earmarked for construction and 8# million for maintaining roads at present standards. Tin road commission points out that t6 million may not be sufficient for adequate maintenance. The report delineates specific expenses and projected construction costs. It states that:' • One grader and operator are necessary for every 50 to 75 miles of gravel road; the annual cost is $20,000 per grader and operator. • A dump truck and driver are needed for every 90 to 50 miles of road, an annual cost of $18,000 per truck and driver. • Supervision costs $50 a mile. • It costs $885 to add one inch of gravel to one mile of road. • Ditching on a slhgle road side costs 50 cents to $1 per foot. • Calcium chloride—used for settling dust on dirt roads — costs $920 per mile per year. • Pavement repair or replacement costs $9 to $7 per square yard. • In a year, about $900 worth of salt per mile is used; the cost of truck and driver adds $100 per mile during the winter season. ★ W ' W • Widening a two-lane concrete pavement to four lanes costs from 1950,000 to $350,000 per mile, and all new flve-lans concrete pavement costs more than $500,000 per mile. • To place a 2‘4-Inch blacktop cap over existing pavement costa at least $25,000 per mile. The report also notes that all coots sure (Continued on Page A-4, CM. 2) Astronauts Feel Fine (EDITOR’S NOTE - This it the second o/ three articles on the Oakland County Road Commission.; By JEANSAILE A study of Oakland County’s majorprimary road needs for the decade 1988-78 points out that nearly $175 million must be spent for “minimal” Improvement. The study, made by the Oakland County Road Commission, indicates that the needed Improvements are growing far beyond the communities’ or the county’s ability to pay. * * * “It is obvious that large amounts of local and county funds are going to have to be raised if a reasonable portion of the needed improvements are going to be made,’’ states the report issued in May — three months before voters rejected a 1-mill road improvement levy. "Without additipnal income over and above gas-weight taxes (state refunds), only one-sixth of the road improvements listed in this study will be completed by 1978,” according to the reports. MAJOR CUTBACK The road commission, which this year operated on a $14.6 million budget, expects to get only $9.7 million In 1969. During the current year an additional $5 million—not normally included in the budget — was derived from the sale of bonds and a short-term loan. The latter is to be paid off in five years and the general obligation construction bonds for $4 million are to be paid off over 20 years. Of the $9.7 million, $9 million is Policies Vary Many people will be returning Christmas gifts to area stores this weekend and merchants report that there will be no set policy regarding exchanges this year. J. L. Hudson’s and Montgomery Ward in the Pontiac Mall have requested that Christmas gifts be returned by Jin. 2. Federal’s Department Store 1 n downtown Pontiac has set Jan. 5 as the date for exchanges to be completed. The J. C. Penney Co. in the Miracle Mile Shopping Center and Sears and Roebuck downtown have no'deadllne for the exchange of Christmas gifts but would prefer to have presents exchanged as soon as possible. ABOARD USS YORKTOWN UR -Climaxing a magnificent space odyssey, the Apollo 8 moon explorers came home from die heavens today, steering their spaceship to a pinpoint landing less than three miles from the main recovery ship in a dark Pacific Ocean. Air Force Cbl. Frank Borman, Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Maj. William A. Anders reputed they were in excellent condition after the momentous journey. They landed just before dam and waited patiently in 'their bobbing spaceship for 45 minutes until the first rays of light began to illuminate the Pacific so that swimmers could safely drop into the sea to secure the Apollo 8 craft. America’s newest heroes ended man’s greatest space adventure and one of history’s most momentous explorations when they survived man’s hottest and fastest dive through the atmosphere and parachuted into a gently rolling sea about 5,000 yards from toe York-town. Hie astronauts climbed into a life raft and were hoisted aboard a helicopter 80 minutes after landing. They were ferried quickly to the carrier, which had steamed toward toe scene frpm the moment of touchdown. With a beautiful dawn breaking over toe Pacific, Borman, Lovell and Anders were deposited on toe currier deck at 12:20 p.m. EST. Hundreds of sailors cheered and snapped pictures as the bearded adventurers stepped on deck and strolled a bit uneasily across a red carpet rolled out for the occasion. The astronauts were dressed in White flight suits, into which they had changed while waiting for recovery. WAVE TO SAILORS They smiled and waved to acknowledge the cheers of the sailors. Borman stepped to a microphone and thanked the crew for toe great recovery operation. “We’re very happy to be here with you,” Dorman said. “We appreciate your efforts. We know, you had to stay out here over Christmas. It seems that Jim Lovell and I always seem to fly in December.” w -w * ■ “But on Gemini 7,” he addgd, “we got home before Christinas. “We are very proud to be part id this great achievement. We’re proud of it and we appreciate toe part you played in getting us back.” ★. W ★ Borman, Lovell and Anders all looked in great shape as they left the microphone and walked' to an elevator, which took them down to a sick bay* for a medical examination. ANTHEM PLAYED With the astronauts safely on toe carrier, officials in toe Mission Control Center in Houston unfurled* large American flag and the “Star Spangled Banner” was played over a communications circuit. Helicopters spotted the six-ton spaceship dangling under its three red and COL. FRANK BORMAN Ram, Flurries Due Overthe Weekend Rain and some snow flurries are likely to dampen the Pontiac area this weekend, the weatherman predicts. The U.S. Weather Bureau reports the following weekend forecast for Pontiac area residents: TODAY — Occasional rain or drizzle and warmer weather with a chance of freezing rain ending early this afternoon, high 88 to 49. Tonight rain and warmer weather, with a low of 95 to 40. TOMORROW — Cloudy and turning colder with a chance of brief showers. High 95 to 40. SUNDAY — Cloudy and a little colder with a chance of snow flurries developing. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent are near 100 today, 90 tonight, and 40 tomorrow. Tito low temperature- prior to 8 a.m. today in downtown Pontiac was 29. The reading at 2 p.m. was 92. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) - Fake charts were used by the navigation officer of the USS Pueblo to foil a Communist claim that toe intelligence ship was seized inside North Korean waters. Lt. Edward R. Murphy Jr., executive officer, said his captors forced him to Related Stories, Pictures, Page A-10 make charts showing toe ship violated territorial waters of North Korea, but he managed to insert enough errors to make them obvious fakes. ★ * * (a . At a news conference yesterday, Murphy pointed out discrepancies in the coordinates used to pinpoint the Pueblo’s position. One of them, he said, would have had the Pueblo traveling at 2,500 knots. The ship has a top speed of about 12 knots. Murphy reiterated that the Pueblo was well outside North Korea’s 12-mile limit when it was taken over. At the same time, Pentagon sources see virtuaQy no chance that any member of the USS Pueblo’s crew Will face court-martial for conduct during the Flashes white parachutes as it dropped for the sea. They were overhead moments after the 10:50 a.m. EST splashdown. While waiting for pickup, the .astronauts chatted by radio with the commander of toe helicopter hovering overhead. w * w Cmdr. Donald S. Jones of Madison, Wis., asked toe astronauts what the moon was made of. “It’s not made of green cheese at all,” Borman replied. “R’a made out of American cheese.” w w w Asked what they wanted for breakfast, the astronauts replied “steak and eggs, toe same that we had before we left the Cape last week.” FIRST LANDING IN DARK They are the first U.S. astronauts to land in darkness, lt was 4:50 a.m. local time, about an hour before dawn and 45 minutes before first light. ★ * * Unless there were an emergency, frogmen did not plan to deploy from toe helicopters until first light, leaving the astronauts to wait out toe recovery in their floating craft. a The astronauts had been away from earth exactly six days three hours on a dramatic mission that thrilled the world and gave man his first close-up look at the mysterious celestial neighbor that has intrigued humans since the beginning. 597,866 PERFECT MILES They traveled 69 hours outward to the moon, circled lt 10 times in 90 hours at an allude qf 70 mile# and then raced hbme i^qf ; a 58-hour corridor. They logged about 597,000 perfect miles. - Pueblo Officer Used Charts to Foil Reds months the men were prisoners of the North Koreans. A court of inquiry usually is a prelude to a possible court-martial, and the Navy Judicial Board presumably will be obliged to make some statement concerning the conduct of toe prisoners. WASHINGTON (AP) China detonated early today a nuclear device with a yield of about three megatons. or tore# million tom of TNT, the Atomic Energy Commission announced. The AEC said the atmospheric test, the eighth detected by the United States, occurred in the Lop Nor nren about 2:96 a.m. E8T. WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department announced today Baal agreement on ■ $986 million deal to provide 56 Phantom jet fighters to Israel. APOLLO RECOVERY SHIP - The aircraft carried porary home of toe Apollo 8 astronauts following their in toe Pacific Ocean this morning. The ship took the tor 1,450 miles southwest of the Hawaiian Islands. 2 Gallant Ladies of War Improve With the Years Flu, Fuel Needs Endanger NY NEW YORK (AP) - Three New Yorkers have died from lack of heat and 10,000 are seriously ill in unheated apartments, toe city health commissioner says, and any fuel Anns.that, refuse to cooperate cy deliveries will be ] WWW | i The board of health declared a “state , of peril” Thursday, five days after a settlement was reached in the strike of fuel deliverers. w w w Delays in deliveries prompted Mayor John V. Lindsay to call for “extraordinary” efforts to get fuel to buildings with sick people. WWW The health commissioner, Dr. Edward O’Rourke, said three deaths were directly attributable to lapk of heat. His department estimated that 2,400 would die to the city this week, half from flu complications. w * w Deputy Mayor Timothy W. Costello saldltealth Department personnel would be stationed at about 100 fuel depots in the city “to order that those buildings Identified as health emergencies receive oil on a priority basis.” More than 700 unheated buildings have been designated as emergency hospitals because of a large number of ill residents. (EDITOR’S ROTE—This it the seventh of a aeries of columns that Bob Hope is writing during the holidays about our armed forces in the Far East.) BY BOB HOPE USS NEW JERSEY IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA -* We Spent Christmas day in the company of two gallant ladies. Though no loh young, they’ve kwt j none of their grace, their charm and] their character. In, fact, like good wine they’ve improved j with the years. J ' No Newport dowager ever received | her guests with more consideration HOPE 'Beware of Spinach' and concern for their comfort and wellbeing than they did us. The first was a queen who has reigned for many years. Her current domain is the South China Sea. And she’s called toe USS Hancock, that’s her formal name. w w w But since 19$K when she first took part In the battle for Okinawa, toe’s been known as “Mghtiag Hannah.” Almost destroyed by a kamikaze attack in 1915, aba was racopimtsaionsd in 1964. She’s been in action off the coast of (Continued on Page A-2, Obi. 9) Press Delivery Delayed Deliveries of The Poatiae Press were1 late yesterday, doe to mechanical difficulties m the pressroom. The lateness was not too fault of year carrier. The Press regrets the to Peril for Popeye? DALLAS (UPI)—American youngsters eet less spinach than other children around the world—and it may savo their three. In a paper presented to the 195to meeting of the American Association for too Advancement of Science, Dr. Barry Commoner said that ntiratasto spinach have poisoned infante to Germany and Franco. Commoner Is director of the Center for toe Biology of Natural Systems at Washington University. WWW Hie paper said evidence of nitrogen poison has been found to drinking water, especially to southern California. The rise to the amount of nitrogen found to food and water Is due to the increased uie of nitrate fertilizers by farmers, said Commoner. IN BABY FOODS A large amount of nitrate to baby foods has been known to cause asphyxiation, he said. Children are more susceptible to the problem, he noted. Commoner said nitrogen In well water to Minnesota has poisoned dozens of children and this nitrogen has come from fertilizers to toe soil WWW He expressed fears that a growing use of nitrogen fertilizer will result In the pollution of all the water systems to the Untied State*. Gift-Exchange 'Road Needs to Outstrip Income’ J V *1 ) THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY/ DECEMBER 27, 1M8 McCoririack Foe Faces WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Morris K. Udall’s startling challenge to the House Democratic leadership was welcomed by Uberal-moderates today, but he (aces a stiff battle to unseat Speaker John W. McCormack. Udall, In announcing yesterday he was after 77-year-oid McCormack’s job, said he had reached the decision without lining up any prior backing or consulting with the liberal-moderate leadership. Several members of the liberal-moderate Democratic Study Group, a largely informal alliance of some 140 members, including Udall, said they were surprised by the four-term Arizona congressman’s announcement. “His chances are vary good. Re’s very popular personally and he's very articulate. But it depends entirely . i what the ones in the middle do,’’ said a source aligned with the, DSG. IMPORTANT PLEDGE There was a feeling among others, however, that Udall’s pledge to caU for other nominations if he unseats McCormack on the first ballot was the strongest factor going for him. * * * The belief is that a Northern or Western liberal wouldn’t stand a chance agatast the speaker from Massachusetts, but that many members dissatisfied with McCormack would go for such' a candidate if they thought It was a ghwmUw that could lead eventually to election of their own man. First test of UdaH’s.strength will come by secret ballot it the Democratic caucus Jan. 2. The nominee of the caucus will be presented to the 1011 House when it convenes Jan. 3. Since the Democrats hold a 243 to 192 majority, their choice is a sure titling. MODEST APPRAISAL In announcing his decision to make the race, the 46-year-old Udall, brother of Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, said he first-ballot defeat for the McCormack “not as a decision that I should be Speaker” but only “a vote that a change is desired.” A caucus contest, he said in letters to colleagues, need not spilt the party but “should strengthen us in the House and in the, country at large.” m • * McCormack’s backers, who include powerful committee members and deans of some of the larger state delegations, are not “naming scared.” They put Udall’s top strength at SO votes. This challenge to McCormack, veteran of 40 years in the House, is unprecedented ip modern history. MORRIS K. UDALL Widespread or Regional in 33 States IOWA KILLING SUSPECT - This is Anthony E, Williams, a fugutive mental patient charged with murder in the abduction and death of Pamela Powers, 10, of Des Moines, Iowa. He is being returned to Des Moines police headquarters after showing police where the body was. She had been missing since Tuesday. Suspect Leads Iowa Police to Flu-Related Death Rate Increases ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) — Hong Kong flu has caused ■ widespread or regional illnesses in 33 states while deaths attributed to pneumonia-influenza more than doubled during the third week of December, the National Communicable Disease Center reports. Officials are standing by their earlier predictions that the epidemic will not hit its peak until next month. During the week ending Dec. 21, the center’s figures show about 500 more deaths from pneumonia-influenza in 122 selected cities throughout the nation than might normally be expected. However, Dr. David J. Sencer, the center’s director, cautioned that the figures from the 122 cities are “purely a sampling.” He said that they should not be Interpreted too strictly. Sencer said the NCDC is taking the unusual step of using an editorial on the front page of its weekly report to caution about relying upon interpretations of the figures. The weekly report is due for release later today but the figures it contains were confirmed last night by several NCDC officials, including Sencer. * ★ ★ The director said the rising number of deaths is part of a trend which began about two weeks ago and they were up “sharply” during the week ending Dec. 21. Normally—in years with no flu epidemic—about 500 persons would be ex-tected to die of pneumonia-influenza during the third week of December, a spokesman for the center reported. The actual total from the 122 cities will be about 1,000 dead, he said. Body of Girl|io Saigon Chafes as France Talks Politics With Cong : DES MOINES, Iowa OB - A fugitive from a Missouri mental hospital has been charged with murder after leading police to the frozen body of 10-year-old Pamela Powers, missing since Christmas Eve. ^ A self-styled minister whoHdentified himself as Anthony Erthell Williams, 24, wordlessly directed detectives t o Pamela’s half-clothed body, wedged between a culvert and the side of a snow-covered 15-foot embankment, yesterday. * * a Police waited results of an autopsy to determine how the blonde, blue-eyed fourth-grader died and how long she had been In the spot near Mitchellville, 10 miles east of Des Moines on Interstate 80. Williams was arraigned on an open charge of murder under heavy guard at the Des Moines police station yesterday. *NO SIGNS OF EMOTION’ Officers who accompanied Williams and the two detectives to the girl's body said Williams showed no signs of emotion. His return to Des Moines police headquarters — only four blocks from the YMCA building where Pamela disappeared Tuesday — was conducted under heavy security after police received anonymous telephone calls threatening Williams’ life. PARIS (UPI) — Saigon’s war talks delegation chafed today at France’s discussions with the Vietcong on the political future of South Vietnam. The Saigon negotiating chief, Pham Dang Lam, denounced French Foreign Minister Michel DeBre’s meeting yesterday with Tran Buu kiem, the top Vietcong at the stalled Paris talks. ★ * * North Vietnam and the Vietcong countered with a communique demanding the immediate opening of negotiations around a circular table. The communique said Saigon was trying to sabotage peace efforts. Kiem emerged from his conference with DeBre and announced “it remains only for the details to be fixed” before the Vietcong release three captive GIs in South Vietnam as promised. OUTCOME ‘PREJUDGED’ Denouncing the Kiem-DeBre session, the Saigon leader said the French foreign minister “has prejudged the nature of the (peace) conference to be held and its final outcome.'”' “It seems difficult not to link Tran Buu Kiem’s efforts to be received by the French foreign minister with file effort put up by the Communist side with a view of winning for the Vietcong a certain status for the forthcoming Paris conference,” Lam said. One of the primary issues blocking the beginning of expanded talks is Saigon’s refusal to accept the Vietcong as a separate entity at the bargaining table. DeBre was the first French cabinet member to meet with a Vietcong representative — a meeting that gave The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Occasional rain or drizzle and warmer today, with a chance of freezing rain through mid-morning. High today 38 to 43. Tonight occasional rain and warmer. Low 35 to 41. Saturday cloudy and turning colder with a chance of brief showers. High 35 to 40. Sunday outlook: Cloudy and a little colder with a chance of snow flurries developing. Winds southeast Increasing to 15 to 20 miles tonight, becoming southwest eight to 18 miles Saturday. Probabilities of preciptatlon near 100 per cent today, 80 per cent tonight and 40 per cent Saturday. TRAN BUU KIEM the guerrillas a propaganda boost in their demand for official recognition. ‘PEACE CABINET Yesterday’s communist communique warned the Saigon regime would “sabotage the Paris conference” and urged the United States to overthrow the South Vietnamese government and replace it with a ‘peace cabinet.” In Saigon, Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky and two pf his delegates to the Paris talks met yesterday with President Nguyen Van Thieu. Their aides would! not reveal what the men discussed. South Vietnam severed its diplomatic ties with France in 1964 in protest against President Charles de Gaulle’s call for neutralizing all of Indochina, including Vietnam. Meanwhile, Cyrus R. Vance’s impending return to Paris raised expectations today of a new U.S. move to break the long deadlock delaying the Vietnam peace talks. PROCEDURAL ISSUES Vance, due back tonight, has been the U.S. negotiator in the talks with the North Vietnamese on the procedural issues blocking the start of the expanded conference. Despite anticipation that Vance might be returning with new proposals, some "diplomats are saying privately they expect no substantial progress of any sort until after Nixon is inaugurated. Exam Set in Mates Death TMiy In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding I At I a.m.: Wind Velocity IS m.i Direction: Southeast One Year Ago In Pontiac Highest tamperature A 38-year-old Orion Township woman accused of the shotgun killing of her husband Christmas day faces preliminary examination on an open murder charge Jan. 7 before Waterford Township District Judge Kenneth H. Hempstead. In custody without bond in Oakland County Jail is Mrs. Barbara Trudell of 881 Vernita. She was arrested in her home when sheriff’s deputies, who had been called to the scene by a neighbor, found her husband, Lyle E. Trudell, 34, dead in the living room. Investigators said he had been shot in the head. 3 GUNS IMPOUNDED, Impounded at the scene were three guns, including a 12-gauge shotgun believed to be the murder weapon. Capt. Leo Hazen, chief of sheriffs detectives, said deputies were called about 2:30 a.m. and advised that “something terrible” had happened. ★ * He said one of the five Trudell children living at home asked the neighbor to call the department. County Fears Epidemic Is Not Yet at Peak Oakland County health authorities remained cautious today despite optimistic comment from the state that the epidemic of Hong Kong flu appears to have leveled off. “We’re still running a 15 to 20 per cent work absenteeism rate countywide, which is not unusual for a flu season,” said a county health official. He noted absenteeism during an apidemic is charted at between 30 and 50 per cent. ♦ * ★ He said the department still believes that the middle of January will be the high point for flu cases in the county. The comments Mowed an announcement by Dr. Willard Lenz, State Health Department epidemiologist. He said an informal survey showed the number of reported flu cases had leveled off over Christmas week. ‘THINGS LOOK GOOD’ "If it continues the way it has this week, things look good,” said Lenz. But he added: “There is no way of being definite about the course of the outbreak at this point.” ★ * * Lenz said the number of Detroit-area pneumonia and flu deaths for the week ending Dec. 20 would be the highest for the Detroit area since the flu outbreak started. At least 50 such deaths were reported in the first week of December and 70 in the second. The State Health Department in Lansing planned to start an inquiry today on how Michigan Bell Telephone Co. managed to obtain a reported several thousand doses of the scarce anti-flu vaccine. NEEDS ‘IGNORED’ The investigation Is in response to a-charge by State Sen. Roger E. Craig of Dearborn that PUrke, Davis & Co. ignored the needs of many hospitals and nursing homes to sell the drug to Michigan Bell. Detroit’s Herman Kiefer Hospital got its first Hong Kong flu vaccine Monday, more than a week after Michigan Bell started lnnoculafing its employes. Most hospitals and nursing homes in the area continued to impose restrictions on visits to patients pending file end of the outbreak. Birmingham Area Ford Exec Is President of PR Group BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Robert W. Hefty, director of public information for Ford Motor Co., has been elected 1969 president of the Michigan chapter, Public Relations Society of America. He succeeds Donald F. Connell, public relations coordinator for Marathon Oil Co. — * * * Other new officers are: vice president, John O. Montgomery, news relations manager, Chrysler Corp.; secretary, Charles J. Snell, vice president and director of retail marketing, advertising and public relations, Detroit Bank and Trust, and treasurer, Dan P. Lutzeier, director of public affairs, Burroughs Corp. The Michigan chapter is one of the oldest and largest in' the 6,000-mender national organization. EX-WIRE NEWSMAN Hefty joined Ford in 1952 after 10 years with the United Press. He was manager of the Ford’s news department and public relations manager of Ford divisions before being named director of public information in 1965. He is a graduate of the University of Minnesota and lives at 3736 Peabody. Montgomery, of Grosse P o i n t e, formerly -with the Detroit Times, is a graduate of Michigan State University. * * * Snell is a graduate of Olivet College and holds a law degree from Wayne State University and resides in Pleasant a graduate of Princeton University and lives at 3107 Upton, Troy. Ladies of War Retain Character kelfled NSsMUm Net Indicates- Camult local Soracail AP Wlrtphpf* : NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow mixed with rain will move from the /astern 1 Great Lakes to the Northeast tonight, and showers will fall in the Southeast. Snow .will occur (pan the western Great Lakes to the northern Rockies, and there will be *kalo over the northern Rockies, and there will be rain over the north and central 'Padfie Coast. „ (Continued From Page One) Vietnam since the beginning. It was “Fighting Hannah’ 'which launched the first reprisal raids against North Vietnam ordered by President Johnson in February of 1965. YOUNGER GENERATION You wouldn’t worry about our younger generation if you could meet some qf the kids who man ships like the Hancock. Cmdr. Bill Span of Ambridge, Pa., who leads the 22 Skyhawk pilots, told me that, from enlisted men to pilots, pulling eight-hour workdays, their performance and dedication are unbelievable. He told me of one of his pilots whose plane was hit over North Vietnam — this was before the bombing halt. He ejected and as he was going down he realized that capture was unavoidable. He took out his radio and began beaming information to his buddies still in action. “I see a flak site across the river that’s firing at you. You ought to hose that down.” He then gave them the results of their bombing, their hits and misses. And as he neared the ground, he said: “OK, gang. I’ve gotta sign off. Good luck. I'll see you when I get back.”* FLAIR FOR LINES -And these kids have a great flair for a line. On the ship operations door, a sign read “A little hit of Hope is fine but a little b)t of Ann-Margaret goes a long, long, wap.” And when 306-pound Rosie Greer was Invited to sit in the cockpit of a Navy jet fighter hnd then couldn’t get out, a sailor who was watching this scene said: ‘.'Rosie, you may have to wear this home.” The esprit de corps on the ship and especially the concern of the kids for the pilots was Illustrated a couple of weeks ago when Lt. Pat Scott of San Diego \*as returning to the ship at night after a mission. Because of the rough seas and the pitching deck he hit the stern, his plane broke in two and burst into flames and went:Into the sea. He ejected but he was too low and got tangled In his chute on the bow of the ship where he dangled helplessly. Had it not been for some very alert sailors who hauled him to safety,-he'd have had it .Scotty laughingly said: “I think I set a new kind of record. I'm the first Navy pilot who ever hit the stem and the bow of the ship at the same time.” SECOND LADY UNIQUE Our second lady, USS New Jersey, is unique. She’s the only' battleship in the fleet and (fid as she is, die’s doing the work of a dozen. She became famous in World War n as Adm. “Bull” Halsey’s flagship. His cabin has been kept exactly the way he left It. I got a kick when I found out his phone number was 807. Cost of Living Continues Spiral WASHINGTON — Living costs rose another four-tenths of 1 per cent last month, continuing the sharpest price spiral since 1951, the government reported today. Although grocery prices dropped five-tenths of 1 per cent in November, sharp increases for housing, clothing, transportation and medical care pushed the Labor Department’s consumer price index up to 123.4. * * * The index figure means it cost $12.34 in November for every $10 worth of typical family purchases in the 1957-59 base period. The price index rose 4.8 per cent during the first 11 months of 1988 and Assistant Commissioner Arnold rn«gt of the Bureau of Labor Statistics said the 1968 rise will probably wind up at about This would be the largest increase in consumer (vices since the 5.9 increase In 1961 during the Korean war. No Deaths in Jet Cra SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) - An O Air Lines DC9 jet with 82 passen crashed Into heavy snow In a grov trees on takeoff from the Sioux Airport this morning, but no fatality serious injuries were reported. Ambulances rushed at least 32 pen many of them returning | holiday visits, to hospitals, w spokesmen said mqat of the’ tnji consisted of bruises dnd cuts. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 A—8 WASHINGTON (AP) - John A. Volpe, President-elect Nixon’s choice fin- transportation secretary.asya more emphasis must be pht onmass transp< tion systems to cope with the nation’s urban traffic problems The Massachusetts governor said Thursday in his first news U.S. INS VIETNAM FATALITIES—Chart show U.S. losses in the Vietnam War for the year, at four-week intervals. Figures fot the period after Dec- 21 wil be released early next year. Stress Mass Transit, Says Nixon Choice Gun Wound in Mouth Kills Winchell Son TUSTIN, Calif. (AP) - The son of columnist Walter Winchell (Bed of a single gui wound in the fnouth, the coroner’s office says. Walter Winchell Jr., 33, died Wednesday night. A .38-caliber pistol was found lying beside his body. Fighting by Yanks in Viet Reportedly at 3-Month Low SAIGON (AP) - The U.S. were captured 23 miles north of| The U.S. Command reported Command said today that Saigon and apparently put up only light contact in scattered American troops are doing less fighting than they have at any time in the past three months But the South Vietnamese government said its forces killed 146 Vietcong and North Viet namese in four clashes Thursday, captured 40 new Vietcong draftees and uncovered a six-able store of munitions. * * * The South Vietnamese said their losses were nine killed and 33 wounded in the four clashes. Three were in the Mekong Delta and the fourth was near Da Nang. The heaviest of the fights raged for several hours about 20 miles southwest of Da Nang. There South Vietnamese,Rapg-ers reported 74 North Vietnamese and seven rangers killed and 30 rangers wounded LITTLE RESISTANCE A government little" resistance. actions for U.S. forces. “There was some exchange of i fire, but I think because they One high-ranking U. S. officer were draftees, they just surren- said it was too early to deter-dered,” he said. Three South mine the significance of the lull Vietnamese soldiers were'But he said the Christmas wounded. | ceasfe-fire undoubtedly was ★ ★ ★ 'factor. The spokesman said the gov-| “We felt that for the most eminent soldiers took the ene- part there was a fairly good effort on the part of the Viet Cong to stay by the truce,’’ he said. NO GREAT EFFORT American reconnaissance con- The victim’s wife, Eva Anne-lies Winchell, 34, told police that her husband wrote a suicide note on Dec. 20. She said he attempted suicide last Christmas underwent therapy for about four months following the incident. According to police, Mrs. Winchell said her husband was talking with her and a friend when he “got up from the living room chair, walked over and gave me a hug and said he was going for a walk.” Moments later they heard a shot and found Win-chell’s body in the garage. Winchell was working as a dishwasher at the time of his death and the family was receiving welfare benefits. He list ed his occupation as a freelance writer. conference since appointed by Nixon that “Highways alone mot do the job.” * * * The emphasis on public transportation came as a bit of a surprise since Volpe has gained a reputation as a man who believes in highways. As federal highway administrator in the Eisenhower administration he directed the start of the gigantic interstate road system and he founded a construction company that has built thousands of miles highways. * Rapid-transit systems may it prove feasible in some areas, Volpe said, but there will be others where “you can’! build any mure highways without tearing a city apart.” MORE FEDERAL MONEY? He added that the stream of cars coming into city downtowns makes it impossible “even to provide parking spaces for them without having to tear down half the city for parking lots.” In calling for more stress on mass transit, Volpe declines to say whether more federal money would be needed. And he stressed- that each area would have to make its own decisions on what kinds of transportation it wanted. Simms Bros.-9S N. Saginaw St. TONITE Until 9“t SATURDAY 9 ML 1st ML my by surprise while searching the area just after daybreak Thursday, while the 72-hour cease-fire proclaimed by the 3Sf JSLfor Chrtetmas cease-fire, and the officer said the enemy apparently did not Marriage licenses Roy M. Watson, Farmington and tCath-n S. Tullor, Formlngtr-Paul D. Jarman, Troy Gregory, Valparaiso, tnd, still in effect “They were still having their truce period, and maybe because of that it was such a big haul,” he said. 7-HOUR DIFFERENCE The Vietcong cease-fire extended Until l a m. today, but the U.S. and South Vietnamese commands ended their Christmas stand-down at 6 p.m said the Vietcong conscripts!Wednesday. 'eo pie in the News| By The Associated Press Former astronaut John Glenn Jr. is thinking of a second try at Ohio politics, the state Democratic chairman says. Glenn entered the Democratic senatorial primary in 1964 but withdrew after suffering a head injury in a bathroom fall. Sen. Stephen M. Young, the Democratic incumbent, has indicated he will not run in 1970, and Gov. James A. Rhodes, a Republican, is barred by state law from seeking reelection in that year. Eugene P. O’Grady, the state chairman, declined comment on whether Glenn, the first American to orbit the earth, would GLENN seek the governorship or the Senate seat. Actress Connie Stevens Gives Birth to Girl Actress Connie Stevens, 31, wife of singer . Eddie Fisher, gave birth to a 5-pound, 5-ounce daughter yesterday in Burbank, Calif. The baby, named Tricia, is their second child. Fisher, 39, formerly was married to Debbie Reynolds and Elizabeth Taylor. Sophia. Pont! Get Biggest City Tax Bill in Italy a Actress Sophia Loren and Carlo Pont! have ___ been given the largest, dty tax bill of any couple In Italy. Rome tax assessors listed yesterday a combined taxable income for the couple of $1 million and called for 1147,999 hi foxes. Miss Loren was credited with $569,099 In earnings. Her tax equals that of Giovanni Agnelli, president of Flat Industries and considered Italy’s richest man. MISSLOQgN -----| Survivor of Massacre to Wed in Phillipines Corazon Amnrao, the lone survivor of the nurse massacre, will marry her home tows Alberto Attorns, a lawyer, Jan. 5. Miss Amnrao, now 2S, was elected a municipal councilor in San. Luis, the Philippines, after returning home from Chicago. She hid under a bed while eight other nurses were slain fas a dormitory at the South Chicago Community Hospital, make any great effort to maneuver troops and supplies during the period. The U.S. command said 133 cidents of enemy activity were reported during the allied truce period, and 47 were considered significant because casualties occurred. The allied commands said two Americans, Vietcong and North Viet-and 15 South Vietnamese were killed, while 36 Americans and .35 South Vietnamese were wounded. R. Gatorngau, Farmington. Carl J. Robia, Oraxal Hill, Fa. and Christina Von Andoroon, Bloomfield Hills. Charlas N. Taagar. Clarfcston Undo J. Vancll, 302 Saward. I Farm, Birmingham . Birmingham. i&'mSN Volpe also announced he plana to sell all his stock in his stniction firm. He said his brother Peter would ‘replace hini as the chief stockholder. WINTER SAVINGS SPECIAL 3 Rooms of Furniture for only 5297 Beniamin F. Watkins Jr., « Gills and Brand# L. Johnson, S7 Walnut. Warren S. Glovor, Union Lake Patricio A. Robertson, 4t( Harvoy. Barry A. Hanson, JM Clara and Ji Wsrrsn B. Brown, ta, 301 Going tnd Fol 301 Oolno. Westland. Mich i 11 N. Johnson. Clunkers Fail to Flee Police LEBANON, Tenn. (AP) — “I never had such a silly feeling, ”i Sgt. Charles Douglas of the Tennessee Highway Patrol said, describing a Christmas Eve auto chase in which two old cars! outran state police at speeds of over 120 miles per hour. Douglas said thefPbere mJd-1930 models. The incident brought reckless' driving charges against Estll R.• and Luther H. Eakes of near-j by Donelson, Tenn. Police caught one of them as a result of congested traffic. He said he didn’t know we were chasing him, and I’m Inclined to believe him,” Douglas Id. “One brother wanted to know what I was going to tell the judge, and I said I was going to II him about the speeding.” “He’ll never believe you,” Douglas quoted the brother as' saying. | and Evalyn E. Cottar, Fierce. Waited .aurlne L. W g Larry J. R anet C. Lengdon, Birmingham. Oragg M. Flland, Bloomfield Nil Alldred l. Fatcoo, Bloomf Earl A. Jackaon. Milford ---------m, Hlghlai mja. Ferry and Ruby STOP IN AND SEE THEM TODAY NO MONEY DOWN LONQ EASY TERMS Little Joe** BARGAIN MOUSE Oonttr Baldwin and Walton TafgpiMtfa U2-M42 Open Daily to S P.M. Sat. 8 A.M. to S P.M. tlw fioiuttan, Mils Amnrao was Richard Speck, who was convicted of foe and is now uader death oen tenet. MB8 AMU RAO GALA NEW YEAR'S PARTY with Pontiac’s Own SKEE BROTHERS 3279 W. HURON 692-97M 'Temporary Help' Lightens His Work LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - A young man approached the main floor record counter of the Brandeis Gold’s Department Store Thursday. He told the clerk he had just been employed as temporary help and believed he waa the employe’s lunch relief. “I’ll go upstairs and check,’ the stranger said. „ He returned in five minutes to confirm his assignment. When the regular clerk returned, $100 was missing from the cash re-1 gister. The Air Force is studying the development of hot-air balloons to enable midair rescues of aircrews who have parachuted from disabled aircraft. ARE YOU UNDER 30? Set up a *30,000 life insurance estate overnight . FOR LESS THAN •13“ A MONTH For all the facts on this Allstate "10 year term" renewable policy, the men to see are at— 4381 Highland Road J!A-59 At Pontiac Lake Road NOW AT OUR NEW OFFICE PHONE 681-0400 Allstate Allstate UfB Insurance Company Northbrook, IN. YOU Get Mora Than YOU BARGAINED For Hera at SIMMS... l-HOUR in Downtown Parking Mall-Just Have Ticket Stamped in Simms at Time of Purchase Except Tobacco and Beverages CHARGE IT at SIMMS -get Instant Credit for 30 day*—tame at cash—on purchases of $10 up to $150 for uto your MIDWEST BANK CARD! SIKMS CAMERA DEPT. SALE! KODAK & POLAROID FILMS ffikTWl835 37C Ml»S,LV.d«hrom. 17' •he........... til, II Movies....... ft ISO INSTAMATIO B ft 4£lr W VP126-12 expos- j.71 $3.20 SUPER 8 Afk| urofilm....... T6l FILM Indoor or Out- VUl 82®*"................2 91 $1.21 K0DA00L0B FILM 0X129-1 lO- rn ............ $1.40 K0DAC0L0R 0X12$ INSTAMATIO -It exp......... IS in Polaroid Films Type to*Color ... . 3” X'sas“........... DO# 19 Swinger . ,. ft4* SYLVANIA FLASHCUBES & FLASHBULBS SYLVANIA |AQ SYLVANIA -dW SSmV FLASHCUBE S2.2B lU0 MS BULBS I10 peek eft.... 1 whito.......... ft ...so® m...........i19 raLlfflS 102 JUST'”*1 144 I White......... ft FFtS-whlte ft ^Transistor Radio Battery, Hi-Power transistor radio battery for most transistor radios. Fresh date 9-volt batteries. Limit 10. Sunn or Supor 8 Film She Movie Reel and Can 2SS-Foot Reel ft Can. Reel ft Can.. 39* 49* TDC, Sawyer, Keystone. Cardboard For Slldt Projectors SUDE TRAYS capacity for Kodak or Ragalnil moMuro and light dam- 29* AIR0R1IPT Magazine J44 '34 .lldat limit (O ROTO-TRAYS ]»» $2.95 Value-Now Jamproof Roto-Tray* In choice of 80-elldo Kodak or 100 slide Sawyer or Airqulpt tray*. Limit 6. ‘VICEROY 206’ SUPER 8 Zoom Movie Camera KEYSTONE Singis Lens System Electric-Eye Cameras c ■ 84 INSTANT L0ADINQ FLASHCUBE S129S0 Value—Now (‘Perfect »hoti ovary time with •ingle lam, olectrlo-oye tyfr ailing range-finder, too. PoW f2.8 I com. Chorgo H at Slmme_ IYA-SEK0R’ 35mm Camera LENA METER SYSTEM 1595® WITH BEHIND-THE-LENS METER SYSTEM $179.50 value - modal 500 DTL hoa bo Ion* spot and averaging «y*tem. Fad f2 It lor spoodt lo 1/500 socondi Focal plan# thuttor. (Cato with Camera only $10) Modal DTL at thown only $189 J0l -a Gets Assist From County Deputies Santa Finds Family Burned Out of PONTtACf |^Ess FRIDAY, DECEMBER n, 1968 A—i GROVELAND TOWNSHIP - Santa Claus may have lost his way to the Emmett Hubarth family for a while this year, but he made up for lost time with an assist from the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. Mrs. Hubarth told gratefully this morning how sheriff’s-deputies pitched in to help after Santa was thrown off the track by a Christmas Eve fire, which burned the Hubarth home to the ground. * ★ * “It was quite a shock,’’ she said of discovering the fire. “We were just coming home from visiting friends, and saw some lights across the road. We thought someone was stuck, but then a sheriffs department car came by and they told us our house had burned.!’ While the Hubarths and their two children, Emmett II, 11, and Diane, 9, were making arrangments to stay with Hubarth’s brother, Alfred, of 51 Cottage, Pontiac, Sgts. Ray Pelon and George Kessler of the sheriff’s department went to Work. PUT OUT BULLETIN The two put out a bulletin on the regional law enforcement teletype wire, explaining what had happened to the family and asking for help. Even though it was 2 a.m. police from Southfield. Keego Harbor, Royal Oak, Garden City?