor repairs that may be necessary along the way. Always start a day’s trip with a full tank of fuel; a backup supply of “petrol” might also come in handy.
3) KNOW YOUR SUPPLIES. Carry extra warm and wind-proof clothing, a first aid kit, compass, map, matches, snow-shoes or skis, and a spare food pack — all the necessities of a good survival kit. A crash helmet is a good thing to wear to save the old noggin from some
Grand Sable Lake, Alger County; Big Blue Lake, Kalkaska County; Tildon Lake, ift'ar-quette County; and Bill’s Lake, Newaygo County.
Kokanee salmon are also open to winter action and.they may start showing up this season in angler catches at Torch and Higgins lakes.
On the Great Lakes front, lake trout may be taken thoughoiut the year!
Lists pf inland lakes open to hook and line fishing this winter for rainbow and brown trotit, splake,.lake trout and kokanee are available from department district and area field offices.1
Deadline Nearing for Kennel Show
Tuesday noon is the deadline for entering dogs in the annual Pontiac Kennel Club all-breed show.
Entries for the Jan. 21 allbreed show at the CAI Building are limited to 600. If this number is reached before the deadline, no others will be accepted.
The Pontiac. Press best-in-shdw trophy will be awarded to the winner. There will be no obedience.
Entries can be submitted to Bow Dog Show Organization, 9999 Broad Street, Detroit, 48204.
t ' '' “ M
SERVING OAKLAND COUNTY OVER 35 YEARS
Lozolle Agency, Inc.
YOVRj
luurmtt
ALL FORMS OF
INSURANCE ■=$*
| y »#» .Vis “
Utnltnt
GENT
y*« liait*
504 PONTIAC STATE/BANK BL1)G.
Closed Saturdays-—Emergency Phone FE 5-0314
Phone FE 5-8172
AREMCO
4520 Highland Road
I Block West of Pontiac Lake Rd 674-3157 or 674-3158
Open Monday thru Saturday 8 - 8
Bluegill Project Doesn't Cause Radioactive Fish
Gamma rays used to sterlize bluegills now being stocked in some Michigan lakes on an experimental basis do not cause radioactivity in the fish.
The substance comes from cobalt and is similar to that used in giving people x-ray treatments.
ft ft ft
The bluegill project* is designed to combat a major problem in Michigan lakes — over abundance of stunted fish. By stocking sterile fish, no reproduction would result and a balance between fish and food supply would be maintained.
Die result is expected to be fatter-growing and larger blue-gills.
BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS!
WHEN V0V NEED DEPENDABLE HONEST TRANSMISSION SERVICE
Get Yiars of Experience From The Following
TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS
of Pontiac .
ALL W0HKMANSNIP GUARANTEED
RELIABLE TRANSMISSION COMPANY
922 -Oakland Avenue
BEATTY'S TRANSMISSION SERVICE
197 South Saginaw Street
FRALEY'S TRANSMISSION SERVICE
17 90 West Montcalm
DRAYTON TRANSMISSION SERVICE
2987 Dixie Highway at Scott lake Rd.
PONTIAC TRANSMISSION SERVICE
' 3S2S Elizabeth lake Rd. *
SPECIAL LABEL GIANT SIZE
Cheer
Detergent
11x9-3/8, TWO PLY JUMBO ROLL
Gala
Towals
REFRESHING • DOLE DRINK
Pineapple
Grapefruit
ECONOMICAL FOOD wrap
Cut Rite Wax Paper
GOOD FRIED U. S, NO. 1
Yellow
Onions
FOR SALADS TRIMMED WASHED
Mil
A visit to any of the 83 Farmer Jack Produce Departments is an experience you'll long remember! The finest sun-ripened Fruits and Vegetables-are all priced the low Farmer Jack way--which is below what you'd pay-if you bought them in any other store!
CHIQUITA BRAND
I Golden L Bananas
FLORIDA THIN SKIN SEEDLESS
White
Grapefruit
FRY WITH MEAT FRESH TENDER
Sno White Mushrooms
p? s’ V 9
MBBBtta I
BP tj-j'i
SSSlSlIil gfc f 1 • L
mW
THE PQNTOAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 3. 1888
DSD
BUTTERNUT PIECES & STEMS
DOLE FAMOUS HAWAIIAN
CAN
14 OZ.
4 OZ. WT. CAN
There's a total of 83 Farmer Jack Supermarkets, now-convenlently located so low "bushel an' case" prices', are near your home, and^you can always depend on the lowest Grocery prices-whenever you shop! Yes! Money-saving Farmer Jack prices-are just minuses away I
PEjtKS UP THE FLAVOR OF FOOD
Del Monte or Hunts Catsup
14 OZ. WT. BTL
LADY LINDA 8 CT. HOT DOG OR
Hamburger Buns
22*
14 OZ. PECAN CRUNCH OR
YOUR
CHOICE
12 CT. PEANUT BUTTER CHIP
Awreys Cookies
YOUR
CHOICE
PKG.
FLASH-O-FREEZ BREADED
VEAL, CHUCKWAGON OR
Jiffy Steaks
172
OZ
WT
PKG
WT
PKG
OZ
SARA LEE ALL BUTTER PECAN
Coffee Cake
FRANKS
Ground Cinnamon
FRANKS
Ground Nutmeg
CHEF BOY AR DEE
Spwhotti/Moatballs
STEERO
Instant Bouillon
CRISP AND TASTY
Bachman Pretzels
4 OZ. WT. CAN
1 OZ. WT.CAN
3 IB.
eoz.
CAN
3 3/4 OZ.
wt. on.
to 1/2 OZ. WT. PKG.
BUTTERFIELD
Potato Sticks
X-LONG GRAIN
Mcoland Rico
X-LONG GRAIN ;;
Rica land Rica
COLLEGE INN DINNER
tf Chiekon/Noodle
SPECIAL LABEL
Upteo Tea Bags
1 3/4 OZ. WT. CAN
1 IB. PKG.
%
a in.
PKG.
43 CT. PKG.
S. Telegraph at Squart Lake Road * Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains * S. Glenwood at Perry, Pontiac • S. Telegraph, Pontiac Mall, WaterfordTwp, • t . ■' ■ ' : . . ; .■ isz-tJ’;* * ■ •
' ; •* .' .v '‘V ‘-1 • -i'.. ‘ ■ 1
breast o chicken LIGHT MEAT
Chunk
Tuna
POUR OVER PANCAKES LOG CABIN V
Pancake
Syrup
£49*1
Isn't it great to know that whenever and wherever you want to do you food shop-ping-theres 83 conveniently located Farmer Jack Supermarkets-loaded to the brim with the lowest everyday prices an everything you need-including all of the National Grocery brands I
FINE QUALITY
Delicious Fig Bars
FOR EXTRA GO POWER
Cheerios
Cereal
KRAFT BRAND PURE CONCORD
Grape
Jelly
POP INTO THE TOASTER FRESH FROZEN
Lparm Maid 1 Waffle*
FARM MAID FRESH GROZEN GRADE "A"
Cooked i Squash
Farmer Jock’s Frozen Food Department is a joy to behold, with everything you need to turn an ordinary meal into a money-saving banquetl Buying at the lowest prices every week-amounts to hundreds of dollars saved throughout the year! So visit Farmer Jack & savel
BUDGET-PAK CREAAQY
Vanilla Ice Cream
RICKS FRESH FROZEN
Coffee Rich ^
CHEF CHOICE FROZEN CRINKLE CUT
^ French Pries
iffc****
ONE
GALLON
CTNL-
FRESH FROZEN ORANGE DRINK
Birds Eye Awake
THE PONTIAC PRESS# WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1908
REAL ORCHARD FLAVOR
Motts Applesauce
1 LB. 9 OZ.
RICH INSTANT COFFEE
Maxwell Mouse
10 OZ. WT. JAR
DEL MONTE APPETIZING
Tomato Juice
1 QT. 14 OZ. CAN
DUNCAN HINES ASSORTED
Cake Mixes
1 LB.
2 1/2 OZ. - BOX
MISS MUFFET FROZEN SLICEC
Strawberries
10 OZ. WT. PKG.
rrrr
SPECIAL LABEL..LIQUID-
Dew Datargent
SPECIAL LA1IL..LIQUID
Sami Detergent
SPECIAL LABEL..DETERGENT
Vbn Dry Tablets
SPECIAL LABEL...1 St OFF
Surf Detergent
BRIGHTER WASHES
Breeze Detergent
1 is,. 6 OZ. PKG.
an.
2 OZ. PKG.
3 II. 6 OZ. PKG.
SPECIAL LABEL...25* OFF
Sunshine Rinso
LIQUID LAUNDRY
Wbk Detergent
\iOTION MILD, LIQUID \
Lux Detergent
FINAL TOUCH
K Fabric Soft ner
Cl REGULAR SIZE
Lux Bar Soap
3 BAR PKG.
I
S. Telegraph at Square Lake Road • Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains • S. Glenwood at Perry, Pontiac • S. Telegraph, Pontiac Mall, Wdtarford Twp.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY & 1968
Shop end compare the savings you make on Farmer Jack's U S. Choice Beef, and stock upl It's on sale this Week, and you've never tasted Beef as delicious as thls-nor, bought It at such a low, low prlcel
DELICIOUS, TENDER
U.s. CHOICE
Chuck
Roast
lUSOA
CHOICE
U.S. CHOICE WHOLE
Beef
Brisket
USDA
CHOICE
PICNIC CUT SHOULDER
Pork
Boast LC
♦ CHOICE BO NELESS
VEAL, BEEF, PORK
Rainbow
Meatloaf
USDA
CHOICE
U.S. CHOICE
Special Cut Rib Steak
USDA
CHOICE
VELVETS
KRAFT PHILADELPHIA
Cream soi Cheese
SWEETMILK OR BUTTERMILK
Puffin 8 OZ.
WT. PKO.
DAIRY RICH FRESH
Creamery i lb. Butter PR,N
TOWN PRIDE
Soft * i lb Margarine CTN
ECONOMICAL TASTY
Royal Soot 1 lb. Margarine soul
FARM MAID ALL PURPOSE
Half * ot. Half
KRAFT MARGARINE
Soft Parkay
OLD FASHION
Farm Maid J2I:
__ ^ CTN.
I
\ Telegraph at Square Lake Road • Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains
• S. Glenwood at Perry, Pontiac
$.'Telegraphy Pontiac Mall, Waterford Twp
#■ T •
\
\
ifi
i
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
MONEY-SAVING DELICIOUS PORK KATINQ» WITH A 200% GUARANTEII
Former Jock stands behind eyery pound of Moat 7—"" ' -with a 200% mopey-back guarantee I Don't
pass up a savings opportunity like this! Your jBgjgngffl^MaM^^ choice of mouth-watering Farmer Jack Pork-at
the lowest prices in town!
M) gWJSAD^ l
FARM MAID PURE PORK
Roll
Sausage
1 LB. ROLL
SHOULDER CUT
Pork
Steak
FARM MAID SLICED
Thick
Bacon
BREAKFAST
SUGAR
£Wo*ite
cured
YEARLING STEER
Sliced Beef Liver
VLASIC BARREL CURED
Sauer QT.
Kraut JAR
•MAOt
REGULAR OR JUMBO PETERS ORADE 1
Polish
Sausage
PETERS FRESH OR SMOKED -BRAUNSCHWEIGER STYLE
Liver
Sausage
TIGER TOWN SKINLESS GRADE 1 ..
All Beef 1 lb. Franks PK0*
PETERS SUCEb
Luncheon i lb. Meats PKG
GRADE 1 SKINLESS
Paters .*
houbo
HYGRADE SKINLESS GRADE 1
Ball Park i lb. Franks PKO
SPENCERS GRADE 1
Large i Bologna p
HICKORY SMOKED GRADE 1
Kokrieh
Smokees
CENTER SLICES
Hy grade ^ ?ko. Boiled Nam
SKINLESS GRADE I 4
Spensers i lb.
ffjBfca ■».. ***
mr»i/i»nMnuidh>HMmmRpr.1>wTrmlhhiniiiiiutbi/ill^jHnh»j>TtfwMj},mdb7m>)}rT
l*^V0R
Q
S. Telegraph at Square Lake ?oad • Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains • S. Glenwood at Perry, Pontiac • S. Telegraph, Pontiac Mall, Waterford Twp.^
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1963
LIVE STEAMERS, TO SCALE — On the % Louis, ride on a 10-fobt Pacific 4-6-2 .built to
elevated track, John-Curtis of Belmont, Calif., passes 4he water tank with his Central Pacific miniature. On the front track, Louis Romani of'Campbell' Calif., and his sob-,
the scale of-” 1 */2 inches to the foot. Its an outing of the Golden Gate Live Steamers, Inc., a club devoted to- operating miniature locomotives.
Current Books
'fmm
Miniature-Railropd
Outgrows Californio Site
By William c. harrison
Associated Press Writer
OAKLAND, Calif. — Engineers are planning to relocate an entire railroad—station house, tracks and trestles—in the hills east of Oakland.
The engineers are operators of foot-high miniature locomotives. The Redwood Railroad is a scaled-down version with a half-mile of track in parallel loops.
One set of tracks is elevated so the engineer can dangle his legs comfortably from aboard a tender or flatcar as he stokes the engine and works the throttle.
Another loop of wider, heavier tracks at ground level accommodates larger models. ★ * *
The engineers are serious hobbyists who build meticulously accurate models of famous old steam engines.
200 POUNDS
A typical locomotive may be about one foot high, five feet long and weigh some 200 pounds. It can cost up to $290,000 or more.
The railroad and the engineers belong to the Golden Gate Live Steamers Inc. Buffs formed the dub in 1939.„
' Driving of solid gold spikes marked completion-of one track in 1950 and the other in 1983. The club has some 190 members today.
,♦ k k
The Redwood has outgrown its present regional park' location. Club members have accepted ah invitation to move to Tilden Park, 10 miles to the north, but they’ve worked out no timetable yet.
ACCIDENTS RARE
Accidents are rare and usually minor on . the Redwood line.
“If a man uses judgment, takes care of his equipment and pays attention to what he’s doing, he won’t have any problems,’’ says Harry Dixon of Castro Valley, charter member of the club. '
Dixon once had his own 175-foot-long Dixie Short Line Railroad in his garden. Now he loads his Dixie Belle loeomotive into the family station wagon and takes it to the Redwood tracks for Sunday runs.
“If I’m having someone else drive my engine, I go along behind on a flatcar, and
I’ve got a hand brake so I can control the operation of the train?’ “Dixon says.
‘MY RESPONSIBILITY’
“If I see he’s going to get intp trouble, I can always brake him *dtfwn. I’hat’s my responsibility; it’s my train and 1 have to watch out for it.”
Most' of the engines use clean-burning Welsh steam coal or Colorado anthracite, but a. few burn oil.
Once a woman visitor, unfamiliar with the habits of coal-burning locomotives, stood too dose to the track—but not for lohg.
k k k
** Hot cinders, she said in a claim against the club, burned holes in her blouse. The club bought her another.
POTBELLIED STOVE
The Redwood’s station house features a potbellied stove and an Operating telegraph.
Engineers and firemen usually wear striped overalls and trainman caps. Some carry big railroad watches.
Dixon, a retired toolmaker, is secretary of the worldwide Brotherhood of Live Steamers.
★ k k
Joining the brotherhood "involves no money,” Dixon says.
HE LOVES IT
His job is unpaid but he loves it, corresponding with railroad farts all over the world.
He estimates that the brotherhood has well over 1,000 members in the United States alone.
Railroad lanterns. of gleaming brass, railroad calendars and scores of railroad books almost fill a study room he. shares with his wife, whose own hobby is knitting.
★ k k ■’
Locomotive builders’ name plates, big
brass, bronze or steel plates from real engines all over the world, adorri one wall. Th5y represent a Dixon side hobby.
Dixon yearns to operate a full-size engine just once. •
★ ★ k
“I’ve been in the cab,” he says, “but I’ve never been invited to handle the controls. I’d like to.”
In West Germany *
Satirical Recording 'Sells' Foreign Aid
BONN. Germany.( ApT — courts^ to mothers-in-law, have given away during the past two “Hello’ Is this the ministry of become best-seller records. y | weeks. Requests are coming in
what’sit called, where they take was„T- aU^;rate J? a day,; K
, „ • . Jf. 'missioned by. Minister Hans-] “This is Tegtmeier. he tellsi
care of Negroes and Chinese jUgrgenWischnewski’s depart-'the minister, a former union of-and everything? ment to promote the idea of de-lficial. “I don’t know whether you.
“Yes, yes, the ministry of de- velopment aid,/ Boryn’S versionjstill remember me. The union velopment whatchamacallit. i of what Americans call foreign; delegates’ conference in Boch-[ * * * add. I urn in 1955. You had that nice'
“I would like to speak to your Tegtmeier presents populariSoeech. I sat at the front . . .1 chief Mr. Wischnewski, miss.iarguments against it until thej You don’t remember anv more?) Could you call him to the tele-1 minister convinces him that it’s had on a brown suit withj phone, please?." good for the economy and the!needle stripes. Well, it doesn’t1
The caller to West Germany’s worker. i matter.
Ministry of Development Aid is * * * | “But look Mr. Minister, when,
supposed to be Adolf Tegtmeier. The record-an upusual touch|you were wjth the Metal Work-! a worker from the Ruhr. He is in the eafnest world of Westjers’ Union, you were for it that; the creation of the country’s German politics — is available(the worker gets his share of the! best-known satirist. Juergen von free to Germans who write the national nroduct. That is, that Manger. 44 Monologues by the] ministry. |we get the pennies, vou know?
fictitious character Tegtmeier,] A spokesman says most of the]pay increases and job security.! making fun of anything from'first batch of 30,000 have been]you stood up for all those'
f things.
-k k k
“What aTe you doing now?j JVou hand out 6ur tax fnoney so that some Negro thinks you’re wonderful because you stuff him) with development aid. j
- “Look at - our firm. The old j
I___^ man wanted to shoot himself]
*i last' Christmas because we
A SHOAL OF STARS • By O’Hara tries hard to bring Yank couldn’t get any new orders and Hugh Downs. Doubleday. $5.95. to life he never succeeds. then this thing came from Paki-
It is interesting that Downs] It is witl^ the minor charac-, stan. We’re still working on it
“appends to his story of a real ters that O’Hara scores his sue-1 and when we finish. we,’ll have
life adventure in ocean sailjng'cess. Here is a wide range oi| a contract from Uganda.
%some notes on planning and completely real people brought: INSULT INDUSTRY
1 scheduling a similar trip, with vividly to life in just a sentence r '1
check lists of equipment, sup-'or two. I ‘Therefore I say-stop this de-j
'plies etc. 1 * ★ * S j velopment aid and insure in-*
. “The Instrument” is a novel stead that German industry gets
Maybe not many readers will I Jj?. 1 better more orders apd that the export,
able to undertake such an?" w™cn F1® P5f nZHZ, keens rolling • « .-si than the whole, but even flawed seeps rotting.
TT Z is far superior t$ much cur-1 “What, that is develpment
but a good many sailors in bays,]ren|. fiction ]aid? Development aid is when
] sounds and coastal areas should ’ ______ . other countries are put into a
be able to find sqpie vicarious AND CIVILIZATION Bv position that they can buy here?
thrills in his story. , Be^d MyVrl M^raw-kil?'Then it’s also good for our firm?
This is a report on a three-Bernard Myers. McGraw-Hill. The Paksitanis and Ugandans month voyage which the author, $16.85. ^ got the money from you?
his son and several friends made This formidable and sumptuous “Listen, why couldn’t you in 1965 aboard a chartered 65- book surveys five millenia and have said this right away? You foot ketch, called “Thane,” more of global art, does it read- tot me waste all this money from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to ably and authoritatively and nooning you. Boy, then we can ! Tahiti. Downs, due back in New heaves the , reader with a good glad that we have develop-York for his television appear- working concept of the creative ment aid. I hereby ^ demand ances, made the return trip by ]side of man. j more development aid.’’
P ane' kkk The scope is too large to allow1
, .. —_____. , Dr. Myers much chance for a
As a yachtsman, Downs had, . ... ...... ,
, , . ... I close examination of individual
been building up to this adven-l^ artistg 0f even move.
ture for severa y ■ ments, and invariably what is
His narrative isn t likely to ’ breadth ^rifleed set any records ati a classic of J, ^ ers seem
the sea. But on the other hand, J thin_for e ,e>
his eviHent zest and earnest ded- thoge o* chinese and Jajtanese ication to an exotic sport—com- , m
plele with impromptu libations Thig - a new enlarged edition on occasion lend a bit of g work published a decade glamor to his sea safari. ag0 Numerous black and white
| THE INSTRUMENT. By John il!uftrati0nS1 and fcolor O’Hara. Random House. $5.95. plates supplement the text,
Yank Lucas is a vampire of] a sort.
j Yank’s the dropout hero of j this novel—John O’Hara’s latest!
Thanksgiving offering.
He’s a playwright who draws the stuff of his dramas from living people. When he’s finished with them he discards them, casually and ruthlessly, uncar-] ing of the hurt he leaves behind.1
-Yank should be classified as a bad guy. But he’s not. Neither i i is he a goqd guy. He’s too un-jreal for classification. And this]
{is unfortunate because although]
LIMITED ENCASEMENT! HOW! thru TUES.
TONITf it 7iGG I tsM
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■It
OLGA'S HOUSEl OF SHAME1
THIS FILM EXCEEDS THE IMAGINATION!1!
BODIIS
WCKfO
BY
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tortums
7ZZJ2 KEEGO
i
WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS!
DAVID LEANS FILM >
0fatmsi«sTtRN*KS /
DOCTOR
ZHIVAGO
in MWVISION' «N0 MElMCftM
TONIGHT OPCN lilt FEATURE UN Fit. ORLY
| flow Ploufuuj ot Mi/uicU. Mil*
IT’S NOW A MOVIE! bestseller
H .Valley i ________of the
=? [ BcylA si S
COLOR by DeLUXE
aiumei HePBium anDpereRdTooLe
IN WILLIAM WYLER'S
HovrToneauw . &/< ffrth /AtJc/ptAiiis amiLiion
ELECTRIC IN:CAR HEATERS • BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 P.M.
Mi/iocfaMiffz
T DRIVE-IN THEATER • FE 2-1000 SOUTH TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE HO.
1 MIIE. W. W00DWAN0-
Bandit Picks Wrong Bank
Tuesday's News of State Officials
By tht Associated Press
.... . » a THE GOVERNOR
BOSTON (AP) — The man You re in the wrong bank, w«s in Pans, preparina to return home walked into the south even endithe note saidf You II have to go'JJ/n,amiddle Eastern and southeast branch of the Charlestown Sav- to somewhere else.” ' A!la?HEPuEUTEN*NT governor
The man left the bank. I «•* *i,h political, civic, church and
ings Bank Tuesday and handed teller Lawrence Goldman a note demanding alMiis money.
Goldman, after briefly with wrote a note in reply and hand- with ed it to the man
| labor
]session.
To make their dens cozy forL.s;''n«? In,° l**» b.in transferringi the
" (State Resource Plannlnq Program from conferring winter, grizzly bears dig themjlhe Department of Commerce lo the Ex-
another teller, into slopes and line the burrows cu v the aiLtorney general
f Asked the Legislature to approve higher I Or p#y for policemen, two-year grand juries, school courses in law and order and state moneV for victims of violent crimes.
evergreen warmth.
boughs
Steaks
to fulfill your dr«om» of pRrfRctiofv
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O Char-Broiled Steaks o Fresh Florida Snapper and Pickerel
• Famous for Excellence in Sea foods
• Try Our Famous Round-Up Style Dinners
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JAXUAHV 3, U>68
... ;mn
TY ft
...
For Balance of Payment Woes
m
.......... «
wrnmm
MARKETS
''/■■•' ! Car Harnesses
Weaknesses Develop
Stock Market Rally Continues
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots.
Ku°Bm ft markLYOi£S (A|1,_Thef St°C'5 by a rf° g about 6 % PriCefh m°AVed fTS^'l
f Fridav markets 1968 rally continued much, but the gainers included^r on the Americaif Stock EjTx-
0 y‘ . early this afternoon de- j some of the heavier weight blue change. Pancoastal Petroleum!
Produce spite more weakness among air- jchips., was the volume pacemaker as it,
line and gold mining issues.]’ The result was that the Dowgained a fraction. Up about a
FRUITS
jgjSt ":“Tr?dinK was active ,
Appits. Mcmtoih j.M Airlines took further losses in noon was up 1.85 at 908.69.
Apples. Northern Spy. bu. 4.25 .. _ . . * F , , . . „
Apples. Red Delicious, bu....... 475 reaction to President Johnson s The pace of trading was
Apples, figtf >—■
Jones industrial average at point were Sterling Precision automobi[es roiling off assem- rarv. and’could
2. ---------1 nr OAO Oft J tfi ..non n fnntnurMnnt ° » ’
and Victoreen Instrument.,
Golden Delicious,
VEGETABLES Beets,, lopped, bu.
Cabbage, Curly, bu..........
Cabbage. Red, bu.........
Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu.
Carrots, topped, bu
Celery, root, IA bu...........
Horseradish, pK. bskt..........
Leeks, dz. ben*...................... < iu
Onlons/’drv, 50-lb. bag ............ 2.00
Parsley, Root, dz. bch................ 00
parsnips, V*-bu. ................. 2-00
Potatoes, 50-lb. beg ............... 1-50
Potatoes. 20-lb. bag ..................45
Squash, Acorn, bu. ...............
squash, Hubbard, bu...............
Turnips, topped
LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery, Cabbage, bu. .............
5 00 proposals to curb U S. tourism somewhat heavier than it was in Europe while the gold mining on Tuesday. j
rjo stocks reacted again to John- The Associated Press average Net Ch 21m son’s tough program aimed at of 60 stocks at noon was up 1.0 Noon ^wed. 3 ^'defending the dollar in foreign at 325.1 with industrials up 1.4,week Ago
BY JOHN CUNNIFF - payments position or the world j Instead, the United States has AP Business Analyst i might face the threat of eco-jjfgu^ these nations should
NEW YORK - Tough as they inomlc doldrums^ /;cooperate irf the interests of in-
are, President Johnson’s plans Justone month ago, this threat ^- ■ e .
for restricting America n was described to Europeans by rrna;*onal stabilny by export lor restricting a m e r i c a “ _ Rostow imdersecretarv ln8 their capital, by buying
Pric. Hikes RefleS^«to?SnST%?8* th, mu* «-k »
rrice nixes KeTiecT ments .jjs jnancial machinery would be en- FRENCH REPLY
At the most, they are emer- dangered if Europe continued to The reaction to this idea, how-gency measures, partly in the build huge surpluses while the j ever, was a reply from the realm of politics rather than United States was forced to cutjFrench that the only lasting so-All new economics, very likely tempo- back. lution was in a "return to finan-
* * * jcial discipline” by the United
This would result in the near States and Britain, collapse of w6rid trade, with na- —----—-
New Safety Device
DETROIT (AP)
bly lines in the United States to- in the long run day had two new items: manda- do more dam-lory shoulder harnesses and age than good to the balance
STOCK AVERAGE Camplted by Th* Associated Prtaa
Tnd, Rails util. st«k, higher prices. Q
42oV ti+31 147 7 325 ° Shoulder harnesses became of pay m e n t s 4inSbury co funds.
Wednesday's 1st Dividends Declared
Pm- Stfc. of Pay-Rata riad Record abla STOCK
Original* Inc (v) MS 1-31 ,
Phila El 1 64 Phil Rdg 1.60 PhilMorr 1.40 PhW Pet 2.40 Pitney B 1.20 PitPlate 2.60 Fitts Steel Polaroid .64 ProctrG 2.20 PubSvcColo 1 Publklnd 46f PugSPL 1.60 Pullman 2.80
29% — Va;
95% — %
59V4 i/2 i RCA 1
]33/a 4- RalstonP .60 y4Va 4- 5„ Rayonr 1.40b 71% 4- % Raytheon .80 55^v _ s8 Reading Co
42
2 89'4 89 89 te 44 Grant 1.10 11 33% 33% 33%
27 IP 18% 18% 4 % GtA&P 1.30a 34 29% 29 29%
54 20% 20^8 20% 4 % Gt Nor Ry 3 8 57 56% 56Va 4 vB
47 48% 48% 48 Va Gt West Finl 319 14% 135b 14% 4- %
68 13' 4 13 13% GWSug 1.60a 15 48% 48 Va 48%
37 36 357m 36 4- % Greenunt .88 4 35% 35% 35Vj 4 V2
1 26% 26'/a 26% Greyftound 1 56 22 Va 22 22% 4 %
311 14% 14% 14% — % i GrumAirc .80 109 38% 37 37% — Va
ReichCh .40b RepubStl 250 Revlon T.40 Rexall .30b Reyn Met .90 ReynTob 2.20 RheemAA 1.40 RoanSe 1.67g Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72
Price hikes generally range ilTOi"s s ^averse CUNNIFF | from $23 to $32, or what the au- balance of payments have in-: tomakers had been charging for vuolved . governmental rather
the harnesses as optional equip-|han Pr‘vate : first;
-[t^ _ ly military and financial aid;]
' r. j it u • _ f second, domestic inflation,
Henry-Ford II, chairman of
sum Nti Ford Motor Co., terms the new ^be solution of the first has
‘“VSi? T +"?; Shoulder harnesses “very elfec- eluded thls administration since, DETROIT (AP) - U. S. auto- 1,697,346 or 23 pel1 cent; Chrys-
ij ijvv' iii',a itt/3 -i4 tive ” says he used them and t00^ °^'ce- ^be Inflation is, to makers built 7,413,422 new cars'ler with 1,363,206 or 18 per cent
1 aa IT +Tm “people are stupid if they a «reat de«ree’ the resu't ?f JSfiin 1967. a decrease of 13.8 per land AMC with 228,«STor 3 per
i»7 68T« 66 66'n -h1. Hon’t ” ' . war. The weakness is not in the cen^ below_1966 and the lowesticent.
On the other hand, Ford says, P^e se^01, °f tbe u s e™110-.output since 1962. : Ford dropped 5 per cent
“I think people are going to my' A two-month strike by the!under its 1966 output while
liate them,” and an auto stylist BALANCE OF TRADE United Auto Workers at - Ford I American Motors was off 0.15
says “they look lousy.” t At the present time the United j Motor Co. cost the firm half a j per cent. GM gained nearly 4
One Chevrolet dealer was States has a balance of trade in;million cars, the trade publica-iper cent and Chrysler was up g? quoted {is saying that ‘‘the aver- its favor. That is, the Americanjtion Automotive News reported.|about 1.6 per cent over 1966. s?w + T* age guy isn’t going to pay for! economy continues to produce j ★ A * j A W ★
these belts if he hag a choice of, more goods for sale abroad than| The 1966 production was Christmas holiday re-
+ vT a car without them.” Thus, the are imported for American 8^604,726. Calendar 1967 produc-LjrjC{e(j final week of 1967 m iofJ lof’ i’TS dealer said he anticipates his in- needs. !tion was the lowest ^nce the output to ^^53 cars compared
Tr, Tt, ventory of some 300 cars built But, as economists h a v ej 6,943,470. cars built in 1%2^ with 189,716 in the preceding
/ last vear will sell auicklv warned, domestic inflation. Ford and American Motors week and 115,478 in the corre-
|: ★ ★ * - eventually may cause American) fell short of 1966 output wb'lC|Sp0n(jjj1g week of 1966
deal- goods to be less competitive in j General Motors Corp, andi
38 30>/4 29% 29% — %
91 96% 95'/4 95% 4- %
13 45% 44% 45% 4- %
63 65% 65% 65% — %
24 70% 69% 70 4- %
8 66% .65% 65%
15 12% *12% 12%
76 244 236% 239 %f>—5%
21 9Vk 92'/4 93 .♦
25 2.1% 21% 21% ...
12 33V4 33 11 51% 51%
—R—
388 51% 50% 16 22% 22^
18 82% 82 82 V
20 36% 36 36
35 50% 49% 493
The December aggregate was
1 22% 22% 22%
8 73'.
72% 73' 4 4-
124 32%
550 52V* 51 ^
56 32% 32'/4 32Va 4- M
12 35% 35% 35% 4- »/•
39 37 36Va 36'% — Va
94 48 47V4 47% 4- %
649 47% 46 46% —1
11 56% « 56 56V
51 49'/a 49'/4 49V
17 36% 36% 363, 24 54% 54 54
2 72% 72'
62 28% 27*/i 152 105 104 104 —
26 19% 19% 19% 4*
71
6%
154 64’/a 63% 64'4 — % 57 62’/4 59% 60% —2% 9 48 46% 46% —2%
24 140 139% 140 — 1
—R—
13 47% 463 26 29% 29*
518 59% 58*
Gulf Oil 2.60 GulfStaUt 88 GulfWIn .30b
jHailiburt 1.9b , Harris InL 1 Hecla M 1.20 i Here In 1.20a (HewPack .20 I Hoff Electrn Holidyl.nn .30 HollySug 1.20 iHomestk .80b 35 t/« I Honeywl 1.10
72%____% i Hook Ch 1 40
or ! House Fin 1
HoustonLP 1 Howmet 1.40 Howmet wi HuntFds 50b
31 75% 75 V 11 26 25% 25%
60%
332 61
—H—
25 64%
10 66 66 66 8 57% 57'/4 57%
-S—
4-
< Safeway 1.10 64% +1% SfJosLd 2.80 SfLSanF 2.20 StRegP 1.40b Sanders .30 l’j 69',* 69 69'k - ^jSchenley 1.80
14 12% 12% 12%1.20
54 51% 4b% 493/4—i% Scientif Data
23 33% 33 . 33% 4- % SCM Cp ,60b
27 61% 60% 60% —1 I Scott Paper l
47 104 103 103% +
5 43% a 43'/a 43%
2 29% 29% 29% .
12 461
47% +
Idahopw 1.50 Ixleal Basic l III Cent 1.50 _ , Imp CP Am 29% 4- % j IngerRand 2 59% 4- % Inland Stl 2 , PH -41 InsNAm 2.40
25 88% 87 87 —i InterlkSt 1.80
28 S3T9 52 52 —lVkjlBM <.40t>
'01 8'/2 8'/. 8 V. — Vx | lot Harv 1.80
84 345». 33?% 34'/« +• TV | »nt' Miner 1 79 87Va 86T* UrVipi,P V35 20 40% 40 40 — HI JTE Ck» 1
19 34V. 34 34H ... IntNICk 2.80*
63 2929'/. 29'/. + ! |ntl Packers
56!% 4- i/ailnt T&T 1.70 58% 4- Va i Iowa PSv 1.24
75 85 2 42% 9 55%
1 62
84V
85
i/4 SbdCstL 2.20 SearIGD 1.00 'Sears Roe la 7/, • Seeburg
6%
, , Sharon Stl 1
_ iZ Shell OH 2.10 ShellTr 1.170 , SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2 60 + V* SingerCo 2.20 SmithK 1.80a SouCalE 1.40 + '/a South Co 1.08 + 1' « SouNGas 1.30 4- % SoutPac 1.60 M Va I South Ry 2.80 — % Spartan Ind SperryR “
er^^^hr snip ^ut^the^w Tar- foreign markets. Inflation and j Chrysler Corp., which has yet_to 17gi,765_highest of any month
33^ +’!;! nesses8which strap down across the war, therefore, are again:announce its final production,,ast year p0rd worked Satur-
ate -the driver’s chest. General Mo- among lhe cujPr*ts’ as theyibreakdown, both gained IdaJ operations at 1° plants . 3 tors Corp. sent a warning leUerhave been in a11 thls nations sj1966‘ _ wlule AMC suspendedproduc-
_________i 4. that if dealers remove harness- economic Problems’ ^ . GM LEADS , mjto*
6) 3»4 3ova 3wi es for any reason, they and not * .* | GM led 1967 productionwithrearrang and Mil-
W 5 r the corporation will be liable in 0ne thing is certain about:4ii18)235 or 55 per cent of the to- tions at Kenosha, Wis., and Mil k any lawsuit that might result. Johnsons compulsory res-.g, followed by Ford with|waukee
~ J + * % traints: they will have an lm-j
The straps will be the most mediatte e/fe(ct’ (^hich obvious of all the new federally ordered safety devices, and
28’/» 4- ' 48% '
55% —1 56% 4-27% 4-, 37'/4 —
08 443/4 27 34% 34',
12 57% 57 10 79 287
35 616 6131---- . .
56 35% 35% 35% —'/■ SquareD :70a
17 118 118 118
9%
9%
Staley 1.35
— 'a'stBrand 1.40
— % Std Kolls 4-1% I StOICal 2.50
| StOillnd
50
22 69 53 137% 133 181 58Va . 55V 55 28% 28 11 48Va 48'/
31 56'/4 55V
90 56% 56V
242 27% 27
18 37Va 37V
14 68 673
8 25% 25% 25% 4- '
10 48% 48 48% 4- a
44 763/4 76 76 —1
44 66% 65% 65% — 3
14 50% 50 50 — 1
10 36% 35% 36% 4- 1
19 28% 28% 28%
■ 50 443/4 44% 443/4 4- ’
39 29% 29 29 — '
3 47 463/4 46% — 1
410 25 24% 24% + I
529 61 58% 58% —3'
137 23 22% 22% — !
4 353/4 35% 35% —
17 353/4 35% 35% 4* 1
a contrast to the mostly un-j successful voluntary measures
...... | .. that have been in force during
Ford originally opposed them as rec(?nt months.
General Motors’ 12-month production totals for 1966 and 1967 in the U.S. and Canada follow:
Through December
“improper and ill advised,” saying they ‘ often prove awk ward an8 uncomfortable.”
9 29V
29
29
56% 56 193 69% 68 229
8 36’
sF" v. Jewel Co 1.30
S* MW
40TJ 40’. 40’/
»Vk 29(/i 29V
49 40 39’/. 40 + Vx
95.177'/i 174 174H —3'/j
199 51. 5T'. + Vi
23 48 477/. 4774 .
20 27V. . 26 V. 26Vi — 3A
28 29 28'/. 28'/. +
21 25 241. 25 +
4 41 ■*. 41 >4 41V.
4 23'4 23 23'.
John John .60 JohnMar 2.20 Jones L 2.70 Jostens .50 joy Mfg 1.40
173 17'. 17'/. 171» + 50 42V. 42'/. ,42 V
t iS ci'ifisve 1.80
3r* + W Clark Eq 1.20 ,/iCIOvEIIII 1.80 T CocaCola 2.10 I Jl'ColB Pal 1.10 + J. collinRad .80 73'/. - W coloInlG . 1.60 24 -r W CBS 1.40b
Col Gas T.44
76 40
107 36'/. 36 7 38T. 38 42 73'/. 73'/.
51 26T. 2574
.... ... 21 33'/. 33 HR |
Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1968 comICre 1.
■ ~....... ComSolv 1.20
ComwEd 2.20 Corhsat
Stocks of Local Interest ConElecInd 1
Figures after decimal points are eighths ConFood 150 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Con Nat G 1.70
Quotations from the NASD are repre*,ConsPwr f.90-wntative inter-dealer prices of approxi- Contamr i.jo matelv II a. m. Inter-dealer markets ContAirL 40 change throughout the day. Prices dojConf tan z not Include retell markup, markdown or CW ins J.TO commission. - JB’^'5® off**
Bid Asked Cont Oil 2 80
AMT Corp........................ 5.3 5.6 Control Data
Associated Truck ............... *.« 135
Braun Engineering ...........
Citizens Utilities Class A Detrex Chemical
Diamond Crystal ...........
Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber Co.
Monroe Auto Equipment North Central Airlines Units Safran Printing Scrioto
Wyandotte Chemical
MUTUAL FUNDS
% Kaiser Al 1 „ KanGE 1.32 S KanPwL 1.03
Jf KayserRo .60
T * ! Kennecott 2 + : Kerr Me 1.50
+ f* KimbClk 2.20 —11 Koppers 1.40 Kresge .90 Kroger 1.30
.. _____ ■ ’62A. + Ahj
9 56'/i, 564. 56'/. — I Lear Sieg .80
17 4544 454* 454* — 4.1 LehPCem .60
124 43'/. 43V. 434. Leh Val Ind
60 17'/. 164. 17'/.,+ 4. | Lehman ,98e
7 4344 43’/. 43Vi . LOFGIss 2.80
41 104. 18'/i 184. + '41 Llbb McN L
16 644. 62'/. 644. +1% Liggett&M
32 4074 40V. 40Vi Mt
8 41'/. 41'/. 41V.
2 1844 18'/i 1844 + 4.
58 414. 41 41 — r
69 56V. 5544 ' 5544 —
39 32'/. 32'/4 32V. .
60 484. 4744 48V. +
354 28 26 20 +14.
5 374. 37V4 37'4 +
5 132 131V. 132 ■ +
444. 44V. 44'/.
117 11714 116'/!
1 22V. 22'/l
. 20 344. 34>/i ' 3 5944 59'/i 594/
8 89'/i 88'/. 88V 18 554. 54Vi 554 77 57 56V. 56'/
18 29V. 28 Vi 29V 15 344. 34 344
—K—
11 48". 4744 .8'/
6 254. 25Vl 254. +
2 20V. 20'/. 20'/.
19 57’/. 57 57V. +
II 37’/i 36'/. 37>/j +1V
5 864. 054. 854* — 1
244. 244. + |
151 57
360 70' 69'4 694* +
4 % StOilOh 2 50b 11 71 70»/4 707# — in ;
i St Packaging 51 15% 15% 15% *4 % 1
j StauffCh 1.80 8 45% 45% 45V. — V.
l4 % | Sterl Drug T j 30 50% 49 491/4 _§ 7.
— % , StevensJ 2.25 122 52% 52 52% — V.
—1% i Stude Worth 181 66% 64% 64% '4* %
4- % Sun Oil 1b 7 64% 64Va 64% ...
4- Va Sunray 1.50 76 4O70 40% 4OV4 — % 1
41% Swift Co K20 74 33'/4 3294 32% + %
-jr % , Tampa El .68 95 T— 76% 26 26^4 -»- % 1
Tektronix 51 49 Vb 48% 48% —» ,<
4 %; Teledyn 3.81 f 112 141 137% 138 —2
4- Vi 1 Tenneco 1.28 133 2774 27Va 27% !!
.+ % Texaco 2.60a 126 83% 81 Va 82% 4-1V4,
TexETra 1.20 25 22% 22 . 22% -H % !
4 Tex G Sul .40 56 125% 124% j?! /
But, continued for a period of; years, they could be politically! and economically dangerous to • ' the entire world.
. - ECONOMIEC EFFECTS
ranarnl StnFPC In-the economic sphere, it is!
rt?ut?fui oiui ca ]ear that a curtailment o{|
Amreican investments in Europe will immediately reduce! our balance of payments deficit.
. , _ , For the moment the nation’s
The two area Federal Depart- books wj„ ^ jn belter baiance. j
ment Stores are adjusting shop- But> these dollars that are! ping hours, beginning today, to being saved rather than invest-fix a recent, company survey ed wou]d have, in the long run, showing a shift in consumer returned many dollars4o Amer-shopping habits. ica. A new American factory in!
The downtown store at 91 N. Germany would be costly at h
: Adjust Hours
1967
Passenger Cars
Chevrolet—Chevelle ............ 375,831
Chevrolet—Regular .. 1,150,272 ’
Chevrolet—Corvette ............ 23,778
Chevrolet—Camaro .............. 216,210
Chevrolet—Chevy II .......... 135,882
'Chevrolet-'-Corvair ........ • • • • 18,703
Total Chevrolet ............•• • 1,920,676
Pontiac—Regular ............... 445,956
Pontiac—Tempest ........., s...... 288,924
Pontiac—Firebird . ........... 122,291
Total Pontiac ....... ......... 857,171
Oldsmoible—Regular . . ... 296,354
Oldsmobile—F-85 256,643
Total Oldsmobile .......Aj..... 5527997
1961
—L—
37 44V.
Texaslnst .80 Tex PLd 35g Textron .70 Thiokol .40 Timk RB 1.80 TransWAlr 1 Transamer 1 Transitron ri Cont .92g
x66 104% 1023/4 102%
ill 54 534* 534. A ]a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday, Thurs- the United States when produc-12 ini 40* 404. - 4* day and Friday; from 9:30 a.m. tion began.
Buick—Regular Buick—Special Total Buick .
. 379,511 194,355 .^5737866
LifyCup 1.20b Llton 2.651 Livliigstn Oil LqckhdA 2.20 LdewsTh .25g LoneS C*m 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.16 Lorillard 2.50 LTV 1.33
...........- , Lucky Sir .90
46 100'/. 99 Vi 9944 + -Vi I (.ukenS Stl, 1
2 43 42'/. 43
37 534. 534. — ’<■ , , „ „
38 264. 26V. 264. + '. Macke Co .30
20 32*. 32 324. + 4. Macv RH .90
18 364. 36'. 36V..+ '. MadFd 2.63g 22 48 4744 47’A* + ' i MagmaC 3.60
30 49'/, 48'. 49 — '/i Magnavx .80
66 32'/, 32'. 324. — '/« Marathn 2.80
it jiTi 41'. 4134 + MarathOil wi
55'/. +1 Mar Mid 1.40
43'A 434. — ',.
12W 1244 + 4.
488 10 94. 10 + <4
47 23'. 224. 2244 + V.
28 49Vi 404. 49 + 44
52 16 1544 15’/. + '* I.
5 72'A 72 72'A + 'A I
39 35 34'A 35 +4. UMC Ind .60
146 102'A 100'/. 1004. — l'/i Un Carbide 2 100 10'A 10 10 . Un Elec 1.20
73 53'A 524. 524. — 4. UnOIICal 140
121 136 130V. 135'/! +2'A UnlonPacIf 2
85 17'. 17V. 171A + 'A Un Tank 2.50
345 29V. 28 284. —14. Unlroyal 1.20
11 27V. 264. 27 — 'A UnltAlrLIn .1
17 49'A 48’4 484. + 4. UnilAlrc 1.60
17 129A 1204. 1284. + •Vunit.Cp ,50g 13 35 344. 344. + 'A Un Fruit 1.40
64 37 364. 364. + 4. UGasCp .1.70
M . 'Unit MM 1.20
294 474. 45
63 944. 53'A 534.
113 18'A 1744 1 7’A .
61 32 314. 32 + IS
10 101'/. 1014. 101'/. + 4. 108 304* 294. 30 — 4*
-U—
★ a | ★
Another risk is that much of the vigor of our domestic econo-
134
71 18V
17%
33 38 36%
58 .29% 29%
2 57% 57% 57% +
, ..ills .Borax la 18'/1 + 4. ; uSGypsm 3a 4-1% lie ir%*4 7A
20 55% 54 29% 26 44% 15 31%
29% 29% +
15*2 16!o!C°rn M 1J0 25 2 25 6 CorGW 2.50a* 18 0 19 0 Cowles .50
16.0 16.3 CoxBdcas SO
39 6 40 6 CrouseHmd 1 31 4 34 5 Crow coll 2f 30 2 30 6 Crown Cork r a on CrownZe 2.20 n 4 14 2 Cruc Stl 1.20 j ! 9 7 Cudahy Co
in 2 31 2 Curtis Pub 30 2 / Curtiss Wr 1
Bid Asked
’ fj Dan Riv 1 20 18.64 20.60 OgyfoCp 160 « l'6,t °«V PL 140
15.35 16.75 Qe.,., Co 2 9.34 10.20 pei Mnle 1.10
t-S ,J*TS DaltaAir .40
12.93 1413 oenRGW 1.10
16,38 17.20 DetEdis 1.40 13.26 14.49 Det Steel .60 10.09 11.00 DleSham 1.40 13.0L 14.14 Disney .30b 18.72 20.35 Dial Seag 1
____ DomeMin 80
DowChm 2.20 Dresslnd 1.25 Duke Pw 1.20 Dunhill .50
9 , duPont 5g
WASHINGTON (AP)-The D^Am “40
of the Treasury compared with corre* r ■ponding dale e year ago:
Dec. 21, 1967 Dec. 28, I™* East Air .50
Balance— ____ ,, EKodak 1 60a
t 6.919,176,919.40 t 6,291,713.406.21 gatonYa * .25 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— EG&G ,10
71,765,384,953.75 69,614,906,776.46 £| gondShr 2
Withdrawals Fiscal Year- Electron Sp
09,473,118,600.26 83.101,764,752.32 cip.sgNG I
X-Tolal Debt— . ,. imer El 160
346,570,944,478.90 330.100.569,415.24 pnd Johnson
Gold Assets— ErleLack RR
11.023,577,621.35 13,159,019,062.21 Ethyl Cp .60
(X) — Includes 1260(702,657.72 debt not EvansP 60b
! MartinMar j 31*. MayDSIr 1.60
142 23»* 22V* 22**—,V< I Maytag 1.60a 28 50** 49'/* 50'A + **!McCalf .40b
7 78** 78 70 iMcOonD ,40b
2 22’A 22** 22** — 'A ! Mead C 'Pi 70
63 74 73 73V. — V* | Melv Sh 1.60
112 134 132'. 133'. — '. I Merck 1.60a -
13 49'A 40'. 49 + *. Merr Chap S
35 407* 40’* 40’* — V* MGM 1.20b
4 343 343 343 . I MldSoUtll .02
4 IS’/, 15** 15’A + '* IMlnnMM 1.30
3 51'. 51'A 51'A — HIMInnPLt 1.1b
5 32'. 32'. 32'. + ’A I Mo Kan Tex
59 46’
2 36V* 36'* 2 29'/s 29'/s
36'A - ' 29'/* + V 51V* -I'/ 38*1 + >,
US tod US Lines 2b USPIyCh 1.50 '* US Smelt lb A US Steel 2.40 ;/a UnivOPd 1.40 • Uelohn 1.60
%
Vi Varian Asso Vendo Co .60 I VaEiPw 1.36
-J |to 9 p.m. Saturday; and from 10 a.m: to 6 p.m Tuesday and -Wednesday
__ The, store at 5000 Dixie, my results from the tremendous
2s 21 20** ■ 20** — ’a i Waterford Township, in Dray- overseas expansion of our indus-
22** 22v* 22** + ’a ton Plains Shopping Center, will|tr'al giants. The longer controls am f4 Mvi + 'Ajbe open daily from 10 a.m. to!are maintained, the less c°m-r 3S SSi 48** — v* 9 p.rm; Saturdays from 9:30P^titive these companies will 39 SI IIS a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Sundays I ^ome, and the re^uit rmght be
fewer American jobs.
Hidden in these curtailments,] however, is a potential benefit, i It is that some European nations might be shocked into realizing that international i trade and cooperation benefit all and that a lack of cooperation hurts all.
and Sundays
53 *0* 59*4 59’a — **! from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
87 64'A 83’A 84'A
11 27V* 27’A 27*4 6 3d’/* 29V* 29V« + 39 47'. 67'A 67'. — 41 43*4 . 42'. 42'. -269 48Va 47% 48% -K 9 46 45% 46 +
64 59Va 58% 59% + 226 43% 42% 43 4-
4 91 90% 90% —
303 49% 48% 49 —
—V—
46 31% 30% 30% — 22 28% 28 28% +
% I
Smart Will Speak to Waterford GOP
Cadillac...................... 213,161
Total Passenger Cars—U.S.....4,117,871
Total Passenger Cars—Canada .... 312,180
Total Passenger Cars—
U.sf. and Canada .........m4,430,051
Trucks & Coaches
Chevrolet . 549,676
GMC Truck & Coach........ 130,659
Total Commercial Vehicles—U.S. . 680,335
Total Commercial Vehicles—
Canada ..................... 73,850
Total Commercial Vehicles—
U.S. & Canada . .............. 754,185
423,317
1,431,022
24,939
94,426
155,726
73,362
272027792
481,591
384,794
"8667385
356,087
^237,982
“5947069
363,712
216,709
“5807421
205,001
59'I
59'
—IV
30 59'/
72 *6 45** 45*4 — '
67 33'* 33** 33** +
224 19'A I9JA 19V* +1
60 12*4 12’* 12*4 +
14 27. 26** 26** —
—D—
12 22Va 22%
« f 2%
a /47%
5 27% 27% 27 29 52% 52 52
13 35% 34% 34 58 33% 33% 33
j MobilOil Mohasco 1 Monsan 1.60b MontDUt 1.60 Mont Pw 1.56 MontWard 1 Motorola 1 .,-MI St TT 1.24
NatAjrlin .30 Nat Bisc 2 Nat Can .50 NatCash 1.20 N Dairy 1.50
196 53?
28 38%
10 86 56 81%
4 24%
22 48%
16 25
49 94%
4 21%
^137 20% 20% 20% 469 44% 43% 44% 24 24? • 23% 24%
50 47% 47% 47% 12 29% 29% 29% 11 28% 28% 28%
115 24 48 117
29 23
—N— *
34% 34“
WarnLamb 1 81 ' 81% 4- % I Was Wat 1.20 24'. 24** + 'A W«te AirL 1 47'. 48 + V4 Wn Banc 1.20
24** - V* WhUTel 1 40 93'* 93'* — IWestg El 1.60 21'A 21’« + '* I Weyerhr 1.40 \
Whirl Cp 1.60 f % I White Mot 2b f Va I WinnDix 1.50 iWoolworth 1
32 43^
7 35%
li
40 40'*
50g
-E—
51, 32** 32 3JV
40 Ite 22 3/
35 28Vi 13 ID1*
—F—
98 85** 84 V 23 22
17 55* '
26Va 26% + * 4 Nat Fuel 1.68 9 28% 28 28% - %
207a 20% + 7# Nat Genl .20 53 24% 23% 24%
31% 32% 4- Va 1 Nat Gyps 2 20 44% 43% 43%
54,‘a 55 4- Va i N Lead 3.25g 24 66 V a 66 667. + ’i
36Va 37% + % , Nat Steel 2.50 36 49’4 48 Vj 49 V. ■+■ %
53 S3 % Nat Tea .80 25 14% 13% 14% ■f %
87 87% % Nevada P .92 5 4574 45 45V4 — %
38 38 4- % | Newbrry 45g 19 29 27% 29 -FI
37 37 % NEngEI 1.48 8 26% 26% 26% -F %
18% 19 4" % 'NY Cent 3.12 35 75% 74 74 —1%
157V4 158 -4 V4 iNlag MP 1.10 59 21% 20% 20% 4- %
29% 29% 4- % i NorfolkWst 6 22 *95'/a 95 95% •F %
21 21% + %! NoAmRock 2 32 40% 39 Va 39% — %
NoNGas 2.60 24 48% 48% 48% ■F %
1 Nor sPac 2 60 3 55H~ 55% SSli
44 U 44% NoStaPw 1.60 23 29% 28% 28%
146U 146% , ! Northrop 1 108 44*4 43% 43%
31% 31% a Nwst Alrl 70 163 80*4 75 76%
52 52 Norton 1.50 17 41% 41V4 4lVa
58 59 4 J®1 Norwich .75 25 45% 45% 45%
w_ , Clifford H. Smart, Both Dis- U.S. VIEW
37 43** 14** 43'A trict state representative, will. As the United States views the -4i sJv* 33v* mvI - '.*|be guest speaker at the 8 p.m.jproblem, Europe must assist
24 27v* 27** 27v. + 'a Tuesday meeting of the Repub-the United States to correct its to change
'ft tTv* w* 7u* + v* Ilican Club of Waterford Town-;—;----------------------------- '----------------------
45 rate 52'* 52’74+ v*'ship at Pierce Junior High
16 T 28** tT" + ’ll School, 5145 Hatchery.
41 25 iiv* ~ 1/4 ( Smairt, a Republican from
Xerox cp i.4o -4 Walled Lake, informed the club
Yngststit l.oo 68 32** 3P* - ; •, that he will speak on current
Copyrighted by The ASJOcteted Pres* I960 ' jssues faced by the Michigan
Seles figures ere unotficiel. Legislature.
Unless otherwise noted* rates of divl- * * *
dends* In the foregoing table are annual,
disbursements based on the 'lest *u«''«r'V | fhe public IS Invited to at-or semi-annual declaration, special or | ^ r
extra dividends or payments nof tend the meeting, according to
nated as regular are identified in the , . r * . -j
following footnotes. I Frank A. Lane, club president.
a—Also extra or extras. b-Annual rate
plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating divl-1 ----------------------
dend. d—Declared or paW* In 1967 Plus stock dividend, e—Declared or paid so far this year, f— Payable In stock during 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-lstrlbution date, a—Paid last ve*r-h—Declared or paid after stock dividend or split up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative Issue ^flth dividends in arrears, n—New. Issue, p—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no aftlon taken at last dividend meeting. r~sDe-clared or paid in 1968 stocki dividend. t-~
TOTAL U.S. AND CANADA ...................5,184,236
285,984
4,734,652
621,354
127,294
748,648
70,009
818,657
5,553,309
NOTE: December, 1967, figures are preliminary and subject
20% 20% 4- %
977'. 97% F % Occident ,80b
28*4 8Vj 28V4 — % Ohio Ed is 1.30
8% - % OklaGE 1.04
36% 37 OklaNGs 1.12
28 28% — % OlinMat 1 80
IS'i 18% 4 % Omark 1 .171
OH&. Elev 2
—O—
171 113% 110% 110% -3 22 26% 26 »26% f
1 34 26% 26't» 26% 4
date
i—Sales in full.
cld—Called, x—I__________ . t.
dend and sales fn full, x-dls—tx distribution xr—Ex rights xw-Without warrants. ww- With warrants, wd -When distributed. wi—When Issued, nd—Next day delivery.
In, bankruptcy
News in Brief
Mrs. Clara Hammond of 5790 Croswell, Waterford Township, reported to township police the theft of a battery valued at $44 from her cal- parked at Waterford Township 1 Crescent Lake.
receivership
7 46
45*
U 73% 73
F,p Mog 1.80
79.1/Flltrol 140 79 1 Flr,tfn» 1.40 78 8 FjtChrt 1.24,
79.3 Fllntkole 1
16 4 Fl» Pow 1'.44
89.4 FI.PwLt 1 76
78.4 FMC Cp 75 90 7 FoodF.lr *0 83.7 FordMot 2.40
12 33'. 33', 33'*
112 57'* 56'. 56V —
181 24’. 23'i 24*. +1
38 24*. 23*» 23*. —
P.c G El I 40 Pac Ltg 150 Pac P.r 15g PacPwL 1.20
Earl A. Kreps of 1781 Bev-
28** 28V* 28'« + S being reorganized under the Bankruptcy p|-|y Sylvan Lake, reported to
42% 41% 42% 4 % Act, or securities assumed by such com »_ ■ v
30 29*t 29V. + i* panles. ,n—Forelgn Issue sublecl to in- Waterford lOWnship police yes-
terday the theft of his overcoat valued at $115 from the cloak Airway Lancs, 4825
terest equalization tax.
% I Pan Am .4ft % IPanh EP 1.60 % I ParkeDavis 1 % PeaCoal 25e %! PennDix .60 Vs Penney 1.60a
29'’ 23*% 76 4034 1229 22% 8 34%
40%
21%
- »4 DOW JONES AVERAGES % STOCKS ^
- % 30 Indus . .
% 30 Ralls
f % 15 Utils ' % 65 Stocks ’•BONDS I % 40 Bonds
l0*Higher grade rails ' % 10 Second grade rails \ 10 Public utilities
!>■ 10 lndostrlal|
9o« 4911 «5 room
237 21 I 0.77 129.92 4 0 61 M5J».
Jl^.1710.88 , „
74 731 0 05 Orescent l^ke Inn under new tela+o'ii ownership, Kenneth Gohl, 4904 I’ake Rd. -Ady.l
NEW BUILDING — House/of Bedrooms has moved to a new 14,000-square-foot building al 1716 S. Telegraph from its former location at 1662 S. Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. One section of the 114 displays
PantljBc Pr*M
is devoted to bedroom sets for teens and younger persons, according to owner Robert Goldman of 5944 St. James, West Bloomfield Township.
'i
r
\
m
D—10
i
■; ; m \ ■; \ j V}';f jp*' ; ^
THE PONTI AC PH ESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
He's Willing, Not Anxious
r~
Rudy Vallee for Mayor of LA?
