The Weather V. *. WMltwr BurtM For ^ Showers • (Dolallt Pago 1) THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition VOL, 126 ** NO. 181 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968—60 PAGES . ■ ASSOCIATE^ PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ' He urged his supporters to work instead for the election of senators who '> agree with his opposition to Vietnam war policy and his stand on domestic priorities. t k ' k- - k McCarthy said he has asked that his name be withdrawn in Iowa where he said it “would have little bearing on the outcome of the national election’’ and might hurt Gov. Harold H u g~h e s ’ Democratic Senate campaign. k k k A top supporter of McCarthy’s Democratic bid — former Democratic National Chairman Stephen Mitchell — said meanwhile he will now support the party’s nominee, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. Humphrey formally kicks off his Democratic presidential campaign Monday in Philadelphia. He planned tp’interrupt strategy sessions at Waverly, Minn., today to return to Washington for a National Security Council meeting. Humphrey’s running mate, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie said yesterday Wallace’s third-party campaign is a greater threat to the Republicans than the Democrats. Wallace and Nixon, Muskie said, “are competing for the same votes/’ Aid Airlift to Biafra Gets Nigeria's OK LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)-The Red Cross begins an accelerated airlift of food and medicine into besieged Biafra tomorrow, following an agreement with the government permitting daytime flights for a 10-day period. Meanwhile, Lagos said its troops were battling for control of two of the rebels’ three remaining towns. * j The federal Ministry of Information announced the airlift agreement with the International Red Cross Committee —veotardasu—.. - -• ■■ ‘ The Red Cross and o{fieF“ffftvSW'’' groups have been flying 'emergency supplies totwo Biafran airstrips at night, but the amount of food they have been able to deliver is negligible. In Today's Press Farmers' Market Lack of Quorum Puts Off Senate Debate on Fortas WASHINGTON (AP) - A quorum failed to show up today for a meeting of the Senate Judiciary C*o m m i 11 e e , preventing any move to win approval of Abe Fortas’ nomination tp be chief Chairman James 0. Eastland, D-Miss., said he was unable to say when,he would attempt to have another meeting. * ft * k , Eastland told newsmen he will vote against reporting the nomination to the Senate and also will vote against confirmation if President Johnson’s ap- pointment of Fortas to succeed Earl Warren is brought up in the Senate. Eastland’s opposition was not unexpected, but he jpreviously has refrained from taking a stand publicly. HA^AifHSNT Only five of the Judiciary Committee’s 16 members appeared for the meeting. A majority is necessary to make a quorum. , / Among the attentees was Sen. Philip A, Hart, D-Mich., who said yesterday that he would try to get the Fortas nom- GTW Operations Normal as 40 Engineers Return Grand Trunk Western Railroad operations in Pontiac were back to normal today with the return of 40 engineers to their jobs. Showers May Cap Today's High 80s Today’s sunny sides are expected to become cloudy this afternoon with showers and thundershowers moving in tonight and tomorrow. Temperatures, in the high 80s today, will turn cooler late tomorrow. Fair and cod is the outlook for Friday. Tonight’s l8W~Wtil" be.08 to Mr— ■ k k . * - Southerly morning winds at 10 to 18 miles per^teurwili continue through the day. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 80, tonight 50,. tomorrow 60. The low prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 63. By 2 p.m. the mercury had climbed to 84. Weekly News Quiz Good Test for Students The engineers failed to report to work yesterday in a dispute with the company over the relocation of their wash-up and locker facilities. ★ k ■ .k t A court order calling for a halt to the work stoppage was issued yesterday morning by Oakland County Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore. In issuing a temporary injunction against the members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Local 920, Moore scheduled a hearing for 9 a.m. tomorrow to receive further information on a permanent injunction against the union. EXPECT TO CLEAR BACKLOG A spokesman said'that the backlog (ft “freight created by1 the wiidcat itrike was-expected to be cleared”up today. He said that neither commuter service nor passenger trains were interrupted by the work stoppage. k k k The strike' was unauthorized by the union, according to Orville P. Convis, general manager of the union. , ■* * ★ The railroad spokesman said that the' men agreed to return to work following all-day sessions between the company and the iinion and that there will be no reprisals or disciplinary measures taken. , ination out of the committee at today’s meeting. Eastland said Hart had told him he was going to a meeting of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence but would be only about 15 minutes late for the Judiciary Committee session. After waiting an additional 20 minutes, Eastland abandoned the effort to get a quorum and announced cancellation of the committee meeting. STAG FILMS Supreme Court pornography decisions are a prinicpal factor in the issue of confirming Fortas. Sen. John L. McClellan, setting the stage for today’s'resumption of Senate Judiciary Committee debate on the nomination, showed., three stag party films yesterday to staff aides of non-committee senators. k k k Hie Arkansas Democrat, presumably trying to drum up support for opposition to Fortas outside the committee, called the films “degrading.” Fortas, as an associate justice, voted with the majority that found two of the films not to be pornography. The vote became a major point in opponents’ arguments just before Congress broke Aug. 3 for the political conventions. Less obvious as Congress returns to work is the impact on the controversy of Richard M. Nixon’s nomination as Republican presidential candidate. k k k Nixon was one of the earliest to say Johnson should make no nominations -until after the eiecttoirT7i6re have' been predictions that his selection as GOP standard bearer will .blunt some support of Fortas from Republican senators now more interested in party unity. “The three films are degrading. And if they are protected under the free-speech clause of the Constitution, there is no kind of pornography that- is unconstitutional,” McClellan told a reporter. This is only one issue raised by opponents. But Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., and other supporters of Fortas’ nomination have said that it could prove the most troublesome. Bus Crisis Meeting Called With the city faced with losing its bus service this month, Pontiac City Commissioners. will meet Monday with an official of the Pontiac Transit. Corp., in an effort to resolve the looming crisis. The transportation firm has informed the city that it intends to terminate its - eer^ee by Sept. 39: 1 {* ————*_ v k k k The commission has informally considered several alternative proposals offered by the bus firm for the city to purchase or lease the transit system, but hastaken no action. v " k k -if Under the proposals, the city would hire the Pontiac Transit Corp. to manage the bus system at a fee of 6 per cent of the gross profits. $100,000 A YEAR City Manager Joseph A. Warren has told commissioners, that the alternative solutions will cost the city an estimated $80,000 to $100,000 annually. k k~ k Presently, the city subsidizes the company with an annual $35,000 allocation because of the claim that the bus -system-operates at a loss in the city. k k k Meeting with commissioners at the 7:30 p.m. session next week will be Kenneth Totten, regiohal manager for the American Transit Co. which operates the bus system in Pontiac. Pontiac Board of Education President Monroe Osmun and Superintendent Dana Whjtmer will be invited tp the meeting. City commissioners feel the school board should be Interested because of the large number of students who use the bus service, u week for thousands of, Pontiac area youngsters. In an attempt to keep students better informed on current affairs, The Pontiac Press will jgtt | “““w“ news Head Has a Problem DICK ROBJNSON College’s new E. Hill, readily admits he has a communication problem. It’s-that old problem of a mathematician trying to relate to a lay person without using too much educational or technical jargon. ‘NO REPORTER* I’d never make a ” be admits. But'to help alleviate this communica-gap. he iswilling to work at to explain himself. Hill, 49, was named OCC’s new presi- dent last week by the, board of trustees to,replace Dr. John E. Tirrell. Tirrell left the college at the end of Jtme. to become an educational consultant.- Tirrell served four yean as OCC’s flnt president. yesterday, takes over the presidency fulltime Oct. 1. 'MUST REACH DISADVANTAGED' He said he hopes to get away from his For Hill, who specializes in research design, mathematics and statistics, the problem is a difficult one. His conversation is frequently colored-with such terms as qualitative symbols, theoretical symbols, inputs, outputs and other jargon of systems analysis — a study of a part as related to the whole. ESTIMATES SALARY Hin, one of some 20 candidates for the job, said he has not signed i contract yet, but he expects hit salary will be' about $27,000. Tirrell was paid $32,000. job as associate dean fop graduate studies at Wayne State University moot every afternoon this month to work at... ode. Hill said the one-year contract probably will provide for a free automobile and insurance fringes but not the use of the- 10-room presidential home' on the administrative office grounds. One of thp first things he has to say about the college is that it has to reach but to all segments of people in the county,-' ■ * < M ' That is to be 'occupied by the Tirrell family until one of the boys finishes high school next' June. {fill, who made his first visit as presidentelect to the college’s administrative offices in Bloomfield Hills ' “We have to reach the disadvantaged people, both black and white, in such areas as Pontiac, Royal Oak Township, Madison Heights andHazel Paris,’’ bo explained. (Continued on Page A-16, Col. 1) McCarthy Agai n Shuns Efforts to Set Up 4th Party 4/.S.Set to Pledge It Wont Cut Level of Force in Europe County facility jrffers glimpse into the past — PAGE B<6.—— Daley vs. Networks Chicago mayor calls NBC offer “unresponsive” -r PAGE C-U. Addison Aide Quits Another member of the township planning commission resigns in controversy — PAGE A-4. By The Associated Press Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy says he will not become a fourth-party candidate and will hot join the effort to organize a fourth-partytfrive.------ McCarthy, Who has said he might support such a. drive If its programs and leaders were acceptable, reiterated refusal to directly participate with a statement yesterday to Washington. '★ ★ w Rut the New-Reform Party of Montana Ignored the statement and nominated the unsuccessful eontender -for the Democratic nomination as its presidential candidate. - ■ 1 .' k k k Marcus G. Raskin, whose New Party hopes to get on the ballot in 25 states, predicted over the weekend that several state groups would put McCarthy’s name on the ballot whether he wanted it there or not. . RESPONDS TO SUPPORTERS McCarthy said he would deny official ----approval in those states requiring it to- ___put his name on the ballot, but said he would try to “respond” to the Wishes of supporters in states that , do not require' official approval. > WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States is willing to pledge, along with its NATO allies, to maintain current troop levels in Europe as one way to meet the new Soviet threat, administration sources say. The sources say the issuing of such a pledge probably would be done in a joint statement. They said this was among alternatives before the National Security Council (NSC) at a meeting today called to chart policy toward the Soviet presence in Czechoslovakia, which points like a dagger at the heart of free Europe. ★ ★ ★ President Johnson called the late afternoon session with his top military, defense and diplomatic aides earlier in the week while winding up a long stay at his ranch in Texas. He returned to Washington today. The session parallels a similar review now going on in the inner chambers of Senate Probers Criticize Army for Ml 6 Pacts WASHINGTON (AP) — A Senate investigating subcommittee today charged the Army With “a most inept performance” in awarding contracts to accelerate production of the M16 rifle. While it will not attempt to undo decisions already taken, the subcommittee said, “this should be the last time that any defense agency conducts a procurement in such an awkward, unreasonable manner,” ★ k k The five-member unit of the Senate Armed Services Committee commented in a final report oh a long investigation of Army contract awards lor a sharp increase in M16 production to meet Vietnam needs. the North Atlantic Treaty Organization at Brussels. HOPES FOR UNITY 'Decisions made here will be transmitted to the U.S. contingent at NATO with the hope it will spur unity in any military or diplomatic retrenchment to meet the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia and what some consider threatening gestures toward Romania. Czechoslovakia now harbors an estimated 200,000 elite Red invasion troops and appears to be causing the most concern. ★ ★ ★ Secretary of State Dean Rusk was described yesterday as accepting the word of Russian Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin that his country does not plan to invade Romania. * * ' k. Fresh reports of a troop buildup along that nation's borders, however, prompted President Johnsoh last week to beam straight at Moscow a speech that warned it “not to unleash the dogs of war.” And the subject was on the table before the NSC. ACKNOWLEDGMENT