- Melvindale, Wayne and other metropolitan communities answered the call for help. * * * Some had surplus toys and clothing on hand from their. own distrubitions to needy families. The family was still awake at 6 a.m., Mrs. Hubarth said, when three sheriff’s department cars pulled up in front of the house. OFFICERS WITH GIFTS “We were drinking coffee, still a little dazed, I guess," she said, ‘when in. came six officers loaded with gifts for the children and clothing,’’ The officers had also rounded up an assortment of canned goods and a 17-pound turkey for Christmas dinner, she added. ★ * ★ “The children had worried quite a bit about whether Santa Claus would find them,” Mrs. Hubarth said, “but they know for sure there is a Santa now,.” Shelby Twp. Board Changes, but Vote Totals Stay Same By TOM GRAY , ^ SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Some of the faces have changed on the Township Board, but the vote totals remain the same: 5-1. Supervisor Kirby G. Holmes, the. dissenter for two years as the stile Republican on the board, voted all alone again last week on one of the first major issues to come before the newly elected board, which is split, four Democrats to three Republicans . ■ The question before the board was the apportionment' of monies from a $900,000 bond issue passed by township voters in 1967 for construction of new fire stations. The board, taking up the much-discussed. matter, after postponing it for some time, agreed to ask its architects, Loitis Berklich and Associates o f Rochester, to draft plans for a reduced main station, measuring some 8,000 square feet in floor space. OPPOSED PLAN Holmes, conceding that “the politically expedient thing to do would have been to agree with everyone,” voted against the plan, offered by new Republican trustees Robert Seidel and Jack Jenkins. The supervisor listed his reasons as follows: • The proposed main station, if approved by the board, would give the township facilities for 60 firemen. There i are only 20 firemen on the township department. • Increases in fire department manpower are unlikely, because there is no money to pay for them. The township already levies 2Vi mills few manpower and operation of the department, the maximum allowed by state law. % As a result, the new station would not Increase the township’s fire-fighting capabilities. ‘MORE PLUSHY’ Summarized Holmes, “Should we build this station, we will not be spending money to increase our fire-fighting^ capacity. We are only taking what we have and making it more plushy.”- .' The alternative suggested by the supervisor? Hold off oh plans for the main station and build a substation in-!' stead at the present time. (The bond proposal called for a main station and three substations.) ★ * * A new substation, Holmes explained, would relieve the present overcrowded fire department facilities at t h e Township Hall and “give us a situation where we would have two fire stations adequate for our 20-man department, rather than three times what we currently need.” Building the substation, he added, would not necessitate selling as many bonds now, therefore easing,the burden on taxpayers. * ★ ★ “We are going tp pay the architects more money to redraw plans for a main station,” concluded Holmes, “Plans that are excellent, except for a few minor alterations, and should be used for building a main station five to six years from now.” £Sa * 1. ' as** KIRBY G. HOLMES CHRISTMAS GATHERING - Emmett Hubarth}^ 11 and sister Diane, 9, examine some of their Christmas presents with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Hubarth of Grove- Pontlac Prill Photo by DM Ontornohror land Township. Oakland County sheriff's deputies collected toys and clothing for the family after their home was destroyed in a Christmas Eve fire. Brandon Girl Wins 4-H Title BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Sandra Tilton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Wayne Hilton, has been named state winner in the 4-H poultry competition sponsored by Heisdorf & Nelson Farms, Inc. She received a $50 U.S. savings bond. Miss Tilton, 18, of 108 Sashabaw is a freshman at Central Michigan Unlversl-1 ty. She has been en-'l rolled in the poultry j project for seven jwars. > “Chickens, of all | the birds and , Baals around the I farm, will always be my favorites,” she 1 said. MISS TILTON She has won several awards for poultry, Including county and district medals in 1987 and 1968, a state excellence award for poultry in 1967, a second-ln-the-state award in poultry judging in 1967. ★ * * “Early in my project I was sure of another medal, when the judge who was looking at my roosters told me that one of them was a hen," she said. * * * Even so, the state winner still considers chickens man’s "second-best friend.” Blaze at Metro Forces Evacuation of Airport; No Injuries Reported DETROIT (AP)—Detroit's Metropolitan Airport was evacuated last night and all flights of major airlines were suspended for 40 minutes when smoke from a kitchen fire spread through the terminal's ventilating system. No Injuries were reported. About 3,000 persons were evacuated from the terminal without incident. ★ ★ ★ ' Flights were suspended when employes were forced to leave the airport tower, located above the south terminal area where the fire began and was quickly extinguished. Damage was estimated at <200,000. At least 15 planes were diverted to the nearby Willow Run airport or were forced to circle the airport until cleared to land. ★ * * Officials said the blaze began in grease In a kitchen duct. Driver Who Killed Couple Finally Loses His License LANSING iJfi — The driver’s license of a Howell man — convicted 80 days ago for negligent homicide — was suspended yesterday by the Department of State. Secretary of State James Hare announced the one-year suspension of driving privileges of Frank M. Bignell, 54. At the same time, Hare criticized the “time lag" between the conviction of a person on a traffic offense and receipt by his department of official notification of the conviction, . “In Bignell's case, we received the notice of conviction from the Washtenaw Circuit Court today,” Hare reported Snowmobile-Ride Prices Questioned DETROIT (AP) — With memories of that six-second, 25-cent slide on Belle Isle fresh In their minds, members of Detroit's Common Council decided yesterday that $11 an hour might be a shade steep for a snowmobile concession at Rough Park. "So we don’t get trapped like we did on that slide, let's get Mr. May over here," said Councilman Louis Miriani, proposing that the council summon John May, city director of parks and recreation, May’s department recommended the contract under which a private firm, Snow Trails Inc., would be allowed to operate the concession at the park. ‘Action was taken im- County Board to Be Sworn In Jan. 6 at 7 P.M. Oakland County’s new board of supervisors probably will be sworn into office at 7 p.m. Jan. 6 at the County Courthouse. County Clerk Lynn D. Allen is expected to administer the oath of office to the hew 27-man board. * ★ The first meeting of the group is expected to be Jan. 9. Philip O. Mastin of Hazel Park is the Democrat’s nominee for chapman, and Alexander C. Perinoff has been nominated for vice chairman. Garage-Sales Limits Urged in Rochester GOP NAMES Republicans are expected to name yesterday, mediately. CONVICTED OCT. 4 “His conviction on charges of negligent homicide in connection with two deaths dates back to Oct. 4, a time lapse of three men to a powerful more than 80 days,” Hare noted. - • Bignell was convicted of negligent homicide in the deaths Aug. 3 of the Rev. Ellis Klncer of Ypsllantl and his wife Alice. They were struck by the car Bignell was driving as they walked along M52 about three miles north of Chelsea. Bignell surrendered his license Monday, the secretary of state said. “We have no way of knowing the disposition of any case until we get the notification in the form of an abstract from the court," Hare said. “As expected," he said, "some courts are very prompt. ‘OTHER EXTREME’ “At the other extreme, we had one case which took 405 days from the date of conviction to the time that our department received notification. lit another case, it was 302 days lag time,” he said. Hare said he considered the time lag 'a very serious problem,” "Although most of the drivers are not convicted of any felonies,” he said, "they have had serious traffic offenses to cause suspension or revocation of their driving privilege."'-' Hare added that he bos several times asked the State Supreme Court to take action against some lower cqurts which are often late in filing notices of abstract of convictions with his department. committee on committees. Designed to take over some of the functions formerly performed by the board chairman, the committee will recommend appointments to other board committees. The Democrats, who suggested the committee in context with their reduction of the over-all number of committees from 24 to 12, have already named Mastin, George Grba of Pontiac, Niles Olson of Lake Orion and William Richards of Birmingham to the group. ★ * * Democrats have suggested a blue-ribbon citizens committee to study salaries for the new board. The plan has met opposition in the Republican caucus, which has come out in favor of a flat $5,000 yearly salary, based on an estimated $25 per meeting. Republicans said to leave salaries to a bipartisan lay committee would be reneging on campaign promises they made to hold the line on salaries. MORE IMPORTANT QUESTION Behind the salary question is the more Important decision, yet to be made, regarding functions of the board. Some Democrats reportedly believe in full-time responsibility, assuming some administrative fun c 11 o n s as well as policy making. Republicans reportedly adhere to the present policy-making only function of the board. ROCHESTER — The City Council has been asked to consider possible methods of regulating sales at garages here. The council has referred to its attorney complaints from a number of area businessmen and representatives of the Salvation Army, who contend, according to City Manager Bill Sinclair, that the garage sales are “getting a little out of hand:*’;1" ‘ ★ ★ ★ Sinclair said the complaints were concerned with sales “which appear to be going beyond the family property sale stage.” Council was told, he said, that in some cases brand new merchandise is being sold. In other business, the council has agreed to a State Highway Department proposal for updating and modernizing traffic and pedistrlan signals along Main Street. AGREEMENT APPROVED The plan provides for placement of pedestrian signals at intersections with Third, Fourth and University streets and installation of enough new traffic lights so that each intersection will have two, Sinclair said. The council also approved an agreement with Detroit Edison Co. on replacement of utility lines and poles in Rochester's urban renewal project area. ★ ★ ★ The question of footing the bill for the replacements, according to Sinclair, will hinge on a suit based on similar circumstances which has been pending for some time between Edison and the City of Detroit. , Under the agreement, if the courts decide in favor of Edison, Rochester The Rochester City Council has scheduled a hearing for Jan. 13 for city residents to ask questions about proposed antiballistic missile bases for the area. The hearing will be held during that night’s council meeting, which begins at 7:30 p.m. will pay for replacement. If the outcome favors Detroit, the company will pay. PROPOSAL SUBMITTED The State Highway Department also submitted a proposal for revision of the Romeo-Main intersection, at an estimated cost to the city of $30,000. The council did not take action on the proposal, but directed Sinclair to contact representatives of Sun Oil Co., which operates a service station on the corner, to see if the company would be agreeable to suggested changes in street rights-of-way. ★ ★ ★ The council also: • Passed resolutions honoring Rnscoe Martin, outgoing municipal judge, and Lester Melstrom, outgoing county supervisor, • Revised the retirement credit system for city employes to standardize it with those of other cities. • Approved an agreement with the Oakland County Board of Auditors to provide temporary facilities for a district court. The court will be located in the council chambers for a rental fee of $320 per month. Saks Chief to Retire NEW YORK (AP) - Plans to retire Feb. 1, as president of Saks Fifth Avenue were announced yesterday by Adam L. Gimbel, 75. Road Needs Seen Outstripping Income (Continued From Page One) escalating by more than 5 per cent annually. There are more than 1,625 miles’of city and village street^plus 2,475 miles of county roads In Oakland County. "Since many of these roads are far from adequate, it would be a staggering and Impassible problem to talk in terms of improving all of them to adequate standards in the foreseeable future,” the road commission reported. r * * * In northern Oakland County, the road commission suggests that the following areas be given top priority over the next. 10 years. Other projects have been picked for southern Oakland County. The two together total $175 million in needed road construction. CITIES OF NORTHERN OAKLAND COUNTY Needed Improvements on Major Roads 1968 through 1978 City Miles Est. Costs Birmingham 7.32 $1,689,000 Bloomfield Hills 9.67 $3,760,000 Farmington 6.19 $1,894,000 Keego Harbor 1.10 $647,000 Orchard Lake 5.63 $1,332,000 Pontiac 20 40 $19,235,000 Rochester ' 1.51 $344,000 South Lyon 2.36 $390,000 Troy 60 30 $21,785,000 Walled Lake 7.18* $1,894,000 Wixom 9.26 $1,629,000 Ciarkston 1.65 $358,000 Franklin 3.4l' $1,217,000 Holly 3.76 $726,000 Lake Angelus 2.24 $336,000 Lake Orion 1.05 $295,000 Leonard 2.00 $120,000 Milford 5.18 $1,410,000 Novi 28.81 $5,350,000 Ortonville 1.87 $215,000 Oxford 2.85 $352,000 Quakertown 1.27 $75,000 Wolverine Lake 1.13 $399,000 Wood Creek Farms 1.00 $478,000 TOWNSHIPS OF OAKLAND COUNTY VILLAGES OF NORTHERN OAKLAND COUNTY Village Miles Est. Costs Township Miles Est. Costs Addison -9.19 $1,435,000 Avon 21.78 $5,753,000 Bloomfield 20.86 $7,531,000 Brandon 17.88 $2,100,000 Commerce 15.09 $2,973,000 Farmington 23.43 $8,080,000 Groveland 11.01 $1,570,000 Highland 12.27 $1,710,000 Holiy 9.82 $925,000 Independence 13 93 $1,500,000 Lyon 19.02 $1,660,000 Milford 14.86 <1,013,000 Oakland 13.47 <3,015,000 Orion 11.69 <3,100,000 Oxford 12.55 $1,520,000 Pontiac 9.32 $3,730,000 Rose 12.74 $1,025,000 Royal Oak 0.27 <71,000 Springfield 11.99 $1,006,000 Waterford 33.40 $10,2$9,000 West Bloomfield 23.39 $8,620,000 White Lake 14.03 $1,730,000 Street Light Need Is Told in Wixom WIXOM — Police chief D’Arcy Young has informed City Council members that 84 more street lights are needed throughout the city qnd subdivisions. The cost Per light is $3.75. He suggested that the money be alfot-ted out of the 1969-70 budget. * ♦ ★ Young also recommended that a light be installed at the intersection of Martin and Wixom. Dealer’s Wholesale Supply *•* Martin is putting up a four-lot industrial subdivision at that Intersect tion and had requested that a light be installed. J HOLLY - Ralph C. Schlllinger Jr. of <10 Harden has been promoted to an assistant district manager In the Pbntlac office of the American National Insurance Co , it was announced today. Schillinger has been with the company since May of this year. * ★ * American National has regional and branch offices in 360 cities throughout the^J.S. Hie Pontiac office is located at 3115 Dixie. A THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 A—g WOMEN’S SHOES PNGSBOU Draperies, Mbs, Slipcovers Upholstery Fabrics Atefcrtod R*adymad* Drapery Pan* •1*. prints, solids and textures in array of colors. Fiberglas® end assorted fabrics. lie to 2949 Remnants of draperies, slipcover and upholstery fabrics; solids and prints; many colors. 29c to 1548 Discontinued fabrics for draperies, slipcovers and upholstery; bolt ends, S to 60 yard lengths; many patterns; plains.' yard 97c to 847 Assorted curtains: Ruffles, panels, tiers, pinch pleats. lie to $17 Hudson's Draperies, Curtains VALUES FOR BABES AND TODDLEBS Assortment of outerwear: coat bets, prsmsuits, snowsuits. 8.98 to 29.98 Dresses in cottons and blends. 2.98 to 5.98 Playacts, assorted colors, fabrics. 1.98 to 3.58 Babes and Toddlers FOR WOMEN Drees sheer hosiery... .39c to 69c Women's Hosiery Stay Straight Hair spray; 6-oz., 1.59: 13-oz.............249 Toiletries Assorted blouses, pant tops, sizes 88*44 ...........1.86 to 7.88 Women's Sportswear Women’s sportswear: sweaters, pants, skirts, coordinates. .................2.88 to 848 lOss Detroiter Sportswear Assorted umbrellas, raincoats and tote bags.......... 96c to 1048 Umbrellas Scarves, shells, jackets. .96c to 1046 Neckwear DRESS VALUES Detroiter Shop, Misses Dresses: Assorted styles, colors, 648. Maternity Shop: for day and evening, Mi and 1549. Tell Girl Dresses: Plaids, solids; Downtown only, 13.89 and 20.98. SL Clair Knit Shop: Dresses; suits; wool knits, polyesters, 2049. Detroiter Women's Dresses: All occasions; transitionals, 748. St. Ckdr Shop Women's Dresses: 1, 2, 3-pc.; wools, blends, 1948. Misses SL Ckdr Shop: For day, town, dress up, 94$ to 4848. Young Iupior Dresses. Coats. Suits: Many fabrics, styles, $48 to 8749. Young Junior Sportswear: Separates, sweaters, jumpers, 149 and 449 Pontchaxtraln Shop Misses Dresses: Fall, winter styles. 948 to 1949. Rome and Town Dresses: Rayon jerseys, Downtown, Northland, Rasttud, 949. Dacron* polyesters, Downtown only. 949. Home and Town: Dresses, jumpers, pantdressee, 249 to 449 FOB SOME Shiloh shelf units, 12x80x60”, 249 Garner Ware shelves, 249. Hodson's Hardware Reconditioned floor polishers, 1949 to 2149 Adjustable ironing tables, 449 Hudson's Cleaning Supplies AMC copper, pewter mugs, 449 AMC TV table, 1749 Barbecue Shop Top-quality paints; gallon, 99c to 449: quart, 49c to 1.19. Hudson's Points Young Fashion Shoss 949 Little heels end flats in » wide selection of styles, popular colors. Miss Detrotter Shoes 840 Clearance of fall sssson shoes from famous makers; mid, low heels. Women's Comfort Shoes 1240 Tailored suit, dress and walking styles; colors, famous names. Casual Shoes 1040 Popular styles end colon by known makers; flats and little heels. Fashion Shoss 1040 ajnd 1440 Famous maker styles. Northland and Eastland, all shoes 1040. Downtown and Oakland, 1040 and 1440. Salon Shoes 1940 Great values from Palizzio, Geller, Newton Elkin, Margaret Jerroid. Downtown, Northland, Eastland. Hudson's Shorn WOMEN’S GIRLS'DRESSES PRICED TO GO 2.98.608 Appealing assortment of size 4 to 12 dresses. Variely of styles, colors for school and dress. Hurry for best selection of these favorites. ✓ Girls* Dresses HURRY-IN VALUES CHILDREN'S SHOES Children’s, Misses and Terns T-Strap Shoes 5.38 Children’s, Misses, Girls, Boys Stride Rite Shoes 5.98 Girls’ Dress Shoes $.98 Children’s Shoes CHRISTMAS CARDS Town and. Country Sportswear Fall and Summer pants, skirts, tops; wide assortment at year-end savings........ 648 to 2448 Summer and Winter - weight dresses, knits, coats, suits priced for clearance now .. 14.88 to 60.88 Town and Country Shop Separates in great variety Fashion Paco Junior Sportswear: jackets, 947 to 14.97: sweaters, 147 to 347: shifts, jumpers, 548 to 1448 SL Ckdr Blouses: variety of blouses and shirts 148 to 348 LAMP SPECIALS 14.99 . 49.99 Eye-lighting assortment of table and floor models to fill many needs in your home. Shop early. Hudson’s Lamps TABLE UNIS GREATLY REDUCED Solid Color Irish Linen Tablecloths. Choice of 10 sizes. 3.19 to 15.49. Tablecloths with assorted textured weaves, 7 sizes to choose from. 3.99 to 13.49. Discontinued patterns in European imported cloths, napkins; Fine Linens at Hudson’s Downtown, Northland and Eastland only. Cloths, 649 to 4749; Napkins, 99c. Cloth/Napkin Sets, 16.50 to 22.50. 70" round Belgian Unen tablecloths in beautiful assorted prints. 548. Accessories Fashion Jewelry 99c to 1.99 Necklaces, bracelets, pins, etc. Handbags 1.99 to 19.99 Leathers, plastics, fabrics. Appealing Millinery $3 to $10 Felts, velours, wools, fake furs. Curly Wigs 16.99 Attractive Dynel stretch wigs. FOR CHILDREN Children's canvas casuals ... .98c Children's Shoes Infants cribs..2848 to 5848 Chests for infants .. .38.98 to 7148 Infants nursery accessories. ...............148 to 2248 Infante Furniture, Downtown Girls skirts, size £-14. .249 to 448 Jumpers, sizes 8 to 14. .248 to 848 Summer playwear for girls... ............... 149 to 948 Girls* Fashions Boys long-sleeve - sport shirts; polo shirts; sizes 4 to 7 148 to 848 Ski pants for boys; 4 to 7 ... .548 Boys size 4 to 7 knickers 448 to 748 Boys corduroy pants, 4-71.78 to 448 Boys* Wear MONEY-SAVING FINDS IN MEN'S CLOTHING Suits and Topcoats 59.98 to 79.98 Darwood Shop Suits and Sport Coats 24.98 to 59.98 Hudson’s Men’s Store CLEARANCE Fashion Fabrics Yard 27C to 77C Assarted cottons, rayons, wools, blends—at savings. Many remnants. Hudson’s Fabrics c6iton flannel Toni 44C For sleepwear, lounge wear—and so low-priced. Geometric prints, dainty florals. 46’’ wide. Hudson's Fabrics FINE CHINA AND SERVING ACCESSORIES Heinrich 42-piece dinner set in graceful "Dorothea” design. 955 West Bend Thermo Serving accessories: 16-oz. serving bowls, 149: insulated steins, 141: insulated tumblers, 88c; serving dish, 149 Wrought iron occasional tables in 8 adaptable sizes. 948 to 148 Fine China, Bar Accessories WRAPS AND TRIMS Vi off Cards, paper, ribbons, tags; candles, garlands, wreaths and assorted decorations at % original price. Hudson’s Downtown, 12th 4 to fix 1.98 and 2.98 7 to 14 2.98 and 3.98 Gather up an armload of these easy-care favorites and add up savings. Selection of colors, styles. Girls Sweaters SL Ckdr Spectator Sportswear: sweaters, pants, skirts, jackets, blouses, shifts 3.88 to 24.88 Miss Dstroltsr Blouses: assorted colors and styles 348 Country Corner: skirts and sweaters by famous maker 548 to 1148 Paired for savings CLOSEOUT STATIONERY 2 for 1.09 2 for 2.59 Assorted colors, styles and sizes. Hudson’s Stationery PLAYING CABD BUYS $2 Choice of double-deck cards in wood storage box or travel case. Also, cards and dice set. Hudson’s Stationery Great selection of 84” long tablecloths; variety of patterns, colors, textures 549 to 849. Assortment of napkins, guest towels, runners, place mats, bottle covers, miscellaneous accessories. 49c to 549. Dansk sheer linen tablecloths at Assorted sterling, plated and stainless holloware, 148 to 19848 Stainless and sllverplated flat-ware, 49c to 19.98 Hudson’s Silver Galleries RUGS Antique braided rugs, American made, wool and nylon blend; 6’8”x 8’ x 8” $48; 8’6” x ire”, $89-Danish reversible rugs, variety of colors, designs; 8' x 6’ to V x 12’, $15 to $119. All other stores, too ACRYLIC SWEATERS Hudson’s Downtown, Northland only. 649 to 1249. YEAR-END SAVINGS AT HUDSON'S DOWNTOWN, NORTHLAND, EASTLAND, WESTLAND, PONTIAC AND OAKLAND THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1868 How*«» H. Jom» A. Hi imtm • DIrtotor TreMurer and Finance o. liuteuu. Local Advert! Dr. George P. Raynale Few men have so well and fully lived their mortal destinies as had Dr. George P. Raynale who died Sunday at the ripe age of 88. Born in Birmingham and successively the third of a family of physicians, he was once literally and , always figuratively a “horse-and-buggy” doctor. Literally, since that was the lftode of travel when he began medical practice more than half a century ago; figuratively, because until the end his precepts of practice reflected the time-honored intimacy between doctor and patient and the willingness of the healer to go to the home bedside of those calling for medical treatment. Dr. Raynale was an original member of the Oakland County Medical Society and a onetime president of the organization. He had also won honorary distinc- tion in national medical circles, and in 1961 was named “Doctor of the Year” by the Michigan State Medical Society. Early in his medical career he had served his country as an officer in the Army Medical Corps in World War I. An enthusiastic equestrian who found kindred enjoyment in sailing, Dr. Raynale's warm and outgoing personality had won a host of friends and admirers. A gathering of any sort was enriched by his presence. ★ ★ ★ The passing of George Raynale L*-is a deep loss to the community. The many saddened by it will find comfort in the knowledge that he left an enviable and enduring record of personal achievement and service to his fellows. Darkness, Wintry Weather Challenge Motorists Darkness serves mankind in many ways, but it is no friend of motorists. During its sway, traffic accidents double. This fact of motoring life — and death — is compounded by the hazards of winter driving, when frost accumulates on car windows and windshield, and fog, snow and sleet are seasonal phenomena. “Smart motorists compensate for these dangers,” says the Michigan State Safety Commission. “They make certain their lights are functioning properly and focused correctly, keep a brush or scraper handy to clear glass surfaces of encrusted snow, and maintain increasing vigilance at the wheel in street and highway traffic.” ★ ★ ★ Your “peephole" artist, with his nose against the windshield straining for a view of what’s going on around him is headed for trpuble. The Commission passes along these timely operating hints: • Before starting out on a cold day, especially at night, start the en- gine a few minutes ahead of time, and turn on the heater and defroster. Allow time for the inside air to become warm enough to prevent condensation on the glass. • Streaking windshield -wiper blades should be replaced with new ones or refills, thus assuring that windshield can be cleared effectively in rain, sleet or snow; and minimizing the glare from approaching headlights. • Under adverse traffic conditions, the winter-wise motorist will reduce speed, taking into account that it takes longer to make gradual starts and stops on snow, or ice under the snow. • Maintaining a safe following distance behind other vehicles, signaling turns well in advance, and practicing defensive driving at all times for possible mistakes of other drivers are essential to security in winter driving. “Safety is ho accident,” it has been well said. But the safety should be provided by diligence, not merely by good luck. Voice of the People; Senator Lodge Comments on Recent Incident at OV The ordeal of Senator Huber’s “Shameless Nude” at the great university of Oakland has desecrated one of the greatest gifts of the youth of America. I cannot condone .the “incident” or the misadventures of obscenity by a few on our campuses as' I do detest filth, but the crucifixion of a university because of the misguided conduct of one is unjustified. I regret the error of my brother Senator’s caustic brew, and I cannot support the inquisition he has ordained. I will attend the meeting at lodge the university on Monday—not as a persecutor, but on behalf of the fine, intelligent student body of Oakland University whose character and integrity has been maligned. ★ ★ i Education cannot be attained at the point of a bayonet nor through shielding one from the wo^ld with puritanical guidelines. Everyone has the choice of honor, mondity and integrity, or the oblivion of degradation. , ★ ★ ★ By 1970 one-half of the population of Michigan will be under 25 years of age. The future of America lies in their hands. So I will call upon, not alone the youth of Oakland, but the youth of all'America—to rally to the aid off education by setting standards of morality, decency and integrity— cleaning their own universities of filth, dope addiction, immorality and lack of integrity of a few. • i* • A. T J»p r| Do not be “tarred” by the brush of association— Criticism oi Cabinet Is oil Dase It is easy to destroy, but I desire to build with the finest-Ahe youth of Oakland. The caustic of Senator Huber’s teacup will dissolve in the storm of protest from the fine, intelligent body of Oakland University. 'Just Soften Him Up A Bit!' David Lawrence Says: WASHINGTON-How little the European press understands the American political system was emphasised when many newspapers in Science Sees Weeds as Food Source If a nice mess of weeds shows up as the piece de resistance on your dinner table in the not too distant future, blame scientists at the University of California. They are looking into possibilities of expanding our food supply by making hitherto despised garden weeds as nourishing as present food plants, such as spinach. ★ ★ ★ Spinach happens to be a good example, since it is under the most intense study in the effort to decipher the secrets of photosynthesis, the complex chemical process by which green plants transform sunlight, carbon dioxide and water Into food components, fats and proteins. Once they learn how spinach does it, researchers hope to duplicate the process in the laboratory to produce a chemical which, sprayed on weeds, would convert them into food plants. They report progress. Several plant elements that initiate and control photosynthesis have been isolated. Success would certainly rank as a momentous scientific achievement, but chances are it would make no difference at all to countless small fry who already regard spinach as a weed. In Washington: tries abroad stressed the (act that Presidentelect Nison did not appoint either a LAWRENCE Democrat or a woman or a Negro to his Cabinet. These “omission s,” of course, were mentioned on television and radio and in the press of this country, but it was also pointed out as a matter of news that Nixon had asked Sen. Edward Brooke, R-Mass., a Negro, to become a member of the Cabinet, and that he declined. In the recent election, more than 12 per cent of the Negroes, according to the pollsters, voted for Nixon. The theory that there* must be representation in the Cabinet not only from the opposite political party but also from every religious or ethnic or racial group falls to take into account the basic principles of party government in the United States. Certainly no parliamentary system puts into the cabinet persons from another pollUcal party unless the two parties have formed a coalition at the polls. SECTIONAL NEEDS There was a time when a president could not pick a Cabinet without giving weight to arguments of politicians in every section of the country who felt that their area should be represented. Doubtless if Nixon had turned away from soma especially qualified men, ha might have found a woman who could have filled, a advice of men who know the political risks or advantages that a particular policy may involve. As government grows, the Cabinet will become more and more important, and efforts are already under way to make plans for consolidating various government agencies within certain executive departments. The national government cannot be organised o r operated like a private business. But much can be learned from the persons who • have had experience and have made a success in the business world. Nikon gave prime consideration to this point in selecting his Cabinet. SENATOR L. HARVEY LODGE 17th DISTRICT, MICHIGAN PvbllilMn-HaN' Syndicate) Bob Considine Says: Happy New Year Unlikely for the Starving of Biafra U.S. Has Lost Face on Pueblo By RAY CROMLEY NE A Washington Correspondent Washington — The opinion around the U.S. State Department is that the arrangements for freeing the Pueblo crewmen make Kim n Sung’s North Korean gov e r n m e n t look r 1 d i c u-lous. They openly I use the words! “terribly!______ clever” and CR£mQE¥~ “Ingenious” In describing the U.S. negotiating team’s work. But the U.S. government may be In for a surprise. It is a wonderful thing to have the Pueblo | prisoners freed. It was worth considerable sacrifice to achieve this But we should not fool our-•elves about the cost. * * * The U.S. government, in signing the North Korean-dictated “confession” and simultaneously denying the validity of that "confession” did win the freedom of the Pueblo officers and men. U.S. officials also undoubtedly sneaked through a very sophisticated legal coup. But in doing this, Washington stated officially that the U.S. government’s signature on an official document was not worth the paper it was written on. NOT CONVINCING Never mind that this statement was Intended to apply only to one document. Who is to convince Aslans It doesn’t (or won’t) apply to other agreements, if convenient? The more the United States repudiates the Pueblo “confession,” the more many Asians will tend to believe that a U.S. signature on an agreement is worthless. * a a The North Koreans, North Vj tnamese and Communist 1 iiinese have been saying this for a long time. Now U.S. officials are saying it “barefacedly” about one document. Henceforth, when the United States accuses the North Vietnamese of breaking the agreement on Laos, the terms of the bombing halt or whatever agreement is signed on Vietnam, fewer Asians will take us seriously. PROOF OF POWER Secondly, Asians place great stock in the proof of power, as demonstrated In making a formal apology or “confession.” When a man is In the right, and apologises to a lie, then this Is all the more proof of his weakness in a showdown. ♦ * A The greater the lie one man, one group or one nation forces another to confess to, the more the contempt felt for the The U.S. repudiation will be taken by millions of Asians merely as an attempt at facesaving. * * * The State Department experts understand law and its niceties. They do not understand Asian psychology. Politics, of course, never ceases to be a prime consideration with any president. Nixon la fortunate in having in his Cabinet former Atty. Gen. William P. Rogers, who has been active in politics in the Republican party, and also Rep. Melvin Laird, who was one of the leaders of the Republican party in the House. POLITICAL SAVANTS When political questions arise, the new president will be able to get the counsel and Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rasmussen of 180 Gateway; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Everett of 3781 Lincolnshire; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Nlque of Drtonville; 57th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Josle Scott of Union Lake; 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haslock of Davisburg; 58th wedding anniversary. NEW YORK—It is not going to be easy to convince the 10 million people of Biafra that this is to be a happy new year. “About 25,000 Biafrans will be dying each, day from starvation and ter- , ribly needed! medical sup- year,” the Irish missionary said. AAA It was Desmond Doran speaking, one of the intrepid missionaries who labor among the blockaded and besieged Biafrans. He was accompanied by Father Philip Jarmack, and by Mrs. Catherine Menninger, wife of Dr. Roy Menninger of the famed Topeka (Kansas) psychiatric institution. They and other dedicated people, representing religious and charitable groups, are trying to stop a catastrophe which pales even the war in Vietnam. AAA Beat-up charter planes, operated by veteran crews, make up a pitifully inadequate, but still breathtak-ingly costly and dangerous airlift to Biafra. They fly each night from a small Portuguese island of Sao Toma. The mercy planes have to run a double line of antiaircraft fire coming in and going out. A A A They fly only at night. There is no communication with the Biafrans except flashlight signals near the end of a trip. The landing strip is a road not much longer than 1,000 feet. It has been frequently bombed and is only lighted with kerosene pots — two minutes before landing. The cost is prohibitive. Up to $3,500 for one 3-hour round trip. gome crews, make as many as three round -trips a night. AAA It is not healthy work. Ail four DC7’s provided by a German Lutheran group have been destroyed. Negro pilot Augie Martin crashed on his final approach to the tiny Biafran airstrip not long ago and all died, including his wife — who had gone along with him. As a child, Martin played “Buckwheat” in Our Gang comedies. “You are only prolonging the war,” the Nigerian ambassador to U.N. told Fathers Doran and Jarmack, and Mrs. Menninger, when they pleaded in vain for a land route to the'dying in Biafra. AAA At the State Department, when the group applied for one or two of the many obsolete U.S. Air Force cargo planes now about to be junked, it was told that the U.S. could not afford to take sides — even in the name of mercy — in what the department considered “an internal affair.” AAA “You’ve lost a thousand planes killing people in a war in Vietnam,” Father Doran said. “But you can’t give us even one to save people in Biafra. I just' can’t understand.” ‘Majority Don’t Support Student’s Action’ It’s too bad that students, faculty and the school’s reputation must suffer because of one thoughtless student at Oakland University. I’m sure the majority of students at Oakland do not and will not support this kind of action in any class. A A A As far as the 12 students living together in Rochester and the number of coeds having illegitimate children, please show us these facts before passing judgment on the whole student body as well as the faculty and school. BOB GOHL CONCERNED STUDENT AT OU Question aqd Answer I beard someone talking about a short ton and a long ton. They seemed to know what they were talking about, but I certainly didn’t Can you tell me? NEW-MATH DROPOUT REPLY A short ton is the ton you’re familiar wit'k— 2,000 pounds. A long ton is 2,240 pounds. Question and Answer , t Are there any rules against putting up. a Christmas tree as decoration for a grave? L. L. D. REPLY Each cemetery would have its own ruling. However, Ottawa Park and Oak Hill Cemeteries don’t allow Christmas trees. The ruling states they are considered an “embellishment” whkh other lot owners might find offensive. Artificial or evergreen wreaths and blankets or real flowers are the only decorations allowed at the two City cemeteries. Other cemeteries we called said no; too. White Chapel said they discourage Christmas trees, but when an occasional small one appears for a baby or small child, it is conveniently overlooked. Better check with the cemetery you have in mind. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Retirement Vancouver (Can.) Province There are reports that Pope Paul has decided to resign at the age of 75 (Sept. 26,1072) or before that if his health fails. His Holiness is said to have ruled recently that all high Vatican officials should retire at 70 and to have urged cardinals over 70 to do the same. Now there are rumors he intends to apply himself the ruling he Imposed on others. Already there are reports he has prepared the text of the letter of his resignation and told two cardinals m uc h younger than himself of his intentions. AAA This has aroused some speculation, particularly in view of the publicity given the papacy in recent weeks. Some wonder whether a Pope can, In fact, ever give up the throne of St. Peter. In nearly 2,000 years there has been only one papal abdication. The Pope involved was Clestine V who, in 1204 found the job “out of his world” and beyond him. it it it He had been chosen by the Conclave of Cardinals when it despaired of agreeing on any Of the “recognized” candidates. It was quite by chance that someone mentioned Peter of Murrone, a revered and holy hermit. But while retirement is becoming the order of the day for aging business leaders, judges, senators and so on, should a world spiritual leader retire? Or could he? unveiled by Herbert Stein, a Brookings Institution expert who heads a group of financial advisers to Presidentelect Richard M. Nixon. Mrs. Stein feels it should be possible to adjust the federal Income surtax, recently adopted, year by year so as to keep inflation at a crawl if -not stop it. ’ A A • A" Certainly this idea merits wide public discussion. And certainly fighting inflation will be one of the Nixon administration’s most urgent jobs. It’s encouraging to see the Nixon team begin now to plan for that fight. Halt Inflation New York Daily Newt Living costs now are rising at a rate of 4.5 per cent a year. This news came down from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Such a rate of inflation is ominous. ,■ All the more timely, therefore, is a proposal THE BONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, A—T Clock Repair » Antique Clock Specialist« ; '# ' Sales & Service Sty* SitttpfMfop 1S1 S. Bate*, Birmingham 'Control of Franking Up to Congress' Past Office Changes Its Tune I WASHINGTON (AP) — The congressional mailing Post Office Department, ac- leges. ' privi- being properly used, made nol May said that after examining ' {mention of charges by Michi-past situations, he feared it cused by a Republican senator of doing hatchet work for President Johnson, said today It Was giving up its watchdog role over | could lead to constitutional problems involving possible censor- , T1» decision, which said cdn-;«an’s W W*. mafl privltega were 'N0T * RESPONSIBILITY- Democratic f to Republican “Congress has not ordered the hands next month, will benefit. dePartrnent to police the behav-He said he will press for Con-;ior of members in the use of gress to draw up its own guide-.banking privilege, nor is there any regulation under which the! Post Office Department can collect payment if such an abuse occurs,” May said. “Therefore, it is obvious that Congress never intended that the Post Office should be a collection agency regulating the I Congress. lined in the next session. During the peak of the controversy last fall over Abe Fortas’ nomination as chief justice of the United {States, the Post Office Department accused Griffin of misusing the franking privilege and said he owed the government 125,000. LED THE FIGHT , RMi Griffin led the successful fight,fuI1 P3^-to block nomination of K, «- aals-I print of a statement by Secre- * * * jtary of Agriculture Orville L. Griffin, in his statement, said [Freeman. “The issuance of a new pol-: icy is not the most satisfactory GROWING PROBLEM’ The statement said also that the department’s involvement in franking rulings has grown over the last several years from an occasional Inquiry “to the point where the mailings of a substantial number of congressmen are contin- CERAMIC TILE ALL FIRST QUALITY ixl......39* sq. ft. 426“ Great savings now on the greatest coat and jacket looks of the yearl Come see this exciting collection of plush acrylic piles, crisp wool blend plaids, wido-rib cotton corduroys. Snappy double button styles, smart classics, all the looks you want mostl Many lined with coxy pile. Some with lush fur trims. Basic and bright colors. Misses', |unior and holf sizes in this terrific collection. LIKE IT ... CHARGE ITI SHOP MON. THRU SAT.... TILL 9 P.M... . PENNYS WILL CLOSE NEW YEAR'S EVE AT 5i30 P.M.I MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER, TELEGRAPH and SQUARE LAKE RD. 3 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1,968 A Road Commission Crew Loads Salt To Fight Slippery Conditions1 Road Team Ready for Anything Operation of the Oakland1 County Road Commission during the winter months is a job for a prophet. Activity depends on what the weatherman dishes out, and everybody knows that’s an iffy proposition. * * ★ To be ready for anything is the requirement of the department. To that end the commission can mobilize 150 men in an emergency, also 87 trucks and 25 graders. ONE DAY’S WORK A big snowfall, if confined to one day, can be cleared off main roads and trunk lines in one day, according to Sol Lom-erson, chairman of the commission. It takes 2ft to three days to clear out all roads, including subdivision roads, Lomerson said. A continuing storm, he noted, has a different effect. It requires longer utilization of emergency equipment on main roads. ★ ★ * Last year the commission spent $873,000 for snow and ice removal. Of that, approximately $560,000 was spent on local and primary roads and $413,000 on state trunk lines. Hie latter sum is reimbursed by the state, Lomerson said. Exam Stalled for 2 Suspects in Break-In j Girl, 7, Killed in Fire After Rescuing Five GRINNELL'S MAGNAVO^ SPECIAL! SAVE *50! See All The Bowl Games In Thrilling Color! Magnavox COLOR TV's BIGGEST PICTURE This popular Magnavox features a BIG 295 sq. inch vivid color picture —the world's largest—yet needs -no more floor soace than most small screen comoacts? Instant automatic color, color ourifier. front-mounted concentric UHF-VHF tuners, and concealed swivel casters. Five styles. 