’ By BOB THOMAS Stengel as one of the great non-, “Shirley Temple? I don’t
AP Movie-Television Writer (stop talkers, which should stand.fenow about her. Cqpipared to HOLLYWOOD — Rudy him in good stead if he decides•our'*woirnan from Maine (Sen. Vallee for mayor of Los An-|on a political career. Sometimes Margaret Chase Smith) she geles? Why not? Remember,it’s best to just stand back and,not comeoff too well. But what happened with George-let him continue speaking. Like ^ Shirley i’gmore feminine, Murphy and Ronald Reagan, i ithisr • 1 J and I’m not so sure thefeminine
But the veteran crooner iSh’t j “I first started thinking women are suited for politics, going after a campaign to un-j running for mayor back in Sw^ * have 'peculiar minds, seat Sam Yorty, Los Angeles’and ‘60. I;was appalled at what |women do and j don.t think ubiquitous mayor. “It would!(the then mayor) Nome Foul- jjjg have the savvy for poli-have to be a real draft,” says son did to Khrushchev. EVen ycs_„ ,
Vallee. ^‘If enough people want though the man was a Commu-me to run, I will. But I’m not nist, there was no excuse for going around kissing babies and being rude to a visiting digni-
all'that sort of rot.” Politics would be a brand new pursuit for the 66-year-old Vallee, whose career has covered all the show-biz bases.
He was the first of the great pop singers, a screen idol, radio star, record
Big Voter Okay
FORT Gibson, Okla. (AP)
tary. Norrie is a fraternity brother of mine, and I met him at a few affairs. One day I ran into him in the Houston airport j Voters living in a 13-foot strip and I told him I was thinking of which starts at the western edge running. of the Fort Gibson School Dis-
THINKING SERIOUSLY jtrict voted overwhelmingly
, ... .- Tuesday to annex the strip to
“You know what he said? He,the Braggs School District. The just grinned and said; Rudy; vote was 34) Five persons were you’d make a helluva ™ay°rr .eligible to vote in the election, and he went running off. That t ______,__—|-----------
THOMAS
annoyed me, and I started thinking more seriously about
---- - entering therace. Then one day
p e r s 0 n a 1 i t y, film cnarac-!j ^ad breakfast with one of the ter actor, television,jerformer kjngmakers 0f this t owtf. He and Broadway star (‘‘How me ‘RU(jyi you wouldn’t be
Succeed in Business Withoutgble to take jt aji tj,e in-fighting Really Trying”).. and the dirty work that goes on
He also ranks with Casey in politics * That discouraged! me. ..
! * ★ ★
“I’d enjoy being mayor, and I think I could do a good job. There are several things* I would like to accomplish, and I agree with Yorty that something should be done about the property tax. I don’t think a man like myself, with no children, should be required to pay the same school tax as a man who is the father of nine. It simply isn’t fair...
QUALIFIED SHOULD RUN “What’s wrong with actors going into politics? If a man has any intelligence, common sense
to Save Species
Breeding "[Plan Eyed for Scarce Animals
LONDON (UPI) - For a species which has been around for tens of millions of years, the
jgiant Galapagos tortoise has J| ______________|_____________
never really been comfortablejand honesty, he should be quali doing what comes naturally to fied for public office, even the birds and bees and practi-lthough he is an actor 0h, g| cally every other living thing,, a(jmjt; there are a lot of actors Including man. who don’t have enough sense to
The old adage that nature come in out of the rain. Many of
knows best doesn't seem to apply here. For one thing, mating is a pretty awkward business what with those huge Six-foot walnut-shaped shells and the
them are unfit for any office outside of dogcatcher.
* *
“But being an actor shouldn't disqualify you. Ronnie Reagan
necessity of finding exactly the had every qualification for right texture of soil. For another being governor of California. He the tortoise does not appear to has good common sense and did have had the sex drive of other ^ fine job as president of the amphibians. j Screen Actors Guild. George
Hie reason why has been sug-jMurphy hasn’t exactly set off gested in a study by zoologistsfireworks in the Senate but jhe world over of the mating^ a person and hard habits of animals. It is hoped worker^Well it s hard for me to the study will lead .to saving^ him because he was them from extinction. The idea‘classmate of ™>ne at Yale is to keep breeding stock in
zoos so other zoos can obtain specimens if the beasts are exterminated in the wild.
In the case of the Galapagos tortoise, it seems nature hasn’t really bothered to arrange easier or more frequent reproduction because the great longevity (possibly 150 or more more years) has meant that the species could maintain itself if couples had offspring every decade instead of every year.
★ ★ ★
This might also explain the highly wasteful egg-laying procedure. One female observed by the San Diego zoo cracked most of her eggs by dropping them on the hard shells of other eggs. Then she spread sand over the clutch and stamped it down with such heavy blows of her hind 1 feet that she cracked s o m e more.
EGGS SLOW TO HATCH
Thc0. eggs take their time, hatching — anything from six to eight months.
Nature could aHord to be profligate with a species which! once had few natural enemies. Then man appeared. In the days of sail, sailors are estimated to| have eaten 10 million of the) tortoises for fresh meat to stave1 off scurvy. They generally took! the smaller females, thus up-j setting the breeding pattern.
Richard Fitter, secretary of. the Fauna Preservation Society of London, says zoologists are' worried about all the animals, birds and reptiles man is hunt-! ing or eating out of existence.! But they are equally concerned about species threatened by the loss of their habitat as game: preserves shrink and man civilizes wild country.
★ ★ ★ j
Some species already exist on-j ly in captivity — Pere David’s deer in England, the European bison in England and Poland, the Chillingham White cattle which* descend from prehistoric stock in England, the Przewal-ski wild horse in Russia.
An Anglo-American effort has established a breeding herd of / the Arabian oryx in Arizona though desprt shiekhs now seem! to be aware they were wiping out a natural asset by hunting It with submachine guns. I
Death Notices
BENEDICT, EDITH M ; January 2, 1968; 103 U.S. No. 23, Baldwin Township, Iosco .County; age 73; beloved wife of Leo A. Benedict; dear mother of Kenneth F. and Howard A. Benedict; dear sister of Mrs. Margaret McCaugh-na; also survived by 10 grandchildren and 10 great - grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, January 5, at 10:30 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Roseland Park Cemetery. Mrs. Benedict will lie in state at the funeral home, after 7 p.m. * tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)
BROWN, BEULAH B.; January 1, 1968 ; 50 Square Lake Road, Bloomfield Township; age 82; dear sister of Mrs. Ray Curtis and Mrs. F. W. Kehlet; dear aunt of Mrs. Arthur Haga. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 1 p.m. at the Donei-sort-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Brown will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to
5 and 7 to 9.)
CUMMINGS, aTNN E CT; January 2, 1968; 153 North Roselawn Street; age 46; beloved wife of Forest Cummings; beloved daughter of Mrs. Sarah Handley; dear mother of James E., Marla S>, Sharon E., Donald F. and Stacy R. Cummings; dear sister of Mrs. Peggy Johnson,. Mrs. Sue Burke, Ewell, Joseph and Era Handley Jr. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home.
HAWKINS, ELMERjTJan-uary 3, 1968 ; 75 LaFayette Street; age 42; dear brother of Mrs. Irene Lewis, Geprge and Rbbert Hawkins. Funeral arrangements are pending a£ the Huntoon Funeral Home,
Death Notices
KNIGHT, SHERRY A.; January 1, 1968 ; 203 South Center Street,* 5 * 1 Highland; age 17; beloved daughter of Lane E. and Ann Knight; beloved granddaughter of Mrs. Agnes Hazen, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Kowalski: dear sister of Michael and Spec. 4 Wayne L. Knight. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 1 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Fu-rteral Home, Milford. Interment in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Sherry will lie in state at the funeral home.
MAKI, DAVID GLENN JR.; January 1, 1968 ; 39 Thorpe Street; beloved infant son of David and Carol Maki Sr.; beloved infant grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Sherman and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Scarborough. Funeral service will be* held Thursday, January 4, at 11 a.m. at the Hun top n Funeral Home with Rev. Robert Richardson officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
McGRAW, MARY L. ; De-cember 31, 1967; 118 East Chicago; age 83; dear sister of Mrs. Edward Shekel!; dear friend of Mrs. Robert Matheson. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 1 p.m. at the Elton Black Funeral Home, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Mc-Graw -will lie in state at the funeral home.
MILLARD, ROBERT E.; January 1, 1968 ; 243 Haux-well Drive, Lake Orion; age 53; beloved husband of Beatrice Millard; beloved son of Bessie and John L. Hall; dear father of B r u c e and Barbara Millard;! dear brother of Mrs. Paula Nelson; dear step-brother of Mrs. Mona Bishop and Mrs. Betty Mitchell. Masonic memorial service will be tonight at 8 p.m. at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford, under the auspices
, of Orion Lodge F&AM No. 46. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 2 p.m. at the funeral home. Interment in East-lawn Cemetery. Mr. Millard will lie in state at the funeral home.
MUSETROBERT C.; January 1, 1968, 1022 Bathavis Street, Royal Oak; beloved infant son of Charles and Marilyn Muse Jr.; beloved infant grandson of Jake and Helen Smith and Charles and Anne Muse Sr. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in North Oxford Cemetery. Robert will lie in state at the funeral home.
REED, OSCAR J.; January
1, 1968 (age 76) of 21159 Poinciana, Southfield. Beloved husband of Gail A.; dear father of Clarence E., Glenn O., and Mrs. Raymond (Lucille) Barnum; brother of Archie E., Ern-nest E. and Roy. Also leaves 11 grandchildren and 13 great • grandchildren. Services 2 p.m Thursday at Heeney-Sund-quist Funeral Home, 23720 Farmington Road, Farmington.
SWnENRERG, WILLIAM A.; January 1968; 1478 Rosedale Street; age 79; beloved husband of Elsie Sonnenberg; dear father of Mrs. Adeline VanVleck, Mrs/Evelyn Palmer, Ed-
Death Notices
win L. and Willipm A. Sonnenberg Jr.; dear brother of Mrs, Alvina Lindow; also survived by three grandchildren and six great - grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 2 p.m. at the Spar’xs-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Sonnen-b^rg will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to &)
SOPP, THOMAS J. r January 2, 1968; 5194 Farm Road; age 83; dear father of Mrs. Mary Abare; also survived by six grandchildren and seven great-grandchil-d r e n. Scripture service will be held Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Melvin A. Sqjiutt Fufleral Home. Funeral service will be held Friday, January 5, at 10 a.m. at the St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Mr. Sopp will lie ip state at the funeral home, (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5
- and 7 to 9.)
.STOUT, INA E.; January 3, 1968 ; 86 Waterly, Waterford Township; age-81; d ea r m 0 t h er of Mrs. James Sorenson Sr,, Mrs. Stanley Weller, Mrs. Kenneth Barnes and Horace Linderman; dear sister of Mrs. Velma Gane, Mfs. Edna Parsons, Mrs. D. J. Dinsen and Herbert Holcomb; also survived by 11 grandchildren and 28 great - grandchii-, dren. Prayer service will be held Friday, January 5, at 8 p.m. at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Saturday, January 6, at 1 p.niv-atj the Methodist Church, Cedar Springs, Michigan. Interment in Elmwood Cemetery, Cedar Springs. Mrs. Stout will lie in state at the funeral home after 3 p.m. Thursday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)
Announcements 3
pH"
la
DEBT AID* INC.* 718 RIKER BLDG FE 2*0181# Rtftr to Credit Advisors. 16-A
EPTldNS
ALL FOR RENT. RECEF lodges* church. OR 3-5202* FE 3 3838.
HUDSON'S OPTICAL s,
SERVICE
| prescriptions for eyeglasses filled with pinpoint precision* Including j aspherl, catarac and plastic lenses. Many styles in frames and eyeglass accessories In, great variety; •Iso a large selection of sunglasses. We do hot examine eyes. Optical service* Pontiac* lower level; also downtown Detroit. Northland* East-land, Westland, Dearborn and Lincoln Park.
LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY , WITH Dex-A-Diet Tablets. Only SI cents at Simrrts Bros. Brugs.
VILLAGE LIVERY
Horse dra\Wn Hay and Sleigh rides along scenic Lake Trails* open all year, 3200 acres* private club-room, picnic facilities. Relive yesteryear at Kattington Antique Village.
2378 Joslyrt Rd._______391-1370
BOX REPLIES )
| At 10 a.m. today there j | were replies at The Press j | Office in the following f {boxes: ;
C-14, C-15, C-39.
Funeral Directors 4
COATS
FUNERAL HOME
DRAYTON PLAINS *74-04*1
DONELSON JOHNS Funeral Home
"Designed for Funerals**_
Huntoon
FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 years 79 Oakland Ave. FE 2-0189
C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Kaego Harbor* Ph. 682-0200.
SPARKS-GRIFFIN
FUNERAL HOME
"Thoughtful ServlM" FE 1951*
Voorhees-Siple
Cemetery Lots
4-A
AT WHITE CHAPEL Moving to Fla.
Choice graves S95 ea.
These Graves are privately owned Ml 2-3534
Personals
4-B
2-5122_befor* 5 p.m. Conlld*ntT»| AVOID GARNISHMENTS!
GET OUT OF DEBT!
We can help you with a plan you can afford.
DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC* INC.
. 114 Pontiac Stete Bank Bldg.
FE 8 0333
•TATE LICENSED-BONDED Open Saturday 9-12 a.m.
GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg.
FE 8-0456
PLAN NOW FOR DELIGHTFUL old fashioned sleigh ride. Ideal outing for your club or group. Occasions of all kinds. Lovely club rbom fmcL diplne areas. Daytime or evening parties for groups of 20 or more. Just the spot for your holiday party*. Call tor reservations, 628-161].
JJPLAND HILLS FARM
D'EBT AID. INC., 71| rikIr bldg] FE 2-Olit, ' Rtftr to Otdlt Ad-visors. 16-A
Personals
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY BY KnMfMl coioc, Pat in* turn CAUMliMW*. tnyffm*.
WILL iteu/MY HOLIDAY~HfAUf& Club mtmbtrjhlp. Includts txtrcltt tqulpmtnf, whirlpool, itttm B*th», tw tanning room, ftc. OR 3^5lt,
4-1 Help W«Rte4 Male
Lest and Found
FOUND: . GIRL'S GLASSES, HUD-son's Pontiac Mall parking, Dtc. 30. FE 4-3177
FOUND. YOUNG FEMALE BEA-gle In Westacres, 3*3-44*9.
FOUND, FEMALE DOG WHITE WITH LIGHT BROWN SPOTS, ME with light brown foots, medium
sued. 334-3713. ________________
LIBERAL REWARD FOR. LOST fawn and whltt boxer missing since Dec. 23, Middltbtlt-Long Lk. Rd. Area.' AnswtTs to name - of
boots. Call 338-‘3f4S.____________
LOST DEC. 27’ TOY POOOLE, apricot — biege color. Male. "Pepl". 15 Ml. 8> Dequlndre. Re-
ward. 689-9538.______________1
LOST: SABLE FEMALE TOY COL-lla In Bay St. area. 39*-0I7».
LOST: TRI MALE TOY COLLIE puppy, p o n 11 a c Motor prea.
332-701*. __________________
LOST: 5-YEAR-OLD ST. BERNARD Dec. 28, children’s pet, rewerd of 1 reg. St. pup It returned or give lead that will find him. 625-
5676._____________;;_________1
LOST; BLACK, BROWN AND TAN Basset. Vicinity of Watkins Lake. REWARD. Ceil 674-2790. «
LOST: 2 WHITE POODLES, VICINI-ty Douglas And Pike. Reward FE
2-3106. After 5 p.m.______________
LOST: BEAGLE PUPPY, MALE, vie., Fpatherstone, between .Op-dyke end Squirrel, Children pet,
reward. 052-2012. ______;_________
LOST: WHITE AND TAN SPANIEL mixed, vicinity Telegraph-Ellzabeth
Lk. Rd, Reward. 338-1539. _
LOST: GERMAN SHORT HAIR pointer. Choke collar, no tags.
Vic. S. Blvd. Reward. 330-9017.___
LOST — VICINITY UNION LAKE Village,"* German - Shepherd, 6 , months. Tan with black race. Name Heidi. EM 3-5539 evenings. LOST IN 'VICINITY OF PORTER Rd., WTOT Lk. Township. Small long haired, white with brown dog.
Child’s pet. 363-7220.____________
LOST: GIRL’S GLASSES IN
brown case. Badly needed. 674-
1741.,____________—
LOST: BLACK AND TAN GERMAN Shepherd, male, red collar, Waterford dog tag. Believed to be in vicinity ot -Square Lake or Sylvan
Lake. FE 8-3473.________________ _
l55T. ' SMALL FEMALE GERMAN Sheperd, tattoo in left ear, Baldwin Longfellow area, reward, FE
2^4713.______________________. _
LOST FEMALE BEAGLE, SADDLE back, vicinity ot Gale and Teggger-dlne Rds., las* weds.. Reward. 028-3036. ________ •
Help Wanted Male
1 MAN TO RUN BRANCH OFFICE, over 21 and married, call Mr. Moore, 673-9680.
1 DEPENDABLE MAN
Married* over 21. $200 guaranteed per mo. Part time. Call 334-2771*
2 PART TIME MEH, EVENINGS*
21 and married, easy hours. 673- , 9680. ; __________________________
2 MENTNEW CAR DEALER, TO clean up cars and work on used car lot. Steady work, hospitalization, vacation with pay. Birmingham Chrysler-Plymoutn, 860 S. Woodward^________
3~SECOND SHIFT WORKERS, FOR morning work, 21 and married. 673-9680.
4
Full time real estate salesmen are needed Immediately to TSTh the staff of one of Oakland County's fastest growing organizations. We offer a fine building program as well as an excellent trade prtyr gram and we can offer you an ^excellent training program. The tobtvAnd tha leads that will en-ableyeu to earn a minimum of $10,000 ydur-tirst year. Call now, while we stllPTrave openings on our staff. jjjjj —
McCullough realty
10 BOYS
WE NEED 10 BOYS TO WORK IN OUR MAILING ROOM. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3 FROM 12:00 NOON TO 4:15 P.M. MUST BE 16 YEARS OF AGE. APPLY IN PERSON TUESDAY OR WEDNESDAY TO:
LYLE McLACHilN
Mailing Rooom THE PONTIAC PRESS
$400-$600 FEE PAID MANAGEMENT TRAINEES
in office* finance, retail*, sales Age 21-31* some college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1-080 W, Huron* Pontiac 334-4971
$500 $650 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES
In *11 fields, age 21-30, some college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1000 W. Huron Pontiac 336-4971
$5,000*$12,000
TECHNICIANS
In Mech.-Elec .-Lab, age 20-30 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron Pontiac 334-4971
$8,500-$12,000
PROGRAMMERS
Sr. and JK, also tab operators. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL. 1080 W. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971
A PART-TIME JOB
A married man, 21-34, to work 4 hours per evening. Call 674-0520, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. tonight.
$200 PER MONTH _
ACCOUNTANT, 1 OR 2 YR5. EX'-<* perience for CPA office. Mrs. Fogel 398-7405,______________________
ACCOUNTANTS $6,000-$! 4,000
Jr. and Sr., age 2145, gen. or cost, 2-4 yrs. college exp. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971
ADVERTISING
SALESMAN
Attention — ExectUve sales oppor-tunity:
$10,000 plus
Management opportunities Established clients Salary plus commissions Bonuses and Incentives Complete insurance programs District and home office training
This opportunity exists In the sales. Promotion field right here In Detroit with rapid advancement and no forced, moves.
BASIC QUALIFICATIONS:
The man we seek Is probably earning $500 to $750 per month, is limited In his present employment, between 28 and 45* minimum of 1 yr. In sales, and is willing to apply nimself and take direction. Interviews for this position with
BROWN & BIGELOW will be set up. Immediately. Telephone:
Rufus Starnes* Jr. ___________962-8550 _
ANALYST
DETAILERS
Special marine equipment. Paid Blue .Cross* vacation, holidays and insurance.
JERED INDUSTRIES, INC.
1299 Axtel Rd., Birmingham Ask for Mr Chlsnell Ml 71700
An equal_opportunity employer ALUMINUM SIDERS;~~S T E A D Y year around work, experienced end with equipment, good wages and benefits. Gale Whltford Roofing and
\ Siding* 437-2446._
A S SI ST A NT CO NTRbL L E R, CA P-abte of administrating and , supervising an office In a Tool and Die Operations. Northeastern Tool A Ole Corp, 25411 Ryan Road,
Warren Michigan, 539-0500.'_
AYfRACTlVE SERVICE AND sales opportunity. Salary, bonus, commissions. No experience neces-sary, w 1 It train, 674-2272._
Auto mechanics and h e lp-
ers* parts clerk. Keego Sales and Service. 3080 Orchard Laka Rd. 682*3400.
AUTO MECHANIC f ; TUNE-UP MAN'
8150 watfc ouarantta, lull benaflt* and MtjrMMm. Contact Mr. GhF llanl. MlTlWQ. .
Automobile Parts ; Assistant £
Experienced L I n c o l n, Mercury* Ford preferred by fast moving dealership, excellent position and future Opportunities.
Please . apply to Parti Manager dnly. / , , /
HILLSIDE
' LINCOLN MERCURY
■________1250 Oakland_
AUTOA6ATIC SCREW MACHINE operator with machine shop exp. on Swlst typa machines, new plant, axe. conditions. Bernal, Inc., 1450 Soutar Blvd., Troy,
AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE OPERATORS
Excellent opportunity 'with Troy manufacturer. Some previous single spindle experience preferred. Steady year round work with overtime and benefits. Phone 549-7432. BARTENDER AND NIGHT MAN-ager. Closed mondays. Send resume and qualifications to Pontiac Press box Nufnber C-19. _
BROILER MAN* DAYS* MUST BE dependable. Apply In person, closed Sun. and holidays. Bedell's Restaurant* Wpodward and Square Lake.____________' ______
BORING MILL HYDROTEL
Night shift. Top rates. Steady employment. Journeymen only.
LIBERTY TOOL & ENGINEERING CORP.
2250 W. Maple Rd. ^^Wallad Laka BOY 16, DRUG CLERK AND GEN-eral store work. Russ's Country
Drugs, 4500 Elizabeth Lk. Rd._
BRICK LAYER SUB CONTRACTOR wanted for protect of new homes lh Southfield. Mich. For further Information call 644-4024 of after 6 . p.m., 372-9149.
CALL 5 TO 7 P.M. Part time help. 21 to 35. 682-6203.
CARPENTERS - ROUGH, FOR custom homes* over time, 8 hour day* 2-year project, 646-4431* eve-nings, 682-6003 or 356-8275. ?
CHIEF PHARMACIST. IMMEDIATE opening in 300 bed acute general hospital. Salary to be negotiated. Assured Increases? generous fringe benefits Including retirement program, Contact assistant administrator* Saginaw General Hospital* 1447 N. Harrison*, Saginaw* Michigan. 48602. Phone 517-753-3411 ext. 234.
CAR WASH DRYERS — 149 W. Huron apply >8:30 to 9 a.m.
CLERK, PART /TIME, ADULT, over 18# every other evening. 9 to 10 p.m. every third Sunday 10 to
COLLEGE GRADUATES $7200 UP
Management positions In ail fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971 COOK, SHORT ORDER FOR NIGHT shift, top wages, good working conditions. Apply anytime. Country.
Kitchen, Auburn at Opdyke._
COUNSELOR. IF YOU ENJOY working with people and have sales ability* there is no limit to your potential in this field. Calt Angie Rook, 334-2471. SneUing & Snell ing.
DESIGNERS'AND DETAILERS FOR fixtures and machine tools. Superior Design Co.* 1771 Pontiac Trail near Decker Rd.* Walled Lake. 624-0300.
"•DISHWASHER* HOURS'8-5 P.M, AP-ply in per|on* Maple House Restaurant, 3611 W. Maple* BlrmlnQ-
ham.__________________'
DISHWASHER AND BUS BOY, night shift only, good wages plus all benefits. Elias Bros. Big Boy, Telegraph and Huron._c
Electronics Trainee $5000
H.S.G.* electrical or mechanical background, with some exp. Mrs. Smith, 851-1050.
INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd.
________Orchard Lake _____
ENGINEERS $8,000-$ 15,000 ’
POSITIONS IN ALL FIELDS.
International personnel
1080 W. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971 ESTIMATOR FOR GENERAL Contractor specializing in design and build Industrial, commercial and (nultl-tamfly projects. Call or send resume to Thomas Frank# Construction Co. 32823 W. 12 Mile Rd., Farmington,-48024. 474-5888,
EX-SERVICEMEN
Wondering where to go? We have career opportunities in all fields. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron* Pontiac 334-4971 EXPERIENCE NEW AND USED car salesman* required immediately for new car dealership, tree demo, benefits, guarantee! Top * pay plan* bonus* good traffic* no phone calls* apply in person td Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth. 724
Oakland* Pontiac. __________
EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER cook* apply between hours 9 a.m. 5 p.m. Steak 8i Egg* 5395 Dixie Hwy.* Waterford.
EXPERIENCED MOPAR PARTS counter man* top wages and bene fits. Call or see Mr. Estes. Oak-land-Plymoufh. 724 Oakland* Pen tiac. Phone 335-9436. EXPERIENCED TCJOL AND DIE maker, days. 2260 Scott Lk. Rd. EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE salesman needed for Immediate opening Inquire Warren Stout* realtor* 1450 N. Opdyke Rd.* Pontiac. "FE 5-8165 for interview.
Experienced oil truck driv-
er, apply in person. Full or part
time. 351 S. Paddock._|
EXPERIENCED MECHANIC NEED-ed for GM Dealership. Please apply in person to Mr. Ernst at Homer Hlght Motors Inc. Oxford* Michigan.
EXPERIENCED AUTb~SALESMAN to sell Chevrolet* Buick and* Pon-tiacs. All fringe benefits. Apply to Everett Ernst, Homer Hight* Motors tnc., Oxford* Mich. (Apply In Person Only).
EXPERIMENTAL-* Sheet Metal Inspectors Sheet Metal Layout Sheet Metal Layout Upgraders
Plaster Pattern Men Kirksite Foundry Men
FULL FRINGES
ANZICK MFG. CO.
'FISHER
BODY
DIVISION
Livonia Plant
has
IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
IN THE FOLLOWING JOURNEYMEN CLASSIFICATIONS:
PAINTER-GLAZIER
ELECTRICIAN
APPLY: 8 00 * m. to 4:08 p m. MONDAY Throuah FRIDAY
28400 Plymouth Road Livonia, Michigan
Help Wanted Mala
y . Factory Workers
* iv Ray or week: Werehourtmim ossemblers; machine operitorsi material handler,, common laborer*; otc. Dolly poy.-TUoort any tlmo after 6. e.m,
Employers Temporary Service
Clawson 65 S. Main
Radford 26117 Grand Rlyft
FAC T 61 Y WORKER. SEMI* skilled for small mfg. plant In Troy. Soma exp. with dye cutting equipment preferr'ed. Steady em-, ployment for reliable man. Call B Mr, Lemanakl, 611-2646, 9-IV a m. tfRST COOK, ALL AROUND. EX-perience. Send resume to Pontiac Press Box Number C-19. '
GAS STATION ATTENDANT, ME-chanlcs* wrecker drivers* over 21-Local references, experienced only need to apply, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily except Sunday's. Shell Station, Woodward and Long Lake
Rd.* Btpcmflaid Hills._____
GAS STATION AtTENDANTS* PRE-far experienced man but win train. FuM or^part time. Days only. Sunoco, Telegraph at MapfaJUte*
GAS STATION ATTENDANT* EX-oerlencdd, mechanically inclined* local refs.# Kill dr part time, Gulf,
• Telegraph and Maple._____
GENERAL MAINTENANCE HELP-
er with lubrication of machinery, repair of air and hydraulic lines* minor maintenance on mills, grinders. drIII presses. Top rate including cost of living $2.89 per hour plus fringe benefits. 3435 Hilton Rd., Ferndale.
fo
GUARD
For Utica* Mt. Clement and Detroit areq. Top Union scale Paid Blue Qross, Vacation and boll* day benefits. Call us collect. Bonded Guard Services - ,441 E. Grand Rlvd., DETROIT LO 8-4150.________________
HELP WANTED. BLOOMFIELD OPEN HUNT has position available for qualified Professional Horseman — Instructor.»Must have minimum of 10 yrs. training in Hunters, Jumpers# Hunter Seat Equitatioa— ana Dressage with , a professional horseman or equivalent training wih a military hors# troop Including instructional Jime, Minimum wage $10,000 per yr. Also Workman's compensation, liability and Ulue Cross insurance. .Relocation costs may be advanced af time of interview. Write Bloomfield Open Hunt, Bloomfield Hills* Mich. Attention R. H. Zlmmer-mann. With summary of qualifications, ref.* and pertinent pictures.
HELPER TO WORK IN_ SHIPPING and receiving. Towne & Country Furniture, Bloomfield Hills. 642* 8822. _________________________
INDUSTRIAL-COMMERCIAL SALES manager. Experience In industrial and-or commercial real estate. Sales end leasing necessary. Well established company is expanding and offers, excellent opportunity for self starter who c^n direct and manage. Send resume or call for interview to the Thompson-Brown Co. 3283 W. 12 Mile Rd. 476-8700. Ask for Mrs. Goodspeed.
INSPECTOR, EXPERIENCED IN tubbing layout. 2260 Scott Lk. Rd.
JANITORIAL HELP NEEDED AT once* apply 50 W. Square Lake Rd. Bloomffeld Hills. 338-0345. __
JOB SETTER* PUNCH AND DRILL presses* mill s* grinders and special machines. Top rate $3.34 an hour including cost of living plus fringe benefits. 2435 Hiltqri Rd., Ferndale.
JOURNEYMEN—AUTO MECHANICS
APPLY
Pontiac
Motor
Div.
Employment Office
KAUFMAN AND BROAD HOMES, Inc.* an equal employment opportunity employer* seeks qualified tradesmen for multiple family townhouse units construction in the Detroit metropolitan area. Please contact Mr. Barton Fen-more at 18610 W. Eight Mile Rd., Southfield, Mich.,., immediately. We encourage employment applications from minority and negro qualified tradesmen.
LAB TECHNICIAN, PERMANENT position with light appliance manufacturer, no military obligation. Call Yeagle* Skuttle Manuf. Co.* Mllfdrd. 684-1415*.____________
MACHINE OPERATORS
Immediate openingsv days W afternoons, will train for advancement. Reliable men with some previous axp. on lathe, mill* or grinders. Exc. year around working conditions andM overtime. 2921 Industrial Row, Troy bet. 14 and IS Milo Roads off Coolidge Hwv. or phone 549-7432.
H«ip Wairttd Mil». 6
maintenance man, and WIM to ntwtogt If* Noeh*#-,
tor. Michigan- Nf exprlaito* . essary but mint hive MHMNP4 or mechanical background. Salary \ utllUtaa and awrtman* PJoYldad. r cal( Mr. Bannatt at 161-2408. Da-trolt tor Intarvltw. :
Maintenance | Mechanic
Requires City of Detroit and Suburban First Class’ Refrigerator Operator's License. 40-Hour week, overtime beyond 40'hours. Enjoy benefits such ai purchase discounts, Life Insurance, hospitalization, retirement plan, paid holidays, and liberal vacation plan.
Apply In Person
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
Basemem ,
Hudson's
PONTIAC MALL
MAN. TO-HELP WITH CARE OF
horses. 628-2821 ^________.
MAN OVER 21 TO DO PRIVATE Police work- paid training. Contact David Byrd. Spartan Department
Store, 2045_Dlx(* Hwy.____
MANAGER TRAINEE. STRONG desire td succeed is all vou need. 86,888, Call Kathy King. 334-2471, Snelling 8. Spelling. _______.
MARKETING TRAINEE $6600
ear, no fee, 7130, • some .college preferred, National Growtn Corp.* Mr, Fry, 851-1050.
INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL
5722 W. Maple Rd.
Orchard Lake______
MECHANICCHRYSLER EXPERI ence, lull or part time. Ask lor Wally or Al, Blrmlnghem-Chrysler
647-321L__________________
MECHANIC. HEAVY DUtY, TO work In dne “ot Americas newest and most modern Pontiac Dealerships, Blue Crog, Ufa Insurance, disability Insurance, pension plan ottered. Good commissions, the best of working conditions. Call 642-8680. Ask tor Norm Allaire.
ME C H A NIC ALENGINEElS ground floor opportunity research firm. Full benefits, 812,000, call Helen Adams, 334-2471, Snelling 8.
Snelling.___________________
MECHANICALLY INCLINED MAN for machinery and maintenance work. Very steady Work, good opportunity for advancement, must be 21 years of age. Will consider older man. Apply to Mr. Hehl, Pontiac Laundry 540 S. Telegraph.
METAL MODEL MAKER
Afternoon shift to work on the manufacture of proto-type parts for computer printers In our development group. Must be abla to maka own setups and run all model shop equipment. Minimum 6 years model making or fool making experience required. Employment offers excellent salary and progressive fringe benefit program. Contact Jim Breen, Rochester Division Control Data Corp.. 1480 North, Rochester Rd., Rochester. 651-8810, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays - and evening hours ceil our answering servlet at 651-8820. An equal opportunity employer.___
MODEL MAKER FOR RESEARCH firm, general shop skills. Full bene-fifs, $8840, call Helen Adams, 334-.2471. Snelling 6 Snelling.
National Corporation
NEEDS MEN
3 DEPARTMENTS OPEN
Men accepted will be trained for a* career position. Must be neat, appearing and abla to converse intelligently with willingness to work. Opportunity for rapid advancement. Above average startina pay. Transportation furnished. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. MUST BE ABLE TO START WORK IMMEDIATELY. Call Mr. Fox 9 a.m.
to 2:30 P.m.* 338-0359.___
NEEDED* 1 MAN* PART TIME* married* between 21 and 35, $50 week guaranteed. Between 4 and 8 p.m. 363-0841.
NEW CAR CLEAN UP MAN NEED-ed at once to work our GM Dealership* drivers license# apply in person to Mr. Ernst# sales manager; Homer Hight Motors Inc. Ox-ford* Michigan.
Help Wanted Malp
OPPORTUNITY MANAGER WANTED
H and R. Block* America's largest income tax service* wants to locate a person capable of handling a volume income tax service in Pontiac. Excellent opportunity for right parson. We train you. For detais write H. and R. Block* P. O. Box 858* Flint* Mich. 48501 or call Mr. Edwards* 767-
3540* Flint._________________
PHOTO DARKROOM AND PROCESS Camera Assistant for off set..work., Seme experience necessary. Apply DaMyj Sihfinel* 45184 Cass Avepue, Utica* between 1 and 4._______
PLANT MANAGER
Aluminum and glass fabricator* building products, located west of Pontiac, having 20 eriiptoyees. Requires man strong In production control, including purchasing* orders coordinating with customer* processing orders into ” plant. Write Press Box C-15. -
Help Wanted Mala
MECHANICAL ENGINEER
Graduate Engineer for development of new body die construction techniques. Must be able to function effectively in non-reoccurring assignments. Should have some die construction backgroufid,- and a sound knowledge of engineering principles.
MECHANICAL ENGINEER.
Graduate Engineer to engage in all phases of development project work. Involving metal fuming, with the exception of sheet metal.
MECHANICAL ENGINEER
Graduate Mechanical Engineers to work on applied development of numerical control and computer technology in the areos of engineering, tool design and tool construction. Opportunity for creative work in development of N-C machines, controls, procedures and entire systems. Minimum 3 to 5 years experience in one or more of the related areas.
CONTROL'S ENGINEER
Graduate Engineer capable of developing fluid control techniques and applications. Should have experience in this field. %
WRITE STATING QUALIFICATIONS, EXPERIENCE, SALARY TOt
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
Manufacturing Development General Motors Corp.
GM Technical Center
12 MILE AND MOUND ROADS Warren, Michigan, 48090
* An Equel Opportunity, Employer
(/
4
H«lp Wanted Mlio ^: 4
^rrCR. FULL TIME, EVENING unljorm* and meals furn-. alto Blua Cross. Westerner ■laf Buffett., 410* w. Maplt Rd. itZaHI. Birmingham.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEI 1SDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
PORTER.
H«lp Wantad Female
WANTIo/'uVi--Jn. in i an. 67*90**.
.LfvpN
faM Fsmab
MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT. Laboratory Technique and pallant
MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN TO DO
Usad car department. Mu*» hgJ»^™ljLwP^..,g^lH ,nd
;,»!d l£f!!FS' ampttntl EftaJ *va NStf* ^MEN, FULL OR. PART
See DON WILSON. SUBURBAN!r^~rZ2——-*-—---
0tO5a * 633 3- Woodward, Ml SITTER WANTED. LIVE-IN.
■ 7-5 UJ . 1____• . Mature period 33tH3»4 QUor 4,
. PART TIME • # jP*8I • sitter and light
.a? jx %•« 23* &«mve"
PHARMACIST REGISTERED
Needed Immediately lor expand
BABY SITTER NEEDED, I TO 5:30 3 day wit. for 3 small children. In our home, Clarkston area, Old-ar person preferred, mutt have own trant,, 625-4340. After I p.
ina Pharmacy Department In Mod-inlnv "
*rn Progressiva 400 bad hospital. ® ,PTiUe JTfR;h,f^TuflE WOMAN ttn.mn.aio nnn ™ mo!"/ilLtS””*0 Va*rs and
Salary/ range,, *10,000-*12.000 an-,
nually. Shift differential for after- -. _------------_ , .
noon and night duly, 50c per hour,;BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN, 50 TO Weekend differential *3.50 on Sat-f *0 years old, FE 3-4947. urday And «-s° Sunday for, BABYSITTER, ) CHILO~2~MOS' •nT •'fcJ2S|L 2“»M»ndlnfl old, near Baldwin and Walton. 9
fringe benefits. Send Resume to, to 5 p.m. 5 day wk. Ffc 5-2520 Pontiac Press Box Number C-l8.1 njgs—«
cense, apply in person to Spartan bodge Inc., »53 Oakland
time, work from our office or your home. 322-3053.
NEW OFFICE,- NEEDS ERIE getlc gal, ere you tho one? Exc. benefits, 1275. Calf Pot Cory, 334-2471, Snolllng A Snalling.
NURSES AIDES
All shifts. Good working conditions. Experienced.and Inexperienced. Apply In person Tuesday and Wednesday from 9:30 to 11 o.m. Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake Avanua, Pontiac.
PART TIME CLERICAL HELP, Nlgnts and waekends. Good typist. Experienced necessary. Must. be reliable. Call 423-1333.
Public Reitions Trainee $6000
21-21, H.S.G., Ideal training program for ambitious men, Mr. Fry, {51-1050.
INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL S722 W. Maple Rd.
Orchard Lake________
Seal estate salesmen. full time openings are available. Experience preferred. Generous commissions on both new and used homes. J. C. HAYDEN. 342-4404.
Real Estate Salesmen
toll real astate at tlw Mall. Ona ot the hottest locations In Oakland Lots of leads — lots ot
BABY SITTER, 2 GIRLS, 4 AND 4, live In, own room. Oependa-ble, $20. PE 6-3393, before 1 p.m.
BAKERY SALESWOMAN, FULL time, no evenings or Sundays, good pay, Anderson Bakery, 124 W. 14 Mila, Birmingham, Ml 4-7114.
PHARMACIST
REGISTERED
Help Wonted fomoli 7
WOMAN FOR COUNTER CLERK, hours 2 to < p.m. Apply Pgntlac Laundry end Dry .Clean*ri, 340 S.
Telegraph, ____ * 1
WOMAN TO CARE-FOR tHfcfel small children, light housekeep-fays. Maplt "
, after 4,
Work Wantad Male
Help Wantad M. ar F.
A-l PAPERING, PAINTING AND • murols, free estimate. 493-0244.
Im
rl C»ri
ALL RESTAURANT HELP, PART and full time experienced help wantad. Good working condition!, good pay, apply In person between 3 ana 4. Groat Dana Rastaurant,
31444 Norlhwattarn Hwy. and Mld-dlabalt. _______ /
A-l CARPENTER. LARGE OR small lobs. Calling tile, paneling ana recreation rooms, a speciality.
• 482-S127._______ ' >
~ haOlIMq, odd J0i5T"CAiX
r(, 332,3149. '
S7.50
as
B100D DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
All RH Positive All RH Nag. with positive factors - I •fLf, r A-neg., B-neg., AB-neg. ft nm
MICHIGAN COMMUNITY . BLOOD CENTER
In Pontloe _ FB 4-9947
1342 Wide Track Dr, W.v Needed Immediately tor expend-! Mon. thru Frl, t t.m.4 p-m.
Ing Pharmacy Department In Mod- Wed. 1 p.m,-7 p.m. _____
ern Progressiva 400 bed hospital.
Salary range, It 0,000-Jl 2,000 annually. Shift differential for after-non and night duty, 50c per hour.
Weekend differential *2.50 on Saturday and *2.50 on Sunday tor any • hour shift. Outstanding fringe benefits. Send Resume to Pontiac Press Box Number C-l>.
CABINET FE 2-599*
----i^lLLitirPAlNflNgr
OR 3-541*. . _
Wantad Household Goods 29
CASH FOR FURNITURE AND J*M pllances, I piece or housatul. Poor. son's. FI 4-7M1.
HAULING AND ODD JOB* REA sonsbio rates. 473-4723.
ODD JOBS, CLEANING, JlAOVING, and tight hauling. Ask ter Bill. FE
2-19*3.________■
„ „ PAINTING, WALl WASHING ANB *,-3° any kind of work to get ready for the holidays. Rats, on demand F 6 3-7327, / - *i
BAR MAID, FAMILY BAR, DAYS, over 35, Steady, rat. FE *3472, BEAUTICIAN, RECENT GRAD-uate, excellent opportunity, salary, commission, hospitalization other benefits. High volumn salon. Bernard Hair Stylists — Bloomfield, Miss Bryce — Ml 7-3033. Birmingham, Miss Pat — Ml 4-6383.
Punch Press
Operators wanted
Prefer a familiarization with progressiva punch press operation. Day and night shift. Apply between 6 a.m.-6 p.m.
Employers Temporary Service
65 S. Mein, Clawson
contacts — lots of business. Will BOOKKEEPING# GENERAL OF-IRECORDS. SHEET MUSIC AND MU'
train. Call Von Realty, 4*2-5800._flee. PSsJ,.1?ni Sic Instruments accessory saleglrl
at GRINNELL 5-PONTIAC MALL, |u|| timer Apply at GRINNELL'S-tor an efficient young lady want-| pontiac MALL ing responsibility and pleasant .k.nteseii—ncfia-rTi—uvrieu
working conditions. Wo witl train R, ? *_ S „_DENTAL HYGIEN
you i 1st. Full time position for de-
aduTE -SALESMAN FOR 3 WELL r*p Bhi ,Mr Aicpr-ivuicT ’ is, I Pefdable person with slhcero In-established routes, prefer expel!-.C*R,,*"HkLN6S|*L^£I,T«£?Ti-f5' ■ In dentistry. Call 363-4410
11 h ret.'Berg Cleaners, AM.'n, ?at247U Sne*il^i1 o
625-3521.______________________ 4 Snellinq. . REGISTER CD NURSES. ACCRED
Roofers wanted, new and re-ciwer, steady work year around. Gale Whitford Roofing and Siding, 437-2446.________________' ..
CURTAIN AND DRAPERY SALES, top salary, downtown Birmingham, Irvlnf Key's Draperies. 444-5280.
EVER CONSIDER A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE
Wo hove recently expanded our office facilities and now have room for several more qualified people Interested In high Income.
If you are presently sailing roo estate and are contemplating, < change or possibly hove never |old
PROGRAMER ANALIST. degree, 35, MARRIED. DESIRES EM PLOYMENT WITH LOCAL CON-
Insurance
ASSIGNED RISK AVAILABLE FOR!QUICK CASH FOR YOUR HOME, 'those, canceled on Auto insurance, -- |aa|
Hempstead, Barrett and A*> soclates. 334-4724 — 1S5 Eliza-bath Lk., RdT ~ ,
Ml
"J-*
26| Wantad Real Estata ' ., 361 Apartmants, Unfaniiskail 3IApEi1wai»Hy>i|4 J>
Apartments, Furnished 37
1ST FLOOR, 3 CLEAN ROOMS AND bath, private entrance, adults. FE 4-334*. ' /
2~R60(At, LBwill. FRiVAte en-
anraaTC—B.• v-T-a'g'z u trance, bath, pop, FE 2-1718.
1 ROOArF'y f FT* h eT aParT-
S5E?. appll*nc*‘- m*nt, 30 West Columbia.
n ft AllfTtOM j ROOMS AND......BATH.
*4# AULIIUN | couple or tody, FE 5-8929.
8049 Dixie HwW OR 3-2717 j--1———*-------------■
“SuilT
Wanted Miscallanaaas
COPPER. BRASBi RADIATORS) starters and generators, C. Dlx-son, OR 3-5849.
, ROOMS, BATH, WEST SIDE, 30' reas., business or prof, woman, non-smoker. FE 5-5944.
SILVER CERfiFiCATBS, *1.25; SIL-/v*r dollars, *).40~ FE 5-4*9*,
Wanted to Rant 7 32
CiRN, CALL DETROIT, 272-4304.IwANTFn- GARAGE FOR CAR, Vl-i
2 ROOMS AND PRIVATE BAtH. Utilities furnished. 243 Norton.
WATERLINE T H A W I N G, CALL' clnlty N. Saginaw. FE 4-8*14. John Anderson, 473-5477.
Work Wanted Female
12
A-1 IRONING. 1 DAY SERVICE.
Maxine McCowen. FE 4-3847.___
SirTlR jrsing. Birm-vlcinlty. New Pontiac area. Good references. Call between 7 p.m.
Share Living Quarters 33
WOMAN TO SHARE HOME WITH older woman. Minimum expenses. More for companionship. 363-7460.
Ingham, Bloomfield subdivision
and 9 p.m. 646-8250 HOUSEWORK OR BABYSITTING. Vicinity of Euclid. FE 8-1974.
NEEDS
Itlon. 338-4490.
RELIABLE MATURE WOMAN available for babysitting. Call after 6:30, 642-9576. seWing done for women and
2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT, everything furnished, suitable for 1 or 2 working men. North end. FE 4-3135. '(
2 ROOMS AND BATH WITH KITCH-en, fully carpeted and draperies, Baldwin area, call 642-5498. After
3 P.m. _______________
BABY
Wanted Real Estate
36
1 TO 50
ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE, attractively decorated, no children or pets. 335-7942.
2 ROOMS AND PRIVATE BATH, clean, adults. 221 North Cass.
2 ROOMS AND-BATH, CHILD WEL-come, *25 per wk., with *50 dep., inquire at 273 Baldwin, Phone 338-4054.
Grand Prix Apartments
1-2 Bedroom Apts., from $120 per Month 1-2 Bedroom Apt, with carpeting, v from $130 per month All utilities except >,electricity fag
• Private Pool pnd Recreation Area • Huge Walk-in and Wardrobe Closets • Insulated, Sound-Proof Walls
• Electric Kitchens • Ceramic Tile Baths
4 Private Parking • RCA Master Antenna
• Air Conditioning • Aluminum Sliding Windows
315 S. Telegraph Rd.-Pontiac
See Manager Apt. No. 1 Phone 334-7171
HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR. CELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 5-0145
Urgently need for Immediate Sale! Pontiac Dally'til 8
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
! OR 3 LARGE CLEAN ROOMS, carpeted, adults, no drinkers, FE 5-5182.
before, you could qualify for-our | girl*. 482-8281 after 2 p next training clast starting soon.1-*— ^
ALL CASH
*ofler "aTme building program) Building Servicei-Supplies 13 For homes any place In Oakland
on excellent bonus and profit sher------ —----------^j County, money in 24 hours
Ing plan,^ plus_ a JHyal ^°™™J*;iA-1 BUILDING MODERNIZATION, all work guaranteed, no lobs too small. 894-8722 op TY 5-5590.
tion schedule. In addition to ample 1 door and model time.
SALESMEN , . ,
Licipi oppor.unity. Profit sharing 832-4131^; sentlal. Shift diffarential and other
ncLr! COOK, LPN NURSES AID, FULL fringe benefits. Staff RN to *8400.!
- VVE NEED YOUI b*.part time, UL 2-2730. I Assistant Head RN to *8750. Con-
EXPERIcNCED AND TRAINEES 'rniiNCEl no - ie—vnu p m i n v tac* Mrs. C. Mallon Kingswood
Many good lobs need to ba filled.|C°^sELOR IF YOU EN JOY, Hospltsl.10300 W. 0 Ml., Fern-
We have the Job orders, now we! -!*?— dale, 39T3200.
need you. Most fee paid, car, expenses. Mrs. Piland.
INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL , gHn 1880 S. Woodward B'ham. 442-8260' 3nel"nfl SALESMAN, WHOLESALE, EXC.
sates ability, there is no limit to —rr.
your potential in this field. Call ^'LL SHINE IN
Angie Rook, 334-2471. Snelllng & JJg* 'deal receplional wot, *240 - — 1 call, Fran Fox, -334-2471, Snalling &
COCKTAIL WAITRESS. NIGHTS, H „ifh , Holiday Inn, Pontiac, 1801 S. Tele-
opportunity tor j;_ man_ jwllh^a, B7aph/5ge Bronson.
Snalling.
good future In mind. *7,000, call,■■■■■■■ Kathv King, 334-2471, Shelling & CULTURED Snelllng. _______. 1 laf ■
TeMI-RETIRED flAAN FOR FARM watchman. 628-2*21
Service station mechanic at
tendant. Experienced. OppurfunitV to learn auto glass business. With future partnership potential. Drayton Pis. area. After 4 p.m., 674-2593. , ■_________
SHOE SALESMAN
Full time, salary plus commission. Blue Cross paid. Becker Shoes, PAntlac Mall. 482-0511.
service station attendant,
starling pay *120 weekly, experienced, part time, *1.85 hourly, -morning an<* evening Shifts, evail-able, Howards South Shell, Long Lake and Telegraph.
STANDARD OIL CAR CARE Cjjji* ...................ledgas-
____ secretary: cap-
able mature resourceful lady. *525 call Donna Allan, 334-2471, Snalling *■ Snelllng.
DENTAL ASSISTANT, CLERICAL, and chair side. Experienced preferred. Desiraable working condi-—tions In Bloomfield area. Submit resume to Pontiac Press Box Number C-22.
DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK, full or part time. Russ' Country Drugs, -4500 Elizabeth Lake Rd.
DRUG CLERK, OVER 21, NIGHTS, good pay. Lake''Canter Drug, 2387 Orchard Lake Road, no phone calls.
EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES, over 21, all 3 shifts, apply between hours 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.. Steak * Egg, 5395 Dixie Hwy. Waterford.!
RN
Supervisors
and
LPN
HEAD NURSES NEEDED
At 231-bed nursing home on all shifts and at SALARIES HIGHER THAN AVERAGE.
DIAL 338-7151
ter has openings for full time oline attendants. Hours 7 a.m.
p.m., off Sundays. Good P«y»! FULL OR PART TIME
FOLTJER AND PACKAGER FORL.. 4Nn PY
Forse Shirt unit. Elite Cleaners, SALAD AND GRILL GIRL, EX-1024 N. Woodward, Royal Oak.
- _ FOR A
Confidential
interview
Call
DICK BRYAN FE 4-0921
AT KAMPSEN REALTY^. BUILDING COMPANY
1071 W. Huron St. Pontiac
HUDSON'S HOME IMPROVEMENT WE BUY
fFKITFP 4-0363-
r lcqj I crc 4713 Djxie Hwy.
Call Hudson's Pontiac Home Im-“*“TS7ovemeni Center for: . ' ‘
EXPERIENCED COOK. DeUSA'S Bar and Restaurant. Rochester. 651-3604,
FULL AND PART TIME, NO Experience needed, age IS to 50, *2 an hr. Call 334-8592.
LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED, must be 25 or over. Call FE
2-9144._______________________
GROOM FOR HORSES, EXPERI-erica not necessary but desired EM 34)009
excellent conditions. Part time to 10 p.m., Sundays, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Call Ml 7-0700.
STATION ATTENDANT, MIDDLE-aged, days, some mechanical experience, 4396 Highland Rd. 682-9756.
{TORE HELPER AND TRUCK driver. Full time. 334-1200 bet. 0-2
For women who are Interested in having*1 a good steady income. Experience unnecessary. AVON sells itself. Call FE 4-0439 or write
P.O. Box 91, Drayton Plains.___|
FULL TIME CLEANING, DAYS. Rocco's, 5171 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaiins. _________
THE EGG AND I
would like experienced cooks on all shifts. Starting pay *2.25 ,0« GENERAL OFFICE, FINE OPEN
GAL WITH MEDICAL KNOWL-edge will ba top secretary here, *400. Call Fran Fox, 234-2471, Snelllng 8* Snelllng
per hour. Apply In person, N. Woodward, Royal Oak.
TOOL DESIGNERS
(1) Year Board Experiences
Tool Makers Hone Operator Turret Lathe Operator Floor Inspector Milling and Drilling
SET-UP AND OPERATOR
M. C. Mfg., Co.
11* Indlanwood Rd. Lake Orion 692-2711
An equal opportunity employer
ing for a good typist, and varied duties, *2^. Call Kathy King, 334-2471, Snelllng * Snelllng.
TREE TRIMMER Experienced tree trimmer Is wanted for the Parks and Recreation Dept, of CITY OF BIRMINGHAM— steady year round work, full bane fits Including group hospital and life Insurance, retirement, paid holidays, sick time and vacation, Starting rate *2.81. An equal opportunity employer. Apply personnel Office, Municipal Building, 151
Martin St., Birmingham.____________
fRUCK DRIVER, 40 HOUR WEEK, steady work, hospitalization, paid vacation, Equal Opportunity Employer. Macauley's Inc., 15188 W. 8 Mile Rd., Green-* Shopping Center. 547-3000, Detroit. ______________
WANTED: GOOD RELIABLE HELP , Willing to work and receive good pay. Many fringe benefits available; 2 weeks paid vacation. 625-3867, Hennings Maintenance Co. __________
WATCHMAKERS
WORK IN DEPARTMENT DRE) GOOD PAY, HOSPITAL! TION BONUS, VACATION PAY LL 941-2115- ________
WELDER AND LIGHT MAINTE nance, steady employment, apply ,n person. Michigan Building Components, 1000 Decker Rd., Walled Lake. See Mr. Thompson.
GENERAL OFFICE $325-$525
Receptionists, typists, accounting clerks, many varied positions, Many fee paid. Mrs. Tanner. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 80 S. Woodwrrd. B'ham 442-8240
GENERAL DRUG CLERK, PRE fer experienced reliable mature woman, would cdhslder training applicant with good references. Union Lake Drug. 8050 Cooley Lake Rd., Union Lk., Mich. 343-4134.
GENERAL OFFICE, 1 GIRL SPOT, ability to talk to people, nice location, *303. call Helen Adams, 334-247), Snelllng «■ Snelllng.
GIRLS DAY OR NIGHTS. EXCEL-lent working conditions. Paid vacation. Apply Sherman Prescription 15 mi. and Lahser. Birmingham.
GRILL COOK WANTED. APPLY IN person, Gava's Grill. 175 Baldwin,
HOSTESS, APPLY HOLIDAY^ INN Pontiac, 1*01 S. Telegraph) See Mr, Bronson. —"
SALESLADIES
Good income and full benefits for mature* stylish women who enjoy customer contact. Full time and part time available. Contact Manager for appointment. Winkle-man's* Pontiac Mall.
MAN DRAWING F.t.C.A. TO WORK in parking lot. 332-8688.
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST, ASCP may be eligible or equivalent. Full time, permanent position. Excellent starting salary, regular Increases. Generous benefits Including, retirement plan. Contact Personnel Director, Saginaw General Hospital. 1447 N. Harrison, Sag!
, Michigan.
Secretary—Pontiac Area
Executive needs mature, experienced , girl. Salary commensurate with ability. Position open Immediately. Call 777-32*0, for Interview.
OPENINGS, USHERS, CASHIERS, concession help. Apply after 6. p.m., Pontiac Orlve-ln Theater, 2435 Dlx-la Hwy,
SECRETARIAL SKILLS FOR VIP outgoing personality, *430,
Donna Allen, 334-2471, Snelllng Snelllng.
SECRETARY, EXPERIENCED, 20-30, single, for small architects office. 335-2414.
SECRETARY
Mature. Prestige position with potential unlimited- Excellent benefits.
WILLIAMS SERVICES, INC V 353-1030
SECRETARY
Experienced In office work. Must be table to type. *70 week. 1 girl office, Clarkston area. 425-2474.
SHARP SECRETARY IS NEEDED here, type, file and shorthand, superb spot, *325. Call Pat Carey, 334-2471, Snelllng «■ Snelllng.
SHIRT PRESS OPERATOR, CAB-Inat unit, paid vacations, 6 cents a shirt plus Incentive. 482-2340.
SINGLE WOMAN FOR LIGHT housework, good pay. Call between 8 a.m. and 12 noon, 334-2383.
SPARE TIME TODAY?
MAKE IT PAYI Profitable Temporary Work
lincTCCCEC All Types Office Work
nuoltooto CALL MANPOWER 332-0386
Oay and Eve. shifts. Apply Ondti vciD
Johns Pancake House. 1340 S.JSTARTYOUR .NEW YEAR _OUT
Woodward at 14Vk Mite Rd., Blr-fnlngham
HOUSEKEEPER. LIVE-IN O R stay 3 nights. *50 a wk. Days,
442-4310, eves. 424-0317.__
HOUSEKEEPER) EXPERIENCED, refs, 2 days, 358-3143.
HOUSEKEEPER—c o m p I e t a charge, no children,. 5 days weak, own transportation. 481-0799
HOUSEKEEPER- LIVE IN. CARE for Invalid. FE 2-944*.
HOUSEWIVES-MOTHERS Have 15 or mare flexible . hours weekly? Cen you use, *1204150 monthly? Pick- up and deliver Fuller Brush orders" bear home. North ot M-S9 phone Linda Kretz, 334-4401. Sooth of M-59 phone Betty Owen, MA 4-4193.
WELDERS-FITTERS
EXPERIENCED
EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS ARTCO INC.
3020 Indianood Lake Orion
hOW'S YOUR TYPING SKILLS? If they are average, we've got the spot for you, *260. Call Fran Fox, 334-2471. Snelllng «i Snelllng. JOHN R. LUMBER. 7940 .COOley Lake Rd., Union Lake. Full time cashiers and salesgirls
YOUNG MEN
Pleasant Outdoor Work PONTIAC AREA EVES. 2-10 P.M.
Help Wantad Female
WAITRESSES. COOKS. FULL, Bart time. Super Chief FE 2-4*51.
$60460
GENERAL OFFICE-TYPIST Age 21 up. Must type 40 WPM INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 w. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971
$8041004120 bookkeepers-secretaries Age 23 up. Very good skills INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 w. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971
Kitchen employes
Require clean dependable personnel fo 230 bad nursing .home kitchen. General kitchen dimes a well as some cooking Involved. Apply In person on Wednesday, Jan. 3rd at 10 a.m. or Sat. Jan. 6th at 10 a.m. to Mrs. Johns, Dietltlon, Seminote Hills Hurslng Home, 532 Orchard Lake Aye. LAOY FOR WAITING ON CUSTOM-ers, marking and_.assambly. Ogo
A TELEPHONE 6lRL
81.75 per hour to start plus bonusts «nd chance for advancement for experienced telephone solicitor. Call Mrs. Petty 676-2231 9 a.m.-5 p.m
LADY OVER 35
For personnel work Steady work history Work In a pleasant office CALL MR. FRANCIS INTERNATIONAL personnel 1080 W. Huron. Pontiac 334-4971
ACCOUNTING CLERK, * EXPERI enced In payroll, payables, ra celvables, billing or cost, Cierk-typlst, experienced typist for customer order department. Apply Rochester Paper Co., Mill St., Rochester, Mich.
ARE YOU LOOKING- FOR A WAV to help people, we have the spot for you. *240, cell Wanda May, _ 334-2471, Snalling > Snalling.
ARE YOU SHARP ON TYPING and shorthand? Prestlga spot In •op Co., *412. Call Pat Cary, 334 2471, Snelllng 4, Snelllng.