The contracts were awarded to General Motors Corp. and Harrington & Richardson, without competitive bidding. LOWER PRICES The subcommittee said two other companies—Maremont Corp. of Saco, Maine, and Cadillac Gage of Warren, Mich. — were prepared to submit tower prices than those of the winners. The subcommittee said that General Motors and Harrington & Richardson had each received orders for 240,000 rifles at ceiling prices of $56.3 million and $41.5 mifiion, respectively. Maremont testified during hearings it was prepared to bid $36.5 million.. The report cited testimony to a House subcommittee that Cadillac Gage had set a price of $36.8 million. Although officials are reluctant to predict what the council will decide, they acknowledged that the United States would be agreeable , to issuing a Joint statement with its allies pledging no farther reductions of forces in Europe. Regarding American forces in Europe it is now dear that congressional requests for troop reductions can be shelved, the officials said. k k k Most of the 34,000 men to be redeployed and stationed in the Untied States, though committed to NATO, under terms of a 1967 agreement, are back in this country, but officials indicated that the Defense Department might announce soon when in 1960 the men would be sent back for maneuvers in West Germany. RIGHT THIS WAY - Fifth-grader Susan Foster of 18 E. Cornell shows the, way for Richard H. Hoffman, new principal for Owen Elementary at- 43 E. Columbia in Pontiac. Also assisting in the introduction is fifth-grader Alan Hahn of 122 W. Cornell. Today was the first day of school for grades 1 through 6. .Seventh and 10th graders start tomorrow, and eighth, ninth, 11th and 12th grades Friday. Kindergarten begins Monday. . * A-*-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 ■VC Shell City; 4 Aircraft Down SAIGON (AP) — Vietcong gunners shelled another major South Vietnamese dty today, and the U.S, Command reported three American helicopters and a fighter-bomber shot down in the Mansfield Eyes Congress Load WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield says Congress has' about four weeks to clean up legislation which includes such emotional issues as gun control, foreign aid and President Johnson's Supreme Court nominations. Mansfield said yesterday on the eve of Congress' return froth a month-long recess that by October campaigning will probably lure away congressmen necessary for quorums in the chambers. Mansfield said Congress could recess and return in November, But he added that another extra session /could possibly affect only the Senate, which is confronted by President Johnson's nomination of Justice Abe Fortas as chief-Justice of the Supreme Court and by the nuclear nonproliferation treaty whose^ - future is clouded by Soviet moves in : East Europe. Nothing major is scheduled for call-up this week in either the House or the - Senate. UNFINISHED BUSINESS Major unfinished business in . both branches on which some action is likely includes a |72.7-billlon measure for the Defense Department and probably a record low $1.96-billion foreign aid bill, control of interstate sales of shotguns and rifles, aid to education, extension of the basic farm programs, congressional reorganization and possibly some changes in election laws. South, But a general lull in sustained fitting continued into a fifth day. Two of the aircraft, a 12-million Air Force F4 Phantom and an Army helicopter, were downed three miles from the Cambodian border yesterday, but all six crewmen were rescued. The Phantom was supporting allied infantrymen northwest of Tay Ninh, and the helicopter was shot down as it tried to .rescue the Phantom’s two crewmen. Two other helicopters completed the rescue— -------------------'----. . e ★ ★ Ground fire brought down another chopper in the central highlands, near An Khe. One crewman was Injured and the helicopter was destroyed. The third helicopter was shot down on a ‘combat assault mission IS miles southwest of 9aigon. Three crewmen were killed and a fourth wounded. This was in the .same general area where American infantrymen' clashed late Tuesday with an enemy force of unknown size. Fourteen of the enemy and four Americans were killed and 22 Americans were woanded. 833 COPTERS DOWjNED A total of 833 American helicopters now have been downed in combat in South Vietnam during the war, while the Phantom was the-3Q0th fighter-bomber downed in combat in South Vietnam. - Nha Trang, headquarters of the U.S. 1st Field Force 200 miles northeast of Saigon, was the major city shelled by mortars and recoilless rifles early today ; a Vietnamese policeman was killed and 21 civilians and 17 allied soldiers were wounded. The attack continued a pattern of the last few days in which the Vietcong have reverted to long-distance attack with mortars and rockets after suffering heavy losses in two weeks of ground assaults. South Vietnamese rangers reported. killing 1(S enemy troops with the help of tactical air strikes in the Mekong Delta 58 miles southwest of Saigon. ___Hanger casualties were reported light Birmingham Sewer, Water Service Rotes Hiked 30 Pet BIRMINGHAM — The City Commission approved a 30 per cent increase in sewer and water service rates at its meeting last night. The af*Hnn fame with “no discussion," according to a commission spokesman. 1961 JAVELIN—The sport model of the American Motors Co. 1969 line is the Javelin. Featured is a floor-mounted three-speed manual transmission, a standard 232-cubic-inch displacement, six-cylinder engine or optional 290-cubic-inch, tWo-barrel V8 engine. New styling includes a bulls-eye motif grille and trim treatment. Extensive use of wood-grain applique is available in the Javelin SST model along with a two-color side rally stripe and mag-style wheels. Area dealers include: Vil-lage Rambler, 666 S, WOodward, Birmingham; Hahn Chrysler Plymouth, 9673 Dixie, Independence Township; Rose Rambler Jeep Sales, 8145 Commerce, Commerce Township; Johnson-Russ Motor Sales, 89 M24, Orion Township; „and Peterson and Son Rambler, 138 W. Genesee, Lapeer- PAUE Division ReadiesBank Robbers Kickoff of Drive T The Pontiac Area United Fund Advance Gifts division will kick off this year's campaign at a Hawaiin Luau breakfast at Community. National Bank Tuesday. Advance gifts chairman Charles Wood-head has announced five assistants who will help head this year’s team,—-------- , it * * They are Edgar Swift, marketing superintendent of Consumers Power Co.; Carleton G. Patterson Jr. of Thatcher-Patterson, Inc.; Dr. Kenneth Vanden-Berg; Gene Stanley, president,of Gauk- Elude Police in a Speedboat PATTERSON Iranian Rulers fly lolnspect McKeithen Drops Support of VP Quake Damage VANDENBERG STANLEY By die Associated Press The decision of Gov. John McKeithen of Louisiana to withdraw his support ; for Vice. President Hubert H. Humphrey has not signaled a general bolt by Democratic leaders in the South. Those who have opposed Humphrey all along will oppose him still. Those who have backed him in the past are standing firm. WWW An Associated Press survey of party pleaders shows those who appear to be - solidly in the Humphrey column are Arkansas, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. , However, the governors of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Georgia either have said outright or have in- dicated they would not support the vice president. ALMOST A CERTAINTY Govs. Lester Maddox of Georgia, Albert Brewer of Alabama and John Bell Williams of Mississippi — though none has said so officially — are almost sure to back independent candidate George C.. Wallace. McKeithen said ln Baton Rouge yesterday that he could* not in good conscience support Humphrey because of policy differences. One of the main differences, McKeithen said, was their respective opinions of U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren. McKeithen said Humphrey approved of Warren while he did not The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy, warm and humid today with a chance of late afternoon thundershowers. High 80 to 81. Southerly winds 19 to 18 miles per hour today. Showers and flinmter«tin»w likely tnnight gpd TWx/Uy. Warm tonight. Low 62 to 68. Turning cooler late Thursday. Friday outlook:' Fair and cool. Precipitation probabilities: Today 90 per cent, tonight 50 per cent, Thursday 80 per cent Tatey ■* ran Mac Direction: Southerly Sun am Watnartay at t:M ».m, San tliaa Thur»d«y at 7:« a.m. - nz-------- —„ |: it y at an Tuttday In Pontiac . Mlghaat temparatura , Yaar Aya in Panttac Lowwt tamparatyra .. Alpena 4* St Duluth „ ^ Eacanaba 70 43 Fort Worth «S .70 Flint 77 <0, Jackaonvllla 00 40 . ' O. Rapids 04 44 Kantao City 04 U Houghton 41 54 Loa Angalas 71 44 Houghton Lk. 7S 41 Miami loach 10 70 Jack ton . 03 43 MllwaukaO 04 45 Lonalng 03 41 Now Orloant 01 71 Morguotta 70 » Now York ot 45 ^haiiniH 03 04 Omaha *' 73 S3 PtaMriX 74 S3 Pltt4borgh rMompQfati AtlOMO 00 77 01 S7 07 40 — By the Associated Press The Shah and Empress of Iran/lew to northeast Iran today to inspect the devastation of the weekend earthquakes that killed 11,000 of their people. Some 1,400 miles to the west of Iran’s stricken area, Turkish officials said 15 persons! were killed Tuesday and some 200 were injured in an earthquake that jolted towns on the Black Sea east of Istanbul. Iran’s rulers were to visit the hardest-hit villages including Khezri, Mim and. Kakhk. In Kakhk alone, some 6,000 persons died. Relief officials said there had been no reports of epidemics in the shattered towns but that large quantities of disinfectant, vaccine and sterilized water were being taken to the stricken area. ABANDON RECOVERY EFFORTS Premier Amir AbaSs Hoveida said rescuers had abandoned attempts to recover more bodies because of the danger of epidemics. He ordered ruins leveled by bulldozers, burying the unrecovered dead in the rubble. He said homes in the area would eventually be rebuilt, using steel beams and heavy bricks instead of the traditional mud and wood . -Tlac"Iranian Embassy in London np^ pealed for money, tents and blankets to help the estimated 100,000 persons made homeless by the quakes. Oxfam, a British volunteer relief agency, said it was ready to fly in more than a ton of blankets. Tito U.S. State Department said Ambassador Armin Meyer in Tehran was authorized , to release $25,000 for medical and other aid for quake victims. The U.S. relief agency CARE said it bad made several thousand packages of food available for the homeless. AMERICANS SAFE Six Peace Corps workers at Marshed, 100 miles south of the ary of greatest ler Storage Co.; and Harold Nefhouser of Community National Bank. Team goal is <118,384, which to 10 per cent more than the amount raised f by the division In 1967. Some 125 volunteer solicitors are expected to attend the breakfast, sponsored by Community National Bank, j Those attending wiH receive assignments, materials , NEWHOUSER and instructions for calling on some 600 major contributors. Tliis year’s total campaign goal is $1,130,000. Correction A picture published in connection with an armed robbery arrest , in the Aug. 23 edition of The Pontiac Press was not the picture of the suspect, Andrew Roach, 25, of 372 Going. Because of an error in supplying The Press with toe picture, the picture published was that of Ernest Johnson of 104 Perkins. Johnson wasn’t connected with the armed robbery. TKePress regrets the error. ' *; " NEW YORK (AP) - Using a speedboat called Cheetah, -three gunmen .eluded a small armada of - police boats and aircraft on Long Island Sound yesterday after taking possibly as much as $70,000 from a City Island bank, police said. The unusual getaway vehicle .was found abandoned almost five hours later but poli<% did capture a man they said had helped plan toe spectacular robbery. ' ★ ★ ★ Police said that two armed men invaded the bank, about 1 p.m., and one forced bank personnel and customers to lie on the floor' while the other cleaned from $40,000 to $70,000 from toe tellers’ drawers. A spokesman for the Manufacturers’ Hanover Trust Co. branch said the men disarmed a guard but a teller, seeing the rifle carried by one robber;aetivatcdthe alarm system and movie cameras. AUDIT PENDING Bank officials put the amount taken at $30,000 pending an audit. ..... The two men, one wearing a ski mask and the other carrying a bolt-action shotgun, (led from the bank to the waiting outboard motorboat, in a yellow -panel truck which was reported stolen last month. In a letter to toe commission, A. P. Blethen, superintendent of the Department of Public Works, said, “Although no monetary-loss has been experienced in toe installation of sewer and water services since toe last change In rates, trench maintenance costs have greatly exceeded funds allocated, for _tb^i* purpose.” “The labor charge-out rate was recently increased,” raid Blethen, “from $4.90 to $6.40 or 30.6 per cent.” “7 RECOMMENDATION He recommended the increase In present rates||j| “both to the total and to the amount allotted for' trench maintenance.” The commission deferred action on a request for air-conditioning for toe * Baldwin Public Library. The library board will be asked for more specifics. The object will he to determine “more specifically” the desires of the board and to take into account possible remodeling. “A project this size has to be deferred until budget time.” toe spokesman explained. ■ NO INTEREST In other action, toe commission passed a resolution stating that it has no Intention of purchasing property at toe southeast corner of Maple and Southfield for any public purpose. It was reportedly felt by the board that the best use would be i>y private enterprise. The gunmen transferred to the boat at a nearby mooring. Witnesses reported they saw the boat’s name as it churned away from the pier. They incorrectly reported toe boat was blue and White, police said. A police helicopter, nine police launches, a Coast Guard launch and a Coast Guard cutter spent several hours stopping and searching blue and white pleasure boats in the area before the ..boat’s description was corrected. It was red and white. OWNER SOUGHT The boat was finally found moored about 200 yards offshore to Weir Creek, a branch of Eastchester Bay, near toe , Throgs Neck Bridge. ; Police said they had discovered the name of toe boat’s owner and were searching for him. It had been purchased last month to Putnam Valley, N. Y. The suspect arrested last night was described as an unemployed com-puter ’operator named Doinw GeaneyT” 25. of toe Bronx > BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - First Lt. David W. Noyes, 24, of 4235 Carey was recently awarded toe Silver Star medal for his actions while to combat against the Vietcong. ★ ★ ★ Noyes a graduate of Bloomfield Hills High School and Western Michigan University, was a Marine platoon commander with Company “M” when his platoon-sized combat base came under a mortar and ground assault. ★ * ★ The son of Mr. ^trad Mrs. John R. Noyes, he began nis tour of duty to Vietnam to October. DAVID W. NOYES Plymouth Valiant to Sport New Features - TW» OUt h Cincinnati II U SMttlt __Denver------- SS I? Tuoon--------- Detroit |0 37 WMfclnffton damage, were reported safe. They were the oinly Americans known to he to the area.