54850 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ! CONVENIENT ACCOUNTS AVAfLAlLE G RINNELL’S The Pontiac Moll, 682-0422, Open Every Eve 'HI 9 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash)! or Budget Terms If you received Bonus or Christmas Bift of Cash... The preliminary court examination of a Pontiac man and woman charged with breaking and entering a city television store was adjourned yesterday until next Thursday. Miller C. Webb, 26, of 312 Hughes and Mrs. Billie G. Williams, 30, of 404 Central are being held In the Oakland County Jail In lieu of $5,000 bond each. * * * Webb reportedly was arrested inside Hod’s, 770 Orchard Lake, when police responded to a burglar alarm. Mrs. Williams was arrested a short time later while driving a car seen leaving the vicinity of the store. Police said it was necessary to issue a new warrant against Mrs. Williams since she "gRW a false name and address when she was arrested. She id fled herself at the time as Mary G. Williams. Police were Informed of the false Identification when anoth er woman by the same name and a similar address contacted The Pontiac Press to check the coincidence. UTICA, N.Y. (AP) - Wendy Lerch, 7, was killed in a fire in her home shortly before midnight Thursday after rescuing her four sisters and a brother. ★ * * Her mother, Mrs. John Lerch, sat hysterical on the sidewalk in a straight-back wooden kitchen chair, wrapped In borrowed blankets as firemen — fighting in subzero weather their sixth major fire of the night—put out the flames and then searched for Wendy’s body. SDS Confab On ANN ARBOR (AP) - More than 1,000 members of the Stu dents for Democratic Society are expected to be on hand today when a weeklong series of SDS meetings starts at the University of Michigan. Expected topics of discussion are the possibility of staging demonstrations at the inauguration of President-elect Richard M. Nixon and recruiting high school and more college students to join SDS. Mrs. Lerch had rescued her crippled husband, confined to a wheelchair the last three years, while Wendy got Patty Pearl, Ricky, Renee and Linda away from their home. * * ★ Fire officials said the fire was caused by a faulty heater under Lerch’s bed. He and one of the children were taken to a hospital for treatment of minor burns. * ★ * Wendy returned to the blazing house to make sure all her family was safe and was trapped on the second floor at the top of the stairs. The Lerch family lost s son In Vietnam about a year ago. shop at Robert Hall forexciting clothing values for the entire famllyl AUTOMATIC OPERATOR Raynor* solid Mata alactianlc •afoty faaturo Map* tho door instantly upon contact with any yaar. Moreover, the Raynor llactrank Door Operator I* packaged and ready far Da- PONTIAC 200 North Saginaw PREI PARKING far Abano Average She and hceatlenerValecy Vtalt Qar Big Met* Shop et I *051 Orend fiver er SSOO Van Dyke 18-1350 071-2111 Open Mon.-tat., M Bive Yourself a Bift of GR0WM6 INTEREST *■ Sr Put It To Work In a SAVINGS ACCOUNT Any Of The 12 Offices Of Pontiac State Bring It In . • • Well Give U Our Greatest Interest Tkm Bank On The -CROW 12 Conventent Offices to Serve You. *. Main Office Saginaw at Lawianoa . Open Dally I a.at. Member Federal BopaeN huarsnu OorpotwHon with Bopoetts in.ured to tiMUJl Pontiac State Bank \ 4- ' S' ' ' r, ! THE PONTIAC PRESS. FBIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 Maripe Mauled by Viet Tiger May Get Its Skin as Souvenir Da Nang, Vietnam (AP) - A young Marine who waa mauled by a tiger 8unday in the "northwest corner of South Vietnam may get its,|R|n souvenir.‘ ' 1 U.S. Mfrlae-spokesmen said yesterday that if the tropical heat and soae. other .proMems permit, ttm^dcjM -wifi tie preserved, they still declined to identify the Marine. He Was listed in good condition in a hospital in Quang Tri north of Da Nang. A ★ ★ the latest tiger incident occurred while a six-man reconnaissance ‘ team was on a mission Sunday abuot six miles east of the Laos border in northern-most Quang Tri Province. They had completed their task for the day and woe waiting for a helicopter to pick them up. It’S A TIGER!’ “Suddenly I heard somebody scream,” said Pfo. Thomas E Shainlin of Gilbertsville, Pa. “Then somebody else was yelling, 'It’s a tiger! It’s a --Pic. Roy Hogan, of Nacogdoches, Tex., was next to the Marine who. was attacked. “I jumped and saw* the tiger On my partner. All I could think about war to get the tiger awayjhe was hit, die tiger dropped from him. I jumped at the tiger the Marine. v and the cat jerked his head and| The Marine staggered out of jumped into a bomb crater lO thg bomb crater and “looked yards( away, still holding his'dazed and asked what had Prey " happened,” said Pfc. Maurice QUtCK PURSUIT |M. Howell of Richmond, Ky. The Marines quickly pursued. */.-Wf-. W: the tiger to the crater and Hertvas given first aid. treat-opened fire on the animal. When I men*' for lacerations and bites on the neck, and a helicopter soon arrived to pick him up, the rest of the team and the dead tiger. , > , • The incident took place about 10 miles south of the spot where a Marine was killed by a tiger Nov. IS.. - Three weeks ago a group of Marines was sent out with two South Vietnamese hunters to try to find the killer tiger and three other believed in the area. They had no ]uck. It was not known if the tiger slain Sunday might have been one of the tour targets of the hunt. There are 28 Republican governors in the nation. FRIDAY NITE & SATURDAY ONLY til 9 p.m. Here's The Sele With The Difference! BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE We are overhaded with hundreds of floor samples, demonstrators, dlsccmtln« ued pieeee and display We are ready to take Inventory in all our stores AND .we need the space ...so we must clear fast! We snapped up some sensational manufacturers' closeouts and surplus factory merchandise... Choose from FAMOUS NAMES • Take your pick from world famous makers: Bassett, Kroehler, Thomasville, Sealy, American of Martinsville, Western and hundreds more. • Top appliance makers Include: RCA Victor, Admiral, Westinghouse, Norge, Olympic, Speed Queen, Detroit Jewel, Famous carpet mills include: Mohawk, Dupont 501 Nylons, Herculon, Olefin, Bigelow, Stephen-Leedom, Roman, etc. • Charge it on easy Instant-Credit Plush Pillow-Back Mediterranean ss SOFA with TABLES attached 1329.95 Modern All-Foam Channel-Back jf SOFAS $166 DEEP PILE PLUSH 100% NYLON BROADLOOM A yd. adv': 'STRATFORD' Mediterranean cvSEo SOFAS $229.95 $188 25% Thomasville & American of Martinsville deluxe BEDROOMS selectId pieces All-Foam Fruitwood Mediterranean COVERED SOFAS * $16?. 95 $133 QUEEN-SIze J^f. BEDDING SETS includes: 50* mattress and box spring BOTH ST7 PIECES # VALUES TO $129.95 9x12ft RUGS All types, colors, patterns All top mills 559 Reg. 8.95 Miracle Indoor-Outdoor Kitchen CARPET resists water, S™ sun, rot, mildew dm IMPORTED! INLAID MARBLE-TOP TABLES Choice $40 of styles TAfO DISCONTINUED famous ‘LANE' SPANISH and WALNUT TABLES 15% off ' CloseouH Open Slock Colonial WHITE BEDROOM Pi eat your choice e dresser bases _ ^ • chests e desks (1 O e bookcase, panel bade ■ w RIDE.. . FLY... SKI IF YOU MUST... BUT DON’T MISS THE BUYS YOU’LL FIND AT PEOPLES ‘2-DAY’ CLEARANCE SALE • Starts Tonite at all Storesl • Thousands of Bargains not listedl • Charge it on easy Instant-Credit GUARANTEED 15% to 40% OFF! CALLING all thrift-minded shoppers to be on hand for the next TWO DAYS and NITES ... for our BIG ... “REALLY BIG” money-saving January Pre-INVENTORY SALE that will have the whole town buzzing! Now... from our Regular Stock ... other merchandise that Arrived-Too-Late for Christmas selling... Odds & Ends... Floor Samples... the greatest array of quality furniture, custom styled furnishings you eyed all year long — at unprecedented low Pre-Inventory Clearance Sale prices. If you need anything in home furnishings ... carpeting ... appliances... this action sale is for you. Choose from famous names you’ll be proud to have in your home. Remember... Just TWO DAYS ONLY... You’ll find everything for the home at the LOWEST prices of the year. OUTFITTING COMPANY the m furniture peoplet OPEN SUNDAY Telegraph & Square Lake Roads Miracle Mile Shopping Center OTHER STORES IN DETROIT • ANN ARBOR • FLINT e JACKSON • PORT HURON • TOLEDO Apt. siz'd Foam Decorator L0VESEATS $23?.95 $99 'SEALY' FULL-SIZE 6-in deep foam QUILTED Mattress & Box Spring BOTH $77 PLASTIC-TOP Modern 3-Piece BEDROOM t' doubledrssssr, $199 t’ mirror A bed ^ | Contemporary Pecan Triple Dresser 4-pc. BEDROOM trlpls drssssr, mjhJF JT mirror, chest > JAM and bad TiVV OPEN STOCK Mediterranean Bedroom Pieces choice e single dresser ejr W e bed, deekt )Kf| e chests Ull 7J''/ 'BASSETT' Modern Walnut 4-pc. BEDROOM triple drssssr. m 5% 4% <% mirror, chost m M m k and bad SmegoS CLOSEOUTI Chromcreft A Queen City DINETTES 15 to 24% REDUCTIONS adv.' 'R0WE# SPANISH RUBBER SOFAS with 2-slste END TABLES ffc $399 adv!' 'KINGSLEY' French Provincial DELUXE SOFAS i»I’m 5106 You Got BOTHl FULL OR TWIN TUFTLESS Mattrais & Box Spring 2-pcs. $59 JUST 42 - HOLLYWOOD BED OUTFITS includes: twin mattress, box spring on legs and plastic headboard $79*95 $55 DISCONTINUED APPLIANCES Choose from 1000’s of 1965 modtls SAVE! A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 8BgjgMI Navy Operations Chief Speaks Pueblo Crew Wont Be Prejudged' WASHINGTON (AP) - Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chief of naval operations, says “I'm not; going to prejudge” whether the officers and men of the U.S. in-1 telligence-gathering ship Pueblo1 conducted themselves properly while held captive by North Korea. | At least two admirals have re-: ferred publicly to Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, the Pueblo’s skipper, and the other 81 surviving crew members as heroes. ★ * ★ ‘‘Some people have expressed personal opinions,” Moorer acknowledged when asked about this in an Interview. He indicated he was not criticizing them. The Navy’s top admiral insisted expression of personal opinions by high ranking officers will not impair a Navy court of inquiry's ability to reach an objective judgment. CONFIDENT’ Moorer said "I am confident” the Pueblo did not enter North Korea’s claimed territorial waters. If the ship had done so, Bucher would have been violating his sailing orders to stay at least 13 miles clear of North Korean ter-'told the Pueblo’s crewmen ear-ritory. lier this week that “You are re- A Navy court of Inquiry atjgarded as a group of young San Diego under Vice Adm.|heroes.” H.G. Bowen probably will open CODE OF CONDUCT proceedings in two weeks after) Adm. m. Rosen. the recuperating crew has had berg has spoken of Bucher as ‘a hero among heroes.” some leave. Pacific Fleet commander . Adm. John G. Hyland, who will Among other things, the court review the findings of the eourt,lwl!1 consider whether the crew men lived up to the mode of conduct which specifies how American military men shall handle themselves when prisoners of a hostile nation A key section of the code states that: “When questioned, should become a prisoner of war, I am bound to give only name, when the North Koreans re-reans had beaten and terrorized leased film and tape recordings L-gw members, of Pueblo crewmen allegedly Moorer has m ^ Navy' confessing to espionage Md wffl g0 into a range aggression. . of matters in the Pueblo case, film, Bucher was •T’V He declined to discuss details, saying, “I couldn’t anticipate what the president of> the court will do.” In recorded as admitting the Pueblo was well within the North Korean-territorial sea limits. * * * Also, relatives said they had received letters from members of the crew in which they wrote of their guilt. However, many of the relatives said the language in the letters was stilted ural and strained. And one photograph of several crewmen sent to a relative seemed to show some of men making a gesture with A ROUTINE THING’ He said the Court of inquiry L “a routine tiring” which is conducted whenever the Navy loses a ship. service number and date of that is gtSterally consid-birth. I will evade answering ^ an obsce*. moi{m aigni. ADM. THOMAS H. MOORER further questions to the utmost of my ability. I will make no oral or written statements disloyal to my country and its allies or harmful to their cause.” This code was drawn up in 1955 following instances in the Korean war in which Americans signed statements- critical of their country while imprisoned in North Korea.' There were several occasions tying defiance. EXPLAINS CONFESSIONS In a news conference after being freed, Bucher told n men he had surrendered the Pueblo to avoid useless bloodshed. He also said the alleged confessions were made to “save some people from some very serious misfortunes.” Bucher had said the North Ko- YOU BLOW YfHMI HORN We’ll Handle the Foed! For Holiday Parties, CALLi ICHICKEH SSLIBBT 1302 W. Huron - Call 682*3800 500 N. Perry - Call 334*4959 DELIVERY AVAILABLE FOR REAL SATISFACTION in your Food Shopping j w%\ "SHOP THE STORE ^ ■ WITH THE SPARTAN ?/V ON THE DOOR'! AP Wirtphoto 70 POUNDS LIGHTER — John Higgins, a fireman on the captured USS Pueblo, stands on San Diego Naval hospital grounds yesterday, showing how he looks after losing 70 pounds during his 11 months as a prisoner of the North Koreans. According to the Navy, the 6-foot-5 seaman weighed 280 pounds when captured. N. Korea Piet 'Helps' Gl Shed 70 Pounds &AN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) —'milk and juices. In five days he The low-fat diet of his North Ko-jhad gained five pounds, rean captors helped John Hig- LIKES T() EAT gins shed unwanted weight — . . ,, . , about 70 pounds. J| 1 d ,lke lo eat evcry kind of Behind the walls that held food there is," he said. America’s USS Pueblo crew-1 “oat, 0,iBhls *, 7 TP “ men, his mates tried to Joke in lost » to 4° P°unds lnMth® 1 their misery by calling Higgins Poimd a *£"■*"«■. Xth,** “Slenderella" con?‘*tet.ofJ* it it it I food of the season—during win- The 6-foot-5 sailor from St. Jo-|,er we had tu™‘P8 a ,ot- ,In1th® seph, Mo., still was no 97-pound su'nm*r we had some Wnd of weakling. He weighed 280 sP^ach plant and we had a lot pounds when the U.S. intelli- °* cabbage, gence ship was seized last Jan.| ®“‘: mo8t ^ 1 was S0UP 23. When he reached the 121st With a little rice, evacuation hospital in Ascom1 “H only the Korean cooks had City, South Korea, last Sunday,*0™ pagination Higgins -with the other 81 survivors, Hig- sa d San Diego Naval Hospl gins weighed 210 tal, where the Pueblo men were There, he chowed down 0n tak,en Tuesduy for medical tests such American nonsolids as and offWal ^e8t,onin* chicken noodle soup, coffee, NO HAUTE CUISINE — yd ni{e t0 try turnips again. I'd like to try them cooked with of just boiled in soup. These guys just chopped them up and threw them in the water and let them simmer for a while. “I thought I'd be weak when got back, but strangely enough can still crush a tin can with my hands," Higgins said yesterday. Nobody calls Engineman Higgins Slenderella to his face any more. GROSSE POINTE FARMS (AP)—Services for George Ashley Schemm, who founded and served as president and board chairman of the Bin-Dicator Co., will be held Saturday in Grosse Pointe's Christ Episcopal Church. Schemm died Wednesday at the age of 68. FIRST IN COLOR TV Advanced 1969 Color TV now specially priced for the Holiday!,, lowert priced blg-*creen Color console ever from RCA. Handsome Contemporary lines, gian 23" diagonal 295 square Inch picture! $44g05 • SALES • SERVICE STEFMSKI Radio ft TV 1187 W. HURON FE 2-6967 OPEN FRIDAY 9 JLN. - 9:00 P.M. OPEN SATURDAY 9 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. OPEN MONDAY 9 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. OPEN TUESDAY 9 A.M. - 5:30 P.M. CLOSED NEW YEAR’S DAY HAPPY NEW YEAR Phone FE 58114-5 ORCHARD FURNITURE COMPANY 164 ORCHARD LAKE AViil • PONTIAC 2 Blocks West of South WMo Track Drivo • No Money Down • 24 Months to Pay • 90 Days Cash O Froa Dolivory • Fro* Parking o Good Sarvico ‘DEAL DIRECT PAY AT THE STORE NO FINANCE CO. INVOLVED' THE PONTIAC PRESS,FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 Right to Counsel Ruled Limited in m»il©r Coses LANSING (AI*^ Where theGeorge Mashlakjtan, defendant in a criminal t$s$ is ticketed for operating a lodging charged only with a mlade-jhouse without a license. Mash-meanor, the judge is not re-'lakjian had applied for il li-quired to tell him of his right1 cense renewal two years before to an attorney, the State Court receiving the ticket, but the City of Appeals has ruled. of Detroit had taken no action. Upholding. the Detroit Re-| a * f a corder’s Court conviction of! y the city fails to act on an three women for accosting and apolication. the court said, “It sohciting, the appeals court said!Should not ^ ^ to say that the State Constitution guaran- iicensee>s r^ts are' at an end tees all criminal defendants the and that it Can thus put the re-right to counsel. '• jnewal applicant but of business * * ♦ {without notice of hearing. But, it added, the cohstttii- “It is not too much to ex-tion does not require a judge to pect,” the court added, “that advise the defendant of that; the city which series to enforce right. The requirement, it saidJthe law itself obey the law.” is found in the State's Qdpm ' -------- Rules,'and applies only in felony mkh A—ll Man Charged in Girl's Death $1 Million to Help Poor Buy Detroit Weighs Housing Plan SLof far discua-j _ , ■ * • >sion today by the city s Common The arraignment took place Council. The court *also held that a railroad which is not incorporated in Michigan dobs not have express legal authority to condemn lands in the state. The ruling reverses a Saginaw County condemnation case previously derided in favor of die Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., which is incorporated in Virgin- Lalce Levels Vary DETROIT behind wefced doors after De-j ~ _ Si , . ---- trait Reconier’s irrimhartiL?* mwey would be spent on|ing building code enforcement Court Judge Douglas Paterson^*? *7O0 P'antts ^ * the area, giving ^ea resi- ordered the room cleared when? re8?ents of the neigh-]dents more voice In/police and a rdadve of the slain girl1*0^00** would c°me from, public school affaira Increasing lunged toward Robert BrvMitl**16 federal government as part Job training programs and ac* t ... ■'1 cess to public rarvice agencies and educational and health proposals. Copies of the plans, which must be approved by federal officials before Detroit gets funds, were distributed to Council members Thursday. Council-NEW YORK (AP) — Most of men promptly asked David Most NY Students Prefer a Vacation accused hi the murder. Bryant stood mute on the charge of slaying Nina Wencher as she waited tor midnight and tiie right to open her Christmas presents on Christmas Eve. A plea of innocent was entered for 'ji» '., Bryant was hdtf without bond for examination, set for Jan. s.'New York’s 1.1 million students Cason, director of the Model nnturnwn rair :■» passing up voluntary school- Neighborhood program, to ap- “t , u 'days during their Christmas va-lpear today to “discuss" the POUce said witnesses had told]cation aimed at making up time;proposals. teachers’ them that shortly before the|iost during three shooting, Bryant had been or-strikes this fail dered from the building by Ni-| Schools were open Thursday, ®W stepfather, Theo Hodges, but attendance averaged only and that Bryant had threatened I ss per cent. *T to return with a gun. - if * | * The fatal shots were fired; But 80 per cent of the teachers reported for work, the board of education said, taking advan- Qpmma From All The Employees of PLAZA pharmacy; 3538 Pontiac Lake Rd., Pontiac Phone 673-1267 FREE DELIVERY 24 Houri A Day Service . .oft • * City Permit #1874 City officials must submit plans to Washington by Tuesday, to meet federal deadlines. < Detroit’s Model Neighborhood; has between, 120,000 and 150,000 residents, about half black and' half white. The $1 million in grants proposed would be used for down] tage of a chance to make some {payments, closing costs and the! of the pay lost when they first year of property taxes on struck. I homes purchased. Biff WflH CONFIDENCE AT BILL PETRUSHA & SONS You Scratch Our Back-Will Scratch Yours We Would Rather Not Have To Pay The City Tax For A Huge Inventory.. So We've Cut Our Prices To Rock Bottoin To Clear Our Stock! PIMSHMUSE SPECIALS! Everything In our stoek it drastically discounted. Nothing held baek. AUTOMATIC RANGES $|gg REFRIGERATORS 2-Door Priced From: >215 AUTOMATIC WASHERS 2-Speed Prieed From: *115 AUTOMATIC DRYERS gw Priced From: RCA COLOR IV SPECIALS! Sove up to $200 on mony consol* color TVs ond stereos Priced From: ALL DISPLAY MODELS SOLD AT BIG DISCOUNTS TERRIFIC BUYS ON ALL STEREOS IN OUR STOCK NOW IS THE TIME to buy that STEREO OR COLOR TV YOU HAVE WAITED FOR! HELP YOURSELF T» THESE SHUT DEALS! OVER ISO SETS TO CHOOSE FROM! No Down Payment 36 Months to Pay ★ PLENTY OF FREE PARKING fMPifamfio & $oh4- TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER - FE 3-7079 1550 Union Lake Read, Union Lake 363-6206 ★ OPEN EVERY NIQHTTIL9 Tonite Until 9, Saturday, 9:30 Til 5:30 We are winding up the yearwith the biggest bargains of our final sale ... be sure to get your share—NOW! More Price-Slashing on Our Entire RemandM Stoek GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE Plenty of come items .. . few of ethers. You cannot buy a single clothing article in our store at ’regular’ price. Save on EVERY PURCHASE! EnryHiiag GoM-HriMag Raid Rack Hera In Typioal Exam#.. of How YOU SAVE! All LOUNGING ROBES f Original $7.95 to (25 M REDUCED to $J.M to $12.50 M Still a good .oloctlon of pattern, and color, but ir i not event tix.. 4 /tw All SPORT SHIRTS 1 Orlginol $5.95 to $16.95 REDUCED to $2.18 to $f.4f Long and .hort .loovo. for right now or next Summer wear. / 2 Off All DRESS SHIRTS 1 Original $5.95 to (8.95 REDUCED to $t.M to $441 Plain white and color*. Grokon .lie range. Include extra large .lie*. f2? All TUXEDO SHIRTS 0 Orlginol $7.50 to $13.50 | REDUCED to $1.71 to $S.N Regular and turtleneck ityle*. Choo.e from our entiro remaining .tack. /2 Off All PAJAMAS-NOW 1 Original $5.95 to $13.50 REDUCED to $2.11 to $$.1S Button front or middy *tylo«. Choico of winter and .ummer Coats that make o very-now appearance in bright or neutral cotton corduroy, .cotton suededoth Clenoit pile, fake furs and woolens, all in our collection, key-noted by exceptional mid-winter savings. J . Maple 336 W Birmingham Fifteen-month-old Ivette Matos stands between her great-greatgrandfather (left) Louis Marotz,91, and her jgreat-grandfather, Edwin King, 74, of Vernon Street for this five-generatidn photo taken while Pontiac Prott Photo on a Christmas visit here with her mother, Mrs. Edwin Matos of .Puerto Rico. At right, rear, is grandfather, Edwin L. King, also of Vernon Street. Mr. Marotz lives on South Anderson Street. Special Care Is Required Leathers are a few suggestions on for leather: Keep your leather clothes on a padded hanger, out of plastic bags. l.ilcp furs, leather must breathe, and hanging in a plastic bag tends to discolor it. sver store suedes spotted by stains, because they attract mirths which nibble at the nap, leaving little tracks. Never More leathers in a damp cellar or a hot attic. ★ * ★ A scarf should be worn with suede jackets or coats to prevent hair oil from discoloring the collar. Never buy a leather garment that fits too tight, this will cause the skins to stretch. Seams can always be taken in a bit, but never, let out 'Without making stitch marks that are Impossible to remove. | - To press a suede or leather {garment at home, set the iron on its lowest setting* never steam! Use heavy brown paper between the iron and the | surface of leather or suede and I press with constant motion; avoid overheating, i Although leather won't be harmed by light rain, don’t .wear it as a raincoat; if it 'should get wet, be sure to dry it at room temperature. Be sure your dry cleaners will send your garment to a reputable cleaner who specializes in fine leathers. And above all, remember they are a luxury tp wear and own. go you must be willing to spend the extra money necessary to have a first class cleaning. Cose No. H-543 Don't Die Too Young By GEORGE W. CRANE have hardening of the artery ,CASE H-543: Marilyn R., walls, with a reduction in their aged If, is a college coed diameter. | VDr. Crane," she began, ^ requires more pressure and a faster pulse rate, so your normal - blood pressure of •possibly 120-75 may zoom to 200-OS. With this almost doubling of it is obvious why strokes of apoplexy occur, for | an auto tire with double its proper air pressure may blow out when you hit a bump. I Drugs and even sleeping pills can likewise wear out your heart - prematurely, for they must be destroyed in the liver "Daddy died of a heart attack « month ago. j “But he was only 46 years | old! I “And he seemed in perfect, health until that | very day when] it occurred. “So what could1 have caused such an early death?’ I Heart and blood vessel, Birthday Bargain Really Cut-Rate INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. W -Mrs. Charles Ober went shopping for a birthday present for her husband. She bougHt an abandoned 100-year-old school house for only 313. 1 She admitted she didn't know heart. So does. lack of salt via what to do with the building excessive sweating. which was last used in the And Worry , apprehension, 1870s. The structure was tn the fear, anger or other emotions path of an interstate highway will exhaust those two and a and hence was offered for sale, half billion heart beats ahead of Mrs., Ober said she couldn’t reschedule. sist the bargain price. damage (apoplexy) c a u s e and exreted via the kldneys but 1,000,000 deaths each year in the the heart muat meet thls extra iU.S.A. prodding. I Yet all types of cancer, com- c {f . Droducta like tea !.,$ Sf”. fftgfeSS cote i At birth, God Almighty figuratively places 2 Vi billion heart beats in our “cardiac drinks, also up your FASHIONS FOR THE NEW YEAR CASUAL - AFTER FIVE Op»n Mon. and Frl. til 9 p.m. bank account.’’ I If we lead a temperate life, free from unnecessary tensions, •anxieties, stimulants and 'obesity, they should last us to the age of SO years. I But if we “race the motor" and use them faster, we may die at 46, like Marilyn’s daddy. I To help your heart and thus [hoard those two and half billion heart beats wisely, sit down' when you work, if possible. And while reading or viewing ITV, keep your feet on a hassock! | For when you stand, your) heart must pump your blood, maybe six feet in the vertical! and this will require possibly two or three beats more per minute. I When you sit in a chair, your six-foot height drops to about four and a half feet. But with feet on a hassock (or desk or windowsill), it is only three feet. | The least strain on the heart jig while you are in the horizontal posture, so the main purpose of sleep is thus to rest heart and salvage about 3,000 heart beats each night. I Obesity will usually zoom your pulse rate and thus consume those two and a half .billion beats many years ahead of time. For it requires three miles of newly sprouted blood vessels to service each five pounds of extra fatl I So your faithful heart must beat harder and faster to keep up the circulation in those additional miles of “pipes.” | Smoking likewise speeds up your pulse rate as much as 20 beats per minute. And this acceleration may last for 20 minutes after you have finished !your cigarette! I Tobacco addicts also tend to Jctfuuvuj Cfea/awce- Roll End Balances 1511 Elizabeth Lake Road 682-9581 FLOOR COVERIMi Alvin's of Pontiac, Rochester, Oakland Mall She Ca/lMACt/ Adorn Cape^io' values to $21 Hate, $1290 il$1/-VnA Knit £uJU cu Regular to $125 $39 «*79 Winte/v Regular to $1 25 $49 „ $99 Regular to $290 $109 $219 Fuji Turned/ Cooti Regular to $200 $99 to $159 Regular to $475 $169$369 ^pohhim/v >KIRTS-SWEATERS-SLACKS TOP Regular to $24 *6 to $18 CoAvud oundVmAy V/imam Rogular to $26 4* O O Rogularto $55 *21 .. Rogular to $125 0 OO CO e -Heaheal Levina Andmty VetdaVehA TmIWI (7 CoWlt/Uj (dress) Fmt Editim (casuals) were to $45 were to $35 were to $20 were to $1 7 Tom cund Cowdty and ThjMjpbM CoAimh $259° $2l’o *1590 $n9° $]]90 $99CH Shoes in Pontiac and Oakland Mall Only THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 Ml mm MRS. TOBY L. PITSER m >ER Toby Lee Pitsers Wed Orchard Lake Community Church was the setting for vows spoken Saturday evening by Durelie Diane Lazin and Toby, Lee Pitser. * * ★ ! Attired in a princess-style gown of peau de soie with ac-| cents of lace and seed pearls, the bride was attended by Patricia Brown of Salt Lake City, Utah, as honor maid, with bridesmaids Jill Lawson, Susan Elliot and Sandra Spencer. Her short illusion veil was held with a crown of pearls and lace and she carried a bouquet' of white roses, carnations and holly. ♦ a * Randal Hogan was best man for the son of the William Pitsers Of Keego Harbor.! I Ronald Norton and Michael I Cady ushered. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Marie Lazin of Leroy Lane, West Bloomfield I Township. A reception in the Bloomfield Community Centre honored the newlyweds. Paula Rampart, daughter of Mr. and. Mrs. Mitchell Rampart of McCormick Drive, will be installed as Honored Queen of Bethel No. 4(rof the Interna? tional Order of Job’s Daughters, Saturday. The ceremony will be held irf the Roosevelt Temple on State Street. Others taking office are: Mary Jo Driller, senior princess; Candy Elmer, junior princess; Janet Lamberson, guide; and Jean Ann Edward, marshal. Hospital Needs Patient Escorts The patient entering a hospital may feel apprehension, resignation, or despair, but a cheerful greeting can change his fears to hope. The Oakland County Volunteer Bureau in Birmingham is seek-, ing women who can provide this friendly companionship while they escort incoming patients through the admissions procedures at a local hospital, a a * I The volunteer will escort pa-| tlents to X-ray or lab tests and then direct them to their rooms. I She will be able to put patients at ease by answerin'* their 1 questions and providing information about hospital services. a a a If you enjoy meeting people and would like to serve in this way,.contact the Bureau. KINNEY'S' SHOES For ike Whole Fmmlly PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE ; Ladies' SPORTSWEAR Rag. to $18 ! Ladies' FUR TRIM COATS [ Rag. to $135 i Ladies' Untrimmed WHITER COATS Rag. to $65 Ladies' BETTER DRESSES Rag. to $40 STAPP'S Semi-annual shoe. Sale in Full Swing ... To It Your Children Bring! DRESSY PARTY SHOES Patents In black, white, and a rainbow of other fashion colors. Straps and pumps for the Infants sizes 6 through growing girls' size 8. Regularly from $7,50 to $11.50. GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES Wonderful values in children's, misses, oxfords and straps. Choose from many, many styles and a good assortment of colors, too. Sizes 8Vb to 3. Were regularly priced at $8.50 and $9.99. TOPCOATS Reg. $70 to $150 SUITS Reg. $70 to $150 Discontinued Styles STRIDE RITE Values — Bargains and buys In boys* and girls' styles. Oxfords, straps, party sitoes ... a variety of styles and colors Otlldren's sites 8Vb to 3 and larger. STAPP'S FONTIAC STOtt Ml W. Huron et Tel.eraet, u. s«iu Hmirt Phene S32-320S SPORT COATS Selected from stock, Reg. $35 to $75 Boys' and Girls' SHOWSUITS Entire Selection, Staes 2 to 12, 3 to 6x, Reg. $14 to $30 *50 .*110 *50 , *123 *20 ,*63 *11 ,.*20 HUSH PUPPIES DRESS or CASUAL Value* to 14.99 ... . 7.90 MISS AMERICA DRESS Values to 14.99... 8.90 LIFE STRIDE DRESS Values to 15.99... 11.90 NATURAUZER CASUALS Values to 15.99... 11.90 NATURAUZER DRESS Values to 19.99... 13190 MEN'S PEDW^N f Values to 15.99 |f90 MEN'S SHOES HUSH PUPPIES Values to 11,99... 8.90 COAT and COAT SETS*12*V27N Entire Selection, Reg. $18 to $39 PORTAGE, ROBLEE Valuos to 20,99.... 12.90 P0RT0-PED Values to 26.99. 10.90 ALLEN TEMPLETON Values to 26.99 .. . 16.90 NUNN BUSH Values to 33.99. 19.90 CHILDREN'S FAMOUS BRAND SHOES Discontinued Styles and Cohn •BUSTER BROWN MM m oft •HUSH PUPPIES ip; 5TV • ROBIN HOOD TIT1 • BLOOMFIELD MIRACLf MILE w THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 B—-S Bridge Tricks From Jacobys tional values and no desire to merely have bid two no-trump Marriage licenses William E. Lawton Jr., Livonia and Diana L,. Carrvthera, Farmington. Gaorga C. Carlyon, Farmington and Mayrion M. Condon, Troy. Gaorga E. R. Dlahnor, Ml Wuhrook ind Kathy D. Johnson, Ml Wesbrook. Wayno A. Bombards, Orb Sharyl A. Marsh, OrtonvIHa. .David R. Lang, Holly and Linda F. tfcrSg».y" Orion ROBIN MALONE By Bob lwjth burial in Dryden Romeo; a son, William H. of Education, died today. He was!grandchildren; and 12 great-Center Cemetery, D r yd en Macomb; a sister, Mrs. Dan of First Baptist1 grandchildren. Township. iBeetham of Romeo; seven ... ■■ Mr Havens died yesterday.1 grandchildren; and 14 great- ' He was Mrmerly a farmer. | grandchildren. . > | Surviving are his wife,1 Memorials may be sent to the dtPTl OrCI Gladys; a daughter, Mrs. Ida donor's favorite charity. L.y\ rv vi stroup of j^pgg,.. four S0nSii member of First Baptist grandcl Church. Surviving are his wife, Lillian; a daughter, Mrs. L. Jay Clark of Waterford Township; two grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. LBJ, Advisers Work on National Budget MyrOn D. J. Church l ' Service for Myron D, J. Church. 66, of 304 Pioneer will, be 1 p.m. Monday at the Scientist Is Dead at 69 Lewis and Ross, both of Al-| Mrs. Harold Stevens mant, Ronald of Port Huron and Harold of Tulare, Calif.; and U1 WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — grandchildren. {Service for Mrs. Harold (Bonnie J.) Stevens, 45, of 10620 Oakford James L. Dunning Lju be 2 p.m. Sunday at the n- n ciimnort «v . . „ 'Elton Black Funeral Home with Donelson-Johns Funeral Home ecutive.vice president and act- Dunning^lf ^AltT Lakeview i b‘^jal ‘cf^^d^^terdav with burial in White Chapel ing director of the Pinellast Mrs. IStevens died yes£rday _ WASH.no™ (UP..—Pre»-|Council * Economic H « uetec-i mas. et problems the most diffi- f c0I.r0W a» « D m biological research'and scientific live Charles P. Whitlock, 46 of a‘arf Pa[‘ uThe ch,ef executive got off cult ’ he faces in the waning ^ugrdavatthefuneral home director of Biological Produc- d|gi§ durin* Wor,d War 11 ‘hat wry comment yesterday as days of his administration, is Saturday at the L “ ifo win ««n‘and Development Section he worked through a round of drafting the economic message Surviving are s w , before moving to Florida, meetings with Arthur Okun, and analyses he will deliver ® : a son’ Robert M °‘ * * * Promoted to detective sergeant to replace Maur as bureau executive will be Clarkston. durin* In addition to his service with the sheriff's department, Whitlock was a Pontiac policeman for two years, the chief investigator for the county prosecu- Woman Held for Trial in Crash in Area Mate's Death Injures Three, A Pontiac woman was bound over to Oakland County Circuit Court yesterday to stand trial Blood Donors Given Appeal A special appeal for Mood shortly after submitting his last S$foo JSrs^includhw Service was from tha R' G & budget to Congress Jan. 13. wmiam r of Pomtec and tS G‘ R Harrls Funeral H°mes W f Pont,ac’ ana two Inc., Detroit, Tuesday morning, grandchildren. Surviving are his wife, Audrey, and a daughter, Stephanie, and a son Timothy, -• , both at home. Service for Mrs. Charles (Rosa) Edson, 82, of 49 N.-MONTANA GRADUATE Midland will be 1:30 p.m.I Dr. Stimpert, a graduate of budget to Congress ★ * * j Involved in yesterday’s sessions were Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford; Deputy Defense Chief Paul Nitze; Budget Director Charles Zwick; the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and De- Mrs. Charles Edson suss Michigan's Finest Jewelers Invest Your Christmas Bonus In A Beautiful Diamond fense Comptroller Robert Moot, tomorrow' at Voorhees-Siple University of Montana, received ^ ^ # . IllUUUI1 7vvra*u"/ 1 One Cr/f/co//y |[or1/ec?nd1-degrfekmurderK ‘he BTw^TimEdto «irPMUac> / knife slaying of her husband, area residents today by| _ , .. . . .1 . * * .. * _ .. I Oakland County American Red One of three persons injured At the same time, Pontiac cross officials. I M59 Project to Be Delayed Chapel with burial in Mount a microbiology certificate from Avon Cemetery, Rochester. the Pasteur Institute in Paris, i Mrs. Edson. a retired France. He also attended the employe of the Riker Building, University of Southern died yesterday. California Medical School. _ . . _ ________ , n In Helena, Mont., he organ- Surviving we three sons, J O . lecture of Pontiac, DonMd V. of Lake abo copses in bac- Onon and Herbert of biology as special professor at City; a daughter, Mrs. Nina „ » m a collision Wednesday in .Municipal Judge Cecil McCal-| ^ a result of the nu epldemic Pontiac Township is reported in lum set bond at 82,000 f°r and the normal holiday slump critical condition in Pontiac I Mrs. Mary F. Thomas, 49, of donations the Red Cross General Hospital. 1543 California. She had been Rlood Center’s inventory is at a Undergoing treatment in the'held without bond on an open verv iow ievei acoorclinxr to r- * a n • fj , *1“” Carroll College intensive care ward is Leon'charge of murder. imter OakS fftnil Contractors Requ.red aarCn;! * * * Mattieny, 24, of 2045 Opdyke, * * * manager, southeastern to File Rights Form a sister- nine Vamtehildren; From 1948 to 1954 he was Pontiac Township, according tol Mrs. Thomas is accused of Michigan chapter, American 9 m ■ 8,s‘er- "•"« ^anacma specia, lecturer for Wayne State a hospital spokesman. ikllling her 53-year-old husband, Red Cross. , d 20 gg0 lUniversity and the University of * * * iGus, during an argument the * * * | The question of equal op- Herbert G. Francis Michigan. He was injured when a car evening of Dec. 11 or the morn- Pontiac residents may donate portunlty employment has i In 1963 he moved with his » y/- 11 M i Mrn?,of Dec' blood Monday at the Red Cross forced a five-week postpone-i c-rvir® for Herhert G Fran- farnily from Waterford of 2111 Galloway, Pontiac| He was stabbed with a six- Bloodmobile at the Pontiac1 ment of a scheduled Jan. 8 bid-Li. <57 n» 1015 Lochaven Township to St. Petersburg,! Township, collided with , tow inch bread knife in the arm state Hospital from 10 a m. to 4 letting on some- $5.8 million wi.pJI:,, T„wnshin will be i nhere he became director of; ^C^d«rmjennb)jRJCh^fBjt0n’a nd ncar the collarbone Pm. (worth of highway work in the tomorrow at Elton Black .scientific operations and ex- 21,0 3604 Baldwin Oxford on * A * Requirements for donation [state, the State Highway Com- Unten LakeVutive vice president of Opdyke north of Pontiac Road. When police arrived at the include good health, that an in-mission said yesterday. Luh knriai in Oakland Hill* Germfree Products Inc. Miracle and Matheny’s wife, couple's home they found dividual be between 18 and 60 The widening and resurfacing Milnriair.rdAn.Nnvi 1 Wanda, are reported ImThomas dead in a sitting posi-{years old and weigh more than of M59 at Duck Lake Road in “emOT,ai "araena> ________________________ satisfactory condition. |tion in the bedroom and his wife no pounds. Highland Township will be af- * * * sitting in a living room chair. I * * * fected by the delay. Bolton, Carl Healy, 26, of 525^ * * * I Information about other * * * Hough, Dryden, a passenger 1 Her arraignment in Circuit bloodmobile activity in the The commission explained with Bolton, and the Mathenys’ Court is scheduled for Jan. 8 at Pontiac area may be obtainedithat a Federal Highway 3-month-old daughter, Venda, l:30 p.m. before Judge Clark by contacting the Red Cross! Administration order on equal reportedly escaped serious ln-|j. Adams. Her trial will be set office located at 118 Franklin employment opportunity took U.S. Road Toll 231 Over Yule Holiday jury. I at a later date. After 38 Years on DST effect Dec. It requires contractors bid-i |ding on federal aid highway! projects costing more than! $500,000 to certify they are' CHICAGO (JR - Traffic ac cidents across the nation during Time for a Change in Russia MOSCOW (UPI) — Somebody forgot to tell the Russians in the Fall of 1930 to set their clocks back an hour. For 38 years, the people here have been living on Daylight Savings Time without realizing they were getting up one hour earlier year-round. ♦ * * Nobody, bothered to correct the situation which placed Russia's time zones an hour ahead of the world's standard time zones. Today, a special commission of the Soviet Bureau of Standards and Measurements Is preparing to revise the nation’s time zones. ACCOMPLISHED IN '69 According to the newspaper Kummunist Tadzikistan, the revised system will go into effect June 1. The commission plans not only to correct the timekeeping, but also redraw boundaries of the time zones. These were originally drawn in 1919 when rivers, lakes and coastal areas were used for separation of different time zones. * ★ it These boundaries, the newspaper complained, are so inadequate that "even portions of railroad tracks” were used as boundaries in Soviet Asia. The Daylight Savings Time idea was introduced in the Soviet Union in 1920. For several years, the Russians set their clocks one hour ahead in the Spring and reset them one hour back in the Fall. 1930 SETBACK It wqs in the Fall of 1930 that they missed. Reasons for the omission are not known, but ever since the nation has been living oq Daylight Savings Time. As the nation grew, the 191 boundaries began to create a variety of problems. According to the Soviet news agency Tass, the boundaries are so obsolete that the city of Novosibirsk, the nation's ranking intellectual community, is living on two standard times. In 1919, Novosibirsk was a small town on the left bank of the River Ob. The river was then used as a boundary between two zones. BRIDGE SPANS TIME Today, Novosibirsk is a large community spreading on both banks of the Ob, but there Is an hour's time difference between the two ends of bridges spanning it. Kommunist Tadzikistan says the move to update the timekeeping and the zones system is being opposed by employes of the nation’s communications industries who claim they would face serious difficulties if the reform Is adopted Arson Likely in Royal Oak, rln\A/cr\n Pirocithe 3°-hour chr,*tmaa hollday v-IU W 5011 1 11“5 ] claimed the lives of 231 persons. The record of traffic deaths ROYAL OAK (AP) - Police!for a one-day Christmal undertaking "affirmative action hunted an arsonist today after j observance is 253 set in 1846. programs" to assure equth fires damaged three apartment There were 107 fatalities employment opportunity without buildings within a half hour in counted during a nonholiday regard to a worker’s race, col- the Royal Oak area. The build- period of equal length two or, religion or national origin,!ings were located within a half weeks ago. the commission said. mile of each other. MUST BE APPROVED * * * Forms sent to more than 300 Resldenta *he buildings were forced to flee Into sub- Michigan contractorsa s t1* , I . month must be approved by the! reez temperatures 1 State Highway Department and,” fought the "*azes-the U.S. Bureau of Public! * * * flre- The National Safety Council had estimated that 280 to 360 lives might be lost in traffic mishaps from 6 p.m. Tuesday to midnight Wednesday. The lowest one-day Christmas Roads before a contractor canl Two of the buildings were in holiday toll since World War IIj qualify for construction con-lRoyal Oak, one in neighboring 1 was jn 1947 when 179 persons tracts. |Claw|on. The latter, a 12-unlt were kilted. In 1913, the last] Many contractors have yet to structure, was nearjy destroyed. I time Christmas was a one-day be qualified, said Highway * * * 'holiday, 226 pfcrsohs died In Director Henrik Stafseth. He Clawson firemen William Cole- i traffic, added that the same situation man and George Holloway werej exists in other states. injured. Coleman was hospital-1 * * * Ized and Holloway was treated The five-week delay affects!and released. 1 bids on projects totaling an ex- •arson' timated (5.8 million, the com-! . . „ ..! mission said. The M59 portion' " ,af!^fr9‘° “ ars0"’, “id of the projects is estimated H 0ak Fir.e Mar*ha[ Gua cost $210 000 i Howers. "There s too much sim-1 Those bids are expected to be ilar‘ty betwean ,tbe th”? fireg added to those on an estimated ‘° ae Jusl coincidence. $15.4 million of projects to be let * * * Feb. 12. 