ATTENTION
Job openings in tha following dt-partmants 1 Kitchen 7 Laundry
3. Housekeeping 4 4 Nurses Aides with experience Apply 50 w. Square Lake Rd Bloomfield Hills 338-0345.
BABY PHOTOGRAPHERS
We need high school graduates to train as baby photographars for our department store studio In Pontiac. No previous experience-necessary. salary white In training, Minimum aga 1*. Great opportunity for advancement. Calf Da-
troll Collect. 272-4342._____
•AbY SITt.ER, IN MV. HOMf. Will prlvlde transportation. 473-191(7 after 5 p.m.
iABYSITTiR IN mV homST61 live in. Call alter 5, 135-3042.
i »
KELLY'SERVICES
125 N. Saginaw
442-9450 331-0331
An Equal Opportunity Employer KEY PUNCH. EXTENSIVE EXPER-lenca necessary, IBM equipment, If you quality call 444-1429 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Cleaners,
Plfcf.
LPN NAME YOUR PRICE
For tuH or part-time work. Afternoon and midnight shifts. Union Lake area. EM 3-4121
MAIDS WITH CARS
20 NEEDED
*1.50 to *2.00 par hour, *42-5530. MANICURISTS, EXCELLENT OP-portunlty, salary, commission, high volumn salon. Bernard Hair Stylists — Bloomflald# Miss Bryce, Ml 7-3033, Birmingham, Miss Pat Ml 4-13*3.________________
Manager
ASSISTANT
manager
Manager and assistant manager tor our new (Marianne Fashion Shop) in the new (Pontiac Fasnion Mall). Excellent salary plus company benefits at no cost to you. Apply to Miss Stebbins for interview. 682-4914.
MATURE BABY'SlTTER. LIV# IN, 5 nights,
MATURE SITTER FOR 1 YEAR old, own transportation and rat, 334-5509.
with a bang. IBM or Key. Punch Operators needed, *320, call Wanda May, 334-2471, Snelllng *■ Snelllng,
. STENOS TYPISTS CLERK-TYPISTS DICTAPHONE OPERATORS KEY PUNCH OPERATORS
ALL OFFICE SKILLS NEEDED AGE 10-45
Experience need not be recent
Work In area of your choice 2-3 days at a time, a week or two a month, all yeor or lust ba or_ call,
Good Pay and Bonus 869-7265 or 642-3055 WITT SERVICES, INC.
725 $. Adams Plaza. Rm. ,126 B'ham
TELEPHONE GIRL
$1.50 per hour to start* ptui bonuses and chance for advance* ment* for experienced telephone solicitor* call 334-1029* 9 a.m.-5 p.m._____________________
THE EGG AND I
has openings on all shifts for experienced waitresses. Our girls average *120 a weak. Apply In person, ,2820 N. Woodward, Royal Oak. . _________
TELEPHONE GIRLS, HOURLY rate plus commission. FE 2-9019 TYPING AND CLERICAL, MONDAY thru Frl., 0 a.m. to 5:3g p.m. Apply at 49045 Pontiac Trail, Wlxom City Hall.____________
TYPING ABILITY, WE HAVE lust what you're looking for, *240, call Wanda May, 334-2471, Snalling B Snalling.
TYPIST, EXPERIENCED FOR CPA office, Mrs. Sharfman, 391-7404.
V/AITRESS WANTEO. NIGHTS, AP-ply In person before 2 p.m., 31 E. Walton, Hudson'! Dinar. No
phone calls.________________
WAITRESS, EXPERIENCE, AFTER.
WAITRESS-BAR MAID. NEAT. LI 9-5089, Gay 90's bar. 3*01 N. Wood
ward. Royal Oak. ________
WAITRESS FOR NIGHtS, INQUIRE Payton Place. 7* Baldwin.
WAITRESSES
CURB GIRLS TELE-TRAY OPERATOR
Day & night shift, excellent earnings, profit sharing, fret hospitalization, apply In person. Big Boy, S. Telegraph, Pontiac, 334-4503,
WAITRESS WANTED. JOE‘sl CON ey Jsland, 1451 S. Telegraph. 338 8020. '_____________________________
WAITRESSES
Experienced or will train. Uncle Johns Pancake House. 1360 Woodward at 14Vfc Mila Rd.* I mlngham.
WStYRfSFwXhTED, 1*0 StlNbAYS
no holwoyi. Inquire 444-4620._
WANTfeft KITCHEN HiLP. SOME cafeterle experience desired. Call
451-4311. ___________________
WANTED EXPERIENCED WOMAN to cere for 10 month old child end do housework S days weakly, I a.m. to 5 p.m., muat have own trans, Pontiac area, call 334-4574, WOMAN TO HOSTESS AND SU?fft visa dining room, we need a me lure woman who has tha abllty fo suparvlsa, good wages plus benefits, gig goy Rastaurant, Tala-graph and Huron Itraat, Interview, 1-4 p.m.
NEW CLASSES STARTING—LEARN Real Estate now. For information call 343-7700.
SIDING
ROOFING
HEATING & COOLING BATH MODERNIZATION ' KITCHEN MODERNIZATION WATER HEATERS
Hudson's
PONTIAC MALL
Business Service
15
PRECISION PRODUCTION, AIR craft - prototype • experimental
3 ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITIES furnished, adults only. 75 Clark.
3 ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITIES)
deposit. 335-2*14.____________
3-ROOM APARTMENT, UTILITIES furnished.
WRIGHT REALTY
382 Oakland FE 2-9141
3 ROOMS AND BATH, N7e. SIDE,
lights and heat* newly decorated*
338-6330. ___
3 ROOMS UFPER, REAL NICE.
I 334-3971 anytime. ___________ '
W^,JRA?S 3-ROOM BACHELOR APARTMENT, n 'utnn P private bafh and entrance, every.
______________Drayton P aint minfl fUfnj,hed. FE 5-7805
ALL CASH 10 MINUTES 3 rooms AND BATH. AIR-CON-ditioned. Hot water heat. Adults
only. New. 335-9760. '
3 tARGE ROOM MODERN NEAR Wisner school on Oakland* nicely furnished* private entrance* automatic gas heat. Inquire 900 Oakland.
ounty, money in 24 nours.
YORK
even If behind in payments ot under torclosure. Agent. 527-6400.
CASH
"48 HOURS
LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES
WRIGHT
382 Oakland Ave. ,_FB 2-9)41
3 ROOMS, BATH, NEAR PONTIAC,-*25. wkly. Including utilities, adults, sec., dep., EM 3-4465.
, 3 ROOMS AND BATH, ALSO I
We have the sales force, financing,j room. no drinkers. 154 N. Perry.
«sV'r,blVn2rs.*Weer'woCr* h?rd *.*< .Mp^eqlta^M-2TO3 N°R‘
OR 4-0324.
*30 week. 391-3324.
I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT YORK AT 674-1698_____
4 ROOMS AND BATH, BABY WEL-come, *35 per wk., with *75 dep., all utilities paid by us. Inquire at 273 Baldwin. Phone 338-4054.
LISTINGS NEEDED FARMS-HOMES-ACREAGE I RIDGEWAY, REALTOR MLS _________________338-4084;
LOTS-WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUE REALTY, 642 4220
BACHELOR, 2 ROOMS, BATH, ctbse In. Clean: modern, quiet. 335-3590.
NOTICE:
COMFORTABLE HOME, 1-BED-room, also stud 16 apartment*
I White Lake* 1-744-7458. (efficiency APARTMENT* AIR conditioned* all utilities* Union
Triangle Industries. 135 W. High- CLARKSTON AREA HOME, LOTT Lake area) *132 monthly/ 363-7571
land Rd., Highland, Mich. 485-1303.
RESTAURANT HELP WANTED Dishwashers, bus boys, waitresses. Original Esquire, 11 Ml. Rd. Lasher. Harvard Row Shopping Center. Apply In person, 1-3 p.m.
RETIREE TO WORK AJ CIGAR counter, must live in Drayton Plains area. Apply Thrifty Drugs, 4(95 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains
SHOULD YOU
Make an employment change? NOW IS THE TIME I
Michigan Bell
1345 Cass Ave., Detroit Phone: 393-2*15______
Credit Advisors 16-A
GET OUT OF DEBT
AVOID GARNISHMENTS, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT, HARASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND LOSS OF JOB. We have helped thousands of people with creditor problems by providing a planned
WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit as to amount owed and number of creditors. For those who realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT ..."
LICENSED AND BONDED Home Appointment Gladly Arranged No Cost or Obligation for Interviews HOURS 9-7 P.M.—SAT. 9-5 p.m.
DEBT AID
713 Rlker Bldg.____________FE 2-0181
5854 S. Main
WANTED AAANAGER FOR DRIVE-In restaurant. Must have food experience. Will Interview either male or * female. Call Mrs. Haines. FE 2-1740 mornings for appoint-ihent. _______________________;________
Sales Help Male-Female 8-A CAN YOU SELL?
If so, we have an opening for 2 people Interested In making money. Real Estate experience helpful but not necessary. We have e good building program and an attractive commission schedule. For In-, tervlew call — Mr. Taylor, OR 1 4-0304, Eves. EM 3-7544.__
Convalescent-Nursing 21
OAK HILL REST HOME, PRIVATE Exc. Cafe. 627-3650.___________
Moving and Trucking 22
LOCKWOOD MOVING COMPANY — we will move or store your furniture. No extra charge for weekends, 894-8722 or TY 5-55W.
Painting and Decorating 23
PAINTING, PAPERING _______Tupper* OR 3-7061
PAINTING AND PAPER ING. You're next. Orvel Gkfcumb* 673-0496. ____ ___________
PAINTING AND GENERAL RE pair. Licensed. 625-2101______________
Upholstering
24-A
CAREER
POSITION
Nationwide corporation needs a men who cen grow Ipto sales management. We measure a mans value bv hls habits, ambition and goals, not by hls |ob — or Income.
First years earnings *9,880 to *11,000 bracket, plus override, plus stock options and security.
We are seeking .a sincere man over 21 with a strong desire; for success. t _
For private interview by appointment only, Phone:
EL 6-9178 PERSONNEL
AGED FURNITURE
ReuphQlstored* better than naw at half fhq price. «Big savings also on carpet and draperies. < Call 335* 1700 for FREE estimate In your home.
Transportation
25
CAR AND FUEL FURNISHED TO driver to Florida about Jan. 12, Ref. Call eves. 482-0434.
RIDER
Florida.
6y8t.
AND ACREAGE OWNERS. Belngl o° 6lt2 2UA
Ear
tact us before you list I
Clarkston Real Estate
cal! OR 3-1943* after 6:30 p.r
DARLING COURT
New Luxurious
" ALL-ELECTRIC APARTMENTS
Awarded the Gold Medallion by Edison for excellence in All-Electric Living
1- and 2-Bedroorti Apts, from $165.00 per month Including All Utilities
PLUS
• Clean. Electric HetiT
• General-Electric
Kitchen----------
Including .Wesher/Drver, DIslF washer, Garbage Disposal, Refrigerator, Range and Oven . . . Plenty of Formica-Top Cupboards, Lazy Susan Pantry.
• Insulated Soundproof Walls
• Central TV Antenna
• Private Paved Parking
• -Central Air
Conditioning
• All Rooms Fully Carpeted _
Including Spacious Living Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Bedrooms, Hallways and Closets.
• Storage Area in Each Unit
• 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
MA 5-5821
SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH pond, or smell take for hunt club. Write BILL JENNINGS, 37411 Grand River, Farmington, Mlqhl-gan or call 474-5980.____________j
WHY NOT START OUT the new, year by engaging our staff here at Times Realty to handle your real estate problems. We have1 gfSgjjijg
as wars* maanc nwallahln tn VO IllwHw
every means available to you such as mortgage money, all FHA and VA closings In our office, Investment buyers for home or acreage, and 18 capable salespeople to assist you.' Call for your assistance now and we will have one of the following salespeople at your door within 15 minutes from the time you call— Allen LeFontalne, George Ver-not, Bert Hungerford, Florence Bllmka, Don Genareux, Shirley Burton, Beverly Williams, Rich-erd Williams, Tony Manzella, Ray Hayward, Rev Hunter, Art; Glen, Bob Frey, Bob Monahan,
I Bill Oliver, Russ Johnson, Kay Svetcos, Pat Flood. No obligation, no high pressure, lust a warm welcome. Thank You.
TIMES ■
„ SPOT CASH
FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS FE 4-7005.
WANTED-HOUSES TO SELL Call BREWER REAL ESTATE, 724 Rtker Bldg. FE 4-5181.
We Need Listings
Buyers Galore J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc.
Reel Estate — Insurance — Bulldlnc 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) - OR 4-030! Evenings call EM 3-7544
Help Wanted M. or F. 8 Help Wanted M. or F.
FURNITURE EXPERIENCE RE-qulred* full tlm«* any age* good conditions and pay. Bloomfield area* House of Bedrooms* Mr. Goldman. 334-4593._______
No Experience Necessary
*750 to start minimum monthly guarantee If you meat our requirements. Car necessary.
Details at personal Interview. Call 542-4534.
REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Bon Real Estate needs 3 more saWsmen for the Utica office. Expedience not necessary — will strain. Hospitalization and up to *150 per week to start. Call Mr. Campbell, 731-1010. ____________
SALES TRAINEES AGE 18-25
High school graduate. Neat appearing. Who would Ilka, to prog-rasa fo learning operatlori of local business. Experience not necessary.
SALARY DISCUSSED AT INTERVIEW
Inctructions-Schools
10
LEARN BULLDOZERS, GRADERS, drag line*, scrapers, backhoes. FIELD TRAINING. GREER 164-
7427. 01 approved.__________
PIANO INSTRUCTION AND~"prT-vate tutoring — ell subjects through high school. 442-98*4.
REGISTER NOW
Day and evening classes
Federal & State
IncomeTax
Course
Licensed by Mich. Stele Board of Education
MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
14 E. HURON 132-5*9*
Aluminum Bldg. Hems
ALUMINUAA SIDING. ROOFING IN stalled by "Superior's, — Your authorized Kaiser dealer. FE 4 3177. _____________________
ALUMINUM GUTTERS
and down spouts, S.75 per foot, call now 844-1908, and save
Boots and Accessories
BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family boating headquarters. Starcraft aluminum and flberglas Shell Lake and I.M.P. flberglas. 1245 S. Woodward at Adams Road. Ml 74)133. Sno-Mobila sales, service qnd storage
Floor Sanding
CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND old floor sanding. FE 2-5789.
Brick A Block Service
BRICK. BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT work, fireplaces specialty. 335-4470.
Building Modernisation
A QUALITY GUARANTEED, licensed, free estimates. Spring:
field Bldg. Co., 625-2128._
REMODELING AND NEW HOMES. Deal direct with builder. Will supply ref. License and bonded, MY 3-7291. ________~
CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. Linoleum, formica, .tile. Carpeting. 741 N. Perry, FE 2-4090.
Carpentry
LAST CHANCE!!
To Enroll in Our 1968 . Training Course
CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE
BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF ITS 1968 ... "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN."
• Fundamental
Salesmanship
• Preparation for Board
Exams
• Real Estate Law •' Appraising
THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS, STARTING JANUARY 8th. CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY CO., 377 S. TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 P.M.
FOR INFORMATION ON ENROLLMENT PLEASE CONTACT
MR) JACK RAL>H FE 8-7161
A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR ~ Family rooms, rough or finished; dormers, porches, recreation rooms, kitchens, bathrooms. State, licensed. Reas. Call after 5 p.m 482-8448._____________.■_____________
CARPENTRY AND PAINTING New and repair. FE 5-1331
CARPENTRY AND CEMENT work. Freo estimates. UL 2-5252.
CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR Free est. 335-4529, 335-7585.
CUSTOM CARPENTRY, BASE ments finished. Paneling, cel lino tile, formlce work. Reasonable. 673-1375? ___________- . .
INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS paneling, 48 years experience — "FE 2-1235._____________________
BLOCK AND CEMENT WORK Pontiac, 391-1173. ________________________-
Commercial Bldg., Modernization
COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL remodeling specialists GUINN'S CONST. CO. 334-7677 or 391-2671
Dressmaking, Tailoring
BETTY JO'S DRESSMAKING Waddings* a Iterations 674-3704
Drivers Training
Drywall
iavestroughing
MAS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE eevestroughlng service free est. 673-6844. Licensed — bonded
Excavating
BACKHOE; LOADER WORK, DRY wells, septic fields, footings, dozer
work, till. 482-3842 or 334-8948._
END LOADING OOZES WORK, septic fields, dry well*. FE S-1081,
fencing
PONTIAC FENCE CO
5932 Dixie Hwy. 423-1840
6. sNyder7"Ploor laying
sending end finishing. FE 5-0592.
A-l NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS — Cell Jack. Save the lack. 338-41 IS,
OR 3-9590. _________
NEW ROOFS FOR OLD. HOT ROOp-thlngles, 24 hrs., free estimate, re-pelr roofs. FE H725.
QUALITY ROOFING. NEW AM 6 reroof. Bonded material. Free pa*, tlmates. Reasonable. 682-7514.
floor Tiling
ROOFING
For any. housa up to 1000 square feet, *99.00. Call now *64-1900 and
save. - •, ■___________
WOMACK ROOFING, REROOP ^, Complete Ins, coverage. Free estimates. 338-4545. ______ -
Jantiorinl Services
FLOOR SERVICE, OUR SPSCIALtY FE 441304, 473-8797 -
SIGNS. HAND PAINTED. MADe TO order. Indoor end outdoor. Compare our prices. 335-3349.
Lumber
TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or aluminum.
Building and Hardware supplies._
1025 Oakland FE 4-4595
ROBERT SCOTT, SNOW PLOWING.
,________3384779.
SNOW PLOWING AND TOW SftiV. Ice FE S-7455.
Moving, Storage
SNYDER BROS. MOVING CO. WE move anything — PIANOS. Mov-Ing Experts, 852-2410.
SNOW PLOWING, CONTRACT only, no seasonal charge, pay aa you go. Worked on at your convenience, day or night. 338-4134. Ask for Jim.
SNOWPLOWING AND REMOVAL
Painting and Decorating
A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON FE 44344
A-1 PAINTING. WORK GUARAN teed. Free estimates. 4824X28.
A-l QUALITY PAINTING. REASON
able. 428-4423. ________________
COMPLETE DECORATOR SERVICE have your home custom styled end color coordinated by professionals. Carpet, draperies, new furniture, custom designed furniture by our own craftsman, reupholstery, appliances. Appointments In your home. Don Frayars, the complete service furniture store, 1188 W. Huron, 332-9205.
EXPERT PAINTING AND PAPER hanging. Call Herbie. 673-4798
PAINTING, PAPERING, WALL cleaning, paper removal. B. T Sandusky. FE 4-8548. UL 2-3190, QUALITY W6RK ASSURED! PAINt ng; papering, wall washing, *73-1872.
Photography
■ED A COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHER? Cell DONOVANI That'S H&S DONOVAN. 852-2351
Piano Tuning
PIANO TUNING • REPAIRING OSCAR SCHMIDT____ FE 1-5211
Plastering Service
A-1 PLASTERING, NEW AND RE pier. 338-2702,
PLASTER REPAIRS Prompt service. 334-3715 PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATE! D. Meyers, 343-9595._____
Excavating
Plumbing & Heating
CONDRA PLUMBING 8, HEATING Sewer, water lines — FE 8-0443.
Restaurants
BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT Sliver Lake — Telegraphs t Huron,
. JACKS DRIVE INN
Cor. Baldwin & MOntcalm FE 4-7182 Frank and Jeanatte Slaybaugh Prop*.
Rental Equipment
ENT- FLOOR CLEANING AND polishing equipment, heaters, mite. 62 W. Montcalm. J32-9271. Jack-son'*. ,___________• ■
Roofing
Sign Painting
Snow Plowing
Elmo Lynch 335-7578.
SNOW I ■■ rate*. 674-3504.
SNOW PLOWING 473-5442
PLOWING. REASONABLE
Tree Trimming Service
A-1 TREE SERVICE BY B&L Fra* estimate. FE 5-4449, 674-3510. TREE TRlMMlRG AND R£MdV-al. Reasonable. 391-1444. _____
Trucking
A-l LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hauled reasonable. FE 4-13S3.
HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAMU your prlca. Any time. FE 8-0095.
LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, garages cleaned. 474-1242.
LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grav> el an* front-end loading. FE 24)601.
LIGHT HAULINd. MOVING, ReAS.
312-7516
Truck Rental
Trucks to Rent
15-Ton Pickups llY-Ton Stake
TRUCKS - TRACTORS ANO EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trallers
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
825 S. WOODWARD FE 441441 FI 4-1441
Open Dally Including Sunday
Water Softeners
SALES AND RENTALS ^ Culllgan Water Condt._____334-9944
Well Clonnors
BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walla cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction guaranteed, insured, FE 2-1431. WALL WASHlNd, RBASQNAftLf" FB 4-1384, 4734797
WALL WASHING, 11 YBAM IX-parlance, rtaa. FB 2-901S.
Weil Drilling
2" WELL DRILLING, FOINT chengtd, A pump service, UL 2-1131.
I
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
toUiilrtl, Ftrabhtd 371 Rooms with Board
43 Sals Hodsos
49
LlVlNO ROOM AND BE BROOM, COMFORTABLE ROOM. COOKING 2-BEDROOM
kitchen prlv., private entrance, .>410 --OHne —— dtjU| »'
Chm'.m Cftntob Rtvtr Or.
NEW t BEDROOM APT. ALL UTILI-fimSnSL amn only, 007-5991.
GENTLEMEN NON - 'DRINKER* lirWfcS, >10 weakly. 673.-3791 aRer 4.
MEWL? FURNISHED 3 ROOMS lAOflS STEEPING ROOMS, $14 and bath, private antranca, utilities Inc. Closa to downtown. OR 5IIU. " ...
MlVAfdrO.EAN.^4 ROOMS AND
bath, couple. UL 2-1320.
SHARP 1 ROOM. POR MATURE BOfson. >15 plus $35 dap. 474-1501.; ffiSfl 3-ROOM APARTMENTS, no drinkers. FE 5-9571.
Warm, clean 3 room, $75 dep.
Newly decorated. $35 wk. FE ' 4.7453.____________________
LARGE' SLEEPING ROOM, MAN
Pontiac, 132-4939._
MODERN SLEEPING ROOM FOR
NEAR MALL, BUS LINE, 17 ROS-
shlre Ct., 338-8924._
NICE* SLEEPING .ROOM PLUS meals and laundry °1t desired, old-1 er man preferred, no drinkers. Call FE 4-1019. |
Ml ELIZABETH LAKE Estates, nl«e snjall home, pretty . landscape on large double lot, $10.-900 with $2300 'down. 7 per cent land contract, payments $13 monthly, $731-1740 after 6 p.m. BEVERLY MILLS r- BY OWNER, 3 bedroom, VMi baths, brick ranch with fireplace, dining area, 1’A car garage, screened porch, pa^o, paneled recreation room with bar. Recently redecorated includlngVnew drapes and carpeting. Well landscaped. 5Va per cent mortgage, can be assumed. All this for only $31,500. Call $43-8226. 1
BIRMINGHAM AREA DIFFERENT RANCH
Sals House
EASTSfDE PARK
Vacant 2 bedroom ranch, ges heat full basement, carpeting and pa ' Ing, attached garage, ZERO da FHA approved, owners agiht $74-1491. ' -_
TIZZY
By Kate Osann
6
ferry farms sub.
Six-room bungalow. Full basement, gas heat, 0 down# about $52.00 a month. Call:
YORK
Aaartannts. Unfurnished 38 quiet, clean gentleman on-
Hfwnnnnii, vnnH.”TT. “ 1 ly7need apply, . West Side, FE
2-3517.
|rOOM FOR WORKING Lake Orion area. 42M424.
,'?&rR001 WORKING LADY, CLOSE fb mo. 1 mo. Security dep-Apply Oak Northern HI.# 334-2674, after 5 p.m.
43
Grove# 44 Prall St. Sec Caretaker. . -----------... n .
1-BEDROOM DUPLEX, l ■ CHILD! ROOIWS Wlfll bOOrO welcome, utilities furnished, Call;~~^
after 6 p.m. 625-1610._______% ■ 1 GOOD. HOME FOR NICE PERSON
1~BEOROOM, STOVE, RE FR IG- private room, middle-aged
erator, air-conditioning, balcony preferred. 682-8152._______________________
overlooking lake, adults, no pets,! private ROOM. HOME COOKED convenient location, 625-1775. j meals. Close to plant. 335-1679 2 BEDROOMS, GAS HEAT OR 3-3831
place. Good closets. Gas heat.|
$43,900
laaro*eoX $29*700 Vard ""Naif mil* N. of Bloomtl.ld £111. large patio. ,$29,700. Mllo. ^h. tn cnn loniai nome
a quick sa4er.$1245Q0. with! terms.
CR 4-9250.
Drive out M5? just west of Cass,
Lake Rd. to Canoelslick. Directly , . OFF UNIVERSITY DRIVE
behind the Dan Mattingly Business Center.
DAN MATTINGLY
NO DOWN PAYMENT, $9950, COM-ptete on your igt, Art Daniels
Realty .22177 Michigan, Dearnorn,, BEDROOM FURNISHED
Owner moving~out of s^a,te, all
Nice lowcost home, 3 bedrooms, excellent condition, must see inside to appreciate, $360 down pay
l-RDOM APARTMENT.
Village, close to Huron, 1st and last month rent advance, $50 sec.
dep., FE $-0742. V________I i2 STORY BLDG. 20X 40. SUIT-
~~5 ROOMS HEAT FURNISHED UP- ABLE FOR CAR REPAIRS, STOR-per, $90 monthly. 682-5490.___I AGE, ETC.
t~rooms,'$27 wk. deposit. i[ WRIGHT REALTY
child, 420 W..Huron, before 4 Pm j382 Oakland FE 2-9141
2836 ORCHARD. LAKE
KEEGCT HARBOR ICMVnFD
STORY BLDG _20X 40. SUIT- |Q1 N I I J I ■ tl
ly American with modern-con-jWILL^ ACCEPT ALL APPlICA-| veniences. $41,500.
OL 1-0222 m^ht, 10-4, 363-7001, evenings, 887-
4553
furnishings included. Sharp ranch on paved street with city water and sewer. excellent buy at $13,900 with terms. ' ^
Mattingly
WE WISH
We had a dozen values like this. This lovely 3-bedroom brick ranch In Pontiac-Watklns Estates can be yours for only $26,500. Includes such features as carpeting and drapes, full finished basement, plus 2-car attached garage, fenced yard and many more features ybu must see to appreciate. Cash to mortgage, new terms or trade.
? YOU
Must see this lovely Weinberger hornfe on Rutherford Ct.‘ It features lake front on Lake Oakland. J large. bedrooms and bath and a half, a4 full basement with extra lot on blacktop street, close to schools and shopping. This home is immaculate and deserves your inspection. Priced at only $36,900.
Gas HA heat.
Terms.
Nicholie & Harger Co.
Eve. call MR. ALTON 673-6130 _ , W. Huron St. FE 5-1113
FE 2-4280 after 4 p.m.
americanherTtage APARTMENTS 1- and 2-bedroom, all modern conveniences, carports and all utilities Included In rent. No children
Manager'on Premises__673-514$
BASEMENT APARTMENT. PARf-ly furnished. $80 a mo. Can be seen after 5? 314 Oakland Ave.
BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS
Ideally situated In BloomflekLBlr-mlngham area, luxury 1- and 2-bedroom apartments available tor Immediate possession from $135 per month Including carpeting, Hotpoint, air conditioning and appliances, large family kitchens, swimming pool and large sun deck — All utilities except electric. No detail of luxury has been overlooked In Bloomfield Orchard Apts, located on South Blvd. (20 Mila Rd.), between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway. Open daily, 9 to 8 p.m. Sunday, 42 to 8 p.m. For Information: UN 4-0303. Mgr. 335-5670, FE 8-0770.
Cash for all types of property
KINNEY & BENNETT
25,200 SQ, FT.
Two adjacent bldgs, across from
Osteopathic Hospital. Will remodel,Ml 4-7000________________Birmingham
building^., with parking on site I20x* BRANDON TOWNSHIP
140. Contact Bruce Annett personally
Annett Inc. Realtors
PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB-] LEMS AND RETIREES ARE' OKAY WITH US.
OPEN DAILY AND SAT. ANO SUN.! or cqme to 290 W Kennett Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY
For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220
OPDYKE - UNIVERSITY AREA.1 Charming 3-bedroom ranch, spa- 323, w. Huron, Pontiac
cious rooms, including dining —----------------^----.■? ■<-
room, basement, garage, treed lot.!
Lake privileges. $23,500. Nix Realtors. 651-0221, 852-5375.
PONTIAC-VACANT
30,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING WlTR 18 ft clearance, and railroad sid-Ing, O'Nall Realty OR 4-2222.
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY IN CITY of Pontiac. Warehousing and office space available with railroad WE BUY
__facilities. For information call 8 OR 4-0363
a.m. to 5 p.m. FE 5-8141 or 548- 4713 Dixie Hwy 2226.
0 down, 2-bedroom aluminum siding bungalow. Fully insulated. 60 ft. lot. New cupboards and stainless steel sinks in bright kitcheh. About $75.00 per month. Call:
YORK
GAYLORD
WILL BUILD large 3-bedrbom home, ranch style. Basement. Garage. 3/4 acre lot. 1 Vi ceramic bath. Sunshine lighting. Sealed windows. Many* other luxury features. Only $20,450.
SEE OUR MODEL. Call MY 2-2821, or FE 8-9693 for appointment to-i day.
KINZLER
4 BEDROOM HOME
Vacant. New all White aluminum exterior. Qak floors and nicely decorated, IVj baths and walk-out basement for . recreation. Lower taxes and lake privileges. Just what many have waited for. $17#-950 with $1,795 down plus costs.
FAMILY ROOM
With fireplace in this new large 3-bedroom TV* bath ranch home with walk-out basement for recreation. Oak floors, colorfully decorated, double glass windows and gas heat. Low taxes. Well located on high scenic lot off Clarkston-,
Orion Rd. 10 per cent down plus, START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT, costs. Here's a 2-bedroom home In ex.
JOHN KINZLER, Realtor cellent condition, hardwood floors,
. .j . 1 none H basement, gas heat, garage
5219 p.Hr<;tnr?^3 I and b,ack*op drive on S. Mar-
»* .*• f cr?^s»- 0 a shall. Only $13,000, $1,000 dpwn,
Multiple Listing Service_Open 9-81 balanc; l0' FHA terms.
WARDEN REALTY
A HAPPY LIFE
Can be spent in this lovely Colonial home on Walton Blvd. fust east of Oakland University, is vacant and ready for im: mediate possession. Has carpeting and drapes: Formal dining room. FiYttfly room with fireplace. 4 bedrooms, 2Y} baths. Sun deck over garage and. a large landscaped lot. Priced to Jit your budget.
DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY
333-7,57 682-9000 — OR 4-3548 — OL T-0222
STRUBLE
,GI NOTHING DOWN
Nice 2-bedroom home with 1W-ucar garage, on a nice lot. AM forced' air heat and electric bo» water heater, close to schools and shopping center. $400 will move you in. Immediate possession: Cell now. Only $10,250.
COUNTRY LIVING
Close In attractive 2 - bedroom rancher In Waterford, giving room and kitchen paneled. IW-car garage and storage shed on over 1 acre of property. Close to schools and shopping. Immediate possession. $1,700.
MILO STRUBLE
REALTOR MLl
674-3175
Wideman
3-bedroom Cape Cod, full base- WEST SUBURBAN
Si'rV 0 doa^,Uabodu,nin9V85r0°pT: Lara. t«nlTy home ,5 bedropms, month. Owners Aflent. 674-164?. 1 , {£» A,, 9 ba^ment. ' gas FA
heat. Also a 4-room home at rear currently /Tenting for $100 ppr mo. SEE IT TODAY.
WEST SIDE
Two-story home featuring 3-bedroom, ; large dining room and sturdy# spacious kitchen with new cabinets# also new bath, fixtures. Basement, gas FA ,heat. Large garage. Central High and Pontiac General area. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.
PRIVATE OWNER# 6 ROOMS AND bath, water and sewer# close to schools# toWn and bus# W. Bloom-fisld Twp.# $1800 down. FE 8-6303.
RHODES
TO LEASE BUILDING, LIGHT IN-dustrlal area, 4,000 square feet, 11 miles northwest of Pontiac, on AA59. Reply Pontiac Press Box C-37, Pontiac Michigan. (
EMBASSY EAST APARTMENTS
One-bedroom# air conditioning# $130 per mo. See caretaker at Embassy West Apartments# 5367 Highland Rd.# Waterford Twp. (
Lake Vista Apartments
3 rooms end bath, carpeted. Stove, refrigerator, utilities. Adults only. 5344 Cooley Lake Rd.__________
Pontiac, i bedroom lower,
heated, $90 monthly, evenings, MA 4-4400. _______ ’
ROCHESTER MANOR APARTMENTS
1 BEDROOM, $140
2 BEDROOM, $165
Immediate occupancy, spacious, fully carpeted, with Individually controlled hydronic heat, air conditioning, Hotpoint kitchen, swimming pool, many extras. In a quiet park-like atmosphere, , close to shopping, churches. Lease optional. 112 Plate Off Parkdale. 451-3044.____________________
CLARKSTON, 3 ROOM. .UTILITIES, built-in stove and oven# adults, evenings 625-1865.
Rent Miscellaneous
48
ZONED INDUSTRIAL. 100 FRANK-lin Rd., Pontiac 4900 Sq. Ft. on ground floor. 10x10 dock and door, suitable Jor manufacturing or warehouse# storage and office. Fire pfoof, masonary and steel construction. Lou El-Chonen. 398-3933.
Sale Houses________________49
^BEDROOM BRICK, PONTIAC W. side# prefer trade up or down for house on large lot in lake area. Price is $23,500. FE 2-7819._
3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. Located, in Edgewood Perk Subdivision. Large wooded lot. IVa car garage# attached. Full basement, finished. On Private drive. Walking distance to schools. $24,500.00, by owner. Cali 851-2717.
Brown
Realtdrs & Builders Since 1939
and beautiful landscaping; largej lot and fenced yard. House hrfs built-ins; carpets; drafts and; tub enclosure. 1304 Dundee..
build you a house that ___ of the ordinary. Prices a reasonable and our designs arej Custom. !
les Brown# Realtor*
509 Elizabeth Lk. Rd.
(Across from the Mall)
332-4810 or 334-3564
WE TRADE OR 4-0363' ayton Plains GAYLORb INC.
2 W. Flint St. Lake Orion
MY 2-2821 FE 8-9693
L 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR
IAKF ORION lw- WALTON. Good 2-bedroom home
l«i\c wmvn fu|| basement/ gas heat# 60# ,of
3 bedroom, broad front brick ranch 0nly $7,650, VA terms See this 412 W. HURON ST. 334-4526
— large utility — like new —I one today. EVES. CALL_________________. 625-2059
tri-angular lot ~ .200 _foot ^ front j ^ ACRES, scenic with nice 4-room WYMAN LEWIS REALTY
home, pif:heat# large living room# 3g9 Whittemore 338-0325 pRICE REDUCTION. 2 bedroom
dollhouse, vacant, owners want
DORRIS
START THE YEAR IN A QUALITY HOME and the owners have made this beauifui brick ranch In Lake Oakland Heights a dandy. Quality brick exterior# 2 car ate tached garage, V/i baths, built-ins, carpeted living room and dining area# glass door to covered patio and fenced back yard. All this and more including a completely finished basement.
CAN'T BE BEAT. 1 defy you to duplicate this package for $16,000# bedroom aluminum sided ranch home with full basement# a a s heat, outstanding all Formica kitchen 10x17, luxurious ceramic bath with Formica vanity# 3 good sized bedoooms# 13x16 living room with natural slate entrance# marble sills# aluminum storms and doors and situated On a west suburban lot 78V2X140.
GILES
vacant — $450 MOVES IN. On FHA mortgage — for 96le by o wne r —335-2808.
natural fireplace, closed porch, 2-car garage, dog kennels. Onfy $30,000/ $]0,000 down, balance land contract, '
A. J. RHODES, REALTOR
6-room bungalow with 1 rage, in Eastern Junior High dls-
Lake Orion
5-bedroom 2-story colbnial, with
78 foot lake frontage, living room, _ _
with fireplace, separate dining FE 8-2306 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712 room, large frdht porch, all new MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
*a'?dg*ra0e!°rSck,anboatSC'iffL'Snew! ROCHESTER AREA-COZY 2 BED-carpeting in living room anddin-j ng room apd front porch. rJew1
VON
room bungalow, enclosed porch.
HPH p ,WM1 0IM quick possession# $7500 cash. N
Nice family home needs FA. furnace and hot water heater,? Realtory.. 651-0221, 852-5375.____________________
e decorating, only $10,000. on $26,500, $6500 down on land con-! t ract
CABBAGE
The greenback variety will multf-j ply In your bank account if you invest In this furnished 3 family! home. You'll need a hammer,
ORCHARD CT. APTS.
2 bedroom apartments Adults
Manager-Apt. 6.19 Saimer
Rochester-large new 2-beo
room, heat, carpet, appliance, air conditioned.. Lease. $165. mo.
451-0432.________________________
SYLVAN ON THE LAKES Immediate occupancy. 1 and 2 bedrooms. From $152. Children l»el-come. Phone 482-4481) or 357-4300. UPPER 5 ROOMS AND BATH, stove, refrigerator, heat turn. FE 4-7988.
3 Bedrooms
LOW DOWN PAYMENT / NO MORTGAGE COSTS
MODEL OPEN
285 Fisher
1:30 to 5 p.m. — 4-day week
WEST0WN REALTY
4-H REAL ESTATE
LAKE PRIVILEGES
ON
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 mo. totBl payment before Jan. 1st.
BY OWNER, AVON TOWNSHIP, 2-bedroom, living room# full basement, large fenced lot, main street frontage, fruit trees, $14,800, $1,000 down, land contract. Immediate occupancy. 642-4668.
6-room, 3-bedroom home, basement, 1-car garage, oil heat# only $6,950 on G! with nothing down.
OFF BALDWIN
Newly decorated 2 bedroom home with
lawyersIROYER
REAL ESTATE COMPANY
689-0610
3800 ROCHESTER RD. TROY
5844 DIXIE HWY.
623-1400:
WEST SIDE, 1-BEOROOM, UT1LH AFTER 5 P.M
ties furnished, air conditioned, or 3-2391 EM 3-0148 OR 3-0455
couple only, $25 week. 363-2505.-I5TROOM HOUSE, FUCC BASE
ment, new gas furnace, 2 lots, ,onn u/< HURON 100'x150'# $6,500 full price/ Apple Jar 4.035a and cherry trees. FE 4-f630. |
£ $11,590
BRAND NEW. 3-bedrm. ranch# on , your lot, full basement fully INSULATED, family kitchen. No money down. MODEL.
BY OWNER
GQtf Manor Subdivision. Union Lake and Commerce Rds. 4-bed-room, IVa bath. Living room. Dining room. Family room' with fireplace. Kitchen with built-ins. Completely carpeted and draped, car garage. Excellent condition $29 WQ 363-5279._
BUDGET MINDED?
For iust $1000 down, we will build you a Basic-Bilt 3-bedroom alum, sided ranch on our lot near “ Crescent V Lake. Total price $10,650 on land contract. Will furnish material to finish and add to contract.
SCOTT LAKE FRONT
Newly ' decorated interior# 75x203' site finished breezeway and attached garage# Prepare now for next -surh-mer's fun. $1,000 down plus ■costs, $62.96 mo., plus tax and ins. Total $11,500.
HAGSTROM, REALTOR
Claude-McGruder
Realtor
22t Baldwin Ave. FE 5-6175
Multiple Listing Service_Open 9-9
HAROLD R,"FRANKS, j
AT MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE \ 5-room aluminum sided home., Nice carpeting, fireplace# 2 car garage on 2 lots fenced at back. This home is sharp and priced at only $14,500. Good mortgage terms.
Everett Cummings, Realtor |
jt,, 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD || EWT3-3204___________ 343-7181!
HAYDEN
NORTH SIDE. Attractive 3-bed-room .home in excellent condition, fenced yard, close to schools. $12, 500.
Rant Homes, Furnished^________39
1- BEDROOM COZY, CLEAN, CHILD
under 6 mos. welcomed, no pats, $30 wk,, $90 dep., 482-3477. __
t FLATS, CASS LAKE. 2 ROOMS furnished for couple or bachelor, $110 month. 4 rooms, fireplace, lW-cer garage,- washer, dryer, adults only, $140 month. Leas* preferred. 424-7501, 424-8478. __
2- BEDROOM, NEAR MALL, ALL utilities paid, 8130- monthly, $50 dep. 1140 Boston, Pontiac.
BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM HOME on 1 acre of lend. Novi area. GR 4-4511._____________ ___________
MODERN LAKE FRONT, ADULTS or 1 child, $127.50 monthly, lease, first and lest month rent In advance, near Union Lake, cell after 12 noon, EM 3-0134.
CLARK
Large Family
Therv you need a large home. See what you can get for your money 1n this older remodeled village, home containing 9 rooms, 2V* baths and basferrent, 4 bedrooms, parlor which - may be used as 5th .bedroom# large living room and dining j room. Paneled kitchen with break-; fast bar, paneled family room, IVa, baths down are paneled with rrar-| l|te, the full bath having double j vanity and built-in closet. Timken oil forced air furnace.., Home fully insulated and on large shaded lot. | Within easy walking distance, to j churches, 1 schools and shopping.! $19,500, $3,000 dQ^n. j
C. PANGUS INC., Realtors
I OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK |
6.10-M15' Ortonville.
j___CALL COLLECT NA 7-2$IS -
Lauinger |
3-bedroom, fireplace, panelled! WATERFORD. Here's that cute throughout lv» baths, Clarkston.
2-bedroom home you have been) School area. Only $12,500 on land
looking for on V? acre of land.| contract.
Hot water heat, fireplace, breezeway and garage. $13,900. | OFFICE OPEN 9-9 SUN. 1-5 i
'674-0319 673-2168
MLS 'MILFORD. 3-bedroom brick home1 —
EVES; FE 4-70051 on Pav9d street, full basement,!
plastered walls, gas heat. $15,300.
ORTONVILLE
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 on large well landscaped lake front lot, Home is sharp throughout. Clarkston schools. Call for details.
and a screwdriver# as there! 2536 Dixie Hwy.
this one sold yesterday. $1,000 price cut to $10,950: Handy west side location on Watkins Lake Rd. with a lot 51x150c A home designed for low maintenance and few steps with crawl space foundation. Has recently installed forced air oil furnace. Handy kitchen with editing space,,and cozy living room.
DORRIS & SON, REALTORS
Tib McCullough Rwitor
CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT OR EQUITY- ~
FENCED RiAR YARD end flaraa* with this neat 2-bedroom ranch, handy kitchen, aluminum storms , and screens# privileges on Union Lake* close to shopping center. $12,950. Termsj
SHARP 3r£EDROOM RANCH# aluminum siding# storms# and screens# pull down stairs to floored attic# h*ndy kitchen# plenty of closet space# nicely landscaped lot# paved drive# dose to schools. All this for only $13,950.
PHONE: 682-2211 '
are some repairs necessary.)
You'll whistle while you work# be-j cause your efforts will brings good: returns. Only $7,900 with $2,000’ down on land contract.
LETTUCE
Show you this Gt special. Only;
$250 will move a qualified GljCAjj LAKE Into this .big 3-bedroom homf.i,,.... i-daiit Monthly payments as low as $66-LAINAL rKUN I per month can be arranged. Just a short walk to grade school for the kids. Also walking distance to stores. Call today. We have the key! immediate possession can be yours. Only $8,900.
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
"BUD”
VON REALTY
CLARKSTON ! GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor j
3-bedroom ranch, ceramic bath *n the .. aot «5S?m 10
and a half, finished recreation; 682-5W2 if busy 682-S800
room, close to schools and church-; es in sharp neighborhood. $18,950,: full price.
OXFORD
2 family income. Ideal cJor re-;#*. , d i/cthm * pc a q bedroom! tlremenl, income or t^mendous;C‘S^N (AREA^T^bedroom
HALL
ranchs ...........-. m
throughout. Tiled bath, beautiful kitchen, full basement, finished recreation area, ^1’2 car garage plus fenced lot. $450 down plus closing costs will move you In.
' We already have an FHA commitment! on this one.
WATERFORD AREA—New * 3 bedroom brick frame ranch, with loads of closet room, country kitchen with plenty of eating area, clean gas heat and ^community water, Only $13,900 total price with 10 per1 cent down.
WE NEED LISTINGS
J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor
Ilazenby
OFF BALDWIN: 2-bedroom bunga-J363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59)
12’mile west of Oxbow Lake
Y0UNG-BILT HOMES
REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, 334-3830 53' 2 W. Huron St.
A NEW YEARS START AT WALTERS LAKE
CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA
Split toyer — 2000 sq. It. of "living" on 1 acre country site $30,-000 — 10 .per cent dn. Immediate occupancy.
Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 Ranch house - UOO sq. ft., fabu-i
lous view of country side,; ready tor your paint and tile' selection. $26,900 — 10 per
_______________________________ cent dn.
2-BEDROOM WtTH LARGE CAR-peted living room and dining room, large kitchen and bath, full basement with gas heat, vicinity of Pontiac Airport, 673-7616. t BEDROOMS, BASEMENT, 2 CAR laraae. Ne -E 2-2064.
HOMES NOW UNDER CONSTRUCTION BY: .
1 — Den Mattingly
2 «s#John Voorheis
3 — Herb Smith
4 — Daryle Adams
5 — James Raisin
1-BEOROOM HOUSE ON WALT-ers Lake, 2 children welcome, etqctric heel, $135 month plus
$t35 d«poslt. 65I-446J___ you MUST SEE _ CALIFORNIA
3-BEDROOM AND BASEMENT, SHAKE ROOFS
large, yard, near school, children] OUR NEW COLONIAL MODEL welcome. Union area. 343-7220!
. mhwSSm SYLVAN REALTY
I BEDROOMS IN CITY# $125 MOJ..#. A.A.
plus $75 sec. dep. 335-0028. 673-3488
^BEDROOM. WEST SIDE. DEP $125 mo. FE 1-2703.
low type# new aluminum siding new roof# clean Inside#«new car-
Ceted living room, gas heat, full asemenf, drapes and curtains stay. Immediate possession. Only $9,500, $1,250 down.
NEAR NORTHERN HIGH: Very clean 3-bedroom, full basement# gas heat, hardwood floors# full Bath, separate dining room, curtains# drapes) 40" gas range# and washer stays.* Well landscaped lot# new shrubs# owners have purchased new home. Price $14,350 mortgage terms.
CLARK "REAL STATE 1362 W. HURON ST., FE 3-7888 t Multiple Listing Service__
COUNTRY LIVING
In a beautiful 3-bedroom, V*i-car garage, large covered patio, also 24' pool.' filtered New solid WESTSIDE neat 6 rooms and bath,
in c'",, jfH "'**-! basement, gas heat aluminum sid-
| ing, owner . says sell, Gl, FHA 1 or lahd contract.
$9,500 for this sharp 2-bedroom
home, nice lot, immediate possession, $1000 down, land contract. $12,200, we build.# 3-bedroom ranch-
ers, vanity in bath, full basement, gas heat, on your lot, to see model call HIITER REALTY, 3792 EliZ. Lake Rd. 682-8080 after I p.m., 682-6427
EXCELLENT
6-room, 3-bedroom home In very good condition. 15 x 14 living room; separate dinina room, all 3 bedrooms are good size, full basement with gas heat and hot water heater, fenced In rear yard, screened in front porch. Must be seen to be /appreciated. Priced to self at only $9,500 on land contract.
Highland Estates
A well built 3 bedroom all brick rancher with attached brick garage. Ceramic tile bath, built In range#''oven and hood. Full basement with small bar and good possibilities. 75x150 lot# well landscaped and fenced-in rear yard.iOpen daily from 9 a.m. to 8:30 p. Patio, paved driveway and side-1 4626 W. Walton — OR 4-0301 walks make this the home to see!
Full price $21,500.
SISL0CK & KENT
1309 Pontiac State Bank Bid.
338-9294 338-9295
R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor
HIITER
investment. Excellent ter
L0TS-ACREAGE V
Ortonville, 1 acre building sites,
$1800 Oxford 10 acra sites. Baldwin,
Road^ $900 per acre.
WE BUILD-TRADE 628-2548
(er Rd. .M24 _________ours 9 to 9 ex<
SPRINGFIELD TWP/
$8500 full price for this 2-bedroom 10 ACRES — farm with new 5 bed. ranch which includes color TV, room colonial home. All aluminum range and oven, refrigerbtor-freez- exterior featuring 2 full er combination, automatic washer baths# lovely kitchen with built-in and dryer, living room suite, 2l oven and range. Carpeted living bedroom suites# dipette. set and! room and beautiful family room chairs# everythlhg you need to set! with fireplace, and many more ex-
up homemaking. Immediate pos-1 tras. Call for your appointment to-
session. j day.
3 BEDROOM RANCH | Thaurealty
One of the nicest of America's 6569 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 daily 625-4116
mosf popular home styles. This -—----------------
comfortable clean rancher near Waterford High School features a •large kitchen, oversized garage and a full paneled recreation room in the basement. Fenced rear yard. Oh paved street. Price reduced to $21,500 with 10 per cent .
d0Tk D.J4 U C r I Sylvan Shores Brick
I lie KO1T6 n. bmitn LO. ! 2 bediroom home with un-
Sheidon B. Smith. Realtor finished 2nd floor* space for
244 S. Telegraph ! — 3rd bedroom. LR with fire*
2>ffice Open 9-8 place, full basement, gas
heat. Carpeting and drapes. 2 xar garage. $21,500, terms.
ANNETT
10' cement drive, Fruit trees, nicely landscaped.
HOWELL
Town & Country, Inc,
Highland Branch Office
PHONE*. 313-685-1585
$ BEDROOMS, VACANT. GARAGE.
8200. dep. required. 628-2000.
3-BEDROOM HOME CALL MR.
Scott *1 Kresges. FE 54146._
5 ROOMS, I CHILD,
116 Montlcello.
£LEAN ' 2-BEDROOM HOME NEAR schools and transportation. Children accepted, rtes. rent. Cell Joe at 542.7126.
Clean t bedroom house off Baldwin, adults, no pets, sec. dep.
FE M870._______________
ZoWWICTINd WATERS TO CASS — 2 bedroom house, gas heal, ret. and deposit raq. 3165 Kanrjck.
t>IXIE HWY! " AT SILVER LAKE Rd., Isrga lot, 7-car oarage. ] bedrooms, gas heat. Cell days.
541-3731.
feLIZABfetH LAKE AREA, 2~-BED-1 Mil N Opdyk room# fully paneled# basement# gas! heat# rent with option to buy,
9140 monthly# call after 5 p.m , I 353-3390 or 353*3(5: ,
Rent - sell - 2 bedroom.
fiarage, Ik. prlv. 1 child, large,
Of. OR 3-5)11.
tALE OR RitJtT'lN" ROCHESTER,
3 bedroom brick ranch# fenced j^^#Mrtlally finished basement,.
SAM WARWICK HAS AT 4050 CASS-Etitabeth, 3 bedroom, ges heat.!
344-8222 Attention Gi
Mortgage costs only, down ! By owner, pleasant Lake Front#! 2 bedroom modern, large living room# plus family room and dining room. Wet plaster walls# hardwood floors# 60' good beach by 120' plus depth. Excellent neighborhood, only $17,500, Immediate occupancy or will self on land contract with $5,000
Crestbrook MODEL OPEN
DAILY 12-8
3-bedroom, family room and 2-car garage, priced at only $16,400 plus lot, Located in new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out M59 to Crescent Lake Road, turn right to Crestbrook Street and rftodel. j
DON
LONGFELLOW
Asbestoes Ranch, full basement#
Aluminum storms and screens.
Home real clean. Immediate oc- 333-7848
cupancy. FHA approved. Owner SPOTLESS 3 BEDROOM BRICK Agent, 674-1649. _________j ranch in Drayton, close to schools
LOOKING-FOR A \ Zo.^ir^T- J'X *cnyd West Side Permostone
CAREFREE HOME? I clone fenced lot, quick posses- 3 bedroom home In excellent
BeautIM tt:! ‘i0nMENZiES REAL ESTATE n 1 ORfd^and^breSklas^roOT.'
formica cabinets, all aluminum »lvsi . layiui —_i _ _ .o' w a me 1
AUBURN HEIGHTS “RASTHAM
4-bedroom,; 100'x364' lot with fruit.A——!X lk*/ J- X ii and berries, full basement# o i I heat, aluminum siding s t o r m s/ -_-AftTII,llTW screens, 1 baths, 2-car garage,; OPPORTUNITY
IRWIN
NORTH END
2 bedroom bungalow with large living room and large kitchen. New auto, qas furnace, carport and other extras. Located easy walking distance to stores and! bus Monthly payments less than rent. Easy FHA terms.
LAKE FRONT
Large 3-bedroom tri-level with lake frontage on Wiliams Lake hasj basement, family room with fireplace, waik-out patio In rear at lake level, attached 2-car garage and fenced yard. Many other extras too numerous to mention. Full price $39,500. Appointment | only.
Rambling Ranch
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
TIP-TOP CONDITION
First time offered this good look* Ing 2 story aluminum sided home is in excellent condition. Includes glassed In porch which leads Into carpeted living room* dining room and remodeled kitchen down# 3 bedrooms and bath up. Basement with GAS heat and new gas hot water heater. Paved drive to 1W car garage. $13,900. '
DETROIT 2 FAMILY
Very attractive brick 2 family located adjacent to U. of D. 5 room* and bath In each unit with separate basements and gas heat. Solid brick end frame construction. Vory.vory sharp. Only $17,-500.
4 BEDROOMS
Onfy a short distance to Oakland University from this 4 bedroom V/» story home built in 19SB. Municipal water and sewer. Gas heat and not water. Paved drive to 1V% car garage. Price |ust reduced for a quick sale and possession. Look at this for a homo that offers a large amouht of room at a price you can afford. Move In todayl .
YOU'LL BE SNUG HERE!
Just as cozy and cut* as can be, built In 1955 this home otters toed* of area fbr a larger family all on 1 floor. Outstanding features Includes 14 x 15 family room, 3 bedrooms fin* carpeting end drapes.
90 feet on the. water, excellent 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 end screened porch,
24' is 25’ attached garage, cyclone fencing, big oak trees.
Priced at $21,950.00, see It today.
CITY LIVING WITH COUNTRY AIR
Tip-top 3 bedroom ranch homa.
Northern. High School area# ap-i proximately acra grounds# lake privileges# fireplace up and down, plenty of closets# stove and dryer, tile bath with .vanity, full basement, gas heat# 26' x 26' attached garage. Priced at $20#-950.00, terms# call now.
NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. .
49 University Dr.
FE 5-1201
after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370
KAMPSEN
"IT'S TRADING TIME".
CLARKSTON AREA
Close fb 1-75. Cute two-bedroom home with family room end country style kitchen. This is; the home for you If you are:
newlyweds or retired. Low, low]A LOVELY BRICK HOME price of $13,500. with towering shad* trees, e wide
ges heat, attached garage, patio, giant 200 foot deep lot. Quick pot-session. Municipal water and sewer.
Best of all $16,500. It the total price. SEE THISI
Warren Stout, Realtor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8141 Multiple Listing Service
Daily til I_________
O'NEIL
WHY NOT TRADE?
DIXIE HIGHWAY
Nine-room, four-bedroom home.
Large living room# dining room ______ - ------
and kitchen. Stone fireplactML bpet. One pf the most appMlIhfl Two-car garage, full'" basement? T^ffotnes we have had \ to offer et
Property is now vacant. Zoned C-2. A good buy at $21<£00.
NEW HOMES IN SEARCH OF A FAMILY
Two distinguished colonials#, family homes In the .truest sense. In beautiful Lake Angelus Lake-view Estates# an area of fine homes. These homes offer warm hospitality add indoor-outdoor living. Featuring four generous bedrooms# 2v^t baths# formal dining room, kitchen has built-in appliances. Dinette next to the kitchen# paneled fandly room with woodburning fireplace, rear
spanca of beautifully landscaped lawn dnd canal frontage to Sylvan Lake. 3 extra large bedrooms# paneled family room. Attachad garage large enough to store your
$29,500.
No. Ml
Leona Loveland, Realtor
NEW HOME
Near Pontiac Central High.
Bldg, in excellent condition end suitable tor many uses as doctors clinic, union hall,
hoo;ch.ii€!argF.lrroom"d Si THINKING OF SELLING
snd sid* entrances, front endi OR TRADING HOMES
rear stairs, 4 lavatories and1 ------------
bath. Full basement. Extra lot for parking. $45,000 terms, terms,
WE WILL TRADE
paneled family room with studio Realtors 28 E. Huron St.
beamed ceiling. 2-way fireplace, office Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4
l-bedroom or 3 bedrooms and ) den, breezeway. 3-car garage.
large patio, half acra "fenced j yard, priced to sell, $23,500.
Sparkling Ranch
Bloomfield.
HAPPY DAYS
are hare again — Is tha tuna you'll be singing when you move your family into this spacious 4-bedroom colonial. W-'s only 2 years old too. IVi baths, fully carpeted# attached 2*car garage# nice close in suburban neighborhood with lake privileges. Attractively priced at $21,800. Owner will give immediate possession. No. 2-48
DESIRABLE
We offer for your Inspection end approval a 3-bedroom. ranch home located In a desirable section of Wolverine Lake. MBhy extra features can be found in this com* foiiable Home. Full price 917,900. Can be assumed for $3,500 or can arrange new financing with $1,908 down. Call for an appointment to inspect this property. Why not trade in your present home?
No. 9-29
reT LOOKING FOR SOMETHING NICE?
H you're looking for e sharp 2* vH bedroom bungalow In the West
petlo. lull basement, attached | !!f^u.Sa5uSS. ,0^"fl two-car garage, seeled glass windows, marble sills. Priced at $33,950. Just trade your old home in. A phone call will start your dreams coming true.
OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE DEAL — Cali Ken Hall# L#o!
Kampsen, Verona Hallenbeck,
^nmirt'«#kKD,C£^B.7an'i SB v,w„*r HRRH U, .MM.T 8„WT nlflJr* #?ob | would sell at $14,950. On elthtr
bungalow Side, be sure to sea this on# on Thorpe Street; just®eff Eliz; Lake Rd. Owner notified us today they
rith treed backyard.
REAGAN
REAL ESTATE
Beauty
Rite
Homes
7 MODELS FROM $21,400
Is knocking when you consider this sharp 2-family Income. The northside location plus the fact that both 2-bedroom apartments are furnished make this a real 299 W. Walton opportunity. Sailing at iust $15#- IVAN W
9S0 on a land contract. Call us today.
GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 1 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | FE 3 7813
Bill Easthom
Realtor MLS
SCHRAM!
bedrooiYv*-"bTntd? and aluminum ranch. Vfi baths, full basement, 2j .'-jv.
car garage, thermal Insulated win-. dows. Large lot with trees. Dray- JvJjfpv ion area. Full price $20,400. BENNETT
PRESTON FRANKLIN VILLAGE MA 4-9600
TWO Lf:FT
3-bedroom homes in Orion area, ki^..# v.#... TL#s r#s.,n«#.. full basements, garages, IVa baths
NCW YeorS in The Country One has large family room and
Pretty grey brick 3-bedroom ranch fireplace, walkout basement. 10 per on 1 a acre lust north of Rochester, cent down plus costs. Also have
Has large paneled family room mg —«- • *-i— • -
built-lns in the kitchen, new car peting, and spacious living room Easy terms at $18,500.
Shepard Real Estate 651 -8503
New Model
TUCKER
Rlit Room*
$135 lees*. ______
fMAPTTTflUlirj.feEo¥<5bM
- MM IMWlMf.fl AW*:—-^(Including lake-privileged lot.
lake front homes ready for immediate occupancy. Model on. Airport Rd. at Pleasant Dr., 1 Vi miles north of M59. Call 674-3136.
CLEAN ROOM FOR ONE PERSON,
- 814 weak. 33*4444., . -
Clear i^aja''k^i~<|'gi4frE'A^,
18 block from M34. MY3-7I51.
CUEANT DOit T YOU N G MAN. " FE 1-2484.
$1600 down.
335 7900_________________474 2928 LIKE LAKES?