* _______■“ <■ 7, t > -: In Turkey, toe Red Crescent (Red Cross) sent some 2,000 tents, foodstuffs, blankets and a field kitchen to the quake area 200 miles east of Istanbul. The 1969 Plymouth Valiant, traditionally an economy compact, will offer new features of value comparable with those of more expensive models, according to Plymouth officials. Other new Items will be aimed at increased economy and durability. In the four Valiant and Signet models, the Valiant lineup Sept. 19 are: Hahn Chrysler Plymouth, 6673 Dixie, Independence Township; Colonial Chrysler, 209 S. Main, Milford; Oakland Chrysler Plymouth, 724 Oakland, Pontiac; Birmingham Chrysler Plymouth, 2100 W. Maple, Trqy; Wheaton Chrysler Ply- cars cleaner air system. A six-cylinder warm-up and nonicing starter relay mechanism are also new. STYLING IMPROVEMENTS ■ Improvements to styling include a new grille treatment, new tatillghts and .both a two-door and four-door sedan will be available. The standard 170-cubic-inch displacement and the optional 225-cubic-inch six-cylinder engines are again offered. Area dealerships that will be offering mouth, 2222 Novi, Novi; and Mllosch designed interior trim. Chrysler Plymouth, 677 S. Lapeer, Lake Orion. New to toe 1969 Valiant line are'’improved automatic brake adjusters, sure-grip differential and refinements in toe Options available to all Valiant series automobiles are fold-down armrests on -bench seats and, carpeting The mo decor package includes optional body side moldings, steering Wheel with partial horn ring and dual horns. NATIONAL 1BATHER — Showers are forecast for tonight from the Great through the Ohio and Mississippi valleys to. the. Gulf coastal states and westward toto the aontharn plains. It will be warmer to toe northern and central Rockies and eoofer hi the central had southern platosi Power Failure 1,000 City Homes About 1,000 Pontiac homes were without power for one hour and 50 minutes last right after two Consumers ' Power wires burned. The blackout started at 9:45 p.m. when a truck struck a Michigan Bell guy wire to the GMC Track Sales lot at Oakland and Montcalm. When the guy wire broken the Consumers Power poles shook and the- 4,900-volt primary conductors touched and burned. /The blacked-out area was generally north of Oakland and Adelaide and west of Baldwin. The Pontiac State Hospital also was affected. Service was restored aboqt 11:15 p.m. 1918 VALIANT — Economy is still the main feature of , to the lineup include a new grille treatment, taillights and the 1188 Plymouth Valiant line in the Signet model pictured refined interior trim. Conrfort options are fokMown armrests here and the 100 passenger car series. Styling improvements on bench seats and carpeting on all models. THE PQftTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1068 JkdL I Dodge Coronet hr Unveiled jj|. ' v! K CYCLONE CJ—The Mercury Cyclone CJ belted tires are standard equipment. Sports wiy compete in ihe 1969 intermediate pas- options include bucket, seats, racing mirror, ■enger car series for Lincoln-Mercury divi- turbine-styled wheel fcovers and rim-blow ■too. Black-out grille. competition handling steering wheel, package and white-sidewall P7D fiber glass- egg ' New Mercury Model Is Offered —New in the intermediate division of the Lincoln-Mercury Division is the 1969 Mercury Cyclone CJ. Featuring a 335-horsepower CJ 488, engine and-a twodoor fastback hardtop, it Is labeled a ‘ j 1 o w - p r i c e supercar.” Standard equipment on the Cyclone is a black-out grille, , hood tape stripe, white sidewall F70 fiberglass-belted tires and competition handling package. steering wheel are also optional. The Cylcone power train ranges frmn As standard 302-‘ -inch VS engine with fiifiy synchro nlsed . three-speed, manual transmission to a 390-cubic-inch displacement VI with 320 horsepower. full complement of Ford Elztra cost features include —Bam Air induction, hood scoop, black orsUvdr paint stripe and functional hood lock pins,. Bucket seats, remote-control racing mirror, turbine-styled wheel covers , and rim-blow Executive Dies TORONTO (AF) - Alan r|Bruce-Mtoiro^4HL-yice president and managing director oFF. W. Woolworth Co.. Ltd., died Tuesday while woiting at his office. He also served on the board of the parent U.S. company. Motor Co. safety equipment includes a dual hydraulic brake system, energy absorping steering column and wheel, and safety designed door handles. Maximum c o n v a n lance features include a five-dial strument panel cluster placed directly in front of the. driver for easy* visibility. The 1969 Mercury Cyclone CJ and Mercury Cyclone are 2Q3.2 inches long with a 116-inch wheelbase. Area auto dealers include Kaverly Mercury, 120. Main, Rochester; Don Spiker Ford, 130 S. Milford, Milford; Hillside Lin-cobfcMerairy Inc., 1250 Oakland, Pontiac; and Bop Borst Sales, 1950 Maple, Birmingham. The 1969 Dodge Coronet line men t s ' family-size standards with an intermediate pashenger car price tag. Five models with 17 body styles comprise the Coronet series: the Super pee, Coronet R-T, Coronet 440, 500 and Deluxe. ' Safety features Include innovations in the automatic brake adjusting system, improved disc brakes, wide tread tires, automatic speed control and transmission refinements. Area dealerships featuring the Coronet series Sept. 19 are: Hunter Dodge, * 499 S. Hunter, Birmingham; Kessler Auto Sales, 10 N. Washington, Oxford; Spartan Dodge, 85 5 Oakland, Pontiac; and Lloyd Bridges Traveland, 1010 W, Maple, Clawson. Power plants available in the Coronet series range from a 1 7 0-cubic-inch slant-six model to the 440-cubic-inch, four-barrel, Magnum V8 engine. . * LEAST EXPENSIVE The least expensive Model, the Deluxe Coronet, ■ will be avilable ia a two-door coupe, four-door sedan and two-seat wagon. The Super Bee compete with the Cofonet R-T as a member qf the Scat Pack series. Five models will be offered in the Coronet 440 line, a two-door coupe; hardtop, four-door sedan and six-and nine-passenger station wagons.---- ------^ The luxury cqr of the series is the Coronet 500 with two-door hardtop, convertible, four-door sedan and station wagon models available. A bumblebee stripe accents the Coronet R-T Series including a two-dopr hardtop and convertible. A 440-Magnum engitie, and . rally - t y p e suspension, brakes and tires ape R-T characteristics. Scholarships Set GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-U.S. Rep. Gerald R. Ford says five scholarships to. military acad-amies will be awarded to young men of his 5th District of Kent and Ionia counties. Ford, Republican, said the district In 1969 is entitled to two appointments to West Point, one. to Annapolis and two to the Air Force Academy. Applicants must be high school graduates by. next June, unmarried and under 22 years of age. ON SALE SEPT. 19 - The Dodge Coronet series will feature five models in 17 body styles including the Coronet 500 pictured here. Exterior changes in the 1969 models include new grille and taiUighls. Safety features available are improved automatic brake adjusting systems, transmission refinements and disc brakes. ADD-A-ROOM Lat us tassist you in your plans for a bright new clean and comfortable room for your growing family. There are new ideas and we use only the finest materials and craftsmanship. Special Prices Now! AS LOW AS P.r Month BATHROOMS e BEDROOMS e RIO ROOMS e KITCHENS e ATTICS Everything In Moderniaatian DORMERS • OARAQES • RO EAVESTROUOHINQ e STORM WINDOWS • PORCH ENCLOSURES DAYS ... NIGHTS ... AND SUNDAYS CALL Mf A 1032 West Huron (LluP£CuQn 2. BLOCKS WEST * OF TELEGRAPH (Tonstrudion ffix 4-2597 I IMMS J3GAIN GRABBERS Discounts All Over the Store-Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. THURSDAY ONLY FROM 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. at SIMMS Joih your friends at Simms to toko advantage of these super specials for one day only. Something from every department and on every floor. Rights reserved to limit quantities. Hand Towels II88* Famous Cannon tarrydath hand towels In a variety el scrolls, prints, plaids and solid colors. Slight Irrs. Basement Kepek Filled Toss Pillows ««* Regular $1.98 values Decorator design with polka dots, prints and dazzling stripes. Cotton cover. Basement 21x36-lnch Washable Scatter Rugs m Assorted carpeting or washable throw rugs in assorted colors. Protects floors and-carpels. - 1 Basement Discontinued Styles Lades’ Slices 88* Choice of heels and flat styles In discontinued - styles, clearance priced. Sizes 4teto 9. FeipONS CANNON 12X12 Dish Cloths & I 12xl2-inch mesh dish doth* I fe attractive kitchen designs. I Cannon quality. Ladies’Fish Net Stretch Hose 388* Regular 79s values, *fish net stretch hose ill beige Or on* s 8Vi to If. Main Fleer Eiderioh or Acetate Ladies’ Panties 3f88* Ladies' pantie briefc of acetate or piderloir with double cratch. Regular 49c f value. Sizes $ to 8. % _______ Main Fleer 100% Cotton Yard Goods Stripes, flower prints in blue .and brawn. 100% washable cotton. Regular 79e values. Main Floor Famous Brand Child's T-Shirts Famous brand children’s knit shirts with slipover style and snap neck and. others. Counter soiled. Values to $1.69. Sizes 6 months to 6X. Main Floor Famous Brand Ladies’ Anklets 3 88< Ladies’ famous brand anklets. Irrs. of 49c values, white only. Sizes 8Vfr to jl, ’ ■•■-vis'i . :' Main FleOF- Swiss Creme Bell Cake Mix 6188* Creme filled chocolate coke mil mix, Can fa* made Into loaf, cake oho. Delicious. jrfV+ AtoinFloor Approx. 13x2B-lnch . Shatter Regs 3188* Tweeds,-solid colors, mid carpeting with non-skid bucks, variety o* colors. , • ■ r' Professional Size Drum Set Former $149,-95 drum ,set the eludes 14x20| bass with foot 'pedal, tom tom with holder, snare with stand, sticks, jazz. Brushes, cymbal. Sundries—Main Floor Cord or Cordless Rem’ton Shaver $39.95 value, Remington CV 500 Selektronic charges to Shave 10 days tb 2 weeks Without cord. . Sundries—Main Floor TRTfeP Oster Clipper Wh $17.95 value, ’Charmoire’. motor driven and air eoOled, with dipper guard. Oil, ilean-ing brush, carry gase , comb, and 3 butch attachments. Sundrias—Main Floor Roxef 50 Guardsmen Cigars 3*8 p $5.55 box of SO, ton Inc., Guardsmen cigars. King pana-tela size or Queen regular size, taxinc. ~—Tobacco—Main Fleer ’Baby Den’ Alarm Clock 4»8 $7.95 voiue, while or block caae^paby Ben alarm dock froPWestriox. Plain dial Loud ■of soft, alarm. Round, face. Sundries—Again Floor Lady Remington Electric Shaver HP ,$19.95 value, adjustable roll- ' ers, pink or gold powder puff Sundrias—Main Floor Personalizes-ldentifies-Labels 3/8-ln. Dymo Label Maker Head and Shoulders Lotion Shampoo 88* , $1.55 value, 6.5 ez. size Head and Shoulders lotion shampoo helps control dandruff. Drugs—Main Floor Makes raised letter labels to personalize, identify or label anything. Selfsticking, professional quality, %-lnch tape..... 97c Hardware—2nd Floor Makes Yw i Purr When He Shaves Remington 200 Shaver Ayds Candy Reducing Plan - $3.75 value, Vitamin and mineral candy,. mint, vanilla or chocolate flavor. Drugs—Main Floor $19.95 Value The seledro dial adjusts 2, sharp thin . shoving heads for any skin or beard. -- With sidebyrn trimmer- - and instant cleaning. Sundries—Main Floor i 21x42-lnch Size Famous CANNON Bath Towels At Simms ■: Jtut : Liquid or Tablets Geritol Tonic fffl $2.98 value, 12-oz. liquid or 40 tablets gives you new energy. Builds tired blood. ■ Drugs—AAoin Fleer Colgate’s 1N Oral Antiseptic 88* $yyo " Cannon terrycloth both ibwels in _ beautiful scrolls, plaids, prints and solid cOlOrs. Slight Irrs. of $2.49. Basement Colgate 100 refreshing antiseptic keeps breath fresh for -hours.-—------- ■ 1 Drugs-Main Fleer- Squibb Broxodent Electric Toothbrush $19.95 value, 4-brush aH-elec-tric toothbrush- with gentle massaging motion that keep# gums healthy. ;",, ll88 Pkg. of 100 Parke Davis MYADEC Capsules Corn Huakers Hand Lotion $1.49 value 12*oz. size. Soothing lotion for hands that work., With dispensing pump. Drugs—Main Floor $7.79 value, Myadec capsules are a high potency vitamin and min- . - eral formula. From Parke Davis tabs. "1 Drugs—Main Fjoor 3*® , MN ... Saginaw $t, Roux Fanciful , Hair Rinse 88* $2.25 value, net dH colors represented but we have YSL . diodes.' Why not try one? Drugs—Main Floor Padded Car Head Rosts 12 only foam cushioned auto headrests that Install easily In Type A Automatic Trans. Fluid Gal. Factory sealed gallon can. Type A automatic transmission fluid.