1 In each case, firemen said, ★ * * the blazes were started in utility The largest project set for the rooms. January bid letting calls fori -■----------------------!— nearly three miles of grading The largest student dormitory DIAMONDS Enduring Baauty and Valua Beautiful diamond duos to fall In love with ... treasures that will be remembered a lifetime. OPEN AN ACCOUNT • TERMS ARRANGED 24 N. SAGINAW DOWNTOWN PONTIAC and paving on M-39 in Berrien in the world is Bancroft Hall, County. Others are in Genesee,!U. S. Naval Academy, Annapo-Houghton, Iosco, Jackson, Kent,jlis, Md . which serves M liv-There is little chance this opposition (Lenawee and Muskegon coun- ing quarters for 4,000 midship-will be successful. (ties. .men. , SCANDINAVIAN FOODS Cheeses — Hardtack — Lute Fisk Potato Sausage — Fresh Lingonberries Limpa Bread — Herring - Anchovies ifritVs ™i8»poS; tU* * “r 3425 Orchard Lake Road QALL 882*3 OPEN SUNDAY 114 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, . - OHDINAWCB mo. 1*7 |towrus^..,«rt M^LtkcM* th* Etst.rly *7 fret and ,JP, oremane# «Ml «• aftoctiva thirty (Ijf-Oaya attar publication In >* newt-P*fjr circulating within tha Township. . rfi* Ordinance thatl be attirtlva thirty fhlP Board at Pantlac Township, Oak-MW County, MKhtpan, December *th, ! GRETA V. BLOCK, Clark 1 Dec. 17, itoC B—7* city. i-i NOTICE OF INTENTION TO You are hereby notified that at a ra«- .tmsmnm volving Mediterranean trad* path easier, cay 'Jon, tOrte tnoin and related work ... Auburn Avenue train East Drive to 100 tori east of Bait Una Railroad at an •stlmetod coat at mlou.oo. and that the plan, profile and estimate of/jaM Iro- Improvement tfl errnrdenre dahreyad by iibaetot O to trontoga and and pareolo at Mnd fr^'TNst' brTve*'?* faMreTre R«R. Lina Railroad shall constitute the special assessment dlstrlclto defray RMM of the estimated cost and ax- , . ., - VBHP .. that the Com* mission of tha City at Pontiac, Michigan. I Je^y Vjsaaj^^b^^ m '■ OLOA BARKELEY, **toren a£» RECRI Snctlon The rMMWRtf IRDINANCi REATIONA Statement IANCE NO. 1M TONAL ZONE A-1 S Purpose, I Ot three (1) or *«"°p *M Permitted Principal Usas. No lend or building In Recraatlon Zone, may be used except tw one i more ot ton tot&flng .pacific purpose GOD IN THE WHITE-HOUSE— TEE FAITHS OF THE AMERICAN PRESIDENTS, by Edmund Fuller and David, E. Green (Crown $5.95). In drawing up a treaty in- with the Moslem state ot Tripoli bi 1796, President George Washington noted that “the Government of the United States of America is no), in any sense, founded upon the Christian religion.’' That may be * correct Constitutional point, but the fact remains that UA political and social history has been wrapped in Christianity and the 35 U,S. presidents themsleves ranged from philosophical deists to rock-bound Calvinists. ★ h ★ God the White House is more than a book about the presidents’ religious beliefs, however. It offers finely drawn vignettes of their characters in which humanistic actions speak louder than pious pronouncements, and it underlines the fact that, while some presidents may have been short on prayer, the White House has yet to be occupied by the religious fanatic or the secret atheist. God in the White House, with its smooth-flowing narrative, is an excellent reference work. Its' Minnie’ {authors have avoided the easy I hove i_____1 _ . . J - . t . fa]Air contemporary America. For the Gordons, all of them, are strongly conditioned by their religion, even when they turn away from it. This doesn’t but it’s a quiet fact of her life, even as it is the dominating one in that of her father’s. Both Millicent and her father thus learn to adjust to a different set of realities. Kauf-mann has produced an immensely readable, traditional kind ot novel — d e a 1 i n honestly with some basic questions, imbued with genuine sympathy for his leading characters. , MINNIE. By Anne Medley Morrow. $4.95. Our heroine is a Somewhat pixilated child-woman of 41 years, plunged suddenly into unexpected freedom, and con quering all by her unabashed innocence. Her story is both farcial and sentimental. Minnie de Witt has been repressed, isolated, unloved and frustrated air her life by her grandmother and her s Their sudden deaths give her huge wealth and .a late fling at life. "p*r | irbtunwi temptation toward sardonicltelevision aerial in other hands, or Fooorai uus. {comment and have placed each but the author has used enough 9SWn. ai.02 PormltUd Uwt adventures could gooey mlsik attar •rip purooMt of tho A-l Zoo use* may. bo parmMad: b! Oww"K!lto#*,k* c. Miniature golf count! B. Gymnasiums MTlori •Hay* man in the historical context of a country whose evolving religious attitudes have Keen publicly stern and privately permissive. THE PUBLIC IMAGE. By Muriel Spark. Knopf. $4.50. This new novel by Muriel Spark (“The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie’’) is short, 144 pages, and can he read very easily and fast. But that fact is deceptive — in the nicest way for novel anid~ actor. He has "left ”some[r®aders ~ ^cause it packs in Jo.pretty impressive footprints in more sty,e - characterization Uciion of suriicb syo'w^ o'x' ’oii'the sands 6f.the past 25 years SINATRA: TWENTIETH CENTURY ROMANTIC, by Ar-nold Shaw. (Holt, Rinehart and • co Winston, $5.96). - Rtcroationai IS* Frank Sinatra is. an en-aiwtting V%uta'm-°Fe5erai tertainment phenomenon, a ESk " ‘• ^ki^ towering talent both as a singer triclu and drag strips BP * Racr local ad imagination to give the story some amusing touches. It is a light comedy worth reading, -Junior Editors Quiz on- VOLCANOES QUESTION: What makes a volcano erupt? ANSWER: Deep within the earth lies masses of rock so hot as to be in the form of a fiery liquid called magma. Magma contains explosive gases which press upward. When there are cracks or openings in the earth’s surface, molten magma pours up as a volcano and shoots out. Its cooling stage is known as lava, which piles up around the volcano and can build into a tall, cone-shaped mountain. Volcanoes can erupt from the sea floor (upper left). With tons of sea water above, the volcano can not shoot as high, but successive eruptions may pile a mountain form up to the surface. The top of this may appear as an atoll, or volcanic island. A great many) of the Pacific Ocean islands have been formed in this way. Coral reds will grow on the volcano crest, debris and wave action will make enough soil for palms to grow, and there will be a beautiful South Seas atoll, with an inner lagoon of quiet water, and natives singing and dancing on the beach. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors-in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) Marriage Licenses PoaAld H. Schnltzhofer Jr.. Highland id Nana H. Thurston. Milford. William W. Huston. 826 Ketterinp and Joanne C. Hetchler, 826 Kettering D. Bun Theresa # M. rly A. Leonard, Utica, ilobert L. Desmond, Diane E. Bourne, Southfield^ ~ ‘ ‘ fi Brown, Holly, Mich, and; \Aoore, Holly. Mich. . illetg Ortonville and Jen-Cobb, Ortonville. L. Bowen, Drayton Plains and A. Grix, Union Lake. Nipigon, Canada and R 740 E, Columbia. Richard V. Jordon. Flint and Mildred . Powers, Clarkston. .. J Lyle R.. North., 72 Norton ..and Rose , Wilson, WtY BUCklhghatn. 5 • James O. Van Bella, 111 S. Jessie and Mormon J. Lighthall. 911 s. Jessie. Gary W. Wilkes, 43 Burt and Margaret A. Midkiff, 585 First. Kurt H. Kuhn# II, Union Laka and Ramona S. Newton, Clarl Gerald jsan V. Thick, Union Roy H. Murray, Waterford .. Bennett, Troy. Clyde T. Nichols, -enore M. Ellis, Farmington, Farmington and Ington. Wright, Union Lake and Coleman, Union Lake. _ . Begley end Ellen P. ok, 40 Baaley. W. Reid, Union Lakt and Editn M. Baldwin, Lapeer. Michael W. Thomas, Bloomfield Hills and Kathleen A. Boersema, Royal Oak. Charles T. Hardesty, Farmington and Audrey Adams, Butler. Pe. Nikolai Tarassow, 914 S. Hampton and Maris Pliashkun, Rochester. . Carl L. Geiger, Roscommon, Mich. be provided ___________ •rets, racing strips, •isles ahalt be suitab {and depicting of a strata of life! SI TOs ia an exhaustive report ™re autbors can do in a on what thp author d-wrlhui at wX* *WlO* as long. atrip Including tha .Ids abutting •foramantlonud motor thorougn-fara, • ona hundrad (100) foot tut-- back (hall ba nr ov Id ad. k. Or, othar recreational usat which fssnmm t Tuwruhlp Board ot Appaals for V, OpaclalpOrmS: to operato >ami «) ugon racaw af ouch appficati on what the author describes as the “public man.’’ Shaw follows Sinatra, song by soitg, movie by movie and pampe* h skinny mirfp:^pj^'pphr-soxers swoon during IwwiWT II to today’s 'her Most remarkable in Spark’s writing is -■ |thp fact0PV characterization. Tke pro-tn5jfclory ■ , 1 the tagonist here, Annahell asP«ct of the cost Christopher^ is logical but not! “chairman of ^ to react a ^ y mSlTart M he Morocco produce, 13 per cent ,L- certain way. But that’s reaUy a re,ai,ve|y sman Pari « ine ,ka __,u. 3» r,^the board Sinatra’s personality does not ib’days | inspire neutrality. The people iati «ha! who know hift tend either to like him a lot or to hate him. Shaw, whose personal contacts with Sinatra do not seem to have been extensive, belongs in the first category. w grj to cover all mil Incident the general welfare, aaftly and hgaNBAot thp’ 1‘otMantt of tha : ........................ the UUtanca Id lha front lint of auMtlnd fu,JE.na,i buf whata thara Is a dlftaranca In fha tat back of tlw now axltflng buildings,lha moan dlatanca shall ba osad; ho' In no cbm Shall tha sal-back ba last thaaTaMy (0) fast. Tha building linas tor g. slngfa rasldanca in this Zona, mutt *o^ *ko/Parking Ana. In-this Zonad Aral, adaduata off straot parking facllltlaa must ba providad for tho mombart. thofr family. trlMda. u addition to THY DAUGHTERS NAKEDNESS. By Myron S. Kaufmann. Lipplncott. $8.95. The p6stgraduate life and awakening of Millicent Gordon, the awfully bright daughter of a rabbi, unfolds in the 700 pages of Myron Kaufmann’s second novel. Like “Remember Me to God,’’ his first, it explores of the Jewish con- Deafening Din a Real Threat By Science Service isays. “Immediate and serious WASHINGTON — Between 6 attention must be given to the million and 10 million industrial control of thls mu8hrooming workers now on the job in the ________. .. ,, MisslUnlted Vil1 partially,? ^6 ’ overa11 Mlss|or totally deafened by noise in,,oudnes* «f environmental noise is doubling every ten years. If no*se I* allowed (o go un-| noise is measurable in terms of ^ c08^ °t alleviating •m-PdictahU r . dollars paid direct corn-'11 ^ wil1 ln* TSSS'hater «»l,h™.,r r,”““ “..Tk fectiveness on the job. Yet it is NOTICE OF RESCHEDULED CITY COMMISSION MEETING The regular Tuesday meeting of the City Commission of the City gf Pontiac, held in the Commission Chambers, City Hall, 450 Wide Track Drive, East, Pontiac, Michigan, has been re-scheduled. The City Commission will meet on the date and time specified below: Monday, December 30-5 P.M. Olga Barkeley City Clerk , City of Pontlao, Michigan By Order of tht Commission Publish) Dteambor 27, IISS / SHOP RITTER'S For Your Party Needs Let Us Help You m&\NTH£ NEW YEAR ridiculous as trying to ‘otaI ct>st to »f a,raPid‘y “or£ ...... w ti-. k-r increasing new kind of pollu-wona- of the cobalt produced in the RITTER'S FOR YOUR PARTY BEER SDD MIXES LICENSE increasing tion, sound pollution. Open New Year’s Eva end Nsw Year’s Day FARM MARKETS 3226 W. Huron 681-0144 n»«M may aa. Steflon SS.M Fra . Any uu in tbl> Zonad Araa which la not bicldant to tha uu. menury for tha uouat oparatlon of tha partiadar’typo of «l. ond in oddltion, all u«o» of land, buildingt and Mmcturaa that may ha ob-noxlou* or Inlurlout by raaaan at tha Pfodactlnn or omlulon ot dutt, tmoko. r?!aSJ. “hYi. got, fumot, nolu. Vibration or jlmllar lubotoncos or condl- °"*„“an Ohotr bo pormlllod not to W-COOd IUt]T (50) .quart foot. prOVldOd, tM ond li flvo (5) ocrot or lots, whoro tho •snd oroa Is batwaon tiva IS) and Ian °) acroa a. OjM at not mart than On. Hundred and Fifty ON) snuvo tret id pormhiadi any land uvar tan (10) acres may hava a sign of no* to axcood Two-Hundred and Fifty (SMI squsro tret. Sffacflvo Data: This prdlnanca shall bacomu uftactlya thirty (N) days aftor publication In fha Fonilac Press of Pon-tlac. miehlgan. This Ordinance enectod by tho Township Soord ot FontlK Township, Oofclond GRETA V, BLOCK. , Clork Dscomber 17, ISM City ot Pontiac, bo fully out Hog of tho sum of SIM ^ V k.1.1 oftonso^ I For all outguess her. It’s her personality and Jier public lm age..' | * * * I ----- | What ir immeasurable is the! ERIC HOFFER: A n,deterioration of environmental! American Odyssey. By Calvin quality for millions more. Many Tomkins. Dutton $4.95 j°f these stand to suffer phsyical j Hoffer seems to be a unique '^M"tal Illness as the result phenomenon. f the atress tha Ml As many readers are aware. ,1?0 com™onf: the din of traffic he is the rough gem whose the crash »f tewing (lown and penetrating mind has produced bJ,ildln8 UP- h« ■« JA several books highly respected airJcrj>ft' _e'ectr‘cw food b,enders by more erudite thinkers. ,and droPPed *ar,ba«e canB-He was the drifter who.1 Recognizing that this caco-regaihing his sight a f t e r.?^ bad f™wna menace, blindness In boyhood, became jtb® ^fdara,1 Counc*t tor Science an unceasing haunter 0f and Technology iast July formed libraries. He has spent most of a taak torc* 10 consider the hia life as a migrant farm Prob,em of nol*« ln tbe «wviron-laborer and as a longshoreman ment-on the West Coast. ' 14 RECOMMENDATIONS * * * Jt jThe task force has now Tomkins’ brief biography is reported. It gives 14 recom-by the fact that he mendations for research into •vdnr,quotel directly and vividly from noise control, the setting of standards for SAVE WITH MEMRERS OF Hardware WHOLESALERS £ • efiS*fSlm r*fc» lolwtio ’» R»wS5f8ubiect s own conversations.!federal jgeatkwTi W^"*?''^«ntK|The book also contains selected Iceptable noise levels, education »M i^^bT% Hy^llt TiSi aphorisms from Hoffer’s arid cooperation between „ _ ORDINANCE NO. ISM _ An Orginanci to provMa far tht at llthmant at a Parking VtolaMgna Bur to gravMt tor tha aggratlpn thareol •ttaWOh g achaioM of diargaa that i ha aaw In llao at lha luuanca at a i rant, an* ta rapaal all partlent of ( nan«ai Incanyutant with tha pravli of thit OrtUnancp. ; Adopt re: Dacambar M, ISM Eftoctlva; January ], I Sit ThaCjw ' - -• Saetton 1. Thara It haraby attabNthag . _ . -- govfwmwnl ’T»*on of Nw latrativo function wf reap. IB I ixf *u?mu? ,w'h!n*rl* ■ payinant of tha aum pathar with tha turn prg Paragraph ia ar Sb. at aaraph i Bureau. panalllat provM Sc and sa hara provi Parking vwai g) Tht add manat In Paranraaht . ralatad to tha incr ctato ecctttonad l ind at bar axaant / antoroamant af art M « to iha oohtrary, t caad tp ciprry i. „ ___■ parking ordinance vtototort tat mpaii at complaint, warrant and trial to any court ot cehjjjitonygrff precuailng i, warrant lalnlnp -to ragutotkig float and coalt In M tprfcMB caret as praacribad hartlnaltor. SactMNii. AH akMMt^af tha City may pro-- r ~ ^1an of -re Farklng ^itoftoKfur. Irafn lha Gtnaral Fund of tha Cl knprtaon i nlntty Parklna yjp jiiniia.ai by tha "cp^'kw yjin^i^** «sx»,W"M^,>war,s,,,,sa tha traaaury if tha Cky of I a drily basis, and shall ba t tha Aanaral Fund of lha City- , _______ ... taction a. Tha ParkIng yioiatiana ciauaa. santanca, duraau shall ba ttaftog by ampayits af tie City af Pantlic, In such numbtr and wfh such capaMRMa pa may bp daiar-Cdy Managar. All CHy Wtd In connadlon with___ Italians bureau akall ba actod without Bid by tiTciyXSjg «nd^ NTartlun*,f. 1 .af contract apgravad by tha Dt-ritoctjan af Law, tht coat thtrator. H any. im at i ty at rgntiac. a* or parts i art sd ITtr a » tha ayant any phiwn, mt rMBon wf a court YttlnStA wv mwm itti »• Mir# Ml SB* l unconufifwtionwl «r ordlRwnc# thalf t«ko variety of candid photos by cles. George Knight. | “Increasing severity of the Here is an opportunity to get noise problem ln our en-acquainted with a remarkable I vironment has reached a level personality and a vigorous of national Importance and public concern,’’ the report lacMS by tM Par kina vMaMdbp MaOa raau. wd ttta accMHanca at atoat ctmbar t aritty in mmm vStotlan creas. ora ‘MSB relating to parking i MM Par ink top In any marking area ar location in tM I MUM thts Nrd pay af On-'WILLIAM H. TAYLOR JR., j . OLOA parkelVy, I WHO BIRD FEED With 20% Sunflower Seed 25 lbs.........a- 50 Nts.........4M 100 lbs..... . ECONOMY MUD FEED 25 lb. bag....i« SUNFLOWER SEED lg*lto It Iks tor 1“ • Salt for Water Softeners and Thawing; WE DELIVER - PHONE OR 3-2441 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supply Co, 4286 Dixia Highway — Drayton Plaint 3 Miles Norik of Pontiac Your Choiea-ARVIN... or THOMAS A. EDISON . $69.95 . $79.96 Tha ARVIN olfars a pro par mollh uro laval and la automatically maintainod ta ktlp pravant winter's "dry-air" coughs and coldt, moist cemfort-conditionud •Ir at 210 cm. ft. par ntinuto. THOMAS A. EDISON MODEL E27 with tha Ivtfrout look of fin# finish adds up to 16 gallon* of moisture to your homo dally through exclusive no-draft dit-chargg grill# with ultra-quint opur- CLEAN Burning Fur Your FIREPLACE • CLEANEST • HIGH HEAT VALUE • NO SLIVERS • LONG BURNINQ No dirt, smoke, seat, spark*, odor, pitch, tar or ash to dirty your FIREPLACE only MPIOVCO « pHm *1.69 Ctn. KKIGO KEfrO HARDWARE NO. 1 S041 Orchard Lake Read 682-2660 HINT 1MI e Floor Sanders » Floor Idgort Floor Pollthors PONTIAC TOM’S HARDWARE 906 Orohanl Lake Ava* FE 6-2424 SUNDAY 9-2 Compl.te Selection SNOW SHOVELS SNOW PUSHERS ICE SKATES Full Line of Men’s • Boys’ • Girls’ • Women We Take Traded* Complete Selection Toboggans, Sleds and Skates We Take Trade-Ins On Ice Skates INSULATED UNDERWEAR SHAGWAY INSULATED UNDERWEAR AND SKI JACKETS Save 20% -■PIN) K> INSULATED ROOTS Men’s or Boyt-7-12 Size 2-6 Prices Start at $5 99 Others To $8.99 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 * nn Dining Room Now Open Serving The Finest in Food Dine ahd Dance to the Music of 'THE ACT THREE" for the 30 and up crowd. CAMELOT INN at MAPLE LANES MA 4-3081, 1295 W. Maple, Walled Lake Ford Hopes Its Maverick ^ Will Be Another Mustang DETROIT (AP) — Ford Mo-lfinally have embarked on pro-tor Co., which hit the jackpot grams to meet the challenge, when its Mustang became the first OF MINICABS first of the sporty, personalized . .. , __ ... cars to hit the marketplace four , fording to present time-> years ago, is looking tor more of! *b f • ?orfs,n^ Ma™r,ck w,“ the same with a Maverick. | b* the first of the subcompacts | to make its bow — perhaps as mi_ i Kf .. . ’early as the Chicago Auto Show That was the name wtoch,^ rj when8a prototype! 1 may be shown Details about the m jgjjfSf ACCEPTED FOR Call 334-6981 RESERVATIONS at our big NEW YEAR’S EYE BOWLING PARTY SAVOY LANES and LOUNGE 130 S. Telegraph Road inches long, compared with 158-8 for VW and will weigh 2,500 pounds, about 725 pounds heavi- er than VW. Present plana are to power the Maverick with a standard 100-horsepower engine, compared with 53 hp for VW. Ford’s minicar will be built at __ JJHR________ its St. Thomas, Ont., ahd Kan- of Ford announced in Decern-!" D^aii's'abo'Jt thenaw Maver-|sa? plants with 2,000 May her for the new car which is to!ick are sketch ^aufie Ford_ eridcs schedulwl for production go into production next March. |and ^ ■ othef auto flrms _ next March and the tempo pick-Driginally given the code,marked the new car top 8ecret ling up to 10,000 a month in Ap- name Delta, the Maverick i& r ru. Ford’s answer to the U S. auto^ . No price tag has been set for industry’s problem of how to ’ Usually well-ln ormed sources |the Mav|rick as yet, but meet the growing challenge|say the Maverick will have: somesourceshaveestimatedthe posed by smaU foreign imports many of the lines of Fords cur-L, car would ^ ^ the |i goo on the U.S. market. | rent bottom of the line offering, bracket ta order to be com^ti- * ★ * j the Falcon. It will be a two-seat, I tlve With import sales climbing five-passengerfast-back job. j ' Questions u ^op in sales of imports in this steadily towards the million-car-1 In comparison with the current Lhjlt ,nfrnrill„: country within the next two! a-year market, U.S. auto firmslking of the imports, Volkswagenha^ | (Tomorrow: Gonorol Motor* lumps Into the Maverick will be about 178 The Maverick and the rest of the U.S. minicars not only will be competing against Volkswagen and other foreign cars in American market, but overseas! as well. ' “Undoubtedly a lot of the min-l tears will be sold as a second' or third car but we also believe' it will be the basic transportation of many a one-car family,” said one Ford marketing man who declined use of his name. BIRMINGHAM, John WqrM a Katfcortno Dm in "THE HELLFIGHTERS” Wednesday and Friday at liM; SiMiTilS; and liH Thursday at 1t2l; 11:08 PLUS Musical Short “JAZZ FESTIVAL” BLOOMFIELD DOLVTTLE” Friday I:M( bMi liSd Saturday 13t4l| 3s40; 8:40; 1:41 Monday ft Tnasday 2:M| lid! | Thursday TiH Only We are going to have to convince a lot of people that the subcompact American car is not only good basjc transportation but that ft has a lot of zazz as wells” he said. “It will be a tough sales battle, but I think you will see a pretty substantial Bipartisan Partying Paris Viets Ride Fence | PARIS (AP) — Members of [the large Vietnamese colony in Paris have become avid party goers as they take advantage of the flurry of diplomatic receptions and cocktail parties given j by both sides in the deadlocked I Vietnam peace talks. At least some of the guests seem interested In more than the champagne and caviar offered by both sides. They want to be seen. reputation as swingers. In Paris, the ebullient vice president seems to be wary of any suggestion by his enemies that he is living it up while they wait patiently for the start of the peace talks. IN QUEEN’S RESIDENCE Until Ky and his wife flew back to Saigon for Christmas they took most of their meals in the stately residence beloning to the Spanish family of Queen Fabiola of the Belgians. The Communist delegates too, eat mostly at home. Unlike the South Vietnamese nearly all the Hanoi and NLF officials left their wives behind With the outcome 6f the peace talks and the future of South Vietnam in doubt, they1 apparently are playing both sides of the fence and thus pointedly appear at South Vietnamese! wben they came to Paris, and Communist receptions * * * a'ike' . , , , .. ! Ky and the two Communist French officials also go to the!del Uons g-j protection by irecep ions of both a i d e a . the French Uce I American delegation members' are seen only at those given by their South Vietnamese allies.! Commmunist diplomats go only to those given by the Hanoi delegation or the National Liberation Front. tang and Falcon. i Answers are hard to come by; since John B. Naughton, Ford' vice president and general man-j ager of its Ford Division, along with other Ford officials parried all questions about the new minicar with the standard! response, “We never talk in ad-| vance about new products.” Mustang, along with Chevrolet’s Camaro, dominates small, personalized car field and is holding its own in the sales race this year, but the sales percentage of the over - all personalized car market is shrinking as the trend is towards intermediates and bigger cars, according to sales charts. Those charts led some people to question the auto industry’s timetable in bringing out a new minicar line at a. time when buyers appear affluent and in a mood to spend money to dress up their cars. A recent survey of Mustang buyers showed, fur example, that while the base price of the stripped-down car| was around $2,400, the average buyer had added another $5001 the price tag by adding options! such as radios and auto-| matic transmissions. HtnijBtrg} 332-5366 MTHE1 .NEWYEARj P^VHEREL Reserve Now! DANCING COMMERCE DRIVE-IN THEATRE Uiriaii Lk^at Ha^arty M. Fri-p Sat., Sun. jgjjy FREE IN-CAR HEATERS fa»tWtoi>w$**>.»> WHY DID 13 WOMEN OPEN THEIR DOORS TO THE BOSTON STRANGLER... WILLINGLY? THIS IS A TRUE AND REMARKABLE MOTION PICTURE. BOSTON STRANGLER Tony Curtis Henry Fonda George KBnnaitft ■ MiKeKellin MurravHamflton SSSlKw KSSdtmctwr d££fm£ RED CHINESE PRESENT Regular guests at the Communist receptions are members of the Red Chinese Embassy in Paris. Wearing Mao Tse-tung tunics and huge buttons with their leader’s image, they appear at all North Vietnamese and NLF receptions, where they sip the champagne with a con-noissuer’s relish. The Peking government again and again have called on Hanoi to fight for total victory rather negotiate with the American imperialist aggressors and their lackeys.” Yet the Chinese diplomats here cafefully avoid giving the impression that they are ignoring the talks, perhaps because Peking may want to be included! in a peace settlement later. * * * Whils both the Vietnamese sides In the war try to outshine each other with receptions in some of the swankiest hotels, their delegations thus far have avoided the night life and social whirl otherwise. Vice Presideht Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnarri has not been seen in a nightclub since he arrived In Paris Dec. 8. Back home, he and his stunning ex-air hostess wife, Mai, have a MATINEES DAjjLY Efpl 'OU MUST BE 18 - F xsaBexTe Open 11:45 A.I Show Start. 12:CO Continuous—334 4436 YOU MUST BE 18 - PROOF IS REQUIRED AN EXPERIENCE IN EROTICA : DIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL RESERVED SEAT • ENGAGEMENT NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME ; : AT CONTINOODS PERFORMANCES... REGULAR PRICES : IN-C Aril EATERS Pontiac. DRIVE IN THEATER f( 5 4500 Color byDolwco BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 29J5 DIXIE HIGHWAY (U S. 10) 1 BLOCK N. TELEGRAPH RD. CHILDREN UN0ER 12 FREE | HAVE A CHANGE-SPEND NEW YEAR’S EVE WITH US SMORGASBORD & BOWLING PARTY Smorgasbord Starts at 6:30 to 8:30 3 Games Moonlight Bowling Prizes on Each Pair of Lanes, Refreshments and Favors Galore. FUN FOR EVERYONE. •25 Per Couple. HURON BOWL 2525 Ehzabeth Lake Rd. For Reservation* Call Us at 335-2513 X THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 hrttirattce—h It Profitable or Not? m (EplTOR’S NOTE -Whether m busimu is crying att the way to the bank, or headed forttapoorhouse, depend* an which of two sets of figwrssyoujsok at. This report examples bath sets.) ^yHARRf F. ROSENTHAL tioning state regulatory agencies for rate tocraues, the aula insurance industry invariably reports it is losing money. At the same time, it consistently assures stockholders that it is earning substantial profits Which claim is true? From the are. It's ail a matter of book keeping praoMuiree, By using methods which the industry frankly concedes “differ in from generally accepted1 accounting prin-auto insurers can legally show both a profit and K3Z2 KEEG*0 Doris Day and Brian Keith iiiii Get Eggroll” ' Color by Mum. Filnod la PuovUoii*. Roloaiod bv Notion*! Conor*! Plcturoo. eExtra AdStd ■1 1 o ran Disney's noun I figure does not completely i instrument disclose tbe u nd e r w r It in g results.” But when the insurance companies go before state regulatory agencies to justify a rate increase, the brought out that more con- jkjm l ... ’ ~jEi.jto mm DANCE ; ? ; The Famous French Cellar ■-£+. ■ y j .. . ■ • ' HOWE’S LANES "O'* 5" Featuring Vocalist OarolO’Btrijf Owen on Bass Dive on Guitar Bill on Organ “Music for Everyone” Ui.J r.i a-a uu___ M point of view, both performance of the policy con- .....% matter of boak-l&hct.” ? RAKING IN PROFITS Dr. Richard Norgaard of the University of Sedthlrn California testified before the*-...,, 4. n subcommittee ^ casualty fn-ljKry « the a'surance companies are earning. 7 * * * H corporations. "There is indeed a great deal ^ at “ “adjU8tod country's largest automobile underwriter, was 24.6 per cent; for State Farm Mutual 116; for Hartford Accident and Indem-10.4; Nationwide U.6; Safeco 41.6; Southern Farm Bureau 39.4 end Geico Government Employes Insurance Co. 24.3. human.” CITES ADDED COSTS Barring of discussion on whether or the auto insurance business is Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., whose antitrust and monopoly subcommittee has scheduled new hearings on industry next mouth “Sometimes the argument turns accounting methods titan the actual state of health of the companies.” Last yegr, for example, the 10 largest stock property casualty companies using what Qfo industry calls the “statutory method” of accounting reported an underwriting loss of million. When adjusted to ipM accounting said the figure came out as a 655-million profit. And he added, neither figure included the net income on investments for the same 16 total of $f-7 He saiTthe averase 15-vear ven0onal accountin8 methods iw.*a? __________il. arrive at an “adjusted un- violence and bring down cost of automobile insura said Kline. He cited increases in “c 100 per cent in 20 years derwriting profit or loss.” Thus, for example. Continental Insurance Cos. of New York reported in statements to, stockholders that in 1966 and and replacements of such things j 1967 It lost 28 cents per share, as wrap-around windshields. SI \l) 1) SPECI il m SWISS STEAK $ Yct-ctuhld. S.iI.kI.' liiilli r und Roll vntertninmvnt by Jim Head • Dick Burris A Unkr ) THE “HEADL1NEHS” II tiosoruaiiiHi I’llM’l lC LAKE l\\ *880 Htiihliirtil Rond. h7,3.U 8nd 80 ** Hart says stockholder-owned ^ more than the average weeidy earnings in The subcommittee counteredj with figures showing that since 1948, the rate of disabling Injury and death per 10,000 registered motor vehicles and 100 million miles driven has decreased by and casualty companies showed a statutory underwriting loss of more than 6631 million for the years 1058 to 1067 — but when this figure is adjusted it becomes a 6413- current dollars In the 20-year period, the total: amount of auto premiums written was 6U3.4 billion, but million profit. During the same 001,08ses 10-year period, Hart says, the/ industry’s income from in- Jones said, “is like saying that a Volkswagen isn’t an automobile because It looks so different from all the other cars.” BIG PROBLEM The _ ____ It Is statistics like these that vestmmte was™more" than 67|«8used Aitforican Insurance umm Association to prifooM in October a no-fault plan: one under which a driver’s own In-surance company would pay his u r a dc e logSftg _ no matter wj,0 wag at “Except for the policyholder’s premium dollar, i n two analysts studying similar data for the same purpose, points up the difficulty in finding out just how much money ito insurers make or lose. “One set of figures at our hearings indicated this was a hiahly profitable businesg, another that it was dismal,” said Hart. “The ml truth Is probably somewhere In between.” companies would not be realizing these billions in investment returns,” said Dean Sharp, assistant counsel for Hart’s between subcommittee. “The money set aside for possible claim! and return of unused premiums is fl88"c*d **1 y-If ® ludicrous charades In ■ policyholder premiums. The nubtempt to show ^muIvM or fault. “The present system to a grotesque sham which forces everyone involved — the irt-l surance qpmpanv, the agent, the insured and the courts —to1 act out a string of illogical and of all this, according to figures, Is that the average return on investment is around IS per cent for the industry their insured blameless and the| other party totally at fault” Rhode Island’s insurance commissioner, Ralph A. Petrarca, told a hearing held by Sen. “When someone turns one,Warren Magnuson, D-Wash., pocket Inside out to show you^a March, how empty it is but has over $7i * * * • T w * IMUton In the other pocket,” said critics bf the current system The business can seem to be Harf,; “it is difficult to take amm that auto insurance came ip ttie red when actually turning titoir claim pf poverty too |„t0 beinv to protect negligent profit, skid Hart even without siriouaB.” : drivers from losing assets taking profits from investments Nonetheless, state agencies do because of lawsuits. But Into accoudt. (take them seriously. Forty One wuy to do this is through etatoe granted auto rate In-socalled * ’statutory un- creases in 1965, 23 states in 1966 derwriting profit or loss’* - the end 25 states last year. A halfaccounting method prescribed dozen states lowered rates last by few. jyear, but by December the na- re-e . inoo tlonal average cost of auto in- wre A mas (surance had risen 45.1 per cent It works something like this: 1^ that for the 1687-to-1959 On Dec. 1 you give your agent p^od, 6240 for one year’s auto in- surance. On December 31st, the company closes its books for the year but takes credit only for the premium actually earned — In this case one-twelfth year, or 620. Then the company deducts Its expenses In selling you that policy, about 35 per cent — 684 in your case. Thus, while the company actually received 6240 front you, It lists toss on your business of 664. “What bothers me most is a plea of poverty based on underwriting results only,” says Hart The industry insists that only 11 s underwriting experience should be taken into account in the rate-making process, contending that income from investments Is of concern only to stockholders. ijfe ’NOT THEIR CONCERN* United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co., replying to tlomttm from the Hart subcontmittee, put it tiris way : ’One buys a policy. — a contract for protection — no rights oilier than to receive the services contracted for In the policy. Thus neither investment income nor capital gains or looses are propertj allocable to any line of business They belong to the stockholder who risks his funds to guarantee Best’s Insurance Reports, the or convict them when they statistical Boswell of the in- drive 100 miles an hour or drag y, says, “This statutoryjrace, or tailgate, or become the Pine Knob’s Annual GALA NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY Entertainment • Favors • 2 Bands Steak Dinner for Two ,3' *25 v CALL TODAY FOR RESERVATIONS PINE KNOB 394-oeoo SjHRp 7777 Pine Knob Road , George H. Kline, vice president and general counsel pf Allstate Insurance Co. — largest auto Insurer in the country with more than 6)4 million policyholders, told the Hart subcommittee; I ’I must point out that we do not plan and build highways; we do not train drivers; we do] not license them or renew their licenses; we do not arrest them through the advent of compulsory insurance and financial responsibility laws, now in effect in all states emphasis has shifted from protecting the negligent driver to compensating accident victims. That makes the driver flnan-' dally responsible for Ms ac-| cidents and gives the insurance! companies a captive market of more than 103 million drivers, from which they collected more than $10 billion In premiums last year, the critics contend. The Gourmet Adventures of vJayUMtt, •jmAi SSsscftcz fry— wsH Pay uAw Hi You un dm them for aeai/t fsqnirsm* out Hfwt HU a Jhn only pbu In hu. JAYSON’S, 4195 DteU Hwr. nt Hnlnhniy IA, Drayton Plaint, ItL A7S-7VOO for runratlnm. Eq|nr Ihn Dnb Lntrana Quartan* Tnaa-Sai. Whera Hiring pliaiurt and hnapHnlUr in hand In InuZ HAPPY NEW YEAE TO ALL! HELPFUL HINT, FOR JAZZ BUFFS J. C. HEARD Trio Reeordlag Artfoto. Mon. dm fiat. Gala New Yea's Eve CekbnliM Planned. Malta Rnumatlem Early vJau4o«u, 4193 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains NOW APPEARING Woody Martens Twin Keyboards with Floyd Rana on the drums The Best Entertainment is Always at Airways! Make Your NEW YEAR'S EVE RESERVATION NOW! Reservations Are Limited! Airway Lounge at Airway Lanes 4825 W. Huron (M-59) R.wrniii*M Snflnilnrf /or AZ A A A O/T Friday and Saturday Eights D I New- ycoAA Euft"Pa/dij ENTERTAINMENT "CMli" at the Organ Nfi Oovor Ohargfi Special Dinner Menu OPEN #til 4 AM. Opon^oq.)Timo NEW YEAR'S EVE Banquet Room Available for New Year's Eve Party F(wKrtM WIPE TRACK at WEST HURON, PE 2-11T0 Celebrate NEW YEAR’S EVE at th£—— KINGSLEY INN OPEN HOUSE ‘in thw CROWN ROOM EMPIRE ROOM fl V HILLS ROOM DINNERS SERVED PROM 5:00 P.M.... ENTERTAINMENT: CHARLES DUIIN In Th$ Dining Room DONN PRESTON In Tho Cocktail Lovngo No Cover or Minlmtim Charge, In tho ATHENIAN ROOM Dlnnon Sorvod From 9:00 p.m.... Doncoio tho Music of JIM THOMAS (originally with tho 4 Dukas) and Vocalist - MARTY SKELTON From 10:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. $5.00 Par Parson Covor Charge after 9:00 p.m. In the GRAND BALLROOM $17.50 Per Person includes Full Course Dinners Served From 9:00 p.m. till... Dancing from 10:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. to LEO MARCHIONNI and his orchostra -and Featured Vocalist - JUDY BAKER TO AVOID ACCIDENTS: To those who dino at tho Kingsley Inn > Now Year’s Evo wo will offer hotel accommodations at half price. EARLY RESERVATIONS WILL BE APPRECIATED 644-1400 564-5143 'X t THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 SEALTEST EGG NOG SEJULTEST CHIP DIP U.S. No. 1 MICHIGAN JONATHAN OP MoINTOGH APPLES FraikUM fifAC PORK STEAK ’ ib. Dg WEST VIRGINIA C*nt*r Hut IfcAfi SMOKED PORK CHOPS lb. W Aftor anothor yoar of striving for a more porfoct Volkswagen, wabmg you the only visible results. nice new shades. 01 course, torn* people won't be terribly impressed. The woy they tee it, we let yeor oiter year go by without ever really trying to improve Our appearance. Never a bug with dra-\ motic new toil fins. Never a bug with a revolution-» ary now grille. Well, making lento-p tionol outside changes (ust isn't Hke us. light from In unsent/ational inside changes. Take this year's bug. Nice though each of its 13 improvement^ are, there's not a one you con exactly call the stuff of high drama. Oertoinly not the new night-ond-day inside mirror. ii Or the better kind of weather stripping between ihe engine cover ond the body. Or thb new electric rear window defogger. Or even the new ignition lock Ihot combines with the steering wheel lock. Over the years, the result of our striving hos mostly been little things. 2218 little things to be exact. But it's the little things •hat make for perfection. And perfection is no little thing, Autobahn Motors, Inc. 176S South Talagraph Road OVIRSIAS DELIVERY AVAILABLE Frith LEAN ft Ae MEAT LOAF MIX W lb. 09 Fresh BONELESS ROLLED PORK ROAST Fresh GRADE "A" WHOLE FRYING CHICKENS GUT-UP 35‘ HYGRADE'S Sweotenized SLICED BACON NTBKA9FS AMI. LURCH NEATS CANNED HAMS 5 U.S. No. 1 MICHIGAN POTATOES FELICE Reserved To Limit :yi...............,_______ Lfhe Year That April Meant Tragedy, Violence ByJOYKIULEY April spelled tragedy in the United States. Not only wai Negro civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. assassinated, but there was an fflermeth of riots that left death, destruction and bit-terness. A Nobel Peace Prize winner naif advocate of nonviolence, King met violent death by gunfire as he stood on the balcony of a Negro-owned motel not far from downtown Memphis, Tenn It was April 4. * * * As word spread through the Country, so did disorder, fires and looting. In Washington Hardest hit of 100 cities, Negro mobs burned and looted within two miles of the White House. A curfew was imposed, sales of firearms and liquor were ban ned and 4,000 federal troops were called up. Other Americans reacted by closing stores, cancelling sports and social events, and halting campaign activity. A mourning nation counted up the cost in lives — 46 dead, all but five of them Negroes. The cost in money was nearly incalculable. highly unusual finishes in two sports events. In the Masters golf classic at Augusta, Ga., a slip of tbs pen-crowned a new champion. The final round on April 14 had aided with a pair of 177 scores for Bob Golby, 37, Of Illinois, and Roberto de Vicenzo, 40-year-old Argentinian. Then an error was discovered on De Vicenzo’s score bad been on the 171 birdie 3 Having returned it to the was forced by oi abide by its 66 total instead of the 65 that had won him a tie Automatically Golby w a i declared winner. THE WORLD IN 1968 The Pontiac Pratt, Pontiac, Michigan P.O. BOX 66, POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. 12602 Endotod it $...Plaate land coplat of Tho World in 1968 at $3.64 aach bid. tax to I Name. Addrett....... City and State , Zip No..... Send gift certificate to: Addrett......j City and State. Zip No....... III.}*). Li.hMm* ,0»t •! I.r.ol (12.01) NEW MEMPHIS PACT CHURCHES • CLUBS ORGANIZATIONS Metal Folding BANQUET TABLES • CHAIRS $2444 The 65-day strike of the mostly Negro sanitation workers in Memphis, which had brought King to the city where he died, ended with a new contract on April 16. Life crept back toward normalcy and political activity resumed. On April 27 Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey made the not-unexpected announcement that he would seek file nomination for president (Tom the Democratic party. ★ * * Three days later New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller reverted himself and declared ha would be a candidate for the Republican nomination. Within hours ha had scored an 'upset write-in victory in the Massachusetts primary against favorite son Gov. John A. Volpe. Meanwhile the number of Americans wounded in the Vietnam war reached a record f,fH for one week. But there Was a bright note. North Vietnam agreed at long last to peace talks with the United States. The month was highlighted by Folding CHAIRS Juvenile.... $3.05 Junior.... $3.50 Adult......