Elizabeth Lake Front
MOTORWAY DfclVE 26' living room, new carpeting, beautiful drapes, 2 8,xf*r6 large bedrooms, breakfast rodm with scenic view. Kitchen with loads of cupboard space, large dishwasher, DD|r|# DAKiru full basement# completely pentied DKlLIv KAINLM with .divided area for additional 3-bedroom w< bedroom If desired. Two car garage with divided space for cook-ouf. Large patio# automatic sprinkling system, excellent beech,
.many other feetues. Immediate possession. Only $45,000 with reasonable down payment.
K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor
2339 Orchard Lk. 8
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - on this large 2*story family home oiv Anr., . . w.f m a .si the East side. Spacious bedrooms,
OPEN 1-4 SAJ., 5UN. living and dining rooms carpeted,
3 BEDROOM BRICK TRI-LEVEL on Jun b«ement, gas heat# some
Williams Lake Rd. I block norml furniture floes, 1 'rear garage,
ol Union Lake Village. Choice of!, P*'1?- har-b-que Pit. °n|V *50 dn.
Access to i of Oakland County's ^.1.00.. ,19,400 i. 420.2& Flu. &t 1^1,^
most popular lakes 3 bedrogms,/ .. -q nun D- ^ns# enclosed front porch, full
large livingi room big, 2-car 0« l3.BEOI^O/V\ TRI-LEVEL with IW. basement, gas heat, neat and
^;a.e0Vcur.ncyhaOnlyIO»,4.^: «r garage, S,3,400 plus lot. [ ‘ . "^'*o)I
l3%EgD.R^Vp;uN,Cro,WlH' Jcar f- BRE,fi*ldR*AN0cn;y*,00nden* 3.hedroom / I ranch with full basement
basement, fln-ySTATELY 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL1 Ished off family, room and work-: with 2'" session. 363-5091.
amlly. Very large lot. Only $300
TJUCKER REALTY CO.
anyplace you In t new home for PojUlac Slete_Bank________334-1545
'union lake. ] ROOMS AND
338-0466
TIMES'
VACANT
Colonial with 9 rooms. St. Michaels perochfel 'district. Has
5 bedrooms, gas heat, full basement and 2-c»r garage. This home needs a little work folks but If you are hendy you can have yourself a lot ol home lor only $9,950, terms. Cell for further particulars.
START
The new year out In this sharp ranch home with full boson^hL
gleaming oak floors, newly decorated and built. Oh y also
3 large bedrooms, gas heat, aluminum siding and vacanf. Just turn the key for your future address. Call for your appointment.
5. ROOM
Ranch with Cass and Elizabeth
Lake privileges. Has gas heat. I1 i-car attached garage, wall to, wall carpeting, fenced yard, near' schools and shopping Only $10,500 for this home mat will /give you and yours a whole Jot of living. Call for your appointment.
WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU
"JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES"
Times Realty
5190 DIXIE tuOHWAY^*
FHA or Gl terms. So If you hurry you may be you've been
Val-U-Way
EXTRA NICE HOME
Well kept 5 room bungalow off Baldwin near Fishers. Has full basement, wall to wall carpeting# drapes, aluminum awnings# warm gas heat and storm windows. Only $600 required. Fast possession.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
Fey lust $1400 for transferred Owners equity and take over low monthly payments.. Large conveniently located } bedrooms, ges heat, tiled bath, aluminum storms and screens. Hurry, nbt many opportunities Ilk* this.
LARGE HOME-GARAGE
$500 moves you In this lovely large home featuring natural wood pan ellna throughout Super, Ouper tiled kitchen, large full dining _ room, 2 bedrooms and bath up. All £, * oul *° Fox Bey on the Huron rooms fully carpeted. Also has nice ,".lv*r visit our model homes, basement with gas heat. Outside Is WnL on Eliz. Lake Read, right * solid cement drive to a bio. big. ?? F«rry Blvd., loll onto Fox Bay, ; big cement block building which'tiS1’™10, M,arJ* DrJv*- Price* M8B would hold about 4 cars. This*”'*®®' deluding choice lot,
Gl Bill and with closing costs only (lass than $400) investigate how you cah own your own noma. Wa have an excellent 5-room bungalow with full basement available on Gl farms. Baal the high cost of renting through "home ownership." No. 11-1
A 2-BEDROOM ALUM. RANCH with basement, isrga living room end kitchen with lots of cupboard*. Assume present land contract with reasonable monthly payments. Price only 010.500. No. 11-11
WHAT A BARGAIN , The toll price of this cozy lull# home with attached garage It only $7,950, Bui you have got to see It to believe It. It's a steal. Ownor say's SELL TODAY — farms available — but hurry. No. 15-13*
FOX BAY MODELS OPEN
SAT. & SUN. 2-5. P.M.
423-0*00 REALtOR Open If dally 3*s Oakland Ave,
building I* get healed, has hoi snd cold running water. You may find * variety of uses for It. The whole package priced really low to a Gl or FHA buyer. Located on East side lust off Auburn. Only tl 2,900.
R.-J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531
LIST WITH 0'Nftt REALTY For 3 Good Reasons
W* think Our Sens* of Value* yu!1 t1’* ol Froepeet*
And Our Tlreiasi Efforts
Will Make You Sled You Called
RAY O'NEIL REALTY
3570 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2221 MLS 332 4 239
X
Sal* Hmm*
If Incoma Property
Frushour
COUNTRY LIVING , .. -
IN A MODfeRN BRICK RANCH* ER ll w ideal situation tor to-: nay's norm buyers. There ere 7 rooms In HI, IV$ baths, family room end attache* Jy$ car garage, drapes, carpeting. Shed and
SOLats—Acrtofla
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 19fl8
'[CARNIVAL ; '
54 BosiMlI Opportonitiai
HIGHLAND • MILFORD AREA VCQRNWELL T< ments'^ t h*nsmrate™entrl?rli‘l KSL •**»- ,J'450' *** mo. Near! your answer to
"•I"* Pontiac. 'Open! business ot yos
X’XSST' ii’flians, has war els! Sum BlqJh Sm fitSB - FE'
K2lrS2l!lirV* <»r««s monthly l 5395. Priced *t 832,000-88,ooo «own oiv Land Conlr«ct or on a now i Clark Real Estate, 1342 W. Huron St., FE 3 7881. I
HP* «na ' a m__, m
corral (or your ponies. Trade In LIU PropartV excepted. 529,900, ~w-------—" . I
51
ONLY ONE . BUNNY RUN
lake FRONT left In picturesque LAKE FRONT HOME
Twin Lake VIliege end.lt ls,.e Attrac.lv. in .p£,r.™, h„ *
'lcl0!!^ P?fCh, partioned
beSuty. A 7-room rancher with 2' 0 bath and . walk-out basement, ; completely / landscaped and, other features too numerous to count. *" your house In trade and you can have Immediate possession.
EAST.SIDE-PONTIAC
fx50 DOWN plus costs wllL move you into this 4-bedroom -alum, sided home. It Has all -the conveniences ot the city. Already approved by FHA, Sailing tot *13,950.
JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor
1730 Williams L*ke Rd. MLS
674-2245
HORSE LOVERS 30 ACRES
US t* area, IMO par acre.
2Vt ACRES
TED'S
Trading
$1500 DOWN
basemenl, attic, attached garage.
htah so »• nq ftJ79t "n neighborhood of wall Opt and "** . Homes. Needs some work end interior redecorating, si 0,750
C- A. WEBSTER, Reolty
X * 428.9SH
LAKE FRONT LIVING
For quiet and tnloyabla’ year around living, solid 3-bedroom noma with 2Vi-car garage. The grounds are wall landscaped end the beach perfect. Lake stocked with trout. 111,500.
C. PANGUS INC., Realtors
.. 9?EN 7 DAYS A WEEK 430 M 15 Ortonvlllt
•CALL COLlgCT NA 7-2|15
WE HAVE MANY PARCELS FROM > TO IOO ACRES ON EASY LAND CONTRACT TERMS, CALL TODAY
BRIAN
623-07Q2
Waterford
SUNDAYS QRiGn TOWNSHIP — LAND FILL permit on approximately 31 acres. Nix Realtor. 651-0221 — 152-5375.
5904 Dixie Hwy. OPEN
TOOLS MAY . EE
• small jproftfable
.... your own- To attend
group meeting of your future In me automotive tpof business call Landmesser Tools Co. 412-4409.
LAKE FRONT HOMES—NEW AND used -* J. L. Dally Co. EM 3-7114.
Northern Property
ORION TOWNSHIP — 3 ACRES near Qrlon-Rochastar Rd. Ideal building site, 84,000,
GREENACRES
Lekt Orion
UNDERWOOD
TEXACO
Otters an excellent servlet eta-tlon location for leak#, located on 1-7/ at Opdyka and Mt. Clemens excellent gtllonaga, tor ( Information call ially LO 5-4000, evening! cttl Art Ardanowskl at
KE 5-5917
WANT TO INVEST MONEY ANO part time effort in established business operation In Pontiac area. Experienced accounting, management background. Box C-33, Pontiac Press.
WARDEN HAS BARS
Clprkston with W# have an •xceltent selection of rolling land with bars and taverns available. Call
- gnn g or come In for confidential
consultation. NO OiLIGATION. trade-ins accepted.
WARDEN REALTY
0 ACRES N.
322' on road M some trees, restricted, 89950, 11500 down.
0 ACRES near Holly area on Dixie Hwy., 334' on road,,
partially wooded, 219' well on13434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 property, 89500 terms.
<1.A'2'A ACRE corner parcel with 228' on payed road and 504' on side road, oes available, restricted, Holly schools, 34,500 terms.
i Sale land Contracts
LAND CONTRACT TERMS for FWASHED - NORTHERN PEN-this attractive 2-bedroom bunga- SSlu‘i T Move In on Old Highway. -
low, good Ideation, taka privileges, f™- * house and garage — large 5 ACRE parcels near Clarkston and
very neat wall kept homt, full ~ ^’VrL,T,,L5,h *n<) Pl*V- 81,800 Holly, 15500 and $4500 respectively, price 19,000. cash. Call 343-5477 — Heckett. terms. ? .
M UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 8445 Dixie Hwy, ~ 425-2415
EASY TO LOOK AT Lots-Acrgng*
Easier to buy, 'lust 10 per cent down on this 3-bedrootn aluminum sided ranch, full basement wltbf-recreatlon room, carpeted living room and dining room, attached i'-a-cn- garage, large well landscaped Tot, good location. Full price. 117,500.
2 FIVE-ACRE
Bulldlng~sltes with stream. Mettf-mora area, Only 85,000 aach. With aasy terms.
| Salt Farms
1 TO 50
LAND CONTRACTS
Urgently needed. See us before you deal. •*
WARREN STOUT. Realtor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd. T FE 5-114] Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m
56 ^an*_e4 Contracts-Mtg. 60-A
By Dick Turner For Salt MisctlloBBtis *7
NEED A. COMMERCIAL PMOTOG-reoher? Cell DONOVAN IThet's . HAS DONOVAN, 2878 N. Adams. > $52-2351. • . : . - ■
Rlu MBI NO bargain!, Jr-Ae
standing toilet, 914.95; ; 30-gallon
Sparttm Saedt
74
HEAVY DUTY, S N O-M O • It * trailer, large enough for 2, cell
heater, $49.95; 2-placa bath sets,
*59,95; laundry trey, trim, 019.95; shower stelll with- (elm, $39.95;
2-bowf sink, $2.95; levs., 12.95; tuba, 120 end up. Pipe cut and 4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton, OR 441411
JOHNSON SKI HORSE
. SNOW MOBILES ;
>4# fishing tackle ■ Tlp-ups rods, tugers, spears
PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc.
Open Man.-Sat. 9-4
POLAROID CAMERA, COUCHES, chairs, table!, baby clothes, Mi ' 4-2033.
> POOL TABUS
IMS S. Telegraph — Tournament. RUMMAGlTsALe, JAN. 3-6, 5$ E.
WudgefBr 9-5 p.m., off Baldwin.
SP REG-SAT IN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2678 Orchard Lake. 682-
_2820, , ______________________
STEEL TANDEM TRAILER. CAN be seen • 625*5676. i STEEL FRAMi~UTiOTY TRAILER 1 5' x 8’ plywood bed, new con*
j_cHtiorVj^SiaS. Ml 6*3706._I
STOPWATCH
Used by little old lady, to check length of minister's sermons on Sunday. New,, cost 879.95. Offered at half price, $40. Pontiac Press
Box c-16, Pontiac,; Mich_■
StUFFEO ANIMALS, toys, gifts, novelties, lay-aways. Liberal Bills 3265 Dixie Hwy. OR 3*9474. Open 10 a.m. to 9 p,m,_________•
Auction Salas , SS .
AUCTION AT AUCTIONLAND svery Saturday.
B & B AUCTION
EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY' S EVERY SUNDAY ..,TU
FAS.
m
TALBOTT LUMBER
Black and Decker drill, $9.99
Join The Sporting Fun
Bramblewood has the Team Sponsors
Join a team arid race your-snowmobile on snow or' straw, aach Sun., at I p.m. , starting Dec., 24 to Fab., 2S.
If you are between ages of lb-11 years of age;
BRAMBLEWOOD COUNTRY CLUBS
WINTER SPORTS BASIN
DIR: FROM HOLLY 2 MILES -* NO. OF GRANGE HALL RD., ON FISH LAKE RD., THEN LEFT Vs MILE.
2154 MINER RO HOLLY 434-9209
LIKE TO ROUGH IT?
. Like to punish yourself? Don't llkt luxury? Then don't come and see the most luxurious camping trailers on the market. The World's largest selling line—Apache.
EVAN'S EQUIPMENT
625-1711
Just N. of Waterford Hill 6507 Dixie Hwy.
WE BUY — SELL - TRAD! RETAIL 7 DAYS WEEKLY
CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5009 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717
ferkins sale - (EkViCG-Auction-
Swartz Creek
Phona 435-9400
limtock
83
HORSES BOARDED, BOX STALLS, Walled Laka araa, 349-1904.
new""S"h i pmE nt Of hOEses
from the Watt. Jumpers ana polo ponies, 1150 ea. EM P-0009. Klantner Riding^ Academy.______
POLARIS SNOW-MOBILES. S495 and up. Perry's Lawn and Gardan 7415 Highland Rd.—M-59. 473-4234
“You’re a good union man, Pop. Wouldn’t you say there was something wrong with our bargaining?”1
SKI-DOO'S
REGISTERED QUA RTER HORSE Sale. Buckskins and Patamfnoi trained, tarms. 634*3923...
Meats
S3-A
Hay-Grain-Feed
84
FOR
SALE: HAY AND STRAW,
420-2054 __■ ■
HAY AND STRAW SO CENtS Pfl bale. North of Rochester off Rochester Rd. 625 E. Buell Rd.
Poultry
85
ACRES. LARGE HOME AND barn. OA 8-2013. A. Sander*, rep. H. Wilson, Broker.
TIME OUT
For house hunters — give your--«elf a break. If you art looking lor a 4-bedroom home we have 4 and 1 should fit your needs-Call now — In lass than 2 hours you can.saa them all. Included is this 4-bedroom colonial with family room, larga carpeted living room, patio and 2V$-car attached garage. Laka privileges. Paved street. and drive. Full prlca $24,-too, Tarms or trade.
HOME WITH ACREAGE
2-bedroom home, full basement, carpeted living room with fireplace, modern kitchen, 2-car garage and 10 acre! of land. Close to Waterford Twp. high school. Owner will sell, home and-or acreage Separata. Terms or trad*.
TEDS CORNER
January, la the month to sell. Over the past 12 years tha month of January hat proven to be the best selling month. It would behoove you to put your home on the market now while there are plenty of willing buyers. If your .' home Is listed properly It should sell Immediately. We recommend that you choose your realtor wisely and be sure the name realtor Is Included in his-or her. advertisement. The name realtor stands for professional in the real estate business. Watch for It, It can save you time and money.
McCullough realty
REALTOR
5440 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Oped 9-9_____________474-2239
♦STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE
7441 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion *391-2000
JO ACRES FOR PRIVACY, PLEAS-Ore, investment. FE 2-2144. L.
10-50 ACRES. WOODED RIVER frontage, Oakland - Genesee -Livingston counties. /Mr. Fowler, EM 3-9531, EM 3-44(3.
21 Acres—Highland Area
Ideally . located to dlvida or| usa as small estate. Approx.! - V> mile of road frontage,! land gently rolling, paved road. $21,000, tarms. .
80 TO BOO ACRES |
In lower Michigan. Dairy, gralfW. beef or hogs! Name your farm! needs, we hava it at one of; "Michigan's" Farm Real Est ala Coidwater, Michigan. Dale A. Dean Farm Broker and Auctioneer.! Write or call 517-278*2377 - days Headquarters — Dean Realty Co., or 517-288-6127 ~ nights.__
FARM INVESTMENT PROPERTY
240 ACRES
2 homes, 1 imposing and malestlc with 5 large bedrooms, the other smaller but neat and modern. Ex-| cellent land. Located south of La-| peer close to giant new lake now1 being developed. $444 per acre.
. r
Million
Dollars has bean mad# available through an Inheritance. Wa hava a family who wishes to purchase land contracts, assume mortgages or ourchase homes and vacant property for cash. This phona number Is available to you 24 hrs. per day. Call now for personal appointment. A
i| TED
MCCULLOUGH JR.
674r2356
40 Acres—Romeo
Vacant with frontaga on 2
C. PANGUS INC., Realtors
roads, gently rolling land, 430 M15
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
llva stream thru property Ideal for development or private estate. Near Ford Proving Grounds and new Ford plant. S40.000, tarms.
285 Acres—Private Lake
NW Oakland County, appro*. 4 miles off 1-75. Ideal for development, gplf course or recreational arda. Approx. 3 miles of road frontage, RR runs Va mile thru acreage. Large scenic, wooded area. $214,000, terms.
1 to 50
LAND CONTRACTS
Urgently needed. See us before you deal.
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 MARLETTE - SANDUSKY AND L.A-pear areas, country homas with 511450 N. Opdyka Ra FE 5-8145 to 240 acres. Excellent cattle orl Open Eves, pit 8 p.m.
horse ranches. Parcels of 5-10-201 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS, aerds for country estates available: h. J. Van Welt. 4540 Dixie Hwy.
with small down payment and qr 3-1355.___________________________
^Mr™*Smittf°eve”; NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL
RAFTER M. RANCH Horse Stable
From 20-90 acres available. Staf ble has 70 box stalls, 10'xlO'. Indoor riding arena, 70'x200' Observa-’ tion and recreation room, 70'x30\| 755*2010, Warren, or ,752-3477, Romeo.
discounts. Earl Garrets. MA 4-5400. EMpIre 3-4086
Salt Household Goods 65
BEOROOM SETS: MAHOGANY, $95; maple, $65; walnut, $60;. blond, $79. Dining room table, 4 chairs, china cabinet, buffet, $150; living room set, 875; end table set, $23; desk, $25; piano, ,885; stove, 825; refrigerator, $25; dinette, $13. M. C. Lippard, 559 N1. Perry.
4'x8'x%" particle board.
4'x8x%" particle board, $4.95 ea.
1025 Oakland_____________FT 4-4595
TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY $25. G. A? Thompson. 7005 M59 W. I R
----: THE SALVATfON ARMY w» h*v* • «***••& tn dl,pl*7
RED SHlELO STORE AS*,Ai- 5 _________________________I_________
118 W. LAWRENCE ST. * $695 _
Kverythina to meet your needs Also, a complete line of skl-doo LIVE LAYING HENS
___Clothing, rurmturj, Appliances_ clothing access, and trailers. Comal e riru
USED AND NEW OFFICE DESKS,’ Iri for a demonstration ride now.) CMLri
chairs, tables, files, typewriters. See and drive the lively one. 12350 Baldwin Rd. ■ 664-307$
adding machines, offset printing CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE 1 r■ ‘ajjk*
presses, mimeograph, drafting t>TTVT/^ T) /Np rBrnl rrOQUCB OB
boards and tables. Forbes, 4500 K Mv7- ntiv Jo
nt»u nriulnn DD 1.07A7 nr AAI XXXX X NwA IS X l VXBw7
BUNK BEDS
Choice of 15 styles, trundle beds, triple trundle beds and bunk beos complete, $49.50 and up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike.
« B aa Dixie, Drayton,.OR 3-9767 or Ml
Sqib Household Goods 65. ^-$444. . ...■ > pontiac rd. at opdyke
---------------- - ------ USED MATTRESSES, TWIN SIZE, FE 4-0734 , -_____FE 4-1542
like new; Maple table dk., ,FE 4-6588 i C1 T/^T
WANTED): UPRIGHTS, GRANQS, | v OJxl“JJt/W
USED TV'S, $19.95 COLOR TVs, $299.95 Repo. Hoover Washer $99.95 SWEETS
RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. 422 W. Huron 334-5677
AntigUBB
Spinets and console pianos—at
call MR. wSar^v-FE njSKI-DADDLER
— IWASHED WIPING RAGS, AS LOW I
- fs 19 cents per lb. 25 lb. boxes *o 65-A | 300 lb. bales
CLEARANCE SALE
Apartment size gas range Kelvinator refrigerator GE dryer $39
Several other used dryers In ex*E cellent condition. Crump. Electric; . Inc., 3465 Auburn Rd.* Auburn Height*.
COMPLETE APARTMENT FURNI-ture. Must be sold this week. Hill-crest Apartments. 763 N. Woodward at Qak, Birmingham. Ml! 6*3677. - y
Industrial cafeteria tables, seats 6.
| $19.95 . |
CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING I „ M . , ! .
Specializing in fina antique re- 35' van trailers, can be used on finishing, furniture repair of all the roao or for storaga. Start at 63 types, all work guaranteed. Harold,
Richardson, 363-9361. Mon.*Frl. I
Hi-Fi, TV A Radio*
$250.
Clark fo-k lift truck. 4000 lb. $895.
Snowmobile
BUY NOW AND SAVE I
CRUISE OUT INC
E. Walton Dally 9-6 FE 8-4402 5, SIP; SIZE
NO. 1 PONTIAC AND SEBAGO Potatoes. Middleton's Orchards, 1510 Prtdmore Rd., Laka Orion. MY 2-1961 after 4.
Farm Equipment
87
66
CUSHIONS
Custom Made for Danish, Colonial and Contemporary chairs' * and sofas. Special prices on close-out fabrics. Expert workmanship. Phone 335-1700.
SNOWMOBILES
, . . ________■ USE,£,cC^,HS' EVINRUDE
, . PRICED TO SELL. ON DISPLAY
2 - MONTH - OLD BEAUTIFUL S' ' 2 1944 Ormoi
stereo, sliding front panels with: New and used steal, angles, channel, ,walt Mazurek
bar and record storage. AM-FMi beams, plite, pipe. <* I ■ >i/r .kin CCA 88ADIMC
radio with 4-speed ‘stereo changer; LAKt AND 5tA /VIAKInt
lovely walnut finish. Balance due, RAIII FVARD <>lIPPI Y ’ Woodward at Saginaw FE 4-9587
*188.40 cash or 89.50 monthly., 335-1 . _,W , vaai------------------SKI BOOS - SKI-DOOS-----
9283, Household Appliance. ' 500 5. Blvd. E. ,_ ___FE 3-_70*J SKI OOOS SKI DCKJS
21cuiif is” math as tv~ early washing machines conven. •" mode,s £ 5,oc^' -W »
American cabinet, $50. OR 3-5309. tionA‘j. •“,0'na,l,c 21" SILVERTONr COLOR TV i- ^'^ ’^^igan Fluorescenl, I93 year-old, $250, 524-53»l, after 5 p.m. Orebard Lk., FE 4-8442 — 43. _
ZJlpSr _CuR nS-MAfttlS COLOR'^^ ^-^prt^,; jo-. GAs
TV FE 5-1307,________________range, exc. condition, $85 — 2
21" USED TV________ _ $29/5; black leather chairs, 424-0003
ROAD GRADER, TANDEM, GOOD shape, $2,750, owner. 673-3408.
CLEARANCE SALE
ON USED TRACTORS AND SNOW BLADES —
AS LOW AS
$150
A larga selection to choose from.
Money to Loan
(Licensed Money Lender)
61
"RTT77"
BATEMAN
"SAYS"
TRADING IS EASY THE BATEMAN WAY
Gl FAMILY
Annett Inc. Realtors
entice open°evpnings end Sund?yM“ Sale Business Property
40 ACRES. $3500 CASH. WOODED, ~ ^
exc. for recreation. N. of Cadillac. 30,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING with 18
57 Usually
PR 5-2161, Cadillac.___________
60 ACRES, SECLUDED BUT near the action. Price is right at 3100 per acre. Ready tor Invdstmanf or subdividing.
AL PAULY
clearanca, and railroad siding, O'Neil Realty. OR 4-2222.__________
70 ACRES, NEAR DAVISBURG, VA. cant, $650 par acre. Ideal foi development.
20 ACRES, near Hadley, $15,000.1 Tarms.
10 ACRES, near Ortonvllle, $8500. LAKE FRONT on Little Cedar, $3500. Terms.
No. 8 . ... 3 COMMERCIAL LOTS,- M-24, $20,-
NO DOWN PAYMENT tor qualify-1 000, terms; I
Ing veteran on this 5-badroom horns HOMESITES, Indlanwood Shores No. close to schools, bus and downtown! 3 Ca„ today for detans
A. J. RHODES, REALTOR 1
AUBURN AVE.
S stores, all rented $25,000.
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 330-9441
Altar 5 call 332-3759_
BUILDING — 2400 SQUARE FEET, by owner, make offer to buy or leas#. FE 4-0333. _________
FE 8-2304
costs will moyt you In, CALL NOW!|
.... ........ iBETWEEN ROCHESTERi- A N D
REAL BARGAIN Orion — 80 acres with V. mile of
IU0 24$ • paved road frontaga. Land Con-
WITH ONLY 51,000 DOWN. This tract — terms, aluminum-sided home Is located in a
hlgh-damand araa. Basement, new NEAR ROCHESTER — 77 acres with gas furnace, aluminum storms and, frontage ot 2 roads. Land con; screens are lust a few of the nice| tract terms with 20 pet. down, features of this 2-bedroom home.; ■■ .H
distance to _ Fisher Body AT ROCHESTER—120 rolling sen NO with plenty of road frontage. Ideal for new home, subdivision develop-
HIGHLAND RD. WATERFORD VACANT
423'x280* 540,000.
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S, Teldgraph Rfl. f 338-9641
After 6 call 332-3759_
ELEC. STOVE, $25; GAS STOVE# $35; Refrigerator with top freezer, $49; Wringer washer, $40. G. Har-
rls, FE 5-2766. -______________,
FREIGHT DAMAGED BEDPOOMS and living rooms. Save almost half; - LITTLE JOE'S. BARGAIN HOUSE, Baldwin at WaJtOn, FE 3*
6842. >________________
FRIGIDAIRS REFRIGERATOR,
first visit. Quick, frlend-l good condition, $20. 673*6528. I
FULL LENGTH MIRROR ON1 brass standard; pecan coffee table with marble top; ice cream table and chairs, chairs upholstered in white. 335*7232. ________________
Walton- TV, FE 2-2257 Open 9-6 /jjjrrrej annK PNrYCLOPEDIAS. 515 E. Walton, corner oMoslyn_ W2uh mating di^a^ FE °8423!
LOANS TO
$1,000
COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE-----------—- . .. ■■______ .»
joe's Bargain House, fe 2-4042. Hang Tool*—Machinery 00
GE HIGH BAND RADIO EQUIP-'' ment, 1 bass unit, 1 Mobile unit, su INCH HEAVY DUTY CRAFTS-I with antenna, call FE 5-0571. man drill, $15. 7 inch heavy duty
RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES * mail circular saw, $15. Bfrth a l v hard to find7, ball and needle bearing. 434 Bev-
See us — We hava most all kinds | erly Island Drive, Waterford Town-
the mighty Super Alpine • 1BVa HP. Electric, with twin 15". tracks, full line of snowmachlne accessor-
***■ OAKLANO COUNTY'S MfRC-CRUSIER DEALER
Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center
15210 Holly Rd- Holly ME 4-4771
THE GREAT SNOWMOBILE
SCORPION
Built tp perform and endure the most rugged terrain.
ORDER EARLY AND SAVE
KING BROS.
FE 4-1642 FE 44)734
Pontiac Rd- at Opdyka Bd. FARMALL C TRACTOR WITH snow blade and plows. 304-0275. HOMELiTE CttAIN SAWS, JOHN Deere and New idea parte galore. Davis Machinery Co., Ortonvllle, 627-3292.
REAR BLADE FOR FORD TRAC-tor, complete with gauge wheel. Good condition, $200. Ml £3706.
Tractors, Tractors, Tractors
Over 30 models to choose from, we have run out of rooml Buy now and save at these OUT THE DOOR Special Prices.
EVAN'S EQUIPMENT
625-1711
Just Ne of Watarford Hill ________ 6507 Dixie Hwy.
ly, helpful.
FE 2-9206
Is the number to call
OAKLAND LOAN CO.
Johnson TV—FE 8-4549 45 W. Walton near Baldwin REPOSSESSION
ship, after six p.m.
LOANS
$25 TO 11,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. LAWRENCE
FE ’ 8-0421
LOANS
$25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER 8. LIVINGSTONE Finance Co.
401 Pontiac State Bank Building
FE 4-1538-9
AIR COMPRESSORS. L U B R I C A-tion' equipment, hydraulic lacks,,3771 Highland
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC.
(M59) 48
5 giant feet of solid state stereo, steam gjahdfg- WeMlg I USED SKlIS AND-BOOTS. DON NS
front panels with bar and ment. Etc. fonjlac Motor Parts, F corner Walton end Sash-,
storage. AM-FM radio with' 1014 University Drive. FE 2-0)04. | ^aw
- -r— stereo changer, lovely wal- BRIDGEPORT MILL , I -----------wf any SELL TRADE
nut finish. Balance due $227.14 cash; w)th Slncro Trace, 2 mddel J; rnu/' aiiVinds
or $12.50 monlh handles. 335-9283,1 heads, punch press No. 4 bliss,. .. ^rNdS- FE
---------Pi---I----___________ Household Appliance. ______ I 887-5670 lOpdykt Hardware,--,---1S-
GAiJ*T°Y£'/sUI±;S,Zfi'«C0?.E2'|ZENITH 21" PORTABLE TV, 1-yrar-old, In good condition, with stand. 402-4455 after 6:30 p.m.
sliding — record storage. AM-FM radio with 4-speed stereo changer, lovely wal
tone, used 42 mo., 'S149-; G. Thompson, 7005 M59 West.
GE ELECTRIC STOVE. THIRTY- - -
inch size, white, ceii alter 4 p.m. Water Softeners
335-7943. 535.00.
66-A
NEW ANO REBUILT ELECTRIC] ... .
motors. Also rebuilt water pumps. Sand-GrOVel-DlrT
76
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE F O R HOT WATER HEAT AND WATER' sale, cheap. Presbyterian Church softeners a specialty! Condra! on Oakland* 1,to 5__________________| Plumbing 8$ Heating FE 8*0643._____
Loyd* MA 6-2405.
Musical Goods
71
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE IN-
^nLtTkh«,nnB.wmM.h4ne5435d,ninB For Sale Miscellaneous
67;
1ST TIME OFFER FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON GIBSON. GOYA* EPIPHONB Guitars and Amplifiers Call right now ' 332-4163
PONTIAC- MUSIC 8. SOUND 3IQI W. Huron
1-A
■ SAND AND GRAVEL, ALL areas delivered. 573-5515. Watarford
ALL STONE, SAND PRODUCTS. Road gravel — del. all areas. SAW Trucking, 394-0042, 628-2563 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP ply. Sand gravel till dirt. OR 3-1574.
Pets-Hunting Dogs
ment. Terms available.
MILTON WEAVER, JMC. Realtors . In the Village of Rochester 7ll ,w. University ■ <51(141
CLARKSTON AREA. 2
Bloch Bros. <23-1333, r*. 5440 Dixie Hwy., Waterford
ACRES, $45 Sun. 4509.
•na priced it only-50,900 with MORTGAGE COSTS.
PIONEER HIGHLANDS
No. 20
3-BEDROOM BRICK with 2’/$ car garage. Full basement, gas heat and Beautifully landscapad lot dost to Sylvan Lake privileged park. All on one floor, wonderful condition and most desirfd area on west side.
Must ba seen to be appreciated.
Priced to sell et- *21.950 with as little as 52.200 down plus costs.
CALL TODAYI
LAKE PRIVILEGES
No. 45
WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT If you are a qualifying' veteran. Rial nice
convenient Lotus Lake area and this ,
2-bedroom Is lust 12 years old. Just 1 ACRE, In the country, hilly, ap-
FromOne To a Hundred
TAKE YOUR PICK
ACREAGE
closing costs moves you In end priced to sell quickly . $12,300.
Large 100 ft. Wide lot and dose-ln country living that you will enjoy. CALLTODAYI
OWNER TRANSFERRED
No. 41
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION: Lived in less than I year and owners transferred out of area. Beautiful 3-bedroom brick ranch with full basement ana 2-car garage, m baths, built-ins end sodded lawn that Is nicer then new, blacktop street, community water and laka privileges on Oakland Laka, lust minutes from town- Priced et $26,500 for quick sale and txcellant tarms. CALL NOW!
MODEL HOMES
COLONIALS, TRI-LEVELS AND RANCHERS as low as 117,750 on lot With all custom features
100x300, 51,695, 5550
10 ACRES, nlca hill, some trees, good road, 55,220, tarms.
20 ACRES, little north of Lapeer, applt orchard, hardwood trees, gently rolling, 57,H5, (1,000down.
100 ACRES, Maples, Oaks, Sassafras, Belch plus lake possibility (S acres or more), loins state land. Hadley Hills area. $390 per acre.
MANY OTHER PARCELS AVAILABLE. See Pangus Inc., Realtors. Ortonvllle.
C. PANGUS INC,. Realtors
KEEG0 HARBOR CEMENT BLOCK
2500 sq. ft. txtra lot $38>000
ATEMAN
MERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9441
After 5 call 332-3759.
M-24, HOME & LOT
140x200. 1 rooms, 532,950;
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 330-9441
Altar 5 .call 332-3759
umiccum n cpcriAi I’A to v. hp sump pumps, new
HOUjcHULD irtUAL and used, ajso repaired, 12 to 24 _, - ,___________
*20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF 4x4 fireplace wood. Cone's, FE. AMPLIFIER. $40, CALL AFTER 4 1-A POODLE CLIPPING,
,, - FURNITURE - Consists of: | 8-4442. _____j p.m. UL 2-2734. Mfli
OZ 8-piece living room outfit with 2-pcJ j drum-SET. PURCHASE PRICE living room suite, 2 step tables, ^j. $450( sell tor $200. 1 Tappan gas
79
Mortgage Loans
MONEY TO LOAN — FAST I m’o'.'is'rn/'inri.IdJd* l,mM rangeIfltO new, 5100. 623-2509.
First andHi^nSdEmVo'rtlaoes J 7-p'lie’ ^^m^fo 'wlth doubleTW* wFIrst and second mortgages Tor. ^ futi-air* h*rt withl ,BTU. Wa
foeoalan< wlttiInnerspfing mattress and matching Heating -_I________
?iirtlt »r. OK JlthPus call ALL box spring and 2 vanity lamps. 2 PRACTICALLY NEW FURNACES, OICX MORTGAGF Co ' Mr Winn 3 Pi,c' dinette set with 4 chrome: 2,750,000 btu. Made by United 1 W8 7982 IVlr' VVmn' All W MOO. Ymir j COatae l—
GALLAGHER'S
CHICKERING PIANOS
The best — costs no more, in fact — Its cheaper In the long run. You can own — a new Chlckerlng Console as low as $29 PER MO.
■................. S3 AND
Stud service and puppies. FE 4-6431.
1-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC,_ EST El HEIM KENNELS, 391-1159 1-A DACHSHUND PUPS,. AKC, $10 down. JAHEIM'S KENNELS. FE 8-2531:
1-A POODLE SALON BY "ARLEEN" - FE 8-8569
Swaps
63
14' FIBER GLASS AERO-CRAFT, with 40 horse scott, all electric with trailer, sklis, 4 lackets, lira extinguisher and cover, trade for camper to fit 1947 Vk-ton pickup,
O' box. 424-2217. _________
Hay BALER AND SIDE 61, livery rake. For sale or swap. FE 4-0350.
M-24 INDUSTRIAL
10A. 5000 sq. ft. new bldg. 585.000.
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 337 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641
After 5 call 332-3759
MONTCALM & STANLEY
Vacant, 84,500. 51,400 down.
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 330-9441
Altar 5 call 332-3759
ORION TOWNSHIP - LAND FILL
Nix Realtor. 651-<
2-5375.
0RT0NVILLE INDUSTRIAL
2500 sq.'ft. bldg. 521,500.
BATEMAN
shown by appointment and OPEN 430 m-15
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
377 S. Telegrap 338*9641 After 5 call 332*3759
SUNOAY 1-5 p.m. Call tot' appointment.
YOU CAN TRADE BATEMAN REALTOR - MLS
PONTIAC OR ION-OXFORD BR. FE 5-7141 OA 1-4211
377 S. Tala. Rd. 1120 N. Lapeer Rd. Rochester Br. Union-Lake Br. OL 1-0515 EM 3-4171
730 S. Roch. Rd. 5)75 Commerce Rd.
Income Property . 50
3-FAMILY’, 515,900 WITH. 52400 down on 7 per cent TMd- contract, payments $120 monthly Including taxes and Insurance, rents for $xo monthly, call owner, 673-^ 8740 after 6 p.m.__
KENT
Established In 1914
ACREAGE — In Drayton Plains 480' paved business frontaga. Ona block oH U.S. 10 Hwy. Total prlca 550,000. Present Incoma 5500 par month.
FURNISHED INCOME - • units. Spacious grounds. Wonderful location. Total price $45,000.
I FAMILY INCOME — Weal aids location. Big corner lot B1 S.ooc with 52.500 down.
Floyd Kent, Inc., Reoltor
Starting
Soon
New luxury, 8 unit apartment .buildings for sale. Required cash $28,900, bql. mortgage. For full details call 674-3136. Model at 3440 Sashabaw, S. of Walton Blvd.
CALL NA 7-2815 COLLECT
Homesites
Build your dream honrfe this spring. 3 hava 3 choke lots measuring lot 180' wide and from 295' to 345' in depth. Full price $3500 with $500 down. Located lh In- REALTOR dependence Twp.
McCullough realty
REALTOR
5448 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Open 9-9____• ■■
PONTIAC AREA
Sale with lease back on 34x60' commercial bldg., well located on corner lot In new shopping area. Plenty of parking space. A good Invastmant with only $5,000 down.
RIDGEWAY
MLS
674-2239
HOWARD T.
KEATING
EDGE OF FENTON
Oakland County, Holly Township. Approximately 11 acre*. $11,000. Excellent perking soil, sand and loam, cleared bordering on Shiawassee River.
SAME AREA
Approximately 12 acres, small house, needs repair end modernizing, beautiful sl«* bordering on Shiawassee River, 514,000.
ALSO
20 acres, 515.000.,, Cleared land bordering on Shiawassee. On each a minimum of 11 per cent down. 10 per cent oft for cash, balance 4 par cent land contract, For the entire acreage of 4S 21-100 acres. 134.000. 510,000 down, 4 per cent land contract.
DIXIE HIGHWAY
Near Holly Rd. Not . far from Grand Blanc and, Clarkston. Ex-callaht acreages, long Irontlnga on Dixie. Hwy Commercially zoned. 300 teal deep. Excellent for motel, high rise, and multiple. Must be seen to be appreciated.
OTHER ACREAGE AND lake properties AVAILABLE
c. Nelsey. Seles Ag.nt. OevIsburg ] 13-475- 3291 or 313-437-5710 Evening Call Welcome
STORE BUILDING AND HOUSE 2S\x 100'. 3S N. Broadway, Lake Orion, otter a p.m.______________
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
Ideally located corner suitable for many purposes. Zoned C*1 and lays |ust right. Located in fast growing area that makes this perfect for investment or Immediate use, tan be handled with $5000 down.
Warren Staut, Realtor
1450 N. Opdyka Rd. FE 5-8165
_____Dally till 8 _____
Business Opportunities 59 BEAUTY SALON
n
PARTRIDGE
“IS THE BIRD TO SEE”
A TOP LOCATION STORE
Ovar 2400 sq. ft. gt busy Intorsactlon on Highland Rd. Large partially ptved lot 150 x 248. Has hundreds 'of uses In Ibis prime location. For on Investment your own Use — don't wall, priced right lor quick sale el only $40,008, on terms.
ASK FOR BUSINESS GUIDf^ PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W.-HURON STREET FE 4-3581
_ Open Wk. NltOS tin 9:00_
SAND & GRAVEL BUSINESS
JUST OFF M-59
17 ocras with 4i'x6l' steel building, loading dock, frontaga on pevod rood. Owner leaving town, sacrifice on land controcl terms.
BRIAN 623-0702
5904 Dixie Hwy., Woltrlord
LAKEFRONT LOT, CASH, TERMS or trade. 333-7429.
SINGER PORTABLE SEWING MA-chlne, for handgun — any caliber
FE 2-9432, _______
WANTED: OLDER USEb FURNI-
chairs and table. All for $399. Your credit Is good al Wyman's.
WYMAN FURNITURE CO.
17 t. HURON___________FE 5-1501
KIRBY SWEEPER
EXCELLENt CONDITION - $50 FULL GUARANTEE
Kirby Service & Supply Co.
2417 DIXIE HWY. 674-2234
DACH
States Radiator Corp., sttann or. ,710 j Telegraph FE 4-0544 1-A ENGLISH BULL DOGS,
hot water, gas fire. MA 5-216), y4 mile1 south at Orchard Lake Rd. ] shunds, poodles, tropical fish, pet
<335 Sashabaw Rd;_____________ Dally 9:30-9 p.m.________________ supplies end grooming. Un e I
5 NEW 7 00-15-4 PLY JRUCK TIRES, G|BSON BASS GUITAR. AMPLI- CharlkM PW_Shop.^W W-tHuron,
and split rims for Vi ton GMC ori |jer «200. 624-2511. 332-8515. Open sunaays i to_j.-
Chevy $200. 3015 Whitfield Dr. «t[/, —with CAiP.—GOOD: 2-YEAR-OLD GERMAN SHEP-
Maceday Lake.
9'X12' LINOLEUM RUGS, *3.95 EA. Plastic wall tile lc ea.
Celling tile — wall paneling, cheap. B5.G Tile, FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Huron
105,000 BTU NEW GAS FURNACE, Installed with ducts, avg. $595. Also . power humidifiers Installed, reas. A A H Sales, 625-1501, 625-2537.
LEAVING TOWN — BEDROOM, twin beds with mattresses, pillows, sheets and spreads, 2 bedside cabinet!, bureau, detached large frame mirror, also dining room.]
Oval table, extra leaves, buffet,
4 chairs. Washing machine. All modern, like new. Coll 335-3125, | MONEY DOWN
A 1000 USED AND NEW WOOD -*P aluminum storm windows tndj 1710 S^ Talagrapn doors, $2 and up. 646-7945.
GALLAGHER'S
L0WREY ORGANS
See and hear the. now ■Lowrey Rhythm section Of before you buy. Also several good buys In used organs - PRICED FROM 5295
herd. 9-month-old dachshund, frae
to good homa. 391-2924, ________
3 MIXED , BLACK MALE PUPS, 55. 2579 Little Troll, Walled Lake.
424-0475.___________________________
5-MONTH-OLD female labra dor with papers. 620-3247,
4 WEEKS OLD, FEMALE POODLE puppies, $35. 452-5497.
_____■■ FE 4-0544
V. mile south at Orchard Laka Rd. | Dally 9:30-9 p.m.
AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, rare black, farms. OR 3-0002.
ANCHOR FENCES Iused piano, choose from up ___
W ' ---- ----- ---- ■ -Imu muNEY DOWN FE S-7471] rights, grands, spinets end con- AKC german SHEPHEft' PUPS,
391 224$ F Clark ' LINOLEUM RUGS, '2°s7 ,BASEMENT OF FURNITURE, PIC-I Uprights from $49
391-2267. r. Clark, — ; -- 13.49 up. Pearson's Furnllura, 210, ViTr« ? antioua organs, make of-
.cT-rOanP E. Pike SU FE 4-7051. ____t*r '373 EllSSI of? SqueT. Lake
MISCELLANEOUS. FURNITURE j Rd., 335-4072.
WE BUY SELL TRADE, lea skates sporting goods, guns, Barnes A Hargreaves Hardwere, 742 W. Huron, FE 5-9101.
Sale Household Good*_65
VO WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY
3 ROOMS
BRAND NEW FURNITURE
$277
$2.50 per week
No payments during a ttrlka. LITTLE JOE'S
Bargain House
1441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-4042 Acres of Free Parking Evas, 'til 9; Sat, 'til 4, EZ Terms 3 PIECE SECTIONAL — BRAND new close-out, l beige 1 blue, nylon covered, Foam cushion. Regular $229, now $139. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike, FE 4-7851.
4-PIECE BEOROOM SET (Brand New)
$89.00 82.50 Weekly
PEARSON'S FURNITURE
210 E. Pike________________FE 4-785)
5150.
9 CU. FT. FREEZER AND 12 CU. ft. refrigerator. OR 3-6509,
9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89
Solid Vinyl Til# ......... 7c ea.
Vinyl Asbestos tile ..... 7c ea.
Inlaid Tile, 9x9 .........7c aa.
Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake
"Across From the Moll'f “1967TIALXMATIC
Brand new sewing machine left In lay-a-way. Sold for $139.Balance Due $33.33 or will accept $1.25 par wk. Call anytlm«a 334-3886. Dealer.___________________
1967 SINGER
Used only 5 mos. Dial • zlg zeg modal. No attachment needed for
$35r 625-5451.
for sale* reasonable. 673*2132.
BLUE LUSTRE NOT ONLY RIDS carpets of soil but leaves pile soft and lofty. Rent electric sham-era $1. Hudson's Hdwe.a 41 E.
ONE OF A KIND
Freight Scratch I Walton._____________________
so??’ JJS1 rSiirwa,nut> ::::::: w.oo®*10** - your wedding
42" round table. 4 mate chairs 879.50.
Boston rockers 822.951
Pearson's Furniture
210 E. PIKE ______FE 4-7501
Pontiac Resale Shop Buy-Sell
„_____ rsf street past
Oakland on Wide Track. 335-4932. POSTUREPlDIC BOX SPRINGS and mettrass. Walnut dresser. FE 5-2011. *________________
announcements at discount from, Forbes, 4500 Dixie. Drayton, 3-9747.
REBUILT VACUUM CLEANERS, $16.50 and up. Washer and dryer parts.
MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CO.
32*2 Dixit Hwy.________ 473-5011
REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES— 1967 closeouts, savl plenty. Little Joe's. Baldwin et Wallin. FE 2-4842,
SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG
Sewing machine — sews single or double needle, designs, overcasts, buttonholes, etc. — modern cabinet. Take over payments of:
$7 PER M0. FOR 8 MOS. OR $56 CASH BAl
T Still under guarantee
UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER FE 4-0905
t.
Singer—Lightweight
Beautiful sewing machine, zlg-zagger, makes fancy atltches, sail for contract bal„ 529.80 or Will accapt IS per mo. call Northern - r i 473-9
Appliance 673-9744.
etc. Pay off smell balance of $58.80 cash or 85 a month claims. 335-9283, Household Appliance.______
1967 SINGER
TOUCH AND SEW MODEL Practically new — slant needle designs, excellent. Yours for new bal., SI 11.10 or pay 89 per me.
Cell Northern Appliance. 673-9746,
APARTME^T^ELECTRIC STOviS $37. Maytag washers $29 to k $59.
New, sofa oadit $69. 2 pc. Ilvlog
rooms low as $39. BadroOffts* Ul. H .A,« «Ag
chests and dressers. Lot* of used (w ® ^ sag so
bargains. Little Joe's Trade-Ins, *ld,hhul^'ch
Baldwin el Walton, F E 2-4042. Corner hutch '
BAssETt bepii6qm set, ixc. Psorson s Furniture
' condition 8115. Walnut 7 piece dl- 210 E. PIKE FE 4 7881
nett* set. ixc, eondINen_*»•:STUDIO COUCH.'GdoB ' CONDI-. j|nn, fgiq. down lor bed. $25. 684" Stanley Ikve.r 2nd house on right off Monlcalm. AfteT 3 p.m.
(TOUCH - SEW)
SINGER
DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE
Zip ziootr. In aturdy carrying cost. Repossessed. Pay off: • i-/
$38 CASH >*
Or Payments of 5 per mo.
5 yr. guarantee
Universal Sewing Center
___FE 4-0905_ _
SLIGHTLY SCRATCHED
BRIGGS & STRATTON
ENGINE PARTS, SERVICE We're authorized dealers For many other*.
LAWNBOY, JACOBSEN, KOHLER TECUMSEH, WISCONSIN
HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 W. University 651-7010
DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER_____
BROWNIES HARDWARE" FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS SI A DAY
9S2 Joslyn _ FE 4-4)05
BRUNSWICK POOL TABLE 4' X ('. FE 5-8329.
CLEANINGEST CARPlT CLEANER you ever used, so easy too. Gat . Blue Lustre. Rent electric sham-pooer 51. Opdyke Hardwire, 1960
Opdyke._____________
COAL FURNACE. OIL HEATERS,
GRINNELL'S
Downtown Stare 27 S. Saginaw
AKC MINI-POODLE 7 WEEKS. FE mala, 150. 335-8482. , .0
AKC BEAD L E 5, (EXCELLENT hunters, rabbits or birds. OR 3-5007. AXC ENGLISH BULL PUPS AND
grown dogs. Reasonable. F E 5-9052, AKC MINIATURE , SCHNAUZER,
WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS'AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND
iArirNUArAMNA*iiCir "lemeierM'mwthi. Smews'.____
JACK HAGAN MUSIC akc Doberman pincher pups
469 Elizabeth Lake Rd, 332-05051 , 482-1204._______I
8192 Cooley Laka Rd.___343-5500 AKC, CKC, alaSICAN MALAAAUTE
YES. WE RENT INSTRUMENTS FOR SCHOOL BAND AND ORCHESTRAS $5 per month 510 for Saxophone* '
MORRIS MUSIC
34 S. Telegraph Rd.
Acros» from Tel-Huron "C 2*41567
Music Lessons 71-A
ACCORDION, GUITAR, LESSONS.
Sales-servlca* Pulanefkl# OR 3-5^6. THEORY CLASSES STARTING JAN-uary. Beg{nner$_or advanced. Chil-
dren or adults. OR 3-0923.
Office Equipment
72
pups, show and pion bloodline, 634-3923.
all
ALL PET SHOP, » WILLIAMS, FE 4-4433, Parakeet* end Finchov BASSET HOUND, 5 MONTHS OLD with paptri, call attar 4 p.m.
_391-2151.____________t________
BEAUTIFUL COLLIE PUPPIES^ 692-190)
BOXfR. 16 MONTHS, FAWN, AKC, reglsltred, excellent watch dog
Travel Trailers
SB
CENTURY
YELLOWSTONE
Travel trailers Quality et any budget
Mon. Ond Tuas., 9 A.M. to I P.M/ Wed. thru Frl„ 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. ;Set. 9 A.M. to<5 P.M. Closed tun.
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC.
3771 Highland ME 4-4771 Open Daily' and Sundays — wolverine fWCk'cAMAfety and sleepert. Now and usad, SIN up. Alto rental*. Jacks, Intercoms telescoping, bumpers, leddart recks. Lowry Comper teles. 1JH 5. Hospital, fed., Union Lake. BN 3-36*1. Spore lire ctrrStn.
MehUG Weni '
1-A Beauties to Choose Fronr
RICHARDSON DRLTJ
MONARCH ,, duki
homette UBIrti
COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES
25* OPDYKE 5430
Auburn Helghie I. of Witoffort
D—H
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
t BEDROOM 1944 NEW MO#N-40 X IS. jcmtral air, washer, awning. • »*»* or raasonsblt offer, yn-n off 4196. ■ wwii*. iw
ilrtS^lflttRbSON GLfeNHAVEN. 2 • *2,700. 85^4736.
ATTENTION!
• House frailer, owners or sales . 1963 Ford. N-600 fully equipped to handle any trailer.
$1,095
John jyicAuliffe Ford
177 West Montcalm EE 5-6101__________________LI 3-2030
Wwrtwl {wi-Twth 101
ADKINS, AUTO SALES. NEEDS
Best Mobile Home Soles Open Daily—9 a.m.-8 p.m.
Champion
■^andola
Marietta Royal Embassy
' Squire _
Delta Victor
MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON r i DISPLAY
. FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP-, WITHIN 200 MILES..
SPECIAL
2 ONLY — 1968 Champions ' 12 X 60' — $4995
ON DISPLAY AT:
Cranberry Lake Mobile Home Village
9620 Highland Rd., . (M-59) 2 miles West of Williams Lk., Rd.
$63-5296 _________________363-5600
■\ STOP
HERE LAST
M&M ■
MOTOR SALES
Now at .our new location 1 Wa pay more for sharp/ late mop-el cars. Corvettes needed. l
1150 Oakland at Viaduct \
338-9261 1
TOPS PAID
(Downtown Store Only) Regent j FOR ALL SHARP PONTIACS AND CADILLACS. We ore prepared to make you a better offer!! Ask for Bob Burns.
WILSON CRISSMAN
Foreign Can
105
LOW MILEAGE.
1965 VW $999. EXCELLENT CON ditiqn. Dark green sedan. Runs great. 651 -9230,
1965 VW, NEW TIRES, GOOD CON dition, $1100.673-1907.°
1967 VW. ZENITH BLUE. 6,000 Ml' Exc. condition. $1,60ft. 646-^71, ,
CALIFORNIA Benz 190, blown heac 673-6751.
1957 MERCEDES i rust, new valves, gasget, t>est offer.
TOYOTA
SALES 1 SERVICE
' St
Haskins Auto. Sales
Clarkston Dixie (US 10) 635-3112
New and Used Cars
106
1968
Detroiter Mobile Home
Now on display at
. BOB HUTCHINSON'S
4301 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) Drayton Plains OR 3-1!
or
22350 Telegraph Rd. bttween 8 & 9 Mile EL 6-1644.
LOST OUR LEASE
AT 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'xl2Y list price $5,185 OUR PRICE: $3,895 , Don't miss this chance of a lifetime. All sizes In stock. Also see 1968 models on display now. htea delivery and free set-up within 300 (piles. We will not knowingly be ? undersold. _____
MIDLAND TRAILER SALES
Opart'? to 9 7 Days .Week
2257 Dixie Hwy.
Wanted . Sharp Cars I
We Pay Top Dollar! Immediate Cash!
All Makes and Models
WE WILL -TRADE-DOWN
SPARTAN
DODGE
TOWN & COUNTRY
' Mobile homes
CLEARANCE SPECIALS
• NEW UNITS
law Suncraft ............
12'x60' Suncraft, colonial .$5395
12'x60' Bahama .........."495
12*xfl'Bahama ........ .*3395
12'x60' Homecraft ..... $5195
USED UNITS
‘ Kt'x52' Suncraft 1966 ..
‘ 12'x52' Suncraft 1966 . $3450
• DELIVERED AND SET UP
• TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY
334-6694
Oxford Trailer Sales
! MARLETTES - 50 to 63 long, li .. wide, 20 wide. Early American. . Conventional and modem decor Expando or tlp-outs. Priced right, -urn right. Phone MY 2-0721,
ml. S. of Lake Orion on M24.
90
92
I DOUBLE EAGLE AUTO TIRES, 650-13. $20 ea. 334-1335 after
Rent Trailer Space
Tirei-Avto-Truck
Auto Service
93
Motorcycles
95
CHRISTMAS SALE .Mini Bikes? Go Carts
ildandt to choose r~ RUPP — FOX — 'LIL INDIAN RUTTMAN - TACO — BONANZA
From $119.95 UP
$0 down or use your ■ Michigan Bankard
MG $ALES & SERVICE
4667 Dixie Hwy. , Drayton Plains Open 'til 0 p.m. 6 days wk.
MINI BIKES
Candy-paint, chrorr 3V4 n.p., safety 1 $149 With $5 d
lint, chroma fenders,
' y throttle , ' dowtl.
MINI BIKE KITS - *119. ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph FE >7102
SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-250CC. RUPP Mlnlblkes as low at $139.95. Take M59 to W. Highland, Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and' follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAM 9-2179..____________■
WINTER PRICES
SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES on all motorcycles A taw '67s loft at huge savings.
ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102
Bicycles 96
SCHWINN 10 SPEED bike. 625-46704 VARSITY
Boats-Accessories 97
CLEARANCE
1967 Models
BOATS AND MOTORS 1 SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
CRUISE OUT INC.
63 E. Walton Daioy 9-6 FE 8-4403 GLASSPAR, STEURY. GW-INVAD-er, Mirrocraft boats, Grumman canoes,* Evinrude motors, Pamco trailers. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left ahd follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 629-2179.
INSIDE WINTER STORAGE KAR'S BOATS & MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON RD.
LAKE ORION - MY 3-1608
SAILBOAT — VIVACTIY, TWIN keel, 20', fully equipped, 4 berth . cruiser, heavy duty trailer. 692-5101
THE SEASON IS COMING,
SO MAKE THE MOVE NOW . . .
HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS
"Your Evinrude Dealer"
1899 S. Telegraph 332-8033
PINTERS
jonnson poors ana woiors
SNOWMOBILES NEW AND USED 1370 Opdyke 9-6 FE 4-0924
(1-75 at Oakland University! Exit)
Airplanes
99
We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today.
.FISCHER
BUICK
544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600
WE'LL MAKE YOU A BETTER Offer on your used car — SEE
DOWNEY OLDS. INC.
550 Oakland Ave. , FE 2-S101
Junk Cars-Trucks
101-A
1 TO 100 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS, free tow anytime. FE 5-9044.
ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS and scrap, we tow. FE 5-9948.
AND WRECKf D prices paid.
JUNK CARS — WRECKS WANT-ed — highest price paid. FE 5-3620.
COPPER - BRASS; RADIATORS— starters and generators, C. Dlx-son, OR 3-5849.______________________
Used Auto-Truck Parti 102
1961 TO 1964 HIGH RISE TRI-POW-er complete, ‘61 to '64 4 barrel manifold, '65 to '67 alum., wheels, tront only. 646-8659.________
USED ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, rear exit, trl powers, ball housing, body parts, etc. H m H Auto Salas. OR 3-5200. .
New and Used Trucks 103
S' TRAILER TRACTOR CAB, good condition, $2300. Troy 505-6700,
1948 INTERNATIONAL 14 STAKE truck. Hydro-hook-up for dump bed. Exc. condition. 335-5007.
1948 FORD TRUCK, ered. New tiros. By 4 p.m.
1955 FORD Dump TRUCK. NEED minor repslr, $100. mm
ADKINS AUTO SALfe
I960 Chevy Pickup, recently overhauled. runs vary good . . . $395. 738 Oakland FR 2-6230
1963 CHEVY PICKUP. SIDE boxes, good condition, $800 with side boxes, $650 without. 335-5493
COMPLETE
NEW SHIPMENT
'88 JEEPS
aiscoum pnus.
Grimaldi
Jeep
9pQ Oakland Ava.
JACK LONG FORD
Michigan's Fastest Growing Truck Dealer 16-ton, 1-ten, pickups; and camper specials. Get the L-O-N-G Deal OL 1-9711 215 Main St. Rochester
NEW
AND
USED TRUCKS GMC
Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485
!EO TANDEM FOR PARTS Ford wrecker. 61 Chevy pickup truck. 2 11-ply tires. 731-9092.
Auto Insurance-Marine 104
AUTO INSURANCE Terms Available CALL TODAY!
ANDERSON 8, ASSOC.
FE 4-3535 1044 iJOSLYN AVE.
Foreign Cars
105
F.A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL - LET j 1958 VW. GOOD CONDITION. 1 our instructors teach you to fly. i 3Va S. Tasmania, after 6 P-m.