- ~ * - Automotive—2nd Floor VtP Black A Deoker Electric Drill I0M Industrially listed 2250 rpm, 1/7 H.P. No time limit guarantee,’ t Power Tools—2nd Floor Spill Proof Union. Tod Box 3“8 proof tool box with double handle or 4119 single handle toolbox. , -----Hordwoto—2nd Floor ■ Seeled Deem Headlight Bulbs 88* General Electric sealed beam headlight bulbs foe 12-volt cars. Limit 2. Automotive—2nd Floor 60-Foot Aluminum Glitter Guard 288 Pure aluminum gutter guard prevents leaves and trash from dogging gutters. Easy to Hardware-2nd Floor Kfrsh Cafe Style Curtain Rod 88* Brass anodized fluted alw inum curtain rod extends from 28.to 48 Inches. With hardware. Housewares—2nd Floor Aladdin Plastic Brunch Bag 2«» school or the working girl. Housewares—2nd Floor Anohor Reeking It Breakfast Set Prescut crystal-set Includes 6-julce < glosses, 18 oz. pitcher, butter dish, cream end sugar, syrup dkpanier and -salt-pepper. Houeewores—2nd Floor Non-Stick Silicone Bake Pan alee pan fi meat or cakes. Easy, to clean. Bake Ware aluminum. Housewares—2nd Floor Ventilated Tep Inning Board 3*» All metal Ironing board wi ventilated top for faster Iran* Ing. Adjusts for sit-down ben. big. Housewares—2nd Fleer All Aluminum Pint Vacuum Bottle |88 Rustproof aluminum Aladdin -vacuum bottle with- leakproof I Lox-on Stopper. Holds I pint I Housewares—2nd Finer I • ••• ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________M By JEAN SAILS ADDISON TOWNSHIP - T h is township’s controversial planning commission lost another member last night wit/ the resignation of Harvey H. Acheson of 5465% Hosner. ■ * * * '' Acheson, a 10-year member of file previous zoning^board, submitted a letter of resignation at the township board meeting, describing his fellow commission members as “in my view having the same opinion as the township board.” » » He charged it made the planning commission “highly inoperative". Dr. George Licke of 250 Ridgemont was named to succeed him. HEATED LETTER , Earlier this summer Richard Young, former chairman of the group, resigned in a heated, letter to the board and Robert C. Wilson of Brewer Road was named in his stead. The commission is currently chairmaned by Dr. Robert C. Small, who last night engaged in several heated exchanges with some of the 20-member audience present for the township board He defended the commission’s recommendation to institute a flat $100 application fee for all rezoning requests with an additional $5 charge per acre for all land involved after the first acre. -Mrs. Grace Kurschat, township clerk and a member of, the planning group, explained that if the application were denied any money over the $100 remaining after expenses would be returned to the applicant. Small called the fee reasonable in comparison with charges made by other townships. He noted that in the past the FARMINGTON - Action at last nights City Council meeting centered on a progress report from City Manager John Dinan oh the relief of flooding conditions in the Bel. Aire Subdivision. About 30 residents of the subdivision, located near 10 Mile and Broadview, were on hand along with about 15 residents of the Alta-Loma Subdivision. * * . * Several residents of the Bel Aire Bub-division complained of backed up sanitary sewer systems during recent storms which flooded their basements With up to two feet of water. . They attributed the flooding to inadequate drainage systems. FOR PAST 13 YEARS? ;One or two people complained that unsatisfactory drainage has caused Open Housing Stalled ip Shelby SHELBY TOWNSHIP - The Township Board reviewed a proposed fair-housing ordinance last night and deferred action pending an attorney’s opinion. The ordinance proposed by the Shelby Human Relations Committee, drew some "neutral discussion,” according to township Supervisor Kirby Holmes, w ★ ★ ■ ■The board Is expected to take definite action on the ordinance Sept. 17. ."It’s hard to tell how the board will aet on this," explained Holmes. Vote possible If the board first turns it down, we might stick the ordinance on our ballot,” he said, even though the Avon Township Board took their ordinance off the ballot. Avon Township moved to put a similar ordinance on its ballot in July but reversed that decision Mowing "much confusion,” according to township officials. A Detroit District Court ruled in August that the city could not put a fairhousing ordinance on its ballot. The Shelby Township Board took no other action last night, Holmes-said. ~tdwnship has rezoned at no charge if the matter were handled - at a . regular meeting. The fee for rezoning at a special meeting previously was $60, he said. Reports that the township might be called on to pay as high as $20,000 for a land-use plan prompted questioning of a recommendation to hire a planning consultant. I ' • ★ ★ ★ • Small and Mrs. KUrschat emphasized that no,contract was being offered and that the consultant would work only on an on-call basis. His charge for regular work would be $25 an hour, they said. . ♦ ★ '■ Jj” The township board voted to retain (without a contract) Joseph Gerak of Birmingham as planning consultant. He reportedly was one of thrfee applicants; interviewed by the board. ♦ The plan, as explained by Mrs. Kurschat, is for the commission to do much of the work itself and to avoid costly survey fees for the whole township. Gerak would be called in only to advise. A wit pending against the township brought by former Supervisor Billy Van Arsdel over a rezoning matter, was pointed out as being an instance wijgre the services of a consultant would* be useful. ★ * Spokesmen for the commission emphasized that no land-use study is planned at present but if one develops, Dr. Small noted that the federal government THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 A—4 ' > ; ho/Tews Farmington Disc of Flooding in floods in their basements and yards periodically for the past 13 years. Robert Witt of 31528 Marblehead • presented the council with a petition ' signed by 296 residents-of the Bel Aire Subdivision requesting the city take action to alleviate sewers backing up. * * * Dinah explained the area has separate storm and sewer drainage and that flooding is caused when surface water overflows into the sewer system. The council called for a comprehensive engineering study to be made of the area to be completed within 60 days. The council will report progress to residents ■ at council meetings. DITCHING WORK * The city council also voted last night to contact the Oakland County Road Commission regarding the improvement of the ditching on 10 Mile between Tower and Broadview. In other council action, it was to award the bid for and gutter on Moore t( trading Co. for $8,250. * W / It ★". Dinan said construction will begin next week. Cost for property owners would be about $3.50 per linear foot. The council discussed the granting of emergency powers to the mayor during civil disturbances. Councilman Howard W. Thayer suggested calling an emergency council session instead of giving emergency powers to the mayor. The matter was tabled for the second time pending further study. . RESIGNATION ACCEPTED Sticking to a packed agenda, the council accepted the resignation of Ralph D. Yoder from the City Beautification Committee. The council accepted the resignation of City Treasurer Mrs. Kathryn D. Cotter, effective I^ov. 17. Mrs. Winona Woods was then approved as the new city treasurer. She will begin serving as • deputy treasurer on Sept. 23 and take over duties of city treasurer Nov. 18. ★ * ★ Mrs. Woods is the general manager and former editor of the Farmington Enterprise. ’*" ■ A request from the Veterans of World War I asking permission to Veil apple blossoms on Sept. 20 was also approved • by the council. CUTTING ACROSS — A gal line snakes its way across' Addison Township — one of three' utility pipelines reportedly to be built in the area. Its presence caused township board Teachers in the Huron Valley School District reported back w their classrooms today even though they, overwhelmingly voted down a proposed two-year contract yesterday said Gerald B. Kratz, the district’s administrative Kratz said the Huron Valley Education Association has elected Mrs. Harold Meagher as its new president. ♦ ★ ★ The board of education approved. the contract in July and expected teacher approval yesterday. Minimum and maximum salaries for the first year of the contract are: B. A., $6,900-89,821; M. A., $7,762-$ll,048; specialist degree, $8,731^12,428. The maxi-egrcea -eanbe-ettained- INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - The adoption of a rate schedule and operating ordinance for the township sewer and water departments will be considered in the next few weeks. The Township Board, meeting last night, recognized the need in light of construction of the Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor which is under way at the eastem.end of the county. As proposed at public meetings last winter, the township'expects to charge a home owner $350 capital sewer fee, $1,150 lateral benefit fee and $15 inspection costs besides the cost of con--weeting the newer fmn the property line to.'tha home, ; ._________ might pay as much as three-quarters If the cost The establishment of a deductible tax fund for the commission was approved. BACKING ASKED Dr. Oscar Roos of the Lakeville Homeowners Association asked for board backing iq an attempt to prevent construction. of a State Highway Department roadside park on Lakeville Road. Dr. Roos skid some nine acres on Rt. 150 at Lakeville Lake are being contemplated for such a “Most residents figure we’ve got enough nuisances with boat traffic on the Weekends. We’re getting up a petition against it,” he said. Harvey Wilds, chairman of the township’s Why Have Awful* Roads (WHAR) committee, reported on the widening of two intersections along Pond Road. He said the Work was done at no cost to the county road commission. GARBAGE DUMPING Wilds also asked where residents of the fownshlp-were" RT tiump garbage •since the closing of the Curtis Road dump. ★ it it He was informed that a public dump on Dryden Road a mile east of Mefamora would accept township refuse. Cafeteria Workers Reject Pact Rochester Schools ----- Pontiac Frau I members last night to seek an ordinance to control qtich installations; • Photo >1 such Teachers Reject Township tO Mull Pact but Return ' 7 Sewer-Water Rates ROCHESTER — A contract Here for 65 school cafeteria employes is going to be negotiated further — much to the surprise of the district’s school officials. For theV first time in the districts’ history, /according to Supt. Douglas Lund, an employe group has failed to ratify /proposed pact. J * Sr * School board members were told at mm lilt night that the contract voted down yesterday by a 29-20 t.; "r; ministrators expressed surprise at vote and could offer no specific on for the turn down. . REASON FOR MEETING As a result of the cafeteria workers’ vote, the board tabled Its ratification of the pact, which had been the reason for last night’s special meeting. Board members did discuss the various methods of instituting a community relations program to better inform the public of school programs. * ★ ★ Estimated cost of the eventual program was put at $8,000 to $10,000. Imitation Milk's Nutrition \ 'Much Less Than Real Thing' Utica, puts ■K, Mrs, ’ Street EAST LANSING '(AP) - Imitation milk — only a tiny part produced by cows — may be cheaper but it’s not as nutritious as the real thing, warns a Michigan State University specialist. The imitation | Michigan contains less than one-tenth the llVT. nf r»a1 milk nnly one-third the ^oteln, say/W. Portia~M6nTs, " associate professor of foods and nutrition. ★ * ★ It is cheaper — about 39 cents a half gallon, compared with about 46 cents for a half gallon of whole milk. "But you wouldn't be saving if you •spent 5-19 cents less per quart but had to buy., 10 times as much to get the nutrients you need,” Dr. Morris says. MORE IRON * The Imitation product does have more iron than whole milk. "Cows’ milk is notoriously low in iron," she says: And there are other advantages. The . imitation product 'is ^lightly sweeter tasting than real milk and is “a refreshing beverage," Dr. Morris says. It also is relatively free from some ' elements in real milk which nan cause allergies for some people. T • ■ ★ * ★, , • . At least one- deficinecy in imitation milk may one day be aired by research, said Dr. Al Rippen, MSU associate pro-food sAence. would make a product that would con-' tain more calcium,” he says. "But it probably will take some time. Calcium is less soluble and harder to reconstitute and work with” than the ingredients The only type d Cooh.Jop Costs sid Platon-CUSTOM TAILORED JUST FOR YOU! t AMCOir M Matmatti Custom Tailors-Clolhier«.Uniform» Men’s and Boys’ Formal Wear Rentals 908 W. HURON at TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC rennet#* ALWAYS FIRST &UALITY m Our rugged gym shoes for all the family...a back-to-school "must"! 