$3.25 No Seconds — Safa Dalivary Quality Merchandise AN AnlUM. In OvmMNm AUDIO-VISUAL CENTER Dlplilon of Christian Utoraturo Salat BB Oakland Ava. FE 4-1523 1 lb. Frtth, LEAN, HOMEMADE ■ PORK SAUSAGE Atwood's Synthetic Surface Complimented Flints N^ew Astro-Turf Passes First Popularity Test * Wtificlal “grass” on the football field at Flint’s Atwood Stadium has missed its, popularity test -with flying, colors. ■The overwhelming majority of football coaches whose teams have game-tested the synthetic surfacing favor it over tegular turf, according to Richard M. Leach, consultant in secondary physical education and athletics for the Flint Board of Education. Leach ,said this was revealed by a survey of *he£d coaches at Flint and Saginaw Valley prep schools, both pub- lic and parochial, that performed at Atwood. during the 1968 football season —/ the first one in which the manufactured “grass” was in use. JOINT VENTURE The synthetic carpet, which bears the trade name of AstroTurf, was installed late last summer at a cost of approximately 6250,000. '* *" * The project is a joint venture, of the Flint Board of Education; the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation and the Flint Recreation and Park Board, which owns the stadium. The synthetic surfacing was intended primarily for football use, but also is seeing use for soccer and other sports. Twenty-two out of 25 coaches responding to a questionnaire replied that they prefer AstroTurf to regular turf, Leach reported. Three coaches expressed a desire for their games to be played oh regular turf if the football field is in excellent condition, Leach added, commenting: (Continued Page C-2, Col. 5) Michigan Reaches Into 'Cradle of Coaches' for Grid Mentor COULDN’T GET ALONG—It was a happier day three years ago when Dan Reeves (right), majority owner of the Los Angeles Rams, held a press conference to announce he had hired George Allen as the team's head coach. Yesterday, Reeves announced that he had fired Allen because of a “personality conflict." Rams' Players Are Not All 'Surprised' LOS ANGELES (AP) - The firing of Los Angeles Rams’ head Coach George Allen left most Ram followers puzzled and shocked today, but some players say they weren’t totally surprised. Allen, 46, was fired Thursday by Dan Reeves, president and general manager of the National Football League dub. Reeves said a personality conflict led to his decision. “It was probably more my fault than his,” said Reeves. ■k * * Alien called a news conference for today. In three years with the Rams, after the Western Division team had suffered seven straight losing seasons, Allen turned Los Angeles into a winner with of 8-6, 11-1-2 and 10-3-1. FIRST CLASH first public hostility between th# quiet Alien and Reeves came after the Nov. 17 Ram game with the San Francisco 49ers. The teams tied 20-20. After the game, Alien said the muddy field conditions were the worst he’d ever seen. Reeves called the comments unnecessary and ill-advised. WWW “But we heard rumors in training camp,” said Roman Gabriel, the No. 1 quarterback of the Rams under Allen. “We heard rumors that George Allen would be fired if we didn’t win it all this year,” Gabriel said. “And those rumors OU Cagers in Alma Tourney Oakland University’s basketball team with a 1-2 record gets into the Holiday Tournament swing by competing in the 4-team Alma College Tourney tonight and Saturday. (Rivet and Grand Valley are the other teams entered and Oakland meets Olivet In the opener tonight. WWW The Pioneers have lost to Albion and Wayne State while defeating University of Chicago in three games thus far. Gordie Tebo, Warren junior, led the Pioneers against Wayne with 27 points, followed closely by Greg Ranney, Detroit Junior, with 24 points. Ed Holloman, Oak Park junior, scored 17 points. Tom Allan, Royal Oak junior, leading scorer In the first two games was held to 8 points. Ed Holloman is the leading scorer to date with 63 points, Tom Allan has made 86, Greg Ranney 54 and Tebo 43. Allan and Ranney are the leading rebounders. THE PONTIAC PRESS SPORTS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 C- Big Gamble Fails; Yanks Claim Cup ADELAIDE, Australia (A) — Harry Hopman’s big gamble failed and the Davis Cup, the symbol of world tennis supremacy, Is headed hack to the United States for only the fourth time in the last 18 years. WWW Stan Smith and Bob Lutz, a pair of collegians from the University o f Southern California who perform together like precision dancers on a chorus line, climaxed an eight-month American campaign by crushing Australia’s Ray Ruffels and 17-year-old popped up more often as the season progressed. MAKES COMMENT “Before our last ball game with the Batlimore Colts, Coach Allen said he wouldn’t be back next year,” said offensive guard and co-captain Joe Scri-belli. Allen seems to always have commanded the respect of his players. In 1963, while a coach with the Chicago Bears, the team there presented him the championship game ball, an honor normally reserved for players. WWW “It’s hard to realize that a man who’s been a winner like George Allen could be fired,” Gabriel said. “He gave mare to his players than any other coach I’ve ever played for. “If he goes to another team, and he wants me to play for him,” Gabriel said, “I might make it known I’d like to be traded. I’ve also thought about sitting out a year or even retiring.’*' SUCCEEDS SVARE Allen came to the Rams the successor to Harland Svare, who had a 4-10, record in 1965. Reeves fought a court battle with Chicago owner George Hallas for Allen, then gaye his new coach a five-year, 640,000 a year contract. Allen’s deals earned him the name of The Trader and in 1966 the Rams were 8-6, their best record in eight years. The following season Los Angeles was 11-1-2, won the Coastal Division title and, after a 28-7 loss to Green Bay for the Western Division crown, thrashed Cleveland 30-6 in the Playoff Bowl. DOWNED HAWK-Bobby Hull of the Chicago Black Hawks, top Bcorer in the National Hockey League, suffered a fractured jaw Christmas night when elbowed during the game with Toronto. Hull Will Miss Only Two Games CHICAGO tfl - Bobby Hull of the Chicago Black Hawks, the National Hockey League’s leading scorer, had a broken jaw wired together Thursday but possibly will miss only two games. “The fracture is just above the angle of the jaw and below the right ear,” said Dr. Myron Tremaine, team physician. “It’s hard to say how long he will be out, it may be a week to 10 days. But knowing Bobby, I don't think he will sit out too many games as long as he can skate.” Wilson Plans Meeting Bills Interested in Ex-Ram DETROIT (UPI) - Ralph Wilson, owner of the Buffalo Bills, said today he wanted to talk to George Allen about coaching or managing his American Football League club. Wilson told United Press International that until Allen had been fired as head coach of the Los Aiueles Rams, he would not have talked to Allen about the posts before. * * * “However, now if he's relieved of his duties, certainly I would be interested in talking to him,” Wilson said. “Dan Reeves Rams general manager is a good friend of mine. I would never talk to his head coach while he was working for Dan.” “He's a very good coach, as his record proves. Although I have never met him personally, he's very much respected as a coach in professional football by everybody.” ★ * * The Rams* finished 10-3-1 lor the season in the National Football League. The Bills wound up 1-12-1 in the AFL. “We haven’t made up our mind yet what we're going to do for 1969,” Wilson said. “We’re not going to rush into hiring a new head coach. If We do hire a new head coach to take Harvey Johnson’s place, we're going to give it a lot of thought and consideration.” John Alexander in the deciding doubles match 6-4,6-4,6-2. FAST FINISH The rout required only 67 minutes, giving the United States a 3-0 lead,in the best-of-5 match series and a chance to score the first 5-0 sweep in 20 years. The doubles victory took tension and Importance away from the final two singles matches statring Saturday (10:45 p.m., EST, Friday). Clark Graebner of New York meets Ruffels in the first match followed by a joust between Arthur Ashe Jr., of Richmond, V&., and Australian champion BUI Bowrey. A three-hour, five-set victory by Graebner over Bowrey and Ashe’s triumph over Ruffels in four sets put the Americans up for today’s doubles clincher. Hopman’s gamble was in inserting teen-ager Alexander into the doubles although he and Ruffles played together only eight days except for the obscure tournament several weeks ago. YOUNGEST PLAYER Alexander became the youngest player in history to compete in the Challenge Round and his nervousness and insecurity were apparent as he lost vital two sets and wilted under the constant pounding of the two more experienced Americans. “Alexander and Ruffels were a bit tense,” Donald Dell, the U.S. captain said. "We had a big edge on teamwork. I thought it would be a much closer match.” He said he thought this lack of coordination was due to the fact that they were a scratch pair put together officially only a few hours before the match. “But I am not criticizing Hopman," Dell said. “I would have done the same thing under the circumstances. I think Hop-man felt It was all he could do.” Hopman since 1938 has captained 21 Australian teams and has sent 16 of them on to victory, losing to the Americans on the five occasions he came up bare-handed. He made a similar gamble in 1953 4n Melbourne, breaking up the greatly Hoad and Ken RosewaU combination by substituting Rex Hartwig for Rosewati. The American team of Vic Seixas and Tony Trabert scored an easy victory although the Australians retained the Cup. Status of Kuharich With Eagles Is Still an Undecided Matter PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The status of Joe Kuharich as head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles may not be decided until as late as next April 1, owner Jerry Wolman said Thursday. Wolman also said he has not yet acquired a buyer for the National Football league Club, but noted he has until May to do so if he can't solve his financial problems. * * ★ Kuharich, whose 1968 team posted a 2- 12 record, including an 11-game losing streak, is working on a year-to-year contract as coach. He has 11 years remaining on a 15-year pact as general manager. Wolman said Kuharich and h i s coaching staff will represent the Eagles at the NFL player draft next month. * * * In connection with the draft, Wolman said the Eagles would select the best football player on the board when their turn comes. It is believed Kuharich is interested in quarterback Terry Hanrat-ty of Notre Dame. AS Wlnphtto SELECTED BY ‘M’-Bo Schembech-ler from Miami of Ohio was picked to be the new head footbaU coach at the University of Michigan. He posted a 40-17 record in six seasons as coach of the Redskins. Wilt Bypassed as Top Center; 'Big E' Picked NEW YORK (AP) - Elvin Hayes, the sensational San Diego rookie, has been picked over towering Wilt Chamberlain for the starting center position on the Western team for the annual National Basketball Association All-Star game. The 19th annual East-West classic will be played at Baltimore’s Civic Center Jan. 14. * ★ * Forward Elgin Baylor, Chamberlain's teammate on the Los Angeles Lakers, was the only unanimous choice of the sports writers and sportscasters from the franchise cities who picked eight players. Western coaches Will select the other four players for the squad next week. OTHER STARTERS The other starters, named today, Include another Laker super star, guard Jerry West; guard Len Wilkens of Seattle, and forward Don Kojls, another San Diego star. Also selected were forward Lou Hudson of Atlanta, guard Jerry Sloan of Chicago and Chamberlain. * ★ ♦ Phoenix and San Francisco were shut out. However, the coaches must pick at least one player from each of those teams. The maximum is three 'players from one team, achieved by the Lakers. Hayes, a 23-year-old, 6-foot-9 235-pound All-American from Houston, is leading the league in scoring and is second in rebounding. The voting score of the selected players: Forwards: Baylor, 14.000; Kojis 8.469, and Hudson 7.278. Centers: Hayes 11.215 and Chamberlain 9.452. Guards: West 13.804; Wilkens 11.855. and Sloan 5.385. Schembechler From Miami (O.) Replaces Elliott ANN ARBOR (fl — The University of Michigan has picked 39-year-old Bo Schembechler from Miami University of Ohio — a school known as the “cradle of coaches” — as its new football coach. The Associated Press learned Thursday that Schembechler will succeed Chalmers ‘Bump” Elliott, who in turn will move up to the position of associate athletic director after 10 years at Michigan. CONFERENCE TODAY Michigan athletic director Don Canham announced the coaching change as'well as other reorganizational changes at a news conference today. Michigan officials confirmed the reports that Schembechler, who compiled a 40-17-3 record in his aix years at Miami, is the coach. Schembechler, who played offensive tackle at Miami from 1948 to 1950 and early ’50s, is the latest of many a Miami graduate to be selected for top rank coaching. Some include pro coaches Paul Brown, who led the Cleveland Browns for many years and now coaches the Cincinnati Rengals, and Weeb Ewbank of the New York Jets, and college mentors Ara Parseghlan of Notre Dame, John Pont of Indiana, Carmen Cozza of Yale, Paul Dietzel of South Carolina, and former Army coach Col. Earl “Red” Blalk. In addition to playing as undergraduates, Parseghlan and Pont also coached at Miami, located In the southwest Ohio town of Oxford. Schembechler was graduated from Miami in 1951 and received his master’s degree at Ohio State, where he served as an assistant to Hayes. Schembechler also served as an assistant to Parseghlan at Northwestern. He led Miami to two Mid-American Conference footbaU championships and three second-place finishes. He was named coach of the year in 1965, and Ohio coach of year In 1966. LONG STREAK During 1966, the Miami Redskins had a 12-game winning streak the longest in the nation at the time. It is the first time since 1938, when Fritz Crlsler arrived from Princeton, that Michigan has gone outside its own family for a head football coach. Earlier rumors this week had given former Michigan line coach Bob HoUway the Inside track for the job. Others mentioned included Penn State's Joe Paterno, Georgia's Vince Dooley and Tennessee’s Doug Dickey. Motor City Classic Has Tip Off Tonight In the opening game of the Motor City Basketball Classic tonight, Miami of Ohio meets Temple at 7:30 p.m. In the second game of the evening, 11th ranked University of Detroit faces Southeast Conference foe Mississippi State. The games are slated for the U. of D. Memorial Building. Bowl Eyes' Ready By the Associated Press It’s time for the nation’s college football fans to go into orbit around their television sets. All systems are “go” as the bowl season is about to blast off with it games in the next six days, most of them to he televised somewhere or other. The action on the field begins tonight when Ohio University, unbeaten, untied and ranked 15th in the nation, meets Richmond’s Southern Conference champions ®iV MILESTONE FOR WEST - Jerry West of the Los Angeles Lakers drives in for two points against the Detroit Pistons last night in Cobo Arena. West collected his 16,000th National Basketball Association point on this play. Defending are Happy Hairston (left) and Jimmy Walker. The Lakers won, 96-94. Laker Joins NBA Elite; Crushes Pistons' Hopes By the Associated Press Jerry West crashed the National Basketball Association’s 16,000-point barrier ... and kept driving for more. The Lob Angeles backcourt ace dribbled almost the length of the floor and put in a driving, one-hander with 10 seconds to play, giving the Lakers a 95-94 victory over the Detroit Pistons Thursday night. Earlier in the game West, who finished with 29 points, became the eighth player in NBA history to reach the 16,000 career mark. * * * Elsewhere, Boston drubbed Milwaukee 139-106, Philadelphia stopped Baltimore 125-120, Chi- cago trimmed Cincinnati 104-95, Atlanta riddled Seattle 126-96 and San Francisco nosed out Phoenix 119-118. ABA GAMES Indiana nipped Minnesota 134-133 In overtime and Miami slipped past Houston 111-106 In American Basketball Association play. The Lakers wiped out a seven-point deficit in the final 3% minutes behind the shooting of West and Elgin Baylor, who scored 20 points in all. Detroit missed a shot with 14 seconds remaining and the Lakers grabbed the reboundoWest took It the rest of the way. Marshall Tourney Opens Ferris State Cagers Win MARSHALL (UPI) - Ferris State and Taylor of Indiana moved through the first round of the Marshall Optimist Basketball Classic in easy fashion Thursday night, Perris dumping Albion, 89-77, and Taylor downing Adrian, 93-78. Four other teams in the tournament will see action tonight when Kalamazoo meets Manchester (Ind.) and Ohio Second Half Rallies Help IS 27 .270 IS Los Anaeie* 95, Dstroll 94 PhllsdoTphlf 125. Baltimore 120 Chicago 104. Cincinnati 94 Atlanta 126. Saattis 96 San Prancieco 119. phoenix 111 Only gamas schadulad. Today s Oamas Now York at San Dlago at Baltimore Only at Cincinnati Maw York at Saattis Cfw^^ort* Detroit at I Baltimore 1 Only famat The winners used strong second half performances last night in Pontiac Church Basketball League play. Stone Baptist (3-1), ahead 19-16 at intermission, found the range In the second half and on to a 43-26 victory over Rochester Nazarano (0-4), while Pontiac Free Methodist (3-0) broke away from an 18-13 lead at intermission to gain a 57-40 decision over Bloomfield Hills Baptist (2-2). Ron VanCurran tossed in 20 points to pace Stone Baptist. ★ ★ ★ Jack Neldrick checked In with 21 markers for Pontiac Free Methodist while Mike McCoy matched that total for Bloomfield Hills Baptist The all-star break comes Monday with teams from the American and National loops colliding at 7:45 at Pontiac First Free Methodist. Northern takes on Calvin College, the defending tournament champion. SLIM LEAD Ferris held a slim 40-38 half time margin over Albion but got hot in the second half when Jesse Mangham netted 17 of his high 28 points. The win gave Ferris a 4-0 mark and dropped Albion to a 3-3 season record. Mike Wilson waa the high scorer for Albion with 18 points. ★ * * In the nightcap, Taylo jumped out to a 43-37 lead at the intermission, saw It dwindle to 66-63 with eight minutes to play and then moved out for the final victory, its eighth of the season against only one loss. Chuck Taylor was high for Taylor with 10 points fa honors went to Greg Darow of Adrian who netted 29 points, Adrian Is now 1-0. In Saturday’s games, Ferris State will meet Taylor, while the winners of Friday’s games meet with the championship round scheduled for Monday Boston broke loose for 11 consecutive points ... nine by Larry Siegfried ... midway in the first period and breezed past the Bucks to end a three-game home court losing string. John Mavlicek led the Celtics’ attack with 29 points, Bailey Howell got 27 and Siegfried 23 ... including 17 in the first half. Besides its other advantages. AstroTurf also proved a top attraction at the gate drawing a total of 82,278 fans, according to James A. Bruce, superintendent of-the recreation and park system. This compares, it was noted, to 26 events, including almost all high school football games, In 1967 which drew 66,123 spectators. Where It cost $695 to stage an event in 1967, Bruce said, the 1968 cost was $97.70. Putting AstroTurf to test in its initial season were 15 high school games, four junior varsity, 24 junior high, 18 Mott Program (a Saturday program Involving 7th, 8th and 9th graders) and three professional football games. Additional use Included eight soccer games, five “Punt, Pass and Kick” contests, 15 football practice sessions and two band practice periods. SPECIAL PRAISE Special praise for AstroTurf came from Duffy Daugherty head football coach at Michigan State University, whose team used Atwood for' a workout prior to its Wisconsin game. “I am convinced,” Daugherty said, “that the synthetic field is better than the natural grass turf and is the field of the future.” are convinced t h advantages far outweigh any disadvantages,” Leach stressed. Other plus factors besides those cited, Leach said, include Elimination of mud an dust A resulting reduction in expense of cleaning uniforms. Painted yard lines and markers are visible at times. Easier identification of player? during a game by fans coaches and spotters. It all adds up to a better brand of football, Leadt, concluding: ••I predict all with a lack of outdoor $ace and faculties eventually will have artificial surfacing for athletic contests. It is inevitable all major colleges and professional football teams will explore the possibilities of an AstroTurf gridiron.” New! Homelite Snowmobiles fast andFFish/f the snow! Com In today for a FREE From $595 CMCRETESIEPCO. 6497 Highland Rd.(M59) Phone 673-0775 (Acioto from the Airport) VT*.V.„ 4 8-11 20 Bllmy 9 1-5 17 Bing 2 2-2 I Dlechgsr 2 0-0 4 Hairston 0 H 1 Komlvea 2 2-3 ‘ (hO 2-4 10 Walkar n 7-9 29 84 28-1199 Tatals 11 1-7 23 12 7-7 8 0-1 Hawkins 0 (H> 0 Milas Jt Speaks for Itself. YAMAHA BLOOMFIELD SPORTS & CYCLE INC. OPKNi Mon.-Fri. 8-1:16, Oat. 84, Sun. 124 1811 8. Telegraph Stf. V* Mila 8. of Iiiraelo I Your Complete SKI SHOP WHITE STAG HART SKIS LARGE BOOTS HERKE BOOTS DONN'S SKI HAUS 4110 Watton Bivd. at Saahabaw Road Drayton Plaint, Mich. THEMIDASTOUCH! Fast, Free Muffler Installation ...and the FAMOUS MIDAS GUARANTEE, g** coot-to-comt, IIIS. for as long as you own your car. Rapiactd, H necessary, at any Midas Muffler Shop for n service charge only! 435 South Saginaw 3 Block* South of Wide Track' MUFFIERS/PINS/SHOQB/BRAKES/TIRES POLARIS CHARGER I Wow m Zips along like a sports cat Speedy Eaay to handle Aluminum or special LTW eteel body Feature# now PoUria all-rubber track with Sno-Grip treed or rubber with steel-teloned track Choice of Powertrain engine options. Quiet new Polar* ... Of the new 1969 Camaro from ChavraM. On Display Saturday, December 28th thru Saturday, January 4, 1969. raoM $595°° ***!» Term* I Dutiable Perry's Lawn a Carden Oanter 7615 Highland Rd (M59> 613-6236 Matthewe-Hargraavcs Chevy-Land invites everyone to come in and tee the inner workings of the 1969 Camaro. You will see an acfual 1969 Camaro cut in half right down the middle so that every part, working and non-working, are visible to the human eye. We are euro you'll be interested. By .the way ... bring the whole family with you. Savings Service Satisfaction MATTHEWS HARGRt talBaldaiM at BawsHoygaaPtLargsit tabes Chary isalsr Ft M18t THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27. 1968 “Eastern Routs poumey Foe ST. CLQUD Minn. (AP) -Wanting a win but not a full* scale massacre, Eastern Michigan coach Jim Dutcher tried to gentlemanly thing when lift Huroris Whipped Bemidji State Thursday sight in the opening game of the Granite City Basketball Classic. £He pulled his starters after 10 minutes of the first half when Eastern Michigan ran up a 23-U lead. But file reserves rflroved just as strong as East era romped to an easy 93-62 rectory. .In other games in the first Hiund, Concordia nipped Eau (Saire, Wls., 79-78; Drury Mo., edged St. John’s, 59-58; and host St. Cloud State downed Lincoln, Pa-, University 69-55. RENTACAR Only $050 Per Day Minimum 6 days Call for details SHELTON Pontiac-Buick-Opel 855 Rochester Rd. Rochester 651-5500 By JERE CRAIG It’s a banner year on the lanes at Huron Bowl for the area’s women bowlers, if the High Score List compiled by the Press sports staff is any indication. While there have been two 300 games and a pair of series in the 770s among the men locally, the women generally have stepped up the good scoring pace set last season. Joyce Lewis,. the Sterling Heights housewife earlier this month became the third Pontiaa Woman’s Bowling Association member ever to post a sanctioned 700 at a North Oakland County establish*; ment. It came in a Pontiac Motor MOTMS TELEGRAPH ROAD jut nett af Spare Lain Rud 838-4831 B0WL Moonlight Doubles Jackpot at $075 Every Sat. Night, 12:30 >9144199 IN Orchard Uke RENT-A-CAR Classic, especially in team efforts. Hun toon’s dominates the team aeries class with three of the employee’s league at Huron andl**^ to*te’ 5 alsn includJa^vanT three of ** five also included a 275 game. However, most of the leading women’s scores have come from the Huron Bowl Ladies Vikings Down Stevenson in Cage Tourney Balanced scoring and a strong defense helped Walled Lake advance last night in the consolation round of the Northwest Suburban Basketball Tournament, The Vikings tripped Livonia Stevenson, 6849. Tbey will play Berkley, a 6866 overtime whiner over Livonia Bentley, Saturday at 5:30 p.m. All games are at Bedford Union. ★ ★ * In tonight’s championship bracket semifinals, Southfield meets Redford at 7 and North Farmington takes on Farming-ton at 8:30. The winners will meet Saturday at 9:15 p.m. in the title game and the losers will clash at 7:30. Bentley and Stevenson, winless in the.tourney, will open Saturday's four-game slate at 4 p.m. ★ * • Five Vikings hit in double gures led by Mike Ridley’s 17 points. Walled Lake’s defense forced the Spartans to shoot from the outside and they hit only 20 of 76 shots for 28 per cent. The Vikings, who have lost once in the tourney, shot a good 40 per cent on 29 of 63. IT.V.N»0Wp 0 0-0 0 Dottor 0 0 " a s-r t IMS i H M The women continue to improve upon what has been an outstanding season of scoring for them. The Taylor’s 5 and 10 Team in die Huron Bowl Ladles Classic blasted away at the pins for a 2687 actual series, the second best women’s actual reported locally this year. Oxford Mattress’ entry in the same circuit posted a 907 game the same night, only one pin shy of its season high (and the sixth best total to date) Marge Curtis’ 239 game and Helen Fry’s 591 series led the individual pinspilling. ALLSTAR LADIES The Ladies’ All-Star Classic at 300 Bowl recorded game, also. Virginia Brancheau had the fine score while hitting RANGER ON ICE — Oakland Seal Carol Vadnais (5) wrestles New York Ranger Vic Hadfield to the ice during a scuffle in last night’s National Hockey League game. Watching are Mike Laughton (left) of the Seals, Ranger Jean Ratelle (19) nad Seal Bert Marshall. Vadnais and Hadfield each drew a five-minute penalty. The Rangers won, 3-1. team games — all in the Huron Claasio. A 2709 by Huntoon and a 956 by the Huron team rankNo. 1. In the individual reports, two Sylvan Lanes bowlers have gained recognition: Maxine Bradley’s 276 game is the best women’s one reported this season, and Marie Reynolds’ 664 last week set a house record aiKl is the second best series By United Press International and Norm Ullman before Henri Canadiens Surge to lop of NHL Eastern Division Grtws 7 2-4 14 Grtog RMSy 7 M 17 Danwlt 5 M 14 VaiWi'PNNI S 14 11 Hicterrti 2 3-3 | 14 if T.Cxarh'i 3 74 13,1 Total* 3» 11-» |0 Total! 30 1011 wlH«rtC» Ajrto loopti ICORE BY QUARTERS Oxtore H 14 is Angott Vending, 3153 .... u 15 u iHS Hartford Roofing, 3143, ™,oc«T«ir . Laura Chenoweth in the 300 Bowl Ladies All-Star hit a 275 game for one of runner-up efforts presently. MEN’S BIG NIGHTS Huron Bowl also was the site of one of the 300 games. Bob Garrett did It in the Friday night men’s classic. The other perfect effort was by Don Roehl at West Side Lapes in the first month of the current season. Don Clark’s 778 at Airway Lanes, and A1 Pietz’s 773 at Cooley are well ahead of the other'leading men’s series, the team competition, similarly, has two clearly superior totals in both categories. The Oxford Merchants have a 3258 series and Herks Auto Supply rolled a 3247. The merchants’ 1149 high game is only pin behind the top figure, 1150 by Hartford Roofing. All were registered in the Huron classic. The leading game among the junior bowlers’ score reported this season is Jeff Weichel’s 267 at Howe’s Lanes. Only one 7-10 split conversion has been listed and it was by Dick Goldworthy .- HIGH SCORE LIST MNTfiMTMa Don Clark, 77» ......Airway Lonoo Al PM:. 773 .........Coolov Lanai Jim Rutkowakl, 734 ....Huorn Bawl Ed OlSba, 714 Huron Bowl Tam May^^ ^Hurw, Bow. Bob Oarralt. MO....... Huron Bowl Don RooM, MO ......Wool SMo Lonoo John Warnko, 2M...........Collier Lonoo m xlord Merchant*, 3351 .Huron Bowl ork'o Auto Ouapiy. 1147 ... Huron Bowl ■wfi 1154 .... Huron Bawl Cooloy Lenot It’s hard to keep a Stanley Cup champion down. The Montreal Canadiens, de-three such feeing titleholders of the National Hockey League, battled from behind Thursday night to defeat the Toronto Maple Leafs, 4-2, and regain first place in the East Division race. The Canadiens are now one point ahead of the Boston Bruins who were idle Thursday. Bobby Rousseau, known for his sizzling slapshot, fired a der off goalie Bruce Gable’s pads and Into the net to break a 2-2 tie at 17:58 of the second period. John Ferguson pdded an insurance goal at 13:31 of the final period. TAKE LEAD Raiders Head for Frigid NY and AFL Tilt d Roofing, Merchants, Richard split the Maple Leaf defense and beat Gamble at 12:39 of the second stanza, Ralph Backstrom scored the rst Montreal goal in the opening period. The St Louis Blues overcame a two goal deficit to beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 3-2 and increase their lead in the West Division to 12 joints. Jim Toronto had jumped to a 2-1 lead on goals by Murray Oliver Pistol Pete Widens Lead NEW YORK (AP) - Pistol ete Maravich of Louisiana State has widened his lead over Calvin Murphy' of Niagara to Smith from close range. Gary 246 as there were 40 games of 200 or better. The team totals included a 1015 for Copper Mug. Gorman Gulf posted a 1002 and Emery Corp. a 1001. WONDRRLANO LANES JFrWav Wondurlanl Mlxtrs IIGH GAME AND SERIES — See The New Chain Saws at Saw Sorvice 1345 Baldwin-3324382 HIGH GAMES - John Mofleld, 234j "«roW McElyoo. 337-208, LOR Mlrovsky, 304; Dwight King, 3 WOMEN'S HIGH SERIES - Ev JOhnaion, 304—484. .. Friday Twilight Mon HIGH GAMES — Stewart Cox, 220; Bill McVav, *14; Arnold JoHory, 213. HIGH SERIES — Harold HoddOn, 303-205-411. AIRWAY LANES Monday Sunnyv.l* Chapel HIGH game AND SERIES — Bill Portar, 214-404; Shlrlay Turner, 224-507; Bill Turner, 211. MONTCALM BOWLING CENTER Saturday Marimont Baptist Church HIGH GAMES - A mol Vaught, 2S3; E. A. Lundeen, 204; Rod Attwater, 215; Olllo Hughes. 201. SPLIT CONVERSION —Diva Brooks, 3-7-10. HURON BOWL Monde* Morninn Blind ^MOST PINJI-A B 0 a 585 series. She lost high series i£ fakftl' Mrs. Yontz, 5-1C Roberts', 39V*; Y NEW YEAR to All From FLANNERY FORD 623-0900 5806 Dixie Hwy. Waterford by five pins to Chenoweth’s 201-200-594. I Newlywed Peg (Cuter) Dyer! hit 226-559. Among the men this week, Ron Cotner led the Wonderland Lanes Masters with 24 7-258-688. Bob Leibler rolled a E AVERAGE — • ova.), 127-134-127; Mary , 15-18; Maxine Yontz (44 team points*—*Mrs! RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE Joo poNTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! I'*, 34 ( MSU Wins in Conference Hockey Event MADISON, Wis. (UPI) -Defending champion Minnesota overpowered Ohio State, 10-1, and Michigan State upset Wisconsin 3-2 Thursday night in the first round of the Big Ten Second Annual Hockey Tournament. Michigan State advanced to Saturday nitwit’s finals. Min-Roberts and Gary Sabourin Inesota will meet Michigan Fri-beat Pittsburgh goalie Lea day night for a berth in the title Binkley twice within 90 seconds round, as Michigan had an to carry the Blues to victory, {opening bye in the five team St. Louis has not lost at home meet. Wisconsin will meet Ohio since Nov. 2. , State Friday night. ★ | Michigan State 3-7 for the First period goals by Val season, scored the winning goal Fonteyne and Gene Ubriaco gave the Penguins a 2-0 lead. Noel Picard tallied his fourth goal of the season to make it 2-1 after two periods. The New York Rangers downed the Oakland Sqala for the eighth straight time by taking a 3-1 decision behind goals by Reg Fleming, Phil Gqyette and Dave Baton. The Rangers, who have never st to Oakland since the West Coast team began play in the NHL hpt season, jumped to an early 24 lead when Fleming and Gpyette beat goalie Gary SOMnMNe SPECIAL THOM LEONARD... MAI YOUR WORRIES AWAY Msrbara Childrna,’ 431". . . Huron Bowl Mary F os tar, 434 .. 300 Bowl J«TV '"IIM MNi f "*"** Maxlno Bradlay, 274 .Sylvan Lanes PiBOV Onion, 275 ..Horan Bowl IJoyce Lawls, 275 ..Huron feawt OAKLAND (AP) - The Oak-% -jumMS land Raiders who spent an «gpgj-^ arJ'iSS ****** reLaU,ve wat?thi«yis^i” .•■•■•ifcra as of the West, were to leave today L , , Wy Tonm sortoa . for the frigid scene of theft a. hl 3417 ... ..'Huron American Football League (file 1 2572 game with the New York Jets hX™ bowi ■ ' Plumbing, 2541 . .. . Huron Bowl the major college basketball dividual scoring race. The latest weekly statistics from the National Collegiate |24 games Sports Services today showed scoring. Maravich on top with an average of 47.4 points in five games through last Saturday. Murphy is second with a 37.1 average in seven games. Ride Mount of Purdue is the (No. 3 high scorer with a 32.0 av-tg^erage followed by Spencer Haywood of Detroit at 30.8 and Rick Travis of Oklahoma City at 29.7. Haywood is the top rebounder with an average of 22.5. Jarrett scored his 10th goal of the season for the Seals and Baton netted his first goal in to close out the B Tovlor'i Oxford CALL THIS HUMBEH for care-free, trouble-free home heating service. Sunday. |tylv*n Originally, the Raiders were to fly to New York on Thursday, but they elected instead to spend one more day in Oakland to get in some warm-weather practice. ★ ★ ★ The strategy seemed to have backfired when nearly an inch of rain fell Christmas Day, but Thursday was bright and sunny, allowing the Raiders to get in a last-minute workout. A noon workout, closed to press and public, gas scheduled for New York’s Shea Stadium on Saturday. WATERFORD FUEL I SUPPLY 3943 AIRPORT RD. At Waterford Depot 123-3222 SN0-CAPS 4 FULL PLY 2-Mrs FMTM0UNTIN0 | 2-«21* * UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1001 Baldwin Ave. ml. 754 ... 5*ifc»2» I, 221 ... Ifftis-.- G PO PT PH. Ayg. 1. Polo Maravich ..5 17 43 237 47.4 L5U 2. Calvin Murph ... 7 77 42 740 17.1 tT rKi Mount ..... 4 74 44 172 22.0 Purdua 4. Spancar Haywood 4 70 45 207 30J ............ 4 7* 45 IIS 30J 7 77 50 207 27.7 2 22 12 57 27.1 4 21 41 117 27J I 17 17 233 272 I 27 54 232 27.0 5 54 32 144 20.5 2. jllQi Travis .4 (Manama City 4. Ed Sludut Holy Croat ♦ui&y:!,v„ George Wash. 10. SotTLlanharc WHY SETTLE for LESS THAN AN OLDS LUXURY SEDAN? NHL Standings Boat nsr.:." 1st .... York . 8Sar.:::: St. LouM .. Oakland Lot Angalat Phlladalphia Mlnnaaota . Plttaburgn Ian VT P7». OP 9A M ...... 18 I ...... 17 9 4 40 99 80 ....... 18 13 | 39 f| U ...... 17 13 2 34 123 . . 14 14 4 32 107 104 Wait Division 15 T 9 39 H 10 II It 5 11 If 4 11 It 5 27 If „ 11 If 4 34 n #1 9 18 4 24 48 tt t 19 4 24 83 107 7 28 4 20 81 117 Toronto 2 Louie 3, PitteburgK 2 Animat 4, Lot Angelo scheduled. TOST York at Moatreel fipeton at St. Louie Chicago at Mlnneeote Oakland at Pittsburgh Only games scheduled. at 9:37 of the third period on a shot by Bob Pattullo, assisted by John Juntikka. Pattullo’s goal broke a 2-2 tie. i Wisconsin scored In the second period on a Dave Smith goal and in the third period on a shot by Mike Cowan. The Badgers now have an 8-5-1 record. Novi 5 Loses in Tourney Novi, a 60-54, loser to Airport In the Milan Holiday tournament meets Holly tonight. Leading by eight points at halftime, Novi was outscored 20-6 in the third quarter. Lee Snow and John Van Wagner each had 16 for Novi. ABA Standings NINETY-EIGHT LUXURY SEDAN Hao 127 inch wheelbage, b 224.4 inches Iona, turbo-hydra-made tranomiMion; power steering, power brakes, power window*, power Beats, deluxe steering wheel, dock, vinyl roof, headrests, tinted gbas, air-conditioning, whitewall* ... real luxury from bumper to bumper... all for *4495 MERRY OLDSMOBILE-GMC, INC. 528 N. Main St.* Rochester, Mich. 651-9761 PANEL 1 Colors Pre-Finished Root Wood Grain SNOW FENCE roLl*1295 Per roll ROCK SALT $225 180 lb. Bag DICKIE LUMBER 2498 ORCHARD UKE RD. 892-1600 PROTECT YOUR INVESTMENT! Give Your Car A Holiday Treat The 25c Self-Service Cor Wash That Offers You: O MORE SOAP • MORE HOT WATER • MORE PRESSURE • WAX ONLY 25* EXTRA UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Pontiac's First end Finest Coin-Operated Cer Wash K0III CM NASH 842 Oakland Ave. — OPEN 24 HOURS — SAVE AS MUCH AS $1,000 ON 1968 COMPANY OFFICIALS' CARS AND DEMOS NOW! BIG LIST OF MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM Act Now, Save Plenty! MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, INC. 1900 W. Maple, Troy In The Troy Motor Moll 644-2735 BOLENS makes the snow lack Bolen* Husky (8 models) handle* a powerful snow outer (up to 42' wide). Alio handle* heavy duty blade at wide a* 84'. llt.P. Priced at enly ♦560" Bolen* Artie 70 — new, 2-stage anow thrower with 7 hp engine cuti anow up to 80 feet away. BOLENS KING BROS. PONTIAC Rd. at 0PDYKE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Phonal FE 4-1682 and FI 4-0734 f 1 W 1 | ms &?as iNC. , t *□ l fiONMC*Cl 1* THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 MARKETS Trading Is Moderate Mart Continues Mild Recovery NEW YORK (AP)— Thepoint. Ford gained a fraction, as,after a stringof declines accom-Detroit Bureau of Markets as ofslock market continued a mild did General Motors. American ipanied by reports of higher In The following are top prices! covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the! Monday. recovery early this afternoon Motors eased. iterest rates and tighter money. Produce AVERAGE UP Aopies, Jonathan, Apples, Northern Spy, bu. VEGETABLES Beets. Topped, bu. Cabbage, Curly, bu........ Cabbage, Red. bu. Cabbage, Standard Variety, b Carrots, Cello Pak, 2 dz. . Carrots, looped, bu. Celery, Root, V* bu. Horseradish, pk. bskt. ... Onion, 30-lb. bag ..... Potatoes, 20-lb bag Potatoes, 50- lb bag Radishes, Black, % Squash, Buttercup, Squash, Butternut, in moderate trading. ; Gains outnumbered losses by | ™ , ~ , I The small gain, however, did isomething over 100 issues on the! were IrregularlyLonttoue Thursday’s modest i2 50 New York Stock Exchange. | :reas“ .hat^e rise,,making it look more prob- 5 5? * * * l&SS®6!! recently in theable that the tradition of tjear- * & The Associated Press average chenucal industry. jend rally, small as it might be, of 60 stocks at noon was up .7 to * * * | would be maintained. J} 50 360.7, with industrials up 1.1,1 The Dow Jones industrial av- * * * 3» rails up .2, and utilities up .4. jerage at noon was up .81 at! Merrill Island Mining, up a j'mj * * * 955.86. i fraction, Was the most-active 2 25 Most steels were a little high- * * * istock on the American Stock 1%'er. Industry sources reported The average backed away,Exchange. Most stocks were » m that orders for steels were level- from a gain of 2.55 in the first higher. Rath Packing, up % at joo tag off at a healthy position. (half hour. Analysts saw the! 12 on a’ block of 56,700 shares, 2 00| Motors presented a mixed mar:.et fcs relying chiefly on ran behind Rath Packing in , “ pattern. Chrysler was down a technical 'strength developed,trading volume. *1.50 *»l. 2 25: bskt. 2*75 The New York Stock Exchange State Crops Set Records 1 Hot Economy Defies Cooling-Off Efforts By JACK UFLER AP Business Writer NEW YORK - The fired-up economy is surprisingly defiant t cs i .1 c t x iiof efforts to cool it off. , Top rield, Fruit Totoli Early this year, government it ** - !officials and many private econ- Near 11 Million Tons omtets were telltog ^ can people and exhorting Con-LANSING (AP)- Michigin’s S1*88 that the only thing needed to slow the rate of business expansion and accompanying inflation was a 10 per cent tax surcharge coupled with a cut in government spending. The total for the state’s 17) A long-reluctant Congress im-major crops was up 6 per centlposed the tax boost July 1, from 1967. ----------------!------------- top field and fruit crops set records this year, with total output of nearly 11 million tons, says the State Crop Reporting Serv- Economists forecast, that deceleration would begin at § moderate pace in the third quarter and ^^substantial results in the fourtinjtiarter. It didn’t work out that way. FINE-TUNING FAILS Developments during 1968 have emphasized anew how difficult it is to forecast the pace of economic activity,” says Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. in its year-end business review. ( “In general, neither government nor private economists were at all accurate in the projections they made for the year as a whole,- and thefc misjudg-ts were widely shared by business men, high officials in the administration, 'congressmen on both sides of the aisle ahd journalists. Poultry and Eggs DETROIT EGOS DETROIT (AP) (USDA)— Egg prlcts! Id per dozen by first receivers including. 12V,; large 41-SI; medium 45-48V,. ,AelneLlfll DETROIT POULTRY AlrRadtn DETROIT (API (USDA)— Prices Paid|*!“**!“ ler pound mm 3 34 63 51% ■ hens 20*22) heavy 40'/! I B 67’: buying prices ligher; 00 per cent or bat* trade A whites 49; mediums 45Va; AllegPw 1.20 AllledCh 1.20 AflledStr 1.40 Aiiiscr Alcoa ert__ Alrlin AlllsCha ,62p Alcoa 1.80 Amerada 3 Am Alrlin .80 AmBdcst 1.60 20% 20’% 20J 4 72% 71% 713i 26 20% 2OH 2034 69 52j/4 51 51% 72 34H 33% 33% 123 27% 27 27’ 65 24 22% 24 5 62H 62Od ind choice 24.00-25.00. American Stocks Burroughs Cil Plnanl jJ.5:-;; NEW YORK (AP) CaroPLt 1,42 CaroTAT >6 Carrlar Cp 1 jCarlarW .40a Cata Jl CaitlaCka .60 .. . . . . . . Stock CatarTr 1.20 «ng« stlactad noon pricai: CtlanasaCp 2 Salat Nat Canco Ins .30 (hdt.) High Low Last Chg. I Cant sw i .70 |rf .50a 10 33% 32 33% *F1% Carro 1.60b west 38 19% 19^6 19% 4- % Cart-taad .80 »#1r ,70u 17 19% 29 29 — H CPI Stl .80 Gas 1.70 4 37% 37% 37% 4 % Chet Ohio 4 TWffl Oil 281 22% 21' j 21% - % ChIMil SIP P Oil A G ft 8% 8'i 8% -F % ChIPnau 1.80 tCorp wt 66 4% 4% 4% 4- % Chris Craft I its Eng 1 35 35 35 + % Chrysler 2 IILtPw 1 90 18 18 18 4 '• CITFIn 1.80 Pet 57e 104 80% 20'h 20% 4- % Cities Svc 2 pbl Chib 293 11 10% 10% Clark Bq 1.70 Javelin 67 16% 16% 16% ClevEllll 1.92 rama 85 13'* 13% 13% 4 % Coca Col 1.20 la 2.60a 2 38% 38% 31% -- V* Colo Pal 1.20 i Cont 71 17% V7U 17'* 4 % CollInRed .80 lyn Corp 38 28% 7716 28% 4 %IColo|nfst 1.60 iiectrn 312 18% 17% 17% - % I CBS 1.40b It Cp .05r 66 7*s 7% 7% 4- % ColuGa* 1.52 Resrces 48 11% 11% 11% ComSolv .90# non! Oil 9 23 22% 23 4 % ComwEd 2 20 38% 38% 38% 31% 31% 31% 32 31% 31V4 37% 37V* 37V* 34% 34% 34% 79% 78V, 7? 22% 22% 22*4 40% 39% 40'/; 7 22% 22% 82% 2 73 72% 73 $5%' 55% 55’l HouttLP 1.12 idahoPw 1.60 Idaal Basic I III Cant 1.90 Imp Cp Am IN A Cp 1.40 IngarRand 2 inland Stl 2 InterlkSf 1.80 IBM 2.60 IntHarv 1.80 Int Mlnar .50 IntNIck 1.20a JohnJhn .60a JonLogan .80 Jontt L 2.70 JOttens .60 Joy Mfg 1.40 Ktnnecott 2 Karr Me 1.50 KimbClk 2.20 Llbb McN L Llgg Mv 2.50 Ling TV 1.33 Litton 1.69t Llvlngttn Oil LockhdA 2.20 Loawt Thaa LonaS Cam 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LongltLt 1.24 LTV . LuckyStr 1.40 Lukans Stl 1 71% 13SI 717 53% 48% 19 57 54 39 38% 20 37% 37'/s 31 321V* 320 101 37% 36'* 71 82% 22 ■ 96 37V4 37 37 52 37% 36% 37% 69 58 % 57% 58'/; 13 76% 76 76' i 11 26% 26% 26 *i 37 23% 23% 23V; —J— 28 88% 86% 87V; 29 36 —K— 27 J9% 3 3 29 7 1 23% 2 37 29% a Raytheon .50 133 50^2 50 k i Reading Co ReichCh .40b RapubStl 2.50 Revlon 1,40 Raxall .30b Reyn Met 90 155 42% ReynTob 2.20 760 48V* RoanSe 1.93e x664 11 Rohr Cp .80 18 34% RoyCCola .81 ^8 42% 8 25% 25^6 25V 32 18% 18% W/ 51 51 50% 5) 14 83% 83% 83^ 26 42% 42% 42% - % 34 50% 50V* SaFalnd 1.60 San Paint .30 Schering 1.40 Scientlf Data SCM cp .60b Scott Paper 1 SbdCstL 2.20 Sear I GD 1.30 SaartR 1.20a 33% 33% — » 48% 49'/4 -F 1 82 82 . 18 95% 95% 95% —11 | 44% 43% 43% —1' 31% 31% 31% — % Shall Tr 1.13a Signal Co la Sinclair 2.80 SlngarCo 2.40 * iTth K" ‘ SouCalE 1.44 South Co 1.1 SouNGas 1.4 Sou Ry 2,80/ Spartan Ind SparryR .40 StOIICal 2.70 ,* StOillnd 2.10 i] SIOIINJ 3.65a 41 St Oil Oh 2.50 St Packaging StauffCh 1.80 StarlDrug 5 126% 125% 126 66 74 73% 74 20 40% 40^a 40 ;; t 3 67s —s— 29 28 27% 27% -F ' 6 66% 46% 66% .. 1 3e3% 33% 33% — ' 24 43% 42% 43 -F 1 38 61% 61 61% -F i 50 33% 44 82 ~% ___ HU 43% 43% —1 13 51% 84 41% 40% 41 48 63% 62% 63% -35 46 % 45% 45% - 12 47% 47% 47% 4) 75% 74% 75 - 64 42% 42% 42% • 250 132% 131 131 - 62 80% 80 80 - 7 52% 52% 52% -X27 37% 36% 36% - 54 29% 29% 29V* 43 50 49% 50 92 45% 45% 45% 3 62% 62% 62% 28 27%' 27% 27% F 73 47% 47 47 57 22% 22% 22% -200 38% 38% 38% *F 7 47% 47V* 47% . 85 26 25 25 70 74 73% 74 116 62% 62% 62% -F 93 80% BOH 80% + 9 71% 71% 71% 24 21% 21 21 ~* 13 48% 47% 48 — ■m StevensJ 2.40 StudeWorth | Sun Oil lb SurvyFd 80a Swift Co .60 33 77% 77% 77% 13 8% 8% 8% TampaEI .72 Taladyn 6.36t Tenneco 1.28 Texaco 2.80a TexETrn 1.40 Tax G Sul ‘ Texaslnst 136 31% 31% 31% “ Im 86 86 33% 33% 37% 37% 107% 5 20V* J0H 20% + i 118 14% 14Vs 14% ~ l 38 24% 23V* 24% *F : 9 99% 99 59 - ' 29 17s/* 17 17 — 17 46% 46% 46% 15 987/l 35 173 13% 73% 73% 13% 48% 47% 48V* TlmetMIr .50 Tlmk RB 1.80 TransWAIr 1 Transam 1b Transtron TriConti 3a TRW Inc 1 UMC Ind .72 Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOIICal 1.40 UnlonPadf 2 Uniroyal 1.20 UnitAirLin 1 50 108*'i 136 31^ 53 86V 36 34 183 38 23 108 107 2 23% 23 V 75 46% 45% 46% - 23 21% 21% 21 Vs 6 46 45% 43% - 7 40% 40% 40% • 71 44 43* a 43% 68 78% 77% 77% ■ 64 15V* 15% 15% 9 35% 39% 35% , 28 45% 44% 44% - 131 46% 46% 46% 52 22% 22 22% *F ’ 88 62% 62 62% *F : 40 53% 53 53 — ; Record high yields were set for corn, oats, barley, .sugari beets and hay, the service reports. These offset production declines for winter wheat, rye and potatoes. Weather conditions in the spring were “highly favorable" for fall crops, but unfavorable for wheat and rye, the service says. RAIN HELPS CROPS , A warm fall with light to I moderate rain was ideal for ma-l Z £! luring and harvest of eorn, dry £ i beans, sugar beets and other crops, but wheat and rye were !»