ADI Inc., Pontiac Airport. OR 4-i I960 TRIUMPH ROADSTER, OLIVE 0441. ! green with black Interior, 4-speed,
radio, heater, balance due $319.71. CALL MR. WHITE, FE 8-4088, K ING. ,____ ______________
BILL GOLLING VOLKSWAGEN
Wanted Care-Tracks 101 j
EXTRA
EXTRA Dollars Paid
FOR THAT
EXTRA Sharp Car
"Check the rest,
. then get the best" at
Averill
AUTO SALES
PE 2-9871 2020 Dixla FE 4-6896
j HELP!
t ■ Wa naad 300 sharp Cadillac., Pontiac*, Old. and Bulck. tar out-of •tata market. Top dollar paid.
* MANSFIELD
i! AUTO SALES
1)04 Baldwin Ava. _
I FE 5-J900 FEM825
'TOP"
CLEAN CARS OR
"TOP DOLLAR PAID"
GLENN'S
Ui
>PB 4-7171
"HOME OF THE L.V.W."
Michigan's fastest growing
Volkswagen Dealer
1821 Maplelawn Blvd.
Off Maple Rd. (IS mile Rd.
ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT Troy______ ___________642-6900
YOUR
VW
CENTER
70 To Choose From -All Models—
—All Colors—
—All Reconditioned—
Autobahn
Motor. Inc.
Authorlrad vw Dealer W mile Norm of Miracle Mila 1765 S. Telegraph , FE $4531
BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You—
Just Call Mr. Mason or Mr. Murphy at FE 5-4101 McAuUffe
BEEN BANKRUPT? DO YOU NEED a car? Garnisheed? Got a problem? Divorced? New In the area? Call Mr. White FE 8-4080. King
Been
Bankrupt? Had a
Repossession? Need a Car?
i Call Today For
Mr. Wyatt at FE 8-4521
STANDARD AUTO.
OF OAKLAND
New end Heed (Care 106
GOOD CHiAP CARS — *29 UP ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE'- FE 4-2131
19*2 CORVAIRSPYBER, MUST »«ll by Frl, Bast otter, 674-3676.
g pggpg
MARMADUKE
By Anderson and Learning
m
2-D06#
Been Bankrupt
HAD A REPOSSESSION? BEEN TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS?
YbU 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, vary sharpl $5 down — only $3 weekly.
[ FULL PRICE ONLY *29?
1962 CHEVY Biscayne 2-door, .tick shift, excellent condition. $5 down — only $3 weakly.
FULL PRICE ONLY .... *297
1961 FORD Galaxle 2-door hardtop, automatic, V-8, viry sharp. $5 down — only $2.25 weekly.
FULL PRICE ONLY .. $297
PAY HERE! BUY HERE!
STANDARD Auto. Sales
00 Elizabeth Lake I c West of West Hurc
681-0004
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1962 CHEVY Station wagon, V-S, automatic, radio, heater, white-walls, 25 month warranty. Only — $695, On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071.
1962 Fjord Sedan ................ $195
1960 Pontiac Catalina ........... $195
1962 Chevrolet - ........ $395
1960 vx Station Wagon *.......... *1951
1962 Pontiac .................... *4951 I
1963 Chevrolet . ............. $595 Your FORD DEALER Since 1930“
DO YOU NEED A CAR? GOT R__________■
problem? Divorced? Been bank-1630 Oakland Ave.
1962 CORVAIR 2-POOR. RADIO, heater, stick, good transportation, for only $188 full price. No Money Down.
John McAuliffe Ford
FE 5-4101
DIVORCED? BEEN BANKRUPT? Repossessed? New in area? NEED A CAR? Call Mr. White FE 8-4060. King._____________________________
NEW FINANCE PLAN. IF PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHEED WAGES, WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT RE ESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE have over 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHSED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE CREDIT MGR. MR. IRV.
LUCKY AUTO
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED 1967 Chevy 4-dr., auto., V-8's, 1966 Ford «Uto., V-8'S, 1 1966
Chevy auto.* V-8, also 2 1965 Pon-tiacs, auto, with double power, These cars ara priced to sell fast, No reasonable offer refused. Cars can be purchased with no money down.
LUCKY AUTO
WE HAVE A NICE SELECTION OF COMPACT CARS. STICK SHIFTS, AUTOMATICS AND 4-SPEEDS. RONEY'S AUTO 131 BALDWIN. FE 4-4909.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE
NO GIMMICKS—NO GIVEAWAYS JUST
RIGHT CARS AT RIGHT PRICES MANY MANY TO CHOOSE FROM
OPDYKE MOTORS *
2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke
FE 8-9237 _______ FE 8-9238
1961 BUICK' SPECIAL STATION wagon,., VrS, automatic, power « iteering;. ‘power brakes, turquoise with matching Interior. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due *302.46. CALL MR. WHITE. FE
CORVAIR. condition. Call 2-2578.
1963 CORVETTE. RED, CONVERTI-ble, 2 tops, 4-speed, $1600. 493-1385.
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1963 CORVAIR stick, with radio, heater, real good second car, 25 month warranty. Only $595, On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, AAA 5-5071.
1963 CHEVY II NOVA WAGON, 33, 000 miles. Extras Include mounted snow tires, power steering, auto., rock. 5675 or best otter. Eves, FE 8-3418 days, TO 8-2146.
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1963 CHEVY Bel Air station wagon, V-8, automatic, whitewalls, one owner, 25 month , warranty. Only 5995. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston AAA 5-5071. ______________
1964 CHEVY 9-PASSENGER pa la station wagon. Auto. Power steering, brakes, windows, air con-dltlonlng. 51025. Call FE 5-2727 after 6 p.m.____-_______
1964 CHEVY WAGON,, V-8, DOUBLE power, heater, radio, good shape, 363-3221.
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS 1964 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE, 4-spaed, radio, heater, whitewalls, 25 month warranty. Only *595. On US to at M15, Clarkston, AAA 5-5071. »__________
AL HANOUTE
Chevrolet
Bulck
On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS 1964 CHEVY Impale 2-door, hardtop. V-8, ’ automotlc, whitewalls, very sharp, 25 month warranty. Only $995. On US 10 at Ml 5, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. * ____
1964 IMPERIAL CROWN COUPE, full power AAA and FM radio, pow-er bucket seats,. Stereo tape unit, vinyl top, more, A-t condition, cell FE *1101.
1965 CHEVY SS, VINYL TOP AND 4-speed, Hlce'$1295. FE 2-7W2
OVER 35
DOUBLE CHECKED USED CARS
NOW IN STOCK
VANDEPUTTE
BUICK-OPEL
196-210 Orchard Lake Rd.
FE 2-9165
1962 BUICK ELECTRA 4-DOOR hardtop, full power, radio, heater, whitewalls, one owner In excellent condition. Just assume weekly payments of $5.07. CALL MR. WHITE, FE 8-4008, KING.
1965 Chevy
PICKUP WITH CAMPtR
with Camper
VY-ton with fleetside body, radio, V-8, fully equipped camper.
$1895
BILL FOX * CHEVROLET
755 S. Rochester Rd. OL 1-7000
and Used Cart lM Ntw aid Utad Cart IWNow and Utod Cart * 104
1963 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE, 2-door hardtop, 6-cyllnder automatic, ' Meier steering, turquoise with white vinyl Interior. Roald, hooter, whitewall tired. Assume payments of $3.74 per week. CALL MR. WHITE FE MOM, KINO.
1965 COMif CALIENTE 2-bdOR 202 engine automatic, power steering, radio, heater. Nicest - --- dad ages. This *1295. Hlll-
* 1964 VALIANT 2 DOOR
radio, hooter, automatic, SU5
down and Finance Balance of
Only- . iSS , ,A,
■' $695 . 4 'I
^OAKLAND.'
CHRYSLER r• PLYMOUTH
In ages. This 726 ________________
one owner beauty, $1295. Hill- sivumiTu silly III e-PAS.
Llnrnln-AAereurv 1250 Oak- 1966 PLYMOUTH runT m v-raa
iiSd ■ eury * I senger station wagon, v-o. power
land 333-7863.—----------__ . stowing, auto. Irons., only 12.0M
1965 MERCURY PARKLANE HARt)-| „a)M™M-8213. tap, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, braked, beautiful dark: metallic turquoise, with black I vinyl top. $1,518 full price $88 down,
$54.19 por month. Mint condition Inside and outl 5 year or 50.000 miles, new car warranty available.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD |
630 Oakland Ave. - FE Midi I
1966 MERCURY. PARKLANE CbN-!1'^4 0®®" .^^w' brake,, tires, and battery, 1225 offer, 332-3*29.
1967 TEMPEST 2 DOOR CUSTOAA ’ hardtop. Pull power, air.., Hoad rests, alt extras, large tires. 10.-000 mlla*. t owner. FE 5-17(9.
SHELTON
HAUPT | PONTIAC
PONTIAC BUICK
$55 S. ROCHESTER RD, 651-5500.
1967 TEMPEST Sports coup*; sprint opp.. vinyl trim, $1,895
1964 OLDSMOBILE 4-door hardtop,
_ «. automatic, double power,
FAIR Only *1995
vdrtlble, a bright rad beauty with matching all vinyl Interior, pow-| er brakes and power steering, automatic tranemlSsion, stereo. 1M2 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR tape. This Is not a run of the.........................................
mill convertible—It Is a 1 owner garage kept beauty, sold and serviced by us. Has the balance of the new car warranty loft. $2195. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MER-CURY, 1250 Oakland, 333-7*63.
GET A
MERRY OLDS MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE
52* N. Main
ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN
New and Used Car*
106 New and Uead Cars
I960 OLDS. GOOD RUNNING CON-dltion.-C«ll UL 2-2334, after 3:X p.m
NEED A CAR? NEW IN THE I aieit Repossessed? Garnished?: Been bankrupte? Divorced? Got a. problem? Ball Mr. wjilte FE 8-4080.
Star Auto
WE FINANCE
1967 Ford
Galaxie 2 door hardtop
lO&h*40 OLDS HARDTOP. EXCELLENT mechanical condition. Make offer, I 6734)175.
or best 1*66 TEMPEST Custom 3 door hard-. top-, radio, whitewalls, $1895 1966 LeMANS 2 door hardtop, auto-
„ . _ ....... _ mafic, double power. Only
hardtop, desert whlta with match*! $1895
Ing Interior. V-f, automatic# pow-
er, steering and brakes, radio, 1964 JEEP Wagoneer with automat-
double power, 4 'wheel ve, $>695
. ig
heater, whitewalls. Just assume payments of $4.91 per week. CALL MR. WHITE FE 8-4088, KING. PONTIAC 1963 9-PASSENGER WAG-1 on, power brakes end steering, 1 owner, bxc. condition, will accept owner, exc. condition, will accept i trade, 646-7945. ________________
1963 GRAND PRIX' HARDTOP.! Holiday Special; $795.
KEEG0 PONTIAC
Kccgo Harbor 682-340
HAUPT
PONTIAC
____■, On M-15 at 1-75 Interchange*
safety 'track, heater, radio!.' tires i Clarkston MA 5-5500
* mos. old, 1 owner, $745. FE mf"
8-9857, anytime.
11962 OLDS I hardtop, I like new. 642*
4-DOOR CATALINA SEDAN,
______ power, air conditioned, 682-5764.
STARFIRE, 2-DOOR 1264 4-DOOR PONTIAC CATALINAr 1M7 BONNEVILLE 2-DOOR HARD-iwor, 11,000 ml..
>1 pow 1-4112.
. 11962 OLDS CUTLASS CONVERYl-
wlth V-8, automatic, power lts*r- BLE, V-8.* AUTOMATIC,
IngrOnly —
power brakes and steering; hydro-matic, posl-tractlon, low mileage,: oversize premium tires. Original: owner. Only *995. OR 4-0306, eve-, nlngs.tFE 2-87I0-._____________________
top. Exceptionally clean. 1 owner. Had special rust proofing whit* being built. 682-3530, after 3 p.m.
$2275
POWER
STEERING AND POWER BRAKES. .... Tr..„rrT
save, i i 1964 TEMPEST
$695 I convertible, 326 engine, automatic,
COOPER'S
BEATTIE FORD
Extra Clean Used Cars
All Applications Accepted. I Oakland Avenue FE 8-9661
FORO STATION WAGON, COUN-try Squire, 1962, Air conditioned, all power, good condition., FE 4-6000.
1962 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARD-top, 4-door, V-8, automatic, white with matching interior, radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due *409.12. CALL MR. WHITE, FE 8-4068, KING.
ON DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD
■ 623-09Q0
t.o 9 dally
1967 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN 10 passenger, station wagon, with V8, automatic, r a d I a heater, power steering, brakes, power, rear win-
1964 OLDS
98 Luxury sedan, full power, with factory air-conditioning. Ilka new. $1495
SUBURBAN OLDS
635 S. Woodward Ml 7-5111
Birmingham
4-DOOR7
1963 FORD AUTOMATIC, V-8, RA-dio, heater, full, price of only — *495 with no money down. *6.10 weekly you can buy this c(r even if you have had credit, problems.
Standard Auto.
dow, air conditioning eftrome I6g-
gage rack, plus much more. New__________________
years special. Only $2,588 with 1945 OLDS 88, 4-DOOfe, A REAL $188 down. Only $79.86 per month, beauty. Holiday special. $1,395
warranty.0' 5®'00° m"* ^ KEEGO PONTIAC
John McAuliffe Ford I Kaego Harbor_______________8888
• OWNER, 9 PASSENGER, 1965
gold with matching
$1088 ~
Fischer Bulck
545 S, Woodward
1964 LEMANS, CONVERTIBLE. 3-speed, stick shift, 5000. EM 36913.
1964 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertlble, automatic transmission radio, hdater, power brakes, power steering, real luxury at real savings, 1 year warranty, $1095. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY, .1250 Oakland, 333-7863.
630 Oakland Ave.
FE 56101
1963 FAIRLANE TOWN SEDAN, AUTOMATIC, HEATER, WHITE-WALLS, FULL PRICE $595. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Just assume weekly payments of *5.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. •
19*4 FORD 9 PASSENGER STATION wagon. Automatic, power brakes and steering, excellent condition. 338-9032, after 7 p.m.__________
1964 Ford
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
1966 OLDS
98 Holiday hardtop, full power, vinyl top, like new.
— $2395 SUBURBAN OLDS
635 S. Woodward. Ml 7-5111
Birmingham
1964 TEMPEST STATION WAGON. 682-3400 V6, AUTOMATIC, POWER
STEERING AND BRAKES. FULL PRICE 5950. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $8.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1
1966 OLDS
Toronado deluxe, full power, 6-way seat, factory air . conditioned, tilt and telescopic wheel, like new at only.
$2995
SU8URBAN OLDS
63a S. Woodward Ml 7-5111
Birmingham ’
1967 Pontiac
Bonneville Hardtop
‘2-door with power steering, brakes, tan finish, and Is only .»
1965 PONTIAC CATALINA 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.
Galaxie 500 Hardtop FORD INC
2-door with V-8, automatic, power ■ w. '
steering brakes, vinyl root. Only— Birmingham
$1095
BEATTIE FORD
Your FORD DEALER Since 1930“ ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD
623-0900
1965 MUSTANG
Full power, radio. ----- .
walls. Silver blue.' Must sacrifice, $1150. MA *6602.
965 FORD 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE 5995. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of. $8.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. _________
1960 MERCURY '4-DOOR, V-8, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING AND POWER BRAKES. EVERYTHING WORKS.
<09
COOPER'S
Extra Clean Used Cars
4278 Dixie Drayton Plains,
CONVERTIBLE.!OP*n ■? t° 9 dally .___ 674-2257,
heater, white- 1962 MERCURY MONTEREY 9-passenger station wagon, white with red vinyl Interior, radio, heater, whitewalls. Jusst assume payments of $4.16 per week. CALL MR. WHITE# FE 8-4088,; KING.
YEAR END SPECIALS g
SELECT USED CARS
1966 'AMBASSADOR Station Wagon, automatic, V-8, power steering, power brakes, power windows, luggage rack, air-conditioning, tilt-wheel, and much morel Some
1963 VALIANT ! 1965 BONNEVILLE, REp, 2-DOOR j 1965°A^BAS^Dol?f990 Sedan, auto-
2-door hardtop, automatic n?'?veores'l matic, radio, heater, full pow-
. RUSS JOHNSON
PONTIAC RAMBLER ;
On M24 in Lake Orion
MY 3-6266
HOMER
HIGHT
CHEVROLET-BUICK-PONTIAC On M24 iri Oxford, Mich.
OA 8-2528
1965 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-door sedan; powder blue, 6-Cylinder automatic, 17,000 original miles, sharp, priced to sell. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Mnion Lake, EM 3-4155.
Slgna. _
.transmission, radio, heater, white-wall tires.
$695
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
860 S. Woodward Ml 7-3jH4
1964 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP
2 door. Belvedere wltfo V-8, power steering; whitewalls, only $95 down, finance balance of only —
$995
* OAKLAND
. CHRYSLER — PLYMOUTH 3 724 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9436
very clean, $1,595. MY 3-5752. | er ‘ *1095
1965 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-bOOR 1966 RAMBLER AMERICAN, auto-hardtop. sllvermlat finish with! matic, radio, heater, new white-
matching Interior, power brakes, power steering automatic transmission, radio, heater, 1 year warranty, $1295. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY; 1250 Oakland, 333-7063.
1965 FORD 4 DOOR, FULL FAC tory equipment, like new all the way, new years*.speclai only $988 full price first edme —first served,,^ Oakland Ave Only $88 down, $32.52 per month.1 5 year or 50,000 mil* new car warranty available.
JOHN McAUtIFFE fORD
530 Oakland Ava.________FE 5-4101
1963 COMET 2-DOOR, WITH 6-CYLJ radio, heater, absolutely spotless. One owner, new car trade! $688 full price, $88 down $26.56 per month. If you are looking for the extra one. See this one.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
FE 5-4101
WHY NOT SHOP AND COMPARE AT
ONE STOP TRANSPORTATION
DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE
550 OAKLAND AVENUE
FE 2-8101
«. THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING
Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham Area
Pontiac Retail Store
65 University FE 3-7954
wall tires ........ $1245
1965 AMBASSADOR Station Wagon, automatic, V-8, power steering, power brakes, power windows# luggage rack, air conditioning, tilt-wheel, and simulated wood trim ............. .... $129SS*
UNDER $300
1962 AMBASSADOR WAGON, stick.
V-8, radio, heater . . $Avp
1962 CLASSIC SEDAN, stick# radio#
heater# runs good .. SAVE
1962 RAMBLER SEDAN# automatic# radio, heater# good ''transportation ..........>....... SAVE
2 USED CAR LOTS AT:
666 $. Woodward, Birmingham' and
47 E. Maple, Troy
Village
Rambler
1965 Mustang
2 door-hardtop
with 6-cyl. radio, heater, only —
1966 BUICK LeSABER, 4-DOOR. On* owner. Holiday special, 51,695.
KEEGO PONTIAC
Keego Harbor 682-3400
1966 BUICK RIVIERA SILVER green, 1 owner, S, exc. condition, full powr, $2495. 646-0173.
1962 CADILLAC
Convertible, power equipped, radio, heater, whitewall tires, full price $1095, only $49. down, and weakly payments of $8.92.
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM
1965 MALIBU, 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC; RADIO, HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $995. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $8.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. ____.
1966 Chevy II
4 Door Sedan
with 6-cyl„ automatic, radio, heat-
$1475
BEATTIE FORD
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY., IN WATERFORD
623-0900
Kessler-Hahn
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER-JEEP 6673 Dixie Hwy.
mT‘ 4-75001 Clarkston
IMERIAL
4-DOOR
elf whit*-with black vinyl trim: »»■ completely . euro., 1 owner.
1965 CADILLAC COUPE peylLLEc^R,*SL(||L
seldom used, make otter. 646-5807
with black vinyl top, full power, premium whitewalls, sp£r6 er bean used, a low price, one
CONTINENTAL'S
NOW YOU CAN
HAVE A LIKE
................ 67 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL FOR SAVINGS YOU
C^A LL A^T96^ELDOR A DO, AIR^q r s jAN T LINCOLN-MERCURY conditioned, vinyl. top^ choke and SALp$ NOW HAS A FINE
owner garage kept beauty. if Tuonuru
ranty $2895i Hillside Lincoln-; NJEW 64 THROUGH Mercury# 1250 Oakland 333-7863.
choke and telescoping wheals, disc brakes, plus oiher extras 646-7945._________
JEROME
MOTOR SALES
1980 Wide Track Dr. FE 3-7021
MUST SELL AT ONCE. 1964 CAD-lllac, good condition. $1875.
MIKE SAVOIE
Troy's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1900 W. Maple 2 Miles East of Woodward Ml 4-2735
1954 CHEVY) RUNS. CHEAP Make offer. Ml 6-3188.
1955 CHEVY, REBUILT ENGINE, 852-4119
195* CORVETTE, 327 4-SPEED, dual quads, hardtop, SfOO or best otter. Call Reliable Transmission, 8 til 6, ask or Bob. FE 4-0701.
1V8 CORVETTE, 301“ MALLORY, Cam. Hurst. lifters 3 speed tech, new tires, brakes, convertible, $550 firm. FE 5-6901.
1961 CHEVY 2-DOOR, V-8, STICK, full price only $395. Buy Here-Pay Herd at —
Morvel Motors
1961 CHEVY, V-8 HARDTOP, AUTO-matlC, nice; 196) Tempest, automatic. looks, runs and starts real good. $295. 681-9223, Rlgglna, deal-
1962 CORVAIR ■”
with radio, heater, whitewalls, good transportation at only $95 down, balance to finance only—
$395
OAKLAND
CHRYSLER — PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9436
LECTION OF BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD TRADES OF '66 AND '67 COUPES, AND '64 THROUGH '67 SEDANS. ALL CLUDE:
Factory air conditioning Power 6-way seats Power steering Power brakes Radio
Deluxe interior Power Windows And Much More ....
BOB B0RST Lincoln-Mercury Sales
479 S. Woodward_______Ml 6-4538
MIL0SCH
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad—Big Lot
50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM We buy or will ad lust your payments to less expensive car.
*77 M-24, Lk. Orlorr MY 2-7041
$1295
BEATTIE FORD
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30" ON DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD
623-0900
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1965 MUSTANG 6-cyl. stick, radio, heater, whitewalls, blue with white vinyl root, 25 month warranty. Only $1195. On US 10 at M)5 Clarkston, MA 5-5071. .____
19*5. FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE ST As lion wagon, 352 V-8 angina, auto-1 mafic transmission, power brakes and power steering, radio, heater, j need lots of room, here It Is, 50,000 mlla warranty. $1595. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY, 1250 Oakland Ave., 333-7863.
1966 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 10-passenger station wagon, with V-8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, chrome luggage carrier, power rtar window, snow-room condition, $2088 full price, $88 down, and only 867.01 per month. 5-year or 50,000 mile now car warranty available.
john McAuliffe ford
630 Oakland Ava.
FE 5-4101
1966 FAIRLANE
4-Door, economy engine, snycro-mash transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls. Full price $1295, only $49 down, and weekly payments of
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD,INC.
464 S. WOODWARD Ave. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4,7500
1966 FORD GALAXIE < 500 HARO-top. with V-$, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, beautiful snow shoe white, turquoise and *11 vinyl Interior. 51.788 full price, $88 down, and only 156.96 per month. 50,000 mile — 5-year new car warranty available.
john McAuliffe ford
630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101
19*2 DODGE LANCER 4-DOOR RED finish, stick, full price $195. Buy Here—Pay Here:— Easy Credit terms, if — , ,
Morvel Motors
251 Oakland Ave.
:E 8-4079
1964 DODGE 9'PASSENGER STATION WAGON, POWER
EQUIPPED, FULL PRICE *995. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments Of *0.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.______
KESSLER'S
bODGE
CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service
Oxford OA 9-1400
1966 OOOGE CORONET-itO WITH factory experimental 440 Magnum engine ana 4-speed. FE 5-8329 or
FE 4-9248. ______L—
I960 T-BIRD. GOOD CONDiTOn $300. Call 363-5413, attar *.p.m. or 363-9232 daytlma.
1967
RANCH WAGONS COUNTRY SEDANS COUNTRY SQUIRES
6-PAS8ENGER
AND
10-PASSENGER
$79 down or vour old car, and up to 36 month* to pay on balance at bank rates.
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC. , , I
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500
1967 THUNDERBIRDS Towne Landaus Landau Coupes *
$129 down or your old cer, end up to 36 months to pay on balance at bank rate.
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOOOWARO AVB. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500
/CHEVROLET A
1967 CHEVYS * $1695
1967 CAMARO Sport
Coupe, V-8, automatic, power steering.
brakes, > buckets, factory warranty. Marine blue finish
$2495
1966 CORVETTE 2 tops
with 4-speed, 427 engine, AM-FM ra- „ dio, whitewalls, marine blue finish.
1967 CHEVY Wagon
Impala 6-passenger, with V-8, hydro-matic, power steering, power windows, radio, heater, factory warranty. Silver blue mist finish .
1963 CHEVY 4 Door
Bel Air, 4-door sedan, with 6 cyl. engine, automatic, with radio, heater. Sahara gold finish ........
$2695
$795
1966 CHEVY Impala
6-passenaer wagon, with 396 V-8, au-
tomatic, power steering, radio, heater, rK/f|QS
whitewalls, Granada gold finish ....
1966 MUSTANG Hardtop
with a V-8 engine, automatic, radio, heater, black vinyl roof, emerald green finish. Only......... HJlv/OvJ
1966 CHEVELLE 4 door
$1595
V-8; powerglide with radio, heater, whitewalls, Camero beige finish. Only
1966 DODGE Dart
with 6 cyl. stick shift, dessert beige, under Factory Warranty ..
1965 CHEVY 2 Door
Bel Air sedqn, with V-8, stick shift, radio, heater, whitewalls, tu - tone beige and gold finish.,
$1295
$1095
1963 PONTIAC 4 Door
Bonneville Hardtop, with automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, maroon finish .
$995
1965 CHEVY Biscayne
with 6 cyl., powerglide, full factory >1100^ equipment. Only........... kpiUv7vJ
1964 CHEVY Biscayne
with 6 cyl., powerglide, radio, heater, ' Whitewalls, gold finish..............
$895
Oakland County's Larges! Volume Chevrolet Dealer
631 OAKLAND
‘a,-
/CHEVROLET A
FE 4-454?
mm5 w
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ?, 1068
-Television Programs
V * ■ ‘ . t "T \
Programs f urn ished by stations listed in this column arc subject to change without notice
Chennols: 2-*WJ»K-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-Lwm-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 3O-WK0O-TV, 56-WTVS
TONIGHT
«:00 (2) (4) News (C)
; (7) Movie: ‘“Wabash AVe-;| nue” (1950) Betty Grable, | Victor Mature,i Phil Har-jl ris. (C)
(9) Dennis the Menace 1 (50) Flintstones (C) „ 1
(56) Friendly Giapt 8: IS (56) Merlin the Magician | 6:30 (2) (4) Network News (C)J (9) Gilligan’s Island (C) | (50) McHale’s Navy (56) What’s New ,
TV Features
MR. DICKENS OF LONDON, 7:30 p.m. (7).
KRAFT MUSIC HALL, 9 p.m. (4).
for
HE AND SHE, 9:30 p.m.
(2).
7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C).
(4) Juvenile Court (C)
(9) Movie: “Flight of the Lost Balloon” (1961) Mala Powers, Marshall Thompson (C)
(56) News
7:30 (2) Lost in Space — Shapeless aliens create exact replicas of the Robinsons
_ to corrupt’the -robot and -appropriate the*Jupiter 2 to conquer earth. (C)
(4) Virginian--— Trampas and two veteran soldiers search for a dangerous escaped convict suspected of having scarlet fever. (C) (7) (Special) Mr. Dickens of London — Sir Michael Redgrave plays Charles -Dickens revisiting London
— then leads a chase thrbugh his books, re-creating characters and scenes. (C) (R)
(50) I Love Lucy
8:00 (50) Hazel (C)
(56) News in Perspective —New York Times; newsmen are scheduled to review the past year in Vietnam.
8:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies -Mr. Drysdale forces a housekeeper on the Clam-petts. (C)
(7) Second Hundred Years
— Luke launches a campaign to save a boy’s favorite tree from the sanitation department’s ax. (C) (50) Honeymooners
8:55 (9) News (€)
9:00 (2) Green Acres — The general store is robbed, and Eb offers an incredibly garbled explanation of
(C)
JONATHAN WINTERS, 10 p.m. (2).
RUN FOR YOUR LIFE, 10 p.m. (4).
(7) Movie: “Killer McCoy” (1947) Mickey^ Rooney, Brian Donlevy.
(Part 11
1:30 (2) Dobie Gillis (4) News (C)
LIS (7) News
TOMORROW MORNING
6:00 (4) Classroom 1 6:20 (2) News (C)
6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (C) (4) Ed Allen (C)
(7) It’s A.JVftnderfuI World (C)
7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) .
(4) Today (C)
> .(7) Morning Show (C)
7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round
8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (C)i (9) Barney Boomer 8;30 (7) Movie: “Has Anybody! Seen My Gal?” (1952), _Piper Laurie, Rock Hud son, Charles Coburn.
(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 9:30 (4) PDQ (C)
(56) American History 9:55 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C)
(7) Girl Talk (9) Mr. Dressup
1:55 ( 56) American History 2:00 (2) Love Is a Many Splen-dored Thing. (C)
1 (4) Days^eLQur-Lives (C)
(7) NewJywed Game (C) (50) I L&vje Lucy (R)
2:20 ( 56) Mathematics for You 2:31 (2) House Party (C)
(4) Doctors (C).
(7) Baby Game (C)
(50) Make Room Daddy (R)
2:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) Children’s Doctor 3:00 (2) Divorce Court (C)
(4) Another World (C)
(7) General Hospital (C) (9) Pat Boone (C)
(50) Topper (R)
(56) London Line 3:15 (56) Mathematics 18 3:30,(2) Edge of Night (C)
(4) You Don’t Say (C)
(7) Dark Shadows (C) i (50) Captain Detrojt (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm - (4) Woody Woodbury, (C) (7) Dating Game (C)
(9) Swingin’ Time (C)
(56) Ski, School 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C)
(7) News (C)
(50) Three Stooges (R)
(56) What’s New ......
5:00 (9) Bozo (C)
(50) Little Rascals (R) (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) George Pierrot — “Rhineland to Berlin” (C) (7) News (C)
(9) Fun House (C)
(50) Superman (R)
(56)"TV Kindergarten
Autumn Pleasures
turnwar to Prpvtow# Nub;
ACROSS 1.— Imvm 4 Picking ■—*
. strswbprri** • Go oa • bay
44 MaUfner SSCansumcd food SSMoslsm prleit 47 Wisdom II Dainty (coU.) is Boa
n
^oftoba-Sg!*^^
IMHWCIIS'M
rawing mhr fHIMW 1SI66MM HWIfflW
g0ifMia!=ff"i prafeiisimrsi
Ui=i:=ii=tw«a ii *imm a -i MIU-)I=4 iWJW
13 Great Lake
14 Single point!
15 Blueberry —■
17 Card |ama 15 Pronoun ,
19 Self-protectioa
19 Sell-protecuoa 21 Work (music)
23 Disturber
24 Small hollow
25 Table mar tela 25 Hindu robber 28 Chorea
33 Stanches
34 Confirm
35 Speech defect
38 Russian ruler
39 Propriety 43 Ascent
54 Eaceedingly (music)
55 Weird (var.)
58 Dutch commune DOWN
1 Quick Blow
2 Rpoch
3 Accuse
4 Hava on SAanoy
V German aonge
7 Sahara—r-
8 Corvine bird • Frosting
10 Compact
11 Organic salt 18 Usage
20 Eata sparingly
21 Excess of
Hughes Likely to Gamble
on Another Las Vegas Hotel
NEW YORK (AP) -"“‘Jazz was music that was played in
chances 39 Decree
22 Type of fuel 40 Monkeylike
,21 Speck mammal
27 Moslem Tellgion 41 New Hebrides
29 Shrewd island
30 Anxiety 42 Go to football
31 Kind of rifle — (pL)
32 Serum (comb.
form)
34 Primate
36 Existence (2 words)
37 Rub gratingly
45 Breezy
48 Standard money value
49 Ocean fish *50 Mariner’s
direction
1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 ii
1* 13 14
15 16. 17
18 1 ■ 19 20
21 22 : ,
ii 1 *
26 27 | ■ 28 29 16 31 32
33 ■ T
3b 36 37 vi ■ &
39 4a 41 42 1 4 *
W i ■ T
46 47 48 . 49 bO
W 52 53 S r
ST 55 86 3
By EARL WILSON ."gif. _
Howard Hughes is reportedly Interested in yet another Las T4 Vegas hotel—the Stardust—but his aides deny it . Is KeB
the shadows. It was more at Greengrass, who managed Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorm#
jhome in the honky-tonks. Its until recently, talking to att’y Louis Nizer about | rhythm beat against the walls of it? ... Michele Lee, who opened at the Persian dimly lit cellars until it was res-jRm., is bright and bouncy, and a belter, She cued by Paul Whiteman He was introduced her husband James Farentino as “my M the pioneer who. poiqjted the 1 lavorite octbr *’and acidecl, with a bow to ring-
„ ■ .-sT . .. Isider David ( The Fugitive ) Janssen: Sorry
way. He was the giant of the;aboutthat Davjd,,
jazz era,” ‘ Art Carney’s son Brian is debutive here as a
So was Whiteman eulogized:Cafe gjnger Secret Stuff: The star of a cur-Tuesday by Stanley Adams, renj sbow jejjs frien(js, “Don’t bother coming-president of the American So-(|t>g the worgt thing on Broadway” . . . Singer ciety of Composers, Authors and MarUyn Michaels, ailing, missed her Latin V*
Publishers, at a funeral service ■ Qpening _ The late Natl€ole’s1dtr. Caroline got the divorce,
♦hat^VQHe<*a5tr0n^ memories °* after th^ee months of marriage . . . Elaine Stritch’s minidress
e lg band era. (at Daly’s Dandelion twinkled with tiny lights; she had the
* * * battery hidden in her bra . . . Sam Levinson’s book, “Everything
i Whiteman, 77, the “King of But Money,” will be a Broadway show; it sold 300,00(1 copies.
[Jazz” but known affectipnately Secret Stuff: The producer of a major attraction told hie
to his sidemen simply as Pops,[famous (but often tardy) star: Be prompt—or be gone! . . . died Dec. 29 at Doylestown, Pa., iRocky Roberts, the Negro from Newport News who is about thB °f a heart attack. best-known rhythm & blues singer in Europe, has a new record,
Among thg 250 mournersJn an “Too Much,” picked as a Best Bet by Cashbox, which is inupper East Side funeral chapel 'creasing his fame in his homeland, were band leaders George Olsen, ( J
Guy Lombardo and Wavier Cu-gat. Fred Waring Jr. represented his father.
WILSON
LA Police Chief Asks DA Probe
13 Specials in Top 30
f Sinner's Iniiirw markab,e strength of * special Of Of flyer 5 n/ury tejevjsjon programming against
LOS ANGELES (AP) TPo-ljce Chief Thomas Redjlin says he doesn’t think policemen were criminally liable in dealing with
the injured singer Jimmie|that no less than 13 special Rodgers, butihe has asked theibroadcasts placed among toe district attorney to investigate30 shows.
A Look at TV
deepest gratitude to Paul, who, jn effect, raised popular music fro'm the basement to the penthouse.”
V ★ ★ ★
IPianist Leonid Hambro set By RICK DU BROW ling 15th, in a tie with a situa- the mood for many of the mour-[ HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—The re-t*on comedy. !ners when he played toe theme:
Only one new regular series from Geor8e Gershwin’s, “Rhap-finished in the top 30-CBS- sody in Blue” before the start TV’s children’s show about a ^e service. Whiteman commis-boy and his bear, “Gentle Ben.”! s’oned the )azz work for a oon-
It came in 26th, also in a tie. |cert 'n 19^4.
, jj... . 1 Burial is today in Trenton,
In addition, ABC-TV’s , trou-j jq j_
bled position in the ratings race aj" -__________
was pointed up by the fact that More than a thousand physi-the network placed only two
, TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: We hear that Mayor Lindsay’s already made a resolution for '68 to—forget -67.
COMPOSERS PRESENT ! - WISH I’D SAID THAT: Bobby Dai;In suspects his home town Rudolf Friml. composer of banuk \s in trouble. They ordered only one calendar and gavo “Rose'Marie” aqd “Die Vaga-each de^SItor one month’
bond King,” were present as REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The truly happy marriage is one were Bud Green “Sentimental in which a woman gives the best years of her life to the man Journey", Noble Sissle and Eu-jwho made them the best.” * /M- "77.
bie Blake “I’m Just Wild About j EARL’S PEARLS: Tony Delia has one complaint about edu-Harry”) and Lou Alter (“Man-.cational TV: “If you fail a subject, the teacher makes you stay hattan Serenade ). after the Late Show,”
In his eulogy Adams read the If the postage rates get much higher, pretty soon it’s gonna roll of noted singers and musi-1 be cheaper to*go yourself. That’s earl, brother, cians who had been sponsored! by Whiteman and concluded With “our acknowledgment of
(Publlshtrs-Hall Syndicate)
AVOID GARNISHMENT
V?
Bunch all your Bill* ... w« can set up ONE PAYMINT you can afford.
Call 338-0333
regular series is evident in the
latest national ratings.
The rankings for toe two weeks ending Dec. 17 indicate
DEBT Consultants of PONTIAC, INC.
814 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG.
\ o t Htti tint ion
\ol 1 l.onn
how he bought a car forl!0:10 (56) Of Cabbages and
i . ..r-. show? in toe top 30: Lawrence credit card-systems in the West
* hospital spokesman sa,d, specials'.dM ver,,w'lk ' ^
r . *'came m 23rd. and Bewitched :
i" competition with the „lh
the Christmas cartoon using the , _ .
*, * * characters et the “PesLts".’■“'Wj* “™s ”"0
Redding said Tuesday his de-—*-•—« *»• —a «»•« Bonanza, the Red Skelton
a^e
I'd s land Midwest.
BUY! SELL! TRADE!
USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS!
• $300 — toe exact amount that was stolen. (C)
(4) Kraft Music Hall — Simon and Garfunkel, Nancy Wilson and Victor Borge team up for a' concert covering a broad < scale of musical styles. (C)
(7) Movie: “Roustabout” (1964) Elvis Presley, Barbara Stanwyck. (C)
(9) Detectives (50) Perry Mason . (56) Time for Renewal 9:30 (2) He and She-The “Jetr man” show is made into a. musical comedy, with Broadway musical star Jack Cassidy (Oscar) moving to center stage. (C)
(9) To Be Announced (56) Skiing for Children 10:00 (2) Jonathan Winters-The Smothers Brothers, Barbara McNair and the Strawberry Alarm Clock join Winters. (C)
,v (4) Run for Your Life— Albert Dekker and "Judy Carne guest star in this episode where Paul gets involved with an indus-
Kings 10:25 (4) News (C)
1^:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C)
(7) Donna Reed (9) Friendly Giant (50) Yoga for Health 10:35'(56) Geography 10:45 (0) Hawkeye 1(1:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R)
1 (4) Personality (C),
(7) Temptation (C)
(50) Little Rascals 11:05 (56) Art Lesson 11:15 (9) William Tell (R)
11:25 (7) News (Cj /
11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R)
(4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) How’s Your Mother-in-Law? (C)
11:45 (9) Chez Helenfe 11:50 ( 56) Arithmetic for Teachers
TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) (4) News (C)
(7) Bewitched (9) Take 30
(50) Movie: “This Is My Love” (1954) Linda Darnell, Rick Jason, Dan ’ Durvea
partment’s internal ,affairs divi sion found no wrongdoing on toe part of three officers who were with toe singer when he was injured. But: Reddin said he wants an invesiigation by officials outside the police department, '
Sr ★ ★
comic strip was far and away „ w.. ’ 0 c.
T " . Hour, toe Ed Sullivan Show,
toe No. l shew. . ,
i Dean Martm’s variety program,
j Right behind it, in the second position, was.a rerun of another children’s cartoon, “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.” And yet another animated program for youngsters, an hour on NBC-TV, placed ninth even though it
Rodgers, 32, suffered the frac-jwas a repeat, tore Dec. 1 after an off-duty po-j * * >
liceman directed his v car, off a third-rated show was also freeway in suburban Granada specia, an Andy WiIliams Hills. He and tWo other ofBcers|hour. And Bob Hope, in the
“Lassie,” “Lucy,” the Andy Griffith situation comedy, “Gun-smoke^’ “Gomer Pyle” and “Family Affair.”
Man First in Line to file Tax Form
PITTSBURGH the ninth time
(AP) ■ in 10
For
years,
said Rodgers fell after climbing [a rir be ram cateeorv , “*,,v . *"
out of his car. Rodgers saya he ® 8 ^ F«ntey was first in line
doesn’t remember how he was hurt.
nished eighth.
Overdue Books
Tuesday to file his 1967 income BIRD SPECIAL * ' 1 J tax form. He showed up 45 min-
CBS^TV’s most*recent Natiom utes before the Internal Reve* nue Service office opened.
1 Finley, a Mired secretary and business manager for a suburban school district, was beat-
al Geographic special, “Winged World,” about birds, had come _ ; u ’ ; , in a powerful 10th in the weekly
DOCK Home AfjferLratings. And it held up well in ... . , 'the two-week rankings too, plac-
Library Amnesty
en in 1966 by a former IRS district director.
trialist trying to acquire a 12/2* (2\ T°PPsj" Fashion (C)
classic car owned by an exiled dictator. (C)
(50) Movie: “Million Dollar Baby” (1941) Priscilla Lane, Jeffrey Lynn, Ronald Reagan.
(56) Segovia Master Class 10:30 (56) Young American Musicians
11:00 (21 (4) (7) (9) News 11:30 (2) Movie: “The Strip" (1951) Mickey Rooney, Sally Forrest, William Dema-rest.‘
(4) Johnny Carson (C)
(7) Joey Bishop — Chuck Connors and Diana Dors are scheduled. (O (9) Wrestling (C)
12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ
12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow CC)
(4) Eye Guess (C)
(7) Treasure Isle (C)
(9) Movie: "Calamity Jane” (1953) Doris Day, Howard Keel — 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) FugitivtT(R)
1:10 (56) Sets and Symbols 1:25 (2) News (C)
(4) Carol Duvall (C)
(56) Geography 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C)
CHICAGO (AP) - Thousands | of delinquent books were back home today, including one miss-j ing for 33 years.
Tuesday was the Chicago: Public Library system’s first amnesty day, when conscience-stricken book borfbwers could | turn ov.er a new leaf and return an overdue volume without havr ing to pay the usual 2-cent-a-day fine.
* ★ ★
And the books were returned —in shoe boxes, attache cases, shopping bags and packing crates—to the 62 branch libraries.
A copy of William Makepeade Thackeray's “Vanity Fair,”')
dhecked out in 1934, was brought home by a relative of its deceased borrower. The volume was brown With age but
REMODEL YOUR BASEMENT
Here's more room for the kids . . . or a bright new, clean and comfortable room for family recreation or entertaining. Let us assist you in your home beautification plans with the newest in ideas and materials.
(4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) I still in lending condition.
As Low As *3*0 Per Week
— Rqdio Programs
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WJR(760) WXYZ(1270) CKlWfBOO) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPON(l 460) WJBK(1 $00) WHfl-FM(94.7)
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4:00 CKLvV, N«W%.
Shannon WJR. News. Sports wwj, News. Spuiti weather • i Newscopt
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/Music
LoD/LkLvv, Newt. -Da Shafer
WJR, News, Godfrey WHFI, fcneor*
WWJ, News, Marty*
?• OO—WPON, News, Music WXYZ, Dave Prince WJR, News, Music
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1032 West f^uroi^
2 BLOCKS WESf
OT TELEGRAPH
FE 4-2597
WJBK, News, Music, Tales CKLW, News, Tom Shannon WJR, Music Nall
SALE
w.
.......... ...........i________ Jy!
ouitoa, ond-of-a-kind itdms, ovarotockod lindt, all raducod to gol You muat bo oorly for th* boat!
OUTSTANDING VALUE FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME! BE EARLY!
4-Pc. Mod dm Bedroom —Double Dre**- QQ95
er, Mirror, Cheat apd Bed ........ • 9iw
4-Pe. Modern Bedroom — Plastic Top 1 OQ9S Dbl. Droaaer, Mirror, Cheat, Bkcase. Bed I V w
Maple Student Desk -r. A C00
Plastic Top .s .... ......"lii
Maple Plastic Top Double Dresser and CQ95 Mirror. . ....... ........... 09
Maple plastic Tap Table—42" Round, QQ9S with leaf, 4 Mateo Chairs ........ ww
Walnut Plastic Top Table— 42" Round, 11 Q95 with leaf, apd 4 Chairs............ I IV
2-Pc. Living Room Set i OQ95
in Decorator Colors................ I wV
2-Pc. Living Room Set— 9fiQ^
French Provincial Style............!
2-Pc. Living Room Sat—
Italian Provincial Style...........fclMP
Maple Hutch and 11Q9S
Ethon Allen Occasional Tables— 1 f 50 A
Odds and Ends........ ..............If UP
1CQ95
Hide-A-Lounge...................... I ww
Serta Hide-A-Lounge— 1 0091
with- Vinyl Fabric .......... I 99
Strato Recliners — Choice of colors '7QV5
in Vinyl Fabric ............ . •,. IV
Maple QQ95
Record Cabinets.................... VV
Smooth Top Mattress —no buttons— 97*^
Odd Upholstered Of|00 *
Chairs........................... • • mU p
7-Pc. Dinette Set-36x48x60 Table.
and 6 Chairs....................... I V
Bunk Bed—Complete with 2 Innerspring OQ95 Bunkettes, Guard Rail and Ladder .... 99
Odd Walnut 90^5
Chest ................ ........... Aw
i
Regular)
QUALITY FIVE-PIECE DINETTE VALUE 4 Chairs — Table with Leaf - 30x40x40
Cash
and
$i
Carry
Ragular $119.18
Full Size
SOFA
Choiea
of
Colon
*99
Regular S9.95
SAVE BIG WALNUT FINISH BOOKCASE BED DOUBLE DRESSER LANDSCAPE MIRROR
195
69'
GLOBE FURNITURE
0*.
2135 Dixie at Telegraph E-Z Terms 334-4934
OPEN
Mon., Thurs., frl. 'til 9 Tues., Wed., Sat. ‘til 6
r
•W
I
RS I
wl
"THK PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, .TANtf RY 8, 1968
Sp
k 1V.
Ends Saturday At 9 P.M.
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
4-PLY
GUARANTEED 40,000 MILES AGAINST TREAD WEAR-OUT AND ROAD-HAZARD FAILURES
Sears ALLSTATE Radial Tire
115x13 Tube-Typs Whitewall with Tubei-Fits 6.00x13, 6,50x13 and 1.00x13
43
Plus 2.10 Fsdcral Excist Tax Tire and Tuba
195x14 Whitewall Tube-Type With Tube, Fits 7.50x14 and 7.75x14 ...........S45 Plus 2.79 F.E.T.
Here’s Sean Best, Built with two steel belt* that brace ^ the tread, solidly on the road and fabric-cord plies that run radially,~rim-to-rim to give top sidewall flexibility.
The tread stays flat on the road with the tread ribs wide open for top road grip. This greater road contact mean* greater traction for quicker stops and better control. Visit Seal's Tire department today.
AI.I.STATE 40,000 Mile Radial Tire Guarantee Sears guarantees the ALLSTATE Radial Tire, so long as it is used with ALLSTATE Radial Tube* on ' passenger cars or station wagons, |i follows:
Tread Wear-Out and
Tread Life Guarantee Road Hazard Guarantee
Other Sizes Available to Fit Most Cars
' l
WHEEL
BALANCING
4 for ^5
Weights Included
' Tsars Tirs "DspS. .
Guaranteed Against: All fail* ures of the tire resulting .from defects in material or workman-JM »hip.
^ For Hpw Long: For tha lift of the original tread.
What Sears Will Dos In exchange for the tire, replace it, charging only the proportion of current regular selling price plus Federal Excise Tax, that represents tread used.
Guaranteed Against: Tread weir-out and all- failures of tha firs resulting from road haxarda.
Fdr How leong: 40,000 miles. What Sears Will Do: Repair nail ' punctures no charge. In case of failure or tread wear-out, at Sevrs option, in exchange for the tire, replace it, or give you a refund charging in either. case only the proportion of current regular selling price plus Federal Excise Tax, that represents mileage used.
ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee
Tread. Life Guarantee
Guaranteed Againsti All failures of the tire resulting from normal road hasards or defects in material •r workmansip.
For How Long: For the lift of tha original tread.
What Scan Will Dot Repair nail punctures at no charge. In case of failure, in exchange for tha tire, replace it charging only the proportion of current regular selling price plus Federal Excise Tax . that represents tread used.
Tread Wear-Out * Guarantee Guaranteed Against! Tread wear-
What Sears Will Dot In exchange for the tire, replace it, charging the current regular selling price-plus Federal Excise Tax leas the following allowance:
Months Guaranteed Allowance 12 to 24 10%
'rvrvrsTsts sraTrrm'tTrmTffTmrmTr
The Ideal Tire for the Two-Car Family
Allstate Hi-Way Specials
Plus 1.59 Federal Excise Tax and Your Old Tire
• Guaranteed to wear 24 months PLUS guaranteed for the life of the tread against any failure from defect or road hazard.
ALLSTATE Hi-Way Special Tubeless Blackwall Tires Sale Price with Old Tire Plus Federal Excise Tax
6.50x13 13.45 1.80
745x14 13.45 2.08
7.75x14 815 r 2.21
8.25x14 817 2.38
7.75x15 815 2.23
8.15x15 817 2.33
NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan
Whitewalls Only $3 More Per Tire Allstate Tires Installed Free
J«iia*ass,SotsttA«xgtt»a»aB«Atg8S9»9»t9to
5
Battery Guarantee
flUMUNISIB II MOUTHS Volkswagen Battery iftif 097
Only
with trade Equal or superior to original equipment performance, service life and power ratings. 6-volt.
Free replacement within 90 days of purchase if battery proves defective. After 90 days we replace the battery, if defective and charge you only for the period of ownership, based on the regular price less trade-in at the time of return, pro-rated over number of months of guarantee.
rnrimrgTmTnmrrnrT^^
Sears Spark Plugs
Rsg. SSo 47®„ch
Give* sure flash over pro-1 tection nickle alloy center. Equal to tor belter than original equipment
Deluxe Tune Up lyts
1"
en, up
Kit includes a triple-aealed condenser, bakelile rotor and air-cooled distributor points.
Sears Booster Cable
s-Ft, 99c
Aluminum cable with low cold lest shock resistant insulation. Cadmium-plated plate* on handle*.
Sears Spray De-Icer “
Rt|. 73o 63®
14-si.
Plastic top has teeth for ■coring thick ice, straight tough edge for scraping. Aerosol spray.
Gus Line Anti-Kreece
19®
Keeps gas lines, tank,, fuel pumps, carburetors free of water caused by condensation in system. ,
Sears Automotive Accessories Dept.
Windshield Washer Solvent
16-ois.
47*
Clears ice, frost, snow from windshield. Dissolves road film. Will not freeae up.
n
Guaranteed 36 Months
Guaranteed 42 Months
Guaranteed 48 Months
16
4 i
With
Trade-In
Make
Plymouth
Pontiac
Oldsmobile
Rambler
Cadillac
Studebakcr
DeSoto
\ far anil
•ModgJL
All .’*6-67 aland-
■"■Opt. Ilvy.— duly $9-67__________
Valiant all 60-6*
Mott 56-67 JatRtar 88ana F-S5 8 c ylt,64-67
All 56-64, 654? sifcpt Jflstar
Saif Price with Trade-In
3b Mo„
16.44
16.44
1.6,41
16.44
16.44
16.44
.16.11
1644
16.44
1644
43 Mo
148 Mol
STM
17.1
lid
17.8
17.88
17.88
UM
17.88
21.88
21.88
21.88
21.88
21.88
17.88121.88
1758 21.88
jm
21.88
Make
Buick
Year
and Model
U Sabre 6347 300 340 cu. in.; Special
All 35-37, 50-02 moat 63-67______
^perlal l itlylsrk 61-62 and 03-47
Chevrolet My.3587 , | Many 6387;Cbevy II
Corvair most 65-67
36 Mo I 43 Mo | 48 Mo
16.44
1644
16.44
16.44
164
1644
17.88
17.88
■ 17.88 41758
1758
21.88
2158
17.88121.88
STM
7155
STM
|)o(J|f lj^»KlnioS6-57fl 6a44fl 7 «8ffl2 1 oflftl
ESEH IFPfT! fflilH BDE33
Chrysler
Most S3-67
|16.44fl7.88|21.88|
Make
Ford
Mercury
Year and Model
Soma 63-67
Most 56-64 Air 65-67 except 4J7 4jH cu. Mustang, Kal-con, and Fair. Ian«> most jtIM?' Jogtlon*j2_____
Many 63-67
Most
36-64
All 63-67 otik std. iraaMmtMkm I’MOI and Meteor ■wsl 60-67 Comet 6 Meteor ail 60-63 6 cel, std. Irene
Sole Price with Trade-In
36 Mo. 42 Mo
16.44
16.44
1644
17.88
1755
21.88
17v88
48 Mo
UM
21.88
21.88
16.44
m*
yEBLU BMlI5
17.88
nH
16.44 1758
16.44
21.88
2T58
5155
2158
2T55
Open Tucfl., Jan. 2 ’til 9 p.m. Wednesday ’til 5:30 p.m. Ilium., Frl., S«t. ’til 9 p.m.
Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
Iff-J
t
r—
< . J
I
Start Thursday* January 4
4 GREAT SAVINGS OPPORTUNITIES
DOWNTOWN NORTHLAND 8NX“£rn EASTLAND WESTLAND PONTIAC ^
' * . ’ * *1
Two-vin-one zip toque has the look of fur
TARGET SALE 3.29
Arpeggio pump comes in patent or leather
TARGET SALE 8.90
This warm, .water resistant hat is made of soft acrylic. It can be zipped-up into a high toque, or tied under the chin like a hood. Choose from assorted .brights and darks. Get this value now! Hudson’s Millinery* Downtown 7th; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.
Our snappy sling back comes in many colors
TARGET SALE 0.90
Here’s a great .looking calf pump with new square toe and low square heel at Target savings. Choose from black, bone, wvhite, orange, green and yellow— perfect for now and summer too. Hudson’s Casual Shoes, Downtown 7; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.
Here’s a value you won’t want to miss! An all-about-town pump with blocky little heeland man made sole. Black patent; leather jin black, blue, blonde, orange, yellow or green. Hudson’s Miss Detroiter Shoes, Downtown 6; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.
Silk lined kid gloves come in two lengths
TARGET SALE
9.99 and 11.99
Stock up on these elegant silk lined kidskin gloves and enjoy Target savings! Choose the 4 button length at only 9.99; the 8 button at just 11.99. Find them both in beautiful black and shades of brown. Sizes 6 to 71/*. Come in today! Hudson’s Gloves, Downtown 1; Northland, Eastland, Westland, and Pontiac.
Wonderful selection of costume jewelry values
TARGET SALE
1.50 to 12.50
Take your pick of costume jewelry! Choose from tailored gold and silver colored metal beads, textured earrings and . pins as well as simulated pearls and stone set pieces. Hudson’s Fashion Jewelry, Downtown 1; Similar styles North-land, Eastland, Westland and Pontiac.
Assorted handbags in casual and dress styles
TARGET SALE 7.89
These handbags come in many shapes. Choose plastics that look like leather or patent, and some fabrics.'* Colors include black, browns, some reds, greens and yellows. Not all styles in all colors. Hudson’s Handbags, Downtown 1; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.
Important savings on many women’s watches
TARGET SALE 9.99
* Save on women's watches that are shock resistant, anti-magnetic and. have un- * breakable mainsprings. Choose from cl as sib, sport and dressy looks in pendant, bracelet, strap and a-go-go styles. Hudson’s Fashion Watches, Downtown 1; n Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.
HUDS ON’ S
Hudson's delivers a purchase of $5.00 or more excluding tax and service charges, to 19 Michigan counties and Toledo, Ohio. Add 40c for delivery of a purchase under $5.00 to the satite area. Postage and Shipping charges added to all other points. Add 4% sales tax In Michigan only. Add 40c charge for C.O.D. under $30.00.
dson's Downtown open Tuesday and Wednesday till 8:30 p*m.; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac open Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday till 9:00 pan
Save on Warm Wool Car Coats, Big Assortment
Target Sale
and
34.97
Zoom ahead with Target Sale savings beginning January 4 on warm wool car coats of loden cloth, -tweed, and melton. Double or single breasted, in a variety of colors, these cozy lovelies are trimmed with gleaming ^buttons, leather accents and scarf details. The coats may be found with others in -checks, plaids, > and solids priced at 24.97 and 34.97. All in misses* sixes in the Seasonal Coats Shop, Hudson’s Downtown 6th floor, Northland, Eastland, Westland, and Pontiac.
s
ilgp
Target Sale
A. Skimmer with tie seal
red piping, C. Pleat front dress, .navy, purple, gold. Misses sizes 10-18;:§j Miss * Detroiter Bresseis; 'Boiimtb^nJ- jfe Northland, Eastland; Westland, Pontiac.
tmm
h|
Evan Picone’s wool pants in proportioned sizes
Target Sale
Whether you’re short, average or tall, you’ll find your straight-legged fully lined wool] pants at Hudson’s. Just add a skinny sweater to these well tailored proportioned pants —j you’ll look [so contemporary. Choose from! black, brown, camel, navy, loden and grey.j Sizes in short £-16, average 8-20, tall 10-20.; Not all sizes in all colors. Hudson’s Casual Sportswear Downtown 6; also available at Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.;
Start Thursday
udy Bong lirts an Blouses
Target Sale
Team this collection of shirts and blouses to your swingy skirts or slacks. Choose from a variety of current styles in assorted synthetic blends. Misses sizes 30-38. Hudson’s Street Floor Blouses. Downtown 1st floor; also available at Northland, Eastland, Westland, and at Pontiac.
Hudson's Downtown open Tuesday and Wednesday till 8:30 p.m. Northland. Eastland. Westland, Pontiac open Tuesday. Thursday. Friday, Saturday till 9:00 p.m.
V
Can't shop in parson?, -
Writ*, or phono CA 3-3100 or your tolMrot suburban number.
It’s the sale you’ve waited for. Now take that Hudson’s Gift Certificate or your charge plate and come in and splurge on luxury lingerie at outstanding savings. Hudson's has a wonderful world of famous maker lingerie, sleepwear, loungewear, even snap coats. Beautiful colors, rriost wanted fabrics that look luxurious and are so easy to care for and practical. Everything priced to save. We’ve a wide range of sizes, not every style and color in each size, hpwever—so hurry in for best selection. Sale starts Tuesday in Hudson’s Daytime Lingerie, Sleepwear, ( Loungewear, Jr. Lingerie—Downtown, 5th floor; Hudson’s Moderate Priced Lingerie, 1st floor; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Ponfiac. If you can’t come in, call CA 3-5100.
Daytime Lingerie;
Slips, 32 to 42, short )*rtd average lengths, 3.59 to 8.99. Petticoats, S, M, L, short and average lengths, 2.79 to 4.99.
Trimmed panties, sizes 4 to 7, ............l.SlTlo 2.99.
Carter cotton knit briefs, S, M, L, XL, 3/2.29 to 6/4.50. Chemise slips, sizes 32 to 36, ............ 5.59 to 7.99.
tv • ,
Hudson's Bra
Now through January 13, Exceptional semi-annual savings on & tremendous selection of famous-make bras and girdles. Shop now for these and more in Hudson’s Bra and Girdle departments; save on young figure shapers, too, in Junior Lingerie. Take advantage of Hudson’s excellent range of sizes and styles to build up your wardrobe of underneath-it-all shapemakers at outstanding price reductions. Hudson’s Downtown, 5th; Northland, Eastland, Westland and Pontiac.
Pull-ons and Panty Girdles
2.99,0 11.
Women's Zipper Girdles
6.99 ,o 16.99
v •. *
Corselettes
8.99 „ 17.99
Shortline Bras
1.59 ,o 5.49
Longline Bras
3.99 «o 6.49
Jr. Bras
1.59 to 4.59
Jr. Panty Girdles
3.99 to 8.99
—« : I :v
Sleepwear:
Waltz gowns and long gowns, 3.99 to 9.99.