2.994.99 1 ----A. Hi-CUTBASKETBALL SHOES withgrip-ths-ground suctioncup design outsoles oflonq translucent rubber. Cushion insoles, dtch supports. Uppers are of air cooled army duck. Men's sizes 6Vi to 12 .............4.99 ; Boys’ sizes 2'A to 6.1....... B. LOW CUT BASKETBALL SHOES With buff molded rubber insoles, arch supports. Air cooled cotton army duck uppers, and Men’s sizes 6V4 to 13...a.3.99 C, SNUB TOE CASUALS with cprtect balance arch supports, c chick uppers, and buff crepe design rubber outsoles. White. Women'ssi*es4tol0 ........... , .2.99- Children's sizes A, ' ; " , WHY NOT CHARGE IT? ; • 1r.MIL! A MACK • 15240 GRAND RIVW • FORT A EMMONS SHOP TIU. 9 PM. . . . Grow. Point. Wood. hRrfSfwihW llncWn *«* Wow MON. THRU SAT. ... •is-mili a woodward • tsliosarh a so. un , immjia van. ones CHARGE ITI I 48 Welt Huron Street THE PQNTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48058 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1068 feecutivi^ Vto« H»»«Y J. Him Secretary end Advertising AMO MCCVUT , O. MAMMU JORDAW *• Lied AdrertUlnc > Hopes Bloom for the 1-696 Freeway Progress, like the mills of God, grinds slowly — and nowhere has progress ground more glowly-than-in— the development of a 19-mile east-west freeway across the southern portion of Oakland County. This vitally-needed,artery to span the State’s second largest county, both in area and population, has hung in suspense for four years because six municipalities (now cut to three) affected by the 616-mile intermediate link have for reasons of nar-row self-interest thrown up legal road Panel hearings are now in progress and, despite legal maneuvers to circumvent its deliberations, the indi-cations are that solution of the 1-696 freeway impasse may be in the making. It is axiomatic that in the expansion 6f public facilities by an ever-increasing population with continuously rising standards of living, some communities and individuals experience temporary dislocation or inconvenience. blocks. A new State law, however, passed last February empowers , the Commonwealth to act in the interests of the common good in cases such as this, where the needs of the many are balked by the few. But such has been the history of progress since our Country was founded, with the general welfare taking precedence over restrictive, reactionary viewpoints of a minority. The statute empowers the governor to appoint a panel of arbitration whose findings would be binding to explore the areas of highway-route contention, and render authoritative decisions resolving them. The Press wholeheartedly sup-ports completion of the essential 1-696 freeway link in the State’s highway system and urges the municipalities opposing it to heed the inexorable law of progress and be guided by the spirit of cooperation rather than that of obstruction. Students Protest Inactive Role in Prexy Choice Herewith, the statement issued by Stanford University Student^ Body President Denis Hayes on the announcement that Dr. Kenneth S. Pitzer, president of Rice University, -had been named new president of Stanford: “The appointment , , . without benefit of student participation or even student advice, represents a gross abuse by the Stanford trustees of the legal powers vested in them ” Student Hayes also complains that no sampling of Rice University students’ opinions about Pitzer were made. ★ ★ ★ It must be noted that Hayes, exercising his office as spokesman f all the thousands of the university’s students, knows nothing about the new president and has nothing on or against him. That does not stop him from going on at length expressing in Eng. Lit. term paper language his vague doubts about the man or castigating the Stanford trustees for their temerity and questioning their wisdom. “In an age where the relationship of a university president to his students is of such critical importance, this kind of investigatory negligence is inexcus- Times have changed, of course, and the relationship of a university president to his students is undeniably of critical importance today. But if this is an example of the so-called “campus revolution,” old folks over 30 may perhaps be excused if they Wonder if it is an entirely desirable thing. Football Sweepstakes Bids Sweep In If early returns are an indication, the 1968 Press Football Contest with its winner’s award of $500U.S. Savings. Bond seems beaded for a record number of Chtries. , But in case you harbor doubts about entering the contest because of limited knowledge of pigskin principles, you can dispel game pronto. Although gridiron sawy is not to be frowned upon as a contest ally, "many past winners were Of the novice class. Indeed, ore demure ~ieffiihine winnef^tfttr wiD kill you—was so unversed that she thought a forward pass was something a lad made at a lass. BALL CONTEST, P.O. Box 777, Pontiac, Michigan. 4. The contestant who, starting with the first game, correctly predicts without a miss the outcomes of the most games will be awarded a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. 5. If in the final stage of contest the few remaining contestants should have predicted ttie seme ‘Wrtcomriqf*w game, this game wifr-be scratched and the contest advanced to the following game. 8. Contest deadline is Friday noon, Sept. 13, and entries must be on hand at The * Press by that time. Those arriving later, even though postmarked prior, will not be considered. Voice of the People: Cheers Recent Comment on Scholarshipsat OCC Hurray and 50 cheers for the lady who. 4s i part-time student'in the outside inner-city of Poh-tiac who commented on scholarships at OCC. May I remind this lady that there is going to be a resur- * rection in November, and after January 20,1969, job referral slips will be banded out with the welfare checks. ★ ★ ★ I don’t care about Romney walking the bridge this year. Now he has changed the bear season and messed me up again. FORMER DEMOCRAT— EDWARD F. WIER 781 E. MAOISON ‘Lack of Directions Confuses Sophomores' How does the faculty of Waterford-Kettering High School expect sophomores to find their way around? No information was given aind there was no one to ask directions of during registration. Many sophomores that UVe in* Drayton Woods haven’t any idea where the bus stop is or what time the bus pj/»v« »« up someone help us with this before Thursday? A DISGUSTED SOPHOMORE Youth Opposes Our Country’s Voting Age A Slippery Customer! David Lawrence Says: U.S. Knew of Invasion Buildup I was fortunate to be born in America. I love this country, but 1 am handicapped—I am only 18 years old. Hie government says I must fight and perhaps die. Someone has to fight the country’s wars, but why must it choose me? I had no vote td cist tn a national elcctionnr^ state eleetion. Thia great country says it is unlawful to cast a vote unless you are 21 years old, but wiH draft me and take my life at the age of 18. I am not against the draft or wars. I am against not being allowed to vote. Have you ever wondered why the young people of America protest? MITCHELL SORNSON $050 McCORMICK WASHINGTON - The United States government knew of the preparations for the invasion of Czechoslovakia at least 20 days before it happened. A memorandum prepared by the Central In-felligence Agency w a s d i s t r United nouncement of policy by the United' States with respect to the retention of troops in Europe. The Soviet invasion has convinced NATO officials that the United States military forces would have arrived.too late if a Soviet attack had been begun against any one of the NATO countries. Mrs ‘Treatment of Demonstrators Terrifying’ Bob Considine Says: LAWRENCE throughout the government on Aug. 2 to the effect that military preparations had been completed in a fortnight’s time which would be adequate for an intervention in Czechoslovakia if deemed necessary. Also, on Aug. 20, the day before the invasion occurred, President Johnson had a luncheon with high officials at which Soviet strategy was discussed. Reports of a Soviet Central -Committee meeting to be held that same day were available which indicated a decision by the Soviet government to move into Czchoslo-vakia. HHH, City of Chicago Facing a Similar Task As I watched the Democratic Convention on television, I was terrified at the way kids were treated by cops for bold-, ing a so-called demonstration. All they were doing was saying “peace, peace.” They weren’t bothering anybody. Everybody talks about peace but teen-agers are the, only ones who try to do something about it, to stop war and have a happy and beautiful place to live. CAROLYN BIRD, AGE 15 5644 OSTER Letter Discusses Avondale School District CHICAGO—Some convention afterthoughts . . Hubert Humphrey and the city of Chicago millions of dollars in tourism losses this season. ’T’ain’t fair, but there it is. The reports were based on the character of the exercises near the borders of Czechoslovakia which appeared to be a rehearsaljOT military intervention. ..In one sense, the information about the Soviet plans was not particularly difficult to obtain, because when a force of at least' 200,000 is mobilized, there are evidences which cannot escape observation by the have a similar task ahead of them.Eaeh has gpt to explain to the American people that they had nothing to do with the disgraceful sights and CONSIDINE sounds surrounding the selection of the Democratic nominee. If they can’t, they’re going to suffer at the polls and the pocketbook, respectively. 7. Judges’ decisions on all questions relating to contest will be finaL Entering the contest is as simple as shooting fish in a barrel—though, truth to tell, we’ve never shot a fish in a barrel. Anyway, just read over the simple rules, get busy on your contest homework, enter the results on the entry form (or facsimile) and get it winging Presswnrd. - No, we (tyn’t advi$e dispatching by carrier pigeon. Pigeons aren’t what they once were and—who knows?—you might draw a flighty one who’d think the idea was nothing but a lark. (Editor’s note: ick-tck-tck.) , . Tim* fdr > coffee break now. You’ll hear from no regularly. CONTEST RULES | 1. Every man, woman and child is eligible to enter contest (except Press employes end dose relatives) but are limited to one entry each. All members of families may participate, subject to the same limitation. 2. To enter, you simply check your prediction of the winner of each of the 16 games below (to indicate I tie, leave both boxes blank), sign entry form or facsimile, and Sept. 14 Tennessee vs. Georgia Q ‘ Sept. 21 ' □ Oklahoma vs. Notre Dame □ Sept. 28 □ Maryland vs. Syracuse □ Oct. 5 • □ Pontiac Firebirds vs. Dayton □ n Oct. 12 □ Michigan vs. Michigan State □ Oct. 19 □ Texas vs. Arkansas □ Oct. 26 □ Auburn vs. Miami □ Nov. 2 □ Washington vs. California □ Nov, 8 n Waterford vs. Kettering Q- Nov. 9 □ Princeton ■ ^---vs.--------HarvardQ Nov. 10 - □ Det. Lions , vs. Balt. Colts □ Nov. 15 n Pont. Central vs. ^ Pont. Northern Q " Mnvr U Nov. 16 □ Colorado vs. Nebraska O NOT COMFORTABLE Austrian officials say that, even if the occupation troops should be gradually withdrawn from Czechoslovakia, the Soviets will still keep large forces along the Austria-Czech border, and this isn’t very comfortable. What, the Vienna government would like to see; is a clear-cut American statement that the United States will not tolerate any change in the status quo of the neutral zones in Europe. -France also Is becoming restless, and has made a "Strong demand to the Soviets to withdraw promptly their forces from Czechoslovakia. There is a fear expressed in Paris, moreover, that the next country to be invaded will be Romania. West Germany, too, is disturbed by recent developments in Czechoslovakia. NATO REVISIONS Meanwhile, officials of the North. , Atlantic , T r e a t y Organization are beginning to revise their defense plans and to call for a new pro- Humphrey is a gentle man. Chicago is a< great city. Both were tarred in the past few days by circumstances beyond the control of the candidate, as an individual, and the residents of Chicago, as a whole. Their task now is to restore their previous images. Or' else. Neither struck Sen. McGov-^WT75peSrWgitrvd»toeer" Four years ago, Lyndon Baines Johnson arrived in Atlantic City like a Second Coming. He took charge of everything in the big hall, the order of speeches, the length of same, maybe the incidental music. He pounded the big gavel (almost.clouting Luci on her pinkie) and the huge assembly came immediately to order for his speech. When it was finished he 1 spread his arms like the wings of the Fill and accepted the waves and waves of adulation. URGED TO STAY AWAY This time he was urged by his closest advisers and friends to stay as far away from the International Amphitheatre as he could. , “You’ll be booed if you show up,” one close friend; a Washington columnist he trusts among all others, solemnly assured him. In July the Avondale School District mailed mimeographed letters -to parents in the district, stating that the only way It can “live within its income is to reduce teachers on its stall.” Now an article in The Pontiac Press says “Avondale approved a $500 raise for teachers” who will teach only three hours a day. I urge all voters to vote down this millage. The caliber of education received by students in this district is very poor. Instead of a sprawling new school, why not upgrade' teaching methods and lease the R. Grant Graham Elementary School for office space. MRS, HERMAN KERCHANTY 1721 ADAMS Question and Answer How many payless paydays did the State of Michigan ’have because of lack of funds and in what year did they REPLY We assume you’re .referring to the famous (or infamous) payless paydays in May, 1959. Actually, there was only one payday involved, and it was ■not “payless” but rather postponed. Information we have indicates about 2.8,000 employes were affected, but received their moriey after the State met a $35.5 million school aid. payment due the 15th of that month. across her mouth with a nightstick. Neither strung the barbed wire. Neither was in that ghastly “planet of the apes” scene when grotesquely-masked National Guardsmen blocked a car bearing a mother and her two teen-age daughters, stuck guns through the windows, and issued incomprehensible guttural commands through their tear-gas masks. ‘ Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Police Restraint The Well Street Journal NOT TO BLAME Neither cracked a skull. Neither threw that New York delegate out of the hall, or called the taxi and communication* strikes, or cut off the air conditioning in some of the big hotels, or dropped the stink bomb into the ventjlat-ing system, of the Conrad Hilton Hotel. Adm. Kimmel and Gen. Short were blamed for Pearl Harbor. Nobody ever got around to telling them they were probably about to be slugged by the Japanese. The forces of law and prder erupted into unlawfulness and disorder in the streets of .Chicago last Wednesday and we are left to wonder if the incident might have been prevented if the'local political leadership had projected more carefully considered attitudes.