|damaged by standing water and “ ice in February. * * * The service reports that the 17 major field and fruit crops had a combined output of 10.9 million tons in 1968. Output of the 10 major field crops was 10.4 million tons this year, compared with 9.8 million tons in 1967. Fruit production totaled 460,500 tons in 1968, 30 per cent more than the previous year. * * ★ The crop reporting service says production was as follows: • Dry beans: 6.6 million bags (100 pounds clean basis) in 1968, 24 per cent more than the previous year, but <5 per cent less than the 1962-66 average. • Winter wheat: 31.86 million bushels this year, 21 per cent smaller than the 1967 crop because of reduced acreage and lower yield per acre. * * * • Corn: 96.22 million bushels, 5 per cent more than in 1967. • Oats: 32.98 million bushels, 35 per cent more than in 1967. Total feed grain: production of com, oats and barley com-bined totaled 3.25 million tons, £ 9 per cent more than last year. 2j: 2) lJ'AJJJDI 11 lUi jb n*» iih m v ith .......... •9 24’i 4 27% 27 8 14% 14% 14% 34 17% 17s* 17% 26 10% 9% 10 8) 20% 20 20% 2 9% 9% 9% 15 8% h% 0*i 20 70 69' i 69Vj 19 )5% 34% 35 Cotr Con Edit 1 80 25 13% - %Iconiltclnd N#wP«rk Mn Treasury Position %IConiPwr 1.90 % ContC«n 2 70 % Com cp .lot Corn Rd 1.70 CrOW 2.80a CowlM .50 CoxBdca* .50 CroutaHln ib CrowCol 1.511 Crown Cork CrownZa 2.20 Cudahy Co Curtlftfi Wr l CurtlMWr wl Oan Rlv 1.20 Door# Co 2 Dal Mnta DallaAlr DanRGr DatEdil 32 32% 32% l Co .30 Marathn 1.40 400 2 30 39 70% H 149 20 27% 28 92 147% 147T . IPS 42% 42* 3 294 50% 59'. 34% 34U 37% 37% 37% 17% 17% 2 99% 58V. 3 34% Mil 79 37% 3 7 Vi 2 76% 76% 76% • 16 57V* 57 |g| 34 29% 25U 32% 32 32V 3 26 26 —D— 10 24% 26% 40 55V* 54% 2 35% 35 V4 22 35% 37% 37% -F % NEngEi MartlnM 1 MayDStr 1 MnJ* Mead Co 1 Malv Sh 1 MObllOII 2 20 Mon«nn^ 1*80 MontDUt I 68 Mont Pw 1.56 NatAIrlln .30 Nat Blac 2.10 Nat Can .60 Natcash 1.20 N Dairy 1.60 Nat Dial 1.80 Nat Fual 1.60 Nat Gtnl 20 NatOypt 2 Nat Induat NLaad 3.25a Nat Steal 2.50 Nat Ta^ .80 USGypsn US Indutt .40 USPIpa 1 20 USPIyCh 1.50 US Smalt 1 US Staal 2.40 67% 67Vj -F \ 15 15% •3% 83% — » 36% 36% 33% 33% — » 76 32V, 31% 32% -F % 34 Jl% 37% 37% 4- % 25 or ■ ** 76 61% 60% 60% • 166 43% 42% 43 154 30% 38 «38% 92% 84 50% 50 13 48 47V 19 50% 50V 36 92% 92V 33 45% 45% 45% 27 31% il'H 31* 6 24% 24% 24V 39 100% 107% 100 5 25% 25% 25%t 70 60% 60% 4 WastgEI WhtrTcp i 1.60 1029 S9M —V— . AftIO 27 34% 34% 34'4 - Co .60 10 32V* 32% 32V4 - •w I N 46 30% 29% 29% —W—X—Y—Z— im 1.10 29 50% 55% 58% • at 1.24 4 24 23% 24 • AlrL 1 6 44 43% 44 • me 1.20 38 “42% 41% 41% - 44% AP Wiraphoto SMALL BUT MIGHTY - Inventor William H. Hapgood shows off his experimental heat generator, which can heat a nine-room house. Raytheon Co. of Lexington, Mass., is developing it. The gas-burning device is a by-product of research on cooling high-power electronic tubes. 'Coffee-Can' Furnace Is a Hot New Gadget coffee can has beeri developed by Raytheon Co. The device burns gas in any of its forms to heat water, but the announcement said it could accommodate other fiiels and other heatable liquids, Training Plan OKl LEXINGTON, Mass. (AP)—I nouncement said. The facility is An experimental heat generator about equal in size to a nine-so efficient that it could reduce) room house, it said the size of a home furnace to the equivalent of a two-pound Soybeans: 12.04 million ^ bushels, 18 per cent above 1967. Potatoes: 1.83 million hundredweight, down slightly from last year for the late summer crop; 6.24 million hundredweight 12 per cent less than 1967 for the fall crop, because heavy rains caused some lost acreage. patents on the device, which itlsant areas. The funds for the Sugar beets: 1.699 million claims accomplishes its effi- Upper Peninsula Committee for tons, 35 per cent more than cieq) rate of heat transfer, in) Area Progress total $68,259 and 1967. Ipart, though “an ingenious:money for Northern Michigan -• Acreage for the 10 major)arrangement resulting in an1 Community Action Programs, extraordinary level of turbu-based in Mount Pleasant, comes lence.”’ (to $81,253 Raytheon President Thomas “Virtually everyone ‘ underestimated appreciably the sharpness of the rise that was to occur in economic activity in early 1968 amj also overestimated substantially ^the dampening effect that the Jund package of fiscal restraint would have in the latter part of the year.”. Forecasters were confounded, for one thing, by the failure of consumers to restrain their recent buying habits despite the extra 10 per cent tax bite on IM j their paychecks. RETAIL SALES REBOUND mm Retail sales did slip in September and October but rebounded sharply in November. Indications were that if retail sales were less than robust during the Christmas season it would be mainly because a lot lof shoppers Stayed home because of the flu epidemic. Statistics indicated that con-[sumers were dipping Into their savings to maintain their accustomed standard of living. And there were the factors of higher employment and widespread increases in wages and salaries. Forecasters also had expected [that the income tax boost, which would slice profits, would cause corporation? to pull in their boms as far as expenditures for new plants and equipment. Instead, according ' to the Commerce Department, “business seems to have embarked on a new round of investment spending which will have important stimulating effects on an economy operating at very high employment rates." ' ECONOMISTS SURPRISED Economists were; surprised that the Gross' National Product —total of all goods and services —jumped by $18.1 billion in the third quarter to an annual rate of $871 billion when they had expected an increase of about $12 billion. The only solabe that Arthur M. Okun, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, could find in this Increase was that it wasn’t as big as the $21.7-billIon gain in the second quarter. Now the Commerce Depart-ESCANABA (AP) - The De- ment 8878 there wlU 8 siz‘ partment of Labor in Washing- ton has allocated nearly $150,000 to train 200 on-the-job apprentices in various occupations in Raytheon has applied for (the Escanaba and Mount Plea- field crops: 5.99 million acres this year, compared with 8.21 million acres in 1967. Smaller acreages of corn, wheat and all hay more than offset larger acreages of dry beans, oats and * sugar beets, the service reports Firm's Profits Dip able increase in the Gross National Product in the fourth quarter—“not much different from the rise in the'third.’’ The conclusion seems to be that consumers and business executives have deckled to spend now because prices might well be higher next year. Ead Adv Pms Frl Dec 27 moved Dec 26 ED805aes Dec 26 M 45 itury Dec 23, 1*61 com- w>»".nn , 1967 (In dollar!): DfOMliV 'duFont 1,825,988.939.30 7,136.023.408 50 guq Lt Deposit* fiscal year July 1 88,296,901,497.55 70,087,766,954.5 Withdrawal! fiscal vtar 97,783.912,084.44 07,820.805.727.3 Total dabt « 360.050,487,814.05 344.866.608.756 d Gold Amt! 10,366,963.718 03 12,433,177.9047 X Include! 630.516,097.33 dabt not sut act to statutory limit. ; 85% 85’ 4 03V 8 73 72% 73 27% 27% 27V , Newmnt 2 60 vaNlagMR 1.10 %■ Norfolk Wat 6 % NoAmRock 2 % NoNGas 2.60 I Nor Pac 2 60 % NoStaPw 1.60 %. NwstAir I 80 24 43 27 45% 1 9 29% 29% 29% 47 47% 47% 47% 34 61% 61 61% 32 24 23% 23% 61 74% 73% 73% 86 47% 46% 46% • 5 16% 16% 16% 5 44% 44% 44% • ll 37% 37% 37% 23 29 20% 29 17 77% 76% 7f% 42 n% an ■ 4 107 106*4 62 42% 42 46 58% 57' j 57% • 2 47 46% 47 • 18 35% 35 35 • 30 36% 35% 38% • 23 270% 268' 4 269 17 48% 48% 45% • L. Phillips said that Amana Refrigeration, Inc., a subsidiary of Raytheon, is developing the miniature furnace in connection with its existing central heating and air conditioning product line. A laboratory model of the furnace has provided complete ers Power Co gj !WMPH1W * " Mich., reported Thursday eam-jll'a7®l°dreyve " ™ *b pasture in a tew yearnings of $82,438,574, or $2 59 a1-*' J *8. My holdings are $30 M NEW YORK (AP) - Consum-1 $2.59 a ■ tii share, for the year ended Nov ,30 cwX.tto'bY tT. MmtoM^a'itNllO. compared with $67,915,382,, _ . .. s.,a. ............ °r * 8h»r" the previous. Business Notes Uniass otnarwisa noted, riioa of di»i year. Sales rose to $502,524,749 nwiVJ dands In tha toragolng Mbit art annual>} ... I disbursements bated on tha lUt quarterly from $471,905,608. or ttml-annual declaration. Special ar| ____________ axtra dividend* Mantlllad in tha| ■. ^ Jack Ralph, vice president and sales coordinator o f lE Kodak .B8m 66 76 75V K Stock, of Local(nteredl^ S&EV «d- d m«ting of the National 31 Quotations from th» nasd »ro rap- Association of Real E ?k-PBM WSVc yoar.|ra»fntat)ya Intar-Ctaaier prlcts of •P-!gAO|i/ie tQn <*« oe r ttock dlvvbbnd proxlmately II a.m. inttr-dealer markets j DOarQS Jan. pllt up. k Declared or paid thli year, throughout the day. Prlets bo Washington DC 1 accumulative istup with dividends in,"®* ‘nciude retail markup, markdown or > Tfasnmgion, u.v,. -Paid this paar, commission. 1 ind. Util. Pgn. L Yd. J4.0 78.4 |9.1 I FedDStr .95 1 Fad Mog Flltrol 1.40 23 22% 22% 22% 10 31 30% 31 30 34% 34 34% • 64.2 86.0 70.5 89 2 71.8 7i.«>P*1Chrt PecTliT 1.20 PanASul 1.50 % Pen Am .40 % PanhEP 140 % PerktDavis 1 PannCen 2.40 Fllntkota 12 *16.1 70.2 79.2 00.8 (0.3 1 Pow 1.52 161 M 29% 39% 27 37% 37% 37Vj 86 30% 30% 30% Da-1 AMT Corp. .. ... ________ paid In I960 plus stock dividend. IAsioclatad Truck t-Pild. in stock during i960, estimated |r}®« B"*!ra?#r,n« cash value on ex-dividend or ox-dlstrlbu* CltUens Utilities ... tlon date. getrex Chemkel 1 -Seles In full. I Diamond Crystal . dd- Cailad. x-Bx dlvldand. v~Ex dlvF KbEv Mrvte* . dond and oalaa In lull, x-dls—Ex distribu- Mohawk Rubber Co. tlon. xr—lx rights, xw—Without war- lafran Printing ... rants. ww-WHh warrants, wd—Whan ells- Scrtpto trlbuted. wl- Whan Issued. nkruptcy or recelversl “ ink.^^..r . 1 -- — suchcom-Commonwealth Stock •Ublacf to In- Dreyfus {Keystone Income K-i ^Keyttonp Growth K-2 Mess, investors Growtt Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Growth I Technology Fund _____ 953.06+0.11 iKwIhpton yund .. 12.6 13.4 29.1 30.0 P 30.0 1I.0 19.0 MUTUAL FUNDS 23.2 24.2 0.1 1.6 91.2 22.1 reorganized under tha Bankruptcy‘Ch®micai or ^sec^ltlas b------- *- - --— ---- Heart Group Has New Year's Wish DETROIT (AP)—The Michigan Heart Association has iCa 31M »)H + 7| | PlaBwLt *6.2 (2.3 BMC.CP .1! 1*M LOW . *3.* 19.* 78.3 88.0 78.4 FoOdPalr *0 j*47 High 73.0 *5 6 34 * *2 5 «*.4 FordMol. 3.40 1*47 Low 64.6 16.1 78.0 I*. I 78.4 ForMcK .71 OraHMUl 1.40 ———————— FruohCp 1.70 Fewer than one-third of all West German employes belong to a trade union, and total union i.» membership dropped by 2 per oanVijc12 « cent during 1367, to about 6:4 c>" m\ m million. GPubfft 1.«T 21 39% 39% 32 23 22% 39 53% 53% 39 43% 24 29% 39' 4 2 65% 68% 65V 50 32 31% 32 9 m 37 37 104 47 48% 46V 45 95% 98% 986i 125 13% 82% nh 16 36% 36 36 DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Indus 20 Ralls ............... 15 Utils ............... 65 Slocks ............... BONDS 40 Bondf 10 Higher grade rails . 10 Second grade rails 10 Public utilities % 279.79 r%-tt«frA m $ Successfuhthvestmg 1 w. -#t** *:■ t»; By ROGER E. SPEAR Idollar amounts of Boise Cas-O—I try to be a conservative!cade, H. J. Heinz and Magna-In each case capable management has demonstrated the ability to achieve a strong growth pattern. A continuation of these improving earnings trends should be reflected in share price. * ★. 4 Q—In 1M1 I bought 18 shares of Container Corp. at 13%. I can’t find the original certificates, but do find certificates for 38 shores doted 1851, 8 shares 1854 and lots of 180 and 80 dated 1958. I have no Idea where'or at what price these shares were purchased. Can yon give om the approximate cost? B.V. A—Judging by the dates and amounts I would say that these shares were acquired as the results of splits and a stock dividend. In 1951, after a 2-for-l split, your original 16 shares were replaced by 32. A 25 per cent distribution added another 8 shares in 1954. Your final two certificates increased your 40 shares to 160 as the result of a My holdings Treasury Notes, Air Reduction, Allied Chemical, American Natural Gas, Bethlehem Steel, Eastern Air Lines, Plymouth Rubber, Standard Oil of New Jersey and Union Carbide. I would appreciate suggestions for improving my situation. — W. D. A—You still have some pro-i duett ve years ahead—endugh to justify a more aggressive approach toward investing. Treasury Notes currently selling below par should be held for redemption in 4970. Both Amer Natural Gas and Std. of New Jersey have a strong record of up-trending earnings and should be held. Air Reduction, al though closely tied to the steel Three-fifths of the local authority school systems surveyed in the U.S. recently are teaching one of more foreign languages to primary school children. be held for growth. Eastern Air Lines' poor performance both in earnings and share action re- overcapacity. But long-term position and an apparent bottom-ing-out justify retaining the shires. Carbide, also in cryogenics, though a market laggard, now seems to have turned the corner and should be held. I would replace Allied Chemical and Plymouth Rubber, which have reduced their dividends, and Bethlehem Steel, which may reduce, with equal fleets industry problems of 4-for-l split After all adjust ments your original cost is reduced to $1.39 per share. Roger Spear's 48-page Invest- and in Ms 10th printing) is avnll-able to all reMefO of thb column. Send $1 with name and address to Roger E. Spear. The Pontiac Press, Box 1018, Grand Central Station. New York, N.Y. 10017.) (Copyright, IM8) I c—s THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 27. 19sm. Ft ?• IF IT'S AT ALL R*ad ^Unification 16-A a or call Dobt Aid. 10 W. Huron rvlna Oakland County it calls r----*------ BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office In the following boxes: C-15, C-23, C-34, C-37 COATS _*P UNREAL HOMB DRAYTON RLA.NS >74-04*1 4. J. OOOHAROT FUNERAL HOMB Koopo Herbcr, Rh. SW-MOO. donelsoN-johns _______FUNBRAL HOME Huntoon FUNBRAL HOME Serving Pontiac tor SO years n Oakland Aw. FE 3-OHt SPAllKS-C-RIFFIN FUNERAL HOMB to! ServtcJ FI MM VoorheesSiole FUNBRAL HOMB. 332137s Bi»abllshad Pair MYaara 4 LOTSr SECTION 143. 4 loti, taction 154, Block N. Oakland Hllla Memorial Oardans. 431-2172, 331 E. ANY GIRL OR WOMAN MERGING a frlondly advltar, pbona FE t-fllSS btfort 5 p.m* ConfwantlaL "avoid garnishments Gat out of dobt with our man Debt Consultonts •is Pontiac Stele Bank Building FE 8-0333 state Licensed-Bonded Open_leturdey_*_eNoon MR. CHAliliSPHILO would like to confect the Nurse who took cere of him at St. Joseph Hospital, Room 433, bod), P loose cell WI-3MI._ RVIO >a£YiH7Wigs by Calderon. fe ii*n._____ !S#S£QiStCL FOUND: MALI PUPPY, R. white end black jitarklng, vicinity of Rerry RerOa S-ltilT Lost: Aircraft Logbooks Would person finding (hose please cell 33S-3HS or uS*W._ BUYING- SELLING- LOOKING- TELL IT TO 260,000 People With A Pontiac Press WANT AD Phone 332-8181 fmm. W.H r«S1TS/»alF LOST: jtAYlflS *LuVf, near Vtotoomb Street In Clorkston, LOST: tCAcX Lbfto liolrdd LOST: SHAGOYGRAY DOG. moto, vie. of Words Orchord, Rontloc, ■ reword, 3544V73. lost femAlc cr evening shirts. Apply at •togriph t Huron and Dixie wv. A Silver Luke Rd. SLbYMkNT COUNSiLOh EXECUTIVE SECRETARr Mir-aarja! public, handle confidential data and ba able to take toll charge. Good "Srapfe‘““' general codK to? the Bimi. Utoham .Sctiegto. » S or « hours a.ly in toulon only. «4*d30» Ext. 34* or 330. OENhRAL HOUSEKEEPER end jtoby titter to essfit mother, prefer •lye , I", wages open, permanent pubttof ^y'vnitS young, attractive, enthinlqstlc end hoUsIkIUpIr t6 livI—IT m^y^Tom., 3 children. 334- HOUSEKEEPER. *1 days a week, excellent renunera-tton. Cell Ortonvllto *37-3417. HOUSEKEEPER TO live In end To take. Cere .jt hpuse and toddler lor teachers. Itl-Hlt. tAMAiBiA+i pPENINGS tor Socrotsrloi. Apply in parson nhor * fyn. to the Ponttoc Drlvo-ln Thootor. _____ IMMEDIATE OPEN IHO-tor toll tel eeeletanl, experience WTnlSS SSISTANT 'fenced. «t MATURE PERSON, tor child cara, Reteren5sVli!ji§>?8m Mlery* (''cl nlty Qekfend Unlveraltv. «Sl4in. CPU Mrs. I. *44-3711 CHEVY Ml 4-3735 NEW AND USED CAR BILLER oily* experience tor General Motors Dealer, imeltont working candlttonp. Salary and hanatiti immediate emptoymowT mikT^oSi t»W Maple Rd., Trov HuAsI Vl6i*'BVP|||iBHe«h-o will min, oil shifts, mutt neve own car, union Lotto tree. EM i PART-TIME SALAD GIRL eventogt, jo. expelmce necettery. Inquire WW w. Maple Ed. fray or 34S- Rff|UP8IIVIi66. i< to 7 thin, eii. SWjnt wary end working, con-Hospital ^*51*301^' AVC" SECRETARY - BOOKKEEPER. S Michigan bank, at swaoo. (rribNIST for Reel day* a weak. *31 TED'S Pontiac Mall Sundays or holTdavo i STENOS TEMPORARY Factory Jobs pporetors^mltc. tobm^ot ift kinds! Nsodad ot one*, Every Day Pay Day Report rpady to want t a.m.-* g.m. y. ' 7J These Jobs Are Free W* srs an Equal Opportunity An* not an Emptoymsnt Agency s , EMPLOYERS Temp. Service, Inc. REDpSrD 3*117WGrantT Rlw cInterline ?£ eHII,,°o"mR,?. WAITRESS Mms evening work, Rocco'i Dixie HwV., Drayton Plains. WAITRESSES DAY AND night, js&turTOfcr’1 WAITRESSES Will trafitr HMt apptarlng woman for ftfttmup pay te>Rj?ffoy '' WO^IAN FpR tViHlHO, i yjgk comptoto resume._____ WOMAU TO bo atflcTwork, typo ot work normally done in one man ,chMl WOA4ANTp6fc REPAIRING and oHorttton doppriment. S w l f Cleaner, PE MWe. SI 7000 PLUS M. er f. REGULAR BONUS tor man over < : 711, Port worth, Texet. CAMERA SALES Cfmtra tepartmtnt hat an flllj tlma position for who knov knows cameras. THIS IS NOT A CHRISTMAS OPENING. Excellent employee benefits z APPLY IN PERSON FROM 10 AM. TO 4 P.M. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's Pontiac Mall BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH PatRIvg *7 50 I COMMUNI OCENTER • RBAFAST And LUNCH COOKS, experienced, day work, exc. work- rtonfir & RAeakfa^t' Aj^i^^mryey't^&kipler tekliw care of 5 horses ]_______ in® 00 f#rm work, apartment furnished and salary, required. 671-2239, Metai CLERICAL ANO TELLER potl Rank. Apply Office Personnel FREE CLASSES Men or woman wanted. Edm while you learn. We have l offices. 300 MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 JANITORS part tlma low In the tomato. This Is atf afternoon* work! C*H ,7S-75M' LIMOUSINE DRIviRS wanted. Must “nlf'............... W14S or. FE : (t5ry 3-0)44. Chemistry, El ______II. .Xt- Stoi nr MOTOR ROUTE CARRIER- Early momtog delivery of aingto Free Prots,_47 Oakland, FE 5-9272 Pharmacist Full Timt Incfudts* wnplav* benefit orogram Fine minings Purchase discount Lift insurance Overtime berand 40 hrt. Paid holldsvs P*V Planned Retirement Many ether bonefht _ APPLY IN PERSON Hudson's Pontiac Mall Should You MAKE an employment NOW If tHB TIME Michigan Ball AaRT TIME WAltRESS, barmaid la 4 RAILROAD SWITCHMEN Outdoor woyk—various shifts and rast days. Min mum haight 5'6". Experience not necessary — wi train. Rato $3.48 par hour. Company bontfiti indue frM medical, surgical and hospitql benefits, plus III insurance, paid holidays and vacations. Good ret in mti* program. Apply in parson at: * Yard Office Johnson Avsnua and Railroad _______ Pontiac, Mich. toBEtonao Between the Hours of 8 A.M. ond 4 P.M. Mon. Thru Frt GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD An Equal Opportunity Employer GT \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27. 1968 C—7 ALWAYS LEADS ALWAYS 542*666 2 locations FE 8-9405 Doctor will train If fiyityi- Rtal Estate HIGHEST PRICKS PAID FOR 0000 turnlture and eppllancs*. Or what hava vout i, B & B AUCTION WILL BUY OR CELL DISTURBED by til present |ob? LHel tor somsono 25 or over. If you era t'rtd of ^naming and rdody to net, call Bill Hampton, i4&-5030. *. J'A R j*L ESTATE EXPLOSION77" Ws have a future for you In the Roal. Bstete tleld that will wield you earnings unlimited. We will consider full or part time men provided you SB °nu m*s «citi^ flJidWlS TaIMouTreTlior MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE N. Opdyke Rd. fe Mies Work Wontg4 M«le 11 JOURNEYMAN CARPENTER roofing, _______I ____ ooms, siding, etc. Labor bor and ffSlgr Ssnteed in quality FI} 8-2198 Sts A-1 CARPENTRY WORKT "ntthed. 873-8516. Salespeople REAL ESTATE Beautiful Spacious OFFICE Your Own Business Cards YOUR OWN DESK YOUR OWN PHONE LIBERAL COMMISSIONS - Call Mr. Hackett HACKETT REALTY 363-7700 363-6703 363-5477 JOURNEYMAN CARPENTER NEEDS work ol all kinds. Garage additions, roe. rooms. State licensed. Guaranteed workmanship. MM200, Dick Lynch._______________ REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCE OR WILL TRAIN - FREE CLASSES We need help at our UNION LAKE offce - MOO Commerce Rd. at our office at 3 3 0 00 NORTHWESTERN HWY. r Orchard Lake Rd., good pay C. SCHUETT II 7-6560 SALESMAN Reel Estate, 674 SALESMEN i men for sales position < firm. Offering draw tralnlngln company schi to 115,090 first year. Call le-Tn WOLVERINE SCHOOL Mich. Qtdaat Trade School Approved Under Gl Bill DAY-NIGHT &HQQI. 1400 We FORT, DETROIT .abor only JUi work price. Bill WorkWtaodFtwBlo MATURE - BABY SITTING e p.m. Need transportation. 332- SECRETARIAL WORK. Personalized Secretarial Servlcepj33-4n7._ SECRETARY AWAY? CALL TODAY . END WORRIES With A Payday Payment Let Debt-Aid, professional a counselors provide you with fldentlel money minigem service, that has helped mousi solve their Mil problems. Gettli big loan Is not tho answer. can*t borrow youreelf out of 6 Get the help you've been loo for by taking ell your bills discussing your problems: Home Calls by Appointment DEBT-AID, Inc. 10 W. Huron PE 2-0111 Licensed A Bonded Serving Oakland County •ar CASH For you Interest In land contract ^cash to your mortgaga SISLOCK & KENT, INC. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 338-9294 OFFER. BRASS. RADIATORS, Harters and generators. C. Dlxson, UR BUYER. I am paying 38 fox, $4 for coon, II Mr Edwent Harrington, 7746 24 Rd. ot Van Dyke in Piece. NEWSPAPER - 8ft cents Pei lbs. delivered. Royal Oak 1 Paper and Metal Co„ 41. Hudson, Royal Oak. LI 1-4020. OR 3 BEDROOM hoUSE, 1 floor. iARAGB WITH ELEC possibly heat, will tricity, cell 363-4948. SMALL STORE 1 MILLION Dollars has been made available to us to purchase and asaumt land contracts, mortgages or buy homes, lots or acreage outright. We will give you cash lor your equip'. Our appraiser to awaiting your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty 460 Highland Rd. (M-39) MLS >pen 94 *1' ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS home Apartment*, UniawSilnS 38 late Hearn 49l>ale Noam 49 CLARKSTON CORNERS All elec. epts. Boeutlfvl — secluded — no children. No pots. 105 Weffilngton W. Clerkston or cell i s $400 DOWN HIGHLAND ESTATE 5 rooms with connacting bath, full By Ownar 8 badroom tri-iaval* iw I basement and 2 car garage* dining bath* walk out family room. OR 3-_room, owners agant 338-6952. | 3707. EMBASSY WEST ! SPACIOUS 1- end 2-bedroom, $150 end SITE, Mrs. Schultz. 8740589, 1. to S p.m. only. $16,500 ~l Investors Special ON YOUR LOT ‘ bedroom Capo Cod, full beaoment ... , . T-'iSS , needs work. *2.000 take over S2.500 All aluminum ranch with 1,014, balance. Vecenf. Agent tor owner square feet ot living area. Large fe 10912. I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A SaVlaWoUN^CaU! AGEN1 074-1090____ INVESTOR WANTS HOMES — any 474-4104. Top dollar, LOVELAND up. Np children or pets allowed. Fireplace, carpeting, draperies, airing, etove, refrigerator fur- _______ Plus all utlllflee except electricity. Cell after S p.m. 4743603. Drayton Plains. ONLY *380 MO Vis YOU IN Brick Townhouse*. 1-3 bedrooms, -----------------slcome, 1337 Cher- We no ___________ ■ IBI ________ Harbor area. For quick service on •ailing your heme please cell — Leona Loveland, Realtor 3100 Cess Lake Rd. LOTS-WANTED IN PONTIAC doting. REAL VALUE , REALTY, 643-4330__________ dUICK CASH FOR JUICK CA! Equity or I Real Estat 1 to 50 "WWfJW'MAH PROPERTIES, AND LAND CPN- WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke FE 0-0185 Urgently need tor Immediate salel Pontiac MULTI PL E° LiIt ?flo SERVICE ADMITTING CLERK, nice location, f310 call Kathy King, 332-9157, Associates Personnel. Will train, t wry. kdams 8. Adams IMMEDIATE PLACEMENT receptionist $425 Enjoy Ml exciting earner working with the puMIc. Pleasant surroundings and beautiful office in North Suburban area. Fee paid .INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1000 S. woodward B'hom 042-0260 Convalescent-Nursing Jtl elderly A PRICE TO SUIT YOU. Heavy end light hauling basements end garages cleaned end odd Job*. Call anytime,Jree estimates. 334-9049. Painting and Decorating 23 LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR paint-■no In Waterford area. Fret estimates. OR 30304 or OR 4-2958. ING AND il Gldcumb, 1 24-A January Sale Prices Now on ell stock fabrics, up t pet. off. Have your old furni W'cTS h,Jr"" estimate. Com'L Upholstery. Wonted Howefceld Coedi 24 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL ALL CASH 8a anyplace In Oakland loney In 34 hour*. YORK BUY ■ N)P 4713 Pixie Hwy. HE TRADE PC B71H 1702 8. Tftoqrapn A SYNDICATE -tho Reel Estate field hat employed us at their agent to acquire residential home. Commercial property, land contracts acreage, vou list your property you et v°n,Realty tor a cash isle syndicate wants property no you hevo to move test or do net like prospects going through youi homo — -0» ua tor an appraisal. VON REALTY ju _„"ALT22iyu!URON ........iu»y 682-5SO0_ PRESENT FOR MY CHRISTMA: FAMILY: a nica ■ 'eMT' RAY PAYS CASH FOR Homes ALL CASH IN 24 HRS. We accept 30 day listings Guaranteed sale 674-4101 689-0760 OPEN Sundays oik floors, IV* baths. Caramlc tlla and formica vanity in master bath. “ :horvdinim cupboart Phone 682-9031 Valley Place Apartments t the heart of Rochester, compere value anywhere, 3 Air Con- For more Information cell-ART THOMAS or FRED HYTEN REPRESENTATIVES, VON REALTY ___________482-5800 2 baths. ONLY $177 FEATURING: — Central heat — Over 1000 sq. ft. I — Complete Carpeting —*GE freezer. Dishwasher,' Refrigerator — Huge Storage Area — Underground Parking >lus much mora. DIRECTIONS: Take Rochester Rd., Into Rochester, turn E. at University Rd. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Separate bldgs, for families with children. OPEN DAILY 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. PHONE: 651-4200 AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA 3 bedrooms, full basement, 20 ft living room, gss heat, alum, siding, large garage on 2 acres. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyke__________332-0151 BY OWNER - Golf Manor House, : ! bedrooms — family room — VA baths 1 SKSfa 1 BY OWNER NORTH bedroom, gai $9,900, $3,000 down. 338-1942. CLARKSTON IS WHERE THIS BUY Is located, a 3-bedroom large living and dining __ kitchen, carpeting and drapes Yours for only tV m ---- |' 7 TODA' Priced to sell land contract FHA-> and sewer, near Oakland University. Immediate possession. >12,500. In the Village of Rochester MILTON WEAVER INC. Realtors carpeting, wi ^ back, fully * 674-4101* RAY 474-4101 Rent Houses, Furnished 39 BEDROOM, BABY WELCOME, 800 CAPE COD 2 BEDROOMS, NO children or pats. 3 ROOM AND ■ irlng i m over 25. No Children. 674 CAPE COD Full basement, gas heat, bedroom, full dining room, lol FHA approved, ^Only^ Cosh For Your Equity Rent Hoveei. Unfurnithed 40 BEDROOMS DINING room, kltchon. living room with fireplace, full beeemdnt, 2 car garage. 3W acres. 8895 M-59. across from Pontiac Airport. Goodrich, 838-2270 John Slrkineno. BEDROOM, bullt-lns, garage. •Me Jen. IS. Olxi *175. per month, • 473-3944 after 2:00 p.r RETIREE AND WIFE del smaller home with basem Clerkston 674-4106._____ spot Cash-eqOity, 3 BEDROOM HOME In excellent west side location with full basement. gas heat, 2 car garage, married couples only, no children. Deposit and references required. The Rolfe H. Smith Co., 333-7148. 5 ROOM, MODERN, gos heat; anv ployad couple, rat. FE 2-7425. BEAUTIFUL LAKE FRONT trl-level, new, 4 months lease necessary $180 per month, 3 bedrooms. Call Joe or At at 682 9000.___________________________ NEW AND EXISTING .. 2-3-4 bedroom homes. Children okay. N.W. of Pontiac. >5341770, 627-3917, 627-3040._____________ only! Brick Boats and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcraft, I Fiberglass Marc, outboard I 333-4117. ________Sand—Gravel—Dirt HU SAND .^S.L"SSSLS*SVS“?t LOADING DAILY *-1201.__________________ 5* cents per yard, 450 WII BULLDOZING - TRUCKING, reason- !r?VuR5i.,Ynlon L#lt*' MA I Jble^ mllebie. Free estimates or| i^f RtAKl.SAjsD FOR YOUR OR OTHER, ________ CALL NOW. H A O 5 T R O REALTOR. OR 44)351 OR EVE NINOS. FE 4-7009. RANSFERRED COUPLE Wfftt (5090 down desire* 3 home In Waterford area. Agent OR TRANSFERRED EXECUTIVE wilt) all cash want* 3 bedrobm Pontiac, wo I _______ 8784108 ApGrtaBnts, Furnished 37 1 OR 2 ROOMS* CARPETED appliances. After 4 p.m. Frldqy m Scott Lk.-^ ---------- S ROOMS AND BATH, 2-3 bedrooms, ryUTwn, Pontiac. 383417V UTICA, 3 BEDROOMS, RAY MODELS OPEN 2 P.M. —'TILL DARK I 3 bedroom, family room. 3. J garage. Trl-level, only (17,990 ANNETT Sale Howee IRWIN GARDEN AREA good condition, fireplace In LR, Bloomfield room home II on one floor, to car garage. Near B1 orchards & Fox Hll (visions. Reduced to $13,900, WASHINGTON FK — 4 BEDROOMS Attractive brick & asbestos sided home in axcellant condition. 2 bedrooms A bath on first floor, 2 bedrooms up. Large paneled rec, room In basement, auto. heat. Carpeting A drapes included. Close to WhltfMd Element School. $20,500, FHA terms. ROOM BRICK — WEST SIDE 11,000 sq. ft. close to downto. Ideal for offices, doctors clinic, union hall, church, etc., property being In excellent condition. Spacious rooms on first A second floor, center A side entrances, front A rear stairs, 4 lavatories ‘ asement, elevator parking. $59,500, A bath. Full Extra terms. TRADE < mobile horn*,. I* exc. ■■ WE WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Office Open Evenings A Sunday 1-4 n evenings a. 338-0466 3 bedroom ranch, full basement and family room at only $15,990, 1 GILES tocation i NEAR PONTIAC MOTORS Sharp 3 bedroom bundgtgw with brick fireplace in specious living room, lull basement and S car garage. Full price SI 7400. RANCHER '•-* 3 bedroom bungalow, with carpeted living room, utility room, end attached garage. Can be bought for *2800 down to mortgage balance, and payments ot *133 per month Including taxes end r GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE * W. WALTON__PE 3-7183 Val-U-Way OFF BALDWIN Clean 3 bedroom brick front home located on a large tot. Features beautiful wall to wall carpeting, gas heat, tile bath laroe utility room, roomy kitchen and dining area. Priced at $13,950. $400 down on FHA terms. bedroom brick front rancher heet, file bath. throughout. Priced U-18 3 UNIT INCOME Good condition, gai furniture goes with « ___....____ ______________- J goes with property, located . .. ... - 0 873-7837 073-O2O0|ln city, off north Perry St. Cen be room^FH8° apDrovedT^Onlv° S3m' MAYBE YoIPKE LOOKING lor °" '•"« """ *«<» down. Agent for Owner, 338-8993. I vour tlret home. If so then this It ' —«—■ ■ - ---------—-------- what you wentl l year old ell PAA - ' aluminum ranch with 2 bedrooms, $1,500 Down On J full basement, sharp kitchen with »j 2*1 frultwood cabinets, fully carpeted. Land LOntrOCT ■toil A^t [ KwtlV'"' "°" d0Wn bLnsWty o^m fe .S CALL RAY TODAY 474-4101 community water and saw* alurmnum siding. Call today. HACKETT! 363-6703 RAY DIXIE LAKE FRONT nost an acre — attractive 2 Iroom ranch home with 2 car . 873-8191 LARGE ROOM, cooking privileges, gentlemen. FE 00845.______ LOVELY ROOM FOR-jroSsitonel men. 583 W. Huron. FE 3-7111. ryl Elwood Realty._ Elizabeth lake EsYatET-',*- cant, newly decorated Inside and out, 3 bedroom oak floors, utility room, crawl space under house, $14,500, Waterford Realty, >73-1273. FOR LARGE FAMILY 5 bedroom stone home with int and 2 closed in ff"0 Service OPEN 90 mem. Gas heel. Aluminum siding. , a „ Full price S19.680. Don't welt tor John K this one — egg -- •-Christmas. ROOMY BUNGALOW om for mora. RRR neat, garage, approved. About $92 month. Owntrra agont 674-1649. onlV tsu 66wh 2-3 Bedroom, brick., to> model it 1317 Cherry! ON THE Waterfront lining BUY FRIENDS IRWIN And Sons 7 Rooms & Bath: Two story home located wltt easy walking distance ol Webel & Washington Jr. High. Ni kitchen, new furnace, many i AVON TWP. Specious 3 bedroom home "mint" condition. New well fe ) Avon Manor Subdivision on a large 80x150 ft. lot. Total price only Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Aye._Open 9 to 9 GAYLORD 1,900. 8 ROOM HOME, ROOM to build on, furnished completely, l2,on down payment. Call MY 2-2021 er FI 00893. BEDROOM HOME, ONLV 810.800, terms. 50x200' lot, village ef Oxford. Cell MY 2-1021 or PB 00092. NCOMB: 2 COMPLETE Apertme ' | 75'xMO' $21,100, < 2-2121 0-9893. Ctll MY > INC, jRKERS. WIDOWS | OR DIVORCEII PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB; ---------- ---------- IE LEMS AND RETIREES ARi Seers. 35 Clelrmont St., 338-1997, r'60M FOR working 3938. I or 2 single VERY ATTRACTIVE men. 531-0*4. ________ 2 ROOMS AND BATH, attractively deaerated, carpeted, no children or pets. FE 00344. __________ 2 R06mS AND beth, ground floor, no . children^jerking at the door. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, No chlldrm. SwM?' pS-”1«*' S^ofi!"*! Bent Stores Iti! LARGE AREA. FLINTY et reas. rate* by the veer. _ MICH SALS REALTY 8270040__________ FE 0-1 0KAY WITH US OPSN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. retlned Oentlemen. OR 3-7831.__ WORKING MAM OR retiree, neer 1A CARPENTRY end roofing, free estimates. MA M262. A-1 CARPENTRY, NEW and repair, tree estimates. 338-4721 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR ■■■■■HHor finish* :reet tc AND GRAVEL CO. CHAIN LINK AND l'CMh3tSr*‘5 p'ljjj9*33 Dtxl* Hwy., Watartord 623-1040 BY JOURNEYMEN Homes, attics, beeetrants, oarapes and any type concrete Min. ''No carpentry and cement HEINRICH, TUISKU, HIBBLIN, INC. We ere looking tor won, ell c of remodeling, no lob too sir toe large. Specializing In addltloni, rec. BILLS SR./NEW AND Ol mdlng. FE 2-5799. NYDER, FLOOR LAY INC I end finishing. FE 5-0592. HD *ath, furnished, 75 dwfc-3 ROOMS AND 0ATH. sit welcomt, $35 Mr wwk. inquire 273 Baldwin Av 338-4054, 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE b* 1100 diipoelt. FE ANYTIME DAY OR ntoht. Co . merclel or residential. 3300211, AA-t — UK SNOWPLOWING, .. trucks, rellabl* 3350084, 3380685, or 332-5024. 3 ROOMS, UTILITIES FURNISHED, ROOM APARTMENT, *30 *25 WCvrlj ^d«^ »0 Eas 4~K50M1 CLARKSTON ROOFING. SNOW PLOj^NI^. 473-9297 l p SNOW PLBwiMSrBP,---------------^ residential, commercial.04 EFFICIENCY 2-ROQM ce. Rochester, 851-1474 or turnli 851-8538. )OM&. Apply N, Ferry St. hauling. or come te 290 w. Ken nett Neer Baldwin RIAL VALUE MALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220 FISHER BODY EMPLOYES SPE CIAL, 3, bedroom ranch with well te well carpeting In living room end n kitchen. "0" down. SIS TOCAY CALL RAY ’ 874-4101 Rent Office Space SEPARATE OFFICES Open onto layer. Paneled, carjMtl I ^alrjSnlt^jtJgil 3 OFFICE SPACES, HEAT, Brand nine fur* 3134. ________ __________ MEi turn.. 8540 Dixie, OR H255. AVAI Bee LABLB :hester's ONI OP end newest of-rclel center. lenhr ot tree perking. 11-5553 or 851-4578. Tree Trimming Service >-l TREE SERVICE BY B S L. FE 00889. 074-3510. * tr call PRIVATE OFFICE WITH rtc*ptlon room. WILLIS M. BRIWBN ^ 3lker Eyes RAY GOOD CREDIT* That's ell that* needed on this 5 room ranch with full .basement. 2 car oarage, new furnace, plus carpeting. Owners agent. 8M-109*. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 4 BEDROOM BRICK 5 veer eld colonial, * rooms In ell. 217 family room, IV brick fireplace, formal dining room, lr living room, qas heat, full basement, lake privileges. LARGE, LOVELY, bath, near Airport. pete. 8510015. LOVELY 1 slDROOM. wlcomfi, dtp. Rtf, 3>2-582u. .nTcI 4 RObta •partmafll bedroom* rofrloorotor and i 00$ hoot, vocfirrtT do». 425-1741, ^■mn’^r »wImm Property 47-A BUILDING WITH LOTI at IB. W ' ------- 3841 mT Ft 10 by Janitorial Service^ frazibr and MAINTENANCE AND OENERAI Janitorial work, c o m m • r c I a I residential, 334-4229. 24 I INTERIOR FINISH, panell 2-1235, peneljng. 40 yeera experience. FE ¥d OR "KITCHENS. MOD Moderated" Formk end cabinets, UL 3-1824. TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or eh Building end Herdwerd suppl ___________________ 1025 oAlend FE L OOF AND GUTTER .repair end]------------------,1_________________________ replace, paneling, pethting Interior) Moving, Storage end exterior, storm end screen ---------------------------------— repelr, free estlmetes, FE 4-5170. _ I smith MOVING CO. Your mot PENNINGTON Tree * Removal, 334-5121 er 3340003, I VjT', .MV??' .xRi In A. M. or TREE SERViCi=RlMOVAL - Trimming, removal, spraying and >WI surgery. plus >115 dap. 692-1761. ± _ DANdSLIN 437-14781 3 ROOMS AND beth .emell eiby :ome, etove, mtNaeretor ell ties lurnlshed. S32.5 Huron. FE 3-796* bulidlno W-l. *4« BgjU^OR 40547. Sale Honest Everett Cummings, Realtor 3513 UNION LAKE ROAD | EM 3-3206 ______343-7101 HIITER 1x91* park-1IMMEDIATB POSSESSION ON THIS to. 10 day 4 bedroom Colonial* IV* caramk 1300 Crta-I tile baths, $21,900. Terms. VACANT 3 BEDROOMS AND BATH, garage and r THIS ONE -AND RELATIVES WILL DELIGHTED. $22*900 VA* PHA. :all Ray today < RAY PONTIAC bread front ranch laroe utility — decorated like ni — nice let — vacant — 8450 moves vou In on FHA mortgage - BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 West Huron - line* 1925 FE 50448 after 5 P.m. 825-4ft45 JOHNSON LAKE FRONT On Sylvan Lake with beautiful sendy beech, brick ranch, with 3 large bedrooms, 3 full beths, built-In, stove, oven end refrigerator. High and dry basement with lovely recreation room end fireplace. At-•«h«l J-cer oarage, let 7rx22i‘, other items too numerous to mention. Cell for full details. ' price only 852.200. Will trade. A 8 call Sonnes Johnson, 8020O41. JOHNSON '1704 S. Telegraph Fa 4 A&G JUST give firm contract RHODES '•ole Houses immim the piece end push our building lob* from start to finish, (Mr. and Mr*. Trotter's brick homo was complatod In 17 days) end ■T % ill the new building lobs. That's lot true. We only want yours. ANDERSON & GILFORD Building 6 Realty 3181 Highland Rd. (M-19) 682-9000 INDI I AN WOOD oom horn flrtpi . full I, larq# beths, Uvln end wall t ntege. Scenl i. Cell lode 49 Sale Hemei ]5«3V locelTon. Only 843,1 tor datolls. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 8-2306 258 W. Wilton FE £67 _MULTIPLE LUTING liRVlCi RANCHES COLONIALS TRI-LEVELS 3 and 4 Bedrooms 1, V/t and 2'/a Baths 300 te 030,000 pit SHOULD 1Z “ESTABLISHED 1930" isd-level, 22 femil • new heme O" DOWN AND POSlilSION tor thl ___ 49 immediate CALL BAY TODAY is* 19000 874-4101 |A PRICE TO SUIT you. cfMEI Pent! FLOORS, new E reps lee. 391-2500.__________ COMMERCIAL,. INDUSTRIAL GUINN'S CONST. CO. 334-7877 or 391-3871 FIREPLAC kmensh I 3-8877. 5uTn*flr» Piano Tuning PIANO TUNING REPAIRING OSCAR SCHMIDT_______PB 2-5217 PBinfing an^ Ptcarafinf L-1 PAINTING WOR GUARANTEED. P r— ttflmah A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING HOMPSON_____________FE 4-8364 k-O.K. PAINTING. OMlIfV frtt wtlmttor. m-inF -QUALITY WORK ASSURED Paint- 1SH or'ffiv/b W w,*h,B0 Plastering Servlte PiinnMng 6 HenHag CONDRA PLUMBING HEATING L PLUMBING_AND_HtAfiNG, i Gaon ssxs Can rar ___________ Auto Parte, Baldwin Ave.. cell 338-4084. 3 SMALL ROOMS and"bath, upper, 2. 3 ANI heated, range end rtf rig., private decorated. on Putnem St., ISO ----------- * Reply Pontiac Press Box HAULINO AND RUBBISH. Name your price. Anytime. PB 80095 LIRATESH*3A1266G' REAS0NABLE LIGHT HAULING OP XNY KIND. LIGHT HAULIM MOVING* kind* rtt». 3>ffit7 LlGHf hAuliMG, IA>EMENT$ garagaa claanad. 674-1142._ OGRt aRd hIaVV TEUtklNG. rubbish, fill dirt, grading and graval and fronl-and loading. PS * NEW PICK-UP TRUCK, will movt or dollvtr anything, «hort trtoa* Ft 4-2S76. days. RAY WE BUILD 3 BEDROOM RANCH-ERS* oak ffoort* aluminum tiding* $15*400 on our tot or will build on vour lot. Coll B. C. Hlltor, Rooltor* >792 Kill. Lokt Rd. 602-00S0* oftar • p.m. 602-6427.___ HAPPINESS 1$ A HOME OP YOUR OWN YOU'LL ENJOY | this j br Drayton, Prlctd from lot. Mav^ avaMabla. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 3830804. 10735 Hlahlind Rd. (M-09)| ____W Milt west of Oxbow Like SYLVANLSkE Sem Warwick has 2 bedrooms, brlckr unfinished attic, cprpeft, i'i.V' 'ImTedia^ O^CUPAN-CY. 602-2020._ iPAflSUs 7 roomy rpomi* botomont* goroBtf! Ilka now furnaca* S2SS down. About, $90 month. Agant for ownor J3I-, ranch North of mlS?I..r , ___ C-15. Pontiac Michigan, ANP EATH* roforoncoi roqulrtd* 682-3872 5 ROOMuPPEk, sis A^ARTMnf r00m *nd flAttley realty 830 COMM0RC* 3830901 3-M6ROOM House, by owner, in! Weterford. 111,900. with IIOOO down, land centrect. Immediate!-_p>!?fM!or. «51-0«:_________| oil 40359 ’ After 8 P 3 BEDROOM Brick and aluminum ranch, ftnead utilities built-in and grill. Mack-I a yard Mg MR. EXECUTIVE « professional man or 1 1 — who dotlrot a hoi iharm and aaav llalno bedroom ranch has li fireplace, gat haat, water softener, attached garage, near Muntoon Lika, $26*400. HAGSTR0M, Realtor THIS fVtAR OLD RAN?jnrpriced lust right, he* 3 bedrooms, full I bo somoni, polio ond 2 cor attached garage on corner let. Only 122.900 FHA. tm If new. CALL RAY fODAY 8780101 RAY _______ihV) ____ WYMAN LEWIS REALTV 109 Whltttmora_33$ 0323 TAYLOR MOVE RIGHT IN Modern ranch home located on an acre of lend In West Suburban area. Include* 1400 sq. ft. of living •ree, fireplace, family room, 2 car garepe. Immediate possession. Full price only 019,9M, terms to suit. 0LDE f°! N** homes en Andersonvllle Rd. Include o 2 ten let, *gd - - 1-------- home with ivy beths. ACQUAINTANCE Become familiar with this with basement, rec. room, end 2V2 car eerege, Hi utlce. • swlngerl At Huntoon Shores. mOMlve end decorated to any women's delight, end family room. 2 bedrooms, IV* beths, FORGOT to HfY the rentl Why not collect It9 tenants p•y,*ut!l?tl•*U,,l,* "°W 1 llto Rd. Ihl* Spring. Tetel price ftjdroom brick end aluminum, re sent end 2 car ettached garage. •Ignad living DORRIS & SON REALTORS 2536 DIXIE HWr. 03 4-0324 17-1 btdrf 17-2 bad room apt*., from INCLUDING CARPETING ANO DRAPES Stova, rafrigarator, garbaga disposal, hw wnrat nrat. I'/Vilocka from Pontiac Motor* 191 195 W. KENNETT ROAD FE S-2734________M8-543I NOW LEASING BRAND NEW-WATERF0RD Crescent Manor Apits. 1744 Crescent Lk. Rd. 1 BLOCK NO. et M-09 Specious 2-bedroom units featuring Mlvir ■——MW —1 |i cond., COOLEY LAKE FRONT 2 bedroom olucc*. 2 c, nice let, price reduced **" COSWAY | d$1-$7i60 3379 ORCHARD LK. ____(AT COMMERCE RD ) || | 4-H REAL ESTATE ClarkHoo School* — Country a»-motphara. 5 room bungalow. Nica comor lot. Now gat furnaca. Ldka privilagat v» block on baaufiful lake. Idaal atartar horn#. VACANT. Quick poaaaatlon. Prlcod $10,600 $1,510 down on land contract armt. 5844 Dtxia Hwy. 428-1400 Attar 8 p.m. OR 84)465 Ok $ 2676 4-H RIAL ESTATE SUBURBAN - 5 room bungalow, crawl mace, new get furnace, comer let. lake privileges. VA-Mekee even Meal vacation ■s A GOOD INVTsfMItrT needs a little repair. Fix up 3-bedreom frame ranch > rar. beautiful retreat. Price 819008. SUM down on land centrect. 5(44 Dixie Hwy. 423-14001 OR 308M ' ‘ OA S287S private be Ic on Ige'l499 N. JOHNSON AVi„ 8 bedrooms. w-0 •—- "vio« room* dtolnp room,! and bath* full batamanfi ..rape, vn.«S^ r quK! CALL RAY TODAY I RAY (P-25) HOMES PROM $21,500 FI 4 0992; 423 0470 ROSS HOMES SCHRAM OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS J. A. Taylor Aa Inc. ayior Agency 7731 Highland Rd. (M Ml DAILY OR 40306 EVES. EM 3-7548 TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 PONTIAC STATE BANK ____ 334-1145 THINK AHlAD TO SOMMIR FUN r cute 3 I Lake Orion he* beeuttful ereunde evertoeklns the with svfgmsttc. D«. CUSTOM CRAFTED AFFL1ANCEI RY "HOTPOINT." SEE MANAGER APT. Ne. 1*7 IBS P.M. enly Dally by App't. OR CALL 673-5050 batwaan Oakland Ava. and Howard if. It In axcapflqnaMy claan condition. Nawiy painted Intida and out*id* 2 car garaoa. Can ba> purchetad af 115,150 on FHA i morfgaga with $550 down and closing coat aatlmatad at $350 toi poateaaion. Kannath G. Hampafaad. REALTOR itar near tchoola Ctoting coal »lv on FHA, quick poaaaaaion. List With SCHRAM And Coll the Van OPEN EVES ANO SUN JOSLYN AVE. FE 5 9471 . hardwood floors, j board tpaca, marmo-pana wlnoowt* built-in calling fan for tummtr i ventilation, 120,000 Ipnd contract. CALL RAY TODAY * 1 674^104 ! RAY (P-89) I VACANT CAPI~ COD. 4 ttdrooma* baaamant naadt finishing, 62,000 to $2|^ balanca. Ownar't aganf, OR ^WILLOTlORErfA IMMEDIATE POSSESSION This lovely large home In prestige •ree has 4 bedrooms, spec levs living room with fireplace, term*! dining room, lounge mem, eat beef, 2 car gerege, city water A sewer. Out af town owner says sell. Priced et 922000 but open to offer. Cell te see today, we have the kef. WARDEN REALTY 3434_W. Huron, Pontiac 9*2-392(1 YOUNG BUT HOM^S REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Ruaaail Young. Bldr. 834-3880 - SIW W. Huron Sf. ZONED MULTIPLE 114 SEMINOLE I Laro*. ipactoua § badroom, baft ’ z,^ nawij^ dacorafad throughout, "" ‘wrighTrealty ■ 382 Oakland Ave. FI 2-9181 TED'S TRADING 674-2236 R-50 R 16 (2,800 MOVES YOU IN This 3 badroom ranch homa In Orton Township* ban plastarad walls* largo lot* storms and scratni* laka prlv and drapat indudod. Monthly paymants of $101 Incluoa tna and Insuranca. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. R-27 $450 DOWN Up in tha morning and off to school. You catch a tow axtra for this homa It clot* to alamantary school* FHA farms ava on this 3-bodroom, 2-story homo. Pull bosamant, formal dining i gar ago and gas haat* axcaliant valua at $13*400. PONTIAC WEST SIDE ild English styled brick large fivl _ bedroom yard, walking distance to school* R-61 GIFT OF THE MONTH Cuifom brick homa with ovar 2,400 sq. ft. of mant Includat a kltchan. lovtlv racraation arai lot of "IN" antartalnlng, rank I in flraplaca ill now for a list ot i... trad*. Prlcad raducad to $89,900. R48 ALL OUR HOUSES ARE “GO" To mi thjs brick and cadar ranch stylad homa* ^ flraplac ait* 2-ca garaga* floors* carpal 3 ras. Call i 22* fhara ara 3Vb baths and attachad 2'/j car “ ara ara oh, so many list of thorn. Excaiiant location. Tarma* or garaoa, school*, shopping and^ MODELS Watartord Town- IMMEDIAT¥d'Pf5*stfltK>81' lrl-l*v*lt, colonials, end rancho*, ond various dail( i 115.100, call now for an appointment to sea • new hoi McCullough Realty, 5460 Highland Rd. (M-59) 674-2236 -MLS- Inc. C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 HALL 2 BEDROOM - beautiful nge and farad at wn plus cost. Don't wait on this kitchen with built In saparato dining only *17,990 with * BEDROOM ALUMINUM — Ranch with full basement on largo §1 acre lot, featuring,thermo windows, carpeting throughout, 1% ceramic baths, large , country kitchen. Offered for only *2300 down plus closing cost. Let us show you this beputy. LOT OWNERS — use your lot as! down payment and we will build you a new 3 bedroom alum, ranch! with thermo windows and screens, plus full basement, *13,950 total price until Jan. 1, 1909. Call for LET'S TRADE B. HALL REALTY, REALTOR 6569 Dixie Hwy. 625-4116 Open Dally 9-9, Sat. 9 4 KINZLER Family Rm. and Fireplace In this all brick ranch home In the Watkins Lake area. Has 20* living room, 3 bedrooms, 2 • baths, full basement and 2*A car oarage. 130' landscaped lot. Truly an excellent value now at *31,900. Pontiac Knolls Brick and frame 3 bedroom ranch with beautiful paneled recreation room. Newly decorated Inside and out. Now vacant. Closing costs on- IVj0HN KINZLER, Realtor 131, Dixie Hwy. ,23-0335 Multiple Listing Service STOUTS Best Buys Today YOU'RE IN BARGAIN COUNTRY I— When you spy this compact bedroom ranch home I d e a 11 situated on high and dry corner Ic with l’/a car garage. Newl decorated Inside and out. GA heat. Vacant. Only *700 down plu costs to qua I if led buyers. SPACE STARVED?- JACK Frushour REALTOR WE TRADE NEW LAKE FRONT RANCH WITH 3 BEDROOM, IV* b»th built- ■II off a lovely 12x22' Sale Houses II CARNIVAL By Dick Turner BUD1 2nd. Glint lot. Basement i heat, terms on land con- LAKE FRONT HAVE YOU BEEN LOOKING for ■ lake front home tor under 125,000? Look no furthar — wa hava a 3 bedroom bungalow, attacbad garaga and basement with family room. dry. AVON ANDERSONVILLE ROAD Laka front, ranch homa for actlva family, schools all arour 3 bedrooms, living roor spacious kltchan, IV* car garai *2500 movts you In. EAGLE LAKE Channtl front) laka, this 3 room, plus decorated Inside rooms and carpeted living room. City water and sewer, paved street. MOO down plus closing costs. SEE THISI NEED COMMERCIAL ; ZONING?- I feet of commercial frontage*com°, story i homa which eye opener. Also 22 x 26 rental unit. Locatad In action area close . to expressway A Oakland University. *27,750 with terms. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdykt Rd. FE 5-1165 __ Multiple Listing Service SHINN SOUTH SIDE 5 room, 2 bedroom. 26 ACRES Holly area with 1,30 of road front-e, this lovely place of property m be bought on land contract. It's lead to sail — so call today. NORTHERN HIGH AREA 3 bedroom ranch homa, attacl car garage SparkHng w aluminum suing, custom bu 1»M, excellent .condition. Can._ and drapes, large MmHy room, kltchan and full dining roam com bination. PlahwashT, clave washer 8. dryer. Full baaamanl dandy recreation room, additions guest bedroom. IV* baths, gas heat, larga lof, too x 130. Cydona - fencing, double black-top driveway Value priced, 52*^00.00, farms. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION North and 2 bedroom, lVi strov homa larga unfinished upstairs, dining room, new carpeting, lull basamant, das heat, garaga. Priced at 313,900.00, terms. NICH0UE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron St. FE 5-1201, after 6 p.m. Fg 4*773 FE 5-8183 fetsionel landscaping end tecned 2 car garage, | START PACKING TO MOVE RIGHT IN Immediate possession, 3 I rench, full finished basamant with flmplaoa. spacious living with fireplace. drapes and carpeting, attached 2 car garage, closa to schools and Oakland AVON REALTY EXCLUSIVE SALES O WEINBERGER HOMES 13 H. Telegraph , til ♦ 331-0333 Wideman START PACKING IMMEDIATE POSSESSION on th watt tide brick ranch. Carpeting llv. room, tile bath, alto large ra room and bath In basamant. one ai WATERFORD AREA Three bedroom ranch Carpeted living A tfl family room, baaamanl, gat HA| wir t1**!/ attached two car garaga. MLS * TW baths, large corner lot. Early 6744161 ^74*2245 ^M*,on- Pr,c*d t0 M M 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. Three" MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR HERRINGTON HILLS 3 bedroom brick ranch. Carpeted living room plus drapes and curtains. Built-In oven and range, dinette. Full Dtmt. with new rac. room, bar, family room. Largo patio and carport. FHA or Gl terms. "0” DOWN, LIKE NEW NORTH SIDE RANCH. Sharp! Sharpl It the word. Larga carpeted living room, 3 nlco bedrooms, large anchor fenced yard. Storage shad, carport. S15,700 with FHA terms. VACANT NORTH SIDE "0" DOWN, BRICK front. 3 bedroom ranch with large kltchan, larga utility, fenced rear yard, aluminum storms and screens. Just 313,350 FHA, lust •closing costs. Sea this today) miss this ons SUBURBAN RANCHER LOON LAKE PRIVILEGES Attractive ranch homa, carpatad living room, 3 bedrooms family room, polio, 2 car attached garaga. tided. Large lot. rlor aluminum CALL TODAYI OL 1-0230 I «» Solo Houses MS mma REALTORS & BUILDERS "SINCE" 1939 SUNDAY 2 P.M. TO 5 P.M. double-glued windows, a lull wall natural fireplace In the family room, gat automatic beat, paneled and beamed family room, a 3' Wkto grass, doorwell to Mure patio area, a 3300.00 carpet allowance 2J5* living room, bulll-ln dishwasher, oven and range, an ell-formlcw tettehon, a large finished two-car garaga. All this located *. i! In HJ'H!!L VIM*, one of Oakland County's rlHS! teMIv'liont. Paved drive and streets. Located In J.u,l nor"’ " tllvar Bell Rd. and aast ot M-23. Five minutes from I-7S expressway. 3655 Hl-Lure. Office Open Sunday 12 to 5 P.M. W 332-0552 332-4810 50, ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD ACROSS FROM THE "MALL" TRADE YOUR PRESENT HOMS THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL ACT NOW snd you can Immediately move Into 3-bedroom, full basement homa. Fenced yard. I Wear garaga, paved street, city water and sewers, convenient to shopping and schools, makes this the ^MOv'^TODaVi lwm* •*a»,bla to holp you maka EAST SIDE RANCH Three bedrooms, II eras, kitchen, full, i room. dining two story older lo dining rooms, . ______mt, oss HA heat, attached garage. Excellent condition. Easy FHA farms. Eve. call MR. ALTON 673413* Nicholie & Harger Co. 53'/i W. Huron St. FE 541*3 VON VACANT OPEN DAILY 5-6 Watkins Pontiac Estates Owner has moved Into a no homa. Our orders art to put price tea on this largo 3 bedroom aluminum ranch to sail Im-Hr *• »«n»«5»lc low prleo of lll.fog you will pot: Carpeting—Living—Dining- Hall Drapes 15,000 sq. ft. living area Paneled 14x30 family room Dryer Dishwasher Swimming pool Built-in ovens and range Garbage disposal Fireplace 24x20 attached garage 100x178 Cyclone fenctia yard ONLY $21,900 ,V0N REALTY »LS 3301 W. Huron 312-5100 ....... If no onswor 3I2-W33 START Tho New Yotr In o beeutlfu bedroom brick — family room •lag don and dlnlnp room — divided basamant, fenced yard corner lot — shade trees — tractive landscaping — closa recreation and shopping. Just M-St W. of Pontiac. $3,500. We'll try to make a dial to suit Just tall us what you htvo to down, baautlful starter homa In GREAT LIVING! Clarkston rancher that h everything. Full basamant. UNION LAKE 3 bedroom ranch. Lota of spaco. Wall taken cara of. Avlaltblo on land contract or Gl terms. CROSS Realty & Investment Co. Wo pay cash for used homes. 674-3105 MLS LAZENBY INDEPENDENCE TWP. Land contract term, on this l bedroom ranch. Laka privileges, good fishing and boating. Alum, siding, newly decorated, naw gas furnace In basamant. Carpatad living room, birch cupboor) txtro larga kltchan. Cyclone f yard. AI only 315,300 this ons last long. EASTHAM PERSONALITY Lake, featuring 3 bedrooms, basamant, IVb baths, 1 car ga------- family room with fireplace overlooking Iho loko. A homo located Tn an oxoc u 11 v a neighborhood, price 133.000. WE LARGER THAN 3HB LOOKS Is this 3 largo bedroom. 3 yasr old homo, largo family kltchan with bullt-lns, 2 full baths, rac. room In basamant with lots ot room. A homa that was built with a larga family In mind. Owner now buying smaller homo. Price 125,too. WE TRADB. room and kltchon, 2 Pontiac Lake Rd. Thl bargain. HURRY. BUDGET lead small homa In Clark hool area — Big Laka grlv ■jck. New gas furnace ana pi COUNTRY •me near Holly — < Bill Eastham, Realtor WATERFORD PLAZA 5920 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) MLS|^jyh~ <1 If* b HtK k*.rU log. US. I “You’d think that after teaching 10 years Perkins would know better than ask a small boy to empty his pockets, wouldn’t you?” CLARK COMMERCIAL ZONED: 5 room IV* story Brick on 120 ft. frontage, living room with brick fireplace, hardwood floors, plastered walls, lull basamant SYLVAN VILLAGE: Capa Cod 3- . Ing all. Charming kltchan ceramic tile bath, large family room, wall to wall carpeting am drapes, IV* car garage, wal landscaped lot. price 325,900, Mortgage Terms, will accept trade. BUY, SELL, OR TRADE CLARK REAL ESTATE HURON ST. 3124350 OPEN ,-♦ M.L.S. BRIAN jtllfty room, i ««*5 nwar, cedar end Dfl exc. value at only *30,000 SPARKLING Brand naw 1100 tq a lovely woodec Waterford. Comes 1'/* ceramic bath •lata foyer, 7 closets, 2T _ end dlnell combination. Full a^2i?^7,,dow^"C*,t* BRIAN REALTY Multiple Listing Service Weekdays 'til 9 Sunday 52*0 Dixie Hwy.______623-0702 O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? STRUBLE WE TRADE SPREAD THE CHEER! At this time ot vur whit could b nicer than to entertain your frlonc In your own homa. A perfect place to relax In front ot a lolly fireplace. This pleasant older ' has a formal dining room — necessary for entertaining bedrooms and IV* baths. This handsome English Colonial homa In Ottawa Rills also features carpeting, full basement and 2 car garaga. SEE ITI Maybe It's 1 home where you'd like to roll 123,500. CALL TODAY. UP IN THE MORNING AND OFF TO SCHOOL Your children can catch a taw i tra winks before getting up a walking lust across tho ‘stroat elementary school. This homo f _ 3 bedrooms, a 13'x2V living room alum, atormt garaga. Thl commercial and Is details. priced. Call for MS Highland Rd. (ty-5») LIKE A FIREPLACE? Kids need a huge out > area? Mom needs a built-in range,i.. . disposal, plush carpeting? Dad needs Holly Branch a huge double garaga? Whole family! needs 3 bedrooms, IV* baths, forced air heat? Family room, separate dining room? Ortatl They're wrapped up In one fancy package 3V* acres out North Sathabaw I across Seymour Laka Rd. Priced only $37’»00. 10-35 ROYER HOLLY OFFICE PASTURE YOUR REINDEER This 11 aerss is not at tho No Pole — It Is close to Holly, lot CHRISTMAS GREETINGS Christmas comas but one* a y« and brings ut lava, toy a Christmas Chaar, from all of < wo sond to you tho |oys Christmas all yaar through. WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 634-8204 CEDAR ISLAND nlco home aria. x-, rlvUtoo riv lage, 363-95: LAKraTu23M'5' J. L. Polly Co. __EM 3-7113 Lake Angelas Lake Front MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES!) Level, traed building site. Private beach and country mm 31,500. Excellent site, with landscaped. Gravel Vary large, fully bulMIng site. Partly paved road. $3,000. MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSB FROM . AREAS. MAX RROOCK 313, Orchard Laka Road at Pontiac Trail MA 6-4000 444-4890 51-A 60' LAKE FRONT LOTS Swan Laka, Mt. Pleasant area, 115 milts north. Only 4 loft 32,950 with » oar cant down. 3 privileged lots, •1,000 with 20 par cant down. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE lets—ACreege RHODES A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE *-2306 258 W. Walton FE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 54 Site hwNl C—tracH SELL YOUR CO N Tit AC T^fJQW. .......wishing to porchT" J contracts, discou trad Wa kmm _______, for you. Call Von 1 Wasted Controcti-Mfg. 60-A Sale Fenut _______________56 80 to 800 ACRES In lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, beat or boost Noma your farm needs, ws havs It at Dean's "Mich-igtn's Form Rsal Estate Headquarters," 220 NT Michigan Ays., CoMwater, Mich. PH.: 517-2734211,. COUNTRY LIVING r~~~ land contracts wanted, small e aunts, no tags, private. FE 2- retlrlng, 1135,NO. / SNYDER, Kinney & BENNETT ROCHESTER 13 W. UNIVERSITY (Second floor) 65141*8 or 3*441*8 Money to loan (Licensed Mow Lender) loans' .323 TO 31,ON COMMUNITY LOAN CO. Lots—Acroago 3-6633! '383-~133m 573-1770. Call Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" "IT'S ALIVE WITH PISH" i ulcer-relieving business, rearing ti from eggs to tab!# slit. On# of • largest privately owned hatch-ies In State, located near large 1968 SINGER CABINET Zlg Zeg Sewing Machine, slightly used, sews on buttons, makes but-monograms, overcasts, hams dresses, no at-parts and Pull price ---- ^jymonts of month. For obligation, c Manager 'til collea. 563-8200 357.60 lime. Including modern 3 1968 T0UCH-A-MATIC , storage buildings and! ' ^ M holding ponds. Modern latch Mooo ana. •* . plus stock ready ^ lwslnass?C 570,000 5535-GB"C* A REAL GASSER '•tiring from tela gat nation general garaga npalr, tires and tries and wrocker strict. ,y neighborhood including a nice ‘IT'S TRADING TIME" NEAR OAKLAND UNIVERSITY and close to 1-75. This really sharp t« In lying r •r blac living. Includes built-in china cablnats and room carpeting. Features larga utility room? attached garage, blacktop streets ard city water, inspect this homa—It’s i bargain, end only *!*,9S*. Art available on this throo-bodroon vonlontly located to Pontiac Melon School aroe. Has a large utility roorr yard. Priced to sell at *15.950. We SYLVAN MANOR Otters all tha advantages at suburban living with city conveniences! You can move IMMEDIATELY Into tela thrae-bedroom brick contemporary with toll basamant, attachad garaga, enclosed rear porch, llraplau and central air conditioning. All this and much more. CALL FOR AN AFFOINTMBNT TODAYI Gl BARGAIN I Zara dawn and Immediate possession an this two-bedroom ranch nur Truck and Coach on a dud-end atraat, tt'a situated an a large let and hat IV* car garaga. Only 9,.500k Wa hay* tha kayl DO YOU WANT IT SOLDI OR JUST LISTED, Tired Of properly tor a reason I WE'RE OUT-and we're out tor a r user I WE SELL ITI Par action In your transaction, call any of our qualified Mies people. Leo Begirt, Oavo Bradley, Emery Butler, -----Gooden, Kan Hall, Bob Harroll, Olata Howard, Dick ~ hoping? Wa need Lao Kampsen, Eileen Moyer or Elolno Smith. 1071 W. Huron'St. AFTER 8 P.M. CALL FE 4-0921 674-3920 be somoni, two car #'$T room, dining room In bastt..... Call today for an HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYSI JUST REDUCED — A bargain — I bedroom homa located lust West o town, larga living room, formal din Ing root" B— ---- . .. - mant. ti dot* N schools. Ino room and hall. Price 915,000, 61900 down land contract, no dosing costs. Call right away. 12-30. WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGE 7 bedroom log — year round living. Good neighborhood. Price at lust 99,090 on land contract. 960 ur month. 10-31 NEW HOMES AVAILABLE NOW If you are "cost conscious" — you should know about tha tramondous •pocall offerings of naw homes available to you tor I--- cupancy. Your naxt 1___I th* smart aye appeal of ranch or tha tradltlenel < a stately colonial or why not .... elder tho popular trMovet all priced within your budget. Visit our naw homes at LAU ANOELUl LAKEVIEW ESTATES, right all Cllntonvllto Rom, onto Cotta Mute, lopan Bally 1-3 p.m. tpd FOX BAY, right off williams Laka Road, ante Parry Drive, left to Pm Bay Drive Open Saturday and Sunday 1-5 p.m. Vou'll discover hew wall they're built and usy to maintain. You'" | proud as punch to own one. .your O'NEIL REALTY represents-'llv* today I I RAY O'NEIL REALTY. 3520 Pontiac Laka Road LiWi ..... . . 333,950 . arrange your financing m call ut now tor an appolntmant. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MA&&I TO TIMES" Times Realty SIN DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0M0 REALTOR Ostn 9-9 dally OPPICE OPEN SUNDAY 1-3 ROYER OXFORD OFFICE ona of tha action paopla \ sat? Only **,000 with *imh on contract. 6 pet. Intarast. t 21*1. WE BUILD-TRADE PHONE. 628-2548 ROYER REALTY. INC. OXPORD OPPICE 533 S. Lapur Rd. ggffy building with money'made corner, you can do the M price of tela 30x40 station a can ba your golds only 545,M0 plus stock. What have you to otter In trade? No. 13-3331-GB. ASK FOR FREE CATALOG images. 3.300. Tl AVON TOWNSHIP lyySL lams Road N. of Walton, 2, acres mile to future high school. 33527 ir acre, terms. DIXIE HWY. 1050 Huron. Ponttar ITEXACO ;«Tn#LftM 210-2220. UNIT i'OMFLitlLY furnish* apartment building. Pontiac watt side. A-1 Investment. 5U.000 down, land contract terms. NATIONAL BUSINESS BROKERS PE 1-7131 BATEMAN INVESTMENT B COMMERCIAL CO. 377 3. Telsgraph Rd. 338-9641 Weekdays attar 5. Sat. B Sun. ____CAUL 334-3109 kOCHESTER 7-5375.* YeEA ALTOR. 551-9731, ROYER GOODRICH OFFICE 7 ACRES Good frontage an pave, l mile from village o araa stations located at . 1-75 and University Dr. . 1-75 and Baldwin . M-5, and Croaks Laka Rd. 4. Hall and ttorrltt, Utica 5. Orchard Laka Rd. and Inverneas. Desire can overcome In experience In qualifying for a business of awn. Par additional information or pleaM call Mr. 555-3000 days. lVi ACRES Sell Lend Ctirtractt Rolling tend with beautiful view ---------------------------- En|oy country B9 only 10 minutes i from 1-73. Buy i aft M15. lie. Horn welcome. Land contract terms. CLARKSTON Nice trro covered building tot Ctarkstan Estates. 2 blocks acwBblg. 4 blocks to downto* Perk tested. Only 01.0M down CLARKSTON 1 MILLION Dollars has barn made I us te purr contracts, i lets ar ac..— give you again appraiser la eta 674-3 McCullough realty mm Hjytehd Ed. COMO, a GOODRICH 05 ft. let with lake privileges, nlflh let. In aru of raw a. 5600 gown on land contract 1 T056 LAND CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor 1350 N. Opdykt Rd. PE MI6S _______Op*n Evas, 'til S pjn. 5124.50, I or pay 01.10 ur weak. Call day i night. 330-2533, Imperial. AAA-1 1968 USED SINGER Genuine singer sawing machine CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE Furniture, Stereos, Color T.V.'s NEW LEFT IN LAY-A-WAY Lovely sola with Mr. and Mr Chairs, zlpurad r a v g r o I b I cushions, II yr. guarantee on CO structlon, sold tor 3249, baton SIM cash or ttd mutely. radio, mond needle, anct due 5590 * Maplt bunk maltresMS, tor 0126. bi Walnut CMMle starao, AM-FM radio. 4 suakertt, plays all tlz4 records. Sold for 5)99, balance duo 5138 cash or 510 monthly. soft and matching chair, :ushk>nt. Mid 5115 cash or zlpurad reversible 23" Cotonlal Color T.V FM stereo, radio, 0 speakers, solid •tala, diamond nuola plays all size records, sold for 0179, balance Chsrcoal bedroom suite, dressar, mirror 4 drawl bookcau bad, mattrms spring, sold for 53*9, bel 1374 cash or 311 monthly. 3339, balance i partibla with stand. 9379, balance due I INS cash ar SIS French matchli CASH FOB LAND CONTRACTS H. J. Van Wall 3531 Dlxla Hwy, OR 3-1353 LARGE OR SMALL land contracts. G00DR?CHYER REAL636-2211 ,w^Sute HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 331 Blit. Lake Rd. 33543 (Near Tategraah Rd.) Sole HuuaafcaM Ofafa U A - PLENTY Of USED «nMn •tovm. refrigerator* and fradajg furniture bargains. Uttla Jot's ™f&%a'tB,Wwln ** **ltan A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN- I pc. living rm. group (sola chair. 3 beautiful tables, 2 lamps) • pc. bedroom (double draeur. chest, bed. Any Item Sold Separately All for $398 . . . $10 monthly KAY FURNITURE Next to K Mart In otenwood Canter Attention Housewives Highest prices tor used furniture and appliances. Ask for Mr. Grant a), .Wyman's Furniture Ft 5-1501 Hi-Fi, TV & SCOTCH RECORDING TAPE it quantity discount price. Pontiac Music and Sound. tVoi W. Huron. TV'S FOR SALE, reasonable Sagamore Motel, 788 t. Woodward. WANTED RCA color" TV, needing malor repairs. 623-1156. WAREHOUSE SALE open to public. Entire inventory of new Zenith, RCA, Motorola color TV's and stereos. Every Ham discounted, --—below cost, no reasonable idler 1. bank terms, sale today end row. 10-7. HUf Appliance, 24123 Mile, near TafiiBiph. BUNK BEDS Choice of IS styles, trundle beds, trfole trundle beds and bunk beds complete, $49.50 and up. Peareor.'s Furniture. 640 Auburn. FE 4-7551. Complete Line of Repossessed Household Appliances Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., West Pontiac Friday 'III 9 p.m, BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale. BRAND NEW. Large and small site (round, droit-leaf, rectangular) tables In 3-. f and 7-pc. BUNKBEDS, ABOUT tt price. Little Joe's, 1451 Baldwin. FE 2-5842. CLEARANCE $6" electric range. 514.95; automatic washer 529.95; electric clothes drver, 539.95; Reynolds water sotetner, 549.95. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3455 Auburn Rd.____ FE 4-3573 Contemporary chairs . 25 to 50 per cent t.. ... selected group of fabrics. I3S-I78& Corn'!. Upholstery. CHROME DINETTES. ELECTRIC RANGE, 558. 626-3954. GE HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL 820 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists of: 8-Flfco living room outfit with foe. living room suite, 2 stop mi cocktail table, 2 table u (l) rxlV rug Included. suite with full-size -ttress an< I 3 vanity I dresser, chest, full-i _ rhnersprlng mattress, anc^ matching Your S-pieca dinette chairs and tame, mii tor si credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE 5-150! ELECTRIC STOVE, $25* GAS stove, $49; 1 ringer v i 5-2765. $40. G. F R I G I DAIRE REFRIGERATOR, good condition, FE 2-3472, after 6. I KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - 550 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Servica & Supply Co. 2517 DIXIE HWY _______*7*2836 5349 up. Pearson'* Furniture. E. Pike St„ FE 4-7551. lavXToAiVs. complete iiHso value 514.95, also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irregulars. Terriifc values. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Of Chard Lake, FE 4-8462, For Sale Miscellaneous 67 CARTON IMPORTED Portuguese cork for trail paneling. 45 pieces each, tile size tt"xl2"x35"; tt original price, 525 for carton. I offer. MA 5-2575. 5-5 p.m. 9'x12* LINOLEUM RUGS. 53.95 EA. - lit well file .. .... Ice no tile — well paneling, chea ) Tile, PE 4-9957. 1075 w. Hun APPROXIMATELY 308 UNUSED U S. Postage Stamps, shuts tor face value. FE 4-0742. ANTIQUE BARN WOOD. CHOICE railroad ties. Will deliver. FE 5-9120. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 BRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING announcements at discount from, Forbes. 4500 Dixie. Drayton. OR 3- BUY THIS WEEK and save for next Christmas up 1o $10 value for box of 25 Christmas Cards, now 51. Forbes Printing and Office Supply, 4500 Dixie Hwy., Drayton, OR 3- WALLPAPER STEAMERS OLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS CARPET'S A FRIGHT? Make them a beautiful sight with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shempooer 51. Hudson's Hardware, 41 E. Wilton. | CHAfRS~~~=-WM REUPHOLSTERED. ... .... bolt-end materials. 335- 1700. Com'l, Upholstery._ . CHIPPED BATHTUBS. 520 O A. THOMPSON. 7005 M-59 \ ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER me, with n. $28*95 ELECTRIC HOT WATER HEATER eccordlon, refrigerator rad - FE 5-0178 FULL SIZE FRIGIDAIRE electric W. Rocking horse. 3 wheel GARBAGE DISPOSAL, tt hors* power, 527J8. alnless Steel Sinks. 32x21, 529.50. F Sable Launa Plywood, 4x0xtt. 04.95 per sheet. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oeklind ~ FE 4-4515 HOT WATER HEATER, gas. Consumers approved 5(9.50 value 539.95 and 549.95 marred Also electric end butane heaters, terrific velum. Michigan Flour**-cent, 393 Orchard Lake, FE 4-5462. HOT WATER BASEBOARD Radiators, r8l 39 per It. In 5' sections. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-59 KEEP YOUR CARPETS beautiful Hardware. 905 Orchard Like Ave. NEW FURNITURE and di Tyler' Highland Rd. *73-9534. Open 9-9. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC ZlgZag sewing machine. Cabinet model. Embroider, blind hems, buttonholes, otc. 1987 model. Take oyer payments of: $5)90 Per Month for 9 Mos. OR $53 CASH BALANCE Guaranteed UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2615 Dixie Hwy._____ FE 4-0905 PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS REFRIGERATORS. DISHWASHERS, dryers, washers, ranges, crate damaged and scratched models. Fully guaranteed. Terrific savings. Terms' CURT'S APPLIANCE 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 674-1101 REFRIGERATOR 525, APARTMENT gas stove 530, 21" TV set, mile, 5. Harris, FE 5-2768.,____ SAVE PLENTY TODAY floor samples ■Muir refrioer I TVs. I Job's I buttonholes. _______I Bargain Meuse Baldwin at Walton Bfvd. FE 2-6542 SlfiGER DIAL-A-MATINC Zig-Zag sewing machine, modern walnut cabinet, designs, appliques, etc., repossessed. Pi $54 CASH OR. $6 PER M0. PAYMENTS Guaranteed UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2815 Dixie Hwy.________FE 4-090S T.V. SET. EXCELLENT Condition, $49/ wether and dryer refrigerator, Q. Harris, FE $-2788. UNCLAIMED LAYAWAY New 1965 Zlg Zag Sewing Machine, must1 be sold, bullt-ln controls, makes button holes, overcasts, blind hem stitches, saws with one or two needles. Total balance 539.00 portable or 049.00 cabinet or terms of 55.0T per month. Call Capitol Credi Manager til 9 p.m. If toll call col S _ 563-8200 USED COLOR T.V. sTf5, $199.95 " SWEET'S RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. 422 W. Huron_____________334-587' USED FURNITURE, make offer 842-4277 after 8 p.rn. ______ WASHER. PARTS ________1282 Pixie Hwy.______ WANTED OLD COTTON l«ce cur feint, FE 3-2945. LOOK SNOVy BLOWERS—TRACTORS PRE-INVENTORY SALE SALE UP TO 20% BOLENS 10 H.P. WITH BLOWER i get el< All In i HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 113 W. University Dr. 551-701 Downtown Rochester CLOSE-OUT Gigantic clote-out of dlacontinued model guitars — amazingly low prices. Lay-away now. Morris Music DAVID A. SCULL Biano technician TUNING-REPAIRING 335-8227 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 TIZZY By Kate Osann SNOWMOBILE, 1969 ALLUOETTE, 21 h.p., all electric. Gator trailer and cover, ell warranties, won at Kay Gas Station. 5950, 674-3296. WE GOT THEM IN STOCK SCORPION SNOWMOBILES The Proven Snowmobile. 15" end 15" Tracks. Manual elec, starts. _ 15 HP, UPL Trailers, Clothing, accnsorles etc. STACHER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59) __652-9441 EnDER BASS GUITAR with 5198. MA 6-5531. USED ORGANS Choosa from Hammonds and well-known brandt, prices ai as $289. GRINNELL'S Downtown Store 27 S. Saginaw FB 3-7188 Used Electric Organs Baldwin, Lowrey, Storey-Clark and Electrovoice — priced from $225. Close out on combo organs SAVE $$$ SMILEY BROS., MUSIC 9 N. Saginaw PE 6-4721 Open Every Night starting S. A. w. TRUCKING, gravel products, i filtered and fill tar delivered, 394-0042. Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel_______77 -1 OAK AND HICKORY Seasoned delivered. 391-2553. ______ SEASON HARDWOOD, will deliver, 1704 3055 So. Lapeer Rd., Music lessons 71-A and Sound, 682- Office Equipment WHITE BIRCH FIREPLACE wood, split — delivered — stacked. $25 face cord. 651-4386, if no ans. 651-1051. 6' SHOWCASE Store Equipment RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT for Sporting Goods Sun. 9-2. FE 5-2 . Electric Start with reverse immediate delivery LAKE & SEA MARINE 3. Blvd. at Saginaw____FI 4-9557 1969 YUkON King,.)( Huskle, reg. 5695 new Ker's Boats i | BOWS AND ARROWS—334-6349 GENE'S ARCHERY-714 W. HURON BRUNSWICK POOL TABLE. Mate, LAKE PUMPS, priming. — Thompson NOW YOU COULD chooee from new Evlnrude Skaeter* with 15 h.p., to 25 h.p. twin cylinder engines, either 15W' or 20 Vj" Try the new Evlnrude Bob- enoujjh fir two TaEe M-59 to W. Highland, rioht to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd., left end follow signs to Dawson's SALES TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 825- CHRISTMAS SPECIAL 18 h.p. elec. »t*rt Snowmobile $825 Up While They Last. MG SALES & SERVICE 667 Dixie Hwy, Drayton 6734455 GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One of the largest selections Oakland County. B r o w n I n Weatherby, winchester. Remington, Coll and Smith-Wesson pistols, scopes, sights. We do our < "SKI-DOO'S 15", 18", and 30" tracks 30 Machines in stock now! Ve have a complete line of a essorles. Speedo, tach, sled wits, boots, helmets, g I o v e i ustom colored trailers, single ar louble! , STOP OUT THIS WEEKENDI Cliff Dreysr's Gun and Sports Canter 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME *67 Open Dally and Sundays PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 640 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7881. 849.95; 3-plece bath sets. 859.95; laundry trey, trim, $19.95; shower stalls with trim, 839.95; 2-bowl sink, 82.95; lavs., $2.95; tubs, 820 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. 841 Baldwin. FE 4-1516. RUMMAGE SALE: Some antique beauty shop equipment, 9 to 5, Friday and Sat. 8050 Shappla Rd. off Hediey Rd._____ __ SU/ftF>UMPS SOLD, rented and repaired. Cone's, FE 8-8842. _ SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK raMi " Orchard Lake. SOFAS REUPHOLSTERED, 6S-A 2 CHINA CUPBOARDS Y-Knot An- tlquei, p.vl.burg, 53*0991._ CUSTOM antTqub REFINISHING. Specializing In fumlhire raflnlehlng and repairs of ell typn. 363-9351. Mon-Sat._____________________ Hi-Fi, TV t Radios 21" USED TV 335-1700. Com'l. Upholstery. STEEL TOOL SHED, Ilka new, triple coated against rust, V x $', 885; 30" Magic Chef gas range, like new, with gasoline and 2 gas tanks, 895, 692-0902. TEN FEET OF BASE and wall cabinet complete with sink, ten pieces of formica 30x120. FE 5- 5832. Mtegpg THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs __Clothing, Furniture, Appliance* TOYS, GIFTS, JOKES, novelties. Liberal Bill's Outpost — 3265 Dixie, OR 3-9474. I USED AND NEW office desks, chairs, typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, flit cabinets. Forbes Printing an* fefi flea Supply, 4500 Dixie Drayton, OR 3-9767. WASHED WIPING RAGS, < lb. 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. . .. 839.95 Open 9-6 i__E Walton, comar of Jostyw COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV, PE 8-4589 Year-end clearance. SNOW MOBILES Peto-Hunting Dogs l-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC. EST6I HEIM KENNELS. 391-16W Schnauzer and terrier,. Raat. 1-AAA DACHSHUND pup. AKC orra_____>________FE *2535 -A AMERICAN ESKIMOS. Peking-e«e. Poodles, English Bulldogs, Woolle Monkey (very tame), Monkey* Myna Birds, Canaries, Tropical Flat). GROOMING Uncle Charlies Pat Shop, 696 W. Huron, 1 Mila E. of Telegraph. 33* 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edward's High Fashion Poodi Salon, where expertem a n < natural talents abound for the bes in Poodle Grooming. Mon., Tues. Wed. from 5:30 p.m.-fo p.m Thurs. through Sun. 9 a.m.-lO p.m. 335-5259 RED TICK HOUNDS, 15 month* AKC REGISTERED Apricot Poodle* 5 weak,. 651-4136 aft* .. 3 AKC BEAGLE PUPS. SS5. Wormed. Shot* Stud service. 625-5015. All Breeds Grooming No appointment riactuary II Collar* leads and sweat per cant off. HOUSE OF POODLE 5110 Dixie Hwy. AKC POODLE PUPPIES, AKC ALASKAN MALAMUTE Pup AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD Retrlevar* Black. 3tt AKC BEAOLES. 1 mala, t Held champion sired, all shi started, 140 aa, >63-4474. AKC MINIATURE S «It n a u z las, 363-3035._ BRITTANY SPANIELS, I Wonted Cors-Trucks EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor Especially 4 spaa-** and corvettes. "CheOc the rest, ^jien get the bet Averill's FE 2-9870 2020 Dixit FE *6(96 STOP HERE LAST M & M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location We pay more for sharp, lata mooel i. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland at viaduct “I get my room neat as a pin and what happens—my mother is out for the day! ” HAY, ALFALFA BROME seats. A slds or a slice labia or traazar. Cut and wfore you. Give us a coll quality and appointment omeo PL 2-2941. Open 7 POTATOES, BRING CONTAINERS. 335 W. Sllverbell Rd., out Parry._ 87 HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM Lavls Machinery Co., your Hoi_______ Saws dealer, amt John Deere parts galore, from Ortonvllte, NA 7 FORD TRACTOR WITH Shermen Transmission, snow blade, oeb, and side mount sickle bars, $1600. SPECIAL SALE BACK BY REQUEST McCulloch Chain Saws Modal Mac 15 with 15" bar chain Regular Price, $129.95 Sale Price $109.95 KING BROS. Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke FE 4-1882 Travel Trailers 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS CAMPERS INSIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. ) E. Walton Dally 9-6 FE *4402 ___ CLOSED SUNDAYS________ APACHE CAMP TRAILERS See the new 1989 Apache Camp trailers and Travel Trailers. A large selection of pickup truck covers and campers. Bill Collar, to bedrooms, pertly furnished. 338-7381. ; ; » HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL FROM MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dlxla Hwy.________33*0772 Are you going to Florida? All 1968 Corsairs and Gem Travel Trailers stock must be sitd in Dec./Sale starts Dec. 2. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Olxla Hwy.__________6254400 BLACK POODLE, REGISTERED. BEAUTIFUL WHITE AMERICAN Eskimo pups, 6 weeks old, 882-1240 H ................ . DOBERMAN PUP AKC,' Primers* $10.95 per . 5-V GUNS__________ 720 W._Huron DALMATION MALE FREE to good MASSEY FERGUSON SKI Whiz I .*fo0023.________ hand, 17 andiDO YOU NEED protection? An AKC .................... Belgian * |rnmSmm 23 horse machines, Pontiac Farm and Industrial, 825 Woodward, 334-0481 or 334-1442.___ NEW SAVE $$$ Ski Daddler, $795 Ski. Daddler, i.p. Ski Daddler, $1,214.98 $825 im h.p. Ski Dad< 20 h.p. Ski Paddle 20 h.p. Demo Ikl . USED SAVE $$$ 10 h.p. Ski Doo. $395 16 h.p. Diablo Rouge, $495 CRUISE-OUT, INC. 83 E. Walton FE 0-4402 Dally 9-6, Closed Sundays_ PLORIS. 1980 SNOWMOBILE Mustang, 20 horsepower, Wide-_Treck. Tike new, 8850. 6510956. _ SIZE 8 MENS SKI BOOTS, $10. 674- “POLES, bindtags7 good, 820, 335-2701. 7*'ly SKI DOO SPECIAL Over 60-1989 machines In stock Save over $300 on new past model Ski Doos from $829. Castrol snowmobile oil, reg. 812 per case, now 88.95. New 1989 double snowmobile trailers, flit end swivel, 1,200 lb. capacity, $189. New 1969 Shoreline model 450. slnglo snowmobile trailers, $119, In the crate while they last. Open 10 to 9 weekdays 10 to 6, Sat. A Sun. JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT VS ml. E. of Lapeer City limits On M-21. (Shepherd) puppy, housebroken, loyal, affectionate, husky, guaren- you. 802-5401.______ ___________ iOBERMAN P I NSC HER, 10 months, shots, ears clipped, AKC. Call before 2:3ft MA 4-1907. FREE PUP Fill'S, MIXED 674-1508 GERMAN SHEPHERDS, 8 males. GOOD HOME FOR AKC American months, Champion registered Titter. Cell 625-5474 after 6 P-rrv_____ _________________ MIXED PUPPIES WANTED, we complete litters. S5M)072._ MIXED BREED PUTS, $5 __ 834-7654_____________ OLD ENGLISH SHEEP dog, male AKC, champion sired, IS month old, neods training, also puppies available In 5 weeks. 678-3903. POLARIS MASSEY FERGUSON MANUFACTURERS CLOSE-OUT STEREO ; WALNUT CONSOLE *iPMk*rt Diamond needlei BSR 4 speed changer • $89 OR $5 PER MONTH UNIVERSAL 2615 DIXII FE 4-0905 signs, tamp, shads, etc, boulevard supply too t. Blvd. E._________33 Nond^ Tools—Mochintry 611 I AIR COMPRESSORS, lubrication equipment, hydraulic lacks, steam cleaners. Welding equipment, ate. Pontiac Motor Parts, 1016 | University Drive. FE 2-0106. _ I CLARK 5,000 POUND capacity high I I Iff yala 4,000 pound capacity. Both In good condition. 542-1802 a ~~~ HYSTER FORK LIFT, 5,000 | capacity, lata modal, excellent} ______HR1 _ w full 'wood" console stereos. Zenith, TO PUBLIC supplier selling J ------~Tereoi_. ---- Choice , modern solid from $79, 82 down, $2 par weak. ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 4ll2l Van Dyka, 1 blk. l ot W Mila 158 Bait 10 Mila Dally 1*8 Tuaa, *»» 6 738;ft|( 75*88*8 • • SALE TO PUBLIC Larg# auppller selling warehouse lull ot wood console stereos. Zanith, RCA; Admiral. Phtlco, ate. Choice of maple Meditarranana, modem solid wood* *89 medals from II down a D*r ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE priced fo sail. 6JM lb. HMow. ax ! condltlor, 51188. Blvd. Supply. 5 I 3. Blvd. E. 33*7161. ______ ONE GOOD used. Foil I machint. FE 51307. ALTO TENOR AND C meldoy sax; ciarthaf^!-**• '— ^ I fcrte ia fii 1 upright p 825 and up; 1 player piano, < nuferi ARE YOU THINKING OF BUYI A NEW PIANO OR ORGAN? GALLAGHER'S Is the place fo shop New organs from 8595., New pianos from 1899. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1710 TELEORAPM FE 41 PONTIAC OPEN EVENINGS TILL * P.M SAT. 5:30 P.M. SUN. 1 P.M'V 7615 Highland Rd. _______673-6236 J___ SNOWMOBILE SKI DOO SKI DADDLER SNOW JET MERCURY SNOWMOBILES Dally 9-6, Closed Sundays CRUISE-QUT, INC. SKI-D00 SNOWMOBILES PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE RD. SNOWMOBILE SPECIAL Some black, stud service, 628-1183. POODLES, 7 WEEKS Ol6. 332-8885. j|___| CHIHUAHUA and a toy poodles, stud service for both. FE 2-1497.__ scfTnaU/er, MINIATURE PUPS, health guaranteed. Fi 2-1390 REGISTERED white foy poo Check our deal on -SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK ------5 SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS CAMPERS COMBINATION BOAT AND LIGHTWEIGHT Warner Trailer 3098 Welly TROTWOODS JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS _517 E. Walton Blvd.—FE 4-5853 1 DAY ONLY- YEAR END SALEH! MONDAY, DECEMBER 30 OPEN 9-9 P.M. All Coaches Drastically reduced I SOME 1968's left I PRICES ARE GOING UP! $20 holds any unit at sale price I WE MUST REDUCE OUR YEAR END INVENTORY! 1989 12'x50' from $3,795, $400 Down HAPPY NEW YEAR COUNTRYSIDE LIVING J04 Oakland Ava. 31*158* lOxSV RICHARDSON'S. 2 badrooms front kitchen, taka over payments, *588 down 332-1657. IMMEDIATE Michigan Exclusive MARLETTE DEALER SPECIAL: 12x50 Marietta at $4995. Marietta Expandos on display le delivery and sat up within i tiles. Display at: . Cranberry Lake Mobile Hon Village And at Clinton Manor 620 Highland Rd. (M-S9) S miles West of Williams Lk. Rd. 383-5296__ 673-1191 PRE-HOLIDAY SALE • It no batter way to spend net than In a new 1*6* 3ITER. AMERICAN O R *5 Priced lower than aver lor Ing* All size* New and Used Trucks 103 1966 CHEVY Vi Ton Pickup, with west coast mirror* dark green finish, A-l condition! $1195 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm FE 5-41Q1______________LI 3-2030 trucks. Economy Cart. TOP $ PAID All Cadillacs, BuicK Electro 225s, Olds 98s, Pontiacs and anything sharp with air conditioning. WILSON CRISSMAN "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S "CLEAN" USED < 852 W. Huron St. TOP DOLLARS FOR SHARP, LOW MILEAGE AUTOMOBILES. 4. J. VAN WELT_OR *135f We w o u I d like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Junk Cars-Trucks 111 JUNK OUIS, PAY FOR SOME, free tow. 682-70*0. ALWAYS BUYIN^^Nj^CARS and BRASS; RADIATORS -rlersynd generators, C. Dlx»*n, WANTED: JUNK CARS IMJk«9pTrvck Ports 1959 PONTIAC automatic, c and save. 8$$$$ lay-a-way plan. Bob Hutchinson's Mobile Home Sales, Inc. Open Dally *tll 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday *111 5 DRAYTON PLAINS 4301 Dlxla Hwy. (U.S.-10) OR *1202 ROYAL—OR—REGA^ ACTIVE IS'xir living room 3*Gal. ga> hot water heetef Nylon carpeting over rubber pat TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Teieoraph at Olxla Hwy. 334-6694 Open Dally 10 a.m. la 8 p.m. Open Saturday 18 a.m. lb 6 p.m Open Sunday 1 a.m. la 8 p.m. ______Other time* by APPt. Rent Trailer Space NEW LOTS. 2215 Brown Rd. echool children. 33*0155. 92 Byam'e exciting caravan!) CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET LIFETIME MOTOR HOMES STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 2771 Highland (M-58) 4*2*440 4-8QO. 14, 44 ,LY TIRES, *108. 8(2- FREE VACAT0N 1 Buy an Apacha Camping or Travel Trailer now and we will Cyou 2 weeks free at Tlmbar es Resort, plus the Sport-Yak Dinghy Boat. Call for our stora EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6307 Dlxla Hwy. Clerkiton 82*1711________________625*3)6 OAKLAND CAMPER Mldwtat covers and aleoper* All TTJi Tires-Auto-Truck REPAIR, MOUNT, •foal framt. Tour-e-t n §t Colgate 1 FREE-FREE COLOR TV WITH FIRST 12 ORDERS ________________r$s p vied wheel*. MARKET TIRE, 2635 Orcherd l eke Rd.. Keego 5688- 62*1242. Motorcycle Sale Auction Snles 80 B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ..... 7:88 F M. EVERY SATURDAY ....7:00 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY ......2:00 P.M. wi Buy - sell - trade Retell 7 Deyi Weekly CONSigNMENTS WELCOME CAIN PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 506* Dixie Hwy,____OR *2717 YUKON KING leg. Now 8695 1595 884? 8739 8998 $795 HUSKY 10 HP GRISLY T5 HP SUPER GRISLY 18 HP KOD1AC 18 HP $1049 8 KODIAC 20 HP $114? 0 SNOW PONY 10 HP S OAKLAND SNOWMOBILE CENTER < 7454 Dixie,__*8______53*1 SNOWMOBILES SKI RO0LE — MOTO SKI YUKON KINO — SNO PONY B & B AUCTION 3 SPECIAL YEAREND AUCTION SALES EVERYTHING MUST GO . Fri. Night-7 P.M. Sat. Night-7 P.M. Sun. Afternoon-2 P.M. Sharp DEC. 27, 2B AND 29 2 Auctioneers to Help You DOOR PRIZE EACH AUCTION furniture i 5009 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-2717 IMPOUNDED VEHICLES WHICH have been declared | * - - therefore schedule! public auction, pursuant fo Section 252 of Acts 300 of Public Acts of 1949 (C.L., Sac. 257, 252) By tha Pontiac Police Dept. At Sam Allan A Sons Inc., 580 Col ~ “ be held oilier Rd., ile of m Set __________30 p.m.__ ,, Servica, Auctioneers PH., Swartz Craafc 635*400 TYLER'S AUCTION *5® 6*5* Hlghlend Rd. (M-3*) 673* PALOMINO F ARA 5571. SERIES. Itt 18' steke. mile* ssmtST" 1968 DODGE Power Wagon, 4 whaal drive, 4 speed transmission, 2 speed transfer case, free wheel hubs, radio, west coast mirrors, hydra* lift, Myers snow plow, heavy duty mud-snow tires. $2795 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass JT 5-9485 JEEP Sales-Service Over 23 Used Jeeps in stock — Reedy to go. HAHN JEEP 6673 Dixie Hwy. Near Mil Several New and Used FORDS JEEPS-BRONCOS Ready to go with SNOW PLOWS FROM $795 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm Auto Insurunce-MariBe 104 Auto Insurance CAN YOU QUALIFY? 