Pajamas,.......3.79 to 7.99. Bedjaeketsg......3.99 to 4.99.
Ensembles—gown with peignoir, 13.99 to 21.99.
Loungewear:
Arnel@ triacetate nylon fleece short robes,..........8.90.
Quilted short robes, 8.90.
Cotton terry or chenille robes, ...... SJ^O to 6.90.
The group includes prints, solids, regular and large sizes. Moderate Priced Lingerie:
Slips, 2.27 to 1.29. Petticoats, 1.99 to 2.89.
Pettipants, ...................................... 1.99.
Carter Cotton pants, ...................»•. 6/$4 to 6/4.50.*
Gowns, 3.39 to 4.89 Pajamas, 3.39 to 4,89 Snapcoats, 3.39. Junior Lingerie:
Slips and petticoats, 2.29 to 6.97. ■ ' Pettipants and
briefs, J.59 to 2.49. Cotton Spanky Pants. ,3 for 2.29.
Sleepwear: gowns; baby dolls, shift pants, 2.99.
Robes, 6.99. Ensembles, H).99 to 19.99,
X . , ,, «
i.
Save on bedding
Baby bedding in bouncy colors that coordinate to mix or match: '
Percale fitted crib sheets.Sale 1.67
Matching cases............... Sale 2/94c
Converta quilt in fairyland
print.....................Sale 5.47
Ruffle edge comforter in fairyland
print.................. Sale 4.97
Flannelette receiving blanket with
Fairyland print. 36x36 inch. Sale 2/1.94 Sleeping bag with pretty fairyland print on white background.. . Sale 4.97
Crib sized chintz quilts...Sale 2.97
Layette diaper sets from a special assortment imported from Switzerland, nursery embroidered. sgfoA... Sale 4.97 & 5.97
Great savings on layette basics and baby’s apparel:
Nursery tote bag 5.47
Birdseye 27x27 inch diapers 2.47
l! Silk softex waterproof pants 2/1.54
Costume bibs 2/1.74
Handwoven afghan ^ v 4.97
Sweater sets; English imports 8.97
| Knit bonnets; imported 1.97 to 3.47
Baby scarves in Orion® acrylic 1.97
1 ” - Baby mittens . t 1.27
^ a. Leggings; separate 2.57 & 3.97
1 v Legging sett; group, knits 12.97
1 , Spoon A porringer set 4.97
III'' Bowl & Cup set 4.97
wit,'. ■ . ' f r
IpifljffiT i '—. ..
• C . i ■
Hudson’s Sale for Babies
Find everything for your baby from layette to nursery furniture . . . all priced for great savings during this waited-for event at Hudson's. Hurry to Hudson's Baby*a Own Shop, Infants Furniture, and Babe & Toddlers-Downtown 4th Floor; Northland, Eastland, Westland, and Pontiac. Or shop by phone .... CA 9-5100.
SALE 3.27 SALE 4.97 SALE . 2.57 Save on:
Sleep ’n Pla set in soft pastel colors and fluffy brushed arnel material with crochet trim.
Three piece corduroy crawler sets for your boys or girls. Sale 4.97.
Blanket sleeper that’s snug fitting to keep baby warm and comfortable on cold nights. Fluffy Acrilan® acrylic in pink, maize, or aqua. XL sizes 5.57.
Sleepers in cotton knit with adjustable grippers at the waist as a grow feature. Completely washable and comfortable to wear. Safe non-skid soles. Sizes 1 to 4.
Baby’s easy-care layette basics:" Side snap shirt . 2 for $1
Birdseye diapers 9 An
Cozy moc-booties Pull on undershirt 2 fo
SALE 31.97 12.97
• crib mattress
White wicker dresserobe with four large storage compartments. Opens to a generous 18x36 inch- size table top for changing baby. Wipe clean, foam filled tpp, "For storage, it quickly folds to only 17-1 2 inches square.
Six year crib with these quality features; drop sides, kick release, adjustable springs, teethiiig rails. Comes in white or maple.
Innerspring crib mattress gives good back support for your baby. Flowered cover.
SALE £0.97
SALE 19.97
Nylon mesh play yard that folds quickly for easy moving ahd storing. Tempered masonite floor with five-way support to keep it rigid. Easy % clean vinyl pad with flower pattern. A damp doth cleans it in seconds.
SALE 13.97
Folding high chair with a stainless steel tray that adjusts to three positions. The bright! vinyl covered seat and back can easily if be wiped clean with a damp cloth. Folds If flat quickly for travel, storage, carrying.#
SALE 3.27 SALE 11.87
Baby seat that’s lightweight and easy to „ Car seat keeps baby safe while riding and I carry while keeping baby secure. Mothers saves mother’s having to watch him. Sup- 1
find that baby is easier to carry this way, too. port frame rigidly locks under the auto 1
Shell can be-wiped clean with a damp clotty. • seat. Overhead action guard rail and head ] Back adjusts for stationary position. rest give baby extra protection. Vinyl covering.
H XT 3D S O XT ’ S
Lady: Bird Classics
Target Sale
5.29
Come in to Hudson’s or call CApitol 3-1500 for savings and best selection of shirtdresses favored by school-girls and career-girls alike. We’ve five classic silhouettes, and all are available in a wide selection of prints —so come choose your wardrobe of Lady Birds at most unusual savings. Ivy league shirt shift to classic full-skirted shirtwaist, junior sizes 7-15 to misses 8-18, pastel florals to paisleys—this is the sale that means a versatile wardrobe at a low price. Hudson’s Home and Town Dresses — Downtown, 5; Northland, Eastland, Westland, and Pontiac*
Hudson’s delivers a purchase of $5.00 or more excluding tax ajid service charges, to 19 Michigan counties and Toledo,
Ohio. Add UOc for delivery of a purchase under $5.00 to the same area. Postage and Shipping charges added to all other points. Add
4% sales tax in Michigan only. Add kOc charge for C.O.D. under $80.00.
Save at Hudson’s on famous name uniforms such as Barco, 24-Hour Duty, White Swan, Paul Jones, and Bob Evans — all included in this group to bring you exceptional savings. Many styles, from high fashion to classics. A-lines, full skirts, sheaths; short or 3/4 sleeves; convertible collars or jewel necklines. If you work in white, this is your sale. Find everything from crisp cottons to no-iron jerseys, but not all styhSs in all sizes, so come early for the best selection. Hudson’s Uniforms — Downtown, 5; find these values also at Hudson’s Northland, Eastland, Westland, and at Pontiac.
HUDSON’ S
Heavy-duty steel desk has a mar-proof top
Target sale 44.99
It’s good - looking and : durable, made to take. hard wear and tear. L a mi nated top is 24"x40", Vi" thick. Desk is cross-braced for rigidity with one-inch chromed steel legs. 'Both drawers lock for safe storage.' In tan baked enamel finish.
1111
High-shelf bookcase holds a complete set of encyclopedias plus knick-knacks
Versatile walnut color desk at savings
Target sale
Chair,
Target sale
A remarkable low price for this attractive walnut color wood bookcase that makes itself at home in any roofh. High shelves make it an ideal storage area for your large books and bulky items. Designed for easy assembly, it’s 10 x 26 inches, 30 inches high. Order it now, and save.'
Enjoy these special savings during Target sale days a.t Hudson’s. Handsome wood desk fits beautifully in your den, office or bedroom. Includes a sliding-door compartment plus open shelf for a typewriter. 40"xl6", 20" high. Modern chair is also sale phiced. Both easy to assemble.
Handsome accessories to brighten desk or office
Target sale 89C“2.99
Coordinated organizers , add a luxurious look in black or brown vinyl with gold stamping. A. Twin pen set, 2.09. B. Memo box 4x6", 89c. C. Desk pad 19x26", 2,09, 15x22", 1.49. D. 8" ash tray, 2.09. E. Desk basket, 1.49. F. Looseleaf address book, (not shown) 2.09. G. Pencil well, 1.09. H. Was^e basket, 2.39. J. Scrapbook, 14V-»xl2"/ 2.39. K. Weighted book ends, 2.99.
Save on two-drawer and four-drawer file cabinets
Target sale
Both are strong steel construction with neAt looking tan baked enamel finish. All drawers glide smoothly on roller bearings made of nylon, and cam locks i secure top drawers. Four-drawer file: Height, 52", depth*, 18", width, 15". Two-drawer file is 18" deep, 15" wide and 30" tall. Both are very exceptional values
Jumbo flip album
Target sale 4.59
L. Holds 120 photos from postcard size down to Matchmatic 3*/>x 3C/| Choose it in brown, ivory, or green vinyl with gold tooling.
Hudson’s Mezzanine and Downtown 1st; ft Iso at Northland, Eastland, Westland and Pontiac. Order by phone — ('A 3-5100
Start Thursday January 4
,* ■ * .* • - . • -'T
• 1'{' 'Q,;,,V;“:"V- V
Great time to on Bear Brand
Taigot Sale
5-99
;• *nd«gftrsr^fc*
■
ana
near Brand Rendezvous sweater kit to knit Souffle yam. White, raspberry, parchment, toll yellow, beige, pink, misty coral. Target Sale, ft*!
Bear Brand Rippletone wool Afghan pak t< knit or crochet. Blue, rose, green, gold, red, brown rust, blue/green, pink, olive. Target Sale, 9*9)
Stock up and cave on favorite yarns
Bernah-
□ Nylo Germantown, wool/nylon blend, 2 oz. 79e
□ Meadowspun yam wool/nylon blend, 1 oz. 59C
-J ■ --'l
Q Baby Germantown, wool/nylon blend, loz.49*
Belangor: l,1
□ Luxurious fluffy Angora wool,’ 10 grams, 79e
Bear Brand:
□ Knitting Worsted, 4 ply wool, 4 ounces, 1.29
□ Evermatch Sock & Fingering, wool, 1 oz. 59e
□ Souffel yam, acrylic/vinyon, 1% ounces, 1.19
□ Winknit yam, 4 ply Orion® acrylic, 2 oz. 89c Q Winsom yam, 2 ply Orion® acrylic, 2 oz. 89c
□ Winsport yam, 4 ply Orion® acrylic, 2 oz. 89c
□ Winfant, baby weight Orion® acrylic, 1 oz. 59c
□ Paradise or Paradise Puff yam of lofted acetate/textralized nylon blend, 1 ounce, 991
Hudson’s Art Needlework—Downtown, 3rd ; also Northland, Eastland, Westland and Pontiac,
Stock up at Hudson’s now and save on favorite fashion fabrics
Sew your new season wardrobe with imported Irish linen at savings
Target Sale 1.88
yard
Create yseur own beautiful spring fashions in washable, crease resistant imported Irish linen. Al) in fresh new season colors, all 36” wide.
Save on the Dacron® polyester double knits for season spanning
Target Sale 5.88
yard
Sew a travel wardrobe of carefree double knits. Perfectly packable, they’re lightweight, wrinkle resistant. Plain or .novelty, 54 in.
Novelty woolens: unbonded and bonded to acetate for spring. 54 in. ...........Target Sale, 2.98
Bonded (to acetate) wools, double knit wools; solids, tweeds, and more, 54 in. Target Sale, 1.48
Butcher rayon savings, wash’n wear Cobra solids and prints, 45 in.............Target Sale, 1.48
Spring-fresh prints’, stripes, novelties, cotton and polyester/cotton, 45 in........Target Sale, 88c
s
Save now in Hudson’s Fashion Fabrics—Downtown, 3;' Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.
See Vogue Pattern’s fashion show: Resort to. Spring:, Eastland, January 4; Northland, January 5; Westland, January 6; at 2, 4 and 7 p.m. Downtown, January 8 and 10; 12:30, 2:30, 6:80, January 9, 11, 12, 13; 12:30, 2:30. In Hudson’s Fashion Fabric Departments.
Sava at6 Hudson's Downtown* Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac;
/come In or call CA 3-5100 or use your toll-free suburban number
Enjoy the outstanding Target savings on the sturdy steel double door wardrobe closet
Target Sale 24.99
It’s almost like having an extra closet and it’s an exceptional value during Target Sales. Roomy 63"x36"xl9" size with hat rack and hanging bar. Please allow two weeks for delivery. Hudson’s Notions—Downtown, 1st; also Northland, Eastland, Westland, and Hudson’s Pontiac store.
H
jM
IH
Exceptional savings now on the cordless Vib-O-Massager that soothes, relaxes
Target Sale 2.98-< .
Great time to save on the fully automatic yib-O-Massager for feet and other local body areas. Relaxing message action soothes muscular aches and pains. (Order two D batteries, 20c each.) Hudson’s Notions—Downtown, 1st; also Northland, Eastland, Westland, and Hudson’s PontiAc store.
Save on the sturdy steel underbed chest that helps end your storage problems easily
4.99
Target Sale
Underbed chest is a sturdy space-saver with a low, low Target price. Good idea for home or dorm storage; has locks and handle for easy handling. 35"xl8"x6" size in handsome gold type finish. Hudson’s Notions—Downtown, 1st; also Northland, Eastland, Westland, and Pontiac. Save now!
Tasty treat — at savings: Hudson's own delicious homemade plain and nut fudge
Target Sale 88c u>.
Treat yourself to Hudson’s Qwn fine Quality fudge at this low Target price. Choose chocolate nut, plain chocolate, penuche nut, plain penuche-—all made fresh daily in our own Candy Kitchen. Hudson’s Candy — Downtown, 1st; Northland, Eastland, Westland, and Pontiac. Save now!
HUDSO JST ’
Start Thursday January 4
AMC storage house in 2 sizes; lay-away till April 10—
79.95
t'&"xS‘3“x6'10“ high
Turgtt Sale
; - ... high
Both have completely waterproof; galvanized steel undercoats, Perma-plate finishes, front gables, —3#'r
door openings, exterior plywood floors, • L, plus secure locks, each with 2 keys.
Hudson’s Garden Department, 10th Floor; also at Northland, F.wot,. land, Westland, and at * Pontiac.
\
Steel heavy duty storage units with rigid shelves that adjust in height
Tar,.. Sale 4.99-9.99
Add space in basement, garage or closet with these heavy duty steel units. Shelves adjust at 1-1/2" intervals, have sway braces, ribbed posts. 12X-36x36", 4.99; 12x36x60", 6.99; 12x36x75", 7.99; 18x36x75", 9.99. Extra shelves: 36x12", 1.39; 36x18", 2.29. Hudson’s Hardware: Downtown,
Save now and lay-a-way Hudson's own AMC 6 horsepower tractor till April 15
Target Sale 449.99
l ' . ' ‘ • I . ■ 3| . . | ‘ i||IS
Have it ready when you need it! Its 4 cycle Briggs and Stratton engine gives you ground speeds up to 6 MPH; it cuts a 34" wide swath; has recoil starter, hand park-
... ‘ i
ing brake, three forward speeds, neutral and reverse. With 16" front wheels, 23" pneumatic rear tires, two 17" blades synchronized for over-lapping cut, twin gear box blade drive,' Combination brake and clutch foot pedal, pivoted front axle for easy maneuvering. Downtown, 10th; also Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac
10th; also Nprthland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.
V
DETROIT Woodward ‘Ave. and Grand River NORTHLAND 8 «IVfile and .Northwestern EASTLAND « MHe and Kelly Ronds
■' WESTLAND Warren and Wayne ltoads PONTIAC Telegraph, and Elizabeth Lake Road vi .
with stand features
32.50 monthly
color TV at savings
... %va\
Target Sale
Now you can enjoy exceptional quality color TV at Hudson's value price. Highlights: 4" front-mounted Dynapower speaker, illuminated channel knobs, telescoping dipole antenna for VHF, loop hntenna for UHF, automatic fine tuning. Cabinet is in a walnut finish* 180 sq.. inch picture (18" viewable diagonal.)
G.E. color*portable with stand, 227 sq. inch pie,-and Gemini I tuning also sale priced at $389
Zenith. Color TV console in a warm colonial maple
Elegant Zenith Color Console in a contemporary style
Target Sal*
A4..25 monthly La
This color TV has outstanding working features to match its good looks. Hand-crafted chassis^J Sunshine® color picture tube, power trahsf# former, 6" Oval speaker, and all-channel receg# tion. 295 sq. inch pic. (23" viewable diagonal.)
General Electric Filter-Flo automatic washer with important features
Target Sal* 169.99 15.75 monthly
AMC 30" gas ranglt features cook and keep
»«>• 124.99 $12 monthly
This Target value offer* 10 much for the money: high chrome back guard; d-thour timer, recoiled top to ^atchspills, automatic cook’n keep system, and- lift-off oven door for easier cleaning, Alto at target Savingt: Deluxe AMC gat or electric range, 169.99,
Hudson's Major Appliances, Downtown 10; Northland. Batfland, Weistland, Pontiac.
Target Sal* ^485
- U5.25 monthly
In addition to the fine features in this color console you’ll find a beautiful maple cabinet'-an attractive piece of furniture for a colonial room or home. The features include handcrafted chassis. Sunshine® color picture tube, power transformer, 6" oval speaker, 296 sq. inch picture (23" viewable diagonal.)
Target Sales Start Thursday, January 4
Hudson's own AMC 16 cu. ft. refrigerator offers no-frost convenience/ and more
Target 1.1* 249.99 $23 monthly
Here is a washer as modern as today’s fabrics. Its special Permanent Press cycle features automatic cool down. Has large, washbasket capacity, safety lid switch, heavy duty motor, heavy gauge steel cabinet. Also, G. E.’s hydropower washing system for Deluxe G. E. Automatic Washer is also on Target Sale, 189.99; suds saver model, 199.99.
6
Hudson's Music Store, Downtown 11, Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac.
This economical refrigerator offers a wealth of features: the convenience of no frost, twin porcelain crispers and meat chest, 3 cantilever shelves for storage space, roomy 130 pound freezer section, optional ice maker. Choose it now while it Target priced.
AMC bottom freezer model also Sale priced, 259.99
Stevens Utica sheets, white and
SALE 2.89
70-20-6080, 60x80" queen fitted
70-20-8980, 39x80" 70-20-6480, 54x80"
70-20-810, 81x120"^ f«B flat..........4#
n, Ird} Ntttthland, Westland, Pontiac..
■Hi
Martex to wels-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 .. .........1.29
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 :: . .r 7,45
Cotton Terri- Down®. Casbah: blue/olive; pink/verdian; red/ blue and goUt are the colors.
60-103-4294, bath .............1.99
60-103-429, hand ............. 1.29
60-103-4296, wash cloth .59 60-103-300, 3-pc. set includes 1 of each of the above .....V....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 gSld, bitter olive, blush pink, lemon, persimmon, frosty blue, verdian frost, evening blue, scarlet, white, blue turquoise, frosted pink colors.
60-533844, bath . ....... . 2.50
60-5-3640, hand .............1.80
60-5-3646, Wash cloth .... .... ^70 60-5-306, 3-pc. set includes *
1 each bath, hand, washcloth..$5
SALE Chateau Acrilan® acrylic blanket by Field-
I ■
crest. 8 colors. Twin, 12.99; full/ 14.99; dual/'queen, 23.99.
SALE Fieldcrest’s Baronet automatic blanket comes
in 6 colors to complement your bedroom decor. Twin, 1
control, 14.99; full, 1 control, 16.99; full, 2 control, 22.99; queen*, 2 control, 28.99; king*, 2 control, 42.99.
twin flat Or twin fitted
Utica all cotton perccde sheet i» so silky with 180-tiuead count. Many dies to choose. •
70*20-42, 42*33* case ...................2/1,44 T0**M87* 48x76" ’' '* * ^
’ mm 70-26-200, «x7r pm am T •' •• *»)a
SALE AMC thermal acrylic blanket is available in 4 colors. Twin, 6.99; full, 8.99; queen dual, 14.99.*
SALE Majesty comforter by Barclay—4 bright colors. Twin, 14.99; full, 16.99; queen/dual, 29.99.*
SALE Insulaire II by Morgan Jones in 9 colorful shades. Cotton. Twin, 6.99; full, 8.99; queen/dual, 12.99.
SALE 42 Washable Northwood wool blanket by Faribd®; 7 colors. Twin, 14.99; full, 16.99; queen/dual*, 24.99.
SALE Contemporary Flower Song spread by Austin Lee—machine washable cotton. 3 colors. Twin, 12.99; full, 14.99; queen*, 16.99; dual*, 18.99; 36" cafes*, 4.99.
70-20-54, 42x54" case —| 2/2.68
70-20-63, 03x108" sheet 2.69
70-20-72, 72x108" flat twin j :2.89
70-20-81, 81x108" full flat 3.19
70-20-90, 90x108" queen fiat . 1
70-20-108, 108x120" king flat HU
I I . .$M , jfcw&nt, twtu foam
70-20-720, 72x120" long, twin flat. 3.79 70-20-5476, fun foam
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.
mmm
MM
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)low 2 weeks delivery «
S|LLE Choose Scotch Check spread in 4 jew-
eled 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 24x30" 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 Jakson made of Celanese® acetate taffeta. Handsomely styled in 8 colors. Hand washable. Tailored set with 6x6' shower curtain and 54" tailored draperies. 11.98.
70-24-42, 42x36" case .............. 2/2,68 ' B
70-24*424* 42x3flf* c#w ‘ - : 70-24-100,
70-24-72, 72x104" .-3.70 :jA
70-24-06, 90x104" queen .6.90
___—
*”■*» fitted
??'
Globe Bed Pillows
SALE 4.99 » 14.99
Classique has a handsome printed border; cotton ticking with soft linen finish. All down or '50"1 down, 50 V feather, 11.99 each, 20x26" is the standard finished size. Victoria pillow Allied with all down. Regular finish size, 20x26", 8.99; 20x30" finish size queen, 12.99; 20x30" finish size king, 14.99. r
a
Athena Jumbo Dacron® polyester filled pillow. Cotton ticking in blue/white. 21x27" finish size, 4.99.
j&Mmm
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DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Grand Riv«
WESTLAND
r NORTHLAND 8 Mile and Northwestern EASTLAND 8 Mile and Kelly Roads Warren- and Wayne Roads PONTIAC Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road
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Zero
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VOL. 125 — NO. 283
PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968 —68 PAGES
18J Signs Kevsipne Bills
SAN ANTONIO, Tex., (AP)-President Johnson has signed into law bills greatly expanding Social Security benefits and federal aid to education—keystones to his Great Society legislative program.
He hailed the passage of the measures as triumphs for the natiori’s poor. But he had nothing at all to say as he signed a third measure—tpe $2.29-billion foreign aid bill—which imposes the * sharpest dollar limit on total U.S. aid to other nations since the program, began 20 years ago.
Johnson said the expansion of Social Security benefits is the “greatest step forward” since the system was initiated daring the Roosevelt administration in 1935. -
The next phase, he said, calls for close Scrutiny of America’s welfare sys-terti which he branded “outmoded and in need of major change.”
He appointed a 19-member commission to “examine any and every plan, however unconventional, which could promise a constructive advance in meeting the
income needs of the American people.” The President named Ben W. Heine-man, 53,.chairman and chief executive officer of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad Co., to head the commission.
The education bill provides a record |9.3 billion for elementary and secondary schools. ^ The Social Security bill increases benefits by at least 13 per cent for 24 million persons.
Social Security checks going out in March will reflect the new increased benefits. Minimum monthly payments rise from |44 to $55. The maximum will be $160.50, compared! to the present $142. The average monthly check for husband and wife over 65 increases from $145 to $165. , _ ~ „
“One million more people will be lifted above the poverty line,” Johnson said;* and 65,000 disabled widows and 175,000 children will receive benefits lor the first time. • —
Outside earnings of $140 instead of $125 a month are permitted with no reduction in benefits.
There will be additional taxes, though, for worker and employer, amounting to as much as $52.80 in 1968 on earnings of $7,800 or more.
hew effort to prevent dropouts, includes programs for handicapped children, help for rural schools and sets up bilingual education programs for children whose first language is not English.
The new law keeps the tax rate at 4.4 per cent in 1968, but the amount of salary
Related Story, Page A-2
“Thousands of children of Latin descent, young Indians and others will get a better start—a better chance—in school,” said Johnson, a former teacher of Mexi-can-American youngsters. He said the new law begins a campaign to unlock the full potential of every boy and girl.
on which the tax b levied goes up from $6,600 to $7,800. Eventually, the tax rate will rise to 5.9 per cent by 1987.
★ ★ . ★
The education bill continues until the middle of 1970 a program of aid to elementary and secondary schools, giving states more say in how the money is used.
MEDICARE
Medicate benefits are expanded1 to include additional days of hospitalization.
BENEFITS OF LAW This new law, he said, brings special educational and health services to nine million of our poorest children, sparks a
While getting much of what he wanted in these two major measures, Johnson got a setback oh foreign aid monies. k k k
He had asked $3.25 billion for the 12-month period ending next' June 30.
Besides the cut in amount, the bill also included restriction on use of U. S. aid funds by under-developed countries for the acquisition of modern weapons.
* ★ ★
Johnson commented on the record of the 90th Cbngress, saying it was not as productive as he urged it to be and left an agenda of unfinished business.
Cuts in City Services Are Due by
Won't Oppose 'Hot Pursuit' by
Monday u.s -Sihanouk
Pontiac Pratt Phot*
FIRST RABY OF ’68 — Mrs, Richard Brooks holds her newborn daughter, Amy Leigh, who is the winner of the First Baby of the Year contest. Bom Monday at 12:08 a.m., Amy Leigh is the only child of Mr. and Mrs. Brooks of W Birdsong, Milford. She was bom at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.
ByBOBWISLER %
Cuts in city services ordered by the Pontiac City Commission two weeks ago will take place no later than Monday unless the Oakland County Circuit Court rules out an income tax election, Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said last night.
This includes a $35,000 subsidy for bus service in the city.
A hearing is scheduled tomorrow morning before Judge William J. Beer to argue the merits of petitions requesting a referendum election on the income tax ordered hi October by the City Commission. . • . ‘ ,«iti
However, the hearing requested by the city’s director of law, Sherwin M. Bim-krant, could be delayed..
★ .Sr
Robert D. Coon, a Pontiac attorney, said this morning that he would file today with Circuit Court a petition re-
questing that' he intervene in a suit brought against the city.
RESTRAINING ORDER
ested party would allow him to defend the validity of the petitions instead of the city.
The suit, started by a Pontiac fireman and a policeman, asks for a permanent
Related Stories, , Page 8-7
restraining order preventing the City Commission from setting a referendum election on the income tax question.
Once Coon’s request is filed it would be up to Judge Beer to determine whether he would allow Coon to intervene as an interested party. -★ ★ ’ ★ -1
A hearing would probably have to be held on this matter and thus delay the hearing on whether the petitions are indeed valid.
, Judge Beqr last week Issued a tem-
PETITION VALIDITY Some 1,900 signatures were turned in
office, but, the suit brought against the
Mercury Expected to Plunge Tonight
The suit names the City Commission as defendants because the election machinery of the city is controlled by the commission.
★ ★ ★ '
Petitions requesting the election were circulated by a group organized by Cecil C. Mullinix of 571 Lowell. Cbon said he was acting on behalf of Mullinix and the petition circulators..
city charges that the petitions containing the 'signatures were not properly drawn up.
Winston L. Livingstone, a Detroit attorney, representing the plaintiffs, charged that:
CITY’S POSITION
An Arctic cold wave moved into Michigan today, leaving a trail of slowly but steadily falling temperatures. ’ k k k
A temperature of 22 in the morning, before the cold wave hit, was expected to be the day’s high.
The city finds itself in the position of being charged with defending the validity of the petitions. But, the city officials would like nothing better than tor the petitions to be declared invalid.
• — The petitions don’t contain endorsements of the names and addresses of three persons filing them, in violation of the city charter, and,
• — The petitions do not contain certification tty the circulator that “he is qualified to circulate this petition * . . and that each signature on the petition was signed in his presence, ”in violation of the Michigan Election Law.
Intervention by. Coon as an inter-
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4)
Forecasts for tonight and tomorrow call for mostly cloudy and colder weather with snow flurries likely.
The mercury in the area is expected to plunge tonight to a range from 5 below zero to five above. i
~ k.k
Partly sunny and continued cold is the forecast for Friday.
Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 40, tonight 30, tomorrow 20.
Twenty was the low thermometer reading prior to 8 a.m. The mercury recorded 20 at 12:30 p.m.
for Mediator in Wage Talks
In Today's Press
Rochester, township officials
| engaged in verbal battle I
PAGE A-4. 1
Milliken . _ |
i Role as stand-in for GoV. 1
Romney is growing - PAGE 8
B-8. 1
State Crime Unit
1 Stiffer riot laws, limited wire- I
8 tapping among recommends- 1
1 tions - PAGE C-». 1
I Area News A-4 1
8 Astrology C-8 I
| Bridge C-8 I
1 Crossword Puzzle ... .1....D-15 1
1 Comics C-8 1
I Editorials A-8 I
1 Food Section . C-I, C-5 1
1 Markets . ....... D4 §
1 Obituaries B-8 1
9 Social Security A-7 I
H Sports D-l-D-3 1
D-8 §
§ TV-Radio Programs . D*15 1
1 Wilson, Earl D-15 f
8 Women’s Pages ..'.... , B-l-B-4 I
The Waterford Township Professional Fire Fighters Association, Local 1335, has requested a mediator from the Michigan Labor Mediation Board to assist in the unit’s current negotiations with the Township Board toward a 1968 contract for firemen.
★1 ★ ★
“We have reached an impasse with the board,” said Lt. Donald D. Som-merville, president of the association which represents all 21 township firemen with the exception of the chief and assistant chief.
duty time,” said Somerville. “So we are no longer providing this free service and will be shorthanded,” he emphasized.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPI) -Prince Norodom Sihanouk today issued a statement giving American tropps freedom to chase Communists fleeing Vietnam into Camboidia’s border jungles.
The chief of state, in the statement containing remarks made in a provincial speech Sunday, said, he would not send his 35,009-man army against U. S. troops engaged in such “hot pursuit.”
Sihanouk lashed “some Cambodian and foreign” critics of his decision to allow the Americans freedom of border action.
Sihartouk said his refusal to oppose aqy such American “hot pursuit” was in no way an invitation for border crossing by U. S. forces in neighboring South Vietnam. , »
The Cambodian leader said he would use his troops against the Americans if U. S. forces seize Cambodian territory and refuse to surrender it.
In Bangkok, diplomats reported Sihanouk, in Cambodian broadscasts monitored there, said:
• President Johnson and Secretory of State Dean Rusk stopped an alleged CIA-Pentagon plot to kill him and triggerer a coup in this neutral Southeast Asian nation.
• He thus is now willing to meet an envoy from Washington. Sihanouk broke diplomatic relations with t he United States in May 1965.
• The United States accepted a Si-
hanouk proposal to' beef up the In-ternation Control Commission (ICC), set up the 1954 Geneva conference on Indo china to monitor Southeast Asian border. 1
• The Soviet Union and Poland are opposed to strengthening the. ICC. The Soviet Union is cochairman of the Geneva agreement and Poland is the Communist member of the ICC.
• He will oppose the sending of students from Cambodia to the Soviet Union and Communist East Germany. He also charged Cambodian students in the United States are being used to teach “CIA spy classes.”
Baby Bonanza Won by Milford Parents
“Pretty hectic,” said "Mrs. Richard Brooks about the activity around her generated by her new title, mother of the first baby of 1968.
The Brooks, who live at 747 Birdsong, Milford, have named their daughter Ay Leigh. She was born Monday at 12:08 a.ni.
The contest was open to any baby born of married parents living north of 14 Mile Road in Oakland County after Dec. 31. i If .? ■ t “
The girl Was born after a routine delivery at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Brooks drove his wife to the hospital the day before.
Brooks, 24, is a technician in the noise and vibration laboratory at General Motors Proving Grounds in Milford. His wife, also 24, worked at Community National Bank.
* ★ ★
Traditionally, the first baby born in the new year in this area receives numerous gifts from area merchants.
Gifts include a case of disposable diapers," a savings bond, a savings account, cases of milk, baby shoes, a diamond baby ring, baby clothes, a Silver cup, a baby blanket and a high chair.
•k . k k
For the parents are such gifts as dinners for two, gift certificates, a tire, a car wash and polish, slippers for mother, a ham, dry cleaning certificates and flowers.
DR. ROBERT E. WALDEN
Mental Health Leader Resigns
Gas Rationed in Cuba
HAVANA (JFI — Cuban motorists lined upt today for coupons to buy 8 to 25 gallons of gasoline a month under rationing ordered by Prime Minister Fidel Castro on the ninth anniversary of the victory of his revolution.
If Ip ilKi cl.
■ l ■
ByEDBLUNDEN
One of the leading figures in Oakland County’s mental health program has resigned. *
Dr. Robert E. Walden, 47, director of the program for the Oakland County Community Mental Health Services Board, was one of the highest paid county employes at $30,000 annually. He was the center of a controversy for the
The crux of the issue is that township policemen were offered $200 more in wage increases this year than firemen, who were to receive a $600 across-the-board boost.
“The board has created disparity between the police and fire departments,” said Sommerville. “That’s what we’re fighting.
k k k
“Up to this time,” said Somerville, “we have always had parity between the two departments.
HARMONIOUS RELATIONSHIP
“We have, in my opinion, maintained a harmonious relationship with the po-. lice department and would heme to continue this .relationship,” he said.
•k k k
Because of the impasse in negotiations which began in September, professional v firemen presently will no longer double as volunteer fire fighters.
* * *
“We (full-time paid firemen) will refrain from making fire runs on our off-
- 1 last few months.
Criticism was leveled at Dr. Walden
& Tjgjg;; by employes of Oakland Training Institute in Berkley where some 40 mentally retarded children are cared for. The
dissident group claimed lack of leadership for their program, among other
things.
B, Twelve of a staff of 14 had turned tn resignations which woujd have been
mhiiv effective today. ' “ .
However, on Dec. 23 it was announced a compromise had been reached and 10 of the staff decided to stay. The other two reportedly are leaving for different reasons.
k k k
The OTI group was given a pay boost and a consultant, Mrs. Rita Charron, was hired to see to their problems.
The OTI operation has had difficulties since it began about two years ago and four directors quit in 16 months.
Dr. Walden was hired to head all the county’s mental health programs in June *1965. Oakland was the first county hi the state to set up a separate organization of this type under new laws. This fiscal year its budget is $2.2 million.
roomi. Im our
t#
UNTANGLE WRECKAGE—Pennsylvania Railroad crews move in to clear the* wreckage of 26 freight cars—many of them loaded with chemicals—after long-smoldering fires finally were quenched late yesterday at Donreith, Ind. The accident occurred New Year’s night when two trains sideswlped, setting off a series of explosions in ammonia^ gasoline and
M . - ‘ ■ ft ' '
oil tankers, forcing evacuation of the residents. Officials say the 236 residents of Dunreith will be allowed, to return to their homes today when a deadly chemical compound is removed . from a tank Car left battered but unbroken in the wreckage. (Story, Page A-2.) L"J * '
•i : - .'4: ,
Dr. Walden came to the county after a nationwide search for a director. He had been superintendent of Lakin State nos* pita), Lakin, W. Va. ' ./
He received his medical degree from M a h a r r y Medical College, Nashville, Tenn., and took residency in psychiatry from 1957 to 1960 at Brocktoq: veterans’ hospitals la
(Continued on Pip
.-I
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
LANSING (AP)-A handful of citizens representing Michigan’s most prestigious politeal, church, dvic and labor groups renewed! a pledge Tuesday to fight for a statewide open hous-
«£Rfp& -. tBI
Republican acting Gov. William G. Milllken, who led an unsuccessful bid for passage of such a law last month, predicted that this time “we will be successful.”
.«* ★ ★ *
The leaders met with Milliken for nearly two hours to map open housing strategy to be followed in the regular legislative session, which be$ns Jan. 10.
The meeting fell on the eve of the return of Gov. George Romney, who had added the controversial issue to the agenda of a special fall session.
Romney, a contender for the 1968 GOP presidential nomina-
tion, left the lieutenant governor in charge of running the state and coordinating open housing efforts before leaving Dec. 7 on a month-long tour of Europe, the Middle East and Asia.
majorrole
With Romney tied up in presidential 1 primary campaigns, Milllken likely will play a major role in spearheading any future open housing move.
The special session bill, which would have outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion or national origin in most real estate transactions, monopolized headlines last moth, but failed in a 47-55 house vote. ★ ★ ★
“The bill, in my judgment and that of everyone present here today/ is not dead,” Milliken said. “It’s merely waiting to be reactivated.”
Attending the meeting'Were the state Republican and Democratic chairmen and representatives of the Michigan AFL-CIO, United Auto Workers, Michigan and Detroit councils of churches, Michigan Catholic Conference, Jewish Community Council, State Chamber of Commerce and Michigan Association of Police Chiefs.
RIOT COMMITTEE Also present were members of the New Detroit Committee, named by Romney and Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh to seek answers to last July’s disastrous Detroit riots.
★ * *
Democratic State Chairman Sander Levin said he and GOP chairman Elly Peterson planned talks within the next two weeks concerning what can be done by both parties to pass the bill.
Birmingham Area News
City Afters Boat-Trailer Code
f \.
BIRMINGHAM - After extensive discussion; the City Com-
mission . last night .passed an amendment to the city code cov-
ering proper storage of house trailers, boats and boat trailers.
Unaffected by the new ordinance will be owners of boats at the time of .the amendment’s passage, and owners unable to comply with the code because
of physical factors such as size of lot or building location. •
Under the amendment, trailers and boats may not be stored at the front of a residential zone district, and may .not be stored beside a house between the front and back of a district for more than 39 days.
House trailer camps may be established in zoning areas la-
Kelley Recommends Anticrime Measures
LANSING (API—Higher payjrhetoric,” Kelley said. “We can for policemen, two-year grand fight it with firm and even juries, school courses in law handed law enforcement.”
in
and order and state money for victims of violent crimes were recommended to the Legislature today by Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley.
In a letter to lawmakers, Kelley warned: “It is an indisputable fact that we are faced with a crime crisis.”
“We cannot fight crime with
'Doing Well'
CAPE TOWN, South Africa W — Dr, Philip RIaiberg, the world’s third heart transplant patient, was “doing very well” today, a hospital spokesman said- »• I
The 58-year-old retired dentist regained consciousness last night and in his first words since the operation said: “I am thirsty. Please give my regards to my wife.”
. Hie heart beating inside the white dentist’s chest belonged to CUve Haopt, 84, a mulatto, but there was no objection from the chief defender of apartheid-South Africa’s policy of racial segregation.
. Said Prime Minister Balthazar J. Vorster: “I am very glad to hear that the operation was successful.”
Among the attorney general’s recommendations were these:
RECOMMENDATIONS
• Boosts of local police sal-
aries by 25 per cent, part of it financed by the state, coupled with higher education and training requirements for policemen. • <
Making the job of county prosecutor a full-time job and joining together into single dis-ticts small counties where a full-time prosecutor is not needed.
• State-sponsored training programs for new prosecutors and annual seminars for incumbent prosecutors.
• Permitting prosecutors and the attorney general to petition a court for subpoenas or immunity-granting powers in criminal investigations.
Increasing the maximum life of a one-man grand jury fi;om one to two years while “making some'provision for the protection of the anonymity of those called as witnesses before the grand jury.”
• Making it a felony for an unauthorized person to lend money at an interest rate higher than 25 per cent per year.
• Money payments to victims of violent crimes, “based upon the principle of giving to the victim of crime or his family at least as much care and attention as we provide to the individual who has been convicted of committing the crime.”
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Ctoudy and a little colder today with chance of scattered snow flurries and with steady or slowly falling temperatures. High today 15 to 20.' Variable cloudiness and colder tonight and Thursday with possible snow flurries. Low five below zero to five above. North to northeast winds • to 13 miles per hour today, becoming light and variable tonight. Outlook for Friday: Partly sunny and continued cold. Per cent of precipitation probabilities: Today 40, tonight 30, tomorrow 20.
-Today In Pontiac
Lowest tomparoture preceding ( i.nn.t 30 At I e.m.: Wind Velocity 8 m.p.h.
- Direction: North
Sun seta Wednesday at 5:14 p.m.
Sun rises Thursday at 1:02 a.m.
Moon sets Wednesday at 0:13 p.m.
Moon rises Thursday at 11:11 a./n.
lad downtown)
Highest temperature «*............
Lowest temperature ...............
Mean temperature .................14.5
Weather—Partly sunny
a a.m.
7 e.m.
8 e.m. 0 a.m.
I&ajn.
Alpena Escanaba Flint
Rapids
Downtown Temperatures
_ —, nn W. nOHIU
...... $ Houghton
1 p.m.
20
20
a. '......1.11 | |
. « Houghton Lk.. 18
Jackson 21
Marquette 18
One Year Age In Pontiac ""
Highest temperature ....*..........35
Lowest temperature ...............28
Mean temperature .................30.5
Weather—Mostly sunny, '/i Inch snow
Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date In 2$ Years
S» In 1930
Jacksonville 51
Kansas City 21
Los Angeles 57 47
Miami Beach 77
Milwaukee 20 10
it is New Orleans 58 55 18 f New Ygrk 23 21
15 T Ornihe TO-Iff
21 17 Phoenix 81 34
IS 18 Pittsburgh 24 18
17 10 St. Louis 28 17
47 21 Tampa 00 82
40 37 S. Lake City 32 11
-* -27 S. Francisco 50 43
22 18 S. Ste. Merle t
31 27 Seattle 34
12 -10 Tucson 84 40
22 20 Washington 25 23
Da Nang One Target of Attacks by Reds
SAIGON (AP) - Heavy Communist forces launched a series of coordinated attacks in the precarious northern provinces of South Vietnam today, including a rocket assault on the Da Nang air base that destroyed three planes and ground attacks in. which at least 19 Americans were'reported killed.
★ ★ ★
As the ground war flamed up after a New Year’s truce which U.S. officers termed,‘\the worst yet,” Air Force pilots reported shooting two MIGs from the skies above Hanoi. North Vietnam claimed three U.S. jets were downed.
★ 1 ★ ★
Heavy fighting dotted South Vietnam, but it was in the five northern provinces of the 1st Corps Area that the action was hottest.
These actions were reported:
1. Red gunners fired a number of 122mm rockets into a unit of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division bivouacked in the Que Nhon Valley 25 miles south of Da Nang, then followed with a ground attack. InitiaL reports said 11 cavalrymen were killed, 70 were wounded and the fight was continuing. There was no report of enemy casualties.
2. Earlier, before dawn, the eneiny raked the flight lines at the big Da Nang base with 45 of the big 122mm rockets, de strayed a 32-million Phantom jet and two light spotter planes, badly damaged two other spot' ter planes and a twin-engine C47 and did minor damage to 20 oth er aircraft.: Four Americans were wounded in the 10-minute barrage and 19 others were injured as the sleepy airmen turn bled into the darkness and dashed for bunkers.
A ★ ★
Six coordinated hit-and-run assaults raked South Vietnamese outposts within a 15-mile radius of Da Nang. Casualties among the defenders were reported light.
Notice of Suspension of registration cards were mailed to 695 voters yesterday by employes of the Waterford Township clerk’s office.
The 695 electors who were notified have not voted in the past two years as required by state statute to remain on the active registration file.,!?
* ★ *
According to township clerk officials, the voters have 39 days to sign the cards and return them to the4,clerk’s office in order to officially be reinstated as registered electors.
If they fail to comply, their names will be withdrawn from
Body of Mon Is Found in Wrecked Cor
m
AF Wlrtpholo
NATIONAL WEATHER-Snow and snbw flurries are forecast tonight over an area stretching from northern Texas into fin Lakes, region. Snow flurries are expected in the northern Plains and along the Rockies, while rain is due ^MK|mtblni Taxes into the Carollnas. It will he much ONflarli the northeast quadrant of the nation.
JP; * 4
A 37-year-old Highland Township man was found dead in his car yesterday, some 65 feet into a swampy area off M59 in High
land Township.
Oakland County sheriff’s deputies said the body of Theodore R. Stewart of 2919 Summit was found i n the car about 2 after a passing
Oakland Highway Toll in ’68
Law Yaar to Data 0
p.m., shortly motorist who had noticed tire tracks leading off the road called the sheriff’s department.
* * ★
Deputies said the vehicle had apparently gone out of control east of Harvey Lake Road and
_____ PRICE-BOOSTING HARNESS—Shoulder harnesses, such as the one demonstrated by model Lynn Ross, became mandatory on all new cars under federal safety regulations. AH new automobiles rolling off assembly lines in the U.S. yesterday were equipped with the safety straps. With the harness came a boost in car prices, generally in a range from $23 t ,v,
★. ■ ■ Hr ★
So far, Trinh’s statement is regarded here as being primarily an effort to build up new, worldwide pressures on Presi
City Cuts Due by Monday
(Continued From Page One)
City commissioners were prepared last week to order a referendum election after City Clerk Olga Barkeiey certified that enough valid signatures were turned in to order a referendum election.
Hie setting of the election would immediately delay, collection of an income tax revenue ordered by the income tax ordinance.
In effect, the city wouldn’t be able to collect income tax money until voters would approve the ordinance. And then, collection would be delayed until July.
★ A. ★
With this in mind the commission ordered a number of cuts in services and the layoff of some 42 city employes.
SWIFT DECISION .....
While the income tax question is still up in the air the com-
left the road after knocking mission indicated last night that down eight highway guard poles.!on|y a swift decision on the pe-■t, + if titions would delay the cuts.
The time of the accident will be determined at a post-mortem held today, according to deputies.
If the petitions aris declared by the court to be invalid, the cuts won’t go into effect and the city' , will take Immediate
steps to collect income tax rev enue.
If, however, the court delays past Friday in reaching a decision or finds the petitions val id, the cuts will hike effect no later than Monday;
Mayor Taylor said some $542,-000 worth of services must be cut immediately to balance the 1968 general operating budget This budget figures on no new income tax money.
NEW BUDGET
If the income tax goes through the city will draw up a new budget.
In addition to the bus subsidy, service cuts Include shutting down the city’s department of health and youth assistance, closing two library branches and the Hayes Jones Community Center and stopping a rent subsidy for the Office of Economic Opportunity’s Action Center at 7 W. Lawrence. .
Also planned are elimination of two fire companies (12 men) and closing of 'two fire stations, a reduction of overtime for employes of the Department of Public Works and in recreation programs and shutting off some street lights.
U.S.-N.Viet Peace Talk Gap Narrows
would take 8 to 10 hours for the team of experts , to transfer the lethal acetone cyanhydrin to a tanker truck. The compound, used in making plexiglass, pro-1 Will be lowered to two hours, duces cyanide gas when ex- * S * *
posed to,air. j jn other business, the com-
MAY FINISH TONIGHT------------; mission set a-date-of-Jan^
Officials said the transfer tor confirmation of the aSsess-may be complete by tonight.(ment roll on delinquent debts Many townspeople stayed with|from
friends and relatives in other j Commissioners also expressed cities, while some were lodged concern in the proposed sign in motels. i ordinance, currently undergoing
* * * revision by the administration.
Winburn said he had hopes | Residents and business owners
the compound had been consumed by flames, removing the danger of lethal fumes. “The worst thing that could have happened did happen,” he said after finding the filled tank car unbroken.
* A ★ ★
State police said the same chemical had leaked from another car and seeped into nearby Buck Creek. Hiey said nine head of cattle on the Everett Thompson farm a mile south of Dunreith died after drinking poisoned water.
Robert W. Heider of the State Board of Health said samples were being taken from the creek and Big Blue River, which it empties into, to determine how far the poison had spread- HO emphasized that neither waterway is used for human consumption.
FLAMES EXTINGUISHED
Firemen extinguished the last of the flaming wreckage Tuesday night, more than 20 hours after the accident. Railroad crews working under flood lights began to dear the wreckage.
A railroad spokesman said an 18-inch piece of track snapped in the sub-freezing cold, causing cars on the 98-car westbound
planning to invest in signs were cautioned of the impending change in the city code.
Mental Health Figure Quits County Post
by North Vietnam.
Officials said, however, that
the Trinh statement is being fully explored through diplomatic channels to determine whether it was seriously intended to ad vance the prospects for talks.
Exam Is Set for City Man in Hit-and-Run
A Pontiac man arrested in connection.with the hit-and-run death early Monday of a 17-year-old Highland Township girl faces preliminary examination in Waterford township Justice Court Feb. 13 on charges of manslaughter and leaving the scene of a personal injury acci-dent.
In Oakland County Jail in lieu of $10,000 and $2,500 bonds on the respective charges set at arraignment yesterday is Gary Gillespie, 22, of 350 Third.
He was arrested about 4 p.m Monday at North Telegraph and Walton by an Oakland County sheriffs deputy while riding to a car answering a description of the hit-run vehicle.
This was about 13 hours after Sherry Ann Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lane E. Knight of 203 S. Center, was killed and her escort, Alan Lengeman, 17, son of Mrs. Janet H. Lengement of 3727 Gulf wood, Milford, was seriously injured by a car which struck them from behind as they walked on the shoulder of Milford Road in Highland Township.
★ ★ ♦
Lengeman is reported in/fair condition in Pontiac General Hospital.
AUTO STALLED
Deputies said the couple was apparently walking to the Knight home from Lengeman’s stalled car when the mishap occurred.
v if, ' V
E , 4' /
Some $770 in cash was stolen from the safe of a firm in the Pontiac State Bank Building by a burglar who apparently knew the combination, it was reported to city police yesterday.
The manager of the Baxter-Livingstone Finance Co., located on the building’s fourth floor, told investigators he found the safe open when he opened the office or the safe.
He said there were no signs
Finance Firm Safe Is Looted
(Continued From Page One)
No criticism was leveled in the announced resignation — either by Dr. Walden nor by the mental health services board. Making the announcement was Paul N. Averill of Birmingham, board chairman.
He announced, “Dr. Walden leaves behind z record of important pioneering effort in this county, which in itself has given leadership statewide in establishing Public Act 54 as a valid and forward-moving piece of legislation.”
(Act 54 enables separate organizations for mental health purposes in the state. Previously this work had been handled through hospitals and clinics.) ★ ★ it.-
Dr. Walden’s resignation cited the accomplishments of the programs for the mentally ill and mentally retarded.
He did not announce, hqw-ever, his reasons for resigning or what his future plans were.
TEMPORARY LEADERS
Two men are to assume temporary leadership of the programs, the board announced. They are Dr. Donal L. White, assistant psychiatric director, and John Madole, administration officer of the board.
Dr. White, 44, was hired to April 1967 at an annual salary of $26,000. He is a University of Michigan graduate and was on the staff of Fo{£ Hospital, Detroit
Madole was hired In February 1965 at a salary of $13,500 a year after serving as the county envoy in Cali, Colombia, in an Alliance for Progress program. ★ ★ ★
The Mental Health Services
of a break-in, either into the of- Board offers both inpatient and flee or the safe. outpatient care in conjunction
Officers said they later found with several county hospitals, fourth-floor fire escape door it aids in operation of the three open and tracked footprints in county Child Guidance clinics the snow to a third floor window and operates or aids in operat-which was also unlocked. ing various training programs ★ ★ * ' for the mentally retarded.
Identification bureau officers. The 12 board members are checked the scene for flnger-inamed by the County Board of prints, according to police. 'Supervisors.
Spring Parking Ban Due on Part of Huron Street
As part of a long-range im-
provement . of M59,, parking will be banned, this spring on Huron from West Wide Track to Perry.
Joseph Koren, traffic engineer for the city, said today the elimination of parking wlil allow for five traffic lanes.
He said the city will remove the meters now on the streets and the State Highway Department will paint new traffic tones and Install traffic control signs “as soon as the wealiier breaks.”
He estimated the work would
be done about the middle of
March. . - 1 A;
Koran said the' street is wide enough for five traffic lanes — two in each direction with one lane for left turns — without widening of the street
The state highway department and city agreed to changes in the street usage after meetings late last year. ,
• Wy Sr.
Officials are hopeful that the changes will tend to eliminate the congestion which occurs on Huron during the rush hdurs, especially between Saginaw and West Wide Track.
>
/?i^lf^ Township Officials Air Views
*5 PRW
’ tSSHPf IBf
ROY REWOLD Rochester Mayor
william McCullough Avon Trustee
Thomas, 21, who earlier Had been treated and released for stab wounds in the back and back of his head, is now in Selfridge Hospital in satisfactory condition.
‘ATTACKED BY 7 MEN’ *
The Ryan brothers, home on leave from the Army, were attacked by seven men in the parking lot after they arrived at the party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Barr, police said.
A third stabbing victim has been identified by witnesses as Jack Watson, age and address unknown, according to police.-
Also injured during the melee at about 3:30 a.m. New Year’s Day was Charles Parkkila, 25, of 6782 Drake, a cousin of Fred Parkkila.
-★ ★ ★
Another man, still unidentified, was reportedly beaten, said police.
When two township policemen arrived at the party scene near 3:30 a.m. Monday, there was evidence of a large fight both inside and outside the home, said patrolman Richard Lamphier.
State Representative Will Speak to PTA
ROCHESTER — State Rep. Donald E. Bishop, R-63rd District, will speak at 8 p.m. Monday for the North Hill Elementary School PTA; _
Bishop will discuss recent Michigan legislation affecting all aspects of education. He will receive and answer questions' from the audience. 1 The meeting has been opened to the public, according to Bernard Vosteen, president.
Cranbrook
Events
Following is a list of special
events taking place at the faciIi-“ ties at Cranbrook oh Lone Pine Road, in Bloomfield Hills:
PLANETARIUM - Regular public demonstrations, Wednesday at 4 p.m. and weekends at 2:30 and, 3:30 p.m. The topic for the month is “Telling Time by the Stars.”
ATOMARIUM Public demonstration Sunday at 3:30 p.m. or by appointment. Admission 25 cents.
Issue Stirs Heated Battles
AVON TOWNSHIP - The verbal battle over the election Jan. 15 to incorpo-\ rate all of Avon Township outside the City of Rochester is heating up here.
Both pity and towhship government officials have released statements citing opposing views. ^
Mayor Roy Rewold of Rochester today related findings of the Rochester Jay-ceejg seminar’ series and the Rochester Area League of Women Voters'which have urged a single unit of government for the combined area.
“L would urge a ‘no’ vote,” said the mayor. '“My reasoning for this is that some of the proponents of a favorable vote say that we could consolidate the two cities at a later date. ., .
Mayor Rewold said that checking the possibility of two cities consolidating showed that it has never happened in state history. ■ [; «■
“I will do all l ean as a lifetime resident of the Rochester area and as mayor of the City of Rochester to encourage the annexation of the Avon area to the
Rewold’s > statement followed an earlier one put out by Township Trustee William McCullough wherein the recently propoiMd development of the 325-million Fried-Jacobson property at Walton and/ Livernois and the projected R. P. Scherer Corp. pharmaceutical plant on former Parke-Davis property were cited.
City of |tochester.”
Said McCullough: ^
• “Avon Township has an area of 34.4 square miles compared to Rochester’s 1.6 square miles.
' |
• “Avon Township has a population
of approximately 20,000 as compared to the City of Rochester’s approxi- , mately 6,000.
‘ • “The growth potential of the township exceeds that of Rochester! >
- * * * i
• “Uhless Avon Township incorporates and adopts a charter of its own choosing, it could, because of , annexation, be forced to a charter and form of government about which it has no choice. *
“How sentimental can the taxpayers
of our township afford to be?” McCullough asked.
PROTECT INTEREST
“They can best protect their < interest In their property by voting ‘yes’ on the incorporation proposal.
“Once we have protected our bargaining position by incorporation, we then can consider the advisability of eventual merger with the City of Rochester, because we then can go to the bargaining table as equals and not as country cousins.’’
JCs Feel Avon Annexation to Rochester Is Best Answer
ROCHESTER — The Jaycees, an active group of community-minded young men in the Rochester-Avon area; has come out in favor of annexation as ihe route toward unificatiorrof governments here.
An incorporation vote for Avon ToWlP" ship excluding Rochester is due Jan. 15.
Following “an extensive study of the existing atmosphere of local govern ments,” the group has adopted a four-point statement of conclusions which includes:
Man Is Charged With Try to Kill 2 Brothers
• They agree with the objectives 6T simplification by avoiding duplication of governmental efforts and the prevention of fragmentation of the total Rochester-Avon area.
• They believe that if the Jan. 15 election passes, in all likelihood the result would be the formation of two separate city, excluding the City of
Rochester, to be fragmentation of the v. community. •
• They believe that annexation of the entire Avon Township to the City of Rochester, as requested in the annexation petitions now on file in Oakland'County is the most logical route toward unification.
• Whichever c o u r s e the voters of T the community choose, the Jaycees are
pledged to study and work toward unification as long as u remains a possibility.
★ _ ★ ★
The statement of the Jaycees followed a similar one by the Rochester League of Women Voters and another by Mayor Roy Rewold of Rochester.
Statements favoring the incorporation vote Jan. 15 have so far been issued by Harold Pepper, chairman of the Avon Township Study Committee, and by Township Trustees William McCullough and Philip Trimble.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY .‘3, 1968
A—4
Troy Delays Setting Tax Vote
TROY — The City Commission last night tabled for the second time determination of the date for a half-mill tax election.
The proposed increase, to be used for construction of a city library, is still tentatively scheduled fpr Feb. 19, provided a city primary election is held the same day.
Fire Local Head Asks Vote
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP^ -Police here have charged a 28-year-old man with attempted murder of two brothers at a New Year's Eve party at 6551 Drake.
The two warrants were issued yesterday by Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson.
Union Certification Sought
BUILDING CODE AMENDMENT
Charged is Fred Parkkila, 28, of the Walled Lake area who is being sought by police.
The two brothers injured are Randall and Thomas Ryan, both of 21355 Farmington, Farmington.
Randall, 19, who suffered stab wounds in the back and a collapsed lung, is in satisfactory condition at Botsford Hospital,
★ ★ ★
WEST BLOOMIFELD TOWNSHIP — The president of the newly formed firemen’s union here has applied for an election which may certify Local 1721 of the West Bloomfield Township Fire-i fighters Association of the International Association of Firefighters.
The request for approval to hold the election waq made after the Township Board refused to recognize Local 1721.
has always bargains with a lawyer who said he Was representing the firemen.
★ ★ ★
Local 1721 president Donald Nelson made the election request to the Michigan Labor Mediation Board in Detroit.
In other business, the commission approved a proposed amendment to the city’s recently adopted building code; dealing with swimming pool safety regulations.
The board wants to assure that the local does represent the majority of the nine foil-time firemen and about 30 or 40 volunteers, explained Township Supervisor John Doherty.
STATION ‘CLOSED’ AGAIN |
Nelson reported that the Green Lake station was “closed” again Friday from 6:30 to 7 a.m. Saturday. He said earlier that the same station was also “closed” the Saturday before Christmas.
Instead of an “adequate enclosure” as is specified in the present code, any pool containing over 12 inches in depth of water at any point must now have a chain link, frame or masonry enclosure at least four feet high. . ~~
Gates in the enclosure must have selflocking latches four feet high of otjher-
The station was closed both times because of a lack of manpower, Nelson explained.
The supervisor added that the board
Independence Rejects COG
According to Assistant Fire Chief Mel Jorits the Station was hot officially closed although no man was in attendance in the building.
The station was in operation because a volunteer next door was taking fire calls on his monitor and telephone said Jorits.
East Lansing Saga: Tale of 'Goldilocks and the 4 Students'
INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — A' vote against seeking membership in the Southeast Council of Governments was unanimous here last night.
The Township Board qualified its motion, however, with a phrase, “at this time.” Clerk Howard Altman said, “I know they would never vote to join without considerable study of the issue.’1
NOT ALL DOORS LOCKED
Not all the doors of the station were locked, added Jorits who made the decision not to have a man on duty at the station.
Supervisor Doherty reported that for a 10-year period several years ago, the station didn’t have a man on duty in the building all die time but a man answered calls from his home.
EAST LANSING Iff) — East Lansing’s very own “Goldilocks” has red hair and green eyes and goes for bourbon instead of porridge.
Four Michigan State University students returned to their East Lansing apartment after a long holiday break and discovered someone ^apparently had been living there while they were gone.
In other business, the board amended its zoning map in four instances to conform with surrounding property classifications.
Areas returned to a residential classification were a small grocery store on Sashabaw Road near Whipple Lake — to be kept as a nonconforming usage;' an old synagogue in Woodhall Lake subdivision; and a home adjacent to some industrial zoning at the Clement and White Lake intersection.