—jj—|-----——|—S When police and demonstrators clash, it is always hard to lay the blame. There IS a tendency for propagandists to shout “police brutality,” thetelevision footage never shows the whole truth, and many citizens refuse to recognize that some use of force often is necessary to control taunting mobs, -c police and demonstrators is inherently tense. The demonstrators are unquestionably provocative, and the police are human. In fact, they carry ihto uniform the values and attitudes of their own community, and by and large these are the lower-middle-class,. red-blooded values most easily offended by the unwashed demonstra- tor. Nov. 23 □ UCLA vs. Southern Cal. Q Nov: 28 □ Det. Lions vs. * Phil. Eagles Q . Nov. 3Q„ □ Army rlgg vs. - Navy □ 8, Entries may be deposited fat The Press’ Rare* Street drop box or mailed. If mailed, they meet he enclosed hi envelopes (THE . POST OFFICE WILL NOT ACCEPT POSTAL HCARD6 WITH ATTACHED ENTRIES) and addressed ife: THE PONTIAC PRESS FOOT- Name .,. Address City . . . . Dallas has never been permitted to forget that it was there that John Fitzgerald Kennedy was murdered (by a non-Dallasite. incidentally I Nobody we Imow.of takes his convention to Little Rock. Travelers to Washington have had no trouble getting'hotel rdoms since its Negro hoodlums tried to burn down the town last spring. TAWT FAIR’ One night several weeks ago there-were only 12 patrons in the. Paris Hilton—and the City of • Light suffered countless In this case, though, on-the-scene reports leave little doubt that the police bear a good share of the blame. Throughout the week security forces had displayed an undercurrent of ugliness. When middie-aged women •re pushed through plate-glass windows, when newsmen covering demonstrations are repeatedly attacked, when a television reporter la slugged by a policeman with the rank of commander, obviously the polk* are out of hand. A confrontation between _ Even so, other police in other cities have managed to react calmly and sensibly to the taunts of demonstrators. While it is not susceptible of final proof, the difference could well stem from the attitudes of the local political leadership.. ~ We have long felt, indeed, that many street disorders in* subtly affected by the rhetoric of political leaders. We fear rioters may be encouraged w hen prominent leaders apologize for them and stress their presumed justification. In this case, the city’s political leadership seemed, to stress t h e -justification of the polk* in tbeir resentment against demonstrators and the press that publicizes them. Daley railed against draft-card burners and the like. As the disorder in the streets took place, he told the television audience that his police “never” get out of line. No doubt he has often previously expressed similar sentiments. We wonder if the Mayor has ever stopped to consider that too many such statements might egg on the police. He is saying hcagreeswith their values, and in this agreement many of the them might find an excuse for taking matters into their own hands. Some policemen might also get the notion they would not be called too closely to task for transgressions expressing attitudes they know their political superiors share. Even in ;his speech welcoming delegates to Chicago, Mayor Richard No one can say for sure ft Mayor Daley could have prevented the outbreaks. IBs expressions were doubtless sincere, and we find much to admire in the values lie expresses; it is just that when police and their taunters are aboc$ to,meet in the streets, public leaders cannot weigh their words too carefully. Whatever their own emotions, the duty of public officials is to make sure that anything they say is understood by * one and all as an emphatic damand for ra- 1 mmm attaint THE PQNTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER A, 1968 ;A—T' Sleepy Australian town Comes Alive ' JPORT HEDLAND, Western Australia — Three years ago Port Hedlaiid was dying. It chang high on the tropical coast 6f We8tern Australia, a steaming, sleepy little town of 1,200 people, totally unknown, utterly undistinguished. Today Port Hedland is transformed, 8,000 more people have arrived, the place is a turmoil of construction projects and they tell you proudly here that in a few years’ time .the town will be exporting more in terms of tonnage t h a Australia’s great city of] Sydney. - — --------------- '1 * * ’* The transformation is the work of the iron ore of the desolate and remote hills of the outback of the Australian northwest, which until very recently seemed of interest only to the handful of farmers who managed to run sheep over enormous tracts of this arid, scrub-pocked waste. Admittedly, geologists realized that there was iron ore to be found in the mountains, but ’the size of their reserves and the quality of the ore were unknown. In any case, there seemed no way of getting the ore to the world industrialists. Western- Australia was pro-foundly isolated, and no one imagined the funds would b& come, available to reverse this isolation.. This reversal was the'work of a handful of stubborn and in- spired men, with the help of the insatiable iron ore requirements of the steel manufacturers, particularly in Japan. ' They used to "keep in touch with the world through the state' coastal vessels which called in every week or so from the south, to drop a few tons of supplies and perhaps pick’ qp the faltering manganese and sheep exports., In January this year, and before the main ore projects have been started, ships called to collect 376,000 tons of ore and bring .in 38,000 tons of general cargo. FA Junior Editors Quiz About- GHOSTS Gym shoes for the family Women's, girls' white tie oxford fill I y cushioned innersole. A A Plain toe, non-slip sole. Chit- J dren's to3/Women's tolO. Men's, boys' 4.99 white canvas Cushioned arch, suction ou»r soles. Youth's 11-2, boys’' 2Vi- Oik 6, men's 6’A-12. Save nowl . The airport has become one of the busiest in Western Australia, Which means, for example, that the mail and communications ^aremuehbetter. Government officials have multiplied in every department. Business in shops has doubled, trebled. There are couple of new hotels, yet ekl hotels still report business booming, with, the sweltering workers consuming. 2,000 gallons of draft beer in each of the hotels each week. "Exporting Iron ore is essen- N© ode can be sure howfar^jajly-a very simple operation, the transformation will go; they i You find your reserves — and do not even know whether the‘in Port Hedland’s case, companies found a couple of mountains, which, in layman terins, were almost solid masses of high-grade iron are. . You therefore need only crush it and carry the ore away to the 100,000-ton ships which will take buildings that are going up everywhere — the houses *for the construction workers, the installations at the quay and on the railway — will stand up to the next cyclone. tip on the way to the moun- , - ________ tains, a railway is being pushed H to the cUstomeis omseaa. ahead to meet a March’ 1969 deadline. More than 70 miles of track were laid. Meanwhile, the town’s resources have been expanded at breakneck speed. The school, which had 16 pupils five years ago, had 560 last term. the electricity system required six men, now there are Hedland — build the port which will unload the automated, mile-' long trains onto the ships — And do all this at an economic rate. , Thceostaf developing thn-ore deposits of tiie Mt. Newman mining group will be 3260 million to start with. The prize is an annual export achievement of anything from 10 to 30 million tons of iron ore, depending on contracts. At that rate, Port Hedland’s fame is secure. WATCHING REVOLUTION The “shire president” of Port Hyland — a sort of junior grade mayor —is the town’s 54-year-old butcher -and garage proprieter, Angus Richardson. He has held the post for 20 years and is one of the handful of people who have lived in the port all their lives, have waited each ye# for the cyclone season at high summer and the temperatures up to the 100s and But in northwest Australia, and with finds like Mt. Newman (and, to a smaller extent, Mt. Goldsworthy), you have to open up a whole region, set up towns and mining installations, and above all, build a heavy railway Several hundred miles to the coast, and there — at Port are now watching a revolution. , It’s a straggling, dusty, Unattractive town, where you see more aborigines than in many parts of Australia, but town planning has now arrived well, so that there are high prices available for the owners who decide to relinquish their old houses in the newly designed commercial streets. QUESTION: Are ghosts real? * * ★ ANSWER: The wqrid must have been a spooky place indeed in ancient times before men began to understand the natural causes of things. The ancients thought there were strange, supernatural spirits or beings -everywhere. If you heard rustling sounds at night, your imagination would create some eerie being to account for it.. Today, we would realize It was oply a mouse or something equally reasonable. There are people, even today, especially in certain parts of the world, who still insist there are such things as ghosts, thinking them to be the unhappy spirits of people who have passed on. Believers in this kind of thing claim a ghost can walk through a wall, casts no shadow, leaves no footprints and likes to annoy living beings by making sounds like the clanking of chains. However, most of us have come to the conclusion that ghosts are not real. We can sleep better at night because of it. You can win flO cash plus AP's handsome World tear-book if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junibr Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize. JUto mwlablt is high while ityU, IN l| A.M. TO 9 P.M. ($•*. ♦:30-f) ■yton ifM Sunday Noon In 6 a m. nmtom elota TutsH Wei. at 6 p*J DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS FURNITURE SALE Manufacturer's closeout on reg. 129.95 8-drawer desks . Handsome eight-drawer desks in mbdern or Early American styles. 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Make Hudson's your your school supplies Check this handy list for ordering □ School bags L99 to 4.99 □ Rhtg binders 984 to 2.09 □ Spiral notebooks 194 to 1.19 -S Pencils 3 for 294 to $t ea. □ Paste and glue 164 to 494 □ Crayons 1941*744 HUDSON'S PONTIAC OPEN LATE MONDAY, THURSDAY, ‘ FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TILL 9 MESAA3JM IHHX future Grim for Wealthy: Only Youth Lies Ahead | > by dick west T^HTNCTON-ttlEII shall take as our text for today It quotation attribrrted to a New Yodc society matron in a mugariaa article I came across recently. “Today," »he said, “peoples who have money use it almost entirely for social p o w e r. Looking young WEST and attractive is now practically the whole point of being rich." - ★ w ; ★ The article went on to liat some of the expensive cosmetic operations, equipment' and drugs that have been developed to thwart the outward manifes-tations, or ravages, of age. ■ It stud people who can afford these Pooce de Leonish marvels “can go -on looking gorgeous, wearing miniskirts and dancing the watusi until they topple into their graves." LOSES AMBITION I don’t know what appeal that might have for the populace at large, but it rather stifled my ambition to acquire great wealth. * At ★ In the upper, economic stratum,, apparently, all you have to look forward to in your old age is youth. That strikes me as a rather bleak future. pe thing I look forward to in old age is senility, developed this outlook from observing ouq of my grandfathers. He died when I was a mere lad but I remember him well, mainly because Jhe spent his old age abolishing fractions. , ★ ★ ★ For instance, my grandfather customarily retired every evening at 7. Then ode summer be suddenly started going to bed at one minute past 6. FASCINATING LOGIC However, my grandfather resolutely denied that he had changed his bedtime; He explained that once the hour of 6 had passed, the time was' no longer 8; ergo, it must be 7 o’clock. -i The same reasoning was applied to /his age. The day after my grandfather celebrated his SOth birthday, he began giving Ms age as 81. ★ ★ *. I was fascinated by the old man’s logic and tried using it myself in school, but the teacher wouldn’t let me get away with it. “Your grandfather is senile," she said when ! cited Mm as my authority for handing in an arithmetic paper on which I arbitrarily converted all of the fractions to whole numbers. SENILE POWER’ That was when I started .looking forward to-senility. 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DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Orand River * NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Northwestern EASTLAND CENTER 8 MHe and Kelly Roads WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads PONTIAC MALL Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road Ar-10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER' 4. 