51 1044_Jo«!yn_______FB 4-J5J5 1*60 VW WITH lOU'IHaiNVrV axhabtt »y»tem, 1400. OR *3338. 1*64 VW. SEA BLUE. Radio, get healar. *500 or bait offar. OR 3- New end Usod Curs IQS' Cadillacs Year End Specials A Tremendous Selection of Pre-Owned Cadillacs . ALL STYLES AND COLOR COMBINATIONS AND MOST ARE FROM THE BIRMINGHAM -BLOOMFIELD AREA. 1968 Eldorado FlremlJt Balnt, vinyl roof. Full power, ^climate control. New car 1966 Sedan DeVille Full power. 6 wev seat, vinyl roof. Climata control. Only 8,000 miles. 1967 Coupe DeVille Tilt end telescope wheel. Climate control. Vinyl roof, leather Interior. Very clean. u .,1967 Eldorado Doeskin finish, beige vinyl roof. Full power, factory elr. Sharp car. 1966 Coupe DeVille Ebony finish, with whlta leather interior. Full power. One owner. 1966 Sedan DeVille Loaded with equipment. Vinyl roof, air conditioned. Exceptional con- 1965 Calais Sedan DeVille equipped. 6 way aeet. Extra n|^rK*ows' c,lmifo control. 1964 Fleetwood Brougham Black, vinyl roof. Haa all tha aquipmant. Vary vary nlca. MANY MANY MORB TO CHOOSB FROM. Wilson Crissman CADILLAC of Birmingham Phone Ml 4-1930 1350 North Woodward $895 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 753 8. Rochastar______651-7000 IMS VW 1*62 COMIT, NEW BATfUfY ^ood liras, also othar parts. 662- New and UmiI Truckt 103 1959 JEEP WITH PLOW. --- today's special, 8595, $95 down, low bank ratas. TOP VALUE MOTORS 112 Montcalm 335-411 1962 Ford F-600. 14' Flatbed will Ml *7508P*rt“' Cr**m m,nwr HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S, Woodward________Blrmlnghi 1*66 VW. LIKE NEW condition, vi be lean $995 VILLAGE RAMBLER > S. Woodward, Birmingham 1964 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE Vinyl top. Lika M Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 1984 CADILLAC~ladan baVIlla, full! tar, 81550. Call_ 1962 CHEVROLET to Ion pickup, 8580. Pttltr, 33M237. 1963 FORD F-250—%-Ton PICKUP Coast mirrors, transmission. West at an axcalltnl 33^ SPECIAl PRICES ON ALL MODELS Anderson Sales & Service 1445 S. TELEGRAPH FE 3^7102 SUZUKI CYCLES, SO tt to 50 Rupp and Wildcat mlnl-blkas, cycia accassorlas. Taka M-59 to W. Highland, right to1 Hickory Rldga Rd. fo Damoda Rd., •tent fo DAWSON'S ) LAKE. M New SPORT TRAILER DELUXE HARDTOP CAMPER Sleape 1.114*5 Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Olxla Hwy.______. 6254488 Michigan's Finest Selection 60 unde In ttock, travel frailer*, pick-up camper, motor homes, ---champion. O' SPEED BOAT speeds capabla 35 SALES TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 629 Befrts-Acceuuriee 97 Camp-Four. 1 Ing. Buy tha rinasT ano save • s. \ LLOYD BRIDGES TRAVELAND 1010 W. Mapla 62H572 Walled Lake Call 051-3751.____ Chrysler and Johnson Boats and Motors PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0411 $895 Hlllsld# Llncoln-Mtrcury, Oakland, 3XF7883. _ 1983 FORP 88 TON PI c spotless .... • DEALER ___ 1964 FORD F-600 16 ft. 2 ton Insulatad von, wit excailant condition, ona ownai $1795 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 5 Rocheiter Rd 651-781 l*|5 l-ton. VI, 4 tpaad 2.0C >67 for!) I ton etaka 4 «paed Call PHIL Strom 68*1172 LLOYD BRIDOei TRAVELAND [__1010 W.Maple. Wallad Lk. __ A-l Used Trucks FROM FLANNERY FORD 1952 FORD %-Ton Pickup with VI, 4 spaed. Only- $95 1967 FORD Vx-Ton Pickup with 6 cyf. stick shift. Only— $1595 1966 FORD %-Ton Pickup STEEL FRAME PldKW sleeper* end tops. Cab fo Sportcreft Mfg. 4 Waterford. 623-0850. TRAVEL TRAILERS ! r*?ll«''#d, 1250,152 2485^ i WEST WIND GLASSPAR STEURY MIRRO WOOD LAKE BONANZA ^ ________ HU.........P Evlnrude Motors, Pamco SPECIAL WINTER PRICES McClelltn Travel Tr. .......... 674-3183 4I2P Highland RoadlTake M 59 fo W. Highland, right fol PIONEER CAMPER SALES ?dk!‘07.,t Rl2!!; Trailers: Jubitae, Globa Star DAWSON'S SALES TIPSICO; Porpoise Sell Boats. Covers:Sluts Baarcar, Merit | 3091 W. Huron 8*1-0720i WOLVERINE Truck CAMPERS "Your Evlnrude Dealer m5*%<3SSl HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS j rental*. Jack* ' Inlarcoms; IMJ. Talegraph _ 33*80331 PINTER'S ' i 1370 Opdyke 9-8 F E 4-0924 _____(I 75 at University Exit)_ T0NYvS MARINE FOR JOHNSON MOTORS 3895 Orchard Lk., Sylvan Lak< Wanted Cnre-Tmckft^ 101 Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olds and j Buicki tor out-of*stala market. Top >m s, i t tlrtl tanks. Lowry Camper °$alas, 1325 J. Hospital Rd., Union L TRAILERS—CAMPERS -Goodall Trailer tales, Rochester Rd., I»-4550. TRAILER RikTALI FOR Florida vaciffen. CaodaijTrallar WINNEBAGO caachaa. With I gay* m fan ga* blmyland, and Draw-tlta Francl*ce. La* or Miami. Rai _____! *1456 Wt CARRY ANO SERvlffe Frankllns-Craet F»n»-Stream line m^er-Pleasure Metes $1495 1966 FORD boats, Gumman Canoe, Reyl Pickup Gretna Sailboats, Dolphin Pan- with 6 cyf. stick, radio, heater, toons, Evlnrude Motors, Pemtol Only— $1395 1967 FORD Vi-Ton Pickup 1967 FORD Wrecker 6-3*00 1967 VW SEDAN. 651-9157. $1#>5 otfar. FE 3-6*08. __ i*68 oFel it at Ton wagon Kka new, power dltk brake* l( ' werranty, >1450, M6-W32. 1969 VW SUN ROOF Zanith blwa with black Intgrl AM-FM radio, whitewall flrt* tlonal guard*. Only 1518 mllaa. I price— $1995 Bill Golling VW Inc. Off AAapla Rd. (13 MII* Rd.) Across From Berz Airport 893-8117* NE GIRL snow and front tin 693-81)7. ___ TOP QUALITY NEW AND USED IMPORTED CARS & JEEPS ARE FOUND AT GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND AVENUE New and Used Cara 106 a. TO NEUD A CAR) ipossesso Bankrupt? i problem? ( King Auto, 8814802. WINTER SPECIALS MOST ALL CARS, SOME '9 '88s. 845 UP. Also a few truck?. Economy Cars 2335 Dixie FE 4-2131 1961 BUICK LeSABREr Real sharp. Power. Full Price $395. Cell Mr. Frost credit manager ef 842-3219. AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In the Troy Motor Mall, across from Berz Airport. M 1984 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, full power, elr, good cond., 5)291 MiLOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1963 Bulck 2 door coupe, eutom 6, radio, whitewalls, nice cl car $495. 677 S Lapeer Rd., L iY 2-2041 :k ele_...m lrt $1,495. MI 4-2764. NEW FINANCE FLAN. If you have been qernlsheed or bankrupt, or had any credit problems, Wa will fry fo ra-esfebllsh your credit again. Call Credit Manager, Mr. LUCKY AUTO Track FE *7114 cRiTr ~ li aataty chack. Rd. kaago. 1*53 CHfeVY At i»r. Call after 6:88. M»-*845 1868 CHEVyT2“ daor, 6 cylinder Oakland. FE *4w>._____________ mjr*' trailer, 82568. 26*3^!’*' AL HAN0UTE Chevrolet Bulck On M24 in Laka Orion l_ MY 2-241T I CHivVelL AIR-*a*erJN7/i iUITWAC 67*2122_____ ,M4 i*6T"crivv "riTrcKri6M~6i* 1*64 CHIVY IMPALA 2-do 0> —V8, double power, while wM«.-^IAUT0’ ........... i*u (fRlVaLLI MALIBU 8, power brake* and Claan good lira*. 47*54*4 _ MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1984 Chavy station wagon, gold with gold Interior, automatic V-8, radio, whlftwalla, 8898. 677 (. U^oor Rd., Lako Orion. MY I- 1964 CHEVY Impola Sport Coupe with poworgllda, radio, heater, cameo Ivory finish. Only— $995 Matthews- Hargreaves RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin DARK gn irp, 8595. 611-0474 or 882-6351. 1965 CORVAIR 2 door hardtop Monza, auto , no money down. LUCKY AUTO 1*492. Full price $1895. Call Mr. loin wv wihw Parks, credit meneger et Ml 4- FB 41008 4 or ” FE 3-7854 HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 5. Woodward Birmingham H*r*—Pay Here. Marvel Motor*, 231 1*66 BUieK ELECT&A »J, air con pakjand, Fe 8-407*. ng, lull Smell monthly payment) *100 down. LUCKY AUTO! MUST GO—at BALDWIN ORGAN 755-9090 1 0222 condition. 8895 628-9824 or 622' CENTER MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Bold win Avo. $2495 1964 GMC Ton Hand) f\ stick shirt $695 FLANNERY FORD 1966 BUICK RIVIERA, 1 Pickup. Cell Offer 3:30. "SHELTON 1965 CORVAIR t-door hardtop. 4-.pee, Call FE 8-9661 STAR AUTO HE V Y SPObT VAN i, 3 sealer, radio, atlc. read^for any |c 1968 PiVERIi roop guaranteed aw wnan warranty, dual miles Only PONTIAC BUICK 0PEL •55 S Rochester Rd. 651 1962 CADILLAC Hardtop, Black finish. Full pom $595 Call FE 8-9661 LATE MOOCL CADILLACS 01 HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME John McAuliffe Ford 1636 Oakland Ave. _ FE 5 4101 OP 1*66 CHfiV Y IMPaLA HARDTOP, with full power, 21,000 miles. Ilka new, like| best offer. 383-4432 or 882-6775. '<*3.11968 CHEVELLE ~H A R D T O p“, f|U,X? FE ^•S?2?*aft#r7:3«D p.m!* 6 CHEVELLE HARDTOP 1 peed, radio and heater. 839 down, teyments of $11.44, foil price $1395. :all Mr. Parks, credit manager at “HAROLD TURNER FORD I s. Woodward __Birmingham ' MILOSCH * CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH FE 3-70711 2041 hew 2 door sedan stick % . whitewalls. $1595. 677 S, Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion, MY 2* \ c—io THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 Mwr mi need Cmt It* Wtf CORVETTE with two tow, 4 3B 1967 CHEVY Impala Sport Coup* rlth VI, automatic, power «tt no, radio* healer, whlewa ilTiow graan finish. Only- $2095 Matthews- Hargreaves MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1967 Chavy Malibu convartlbla, v s automatic, power ataarlng, radio, whitewalls, rad with rad Interior, white top, 1795. 677 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion, MY 2-2041._ 1968 CHEVYS DEMO'S Over 23 to Select From From $1995 VAN CAMP Chevrolet On Milford ltd, (Nr. High School) New end Beed Care KESSLER'S New and Used Can DODGE car! and truck* tales and Service oxford OA t-1400 1951 DO DOE STATION wagon, motor In excellent condition, body Is a little rough S4uT FE 4-1717. 163 DODGE DART 2 door. 332-3*55 aft. 6 p.m.______________________ 166 DARK GREEN CHARGER, 3*3 cubic Inch, excellent condition, power steering and brakes, km mileage, new Wrea, *1*00, 667-5611. Fine Selection 68 Continental Trades Now at Reduced prices Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales IMP W. MtPte_____Mi 6-2200 FMARKBtT|R^oIv« It • free fety check. 2635 Orchard Lake 1 K—go. SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE 1963 Pontiac Conv. I960 T-BIrd (air) 1962 Studa (Hawk) 1960 FORD WAOON, runt 1964 FORD 6, 2 door, rei >395, Riggins Dir. 682-9223. HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury A fine selection of quality used cars taken in on 1969 Mercurys. 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1965 MllSTANG COUPE 1960 COMET, NEW tnglne, *250. 334- 1965 MUSTANG Hardtop With V-*, automatic, only— $795 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 8. Rochester Rd.______651-7000 1965 FORD CUSTOM 2 door, double power, 352 angina, S095. An Ideal second car, 6014)603. ______ 1965 FORD COUNTRY Sedan Automatic, radio and heater. No S down, payments of S6.44. Full pries S795. Call Mr. Parks, credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward Birmingham 1965 FORD GALAX IE Convertible, vallow with black top, 626-0877. i5~396~CHEVELLE 335-2916 bet. 4 PM 1960 CHEVELLE CONCOURS, 2-door hardtop. 327 angina, fully equipped, taka ever payments, PL 2-2150. i960 CORVETTE convertible, F<1 1968 DODGE LAST CHANCE 30 to choose from. Many body styles, colors and equipment. All new, used and 68s reduced for year-end. Save Nowll Many sold at cost or below. CHECK THESE NEW TRADE* hs?dt»!VYEAR £N(? PRICE* SUtj 1947 Port HO 4 door, YEAR END price ....,,. ,;,..ri»5 1947 Rambler 2 door, YEAR END PRICf ..........m. *1095 ^URjfcS39 down, payi * ----- “ " price >1895. manager, at Ml 4*7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward_______Birmingham 1963 OLDSMOBILE DYNAMIC tfonwagon, double power, red red Interior, real nice cer. sell, $395. 68T-0474 or 6820351. 4.92. Full Parks, erod'd 1964 OLDS HOLIDAY SEDAN Power ... . ___ payments of S5J8. Full price 1745, Cell Mr. Perks credit manager • Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 444 S. Woodward Birmingham 1966 Olds Delta 88 heeler.’ Whitewall tires. $1595 1967 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan Full power, factory air, vinyl 5 to choose from-*, $2795 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD . MI-7-5111 MAY GOD RICHLY BLESS YOU AND YOURS THROUGH THE HOLIDAYS AND THE ENTIRE YEAR TO COME.......... Your Friends at; BEST OLDSMOBILE 550 Oakland A vs. FE 2-4101 1968 Olds 98 Holiday Hardtop Full power, Factory sir, top. Only 5.400 miles. SAVE Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 MARMADUKE By Anderson and Learning New end Iked bn 1SS New end Used Cert 106 PONTIAC: When you buy It let RKBT TIRE give It s fret ty check. 2635 Orchard Lake . Kaaoo.___________________ LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track PE 4-1004___or______FE 3-7054 > T-BIRD LANDEAU. Air con-tlon, power and automatic. $39 nvn, - payments of 114.92. Full ■lee *1*95. Cell Mr. Perks credit anaOar at Ml 4-7400. HAROLD TURNER FORD 444 «■ Woodward___Birmingham COUNTRY (QUIRE 10 itlon Wagon. *39 ..... I..1s of $1X92. Full erica (1495. Call Mr. Perks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD OHHNHIEEpiPOHBPeiEpgHITO Inch. 4 cylinder, 3 speed, 2 — Jras, radio, body In excellent condition, 11,000. 424-33*4. 1947 LtO HARDTOP. AirTondltlon, power and automatic. 139 down, payments of *15.92. Pull price *1995. Cell Mr. Parks Credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 444 ». Woodward Birmingham 1941 FORD TORRIN6 GT, taka fl payments. 301 engine, auto., , condition, coll attar 5, 451-1449. 1944 PAIRLaNE lo and ef iffld . ... PM ill Mr. Perks, credit lenegtr at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD Birmingham Fastback . >39 do Full prtca Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 1945 Odlsmoblle vista Cruiser elation wagon, lull power, air conditioning, rack on top. There are none of those around. 3-1944 Dodge Coronets to choose from, priced from 4995 up. 44 Dodga I black wit _ wasn't driven "by 1947 Mercury Colony reel sharp. *47*?havy II auto.’ Price 41495. 499 tOUTH HUNTER , Ml 7-0955______ BIRMINGHAM 966 CUTLASS HXrDTOP. V-0, power steering. Honduras moreen, black Interior, Immaculate — $1495 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward, Birmingham _________MI6-3900 __1 1967 Cutlass 2 door hardtop. • automatic power steering and brekea. Tur ouolsa finish. $1995 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD ________Ml 7-5111____ MERRY OLDVMO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 520 N. Mein ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 1967 T-BIrd, leaded, silver with Week vinyl top, reel sharp. 1964 Chevy Pickup, red, 4 cylinder, automatic, t nice one. .1944 Valiant, 2 doer, automatic, green, priced right. 1944 VW Bus, orange end white, real sharp. 1945 Oldsmoblle Vlate Cruiser Station wagon, full power, air conditioning, reck on top. There ere none el these around. 1944 Dodge Dart speed. Mack with a wnne car wasn't driven by a tomatk SOUTH HUNTER Ml 7-0954___ BIRMINGHAM TOM Rademacher CHEVY-OLDS On US 10 at Ml 5 CLARKSTON Over 75 Other Cars to Select From! 1941 CHEVY Impale 2-doer hardtoo VI, automatic double power 42,395 1944 TEMPEST Custom si wagon, VI, automatic, p steering, air conditioning .41495 1943 RAMBLER American 2-door, cyl. stick shltt .... $2 196? PONTIAC Bonneville Brougham 4-door hardtop, automatic, lull power air conditioning, only.. *2595 1944 CHEVY Impale wagon, ’ ” ‘ ---------- 41495 1942 PONTIAC V-0 stick. Dealer, 334-9237.__________________ 1942 AND 1943 PONTIAC 01 down. As low at (395. Call Mr. Frost credit manager at 442-3209. AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In the Troy SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY. 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-27*3. GTO 1944 TEMPEST YeMena, “I thought you said nobody could get in unless he knew the password!’1 New and Used Cars 1967 TEMPEST MERCURY, buy the >200. 338-6721, after 5 dt<$695*i P°W< Call FE 8-9661 1942 TEMPEST STATION Wagon. - itometlc, S195, 473-2419. Dealer, TEMPEST 2 door, I auto, vlny larlor, still a fine car, 1575. 343- DOWN, PAYMENTS 14.92 WEEK. CALL MR. PARKS, 4-7900. Harold Turner Ford, 1964 Pontiac Catalina 2 door hardtop. V-0 automatic. $795 Call FE 8-9661 Star Auto * COLD OR HOT WEATHER, WE HAVE A CAR FOR ALL SEASONS. 1968 Buick Electro THE LAST-FISCHER BUICK DEMO I NC LUDI NO FACTORY0,AIN ApC TRANS. I Wit . .NYU TOP L it Price ......... I Discount .............II43J.I1 Now Selling for $3795.00 WITH PULL FACTORY WARRANTY I YR. 50.000 MILES Burnlal . _ . . vinyl top. Automatic transmission, radio, heeler, power windows. Full factory warranty. Factory air. A real bargain for only $3395 Eeay terms arranged 1968 Buick Riviera Cuttom Interior, bucket Mill and working console. Power steering, broket and windows. AM-FM radio. Full factory warranty. 1965 Ford Country Sedan Whits with rad Intarlor, V-l automatic. power Hearing and brakaa. Excellent transportation. Only — $795 Easy farms arranged 1966 Buick Riviera xceptlonal condition. $2195 Easy farms am 544 S. Woodward 647-5600 hardtop, automatic, brakes, windows, and air dlttonlng 1968 PONTIAC Catalina 2-d hardtop, automatic, double p warranty 8259.5 1964 OLDS 88 4-door, with V8, automatic double power.....8895 1966 FORD LTD 4-door hardtop, VS, automatic, double power, air cond. .................. 81695 1964 chevy 2-door, 6 cyl. automatic, radio, hoator, whitewalls -1895 1965 CHEVY Impala SS 2-door hardtop, VI, automatic, power steering ... ............ >1395 AUTOBAHN YOUR VW CENTER In the greater Bloomfield-Pontiac ffj FE 8-4531 ___________ 1959 PONTIAC, LOW mileage, bast offer. 651-9515. 1960 BLACK VALIANT, runs, has lots of now parts; new snow tires, plus >35. FE 2-0017. 1 96 0 PLyMOOTH. GOO D PONTIAC CATALINA, Con-s. excellent condition, :, power steering, power radio, heater, whitewalls, beautiful white top. Full price 195 down, low bank rates. A & P MOTORS 2026 Dixie Hwy. FE 4-015* 1944 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. $750. dealer, 334-9237._ 1945-1944-1947 GTO's. As Iff *1295. Real sharp. Some power. Soma automatic, some stick —t; Call Mr. Frost credit 1966 TEMPEST Custom TOWN I. COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER '69 Ambassador Automatic Air Condition Power steering Power Brakes 2*0 HP v-g regular fuel engine Htjvy duty radiator and fen. Full procSfng.*<,U,Pm,n*’ F,d#r» * All Taxes, License and Title DELIVERED $3048.16 Village Rambler 666 South Woodward BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 •FINE TRADE-INS ON NEW 1969s 1967 FORD Galaxie "500" Two door herdtqp. V-0, eutometlc, power steering, top. ill vinyl trim, radta. heater, whitewalls. 1965 CHEVELLE SS Super Sport V-*, automatic, power altering and brakes, radio, hi whitewalls. , 1966 PONTIAC Bonneville Two door hardtep. V-4, automatic, factory air, t steering, brakaa and windows, vinyl top, AM-FM I 1965 MERCURY Montclair Marauder Twg door hardtop. ‘wwa? ml 1967 CHEVELLE Malibu V-*k^Hrtometle, power altering and brakes, radio, 1966 BUICK LeSobre mmm mmmi issea&g tlms car at a wintertime price, 1966 MERCURY Parklane Marauder $1195 $1895 $1195, $1891 $ 995 $1795 $1695? $1495: HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 COUPE ...........336-9238 MB95 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE on, air, full put extras. Must sell. S3.400. 473-4(30. FIREBIRD 350 hardtop omatlc, double power, vlni' ’ :■ condition. *2350. 402-1904. 1MB FIREBIRD’ 400 convertible. 194* REBEL HARDTOP. $1995 VILLAGE RAMBLER 14 S. Wodward, Birmingham Ml 4-3960 ____ WHOLESALE SPECIALS 1941 Catalina hardtop coupe 1945 impel* i 1947 Catalina 4-door 1947 Catalina 2-door 1944 Bonneville 2-door f bill HAHNb | !5 IS » 1965 TEMPEST $1095 |* LeMans, 2-door, bright red finish, s buckets. 9 passenger wagon, with V-8, automatic, power steering. 1965 OLDS $1095 442 2-door, hardtop, white with black, buckets. 1964 PLYMOUTH $1095 Sport Fury, 2-door hardtop, red with red interior, 383, automatic and console. “ Clarkstoh P '6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 PONTIAC Motor Mall, across from Bsrz Airport 65 8* 1966 LoMANS. As 642-3289. East of Birmingham in tha Troy l Bsrz 642-8600 as >995' adit managar ai AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In tha Troy across from Bari Laka, EM 3-4155. 1960 PLYM6UtM, 2 < 1965 PLYMOUTH 2-door hardtop. MILOSCH >995. 677 S. Lapeer Rd., Laka Orion. No > down. Priced as low as >795. Call Mr. Parks cradlt managar at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 444 5. Woodward____Birmingham 1947'BARRACUDA har dto payments of *15.92. Pull price 11995. Call Mr. Parks credit managar at Ml 4-7506. HAROLD TURNER FORD 44 5. Woodward___Birmingham 1968 Plymouth GTX matching steering^andTIlrak An axctptlonHJjMitee car. BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER,LYM0UTH 21*0 MAPLE RD. TROY, MICM __ Phone 442-7000 V 1968 PLYMOUTH ROAD RUNNER matching Inyl Intarlor, auto.' i grip, ‘ dealer, andVnaw 19" 1968 CHRYSLERS & PLYMOUTHS NEW CARS & DEMOS TERRIFIC SAVINGS GIVE US A TRY BEFORE YOU BUY UNBEATABLE DEALS 1965 Pontiac Catalina $895 Call FE 8-9661 YGO! HAUPT PONTIAC And Save $ $ $ CLARKSTON__ 625-5500 1965 PONTIAC 0* down. Pull price 1895. Call Mr. Frost cradlt managar at 642-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In tha Troy Motor Mall, acroai from Bari Airport LOOKING PQlf A BARGAIN? tr> THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 3-7951 724 Oakland FE 5-9436 Transportation SPECIALS WHY PRICED SO LOW ? ALL MUST GO BEFORE FIRST OF YEAR 1*43 Ford Pelrlane, 4 $495 '69 FIREBIRD SPECIAL Head rests, duel speed electric wipers, dual padded sun visors, back-up lights, complete decor group, whitewalls, push button radio, floor shift, lane changer, and 1969 Safety equipment. $2562 SHARP '67s & '68s-TRADED ON THfe '69s 1966 PONTIAC $495 1962 Plymouth. 2 < $195 1942 Pontiac, but naadt a little lava, today only. $145 1944 Chavy Wagon VI, Mandard transmission, rune Ilka n a w. •peclally priced at only. $495 1949 Mulling. 1 door, automatic. r ipetlal. priced $595 1942 Oldl, * Yet, automatic, or iteerlng, ^Hced at I OAKLAND 1967 IEEP CJ 5jl with low mileage, plow, 4 wheal drive, beautiful bilge with rad convartlbla top. Ail aal tor wlnter. $2495 1968 CATALINA 2 Door Hardtop with VI, automatic, power itMrlng, brakaa. Only — \ $2595 1 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville 4 door hardtop, with factory Mr conditioning, powtr tiering, brakai, wlndowt, and power teat. $2495 1968 PONTIAC VENTURA With Via •r bral Honing, brakti. Cordovan top and $3195 1968 PONTIAC Grand Prix blue flnlih, black cordova top, Hydramatlc. rear iaat speaker, power steering, brakai, '• glass. Only — $3195 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville Convertible V-l, automMIc, power steering, brakes. Rad white tap. Only — $2295 1968 Bonneville $3495 1965 TEMPEST WAGON ....... $1295 1963 PONTIAC WAGON ........$595 1966 PONTIAC Convertible ....$1795 1966 PLYMOUTH..............$1295 1965 CHIVY SS..............$1495 Brougham Loaded with equipment, ilka new liras, wtilts with black cordovan top. Only 7 $1995 1968 Bonneville Coupe with V*. automatic, powar steering, power brakes, sharp. Lew mileage, cordovan top. $3395 -1967 FORD Vt Ton Pickup $1995 1965 Pontiac ;- Bonneville »r hardtop, sharp, whlto vinyl In-, power steering, power brakes. $1395 P-10* with V4 WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24-Lake Orion MY 3-6266 t THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 27, 1968 States AmmIiMmM! ACROSS burden 1 “North Star 34 Whinny State” 36 Pithy remark *0 Golden 37 Encountered „ State" (ab.) 40 Sea eagle 13 Thought of aa 41 Brazilian 14 Chemical 420ffi«Price suffix AteWHirit. lSGunlock Mb.) «.55toh*i 16 Chopping tool ..state* W Depot (ab.) 45 Greek god 18 Chalcedony 46 Poem 19 Full of chinks 47 Swiss canton 21 Consumed dlStrikwawith 4ood open hand ■■ 22 Awkward 48 Seine boats 50"Voluntear 23 Feminine State*9 “““* 52 Sigmoid curre 10 24 Conducted 53 Arils 25 Twice (music) (2 wards) 26 Energy 27 Dance step DOWN 28 Pure honey IBook of 20 Right side prayers (ab.) 2 Conceive SO Public notice 3Camedo« 32 Poisonous 4 Fragrant snake 33 Beast of 6 Certain rsH- 27 Library 1 2 3 4 5 & i 8 9 nr 11 i i 13 14 IS J ■ k 18 H F 20 21 ■ F ■ r 24 , V R F zr r m F 30 31 32 m r 34 35 ■ F B r 38 39 40 H r ■ 43 44 ■ F r 48 ♦7 ■ F 49 50 51 52 53 ia -Television Programs- Program* furnished by stations listed in this column ora tubjoct to change without noticel -WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV FRIDAY NIGHT 8:88 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports i (9) C — What’s My Line? (50) R C — FUntstones (56) What’s New (62) R - Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C - News -Craniate (4) C — News - Huntley, Brinkley (9) R C - I Spy - Kelly says he’s out of the spy game, but he won’t tell Scott why. (50) R - McHale’s Navy (56) Negro People — Brazil’s racial experience is discussed. (62) C - Wilburn Brothers 7:00 (2) C - Truth or Carol Her Devastating Best in a TV Spoof of Marlene By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Carol Channing did her most devastating satire yet of Marlene Dietrich on her ABC TV taping with Pearl ft«»»y —and still she’s confident that Marlene will not lift a leg In protest. “Marlene and I were on the Tony Awards show this year and Marlene told me she’d never objected,’’ Carol told me at a swinging party later at the Rainbow Room. “I had to add a couple of things, such as when I come on, I say,.1“Voodn’b- you teenk dere’d be more applause for Marlene Dietrich?’ Just to let everybody know Who she is.” WWW Carol has Marlene gutturally growling uGott in himmel!” at mention of Brigitte Bardot and WILSON going “Ptttt!” at the name Sophia Loren. Then Carol has Mar lene’s beautiful leg and shoe getting caught in a chair. Carol tugs tnadly to get it loose. It’s a classic. “t did it in Las Vegas and Lucille Sail later told me I shouldn’t satirize a great legend like Marlene,” Carol explained “The next week Lucille took off not only Marlene but also ‘Hello, Dolly!’ ” Our Fearless Forecast is that it wifi be a highlight of 1969 TV and that Marlene, being the good sport that she is, will approve and applaud. WWW Pearl Bailey ran wild at the taping with asides, an extra word here and there, some kidding of the director, and running behind the curtain instead of in front of it. Carol said “The boss of ABC is, oat there. You’d better get scared.” Pear] shot back: “There’s David Merrick out there. That’s the only one I’n scared of.” i THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . David Black, producer of .“George M!” will team up with Ed McMahon, who’s to be executive producer of the Inaugural Gala In Washington Jan. 18, In bringing In the top stars. They’ve been friends since McMahon stepped into a vacation spot for Alan King in “The Impossible Years” which Black produced. Lauren Bacall and estranged husband Jason Robards were together at the “Seagull” premiere, and arrived together at the party at L’Etolle ... After David Eisenhower’s bachelor party St Bill’s 'Gay ’90s, a bartender told him, “Come back some time f-bring your in-laws.” TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Flip Wilson claims nudity on B’way is getting out of hand: “One actor lost a job because his navel wasn't right for the part." WISH I’D SAID THAT: Victor V. Murray says he doesn’t mind wearing some real he-man perfume—as long as he has his choice of rye or Scotch. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The only reason the average American family doesn’t own a hippopotamus Is that it hasn’t been offered to them for a dollar down and a dollar a week.” EARL'S PEARLS: Lou Brecker of Roseland insists that lots of married couples do hold hands in public—If they happen to he sitting next to someone who appeals to ’em. Danny Simon asked his doctor what he’d advise the ailing astronauts when they were hit by flu. The doctor said, “Oh, the usual—stay Indoors a few days and keep out of crowds.” That's earl, brother. (4) C - News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Your Dollar’s Worth — The billion-dollar cosmetic industry is examined. (62) R — Movie: HR! The Terror From Beyond Space” (1958) Marshall Thompson, Shawn Smith 7:66 »1 C - Wild Wild West — Trailing a n outlaw, West and Jeremy get enmeshed in San Francisco’s Chinatown as it celebrates New Year. (4) R C — High Chaparral — Thinking he’s been hoodwinked out of a prize bull, Don Sebastian sends a bandit gang to rustle the Cannon cattle. (7) - C (Special) The First Lady — In “The View From, the White House With Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson,” Lady Bird and Howard K. Smith discuss her five years in the White House, with film clips of the highlights. (9) R -r- Movie “Adventures of Robinson Crusoe” (1954) Dali O’Herllhy, James Fernandez (50) C—Password 6:69 (50) C-Pay Cards (56) CPT 8:25 (62) Weather Show 6:36 (2) C — Corner Pyle, USMC — Taking Corner's advice, Sgt. Carter leaves a note on a car admitting he knlcked -the fender. Then the car’s owner tries to knick Carter with a $325 repair bill. (4) C — Name of the Game — Gene Barry gets tangled in a South American revolution as he tries to help the country’s exiled president. Vera Miles and Nehemiah Pers-off guest. (7) C — Felony Squad — Detective Briggs gets involved with an old flame who’s a hot suspect in a murder case. (50) R C — Hazel — Hazel sneaks a live lamb upstairs. (62) R C — Movie: “The Gentle Touch” (English, 1959) George Baker, Belinda Lee 9:00 (2) Movie: “The House of the Seven Hqwks" (English, 1059) Charter-boat passenger Is found dead with a map locating a cache of stolen diamonds pinned to his body. Robert Taylor, Linda Christian, Nicole Maurey (7) C — Don Rickies — American Bandstand host Dick Clark Joins in a series of slams against that wonderful year, 1968. (50) R — Perry Mason (60) R — Silent Movie: “Web* of Steel” (1926) Helen Holmes, Andrew Wald, Bruce Gordon 9:10 (7) C - Guns of Will Sonnett - Will and Jeff find someone else is hunting James, a young man — Radio Programs- WJR(760) WXYZQ 270) CKLWQOO) WWJ(95Q) WGAR<1130) WPOMQ 460) WJfjtfl 500) WHH-7M(94.7) TV Features Tonight THE FIRST LADY, 7:30 p m. (7) NAME OF THE GAME, 8:30 p.m, (4) Tomorrow THE PIED PIPER OF ASTROWORLD, 11 a.m. (7) BLUE-GREY FOOTBALL GAME, 1 p.m. (2) GATOR BOWL FOOT-, BALL GAME, 1:30 p.m. (7) SUN BOWL FOOTBALL GAME, 3:45 p.m. (2) EAST-WEST GAME, 4:30 p.i SHRINE l. (7) with a well-concealed motive. (9) C — Don Messer's Jubilee 16:66 (4) RC-StarTrek -Beautiful enemy commander . turns S p o c k against hi s Enterprise crewmates. (7) C - Judd - Murder defendant is a surgeon who performs a heart transplant. A member of his team is ready to testify that the donor was not yet dead. (9) A Stagin’ (50) C - News, Weather, Sports (86) NET Playhouse -“Dr. Knock,” 1923 French farce. Doctor drums up business by turning everyone around Into hypochondriacs. . 11:16 (9) C - 20 Million Questions (SO) C-Les Crane 162) R - Star Performance U*00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (62) R C -*■ Movie: “Painting the Clouds With Sunshine” (1961) Virginia Gl Dead in Viet KALAMAZOO (AP)-The Defense Department has notified a Kalamazoo woman, Donita Burrell, that her husband, Marine Sgt. George' Burrell, has been killed in Vietnam. The department said Burrell’s death was not due to hostile action. I A Look at TV Mayo, Dennis Morgan, Gene Nelson 11:36 (2) C - Movies: 1. “A Man Called Peter” (1955) Richard Todd, Jean Peters: 2. “Master Spy” (English, 1962) Stephen Murray, June Thorbum u (4) C -— Johnny Carson 4 Dick Cavett is substitute host. , (7) C — Joey Bishop (91 R - Movie: “Macumba Love” (1960) Ziva Rodann, Walter Reed, June Wilkinson (50) C — Joe Pyne 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Movie: “The Frightened City” (English, 1962) Sean Connery, Herbert Lom (9) C — Perry’s Probe 2:1$.(7) News 3:39 (2) R—Highway Patrol 4:66(2) C - News, Weather SATURDAY MORNING 5:59 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C - News 6:99 (2) C-Film 6:30 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 9:55 (4) C - News 7:09 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Country Living 7:15 (7) C - Rural Report 7:39 (.4) C-Oopsy the Clown (7) C - TV College 8:99 (2) C - Go Go Gophers 8:25 (9) Warm-Up |:39 (!) C — Bugs Bunny-Roadrunner (7) C — Courageous Cat | 9:99 (4) C —Supers (7) C —Casper (9) Toby (50) R-Wells Fargo 9:39 (2) C -Wacky Races (4) C - Top Cat (7) C — Gulliver (9) C —Pinocchio (50) C — Cuzzin Cyrus 10:00 (2) C - Archie Show (4) R C — FUntstones (7) C —Spiderman (9) C - Wizard of Oz (50) R — Jungle Jim 10:80 (2) C - Batman -Superman (4) C — Banana Splits (7) C — Fantastic Voyage (9) Country Calendar (50) R - Movie: “The Golden Gloves Story” (1950) James Dunn 11:00 (7) C - (Special) Hie Pled Piper of Astroworld — Hourlong musical takes youngsters on tour of new Houston, Tex., amusement park. Soupy Sales, Lesley Gore, the First Edition and the Muppets are featured. (0) D’Iberville 11:30 (2) C - Herculoids (4) C - Underdog (9) A Place of Your Own SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C - Shazzan '(4) C—Storybook (7) C — George of the Jungle (9) Swing-around (50) R — Movie: “Pancho Villa Returns” (1951) Leo Carrillo, J e anette Comber, Esther Fernandez 12:39 (2) R C—Johnny Quest (4) C — Super president (7) C e—? ‘American Bandstand (9) CBS Sports — Tennis 1:90 (2) C - Blue - Grey Football Game (4) C-At the Zoo 1:30 (4) C - High School Bowl (7) C - Gator Bowl Football Game: Missouri vs. Alabama*at Jacksonville, Fla. 2:90 (4) Beat the Champ, (9) R - Movie: “Caribbean” (1952) Pirates land on Caribbean island in an attempt to capture it. John Pavne (50) R - Movie: “Miss Robin Hood” ( 19 5 3 ) Pueblo Hero to Be Buried With Honors SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -Pueblo crewman Duane D. Hodges, described by his skipper as “a hero in every sense of the word,” will be buried with full military honors Saturday in his home town, Creswell, Ore Hodges, 21, was the only ere member to die when the Pueblo was captured last Jan. 23 by the North Koreans. WWW Funeral services will be at the junior high school in Crewswell. Members of his former Navy Reserve unit will be pallbearers, and a graveside rifle salute will be fired by active duty mem-, bers of the naval reserve training center in Eugene, Ore. The sailor’s mother, Mrs. Jesse D. Hodges, said Pueblo skipper Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher told her that Duaae was “standing on deck, bending over, destroying secret papers when he was hit by enemy fire.” Hodges’ body came home to the United States Tuesday along with the 82 surviving Pueblo crewmen who were held for 11 months by the North Koreans. Romney Fills Dentistry Post LANSING (AP)—Gov. George Romney has announced the reappointment of Dr. Richard W. Huffman of Grand Ledge to the State Board of Dentistry. Romney also announced one appointment and two reappointments to the Detroit Recorder’s Court jury commission. * w w Renamed were Karl McKee-han and Mrs. Bernice E. White. The new appointee Is Mrs. Marjorie McDaniels, succeeding Cassandra Lewis, who resigned. QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loanora Available PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL A HEARING AID 0ENYER Two Dead in Car DETROIT (AP)- Hie bodies of two Detroit youths were found Thursday in the front seat, of a Hilarious'British' comedy borrowed car parked in a Detroit garage, the victims of carbon monoxide poisoning. Police about a modern female Robin Hoad doing good for all. 8:8# (4) C - Car and Track 3:88 (4) C-Target (50) R - Movie: “Hell on Devil’s Island” ( 105 7 ) 8:45 (2) C — Sun Bowl Football Game — Auburn vs. Arizona at El Paso, Tex. 4:09 (4) C — George Pierrot - “Mexico Highlights” (9) C — Marvel Super Heroes (56) R - What’s in a Word — "Periodic Chart of the Elements” 4:30 (4) C - Huckleberry Finn (7) C - East-West Shrine Game — All-star football from San Francisco (56) Animal Trackers (62) R - MacKenzle’a Raiders 4:46 (56) Time for John 5:66 (4) C - International Zone (9) R C — Monroes (50) C — Hy Lit (56) Children’s Fair (62) C - Big-Time Wrestling 6:80 (4) C - College Bowl (56) R — Hans the Pup-petmaster identified the two as Mary Enoie, 19, and Charles Genoa, 22. The car’s motor waa still running when the two were found. Authorities said the deaths apparently were accidental AVOID GARNISHMENT Debt Consultants ot Pontiac, Inc. Telephone 8894888 •14 Natiae Mate Bank Bldg. Hot. 1M and InM Opon Dolly 'Ml S _____M. 'Ml «. Cloud Sot. Sensational value and qualify in aCompact Console 19o9 jfeNjjH hvitukiYiftcd COLOR TV Apollo Use of Color Eyed 4:SB-WJR* Now* CKLW, Tom Shannon WJBK, New* Hank WCAR, Newt, Ran Root WXYZ, H--------| WWJ, Sport* A i so—wwj, Today In Ravtaw . WJR, Butin***, Tima Traveler 1:45- WWJ, emphasis WJR, Lowtll Thom**, Auta- >!SB-SSSr, Now*, Rick Sttwart WJBK, Newt* Tom Dean WWJ, Now*. Now, Sport* Lint WJR, world Tonight _ T:IS—WJR, Butin*** Report 7:10—WJR, WorWwWe Sport* Lackhar* MB-WXV* Paw i WPON* Musk: TNI MWnlta WJR, R««sonar Roport, Choral Cavalcado 7:45—WWJ, SportoLlna, Rod Whig Hockty 7:94—WJR, Sport* •»4B—WJR, NOW* Dimension •:1S—wjr, Panorama,Minority mart •:SB—wjr. Panorama, Ciooa* WMF i, rom _.._r mmm WJR, Encore WJR, New* lilts—WJR, Focus Encoi IS: JO—WWJ, News 1i:4S—WWJ, SporttLine might IN Daw WJR, Mutk Hi*. WJBK, WXY2, Nee CKLW. Prank Brodle New** Weyna l m m *JBlC New*, Marc Avery VPON, Nawe, Arlten* Nawe* Morrle 7:SS-?WJ Pta WHPI, Gary Pureca S: is—wjr, Sunnytlde •:Ji-WJR, Cave (cade -WPON, Newt, 8ft* Mlllw BY EDWARD K. DELONG SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (UPI) — Even as the Apollo 8 astronauts were presenting their last live telecast of their Christmas moon-flight yesterday, engineers on the ground were figuring out ways to fly a tiny color camera aboard future Apolios. The camera used inside the moonship is an electronic marvel, weighing less than five pounds, but it can transmit only black and white pictures. ★ * * Pictures from space, such as the view of earth’s globe which Frank Borman, James Lovell and William Anders featured in the last yulettde telecast, lose much of their impact without colors. The shot of earth from 111,633 miles out, for instance, showed clouds covering much of North and South America. But in black-and-white, the clouds and the land appeared aa similar shades of gray despite the sharp image transmitted by the camera. RICH COLORS In color the land would have stood out in rich greens and browns surrounded by royal blue seas and topped by puffy white clouds. Engineer Max Meaner of the Radio Corporation of America, the man who built the camera now used in Apollo, said a color camera would be possible before men land on the moon next YEU-EII SHIES CLEARANCE Sav# on Domot and Floor Somplti Customade Products Co. 4540 W. Huron S». (M-59) 673-9700 WJBK, Now*. Conrad Pet-rid' CKLW* Ed Mitchell SATURDAY APTKRNOON ItitB—WWJ, Now* WJR* Now* 11»1S-WWJ, Marty McN**i*y WJR. Farm IlsJB—WJR SB - 1 Optra ’.ifjjn, ShowctM, Dlirrtw. „We think |t ^ mw)e , 0,,f little bit larger,’ ’he said S^rrm*" “Thl* te JU8t *n Uea right ji«s-Wca*, nows, son now, but it’s an idea based on some very sound principles. WJBK, O'Nell Apollo, and squeezing a television camera down small enough | to be carried In the moonship and to operate off its limited electrical current was a triumph of the new technology of minis-j turization. SMALL ENOUGH The Apollo camera Is small enough to fit into the glove compartment of a car. It has both a wide angle and a telephoto lens. Built with miniaturized integrated circuits—specks of crystals carrying entire arrays of electrical components — it requires only six watts of power, compared with 566 watts for a studio camera. Lower power means it uses a different scanning system from a regular TV camera, producing 320 horizontal scan lines per inch compared with 525 lines for broadcast television. WWW Because of this, ground station converters are needed to convert the signal for home viewing For Apollo 7 there were two experimental scans converters, one at Cape Kennedy and the other at Corpus Christl, Tex. By the time of Apollo 8, however, regular scan convertors had been installed at stations at Cape Kennedy, Goldatone, Calif., and Madrid, 8paln. These new converters resulted In a marked improvement of Apollo 6’s television. There was better shading, sharper contrast and much greater detail than seen during Apollo 7 telecasts. Meaner said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has no plans to put color | {cameras in future Apolios, but1 POLICE MONITORS $84*5 TOWN & COUNTRY COAAAAUNICATIONS 4464 W. Walton Rd. Drayton Plaint, Mich. DROWN DRY AIR! with humid-aire Dry, heated air cause* personal discomfort, damage* furnishings, boosts heating costs. f&UMSDdAiRS. -SI” fURNACI MUMtOlflM Nllltlt’ KAST HEATING AND COOLING 580 Tologroph Rood (at Orchard Loko) 338-9255 Weight is a big factor in ladded it could be done. fj Full Zenith Quality CONSOLE 00L0R TV *499* HANDCRAFTED for unrivaled dependability Zanllh Super M Handcrafted Color TV Chaadt Handwlrod with no printed circuit* fewer lervlce problem*. Advanced Color Demodulator Circuitry (or UMUtpaiaed, truo-to-llfe color hue*. Sumhlna* Color TV Picture Tube greater picture brlghtnoH PaBDBOEOEBBHE NEW ZENITH 2-YEAR COLOR PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY Itnitti Sidle Corporation warranto ftp color *Mm* Bio la ftt Zotdft CotOf IV foaofv*I* MOW! MfO ft *0 (no trot* dotocto la auto mat normal «m*o lor tea data at on,lnol caaioanr poi a WanaatycownrapairofootorpMoro I late, or rmlMianat wtft rotollt talar alatara tuba, tkroail aay orrthorUod Zonlft dooioi taywkwi ooraor rosy livo or awn; traaaparta-l|aa, later tad panrtoa mrut an tta aailiaUpa affta ownor. Zonlft sis! TV-RADIO SERVICE 110 Orchard L*k* Avt. FE Mill ( C—la THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1968 Ends Saturday Dec. 28 a* 10 P.M. All n*mt on tol. while quantltle* lad. Air King humidifier is automatic and portable Built-In humidistat turns unit on and off automatically to maintain comfortable, healthful humidity. 8 gal reservoir, built in refill hose. 2*pc. ic« fishing combo Teho rod and reel. Imported from Finland. Folds for storage. Large capacity: depth gauge. Comploto ico fishing kit Contains everything for ice fishing: Rod, reel, lines, ice scoop, depth finders, and bobbers. Famous Hazel-Atlas holiday glass salel 3 pc. chip/dip set in coin dot pattern Includes one 9" chip bowl, a 4 3/4** bowl for dip and gleaming brass-finish holder for all. A marvelous value in beautiful gold tone. 7 piece dessert set in coin dot pattern For fruits, desserts, even popcorn. Includes one 9" bowl, six 4 3/4' individual bowls. Matches glasses in same handsome golden tone. 7 pc. beverage set in coin dot pattern 64 ounce pitcher plus six 12 ounce glasses. Matches all the other coin dot glossware in rich golden color, now at outstanding Yankee savings. YOUR CHOICK Save a big 50% Moist-air humidifier Fits any furnace, forced air or gravity. Porcelain finish, rust-resistant, easy to install. Plates not Included. Automatic humidifier Permanent, troubl free reservoir; easy to Install In duct, needs no electric outlet. Fishorman s Buddy 5x5 ft. ico shanty Humidifier plates Reg. 1.29, with high capillary action to hold wator longer. Long lasting 42.50 Coleman heater blade Combines deluxe 2-piece American handle with finest imported Swedish Swabb auger blade. light easy-to-transport with specially designed frame that goes up in seconds without nuts or bolts. 5,000 to 8,000 BTU catalytic heater for fishing hunting. 1 fill 4 burns all night. has sturdy wooden frame. Will not freexe up.Includes metal reel. YOUR CHOICE Such a terrific buy, you'll want a dozen in every size I Why not? ft's a beautiful and practical way to coordinate every beverage need, for everyday use and parties. Choose 6 oz. juice gloss, 9 oz. on-the-rocks, or 12 oz. beverage glass, olf In gold-tone, all at same low prlcel Match them up at Yankeel •Christmas Lights •Tree Stands •Tinsel-Garland •Christmas Cards •Gift Wrap •Christmas Ribbon •Decorated Ornaments •Wreaths •Santa Door Panels •Standing Illuminated Santa And Lots More... C Copyright Northgot. Advertising Co. 1918 4 I