Jorits explained that men weren’t at the Green Lake station because of a wage dispute and not because of a manpower shortage.
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He said the firemen believed they should be paid more than regular wages when they work on their off days.
The fire department is under the ultimate authority of the township Fire Committee composed of trustees Walter J .Whitmer and John F. Warren.
Douglas Bailey, 21, of Walled Lake told police Someone had been eating their food and sleeping in their beds.
And, he said, the. someone had taken 5Q0 pennies, three pints of bourbon, sweaters, towels, a clock, a pen, about 40 record albums, a check for $6 and a key to’the apartment. ...
Police said neighbors reported hearing music during the students’ absence and seeing a girl with green eyes and red hair.
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By action of the board, most of Section 18 in the Reese-Holcomb Roads area was left in an agricultural category. Suburban farms and residential had been proposed for part of the land.
City Attorney Chosen— 1966 Chair mOn by Avon Democratic Club
ROCHESTER — Pontiac attorney Joseph F. Kosik of Oakland Jownship has been named chairman of the Avon Democratic Club for 1968.
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Other officers named recently are Mrs. Ellen Davenport, Avon Township, vice chairman; Mrs. Louis Berklich, Avon Township coiresponding secretary; Mrs. Don Healy, Avon/ Township, recording secretary; Mrs. F. E. HoWe, Rochester, treasurer; Thomas Gray, Troy, sergeant at arms.
Trustees elected were Mrs. William Tymkow, Avon Township; Glen Douglass. Avon Township: and Mrs. John Ireland, Avon Township.
Panllie Prati Photo
STARTING THE SEASON - The Rochester Civic Center ice rink was initiated for this winter yesterday by Glenna Carltton (left), 122 Albertson, Rochester, a senior at Rochester High School, and Jake Martin, 2786 Gravel Ridge, Avon Town-shop. r
wise inaccessible to small children from the outside.
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The commission also voted 4-2 to deny a request from the Boron Oil Co. to rezone Lots 1-7 in John R. Gardens Subdivision from B-l to B-3 to permit the installation of a service station.
mercial” and said he hoped the planning commission would studj^ possible uses for such areas, adding, “I question whether there is any other use for that corner.”
CONSIDERABLE DEBATE
If no primary takes place, the millage election may be rescheduled to coincide with the regular city election in April.
The motion to table came because the Troy Board of Education, also meeting last night, was considering a new school millage election Feb. 19.
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Friends of the Troy Library, a citizens’ group backing the half-mill hike, have urged that the1 two millage votes be set (Hi different dates.
Since the intersection involved, John R. and Maple, has three Service stations; Which were constructed before the area was-rezoned from B-3 to B-l, (forbidding service stations), the request brought considerable debate.
, Commissioner John Kokalis, who cast a dissenting vote along with Commissioner Wallace B. Hudson expressed his feeling that the corner is “bound to go com-
In other buiness, the commission approved the special-assessed construction of a 12-inch water main on Square Lake Road from Coolidge to Glen-Moor Subdivision to provide an emergency supply for the well servicing that area.
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Also approved was the appointment of Joe Howey as a part-time city librarian on City Manager Paul York’s recommendation.
Howey studying for a master’s degree in library science at the University of Michigan, will work part-time for the city until his graduation in April,
School Board Puts Tax Hike on the Feb. 19 Ballot in Troy
TROY — The board of education last night approved the placing of a 7-mill tax increase on the ballot Feb. 19.
The proposed boost, to remain in effect for two years, would bring in approximately $750,000 each year to brighten the district’s dim financial picture.
The new millage attempt comes on the heels of two others, on June 12 and Sept. 11, both of which failed. As a result, the district will incur, a” deficit of $600,000 by the end of the, fiscal year, despite* cutbacks in,,many areas, according to Supt. Rex B. Smith.
The district cannot use present income to apply to expenses, Smith added, because of twp loans received last year. One loan, he said, was against incoming tlaxes and the other against state aid.
“By March 2,” he continued, “enough taxes will have come in to pay off the first loan, and we will have money to handle current expenses.”1
The board also approved an effort to seek a $410,000 loan to handle current expenses. “We need more money to see us through till March,” Smith said. “As things are now, we’re going to run out of funds aroOnd Jan. 30.”
Orion Township Board to Meet on Tuesdays
ORION TOWNSHIP — The Township Board will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Township Hall, 571 S. Broadway.
Meetings have been put back to the second Tuesday of each month following a summer series of second Wednesday meetings.
Pruning Expert to Talk
MILFORD 4- James Smith, field landscape architect for the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, will discuss “The Pruning of Trees and Shrubs” for the -Milford Garden Club and Senior Citizens Club at 2 p.m. tomorrow. The meeting will take place at the Milford Methodist Church.
More Gold Trahsferred
WASHINGTON (tf)-The Treasure Department said today it has transferred another $450 million in gold from the nation’s money stocks to help cover the recent rash of speculative gold buying in Europe.
Avon Planners Eye
$25-Million Project
AVON TOWNSHIP — A $25-million commercial - office - residential development for the southeast corner of Walton and Livernois is currently under consideration by the township planning com-
The developers told the Avon Planning Commission they would like to start work immedately once zoning problems were solved for the multiuse development.
The commission, due to meet in study session tonight, expects no formal action as yet, though it has received a letter from Vilican-Leman planning consultants of Southfield, which reports on the proposed project as follows:
HIGH-RISE APARTMENTS
No major zoning ordinance Change, with the possible exception of high-rise apartment usage in the future, is foreseen by the planning consultants. ,
“We look for the new developments (in the Walton-Livernois area), to emerge as the major commercial center serving the region and for the (Rochester) downtown area to assume the role of a marginal or fringe shopping area.”
Individual parcels of the 19-acre area would, however, Jutvq to be zoned to usage, according to township officials to permit the stores, the medical office building and the apartments now planned.
Proposed by Martin and Paul Fried of Claridge Properties, -tjetrolt, the development would feature a pedestrian shopping bridge between the projected Jacobson Stores development on the northeast corner of the intersection across Walton to the proposed new development.
Viiican-Leman Visualizes the new development changing the character along Walton from the multiple housing, now ''planned, to commercial* and office ra^ lated to the new center.
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The proposed development area lies now ,between the Rochester Senior High School and Crittenton Hospital.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
in Air Turbulence Detection
|x,8y Sdenee Service WASHINGTON — Clear air turbulence (CAT) Is a mystery that meteorologists would love to solve. The sudden, violent phenomenon pan tear a jetliner apart without Warning.
One of the most promising ways of detecting CAT pockets assumes that they are accom-
panied by a sharp change in temperature, which can be detected either' by infrared or microwave detectors, I
A CAT detector patented last week senses temperature far ahead and to the side of the aircraft by measuring microwave radiation put out by oxygen
molecule?, the intensity of which depends on temperature.
The remote* temperature Is compared with the temperature at the aircraft itself, and when a sharp change is noted, an electronic circuit tells the pilot which way to turn to avoid the disturbance.
The patent was assigned tolflown yet.
Sperty Gyroscope Co, by the inventors, Benjamin R. F o w, Richard F Hazel and Wayne D. Mount, A Sperry spokesman says the remote temperature radiometer is being engineered by the company for use also in air pollution studies, but the whole CAT assembly hasn’t been
One difficulty with the temperature sensors is that the instrument has to be kept level. Temperature changes due to different alfitudes, which would be {ticked up, if the plane tips {dye false alarms.
Regionally infant mortality rates are highest-in the South
Bloomfield Miracle Mile
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THE POirglAC PRESS, W^KfcBDAY, JANUARY 8t 1&(W *
#«*!
■. * *
fn Pontiac, Neighboring
mm
Mrs. Loe A. Benedict
Service lor former Pontiac resident Mrs. Leo A. (Edith M.) Benedict, 73, of Baldwin Township, Iosco County, will be 10:30 a.rh. F^iday at Dondlson-Jol Funeral Home with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery.
Mrs. Benedict died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; two sons, Kenneth F. of Pontiac and Howard A. ofRoscomnton; 10 grandchildrenriO great-children; and a sister.
Mrs. Forest Cummings
Mrs. Forest (Anne G.) Cummings, 46, of 153 'JN, Roselawn died yesterday. Her body is at Voorhees-SipleFuneral Home Mrs. Cummings attended First United Missionary Church and was a member of Welcome Rebekah Lodge 246.
Lewis W. Ward, general sales Surviving are her husband; manager for Pontiac Motor Di- her mother, Mrs. Sarah Hand-vision from 1946 to 1952, died] ley of Gadsden, Ala.; five Sunday. He was 75. children, James E. with the
•Service^ was to be 1 p.m. to- Army, and Marla S., Sharon E.
LEWIS W. WARD
Former Exec at Pontiac Div. Is Dead at 75
day at Bell Chapel of the Wil-
Donald F. and Stacy R., all at
liam R. Hamilton C°-, Binning-'home; two sisters; and three ham. Entombment was to fol- brothers, low at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
Ward, currently president of Product-Sol, Inc., of Birmingham, lived at 3941 Quarton,
Bloomfield Hills.
He was a member of the Bloomfield Hills Country Club, the Detroit Gun Club and the
Detroit Yacht Club.
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Surviving are his wife, Lillian E.; a daughter, Mrs. Allan Led ford of Honolulu, Hawaii; eight grandchildren; and four greatgrandchildren.
Waterford Twp. Blaze Causes $1,300 Damage
Fire broke out at the Thomas Brown home, 6450 Anderson-ville, Waterford Township, yesterday afternoon, causing an estimated $800 tp the building and $500 to the contents.
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Township fire fighters, who responded to the alarm at 4:20 and returned to the station at 4;54, attributed the fire to a pan left cooking on a stove.
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The fire at the one-story, $30,000 brick home was confined to the kitchen, but smoke damage was evident throughout the house.
' • -
| Police Action
I i
. 1 Pontiac police officers i I and Oakland County sher- 1
Iiff’s deputies investigated | 73 reported incidents and | made 12 arrests the past I 24 hours.
iA breakdown of causes § for police action: Vandalisms—?
Burglaries—13
1 Larcenies—16 « fg
Auto thefts—2 Bicycle thefts—1 Disorderly persons—4 I
Assaults—6
Obscene phone calls—2 | Bad checks—2 Rapes—1 |
Traffic offenses—6 Property damage dc- I cidents—9 Injury accidents—4
Elmer J. Hawkins
Elmer J. Hawkins, 42, of 75 Lafayette, died this morning. His body is at the—Huntoon Funeral Home.
Mr. Hawkins was a welder at Pontiac Motor Division.
Surviving are a sister and two brothers. V'.r*
Mary l. McGrow
Service for Mary L. McGraw, 83, of 118 E. Chicago will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
Miss McGraw, a retired employe of the J. L. Hudson Co., di.ed Sunday.
Surviving is a sister.
Robert J, Peltier
Requiem Mass for Robert J. Peltier, 81, of 765 Robin-wood will be 11 a.m. Friday in Holy Cross Catholic Church, Marine City, with burial .there in the Holy Cross Cemetery.
Thg Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Bower-Rose Funeral Home in Marine City.
Mr. Peltier, a retired employe of Detroit Gasket Manufacturing Co., Marine City, ^as a member of St. Michael Cain-!
olic Church, Pontiac, and the Holy Name Society.
' Surviving are two daughters, Sister Dorothy I.H.M., a teacher at Marian Catholic High School, Birmingham, and. Mrs. Willi&rft Thiel of" Pontiac; a son, Morton of Marine City; a sister; four grandchildren; and a great-granddaughter.
Thomas J; Sopp
Requiem Mass for Thomas J. Sopp, 83, of 5194 Farm, Waterford Township will be 10 a.m. Friday in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church, Scripture service will be 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home,
Mr. Sopp, a member of St Vincent de Paul Church, died yesterday.
Surviving is a daughter, Mrs.|.
was a self-employed paiiiter-decoratori Surviving are'' his wife, Beatrice; a son, Darwin of Lapeer; two daughters, Mrs. Daniel Powell and Mrs. Donald McCay, both Of Lapeer; eight grandchildren; a brother, Carl of Lapeer; and five sisters, including Mrs. Zola Simpson, Mrs. Eleanor Elliott and -Mrs. Frances Chubb, all of Lapeer.
Graham F. Diedrieh**
ROSE TOWNSHIP - Service for Graham F. Diedrieh, 61, of 131 Franklin will be 2 p.m. Friday at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly, with burial in Rose Center Cemetery.
Mr. Diedrieh died' yesterday. He was employed at Fisher Body Plant No. 1 in Flint. Surviving are his wife, Mar-
„ .. .nAu,„„ Jan; two sons, Daniel of Royal
Mary Abare of Pohtiac. j0ak and ^ of ,Lansing. t*w0
|brothers, including Ernest of
Mrs. William Stout R^se Township. aifd three grand
Prayer service for Mrs. Wil-| children.
stepfather and mother, Mr. and Mrs. John L, Hall;, a sister;' and two stepsisters, Mrs. Mona Bikhop and Mrs: Betty Mitchell, both of Lake Orion.
Doyle J. Mitchell
HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Doyle J. Mitchell,
18, of 111 St. John was to be 1 p.m. today at Elton Black Funeral Hbme, Union Lake. Burial Was to be in Highland Cem-P°Hce etery, | The incident followed an al-
The youth died Sunday in anle8ed argument during which auto accident. [Mrs. Humphreys ' fired a re-
Surviving besides his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell are four brothers, including Gary, Larry and Ronald of Highland Township; and two sisters, including Vicki at home.
Murder Exam Setfor Man, 53
A Pontiac man accused of the fatal shooting -of his wife Friday faces preliminary examination Jan. 10 on an open charge of murder.
Robert Humphreys, 53, of 229 E. Walton was arrested at his home shortly before midnight,
' His wife, Earllne, 50, died in Pontiac General Hospital a few hours later. She had been shot once in the chest, according to
Fire
Area Home
A fire in Independence Township early this morning caused an estimated $3,000 damage to a basement, its contents and outside wall.
The blaze, believed to be electrical, broke out at 3:20 a.m-today at the 4936 Neosho home oLMr.-and Mrs, Robert Slusher. No one was injured in the fire, said Deputy Fire Chief Tink Rook.
Oscar J. Reed
SOUTHFIELD
liam (Ina E.) Stout, 81, of 86 Waterly, Waterford Township, will be 8 p.m. Friday at Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home.
Service'Will be lpm Saturday at the Methodist Church in Cedar Springs with burial there in the Elmwood Cemetery.
Mrs, Stout, a member of First] Methodist Church, Pontiac, died this morning
Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. .James Sorenson of Pontiac, Mrs. Stanley Weller of Kalamazoo and Mrs. Kenneth Barnes of Wyoming, Mich.; a son, Horace Linderman of Bridgeman; three sisters; a brother; 11 grandchildren; and 28 great-grandchildren.
Mrs. John Brown
BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -
Memorials may be made to the Holly Branch of the Michigan Cancer Society.
Mrs. Fred E. McCleary
BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Serv-ice for Ms.Fred E. (Anna W.) McCleary, 85, of 1312 N. Woodward, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit.
Mrs. McCleary died yesterday. She Bad been an active member of the Birmingham First Methodist Church.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. John E. Lane of Birmingham; four grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Robert E. Millard
„ ! . .. T . /r> , ui LAKE ORION — Service for
Service for Mrs. John (Beulah Rbt E Millard 53 of 243
D $ Dt»nnm Q9 r\f Kfl Qminrn 1 7
Hauxwell will be 2 p.m. tomor-
Pontiac Man Is Bound Over in Road Death
B.) Brown, 82, of 50 Square Lake will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount'Park Cemetery, Pontiac.
Mrs. Brown died Monday.
Surviving are two sisters.
Elvin G. Coulter
.LAPEER - Service for Elvin G. Coulter, 71, of 744 Tur-rill will be 2 p.m. tomorrow from the Muir Brothers Funeral Home, with burial in Stiles Cemetery, Mayfield Township.
Mr. Coulter died Monday. He
row- at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, OxfOrd, Burial will be in Eastlawn Cemetery. ■
Orion Lodge No. 46, F&AM, will conduct a memorial service at 8 p.m. today at the funeral home.
Mr. Millard, head custodian of the Lake Orion Junior High School, died Monday. Hie was a member of the Lake Orion Methodist Church, the Masonic Lodge and OES No. 340.
Surviving are his wife, Beatrice, a daughter, Barbara, and son, Bruce, all at home; his
iMrs.
volver, later confiscated by officers, three times, a witness said.
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Police said they found six spent cartridges on the premises.
Humphreys is free after posting $2,500 bond set at his B T _ , Service for arraignment Saturday by Muni-
®“ar £* 0 21159:cipal Judge Maurice E. Finne-
Poinciana will be 2 p.m. tomor-!gan row at Heeney - Sundquist Fu- 8 . ‘ —-
nerai Home,'Farmington. BxtrP] al will be in P a r k v i e w I Cemetery, Livonia.
Mr. Reed, a retired machine repair leader at Pontiac Motor Division, died Monday:—
Surviving besides his wife,
Gail A., are two sons, Clarence E. and Glenn O. both of South-field; a daughter, Mrs, Raymond Barnum of Livonia; three brothers, including Archie E. of Farmington Towliship; 11 grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchilden.” >' ..
Baby Boy Rewold
ROCHESTER Service for baby boy Rewold, infant son of Mr. and M.1?- Walter Rewold, 801 Ludlow, wds to be 11 a.m. today at Pixley. Memorial Chapel, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy,- p.
Thp infant died at birth yesterday. *
Surviving (are his parents, a sister, Wendy, and a brother,
Brad; all at home, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rewold Of Rochester and Mrs.
Mrs. Robert Wallace of Hubbard Lake.
Local Club to Hear Rep. McDonald
Congressman Jack McDonald, R-19tn District, will be the key speaker at Friday’s meeting of the Pontiac E x c h a n g e Club.
He will discuss current national problems and hold a question-and - answer period after the noqn lurtcheon, MeDONALD according to Pontiac Chief of Police William K. Hanger, club president.
The luncheon is open to Exchange Club members and their-guests; • „ ;
Burglars made off with some 50 long-play record albums from a Pontiac firm late yesterday if but, police recovered two stolen television sets near the scene.
(jfficers were dispatched to the D and D Radio and Television Shop, 319 Prospect, short ly before midnight and found that the intruders had smashed through the front door glass.
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j A spokesman for the firm said at least 50 'albums valued at more than $300 plus the televi-| sion, sets, were missing.
Police said the sets, both port-j ables, were found hiddent under vehicles parked across the street, apparently left there by thebyrglars in a hasty escape.
NOTICE OF ANNUAT MEETING •
' Notice Is hereby alven that the Annual Meeting of the members of the First Fed-eref Savinas end Coen Association of Oakland wfir be held at the Main Office of the Association, 761 west Huron Street, Pontiac, Michigan, on Wednesday, the 17th day of January, 196), at J P. M., for the purpose of considering and voting upon the following:
1. Election of Directors
2. For the transaction of such other-business as may legally come before the meeting.
First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Gaklahd
JAMES CLARKSON, * President -
December 27, 1947 and Jan. 3, 1*4t
A British research laboratory has devised a machine capable of printing all of Shakespeare’s plays in little more than a minute. It can print more than 60,000 characters a second. , .
A 33-year-old Pontiac man was bound over to Oakland County Circuit Court yesterday on Fa charge of negligent homicide in the traffic death of,a Commerce Township man last Nob. 3.
Roy L. -Scott of 170 Florence is scheduled to appear before Circuit Judge Philip Pratt for, arraignment at 9 a.m. Jan. 17. | / The charge against Scott was reduced from manslaughter to negligent homicide by Waterford Township Justice Patrick K. Daly who conducted the preliminary , examination.
The victim. George P. See-dorff, 52, of 2105 Union Lake, allegedly was struck by Scott’s car on the shoulder of 1-75 near Sashabaw Road in Independence Township as he was getting tools from, the rear of his vehicle to repair a flat tire.
Seedorff was pinned between the cars and was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital,' according to Pontiac State Police. ' ’’%■ ‘
The driver who struck Seedorff then left the accident! scene. The suspect later was ar-j rested in his home by Pontlacj police. ‘ ' .j
Ohhh, Are We Happy . . .
Help Us Celebrate
(We’ve Conquerored Our Water Damage Problem)
Let's. Celebrate Tonight and All Day Thursday
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ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL
Need a You’re
Valuable Information for Burglars
Littlo Lessons in Lorcapy No. 5
WARNING
These Premises Protectee From Burglary By
AN
INTERSTATE ALARM SYSTEM
PASS ON BY
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Sometimes we cheafT We hide the Sonic' Tranducers where you can't find them, even when you case the place. We send the Silent Intrusion alarm directly to the police by phone or radifh Then we leave the little wMMBgi'-etlckers - Off. If you hajHjs with e passion, we have It cbming.
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Won't Oppose 'Hot Pursuit' by
Are Due by Mondu.s-sihanouk
FIRST BABY OF ’68 — Mrs. Richard Brooks holds her newborn daughter, Amy Leigh, who is the winner of the First Baby of the Year contest. Bom Monday ft 12:08 a.m., Amy Leigh is the only child of Mr. and Mrs. Brooks of 7ii Birdsong, Milford. She was bom at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. ,
ByBOBWISLER
Cuts in city services ordered by the Pontiac City Commission two weeks, ago will.take place no later than Monday unless the Oakland County Circuit Court rules out an income tax election, Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said last night.
This indudes a 635,000 subsidy for bus service in the city.
A the a r Lb g is scheduled tomorrow morning before Judge William J. Beer to argue the merits of petitions requesting a referendum election on the in* come tax ordered in October by the City Commission.
■ However, the hearing requested by the city’s director of law, Sherwin M. Birn-krant, could be delayed.
it , .it
Robert D. Coon, a Pontiac attorney, said this morning that he would tile‘today with Circuit Court a petition re-
Mercury Expected to Plunge Tonight
An Afctic cold wave moved into Michigan today, leaving a trail of slowly but steadily falling temperatures.
;■/ * ★ ★ ★
A temperature of 22 in the morning, before the cold wave hit, was expected to be the day’s high.
Forecasts Lor tonight and tomorrow call for mostly cloudy and colder weather with snow flurries likely.
The mercury in the area is expected to plunge tonight to a range from 5 below zero to five above.
ft it ★ „
Partly sunny and continued cold is the forecast for Friday.
Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 40, tonight 30, tomorrow 20.
Twenty was the low thermometer reading prior to 8 a.m. The mercury recorded 20 at 12:30 p.m.
mmmm®
In Today's Press
Avon Cityhood
Rochester, township officials engaged in verbal battle — PAGE A-4.
Milliken
. Role as stand-in for Gov. Romney is growing — PAGE B-8.
' State Crime Unit * Stiffer riot laws, limited wiretapping among recommendations — PAGE C-0.
Area News S • A-4
Astrology 08
Bridge C-8
Crossword Puzzle ... D-15
Comics C-8
Editorials A-6
Food Section .. C-l, C-5
Markets ...f.. D-9
Obituaries B-6
Social Security A-7
Sports it . D-l-D-3
Theaters D-8
TV-Radio Programs . IMS
Wilson, Earl, D-15
Women’s Pages .*.... B-l-B-4
questing that he intervene in a suit brought against Hie city.
RESTRAINING ORDER
The suit, started by a Pontiac fireman and a policeman, asks for a permanent
Related Stories, Page B-7
restraining order preventing the City Commission from setting a referendum election, on the income tax question.
Judge Beer last week Issued a tem-
ested party would allow him to defend the validity .of the petitions instead of the city.
Once Coon’s request is filed it would be up to Judge Beer to determine whether he would allow Coon to intervene as an interested party.
it. it ★ :
A hearing would probably have to be held on this matter and thus delay the hearing on whether the petitions are indeed valid.
PETITION VALIDITY
porary restraining order untti a hearing- were turned in
L».u k* k.u " three weeks Ago to the city clerk’s
office, but, the suit brought against the city charges that the petitions containing the signatures were not properly drawn up.
could be held.
The suit names the City Commission as defendants because the election machinery of the city is controlled by the commission.
★ ★ ★
Petitions requesting the election were circulated by a group organized by Cecil C. Mullinix of 571 Lowell. Cbon said he was acting on behalf of Mullinix and the petition circulators..
CITY’S POSITION
The city finds itself in the position of being charged with defending the’ validity of the petitions. But, Ihe city officials would like nothing better than for . the petitions to be declared invalid.
-^Intervention by. Coon as an inter-
Winston L. Livingstone, a Detroit nt-torney, representing the plaintiffs, charged that:
• — The petitions don’t contain endorsements of the names and addresses of three persons filing them, in violation of the city Charter, and,
• — Hie petitions do not contain, certification by the circulator that “he is qualified to circulate this petition ■% : . and that each \ signature on the petition was signed in his presence, ”in violation of the Michigan Election Law.
(Continued on Page A-2,, Col. 4)
for Mediator in Wage Talks
The Waterford Township Professional Fire Fighters Association, Local 1335, has requested a mediator from the Michigan Labor Mediation Board to assist in the unit’s current negotiations with the Township Board toward a 1968 con-( tract for firemen.
★ ★ ★
j “We have reached an impasse with j the board,” said Lt. Donald D. Som-| merville, president of the association j which represents all 21 township firemen | with the exception of the chief and
| assistant chief.
The crux of the issue is that township policemen were offered 6200 more in wage increases this year than firemen, who were to receive a 6600 across-the-board boost.
‘The board has created disparity between the police and fire departments,” said Sommerville. “That’s what we’re fighting.
* it it
“Up to this time,” said “we have always had parity between the two departments.
HARMONIOUS relationship
“We have, in my opinion, maintained a harmonious relationship with the po-. lice department and would hope to continue this relationship,” he said.
. — ★ ★ ★
Because of the impasse in negotiations
which began in September, professional
' firemen presently will no longer double as volunteer fire fighters.
it h it
“We (full-time paid firemen) will refrain from making fire runs on our off-
duty time,” said Somerville. “So we are no longer providing this free service and will be shorthanded,” he emphasized.
PHNOM PENH. Cambodia (UPI) — Prince Norodom Sihanouk today issued a statement giving American tropps freedom to chase Communists fleeing Vietnam into Camboidia’s border jungles.
The chief of state, in the statement containing remarks made in a provincial speech Sunday, said he would hot send his 35,000-man army against U. S. troops engaged in such “hot pursuit.” '
Sihanouk lashed “some Cambodian and foreign” critics of his decision to allow the Americans freedom of border action. !
Sihanouk said his refusal to oppose any shch American “hot pursuit” was in no wSjP'ffii invitation for border crossing by U. Sx(orces in neighboring South Vietnam.
The Cambodian leader said" he ‘ would use his troops against the Americans if U. S. forces seize Cambodian territory and refuse to surrender it.
In Bangkok, diplomats reported Sihanouk, in Cambodian broadscasts monitored there, said:
• President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk stopped an alleged CIA-Pentagon plot to kill himand triggerer a coup in this neutral Southeast Asian nation. ,
• He thus is now willing to meet an envoy from Washington. Sihanouk broke diplomatic relations with the United States in May 1965.
• The United States accepted a Sihanouk proposal to beef up the Internation Control Commission (ICC), set tip the 1954 Geneva conference on Indo china to monitor Southeast Asian border.
• The Soviet Union and Poland are opposed to strengthening the ICC. The Soviet Union is cochairtnan of the Geneva agreement and Poland is the Communist member of the ICC.
• He will oppose the sending of students from Cambodia to the Soviet Union and Communist East Germany. He also charged Cambodian students in the United States are being used to teach “CIA spy classes.”
Bonanza Won by Milford Parents
“Pretty hectic,” said Mrs. Richard Brooks about. the activity around her generated by her new title, mother of the first baby of 1968.' 1,
The Brooks, who live at 747 Birdsong, Milford, have named their daughter Ay Leigh. She was born Monday at 12:08 a.m.‘
The girl was born after a routine delivery at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Brooks drove his wife to the hospital the day before.
Brooks, 24,: is a technician in the noise and vibration laboratory at General Motors Proving Grounds in Milford. His wife, also 24, worked at Community NationaLBank.
it it it
Traditionally, the first baby born in the new year in this area receives numerous gifts from area merchants.
Gifts include a case of disposable diapers, a savings bond, a savings account, cases of milk, baby shoes!, a diamond baby ring, baby clothes, a silver cup, a baby blanket and a high chair.
- * * *
Fdr the parents are such gifts as din-. hers for two, gift certificates, a tire, a car wash and polish, slippers for
mother, a ham, dry cleaning certificates
and flowers.
The contest was open to any born of married parents living north of-14 Mile Road in Oakland County altar Dec. 31.
lM III durln* Mr Qr«nd Optnlrv room*. Sm our oa, Pig*
tint—
A
NWtt of »*d-T-Adv. X AS * _
UNTANGLE WRECKAGE—Pennsylvania Railroad crews move hi to clear the wreckage of 26 freight cars—many of thfem loaded with chemicals—after long-smoldering fires finally were quenched late yesterday at Dunreith. Ind. The accident occurred New Year’s night when two trains sideswlped, setting off a series of explosions in ammonia, gasoline and
./■ • - ' / ■ i ‘
DR. ROBERT E. WALDEN
Mental Health Leader Resigns
Gas Rationed in Cuba
HAVANA UV) — Cuban motorists lined upt today for coupons to buy 8 to 25 gallons of gasoline a month under rationing ordered by Prime Minister Fidel Castro on the ninth anniversary of the victory of his revolution.
AP Wlraphoto
oil tankers, forcing evacuation of the residents. Officials say the 236 residents of Dunreith will be allowed to return to their homes today when a deadly chemical compound is removed from a tank car left battered but unbroken in the wreckage. (Story, Page A-2.)
A • •>-», 'df.
ByEDBLUNDEN
One1 of the leading figures in Oakland County’s mental health program has resigned. ■ p
Dr. Robert E. Walden, 47; director of the program for the Oakland County Community Mental Health Services Board, was one of the .highest paid county employes at 630,000 annually. He was the center of a controversy for the last few months.
Criticism was leveled at Dr. Walden by employes of Oakland Training Institute in Berkley where some 40 mentally retarded children are cared for. The dissident group claimed lack of leadership for their program, among other things. r
Twelve of a staff of 14 had turned In resignations which would have been effective today. *
However, on Dec. 23 it was announced a compromise had been reached and 10 of the staff decided to stay. Hie other two* reportedly are leaving for different reasons.
it it it
The OTI group was given a pay boost and a consultant, Mrs. Rita Charron, was hired to see to their problems.
The OTI operation has had difficulties since it began about two years ago and four directors quit in 16 months.
\ Dr. Walden was hired to head all the county’s mental health programs hi June 1965. Oakland was the first county hi the state to set up a separate orguBfsatisn of this type under new laws. TMs fiscal year its budget is 62.2 million.
Dr. Walden came to the county after a nationwide search for a director. He had been superintendent of Lakin State Hba* pita), Lakin, W. Vu.
He received his medical degree from M a h a r r y Medical College, Nashville, Tenn. , and took residency In psychiatry from 1957 to 1960 at Brockton |nijte||gj| veterans’ hasgitala 1ft .MaaaM||BR|
(Continued on ” ”
PRESS
UNITED PRESS INTERNATI
The Weather
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V. S. WMrtlwr Sartau Paracaat
V Zero
lOafaNa Paga t)
VQI*. 12* — NO. 283
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY* JANUARY 3, 1908 -68 PAGES
. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., (AP)-President Johnson has signed into law bills greatly expanding Social Security benefits and federal aid to education—keystones to his Great Society legislative program.
He hailed the passage of the measures as triumphs for the nation’s poor. But he had nothing at all to say as he signed a third measure—itye 62.29-billion foreign aid bill—which imposes the sharpest dollar limit on total U.S. aid to other nations since the program began 20 years ago.;. % ‘.
Johnson said the expansion of Social Security benefits is the “greatest step _ forward” since the system was Initiated during the Roosevelt administration in . .1935. . ^ j . X . *■
Hie next phase, he said, calls for close scrutiny of America’s Welfare system which he branded “outmoded and in need of major change^"
He appointed a 19-member commission to “examine any and every plan, however unconventional, which could prom-ise a constructive advance in meeting the
income needs of the American people.”
Hie President named Ben W. Heine-man, 53, chairman and chief executive officer of this Chicago and Northwestern Railroad Co., to head the commission.
The education bill provides a record 69.3 billion tor elementary and secondary Schools, The Social Security bill increases benefits by at least 13 per cent for 24 million persons.
Social Security checks going out in March'will reflect the new increased benefits? Minimum monthly payments rise from 644 to 655. Hie maximum wifi be 6160.50, compared to the present 6142. The average monthly check for husband and wife over 65 increases from 6145 to '6165: - < . -r- ... •
“One million more people will be lifted above the poverty line,” Johnson said, and 65,000 disabled widows and 175,000 children will receive benefits (or the first time. • _•
MEDICARE T
Medicare benefits are expanded to include additional days of hospitalization.
Outside earnings of |140 instead of 6125 a month are permitted with no reduction in benefits.
There will be additional taxes, though, for worker and employer, amounting to as much as 662.80 in 1968 on efrnings of 67,860 or more.
The new law keeps tile tax rate at 4.4 per cent in 1068, but the amount of salary
Related Story, Page A-2
on which the tax is levied goes up from 66,600 to 67,800. Eventually, the tax rate will rise to 5.9 per cent by 1987.
—. ★ ★ ★ - .
Hie education bill continues until the middle of 1970 a program of aid to elementary and secondary schools, giving states more say in how the money is used,
BENEFITS OF LAW
This new law, he said, brings special educational and health services to nine million of our poorest children, sparks a
new effort to prevent dropouts, includes programs for handicapped children, help for rural schools and sets up bilingual education programs for children whose first language is hot English.
“Thousands of children of Latin descent, young Indians and others will get a better start—a better chance—in school,” said Johnson, a former teacher of Mexi-can-American youngsters. He said the new law begins a campaign to unlock the full potential of every boy and girl.
While getting much of what he wanted in these two major measures, Johnson got a setback on foreign aid monies.
★ ★ ★
He had- asked 63.25 billion for the 12-month period ending next June 30.
Besides the cut in amount, the bill also included restriction on use of U. S. aid funds by under-developed countries for the acquisition of modem weapons.
★ ★ ★
Johnson commented on the record of Jhe 90th Congress, saying it was not as productive as he urged it to be and left an agenda of unfinished business.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1968
A*
Renewed in State
LANSING (AP)—A handful of citizens representing Michigan's most prestigiou s polltcal, church, civic and labor groups renewed a pledge Tuesday to fight for a statewide open hous-inglaw.
Republican acting Gov. William G. Milliken, who ted an unsuccessful hid for passage of such a law last month, predicted that this time “we will be successful.” > -
n A A A
The leaders met with Milliken for nearly two hours to map open housing strategy to be followed in the regular legislative session, which begins Jan. 10.
The meeting fell on the eve of the return of Gov. George Romney, who had added the controversial issue to the agenda of a special fall session.
Romney, a contender for the 1968 GOP presidential nomina-
tion, left file lieutenant governor in charge of running the sj^te and coordinating open housing efforts before leaving Dec. 7 oh a month-long tour of Europe, the Middle East and Asia MAJOR ROLE
With Romney tied up in presidential primary campaigns Milliken likely will play a major role in spearheading any future open housing move.
The special session bill, which would have outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion or national origin in most real estate transaction's, monopolized headlines last moth, but failed in a 47-55 house vote. ★ ★ a
“The bill, in my judgment and that of everyone present here today, is not dead,” Milliken said. “It’s merely waiting to be reactivated.”
Attending the meeting were the state Republican and Democratic chairmen and represente tives of the Michigan AFlrCIO, United Auto Workers, Michigan and Detroit councils of Churches Michigan Catholic Conference* Jewish Community Council State Chamber of Commerce and Michigan Association of Police Chiefs.
RIOT COMMITTEE
Also present were members of the New Detroit Committee, named by Romney and Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh to seek answers to last July’s disastrous Detroit riots.
* * 1 *
Democratic State Chairman Sander Levin said he and GOP chairman Elly Peterson planned talks within the next two weeks concerning what can be done by both parties to pass the frill-
Birmingham Area Kfcws
City A fters Boat-Trailer Code
BIRMINGHAM - After ex tensive discussion, the City Com* mission last night passed an Amendment to the city code covering proper storage of house trailers, boats and boat trailers.
Unaffected by the new ordinance will be owners of boats at the time of .the amendment’s passage, and ownebs unable to comply with the code because
of physical factors such as size of lot or building location.
Under die amendment, trailers awl boats may not be stored at the front' of a residential zone district, and may not be stored beside a boose between the front and back of a district for more than M days.
House trailer camps may be established in zoning areas la-
Indiana Town Sees End of Gas Threat
Kelley Recommends Ground War Anticrime Measures! ^ares ’n W
LANSING (AP)—Higher pay for policemen, two-year grand juries, school courses In law and order and state money for -victims of violent crimes were recommended to the Legislature today by Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley.
In a letter to lawmakers, Kelley warned: “It is an India-putable fact that we are faced with a crime crisis.”
“We cannot fight crime with
Heart Patient 'Doing Well'
CAPE TOWN, South Africa Ufi — Dr. Philip Blaiberg, the world’s third heart transplant patient, was “doing very well1 today, a hospital spokesman
Mid. ■ '"if''
■ mMMLm
The 58-year-old retired dentist regained consciousness last night and in his first words since the operation said: “I am thirsty. Please give my regards to my wife.”
. The heart beating inside the white dentist’s chest belonged to Clive Hanpt, 24, a mulatto, but there was ho objection from the chief defender of apartheid-South Africa’s policy of racial segregation.
. Said Prime Minister Balthazar J. Vorster: “I am very glad to hear that the operation was successful.”
rhetoric,” Kelley said. “We can fight it with firm and even-' handed law enforcement.”
Among the attorney general’s recommendations were these:
RECOMMENDATIONS
• Boosts of local police salaries by 25 per cent, part of it f i n a nc e d by the state, coupled with higher education and training requirements for policemen.
• Making the job of county prosecutor a full-time job and joining together into single dis ticts small counties where i full-time prosecutor is not needed,
• State-sponsored training programs for new prosecutors and annual seminars for incumbent prosecutors.
• Permitting prosecutors and the attorney general to petition a court for subpoenas or immunity-granting powers in criminal investigations.
• increasing the maximum life of a one-man grand jury from one to two years while “making some'provision for the protection of the anonymity of those called as witnesses before the grand jifry.”
• Making it a felony for an unauthorized person to lend money at an interest rate high er than' 25 per cent per year.
• Money payments to victims of violent crimes, “based upon the principle of giving to the Victim of crime or his family at least as much care, and attention as we provide to the individual who has been convicted of committing the crime.”
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Cloudy and a little colder today with chance of scattered snow flurries and with steady or slowly falling temperatures. High today 15 to 20. Variable cloudiness and odder tonight and Thursday with possible snow flurries. Low five below zero to five above. North to northeast winds f to 13 miles per hour today, becoming tight and variable tonight. Outlook for Friday: Partly sunny and continued cold Per cart of precipitation probabilities: Today 40, tonight 30, tomorrow 20.
Today In Pontiac
Lowest temperature preceding I o.m.t 20 At I s.m.: Wind Velocity 4 m.p.h. -Direction: North Sun sets Wedneedey et 5:14 p.m.
Sun rites Thursday at 1:02 a.m.
, Moon sett Wedntsdav at 0:13 p.m.
Alteon rises Tmtrsdiv at 11:13 a.m.
Downtown Temperatures
Highest temperaturt ..............20
Lowest tempersturs ................ *
Mean temperature .................14..
Weather—Partly sunny
4 a.m. 7 a.m. I a.m. 0 a.m.
10 o.m.
Tuesday's Tsmpsrtturet Alpena 20 1 Fort Worth
Etcanaba 11 7 Jacksonville
Flint 22 21 Kansas CHy _
11 am 50 ?■ Rapids 23 20 Los Anotltt 57 47
12 ni. :....20 uSUSSS! ■ ■ Mlsml Seech 77 72
1 p.m.
Houghton Lk. is
I nrlrsnn 41
20
One Veer Ago In Pontiac
Highest temperature ...............3]
Lowest tempersturs ................24
Mean temperature ............. ....30.5
Weather—Mostly sunny, Vk Inch snow
>'Dote In ts Years
-15 In 1079 Duluth
igtlss 57 Beech 77
Milwaukee 20 "10
ll New Orleans 54 15 ♦ Ntw York 23 31
.14 9 Omaha 10 .-10
21 17 Phoenix 41 34
11 14 Pittsburgh 24 10
12 10 St. Louis 24 17
47 21 Tsmpe SO 42
40 37 S. Ltks City 32 13
-9 -27 $. Francisco 50 43
22 10 $. sts. Merle 9 5
31 27 Seattle 34 30
12 -10 Tucson 44 40
22 20 Washington 25 23
I -21
MMNMNNtpl|sdMjM^M
NATIONAL WEATHER—Snow and snow flurries are fore-, cant tonight over an area stretching from northern Texas Into the Lakes region. Snow flurries are expected in the northern Ptains flirt along the Rockies, while rain is due ■Kpdbam Texas Into fit* Carolinas. It will be much frpMV li the northeast quadrant of the nation.
Da Nang One"Targ®t of Attacks by Reds
SAIGON (AP) - Heavy Communist forces launched a series of coordinated attacks in the precarious northern provinces of South Vietnam today, including a rocket assault on the Da Nang air base that destroyed three planes and ground attacks in which at least 19 Americans were reported killed.
A A A
As the ground war flamed up after a New Year’s truce which U.S. officers termed “the worst yet,” Air Force pilots reported shooting two MIGs from the skies above Hanoi. North Vietnam claimed* three U.S. jets were downed.
A A a
Heavy fighting dotted South Vietnam, but it was in the five northern provinces of the 1st Corps Area that the action was hottest.
These actions were reported:
1. Red gunners fired a num her of 122mm rockets into a unit of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division bivouacked in t h e Que Nhon Valley 25 miles south of Da Nang, then followed with a ground attack. Initial reports said 11 cavalrymen were killed, 70 were wounded and the fight was continuing. There was no report of enemy casualties.
2. Earlier, before dawn, the enemy raked the flight lines at the big Da Nang base with 45 of the big 122mm rockets, destroyed a $2-million Phantom jet and two light spotter planes, badly damaged two other spotter planes and a twin-engine C47 and did minor damage to 20 other aircraft. Four Americans were wounded in the 10-minute barrage and 19 others were injured as thp sleepy airmen tumbled into the darkness and dashed for bunkers.
AAA
Six coordinated hit-and-run assaults raked South Vietnamese outposts within a 15-mile radius of Da Nang. Casualties among the defenders were reported light.
Notice of suspension of registration cards were mailed to 695 voters yesterday by employes of the Waterford Township clerk’s office.
The 695 electors who Were notified have not voted in the past two years as required by sjiate statute to remain on the active registration file.
★ A A ■
According to township clerk officials, the voters have 30 days to sign the cards and return them to the clerk’s office in order to officially be reinstated as registered electors.
If they fail to comply, their names will be withdrawn from
Body of Man Is Found in Wrecked Cor
A -37-year-old Highland Township man was found dead in his car yesterday, some 65 feet into a swampy area Off M59 in Highland Township.
Oakland County sheriff's deputies said the body of Theodore R. Stewart of 2919 Summit was found i n the car about 2 after a passing
Oakland Highway Toll in ’68
Uo» Yo.r to Dot* 0
PRICE-BOOSTING HARNESS—Shoulder harnesses, such as the one demonstrated by model Lynn Ross, became mandatory on all new cars under federal safety regulations. All new automobiles rolling off assembly lines in the U.S. yesterday were equipped with the safety straps. With the harness came a boost in car prices, generally in a range from $23 to 532. (Story, page D-9).
Voter Suspension Cards Sent to 695 in Waterford
Social Security Key Provisions Are Outlined
WASHINGTON (AP) — Following are the major provisions of the new Social Security bill signed Tuesday by President Johnson:
* A A
Cash benefits—Present Social Security recipients will receive increases of at least 13 per cent in their February checks due on March 3. Minimum monthly payments will go up 25 per cent, from $44 to $55. The top of the range for individuals will be $160.50, compared to $142 now. The average monthly benefit for a man and wife now on the rolls will be increased from $145 to $165.
AAA
The maximum future payment for a surviving family will be raised to $434.40, compared with $3G8 under the old law.
Taxes—A worker now pays Social Security taxes on wages up to $6,600 a year. This will be Increased to $7,800 in 1968.
the, active registration file and they* will have to reregister in order to vote in this year’s elections in,the township.
A A .' A
Last January when the law was new, notice of suspension of registration cards were sent to 5,713 township voters.
FOUR-YEAR PERIOD
Prior to the state statute, township electors could keep their registration active by voting once every four years.
Currently, there are 21,936 registered voters living in the township.
AAA
Anyone with questions pertaining to his voter status is urged to contact the clerk’s office.
DUNREITH, Ind. (AP) - Of ficials spy the 236 residents of Qunreith will be allowed to return to their homes when a deadly chemical' compound is removed from a tank car left battered* but unbroken in the wreckage of two freight trains.
Two Pennsylvania trains side-swiped New Year’s night, setting off a series of explosions in amonia, gasoline and oil tankers, and forcing evacuation of the residents.
A A A "
Blast-driven flames destroyed a cannery, service station and three homes. Windows were broken in a dozen other homes and businesses.
George Winburn, safety director of Rohan & Haas Chemical Co. of Louisville, Ky., said it
Waterford JCs Set Tree Pickup
The Waterford Township Jay-cees announced today that they will hold their annual Christmas tree pickup Saturday alnd Sunday.
Keith Cadman, project chairman, said.public schools in the township will be used as collection stations.
Residents should bring their trees to the parking lot of the nearest school Friday night or Saturday morning.
This year, instead of the customary bunting of trees, the Jaycees will transport them by truck to Che Holly Recreation Area where they will be used as brush shelter for rabbits.
A * A '
Howard. Green, a- game biologist for. the Michigan Department of Cqnservation, will direct toe construction of the brush shelters, according to Cadman.
City Cuts Due by Monday
(Continued From Page One)
City commissioners were prepared last week to order a ret erendum election after City Clerk Olga Berkeley certified that enough valid signatures were turned in to order a referendum election.
The setting of the election would immediately delay collection of an income tax revenue ordered by toe income tax ordinance.
In effect, the city wouldn’t be able to collect income tax money until voters would approve the ordinance. And then, collection would be delayed uhtil July.
? AAA
With this in mind the commission ordered a number of cuts in services and the layoff of some 42 city employes.
SWIFT DECISION
p.m., shortly motorist who had noticed tire tracks leading off the road called the sheriff’s department.
A A’ A
Deputies said the vehicle had apparently gone out of control While thp income tax question east of Harvey Lake Road and is up In the Sir the corn-
left the road after knocking]mission indicated last night that down eight highway guard pole^l ®nJy 6 swift decision on the pe-+ * + / titions would delay the cuts.
The time of the accident will be determined at a post-mortem held today, according to deputies.
If the petitions are declared by the court to be invalid, toe cuts, won’t go Into effect nd the city will , take immediate
steps to collect income tax revenue.
If, however, 'the court delays past Friday in reaching a decision or finds the petitions valid, toe cute will take effect no later than Monday.
Mayor Taylor said some $542,-000 worth of services must be cut immediately to balance toe 1968 general operating budget Hite budget figures on no new income tax money.
NEW BUDGET
If the income tax goes through the city will draw up a new budget.
In addition to the bus subsidy, service cuts include tout-ting down toe city’s department of health and youth assistance, closing two library branches hnd the Hayes Jones Community Center and stopping a rent subsidy for the Office of Economic Opportunity’s Action Center at 7W. Lawrence.
beled B-2, but consent of.60 per cent of aff property owners within 500 feet of the proposed site must be secured fijirt. , . / s
Such a camp is the only condition undo: which fixed utility connections may be made to a house trailer, or under which it may be used for living purposes.
48 HOURS
Trailers, however, may b e parked anywhere on a residential zone district for 48 hours for loading or unloading.
The commission also approved the first phase of a program for interim parking provisions during the construction Of the Lot structure at Merrill and Pierce.
Flyers placed on windshields will notify parkers for one week prior to toe lot’s closing, and
planning to invest in signs were cautioned of the impending change in the city code.
U.S-N. Viet Peace Talk Gap Narrows
WASHINGTON (AP) — North Vietnam and the United States apparently have narrowed somewhat, their differences over starting peace talks. But U.S. officials see little prospect the talks would be “productive” as required by President Johnson.
This is one of three questions on which the United States is reported seeking clarification from North Vietnam before deciding on its next move in, response to a statement made last weekend by North Vietnam’s foreign minister, Nguyen Duy Trinh.
-A A A
So far,* Trinh’s statement is regarded here as being primarily an effort to build up new, worldwide pressures on Presi-
would take 8 to 10 hours for the team of experts to transfer the lethal acetone cyanhydrin to a j the 12-hour limit on 25 meters in tanker truck. The compound, [Lot 7 at Merrill and Henrietta used in making plexiglass, pro-1 will be lowered to two hours, duces cyanide gas, when ex-i a A A
posed to air. j in other business, toe com-
MAY FINISH TONIGHT mission set a date of Jan. 22
Officials said1 the transfer if®** confirmation -of the assess-may be complete by tonight.!to®®! roll on delinquent debts Many townspeople stayed wito “®ml®®7. friends and relatives in otoer i Commissioners also expressed cities, while some were lodged]®®®®®111 111 toe proposed sign in motels. I'' ordinance,-currently undergoing
A a A revision by the administration,
Winburn said he had hopes! Residents and business owners the compound had been consumed by flames, removing the danger of lethal fumes. “Hie worst thing that could have happened did happen,” he said after finding the filled tank car unbroken. ,
* 5 .A A A
State police said the same chemical had leaked from another car and seeped into nearby Buck Creek. They said nine head of cattle on the Everett Thompson farm a mile south of Dunreith died after drinking poisoned water.
.A A A
Robert W. Heider of toe State Board of Health said samples were being taken from the creek and Big Blue River, which it empties into, to determine how far the poison had spread. He emphasized that neither waterway is used for human consumption.
FLAMES EXTINGUISHED Firemen extinguished the last of toe flaming wreckage Tuesday night, more than 20 hours after the accident Railroad crews working under flood lights began to clear the wreckage.
A railroad spokesman said an
Mental Health Figure Quits jj County Post
(Continued From Page One)
No criticism was leveled in toe announced resignation — either by Dr. Walden nor by the mental health services board. Making toe announcement was Paul N. Averjll of Birmingham, board chairman.
He announced, “Dr. Walden leaves behind a record ef important pioneering effort in this county, which in itself has given leadership statewide In establishing Public Act 54 as a valid and forward-moving piece of legislation.”
(Act 54 enables separate organizations for mental health purposes in toe state. Previously this work had been handled through hospitals and clinics.) A A A
Dr. Walden’s resignation cited 18-inch piece of track snapped!^ accomplishments of toe programs for the mentally HI and
in the sub-freezing cold, causing cars on the 98-car westbound
height to derail into a passing toe North without a reciprocal. ** b6 . ,
scaling down of military action- gnt a®®®1 tne same lengtn.
by North Vietnam.
Officials said, however, that toe Trinh statement is being fully explored through diplomatic channels to determine whether it was seriously intended to advance the prospects for talks.
Exam Is Set for City Man in Hit-and-Run
A Pontiac man arrested In connection, with the hit-and-run death early Monday of a 17-year-old Highland Township girl faces preliminary examination in Waterford Township Justice Court Feb. 13 on charges of manslaughter and leaving the scene of a personal injury accident.
In Oakland County Jail in lieu of $10,000 and $2,500 bonds on thb respective charges set at arraignment yesterday is Gary Gillespie, 22, of 350 Third.
He was arrested about 4 p m Monday at North Telegraph and Walton fry an Oakland County sheriffs deputy while riding in I car answering, a description of the hit-run vehicle.
This was about 13 hours after Sherry Ann Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lane E. Knight of 203 S. Center, was killed and her escort, Alan Lengeman, 17, son of Mrs. Janet H. Lengement of 3727 Gulf wood, Milford, was seriously injured by a car which struck them from behind ’as they walked on the shoulder of Milford Road in Highland Township.
A A A
Lengeman is reported in fair
Some $770 in cash was stolen from toe safe of a firm in the Pontiac State Bank Building by a burglar who apparently knew the combination, it was reported to city police yesterday.
The manager of the Baxter-Llvingstone Finance Co., located on the building’s fourth floor, told Investigators he found the safe open when he opened the office or the safe.
He said there were no signs
Also planned are elimination1®011^^®® *n P®®fi®c General of two fire companies (12 nten)|**®l,P***1
and closing of tWo fire stations,!AUTO STALLED
a reduction of overtime for em ployes of the Department of Public Works and in recreation programs and shutting off some streetlights.
Finance Firm Safe is Looted
mentally retarded.
He did not announce, however, his reasons for resigning or what his future plans were. TEMPORARY LEADERS
Two men are to assume temporary leadership of toe programs, the board announced. They are Dr. Donal L. White, assistant psychiatric director, and John Madole, administration officer of the board.
Dr. White, 44, was hired in April 1917 at an annual salary Of $26,000. He is a University of Michigan graduate and was on toe staff of Fogd Hospital, Detroit.
Madole Was hired in February 1965 at a salary of $13,500 a year after serving as the county envoy in Cali, Colombia, in an Alliance for Progress program.
A A A
The Mental Stealth Services
of a break-in, either into the of- Board offers both inpatient and
fice or the safe. _________ outpatient care in conjunction
Officers said they later found with several county hospitals, a fourth-floor fire escape door it aids in operation of the three open and tracked footprints in county Child Guidance clinics the snow to a third floor window, and operates or aids in operat-which was also unlocked. ing various training programs
* * a i (or the mentally retarded.
Identification bureau officers) The 12 board members are checked the scene for finger- named by the County Board of prints, according to police. 'Supervisors.
Spring Parking Ban Due on Part of Huron Street
As part of a long-range improvement of M59, parking will be banned this spring' on Huron from West Wide TYack to Perry.
Joseph Koren, traffic engineer for the city, said today toe elimination of parking will allow for five traffic lanes.
He said the city will remove the . meters now on the streets and the State Highway Depart'
Deputies said the couple was Iment "U1, '"JLW
apparently walking to the Knight home from Lengeman's stalled car when the mishap occurred.
lanes and Install traffic control signs “as soon as the weather breaks.” r
He estimated the work would
be done about the middle of Marcfr
Koran said the street is wide enough for five traffic lanes — two in each direction with one lane for left turns — without widening of the street, v The state highway department and city agreed to changes in tiie street usage after meetings late last year.
A A. A. 3^ Officials’are hopeful that the changes will tend to eliminate toe congestion which occurs on Huron during the rush hours, especially between Saginaw and West Wide Track.
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Township Officials Air Views
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ROY REWOLD Rochester Mayor
william McCullough Avon Trustee
State Representative Will Speak to PTA
ROCHESTER - State Rep. Donald E. Bishop, R-63rd District, will speak at 8 p.m. Monday for the North Hill Elementary School PTA.
Bishop will discuss recent Michigan legislation affecting all aspects of education. He will receive and answer quest tions from the audience.
The meeting has been opened to the public, according to Bernard Vosteen, president.
Cranbrook
Events
Following is a Ilk of special events taking place at the facilities at Cranbftok on Lone Pine Road in Bloomfield Hills:
PLANETARIUM - Regular public demonstrations, Wednesday at 4 p.m. and weekends at 2:30 and 3:30 p.m. The topic for the month is “Telling Time by the Stars."
ATOMARIUM — Public demonstration Sunday at 3:30 jp.m. or by appointment. Admission 25 cents.
v.
»
AVON TOWNSHIP * The verbal battle over the election Jan. 15 to incorpo-\ rate all of Avon Township outside the City of Rochester is heating up here. /Vj Both city and township government officials. haye released statements citing opposing views. rV -
Mayor Roy Rewold of Rochester today related findings pf the Rochester Jay-cees seminar series and the Rochester Area League of Women Voters which have urged a single unit of government for the combined area.
“I would Urge a ‘no’ vote," said the mayor. “My reasoning for this is that some of the proponents of a favorable Vote say that we could consolidate the two cities at a later date'.
Mayor Rewold said that checking the possibility of two cities consolidating showed that it has never happened in, state history.
“I will do all I can as a lifetime resident of the Rochester area and as mayor of the City of Rochester to encourage the annexation of the Avon area to the City of Rochester.”
JCs Feel Avon Annexation
to Rochester Is
ROCHESTER — The Jaycees, an active _group of community-minded young -Ifren in the Rocbester-Avon area, has come out in favor of annexation as the route toward unification of governments here. ^ ,~
An incorporation vote, for Avon township, excluding. Rochester is due Jan. 15.
Following “an extensive study .of the existing atmosphere of local governments^’ the group has adopted a four-point statement of conclusions which includes:
an Is Charged With Try to 2 Brothers
• They agree with the objectives of simplification by avoiding' duplication of governmental efforts and the prevention of fragmentation of the total Rochester-Avon area.
• They believe that if the Jan. 15 election passes, in all likelihood the result would be the formation of two separate city* excluding the City of
Fire Local Head Asks Vote
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Police here have charged a 28-year-old man with attempted murder of two brothers at a New Year’s Eve party at 6551 Drake.
The two warrants were issued yesterday by Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson.
Union Certification Sought
Charged is Fred Parkkila, 28, of the Wailed Lake area who is being sought by police.
The two brothers injured are Randall and Thomas Ryan, both of 21355 Farmington, Farmington.
Randall, 19, who suffered stab wounds in the back and a collapsed lung, is in satisfactory condition at Botsford Hospital.
★ ★ ★
Thomas. 21, who earlier had been treated and released for stab wounds in the back and back of his head, is now in Selfridge Hospital in satisfactory condition.
WEST BLOOMIFELD TOWNSHIP The president of the newly formed firemen’s union here has applied for an election which may certify Local 1721 of the West Bloomfield Township Fire-i fighters Association of the International Association of Firefighters.
The request for approval to hold the election was made after the Township Board refused to recognize Local 1721.
The board wants to assure that the local does represent the majority of the nine full-time firemen and about 30 or 40 volunteers, explained Township Supervisor John Doherty.
The supervisor added that the board
‘ATTACKED BY 7 MEN'
The Ryan brothers, home, on leave from the Army, were attacked by seven men in the parking lot after they arrived at the party at the home of Mr. and Mrs! Gary Barr, police said.
A third stabbing victim has been identified by witnesses as Jack Watson, age and address unknown, according to police.
Independence Rejects COG
According to Assistant Fire Chief Mel Jorits the Station was not officially closed although no man was in attendance in the building.
★ ★' if .
The station was in operation because a volunteernext door was taking fire calls on his monitor and telephone said Jorits.
NOT ALL DOORS LOCKED
Also injured during the melee at about 3:30 a.in. New Year’s Day was Charles Parkkila, 25, of 6782 Drake, a cousin of Fred Parkkila.
Another man, still unidentified, Was reportedly beaten, said police.
When two township policemen arrived at the party scene near 3:30 a.m. Monday, there was evidence of a large fight,both inside and outside the home, said patrolman Richard Lamphier.
INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — A' vote against seeking membership in the Southeast Council of Governments was unanimous here last night.
The Township Board qualified its motion, however, with a phrase, “at this time." Clerk Howard Altman said, “I know they would never vote to join without considerable study of the issue.’ •
Not all the doors of the station were locked, added Jorits who made the decision not to have a maft on duty at the station.
Supervisor Doherty reported that for a 16-year period several years ago, the station didn't have a man on duty in the building all the time but a man answered calls from his home.
In other business, the board amended its zoning map hi four instances to conform with surrounding property classifications.
Areas returned to a residential classification were a small grocery store on Sashabaw Road near Whipple Lake — to be kept as a nonconforming usage; an old synagogue in Woodhall Lake subdivision; and a home adjacent to some industrial zoning at the Clement and White Lake intersection.
Jorits explained that men weren’t at the Green Lake station because of a wage dispute and not because of a manpower shortage.
★ ★ ★
He said the firemen believed they should be paid more than regular wages when they work on their off days.
The fire department is under the ultimate authority of the -township Fire Committee composed of trustees Walter J .Whitmer and John F. Warren.
Rewold'i statement followed an earlier one put out by Township Trustee William McCullough wherein the, recently proposed development of the 825-million Fried-Jacobson property at Walton and LivernOis and the projected R, P. Scherer Corp. pharmaceutical plant on former Parke-Davis property were cited.