1868 Foreign Press Galls Political Conventions 'Huge Insane Asylum' LONDON (AP) — The impact,Him take pains to save us from of political events in Chicago that." and Miami Beach was often felt ENGLISH VIEW just is strongly in the capitals of the world as it was in households of Berlin, Wis., or New London, Conn. For some foreign observers, From Chicago, London Daily Express correspondent David English wrote: "I believe this could be the last of the old-style the whole process of selecting I American political conventions. the next president was drawnAnd chaos and confu- r slnn and hittprnpss roiiln prow Fashion Floorcoverings... Selected for Every Taste. t, Priced for Every Budget During Our Sale into serious question. h it ft ""‘I had the impression of "being In an unreal world like a huge Insane asylum,” wrote French- slon and bitterness could grow .the first’of the new. ” Another reaction came from the London Sunday Mirror, which wrote: “The best news in man Michael-Louis- Schaeffer! the Kremlin when the Russian from Miami. ( tanks were rolling into Hungary + it it I in 1956 was that Britain was in* In a letters column for the vading Suez. Paris magazine Express, he * * * said. “Only the insane were con-1 “The best news heard In the gratulating themselves on the Kremlin while Russian truups progress of their insanity . .. I were occupying Prague was even though a lukewarm Gaul-that white policemen were club-list in the past, in the future lining white peace demonstrators will Insert his name in my ioutside ,the hall where the man morning prayers, saying let the i who might be the next U S, I good Lord give him long life president was being nominated, and in watching over us, let: * + * ~“It Is a tragedy that the leaders of the U.S.S.R! should see f t brute force as the solution to all 9 15 A m&rirnn C problems. It is a greater trage-\J%J IV.UIlO dy that there people in the United States who think likewise.” LINKED to invasion 1 The Sunday Times in London also linked the events in Chicago with the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia: “For non-Americans, and many Americans too, last Identified as Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP)—Thirty-five servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been named in the latest Defense!week's events in the stockyards Department casualty list. must uncomfortably ruffle their! They included: belief that the American way of, army life is decisively-better than the ,v*" L- Jr- Soviet. In the end we know pi. *FrY.4ul,hy.LM5i^;'which side we have to be on. Ftnnimer*. haw | But like Sharpeville and Buda-| wi»wi»i(v-^onitruftkw _M»ch*nic pest before them, the name of! Chicago, along with that of, Prague, will survive as the ins stantly recognizable symbol of an historic event.” Ohlp-Cpl. Jam*, H. Pigott, Liverpool. Died of wounds: MARINS CORPS . ] ■ Nebraska—Lane* Cpi. Richard L. A Japanese correspondent of ™ -ar«n. ' j.Sank/ei Shimbun, Masahiro Changed from missing to Kameda, said that “for foreign-dead — hostile: . ers, th« City of Chicago, under MicmaAH-Ffc'iKrthart s. Itwuii,! something resembling martial j law, looked fantastic. lank. I W. Eooert, Cleya- (AdvarMaamaM) FALSETEETH Missing in action: SBl. Talmadga H*Alphln Jr. and Spac. j THot LOOS*R 4 Strl u , h S I Nod No* Embarrass Died not as a result of hostile Don’t uva in f.ar ot falsa teeth action' loosening, wobbling or dropping juat at the wrong time. For more security ! and more comfort. Juat aprlnkla a little FA8TEKTH on your plataa. FA8TEETH hold* falaa teeth firmer. _ not as a result of hostile action: Dentures that fit are eaaentlal to army health. Sea your denttat regularly. Spec. 4 Pater l Ru»»«H Oat FASTRKTH at all drug counter* THAT'S HOW I FEEL ABOUT Capital Whan you wont tha flexibility of tavlng any amount . ,/. any time, wit,h\your fund* olwoy* available, CAPITOL'S Po..-Booh plan It loot ” the thing far you: Remember... it'* a "Capital" Idea wm year money. 4k«%Ann«ol Rat#, compounded and paid quarterly. Capitol** hew BONUS SAVING'S CERTIFICATES effor higher naming* on fund, invoitad tor « j specified time . T»ix‘monthi or longer. Car-/’ tificota* in amount* of $5,000 or mbit are ittuad ahd are outpmotieolly renewed. The CAPITOL SAVINGS A loan ASSOCIATION IWOOWWOftATID Tggo a LANRIMO. MIOMIgAH 75 W. Huron, Pontiac 338-7127 “Invitation” 9x12’ R|ig DURABLE CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON Rtf. 79.99 5988 Decorative new deaign with a deep, dense texture that won’t pill, fuai or ihed, Distinctive pattern la accented by soft lip shearing. Bonded cushion back for added resilience.' Decorator colon. / . 814x11 Vi’ Oval Rug REVERSIBLE FOR 1VHCE THE WEAR RU.19.SI "34*® Enjoy the warmth and beauty of a colonial braid type rug. 60% rayon and 40% nylon ittbulttr ■ construction for long. Choose front a selection of lustrous multi colon to match your * decorating scheme. Sale! Inlaid Vinyl RUOflEO, ATTRACTIVE STONE FRAQMENT MOTIF RII.I.H Simulated atone fragment* in a tea of pastel tinted vinyl. Heavy gauge with a delicate surface. Asbestos 4>ackingfor installation from cellar to attic. 5 popular colors, 6-foet width*. er.44 aJsq.Y Sq. Yd. Save on' Floor Covering MTWSMOOTH NON-PORUS VINYL SURFACE ' “Vlnylcrest’’ resistant to aoil. plains. scuff*. Ideal for kitchen. R*E»' Jl recreation rocin.-bathrooin s floor*. Many pattern* and colon to select from, Available in 12. 3 ft. width*. 11®. M.U, Carpeting 4 FloorCovoring Open Monday* Thursday, Friday, Saturdayto 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 Sears MARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac o Phone FE 5-4171 A—11 THE PON.TIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 ^ Sears i 3-Pc. Mediterranean Bedroom Mediterranean Style Deluxe Master Bedroom Look! You Get Alt This: 9-Drawer 64-inch triple Dresser Plus a Plate Glass Mirror Large 5-Drawer Chest Full or Twin Panel Bed with Elegant Double Arch Design Authentically Styled Suite with Fine Geometric Carvings If you’ve priced Mediterrajnean style bedroom suites, then you know this is a truly fahnlnn* buy. Not only do you save over $120-but you get the same richly carved styling found on costly imported furniture. You’ll love the bold massive lines—the antiqued brass hardware—the truly exquisite Moorish-design overlays on the drawer fronts. All pieces are superbly crafted of choice pecan veneers and solid oak with a warm brown walnut finish. Hurry into Sears for this big savings! Matching Night Stand in warm brown walnut finish, regular 59.95....54.88 Priced Separately! 69.95 Panel Bed.......54.88 $130 Chest...-------- .99.88 $220 Dresser/Mirrer* 169.88 69.95 Night Stand ... 59:88 All Mirrors Are Plate Glass Visit the room displays of exciting furniture and accessories on Sears Home Fashions Floor, then -' *'V - A r-— *'• ~ create yovtr own home decorating magic! Save/519® 3-Pc. Early American Suite Save *5195 3-Pc. Italian Provincial Set HICK PECAN VENEERS WITH FRUITW00D FINISH Italian Provincial design with authentic molded cane design fronts. Fnlly dovetailed and dost: proofed drawers. Includes triple dresser and mirror, 4-drawer chest and full or twin. bed. Priced Separately: . ' ! $139 Dresser end Mirror 114.88. $81 Chest 68.88 59.95 Matching Night Stand 54.88. 59.95 Bed 48.88 Rag. 279.95 WITH DURABLE 8CRATCH0ARD® FINISH Handsome Colonial suite with warm maple finish. Diistproofed construction throughout with dovetailed drawers, Suite includes double dresser and mirror, 4-drawer chest, full or twin bed. Priced Separately: $160 Dreiftr and Mirror 144.88. $85 Chest 74.88 34.95 Matching Night Stand 28.88. 54,95 Bed 44.88 Rag. 299.95 *248 Open Monday, Thursday,-Friday, Saturday, 9 to 9,. Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 7 Start Furniture Dept.'(not at Gross. Point.) • Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 SEAR& ROEBUCK AND CO. • A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS;, WBDIfESiJAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968. •V Alpha State of Mind May Top Tranquil SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - H you can learn to control your alpha rhythm, it may be better, ..than taking a tranquilizer. Town Gets Bill for Fire Fight Alpha rhythm is the name scientists give to a certain type of brain activity which can be in e a s u r ed an an elec* troencephalograph (EEG), a machine for recording brain waves. ★ ★ Sr The Alpha rhythm shows up on EEG charts ST. PETERSBURG BEACH, Fla; (AP) — The city of St. Petersburg Beach has received a |421 food and bar bill from a busiAessman who 'says it was run up by firemen; police end city officials during a fire a year ago. The town's mayor, Richard Ercius, said that the city doesn’t'plan to pay the bill unless dfrected by the courts. The bill came from Jack O’Donnell, owner of Lund’s Hotel, who said the food and drinks were consumed during' a fire at the Paas-A-Grille Beach hotel last September. fiwuia He said tite bill actually came I to twice the amount he is asking! feels.*1 and itemized it this way: Nine1 quarts of liquor, $192; 413 hamburgers, $206 ; 350 hot dogs, $122; 234 draft beers, $81; 203 cans of beer, $71; and 1,000 cups of coffee, $150. O’Donnell maintained he served more than 150 persons, but the fire department claimed the number of firemen, was only 150. since 195$, Kamiya t hi n k a almost everyone cant be taught to control alpha waves for a sustained period. Only. ihe. extremely S anxious have been unable to muster sufficient attention to learn. Ordinarily, test .subjects can be taught to produce the alpha in tyro or three sessions. Significant control is usually gained by the fourth session. MEDITATIVE STATE Because iso many subjects’ reports resembled descriptions of Oriental meditative states, Ksmiya' invited people in- terested in Zen and Yoga to take part in tests. He found they were able to produce and control ‘ alpha waves m n r e quickly than Uw average subsets. In another experiment usMg similar' techniques, one o f Kamiya’s subjects trained himself to reduce his blood pressure. Another- reduced an abnormal heartbeat rate from lift to M ■ Wftwtei Reports from the Soviet Union tdll of experiments in which tdeer patients learned to control acid released in their stomachs to reduce ulcer perforations and promote healing. “By making the covert Internal --processes -of ~ Ml and body directly observable to the individual, we may at last realize the age-old dictum "Know Thyself,’ ” Kamiya •September WALLPAPER SALE Room Lots . . • • *fr®m 14I, Stock Paper... from Mi *.ft Paint.. ■.. .from 1.50 gal. ACME PAINT - 3 N. SAGINAW g fi 2-3308 tinuously shifting series of wavy lines. University of California research psychologist thinksi learning how to control one’s* alpha rhythm may be useful in alleviating forms of anxiety, as' well as other mental and physical problems. MANY.TRAINED Dr. Joe Kamiya of UC’s Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute has already trained more than 100 volunteers to rec-nlpha-rhythms, which he calls agnize and control at will their attaining an alpha state-“Our volunteers, are taught to correlate a specific mental state with the alpha rhythm,” Kamiya explained. “In order to' achieve such control, a person first know what he Hippies Stay, Singer Jailed SANTA ROSA, Calif. (AP) Lou Gottlieb, former singer with the Limetighters, was sentenced to 15 days in jail Tuesday for failing to dear his Morning Star Ranch of hippies. A Superior Court order had been issued for the clearance following months of complaints by neighbors. * * . * He was sentenced for contempt fin* court and also fined $1,500. The volunteer sits in a small, darkened room with electrodes attached to his scalp, which in turn lead to a nearby EEG machine, “Think yourself out of anxiety,” a voice suggests over the intercom. To aid the subject In recognizing the alpha state, a tone, varying in loudness according to the intensity of the person’s alpha rhythm, is "fed back” from a control room containing the EEG machine. 1 TRANQUIL FEELING Mdst subjects describe the alpha state as feeling “tranquil, pleasant, alert yet relaxed,’’ and a few even experience “ecstacy.” '1 ★ • * ■ ★. Kamiya said subjects find they attain the alpha state when: relaxed and paying casual at-; tention to the tone. If they think j of something depressing, or visualize objects or people, the' tone turns off and they produce other than alpha waves. On the basis of his studies I Chunel Yeur Savings into the plan that will best suit your long range need! SV4% $10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 514% when held for a period of 12 months. $5.000 SAVINGS certificates Earn the rate of 5% when held for a period of 9 months. 434% 4*4% $2,500 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rat® of 4%% when held for a period^ of 6 months. PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS The rale of 414% Is coimponnded and paid quarterly; which (fire* an annual yield of 4.S18, a high rate of return peid on regular insured passbook savings. 761 W. HURON STREET Downtown Pontiac-Drayton Plains-Rochester-Clarkaton-Milford-WalledLake -Lake Qrion-Watcrford-Union Lake Before you go back to school, remember where you first learned about clothes. -c port of flontioc ainco 1931—-4- OSMUN’S STOWES FOR MEN * YOUN3 MEN FREE PARKING AT ALL STdRES ■ USE YOUR OSMUN'S CHARGE, SECURITY CHARGE or MICHIGAN BANKARD Tech Plaza Center in Warren (lit Mile A Van Dyke) e Downtown Pontiac • Tfl Huron Center in Pontiac-Open Every Niflht’Tilr Open Fri.’TH 9 Open Every Night ’Til 9. - • ■ r „ •: v ■ i.. T THE FOJJTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER A, 1968 A—18 Ip Village Self-Defense Teams Da Nangs Girls toting Guns (EDITOR’S NOTti ~ Viet-cong infiltration thto Da Nang, South Vietnam’s second largest city, is a very real danger—and fear. As a result, 35 young girts have been trained to serve as a village self-defense team, going out on patrols at night after their regular dag’s tootle.)' By T. JEFF WILLIAMS DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) -Mins Tran is a curvy, 100-pound cutje who would much,, rather canry a rifle than learn to cook. And she does. Miss Tran also thinks it would be melting if she ran into some Vietcong around this northern seacoast city. “But maybe they will shoot back.’’ Her laugh tin-kin gaily, as if it will never really happen. ( or '* ★ But - terrorism in the streets and infiltration into this city. South Vietnam’s second larger, is an ever-present danger. Miss TTan Thi Ngan Ha, with dimples and flowing black hair, is the commander of a specially trained squad of girls that patrols against Infiltration. She is 20 years old. VERY SERIOUS Miss TTan talks very seriously about the value of her military training as she looks over her World "War n submachine gun. Still talking about good traln-ing, die tales to. cock the awkward weapon. Her delicatemuscles aren’t quite ehough, Trying to maintain poise and conversation, she puts the butt on the ground and leans her 100 pounds on the bolt. She just makes it. Miss Tran, who has no official military -position, leads 35 girls trained as a village self-defense team. All the. girls were born in North Vietnam. They came «nuth with their parents as refu-jthe y have more Important things to do. ALL IN A NIGHT’S WORK — Da Nang schoolteacher Tran 1M Ngan Ha wears a cowboy hat and camouflage and tpte8 a “grease gun” on her other job *- member of a village self-defense team. in 1164 when the country was divided. Many of their parepts fought then jss they do. now—a generation of war. BEATS COOKING Why do these frail girls serve as guards? Urey get some pocket money and some exciteemnt. And it beats working in the hot kitchen at heme learning to cook, or washing clothes. this particular groupblgirls helps guardjuat one of the numerous sections, actually a .village within a city, that spill in ever widening circles out from Da Nang. They have a counterpart force of 35 men to form a quick reaction force If the arm is attacked. ** * ** “We go out at night on trols. It’s scary sometimes, but we usually go with some of the boys,, so it’s not too bad,” says Miss Tran. She dimples prettily again and adjusts h er blade cowboy, hat to a more rakish angle. Miss Tran is a-schoolteacher during tiie day. Other girls in the group range from the unemployed to waitresses to bar girls. 