Said McCullough:
• “Avon Township has an area cf 34.4 square miles compared to Rochester’s 1.6 square miles,
• “Avon Township has a population
of approximately 20,000 as compared to the City of Rochester’s approxi-, mately 6,000. ■
• “The growth potential of the township exceeds that pf Rochester. '
* * *
• “tmless Avon Township incorporates and adopts a charter of» its own choosing, it could, because of annexation, Be forced to a charter and form of government about which it has. no choice.
“How sentimental can the taxpayers
of our township afford to be?” McCul- ' lough asked.
PROTECT INTEREST
“They can best protect their interest in their property by votihg ‘yes’ on the incorporation propdsal.-
“Once we have protected our bargaining position by incorporation, we then can consider the advisability of eventual merger with the City of Rochester, because we then can go to the bargaining table as equals and not. as country cousins."
THE PONTIAC PRESS
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1908
A—4
Rochester, to be fragmentation of the community. •
• They believe that annexation of the entire Avon Township to the City of Rochester, as requested in the annexation petitions* now on file in Oakland County is the most logical route toward unification.
• Whichever-c o u r s e the voters of the community choose, the Jaycees are pledged to study and work toward unification as long as it remains a possibility.
if it . if
The statement of the Jaycees followed a similar one by the Rochester League of Women Voters and another by Mayor Roy Rewold of Rochester. ,
Statements favoring the incorporation vote Jan. 15 have so far been issued by Harold Pepper, chairman of the Avon Township Study Committee, and by Township- Trustees William McCullough and Philip Trimble.
TROY — The City Commission last night tabled for the second time determination of the date for a half-mill tax election.,
The proposed increase, to be used for construction of a city library, is still tentatively scheduled fpr Feb. 19, provided a city primary election is held the same day.1
If no primary takes place, the millage election may be rescheduled to coincide with the regular city election in April.
The motion to table came because the Troy Board of Education, also meeting last night, was considering a new school millage election Feb. 19.
★ ★ ★
Friends of the Troy Library, a citizens’ group backing the half-mill hike, have urged that the two millage votes be set on different dates.
has always bargained with a lawyer who said he Was representing the firemen.
.St .★ it: j
Local 1721 president Donald, Nelson made the election request to the Michigan Labor Mediation Board in Detroit.
BUILDING CODE AMENDMENT
lit other business, the commission approved a proposed amendment to the city’s recently adopted building code, dealing with swimming pool safety regulations.
STATION ‘CLOSED’' AGAIN
Nelson reported that the Green Lake station was “closed" again Friday from 6:30 to 7 a.m. Saturday. He said earlier that the same station was also “closed" the Saturday before Christmas.
Instead of an "‘adequate enclosure” as is specified in the present code, any pool containing over 12 inches in depth of water at any point must now have a chain link, frame or masonry enclosure at least tour feet high.
Gates in the enclosure must have selflocking latches four feet high of other-
The station was closed both times because of a lack of manpower, Nelson explained.
East Lansing Saga: I Tale of 'Goldilocks J and the 4 Students' J
EAST LANSING (R — East Lansing’s very own “Goldilocks’’ has red hair and green eyes and goes for bourbon instead of porridge.
Four Michigan State University students returned to- their East Lansing apartment after a long holiday break and discovered someone apparently had been living there while they were gone.
Douglas Bailey, 21, of Walled Lake told police someone had been eating their food and sleeping in their beds.
And, he said, the someone had | taken 500 pennies, three pints oif | bourbon, sweaters, towels, a dock, | a pen, about 40 record albums, a | check for $6 and a key to*the | apartment.
Police said neighbors reported § hearing music during the students’ j absence and seeing a girl with | green eyes and red hair.
★ ★ ★
By action of the board, most,of Section 18 in the Reese-Holcomb Roads area was loft in an agricultural category. Suburban farms and residential had been proposed for part of the land.
City Attorney Chosen 1966 Chairmqn by Avon Democratic Club
ROCHESTER — Pontiac attorney Joseph F. Kosik of Oakland Township has been named chairman of the Avon Democratic Club for 1968.
* Jr * .3
Other officers named recently are Mrs. Ellen Davenport, Avon Township, vice chairman; Mrs. Louis Berklich, Avon Township corresponding secretary; Mrs. Don Healy, Avon Township, recording secretary; Mrs. F,/E. Howe, Rochester, treasurer; Thomas Gray, Troy, sergeant at arms.
Trustees elected were Mrs. William Tymkow, Avon Township; Glen Douglass, Avon Township: and Mrs. John Ireland, Avon Township.
Ptnliac I*ran Photo
wise inaccessible to small children from the outside.
★ ★ ★
The commission also voted 4-2 to deny a1 request from, the Boron Oil Co. to rezone Lots 1-7 in John R. Gardens Subdivision from B-l to B-3 to permit the installation of a service station.
mercijal” and said he hoped the planning commission would study possible uses for such areas, adding, ‘T -question whether there is any other use for that corner." " ...
CONSIDERABLE DEBATE
Since the intersection involved, John R. and Maple, has three {service stations, which were constructed before the area was rezoned from B-3 to B-l (forbidding service stations), the request brought considerable debate.. ,
Commissioner John Kokalis, who cast' a dissenting vote along with Commissioner Wallace B. Hudson expressed his feeling that the corner is “bound to go com-
In other. buiness, the’commission approved the special-assessed construction of a 12-inch water main on Square Lake Road from Coolidge to Glen-Moor Subdivision to provide an emergency supply for the well servicing that area.
★ * it
Also approved was the appointment of Joe Howey as a part-time city librarian on City Manager Paul York’s recommendation.
Howdy studying for a master’s degree in library science at the University of Michigan, will work part-time for the city until his graduation in April.
School Board Puts Tax Hike on the Feb. 19 Ballot in Troy
TROY — The board of education last night approved the placing of a 7-mill tax increase on the ballot Feb. 19.
The proposed boost, to remain in effect for two years, would bring in approximately $750,000 each year to brighten the district’s dim financial picture.
The new millage attempt comes on the heels of two others, on June 12 and Sept. 11, both of which failed. As a result, the district will incur a* deficit of $600,000 by the end of the( fiscal year, despite cutbacks in many areas, according to Supt. Rex B. Smith.
The district cannot use present income to apply to expenses, Smith added, because of two loans received last year. One loan, he said, was against incoming taxes and the other against state aid.
“By March 2,” he continued, “enough taxes will have come in to pay off the first loan, and we will have money tb handle current expenses.” j
The board also approved an effort to seek a $410,000 loan to handle current expenses. “We need more money to see us through till March,” Smith said. “As things are now, we’re going to run out of funds around Jan. 30."
Orion Township Board to Meet on Tuesdays
ORION TOWNSHIP — The Township Board will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Township Hall, 571 S. Broadway.
Meetings have been put back to the second Tuesday of each month following a summer series of second Wednesday meetings.
Pruning Expert to Talk
MILFORD -V James Smith, field landscape architect for the Huron-Clinton. Metropolitan Authority, will discuss “The Pruning of Trees and Shrubs" for the- Milford Garden Club and Senior Citizens Club at 2 p.m. tomorrow. The meeting will take place at the Milford Methodist Church.
More Gold Transferred
WASHINGTON (JV-The Treasure Department said tojday it has transferred another1 $450 million in gold from the nation’s money stocks to help cover the recent rash Pf speculative gold buying in Europe.
Avon Planners Eye $25-Million Project
AVON TOWNSHIP — A $25-million commercial - office - residential development for the southeast corner of Walton and Livernois Is currently under consideration by the township planning commission.
The commission, due to meet in study session tonight, expects no formal action as yet, though It has received a letter from Vilican-Leman planning consultants of Southfield, which reports on the proposed project as follows;
The developers told the Avon Planning Commission they would like to start work immedately once zoning problems were solved for the multiuse development.
HIGH-RISE APARTMENTS No major zoning ordinance change, with the possible exception of high-rise apartment usage in the future, is foreseen by the planning consultants.
“We look for the new developments (in the Walton-Llvernois area) to emerge as the major commercial Center serving the region and for the (Rochester) downtown area to assume the role of a marginal or fringe shopping area."
Individual parcels of the 19-acre area would, however, have to be zoned to usage, according to township officials to permit the stores, the njedical office building and the apartments now planned.
STARTING THE SEASON — The Rochester Civic Center ice rink was initiated for this winter yesterday by Glenna Cdrltton (left), 122 Albertson, Rochester, a senior at Rochester High School, and Jake Martin, 2786 Gravel Ridge, Avon Town-shop. 1 ’ ■ i .-
Proposed by Martin and Paul Fried of Claridge Properties, Detroit, the development would feature a pedestrian shopping bridge between the projected Jacobson Stores development on the northeast corner of the intersection acros^ Walton to the proposed ®w development.
Vilican-Leman Visualizes the new development changing the character along Walton from the multiple housing, now planned, to commercial and office related to the new center.
h * • *
The proposed development area lies, now between the Rochester .Senior High School and Crlttenton Hospital.
• ________________-
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
NewT)evice Offers Hope in Tvrbulence Defection
By Science Service WASHINGTON — Clear air turbulence (CAT) is a mystery that meteorologists would love to solve. The sudden, violent phenomenon can tear a jetliner apart without warning.
One of the most promising ways of detecting CAT pockets assumes thaHttoey are accom-
panied by a sharp change in temperature, which can be detected either by infrared or microwave detectors.
A CAT detector patented last week senses temperature far ahead! and to the side of the aircraft by measuring microwave radiation put out by oxygen
molecules, the intensity of which depends on temperature.
- The remote temperature is compared with the temperature at the aircraft itself, and when a sharp change is noted, an electronic circuit teUs th4 pilot which way to turn to avoid the ^disturbance.
The patent was assigned to
Sperry Gyroscope Co. by the inventors, Benjamin K. F o w, Richard F. Hazel and Wayne D. Mount. A Sperry spokesman says the remote temperature radiometer is being engineered by the company for use also in air, pollution studies, but the whole CAT assembly hasn’t been flown yet.
One difficulty with the tern perature sensors is that the instrument has to be kept level. Temperature changes due to different altitudes, which would be picked up if the plane tips, give false alarms.
Regionally infant mortality rates are highest in the South
Bloomfield Miracle Mile
iL-Aiuuiat
STARTS THURSDAY (TOMORROW), JANUARY 4 th at 9:30
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, wg
mm
Pontiac,
Mrs, Loe A. Benedict
LEWIS W. WARD
Service (or former Pontiac resident Mrs. Leo A. (Edith M.) Benedict, 73, of Baldwin Town* ship, Iosco County, will be 10:30 a .m. Friday at Donelson*Johns Funeral' Home With burial in Roseland Park Cemetery.
Mrs. Benedict died yesterday.
Surviving are her husband; two sons, Kenneth F. of Pontiac and Howard A. of Roscommon; 10 grandchildren; 10 great-childrdn; and a sister.
Mrs. Forest Cummings
Mrs. Forest (Anne G.) Cummings, 46, of 153 nN. Roselawn died yesterday. Her body is at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home Mrs. Cummings attended First United Missionary Church hnd was a member of Welcome Rebekah Lodge 246.
Lewis W. Ward, general sales Surviving are her husband;
Former Exec at Pontiac Div. Is Dead at 75
Requiem Mass for Thomas J. Sopp, 83, of 5194 Farid, Waterford Township will be IQ a.m. Friday in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Scripture serv ice will be 8:30 p m tomorrow in the Melvin A. Schutt Fun eralHome. >•
manager, for Pontiac Motor Di- her mother, Mrs. Sarah Hand-
vision- from 1946 to 1952, died Sunday. He wa&j|.
Service was to be l~p.m. to-^ay at Bell Chapel of the Wil-
liam R. Hamilton Co., Binning-'home; two sisters; and three
ham. Entombment was to follow at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
Ward, currently president of Prodnct-Sol, Inc., of Birmingham, lived at 3941 Quarton, Bloomfield Hills.
He was a member of t h e Bloomfield Hills Country Club, the Detroit Gun Club and the Detroit Yacht Club.
★ Hr Hr
Surviving are his wife, Lillian E.; a daughter, Mrs. Allan Ledford of Honolulu, Hawaii; eight grandchildren; and four greatgrandchildren.
Waterford Twp. Blaze Causes $1^00 Damage
Fire broke out at the Thomas Brown home, 6450 Anderson-ville, Waterford Township, yesterday aftemobn, causing an estimated $800 to the building and $500 to the contents.
★ ★ ★
Township fire fighters, who responded to the alarm at 4:20 and returned to the station at 4:54, attributed the fire to a pan left cooking on a stove. v ★ ★ ★
The fire at the .one-story, $30,000 brick home was confined to the kitchen, but smoke damage was evident throughout the house.
Police Action
Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 73 reported i incidents and made 12 arrests the past 24 hours.
A breakdown of causes for police action: Vandalisms—7 Burglaries—13 Larcenies—16 Auto thefts—2 Bicycle thefts—1 Disorderly persons—4 Assaults—6
Obscene phone calls—2 Bad checks—2 Rapes—1
Traffic offenses—6 Property damage accidents—9 Injury accidents—4
Valuable Information for Burglars
Little Lessons in Larceny
No. 5
WARNING
Time Premises Protected Pram Burglary By
AN
INTERSTATE ALARM SYSTEM
PASS ON BY
We put these little decals on entrances of places having any of our new electronic intrusion alarm systems for YOUR benefit. We tell you in advance how tough it ia...for you inside. Go find a place that doesn't have these little stickers on \ the doors. Chances are, you'll' fare much better.
Sometimes we cheat. We hide the Sonic Tranducers where you can't find them, even when you case the place. We send the silent Intrusion alarm directly to the police by phone or radio. Then we leave the little wmfw'Wickers MW If - -you-hate ps with a passion, we have it fBfhlng.
Interstate Ahum Systems
Z 673-7555
•WSpi
ley of Gadsden, Ala.; five children, James E. with the Army, and Marla S., Sharon E.r Donald F. and Stacy R., all at
brothers.
Elmer J. Hawkins
Elmer J. Hawkins, 42, of 75 Lafayette, died this morning. His body is at the Huntoon Funeral Home.
Mr. Hawkins was a welder at Pontiac Motor Division.
Surviving are a sister and two brothers. %
Mary 1. McGraw
Service for Mary L. McGraw, 83, of 118 E. Chicago will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at. the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery,
Miss McGraw, a retired employe of the J. L. Hudson Co., died Sunday.
Surviving is a sister.
otic Church, Pontiac, and the Holy Name Society. > t Surviving are two daughters, Sister Dorothy I.H.M., « teacher at Marian Catholic1-High School, Birmingham, and Mrs; William Thiel of , Pprttiac; a son, Morton of Marine City ; a sister; four grandchildren; and a great-granddaughter.
Thomas J. Sopp
Mr. Sopp, a member of St Vincent de Paul Church, died yesterday.
Surviving is a daughter, Mrs Mary Abare of Pohtiac.
Mrs. William Stout
was a self-employed decorator!
Surviving are his wife, Beatrice; a son, Darwin of Lapeer; two daughters) Mrs. Daniel Powell and Mrs. Donald McCay, both of Lapeer; eight grandchildren; a brother,’ Carl of Lapeer; and five sisters, including Mrs. Zola Simpson, Mrs. Eleanor Elliott and Mrs. Frances Chubb, all of Lapeer.
painter- stepfather and mother, Mr. and Mrs. John L. Hall; a sister; and two stepsisters, Mrs. Mona Bishop and JMca. Betty Mitchell both of Lake Orion.
Graham F. Diedrich
Praver service for Mrs; Wil liam (InaE.) Stout, 81, of 86 Waterly, Waterford Township, will be 8 p.m. Friday at Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home.
Service will Be 1 p.m. Saturday at the Methodist Church in Cedar Springs with burial there in the Elmwood Cemetery.
Mrs. Stout, a member of First Methodist Church, Pontiac, died this morning.
Surviving are t h r e e daughters, Mrs. , James Sorenson of Pontiac, Mrs. Stanley Weller of Kalamazoo and Mrs. Kenneth Barnes of Wyoming, Mich.; a son, Horace Linderman of Bridgeman; three sisters; a brother; 11 grandchildren; and 28 great-grandchildren.
ROSE TOWNSHIP - Service for Graham F. Diedrich, 61, of 131 Franklin will be 2 p.m. Friday at Dryer Funeral Home,
Holly, with burial in Rose Center Cemetery.
Mr. Diedrich died yesterday.
He was employed at Fisher Body Plant No. 1 in Flint.
Surviving are his wife, Marian; two sons, Daniel of Royal Oak and David of Lansing; two
ShTn JehilUd?gH .I™81 a °>oinciana will be 2 p.m. tomor-S.lr8hip; M grand!rew at Heeney - Sujdquist Fu: „ " , ' • Ineral Home, Farmington. Buri-
Memorials may be made to aj wj[] t,e jn p a r h v i e w
Doylp J. Mitchell
HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP Service for Doyle J. Mitchell, 18, qf 111 St. John was to be 1 p.m. today at Elton Black Funeral Hfeme, Union Lake. Burial was to be in Highland Cemetery,
The youth died Sunday in an auto accident.
Surviving besides his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mitchell are four brothers, including Gary, Larry and Ronald of Highland Township; anijj two sisters including Vicki at home.
Oscar J. Reed
, SOUTHFIELD - Service for Oscar J. Reed, 76, of 21159
Murder Exam Set for Man, 8
A Pontiac, man accused of the fatal shooting of his wife Friday faces preliminary examination Jan. 10 on an open charge of murder.
Robert Humphreys, 53, of 229 E. Walton wa$ arrested at his home shortly before midnight
t His wife, EarUne, 50, died In Pontiac General Hospital a few hours later. She bad been shot once in the chest, according to police.
The incident followed an al leged argument during whigh Mrs. Humphreys ’ fired a revolver, later confiscated by. officers, three times, a witness said.
★ A Hr
Police said they found six spent cartridges on the premises.
Fire Damages Area Home
A fire in Independence Township early this morning caused an estimated $3,000 damage .to a basement, its contents and outside wall.
The blaze, believed to be electrical, broke out at 3:20 a.m today at the 4936 Neosho home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Slusher No one was injured in the fire said Deputy Fire Chief Tink Honk.
TVs Recovered
Local Club to Hear Rep. McDonald
Humphreys is, free after
Congressman Jack McDonald, R-19th District, will.be the key speaker at Friday’s meeting of the Pontiac lExchange Club.
He will discuss
posting $2,500 bond set at his
current national
problems
the Holly Branch of the Michigan Cancer Society.
Mrs. Fred E. McCleary
BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Service for Ms. Fred Erl Anna W.) McCleary, 85, of 1312 N. Wood-
Ward, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow
Cemetery, Livonia.
Mr. Reed, a ^retired machine repair loader at Pontiac Motor Division, niied Monday.
Surviving besides ,hjs wife! Gail A., are two sons, Clarence E, and Glenn 6. both of South-
Mrs. John Brown
Robert J. Peltier
Requiem Mass for Robert J. Peltier, 81, of 765 Robin-wood will be 11 a.m. Friday in Holy Cross Catholic Church, Marine City, with burial there in the Holy Cross Cemetery.
Thq Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Bower-Rose Funeral Home in Marine City,
Mr. Peltier, a retired employe of Detroit Gasket Manufacturing Co., Marine City, was a member of St. Michael Catn-
BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP {g Service for Mrs. John (Beulah B.) Brown, 82, of 50 Square Lake will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns -Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount' Park Cemetery, Pontiac.
Mrs. Brown died Monday.
Surviving are two sisters.
at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. g£
Mrs, McCleary died yesterday. She had been an active member of the Birmingham First Methodist Church.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. John E. Lane of Birmingham;, four grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Robert E.-Millard
field; i a daughter, Mrs. Ray-
mond Barnum of Livonia; three brothers, including Archie E. of Farmington Township; 11 grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchilden.* » ,
Baby Boy Rewold
ROCHESTER — Service for baby boy Rewold, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rewold,. 801 Ludlow, was to be 11 a.m. today at PixleyMemorial Chapel, with buri&l in White Chapel Memori-
Elvin G. Coulter
LAPEER — Service for El-vin G. Coulter, 71, of 744 Tur-rill will be 2 p.m. tomorrow from the Muir Brothers Funeral Hope, with burial in Stiles Cemetery, Mayfield Township.
Mr. Coulter died Monday. He
LAKE ORION - Service for,alT(Jfm.et.ery’
Robert E. Millard, 53, of 2431 The ,nfant died a* blrth yes' Hauxwell will be 2 p in. tomor-
row.. at Flumerfelt F u n e r-a 1 Home, Oxfdrd, -Burial will be in Eastlawn Cemetery. >
Orion Lodge No. 46, F&AM, Will conduct a memorial service at 8 p.m. today at the funeral home.
Mr. Millard, head custodian of the Lake Orion Junior High School, died Monday. He was a member of the Lake Orion Methodist Church, the Masonic Lodge andpESNo. 340.
Surviving are his wife, Beatrice, a daughter, Barbara, and son, Bruce, all at home; his
terday.
Surviving (are his parents, a sister; Wendy, -and a brother, Brad, all at home, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rewold of Rochester and Mrs. Mrs. Robert Wallace of Hubbard Lake.
A British research laboratory has devised a machine capable of . printing all of Shakespeare’s plays in little more than a minute. It can print more than 60,000 characters a second.
arraignment Saturday by Muni-fho|d tjon cipal Judge Maurice E. Finne- and . answer
®an' -________ | period after the
• jnoon luneheon, McDONALD Pnntlnr AAnn according to Pontiac Chief of
I VJffffWdl. I fluff j Police William K. ganger
• i ^ ______1 I president.
IS uOUnd Over luncheon is open to Ex-
Burglars made off wittt some 50 long-play record albums from a Pontiac firm late yesterday, but police recovered two stolen television sets near the scene. , • #
. Officers were dispatched to the D and D Radio and Television Shop, 819 Prospect, short ly before midnight and found that the intruders had smashed through the front door glass.
• , 'Hr A A A spokesman for the firm said at least 50 albums valued at more than $300 plus the television sets, were missing.
A A H- ^ Police said the sets, both portables, were found hiddent under vehicles parked across the street, apparently left there by the burglars in a hasty escape.
cjub
in Rood Death
change Club members and their
guests.
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETINQ 1 Notice Is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of the members of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland will tx» held at the Main Office of the Association/ 701 West Huron Strum* Pontiac, Michigan, on Wednesday, the 17th day of January, 1968, at 7 P. M.> for the purpose of considering and voting upon the following:
1, Election of Directors
2. For the transaction of such other business as may legally come before the meeting.
First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland ' JAMES CLARKSON, President
December 27, 1967 and Jan. 3, 1968
r A 33-year-old Pontiac man was bound over to Oakland County Circuit Court yesterday on a charge of negligent homicide in the traffic death of a Commerce Township man last NoV. 3.
Roy L. Scott of 170 Florence is scheduled to adpear before Circuit Judge Philip Pratt for arraignment at 9 a.m. Jan. 17:
, The charge against Scott was reduced from manslaughter to negligent homicide by Waterford Tbwnship Justice Patrick- K. Daly who conducted the preliminary examination.
The victim, George P. See-dorff; 52, of 2105 Union Lake, allegedly was struck by Scott’s car on the shoulder of 1-75 near Sasbabaw Road in Independence Township as he was getting tools from the rear of his vehicle to repair a flat tire.
Seedoj'ff was pinned between the cars and was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital,1 according to Pontiac State Police.
The driver who struck See-dorff then left the accident scene. The suspect later was arrested in his home by Pontiac police.
Ohhh, Are We Happy .
Help Us Celebrate
(We’ve Conquerored Our Water Damage Problem)
Let's Celebrate Tonight and All Day Thursday
Dinner Specials
CHUCK WAGON SIRLOIN *1.29
Reg.
$1.49
Vi lb. of chopped sirloin char broiled. Childrens Portions Rag. 89c, now 79c
FRONTIER FILET $2.39
Reg.
$2.59
Tender filet of sirloin custom cut for perfect broiling to order,
All dinners sre served with ranch home toast, crisp tossed green sated with choice of dressing, your choice of baked, whipped or french fried
ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL
Need a
.Thousands have borrowed money from‘us in the past year.. . Helping
I
people work out financial problems is one of the reasons we are here. We know how taxes, medical bills or car repair bills can wreck the soundesjt budget, And we've seen how successfully thousands have weathered the problems with a Pontiac State Bank Loan ... If you need money for any worthwhile purpose see us.
iFtSL‘
The Bank On The
Pontiac
State
Bank
12 Convenient Offieas,. • Main Ottioe: Saginaw at Lawranoa... Opan Daily • AM.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation where each Depositor Is Now Insured to SIMM by P.0.1.0.
*r
lii
me
■-w _v,J-' 1 n , ■. ■ ^ r-;../■ ■ •* * .. <»v yw*i-tn1#^no^rmm‘:
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968
•*« «h»hb
For Bajgnce of Pqywertf Wow,t ^llll
LBJ Plan No
MARKETS
Trading Is Active
The following are top prices ' cohering sales of locally grown produce by .growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. -“V, \ r-
Produce
Stock Market Rally Continues
NEW YORK (AR)-The stock
Mi
market early today continued its fally further into the new year: Trading was active. The ticker tape was late.
Gains outnumbered lasses by
better than 4 to 3.
Apples, Cider, *g«l,
Apples, McIntosh J.w
Apples, Northern Spy, bu............4.25
Apples, Red Delicious, bu...........4.75
Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. — , 5.00
•otto, H-Jnsr........................ iwjerage rose 2.78 tp 909.62
Cabbage, Curly, bd. ................1.75
Cabbage, Red, bu. . 3.50
v,rlety- |§1 airline stocks and gold mining
Celery, root, '/» bu.
Horseradish, pk. bskt.
Leeks, dz. bens..............
Onions, dry, 50-tb. bag ............. 2.00
Parsley, Root, dz. bch. "
Parsnips; to-bu. .......
Potatoes, SO-lb. bag ...
Potatoes, 30-lb. bag ..
Squash, Acorn, bu.
serve the dollar in international
exchange.
DOLLAR STRONG Both the dollar and the British pound were strong in foreign exchange markets.
United Airlines and Home
Big blocks changed hands at[ Price Hikes Reflect New Safety Device
DETROIT (AP> —, All new
the start
. Clark Equipment lost % at 26! on 33,900 shares; Continental Telephone, eased Vs to 28Vi on
12,50Q; A. J. Industries, rose 'f automobiles rolling off assem-on 10-5“; American Tel-|bly lines in the Un?ted States ^
Selling pressure continued on Iuneswere iraciKMiai,1,sei^ i * ★
issues in view of. President John-750 son’s proposals for cutting back travel by Americans to Europe and his determination to pre-
topped ..................
LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery, Cabbage, bu..............
Poultry and Eggs
Up about a point were Lines, Cudahy, Pfizer, US, Smelting, Air Reduction and Goodrich.
On Tuesday the Associated U.S.iPresjs Average of 60 Stoicks rose! 1,8 t6 324,1.
The trend was higher on the American Stock Exchange.
The New York Stock Exchange
Exchange — butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 66; A 66; 90 B 6514, 09 C 63V5; cars 90
Egg's Irregular; Wholesale buying prices unchanged to lVj lower; 75 per cent or hotter Grade A whites 27; mixed 27,-mediums 25; standards 25.
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (API—(USDAI—Live poultry: wholesale buying prices unchanged; roasters 24-27; special fed White Rock Fryers 19V4-22.
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(OSDA)—Cattle 1.400, slaughter steers and heifers active, 50 higher; cows active, 25-50 higher.' Slaughter steers; choice 900
DETROIT POULTRY ,
DETROIT TAP) *■*§ (USDAI—Prices per pound for No. 1 live poultry;
Heavy type hens, 20-21 cents; roasters i heavy .type, 26-27; -broilers and fryers whites, 19-21. ^ L
DETROIT EGGS Abbott Lab 1
DETROIT (API — (USDAI—Egg prices Abex Cb , M per dozen paid by first receivers (in- ACF |nd 2.20 eluding U.S.): >. ' • jAdMillis .40a
White Grade A lumbo 33-37 cents; ex- Address l 40 tra large, 30V*-34V*; large, 29'/2-32Vj; med-lAdmiral lum, 25-20; small, 20. AlrRetn 1.S0
CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS AlcanAlum T
CHICAGO.(API — Chicago Mercantlb Alleg Cp ,20g
•---- —u.i—1. 1...... AllegLu 2.40b
Alleg Pw 1.20 I Allied C 1.90b AllledStr'1.32 ; Allis Cbal 1 Alcoa 1.80/ Amerada 3 Am Alrlin .80 Am Bosch .60 AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 AmCyan 1.25 AmEIPw 1.52 AmEnka 1.30 A Home t.20 Amlnvst 1.10 AmMFdy .9(1 , AMet Cl 1.90 Am Motors ' AmNatGas 2 SUM -"Y,200 lb'Am Photocpy 27.00-28.00; mixed good and choice 26.25-i^J’] ®
27.00; good 25.75-26.25; slaughter hflleri, *•" J8®.-1. choice 800-950 lb 24.75-25.50; good 23.00-A™ V“X 24.75; utility cows, 17.00-18.00, few 18.50.1 Am TOD 1.80 ■ Hogs 350; barrows and gilts, U.S. l-2:Tj"f.'ncr 200-220 lb 19.00-19.15;, 1-3 220-240 lb 18.00-:;^??* V;or?B M 19.00; 2-3 240-270 IB 16.75-18.00; sows, 1-3 aJHK!?0} ,ZU 30M00 lb 13.75-14.50; 2-3 400-600 lb U-75-|^»“nc’^g
Vealers 150; high choice end prime ' 41.00-44.00; choice 36.00-41.00; good 31.00-! Armour 1 60 M0°- ArmCk 1.40a
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API—(USDAI— Hogs 5.000; butchors generally steady; 1-2 190-230 lb 17.75-18.25; 75 head at 19.25; 1-3 220-240 lbs 17.25-18.00; 2-3 260-280 lbs 16.00-16.50; sows steady to 25 higher; 1-3 330-400 lb sows 13.75-14.50; 1-3 400-450 lbs 13.25-13.75.
Cattle 3,500; calves none; slaughter steers 25 to 1.00 higher; heifers 25 to 50 higher; prime 1,200-1,325 lb slaughter .steers yield grade 3 and 4 28.00-28.50; hlgh choice and prime 1,100' 1,350 lbs 27.25-28.00; chelce 950-1,325- lbs yield grade 2 to 4 25.75-27.25; choice 850-975 lb slougb-r ten heifers yield grade 2 to 4 25.00-26.00.
Sheep 200; mixed good and choice 85-105 BeechAirc lb lb wooled slaughter lambs 21.50-23.00. jBell How .50
_____________- Bendix 1.40
Benguet Beth Stl 1.50 Boeing 1.20 BolseCasc .25 Borden 1.20 Borg War 1.25 BriggsS 2.40a BrlstMyer la Brunswick BucyEr 1.60a Bucy Erie wl Budd Co .80 Bullard 1 Bulova ,70b Burl Ind 1.20 Burroughs 1
NEW YpRK (API - New York Stock 1 Exchange selected morning price's:
.) High I
-A—
3. 46% 46% ' 46% - y» oen¥tec"2.60
12 29 29 29 + '* Gen Fds 2.40
5 44 43% 44 . I Gen Mills .80
4 60% 60>,» 60% V4 GenMot 3.80g 9 79'/. 79% 79'/. — VS GenPrec 1.50
18 19^ Wl 19VB + % GPubSv .56e
21 35% 35 35’/4 + %!GPubUt 1.56
88 26'/» 26 26 — % GTel El 1.40
Gen Tire .80 Genesco 1.40
Ashld Oil 1.20 Assd DG 1.60 Atchison 1.60 Atl Rich 3.10 Atlas Ch .80 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avnet 50b Avnet Inc wi Avon Pd 1.40
BabckJAL-1.36 Balt GE 1.52 Beckman
1 72V* JVk 72% + %
?7 22% 22% 22% .....
21 40% 40Va 40% + %
,9 37% 37% 37% + %
56 35% 35% 35% — %
10 81 81 81 ......
37 83% 83% 83Va +1%
56 33 32% 32% — %
7 63% 63 63% — %
67 64% 63% 64% + %
13 51% 51% 51% — %
2 25 25 -25 ....
182 26% 25% 26% + %
11 36% 36%; 36% + % 4 41% 41% 41% — %
13 57 57
20 18% *18%
30 20% 20% 20%
35 48% 48% 48% + %
39 13% 13 13%
24 36 36 36 + %
86 14% 14% 14% + % 6 73% 72% 73% -4- % 39 32% “31% 32% + % 250 52 51% 51% + %
36 32% 32% 32% :.
4 35% 35% 35% — % 16 37 36% 36% — %
30 48 47% 47% ...
16 47% 47 47 — %
1 12% 12% 12% + % 9 56% 56 56% + Va
22 49% 49% 49Va +o%
9 36Va 36% 36% -f- Va 9 54% 54 54% + %
18 35% 35 35 + %
1 72% 72% 72% — %
15 28% 28 28% + %
16 T05 104% 104% + %
11 19% 19% 19Va + %
30 6% 6% 6% — %
82 64% 63% 63% —1%
14 62% 61% 61% — %
3 48 37% 47% — %
21 139% 139% 139% —V/a
Ga Pacific ib Gerber 1.10 GetyOil .log Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid wi Glen Aid .70 Gpodrich "2.40 Goody r 1.35 GfteceCo 1.40 Granites 1.40 Grant 1.10 GtA&P 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 , - - - > - Gt West Finl
' t > GWSug 1.60a lB'/e -F H GreenGnt .88 Greyhound 1 G rum A ire ‘ Gulf Oil 2.60 GqlfStaUt .88 GutfWIn .30b
-B-
American Stock Exch.
NEW YORK (AP) - American, Stock Exchange selected noon prices;
Sates Net
Aerolet .50a (Ms.) High 1 11 27V*
Alax Ma .10g 2 54V*
Am Petr ,65g 45 18¥»
ArkLGas 1.60 20 39
Asamera Oil 65 511-16 5
AssdOil 8. G 288 67/b
AtlasCorp wt 77 37 a
Barnes Eng 5 36%
BrezllLtPw 1 112. I2te
Campbl Chib 21 7V*
Con So Pet 26 2’/a
Cdn Javelin 305 im
Cinerama P 8Va
Creole 2.60a 16 34 Va 1
38% 38% + %
3% 3% — %
7% 7 3-16 .
2% 2%+l-16
10% 11% + % 8 a% + %
Data Cont Dynalectrn EquitCp Fargo Oils Fed Resrces Felmont Oil
05d
75 6% 6% 6% ....
191 7 6% 6%—1-16
Frontier Air 8 19% 19% 197/a + Vb
Gen Plywood 8 8^fc 8V* 8V* + VB
Giant Yel .40 84 iftte V/B V/B — W
Goldfield 54 8 V/B 8
'Gt Bas Pet 285 4J.'* 4% 4% + %
Gulf Am CP 71 87i 0% 8VB — VB
GulfResrc Ch 48 34% 33% 34VB + %
3 16% 16% 16% .......
17 22% 22Vg 22% — % 12 18% -17% 17% — % 88 34% 34 34% + %
6 7% 7% 7% -f %
83 19% 18% 18% —'% 22 10% 10% 10% + %
4 7 6% 7 + %
62 169% U6 163 -7
33 43% 42% 43% + %
124 11% 11% 14% ..... 1431 3% 2% 3% + %
28 3% 3% 3%.....
56 48% 47% 48% — % 245 37% 36% 36% -f % 6 37 36% 37 f %
50 74% 73% 73% + % 42 26% 26% 26% + %
_______ 8 33%. 32% 33 + %
Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1968
HoernerW .82 Husky O .30g Hycon Mfg Hydrometi Isram Corp Kaiser Ind McCrory wt MichSug ,10g Mohwk D Sci Molybden NewPark Mn Pancoastal RIC Group Scurry Rain SignafOIIA la Statham Inst Syntax Co .40 Technicol .40 WnNuclr .20
Stdeks of Local Interest
Quotations from the NASD Ore representative inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 0. m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. prices do
not include retell markup, markdown or commission.
Bid Asktd
AMT Corp........................ 5.3 SO
Associated Truck ................. 9.0 9.4
Braun Engineering ...........,...15.2 16.0
Citizens Utilities Class A ...... 25.2 25.6
Detrex Chemical .................18.0 19.0
Dlomond Crystal —.,..........10.0 16.4
Ktlly Services fj........... 39.4 40.4
Mohawk Rubber Co.............33.4 34.2
Monroe Aulo Equipment .......30.4 31.0
North Central Airlines Units .. 8.4 9.0
Sofran Printing ............ 13.2 14.2
Scripto —.................... 8,3 8.7
Wyandotte Chemical .. 30.0 31.0IDan Riv , M
MUTUAL FUNDS
Cal Flnanl CalumH 1.20 CampRL ,45a Camp Soup 1 Canteen .80 CoroPLt 1.38 Caro TAT .68 Carrier Cp 1 CarterW ,40a CasdJI CaterTr 1.20 CelaneseCp 2 Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.60 Cerro Cp 1.60 Cert-teed .80 CessnaA 1.40 CFt Stl .80 Ches Ohio 4 ChIMII StP 1 ChIPneu 1.80 Chi Rl Pac ChrisCraft la CHrysler 2 CIT Fin 1.60 CitlesSvc 1.80 Clark Ed 1.20 ClevEIM? 1.80 CocaColo 2.10 Colg Pal MO ColilnRad .80 CololnIG 1.60 CBS 1.40b Col Gas 1.44 ComICre l .80 ComSolv 1.20 ComwEd 2.20 Comsat ConEdis 1.80
Con Elec Ind 1 Con Food 1 .SO ConNatG 1.70 ConsPwr 1.90 Contalnr 1.30 Cont Can 2 Cent Ins 3.20 Cont Mot .40 Cont Oil 2.80 Control Data Cooperln 1.20 Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a Cowles .50 CaxBdcas .50 < CrouseHind 1 Crew Coll 2t Crown Cork CrownZo 2.20 Cruc Sll 1.20 Cudahy cp Curtis Pub Curtiss Wr 1
7 47 46% 47 + w
4 »'/s Wb 29% + %
6 59V4 597/B 59% + V*
6 41VB 4IVB 41% + %
13 88 Va 88 Va 88 Va + %
12 53% 53 53% + V*
too 8Va 8VB 8Va
M 34 33 VB 33% + %
29 B7*H* 87 8/Ms
8 4U1 40V* 40%
9 34 V* 34 34
36 29 VB 29*/B 79% %
56V* 56 V* 56V* + V*
100 69V* 68% 69V* + %
99 16V* 16 V* 16V*
3 36% 36VB 36 Va
3 25'A 25 V* 25V*
28 27VB 22V* 22% %
2 40V* 40^/4 40% %
3 79 VB 79 Vn 79% %
36 40 39% 40 + V*
25 177 176VB 176% %
C— v
95 5% 5% 5% + %
17 4//« 47% 47% + %
13 7/VB 27 27 Vb %
10 Wn 28% 20% + %
2 74VB 244B 244b
1 41 te 41% 41% +
7 23 23 23 + %
71 56 56 56 Vb
19 16VB 16 V* 16%
103 l/VB 17% 17% + %
34 ■42% 42% 42% +lt*
6 62 Va 62V* 62V*
7 56 Va 564b 56% V.
8 45V4 45 Va 45% %
18 43 VB 43% 43%
35 l/VB 16% l/VB + %
1 43'/, 43% 43'/,
22 18VB 10% 18'/, + 'A
6 63 61% 6I'S —1%
13 40% 40% 40% + Va
7 41 VB 4IVB 41% %
1 18'/B 18Va 18V* %
1 41VB 41% 41%
51 56 Va 56% 56% %
20 : 32% 32% 32 Va
19 Am 47% 47%
338 76 Va 26 26V, + %
2 37VB 37% 37% + Va
1 131% 131% 131%
1 44 VB 44% 44%
21 100% 100 100 + %
3 43 42% 43
12 54V* 54 54% + Vb
14 76VB 76% 26H %
7 32«/B 33 32’/. + %
12 36% 36% 36V. + %
17 47VB 47% 47% + %
8 49 Va 49 Va 49 Va
-40 .13% 37VB 37'/*
116 41% 41V* 41 % + VB
20 55 Va 55 Va 55% +
30 2V Va 29% 29%
16 44 Vs 43% 44% +
7 31 Va 31% 31% +
17 50 49% 50 +
7 im /8 78
1 72^4 27% 22%
7 74 73% 74
Affiliated Fund ........
Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock .
Dreyfus .........
Keystone Income K-1 ... Keystobe Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth
Futnam Growth ..........
Television Electronics .
Wellington Fund ........
Windsor Fund............
DaycoCp 1.60 Bid Asked i gay PL 1.40 8.69 9.40|Defre CO 2 19.11 20.89;DeMnte 110 10.63 11.62! DeltjAIr 40 15.45 ,,-4»
9 39 in 14 Steel .60 7*35 , g.ofl iDlaSham 1.40
‘l3ll0 14.32 (Pj^oy -30b,
13 37 1461 Dlsl Stag 1
10 22 11 14 DomeMin .80-13 07 14:21 DowChm 2.20 18 82 20 50 Oresslnd 1.25
18.82 w Du(te PW 120
---- lOunhHI .50
duPont 5g Duq Lt 1.66 Dyna Am .40
Treasury Position
,1^1 East A|j» 5q
WASHINGTON (AP)—The cash position EKodak I .Ms Of tha Treasury compared with corre- fatonYa 1.25 spondlng data a year ago; u . . EG8.G ,10 T::./.T.Ooe. 2*, 1967:.... Dec. 28, 1964 ElBondf 1.72 Balance— - ^ . Electron So
8 6,119,176,919.40 8 8,291,713,406.21 EIPoaqNG 1 Deposits Fieeal Year July t— Emor El 1.6)
71.765tl84.953.75 69,414,906,774.44 End JobnseA
Withdrawals Fiscal Year— ErieLack RR
89,473,888,600,26 83,102.764,752.32 Ethyl Cp .40
X-Tolal Befit--»!^ - „ . EvansP .40b
3464781*44,478.90 ' 330.100.569.413.34-Ever sharp Gold Asiati— I p
11,89X177.421.35 13,159414,042.21 ..
— includes 8240,702,457.72 debt not rCem ,50g subject to statutory -limit.
FalrHIIl 30g Fantteel Met
—!------- I Fodders .80
; PedDStr i.to
BOND AVERAGE! t i 80
Compiled by Tha Atiaclatad Press i£!,,ro.1
.. Flrestne 1.40
***** ««*-. **"• A*wfr,
±1 FtePwU 1.7# J! FM€ Cp .71 5 FoodFalr .90 'Ll FordMot 2 40
Lear Sieg .B0 LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind7 Lehman .98e LOFGIss 2.80 Libb McN L Liggett&AA 5 LilyCup 1.20b Litton 2.65f Livlngstn Oil LockhdA 2.20-LoewsTh .25g LoneS Cem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 Longlslwt 1.16 Lorillard 2.50 Lucky Str .90 Lukens Stl l
Macke Co .30 MacyRH .90 MadFd 2.63g Mognavx ,80 Morathn 2.80 Mar Mid 1.40 Marquar .25g MartinMar i MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1 60a McCall .40b McDonD .40b MeadCp 1.90 Melv Sn 1.60 Merck 1.60a Merr Chap S MGM l.20b MidSoUtil 82 Mi nnMM 1.30 MlnnPLt 1.10 Mo Kan Tex MobilOil 2 Mohasco 1' Monsan 1.60b MontDUt 1.60 Mont Pw 1.56 MontWard 1 Motorola 1 MtStTT 1.24
NatAirlin .30 Nat Bisc 2 Nat Can .50 NatCash 1.20 N Dairy 1.50 Nat Diet 1.80 Nat Fuel 1.68 Nat Genl .20 Nat Gyps 2 N Lead 3.25g Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .80 Nevada P .92 Newbrry .45g NEngEI 1 48
Net Change Noon Tujit. .65.2 Prtv. Oay 65.2 Week Ago . .65.0 Month Ago 66.1 Yaar Ago 70.1 1967*61 High 73.0 1967*68 Low 64.6 1964 High 79.5 1966 Low . . 70.1
Mel
•6.7
tel
91.5
016
•6.1
/7I.1
76.4
78.0
•V0
•4.0
71.0
•6.1
70.2
89.1 •7.1 89 4
JIM
00.5
ttj
•9.1
93.1 00.4
ForMcK ,12g •» » FreapSul 1.25 •’•4 FruehCp, 1.70
9071
11.7 Gam Ska 1,10
74 134 132W 134 + H
5 4B>/*» 48 Vj 48Va — '/Is
12 40'/. 4044 40% + V*
' 1 343 , 343 343
2 1544 15*4 15U ....
m 3 51Va 511/4 51 'A — 48 yf 3 32V8 ‘321b 32Va + 48
4 4444 4848 4648 ■+■ Vs
■ 21 5948 5948 5948 —144
10 46 45% 4548
20 3348 3348 3348 + 48
109 1948 19'/4 1948 +1
39 1244 1248 1244 + 14
6 26’• 2648 2644 ....
—D—
3 2248 2248 2248 . . . .
0 4744 4718 4748 — <8
3 2748 2748 2748 + V.
11 5248 5218 5248 — 48
6 35 35 35 — '8
39 3348 3148 3318 — 4.
IS 2648 2648 2648 + 18
6 2048 2048 2048 -F >8
160 3248 3148 3244 + 48
9 55 *148 55 + '8
5 36'8 3648 3648 + V.
>7 53'8 53 53 —144
5 0748 87V. 87V. — 44
48 38 38 38 + >8
2 37 37 37 — »8
23 19 1844 19 + 18
22 158 15744 158 d- 44
6 29 2907 2o88 + 48
59 2148 2148 2148 — V.
—E— '
x266 48 4814 4648 — <8
55 14844 14648 14644 —244 5 3248 3248 3248 — 48
77 ’ 5514 5448 5444 + 48
67 $9 5718 8044 +144
120 3344 3144 3148 —144
105 2048 20 20 — 48
5 9944 9948 9*48 — 48
,9 2014 20 2144 + 14
38 041 018 848 4- 18
v 68 3748 3748 3748 — 44
35- 2844 2818 28'8 .
20 «48 18’, 1048 + 1A
—F—
60 S8<8 0748 80 + 44
$8 23'8 23 2348 — 48
7 5548 55 ' 5548 + 44 .
II .7'8 4644 4644 — 48 PanASul 1.50
x6 7418 7344 7344 — 44 I P«n, Am .40
18 41 4014 4044 — MslPanhEP 1.40
10 3314 3348 3314 + 48 ParkeDavll )
x46 5414 5548 56'8 +148 P»»Coel .Jio
2248 2114 2248 +1 “
‘148 23 2314 — 48
Rj 71. 75, — 44
B»8 3618 3»8 +'48
98 1644 1544 1618 + *8
117 M'4 5118 5414 +>44
148 2614 26 26'4 — '8
104 73 7248 7244 + 48
20 38^8 3044 20 4- 48
NoAmRock 2 NoNGas 2.60 Nor Pac 2.60 NoStaPw 1.60 Northrop 1 Nwst Alrl .70 Norton 1.50 Norwich .75
Occident ,80b OhloEdls 1.30 Okla GE 1.04 QkloNGi 1.12 OilnMat 1.10 qmark I.i7f 6tl* Elev 2 Outbd Mar 1 Owenslll 1.35
Pec G El t.40 Pac Ltg 1.50 Pac Pof .1 PacPwL
a
f»actAf i.to
X4A 56*. 60 W i
131 site 16 m 39 m
33 27% 25% 26%
PennDIx Penney 1.60a Pa PwU 1.5? PennRR 2:40 Penmpil 1.40 PepilCb .90 PerffTlm .4if PflxirC l.2ta PhelpsD 3.40 Phila ll 1.64 PhilRdg 1.6(1 PhllMgfT 1.40
80
Safas Nat
(lids.) Hioh Low Last ctig.
27 34%f 32%, 34. —1
280 23% 22% 23% +1
• 34 25% .24%:-24% ..
11 66 65V* 65% —1
65 96 95% 95% — %
13 70 69% 69% + %
12 35 34% 34% + %
138 82% 82% 82% + Va
33 79% 79% 79% + %
35 6% 6% 6% + %
55 27% 27% 27%.....
85 42 V* 41% 42V* + %
39 28% 27% 28 ..
31 42% 41% 42% -f %
38 58% 58% 58% + %
5 29% 20% 29% .....
26 98% 96 V* 96% —1%
86 61% 61 61 —1%
104 12% 12% 12% + %
619 13% 13% 13% -f %'
18 71% 71% 71% + %
178 56 55% 55% — %
11 42% 42 42% -f- %
10 28% 27% 28% + %
8 33% 33V* 33% — %'
,15 29% 29 29 + %
T 57 57 57 + %
156 14% 13% 14% + %
14 48% 48% 48% + %
4 35% 35% . 35% + Va
33 22% 22 22% + %
85 38% 37 37% — %
13 75% 75% 75% + %
25% 25% — %
61 61% +J/4
[ very basic facrj tors in this nations’s adverse
payments position or the wurld might face the threat of economic doldrums.
Just one month ago, this threat was "described to Europeans by Eugene Rostow, undersecretary of state for political affairs. He suggested that the world’s financial machinery would be endangered if Europe continued to build huge surpluses while the
back.
PhIMPet 2.60 PltneyB 1.20 PltPIOte 2.60 Pitts Steel Polaroid .64 ProctrG 2.20 PiibSvcCok) 1 PugSPL 1.60 Pullman 2-00
RCA 1 RalstonR .60 Rayonr l ,40b Raytheon .80 Reading Co ReichCh .40b RepubStl 2.50 Revlon 1.40 Rexall ,30b Reyn Met .90 ReynTob 2.20 RheemM 1.40 RoanSe 1.67g Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 RoyDut 1 90g RyderSys .80
BY JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK -Tough as they are, President .Johnson’s plans for restricting American spending abroad offer few long-range, permanent solutions tp the nation’s bilance of pay-nients ills. j.
At the most, they are emergency measures, partly in the realm of politics rather than economics, very likely temporary, and could in the long ruri, do more dam
tory shoulder harnesses and age than good higher prices. j to the balance!
Shoulder harnesses became j of pay m e n t s mandatory under new federal I and the world’s safety regulations Monday, but economies auto plants were shut for the I ^wo Holiday.
'* . * *'■
Price hikes generally range from $23 to $32, or what the au-. , B tomakers had been charging for Y® ve(^. *over™®en(al rather the harnesses as optional equip- P*an P”va e P°|jcl®s: f*mt, cost-ment , ly military and financial aid;
Henry Ford II, chairman of second, domestic inflation:
Ford Motor Co., terms the new} J]Je solution of the first has Sshoukler harnesses “very effec-!?;®, administ/ation since; _ DETROIT (AP)
/a t” it TATtlr ntfi/lA TIia HtflniiAM m 6n ....
Instead, the United States btf argued, these natlens should cooperate in the interests international stability by exporting their capital, by buying more American goods, by sharing in U.S. expenditures.
FRENCH REPLY The reaction to this idea, however, was a reply from file
United States was forced to cutj French that the only lasting solution was in a “return to financial discipline” by the United States and Britain.
CUNNIFF
balance of payments have in-
This would result in the near collapse of world trade, with na- * * *
tions hoarding their capital in-j The permanent solution, how-stead of investing it abroad,!ever, is not to he found in the with one country declining to French attitude nor solely in tl» ibuy another’s goods because it American viewpoint. More like* would cause ail overflow of ] ly it will be a combination of the funds. two: discipline an theSe dollars that are
1 ioi% 101% + % | ping hours, beginning today, to]being saved rather than invest-
| ** so 30%-%{jx a recent company survey 6 ... ....
20% 20%...[showing a shift in consumer
/, j shopping habits.
The downtown store at 91 N.
-U
23 21
126 49% 49 49%
14 22% 29%/. 227* +
13 56% 55% 56 + V*
23 38% 38% 38% + %
ed would have, in the long run, returned many dollars to America. A new American factory in Germany would be costly at
69
iy<
US Smeif 1b US Steel 2.40
Varian Asso Vendo Co *60 VaEIPw 1.36
WarnLamb 1 Was Wat 1.20 Westn AirL 1 Wn Banc 1.20 WnUTel 1.40 Westg E| 1.60
*erhr 1.40
CP
White Mot
/eyei
l/nirl
1.60
100 63,/b 62 Va 62Va —2
23 827b 82Va 82V* —
1 119b 119b 119b + Vb
36 60 597b 60 — Va
87 84Va 8394 84Vb —IVa
8 277* 2794 2794 — Vb
2 297b 297b 297b + Va
8 67Va 679b 679b — Va
34 4394 42Vb 4294 — 94
196 48Vb 47Va 48V* +1Va
7 4594 459b 459b — Vb
25 59 58Vb 59 +17a
168 439b 429b 43V* +1Vb
286 499b 49 49 —1
—V—
21 31% 31% 31% + %
16 28% 28 28% + %
18 44% 43% 44 + %
—w—•
24 43% 42% 43 - %
17 59% 22% 23% + % 27 34% 34% , 34% + % 1» 27% 27% 27% .
107 37% 36% 37% + %
48 71% 70% 71% ...
t 39% 30% 39% — %
35 52% 52% 52% + %
1 49% 49% 49% + %
'14 29 20% 28% + V4
__x—Y—Z—
YngstSht 1.00 48 329 ...
Sales figures are unofficial.
Unless otherwise noted, rotes of dividends in the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the lost quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular ore Identified In the following footnotes.
o—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dlyl-dend. d—Declared or paid in 1967 plus stock dividend, e—Declared or paid so far this year, f—Payable In stock during 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-lstrlbutlon dote, g—Paid last yaar. h—Dadarad or paid otter stock dividend or split up. k—Doctored or paid this year, accumulative Issue with dividends In arrears, n—New Issue. P—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action token at lost dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1968 stock dividend, t— Paid In stock during i960, estimate* cash value on ex-divtdend or ex-dlstrlbulion date.
z—Solas In full.
dd—Colled, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex dividend ond soles In full, x-dls—tx distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without warrants. ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wi—When Issued, nd—Next day delivery. ,•
T v|—In bankruptcy or -receivership-or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. fn—Foreign Issue sublect to Interest equalization tax.
49?4 4i% 49% + % Saginaw will be open from 10 first, but dollars would flow to
a.m. to 9‘ p.m. Monday, Thursday and Friday; from 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday; ind from 10 h,m. to 6 p.m Tuesday and Wednesday
The store at 5000 Dixie, Waterford" Township, In Drayton Plains Shopping Center, will be open daily from 10 a.m, to 9 p.m.; Saturdays from 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Sundays from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Smart Will Speak to Waterford GOP
DOW—hJONBS AVKRAGES STOCKS: .
30 Indus ............ 904.0—0.41
20 Ralls ................ 236*3+2.79
15 Utils .............. 128.77+0.86
65 Stocks ............... 315.52+1.40
BONDS:
40 Bonds ................ 74.72+0.08
10 Hlghor grade rails 63.55 .
10 Second grade rails ..... 74.21+0.23
10 Public utilities ..........78.98+0.01
10 Industrials 82.17+0V*10
STOCK AVERAOIS Compiled by The Associated Press
Clifford H. Smart, 60th District state representative, wilt be guest speaker at the 8 p.m. Tuesday meeting of the Republican Club of Waterford Township at Pierce Junior High School, 5145 Hatchery.
Smart, a Republican from Walled Lake, informed the chib that he will speak on current issues faced by the Michigan Legislature.
★ k k
The public is invited to attend the meeting, according to Frank A. Lane, club "president.
the United States when production began.
* k . k
Another risk is that much of. the vigor of our domestic economy results from the tremendous overseas expansion of our industrial giants. The longer controls are maintained, the less’ competitive these companies will become, and the result might be fewer American jobs.
Hidden in these curtailments, however, is a potential benefit. It is that some European nations might be shocked into realizing that international [trade and cooperation benefit [all and that a lack of coopera-| tion hurts all.
U.S. VIEW
As the United States views the | problem, Europe must assist]
GM LEADS
GM led 1967 production with 4,118,235 or 55 per cent of the total, followed^ by Ford with
General Motors’ 12-month production! totals for 1968 and 1967 in the U.S. and Canada follow:
Itooip December
ler with 1,363,206 or 18 per Cent and AMC with 228,657 or 3 per cent.
Ford dropped 5 per cent under its 1966 output while American Motors was off 0.15 per cent. GM gained nearly 4 per cent and Chrysler was up about 1.6 per cent over 1966. k k "k
The Christmas holiday restricted the final week of 1967 output to 154,653 cars compared with 189,716 in the preceding week and 115,478 in the corresponding week of 1966.
The December aggregate was 791,765—highest of any month last year. Ford worked Saturday operations at 10 plant*, while AMC suspended production for one week in order to rearrange bodymaking operations at Kenosha, Wis., and Milwaukee
News in Brief
Mrs. Clara Hammond of 5790 Croswell, Waterford Township, reported to township police the theft of a battery valued at $44 from her car parked at Waterford Township High School, 1415 Crescent Lake.
1987
Passenger Cars .
Chevrolet—Chevelle ......J *'j? *• • • 175,881
Chevrolet—Regular .............. LteMB®
Chevrolet—Corvette..........•••••• 28,778',
Chevrolet—Camaro —— ... 218,210
Chevrolet—Chevy H- ........... 1W,882
Chevrolet—Corvair ............. 19.798
Total Chevrolet ........ .1J80,678
Pontiac—Regular...... .......-V. 445,956
Pontiac—Tempest . ......, ...... 288,924
Pontiac—Firebird ..... —..— 122,291
Total Pontiac ............... W7.171
Oldsmoible—Regular 298,354
Oldsmobile—F-85 ............. 258,643
Total Oldsmobile .......... 552,997
Buick—Regular ............... — 379,511
Buick—Special ..............v. 194,355
Total Buick .................. 573,866
Cadillac --------.. .... 213,161
Total Passenger Cars—U.S. ......4,117,871
Total Passenger Cars—Canada — 312,180
Total Passenger Cars—
‘ U.S. and Canada .........4,430,051
TYucks & Coaches
Chevrolet ...................... 549,676
GMC Truck & Co'ach............. 130,659
Total Commercial Vehicles—US... 680,335 Total Commercial Vehicles—
Canada ................... 73,850
Total’Commercial Vehicles—
U.S. & Canada .................. 754,185
TOTAL U.S. AND CANADA .........5,184,236
INI
483,317
1,431,022
24,939
94,426
155*726
73,362
2^792
481,591
384,794
356,087 237,982 ~594,069
363,712
216,709
580,121
205,001
4,448,648
285,084
4,734,652
621,354
127,294
748,648
70,009
818,657
5,553,309
NOTE: December, 1967, figures are.preliminary and subject
the United States to correct its I to change.
j at'.,
at
in ai%
11 30% 30 7S 04% 05% 8 45 44%
39':
41% + Vi 65 -to 48% +3* 71% ....
Earl A. Kreps of 1781 Beverly, Sylvan Lake, reported to Jon I'ls 145.8 jan i Waterford Township police yes-
45? 7 181.4 143 a 317 0 ter(*ay tbe °* b‘S OVerCOat
12-f 151J valued at $115 from the cloak
4912 209.6 1 59.1 $42.6 J. .
4i|.4 159.4 136.5 292.8 room at Airway Lanes, 4825
M59.
Not Chong* Nqon Tub*. Prev. Day Week Ago Month Ago
1947-48 LOW 1066 High 1064 Low .
Tu.tday'i lit Dividend* Doclortd
Pe- stk. of Pay-R*M rlod Record abto REGULAR
Gordon Jowolry A ,10 Q 1-35 3-15
Irwin, Richard O ,08 Q l-t 1-15
Creicent Lake Inn under new ownership, Kenne,th-.,Gohl, 4904 Eliz. Lake Rd. . -Adv.
NEW BUILDING - House of Bedrooms has moved to a new 14,000-square-foot building at 1716 S. Telegraph from its former location at „ 1662 S. Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. One section of the 114 displays
IB::
Ponfloc Ofni RSto
is devoted to bedroom sets for teens MM younger persons, according to owner Robert Goldman of 5944 St. James, West Bloomfield Township.
1
u