6-MONTHS TRAINING They have all bad. fife months training, including some live “fire practice. “But usually we only get tip shoot pne bullet each,” she pouts. Both Miss Tran and her dose friend Nguyen Thi Lien, a 15-year-old girl born in Hanoi, think soldiering is, fine. But Both take precautions to carry lipstick and comb. Questions about boy friends, however, are tittered away as both girls say Bond Salk OK'd LANSING (AP)-The Detroit Edison Co. has been authorized by the Michigan Public Service Commission to sell 6150 million worth of general and refuding bonds to help meet 106640 construction costs. ... . Miss Lien is also not interested in home economic courses offered by the Catholic church that dominates the village square. “When would I use those courses?” she asks. She adds with a frown that there may be another offensive ' list the city. “We must be ready.” She smiles again and tries tq adjust her hat. The rifle bal- slips off and Li„h Kim Ton (Left) And Tran Thi Ngan Ha plops into the deep sand. • ” ' _________. Shed These Traditional Dresses For Night Patrol Duty unniuatiaius DRUG ^uoAc/uptioau Speatotfcdtid’ Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center, S.Telegraph Tel-Huron Center, S. Telegraph- - Rochester, 1451IN. Main Pontiae Mall Shopping Center, N. Telegraph. Waterford Plm, Corner M-69 and Crescent Lake Rd^Waterfprd Twp. Drayton Plains Shopping Center, 6050 Dixie Hwy. ^ ...REPUTATION FOR PROFESSIONAL INTEGRITY IS A PRICELESS INGREDIENT j _THAT MATURES NITH AGE... CUNNINGHAM’S HAS BEEN FILLING #i PRESCRIPTIONS FOR OVER.... S 78 YEARS I Color Preview Days RCA../First in Color TV-SAVE $150 MO MONEY DOWN NOW YOU CAN BUY (n ■ RCA COLOR wy|l FOR AS LOW AS £"fl 9 95 MODEL EJ505J FULL LINE OF 1969 RCA STEREOS ON DISPLAY NOW .. COSTS LESS WITH YOUR OLD SET IN TRADE AUTHORIZED RCA SERVICING DEALER I CHECK OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY! OPEN 9 to 9 ALLCITY TELEVISION Ml 2363 Orchard Lake Rd. .1 Sylvo^hop^Center J NOW, 2 GREAT STORES ' 4350 N. Woodward Phono Ml 2-3139 ULTRA-BIHTE 58* 1 CANVAS BINDER T57t Construction PAPE D 54 SHEETS ATpl II REG. bVf “¥# ▼ § (PENCILS 1 n REGISTERED BRAND PACK of 12 ■ Me m T, CRAYOLA £ BOX OF 16 "1 Jl REG. 29C 1 9 | ST. JOSEPH VITAMINS FOR CHILDREN ?i!i—IS Guiminflliam s scores * ROYAL "PARADE" PORTABLE Om>Bef54.88 TJK'wT 4 Day* Only m Royal “Parade” model portable typewriter featuring 84-character keyboard, standard tabulation end variable pushbutton. Available in both pica and elite type 5-Year fueran-tee. Carrying cate. Daily 10 to 1-0, Sundoy II tat THURS., FRI., SAT. Beautiful Gift Selections in MEN'S AND WOMEN'S DIAMOND: RINGS Features image sizer focusing, sharp ..duplex lens, electric eye exposure control and lightweight body. Color pictures in 60 seconds andblack and white in 10 seconds. Charge lit Extra Special! POLAROID COLOR FILM Per Pack . ,,.lV ..... Milan! Foods Inc. 1BB12 W. Olympic Boulevard tea Angeles, California 90064 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 ■ .. ■. . |fr.u • .... : | • ‘ ■ V ■ - - Building Improvements Mulled lbs Waterford Townsblplj . Board last night beard a] preliminary -report from ' ttg]| “ financial consultants on futurell capital improvements oh township offices and facilities. Specific attention wag devoted to discussion of a fourth fire station in the township. 1 When otoer go ver nmen t toe voters in theYqmpf «'W|! Don a. Keylon represented agencies also claimed a need!issue on the November balloL Stratton Associates, a firm that for additional * space and “We can’t wait for township handies financial planning' for facilities, the board h i r e d financial consultants to alt . governmental units. Keylon' Stratton Associates to around and talk any longer,” he suggested one method oftinan-jdetermir cepted one of three bids received last week iof construction of the new Mott High School sanitary sewer. _____| _ rj determine the best method of ctog future building programs financing several building proj-would be to establish a township'ects and combining them into building authority.__ one long-range program. 'NEW OFFICES said. FINANCING IMPOSSIBLE Most board members agreed that toe station probably la needed, but financing might be The consultants were hired other capital Improvements impossible at this time. after acting Fire will be considered include[. «We hired these consultants to!new townshiP 6fflcp« and ad-1 so they couid outiine a feasible k°ar<* ^5 f (h ffre^station in'd'tional water an<* S'® w e r program for us, and I think we a proposed fourth fire station ^ facilities in the township, ac-jgh0uld w9it for their recom-the townsnip. . . cording, to Supervisor Elmerlmendationg .. Johngoll noted. Johnson. - * * * I See, who is replacing Chief; He'urged against See’s sug-I ahmav rU„r I-ewis Goff while Goff gested bond issue, and won the] I nnUnI L/uVS recuperates from a prolonged ] support of the board. Lvl ly vri l/U7J illness, said the new station Is Keylon, meanwhile, said Ms t A tn J iWf ln ™rth*estPart immediate task was to set up a fnr let hr^npr^c ™,,«t0WnSiiPL in ie »rea,, ^schedule showing that growth in IUI 131 UiaUCI i Wtoms Lake and Maceday^ townsh,p wi* gt )ts Lake. + ^ ^ present rate so. that new First graders in Pontiac: ..The _ _ schools may have to start get- reached a crisis in this area, ting up a little earlier if a pro- See said. “This year alone, w.( posal to extend their school dayl naYe had several instances of | REPORT DUE is approved by the board of | requested inhalator runs that He said he expected a corn-education tomorrow. we could not answer because A proposal to add half an 0ur men were tied up with other The bid accepted came from Cadillac Excavating Co. and wan about $15,000 more than township engineers had estimated-for toe project. The contract will call for. work totaling $88,810, according to Utilities Manager K en n e t h Squiers. Squiers recommended approval of the bid despite Its high coet estimate because he said, township -engineers had talked to several prospective bidders and decided they would not be able to get a better offer. The cost of the project will be absorbed by the Waterford School Board in accordance with agreements made earlier between the school board and the township board, Squiers said. „ . , . . building expenditures can fire department haslcovere| nm thet„ I base. hour on to the current five hours of school a day required for first graders is scheduled to be presented to the board by Assist. Supt. William J. Lacy. * ★ * He said it is possible first graders would have to begin school 15 toinutes earlier and end 15 minutes later than last year’s schedule. .The move to extend the school day for first graders is to give them' the • same amount school time as second through sixth graders. Tomorrow's meeting at the school administration building, 350 E. Wide- Track, is scheduled to begin at 4:30 p.m. because board members have an evening engagement. The meeting will be the first In a new schedule of meetings. Trustees will now meet the first and third Thursdays of each month instead of the second and fourth Wednesdays. matters.' He urged the matter be put to plete report to be finished inj November for the board’s approval. In other action, the board ac- 16 Escape Unhurt SANTA-FE, N.M. (AP) — Sixteen persons, 14 of them children, escaped injury Tuesday when the car in which they were riding plunged off the highway south of Santa Fe. Investigating officers said overloading caused a tire to blow out on U.S. 85. The vehicle did not overturn. Free Demonstration of the New Polaroid Color Pack Cameras! Youth Dies in Fall From TV Tower CADILLAC (AP) - An electrician fell 900 feet to. his death Tuesday while working on a television transmission tower in Cadillac. WWTV officials said the youth, 20-year-old Vernon Milks of take Ann, and the caBfirbn which he was working fell across a 14,000-volt power line, knocking the station off the air for nearly an hour. TRY THE— BEST Qmee * 1890 5 The Polaroid Camera Gifl will be here I; to demonstrate the whole new line of •j fully automatic Color Pack Cameras. :• Come in and start enjoying the most fun : in photography: color picture in a min-: ute, black and whites in seconds. Your Picture Taken Free ! MEET THE POLAROID CAMERA GIRL IH PERSOR AT KMART | GLENWOOD PLAZA, PONTIAC l Friday Sept. 6-6 P.M. to 9 P.M. | Saturday Sept. 7-11 A.M. to 5 P.M. Kmart Regular. *114.87 POLAROID 250 COLOR PACK CAMERA Special at only m POLAROID 210 COLOR CAMERA WED.,’THURS., FRI., SAT. Daily 10 to 10, Sunday 11 to 6 Leather oxfords! Leather suede saddles Wing tips Slip The very Lest Polaroid & ^ ha. to offer. Feature. §: v: electronic shutter, elec- £: x trie , eye, Zeis* Ikon-51; ijf rangefinder focusing 8 and ability to .hoot •* black and white pic-ture. indoor* without g: x Gash in low light. You V can’t top thi. for in- g slant pictures. | j: our regular $39.88 3688 North Perry Street at Glenwood Man-Siee Selection ... $3 Off! SHOE RIOT HITS CAMPUS Our Reg. 10.97 797 Charge It! Our Ref. 49.88 andU.78 4 Day? Onty A. ENGAGEMENT RING with diamond, in 14-k.rat gold Florentine idling, regularly 5478, now...36.88 B. MEN’S 14-KARAT GOLD RING with diamond.... handsome jewelry piece that Mil. regularly for49.99... now......... 36.88 It! 4 Dayt Only! Man, oh man, don't miss these great hairs! Classics you'll wear on campus or off, for walking, sports, dress— 11.99-14.99 values, now only 7.97! Pack several in brown, black; 7-11; 'Save $3 a pair! SCRIPfO VU-LIGHTERS SCRIPT!)® \ u-Lighter* in a selection of three attractive tie-aigna. Choose from Real Dlce. Finh FJy designs and the sport .•cones series including golfo-s, bowlers, fishermen and hunt-en. Charge it. j^Fhank You” for Shopping at Kmart GLENWOOD PLAZA North Perry at Glenwood A Division of ths S. S. Kroigo Company with Stores throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico BOUDOIR LAMP SELECTION . . . SAVE! J44 3 STYLES POLE LAMPS Our Reg. 15.44 to 16.48 4 Dayt Only Cone-shape lamps oh a , leaming brass ole: cylinder lamps with rattan-Iookmesh covers: twin student lamps in hobnail ;dass. Clutrge l Your Choice Your Choice SWAG CHAIN LAMPS ... IN 3 STYLES Our Reg. 15.78 to 17.44. Your m Choice E LAMPS J44 EARLY AMERICAN TAB CHARMING GLASS TABLE LAMPS g44 New drama cornea to light! Impressive, modern shaped globes suspended from brass chains. Hand-blown optic glass, ornate brass holders, finials, Choose blue, amber or green. Charge It. Our Reg. 8.88 to 10.44 4 Day Only Charming Early American designs ... an opal planter bowl lamp (marble base); an opal «nd walnut scale lamp; a twin-arm walnut and brass student lamp. Fabric shades for all. . _____' Your Choice Your Choice Burlap Fabric LAMP SHADES O.ur Reg. 2.28 to 2.58 ff ML 4 Days Only JCw Table lamp shades are burlap laminated, on true white, with Self trim on top and bottom. Sizes'are 8-14” (reg.),4»16”, (rea), 2-12” (extra tall), 6-14” (extra tall), 4-15” (extra tall). Charge It. FRENCH GLASS TABLE LAMPS count Price _- ^k MI At. :her-of;pear or Bristol imported J. OUT mMJp nch glass lamps. 31” tallf'with /WL1 - . sly taffeta shades. Soft base lights. LflOltB Mm-'' Our Reg. 10.44 to 10.97 4 Dny Duly All ceramic - base grouping of table lamps. Cone shape base, brown or green; 41”;, urn ’lamp, 36”; bronze/white or blue/grejen; 39” lamp in glazed gold, tangerine or avocado. Your Choice i top and bottom. Sizes are 8-14” (reg.),4»16”, (rea) tall), 6-14” (extra tall), 4-15” (extra tall). Charge It. GENERAL ELECTRIC COLONIAL DESIGN GENERAL ELECTRIC DIMMER CONTROL SWITCH atsavings DAINTY BALLERINA SHAPESEORYOOR VANITY LAMPS Our Reg. 1.17 GENERAL ELECTRIC -S1LEHTMERCURY 'TOGGLE SWITCH Ouf Reg. 97c 4 Day Only Ballerina shades in white, pink or bine nylon with frilly overskirts and matching ribbon trims. Special sale price. Chargelt. 4 Day Only Another General Electric product for easier living. BE Lighted MERCURY TOOLE SWITCH, RED. 1.11... r.1.11 .Molded polypropylene colonial design limp accommodates 7-watt bullMshade snaps off for replacement), has on/off switch. Chargelt.* Full-range, variable bright* ness control lets you dial the level of light you want Sates eleetricity ana prolongs lamp life. Chargelt. Select From Top Hits by Name Artists COUNTRY/WESTERN POP MONAU RAIS Your Choice ISale-priced album selection of favorites for the teen-ager, plus favorite ’Country and Westerns. To-name a few... DAVID JONES, THE ANIMALS ANIMALISM. THE BEST OF HERMAN’S HERMITS.... plua THE VERY BEST OF H ANK WILLIAMS. ROGER MILLER’S WALKIN’ IN THE SUNSHINE. and mahy.many others. C h arge It. Shopping at Kmart Will Save You. Hundreds of Dollars Every Year GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD V „ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 ‘ >. A—16 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUfl. 11-6 - 'WED., THURS., FBI., SAT. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1068 New OCC Head Has Problem Lift You/Entire Living Room Out Of The Ordinary “Its community service programs lend It a possibility of] educational value^that CSnnot be realised in other types of in-' StitUtiOQS." | Hill joined WSU as men's ac- coilege of education before taking over his present position in' 1964. I 'rrnir. (Continued from Page One) jtheterm a course Is taken, ac-Bat he heb that tta-.PMPleH""* “ "iU Bul .to . feave to be given a -VHfarMt ***? .** ^ ev«7m is «- kind of onportonity." . ‘CAN IMPROVE METHOD* j Why not extend a course ’ T h e college's instructional which lasts one term to three or method of program materials s*x’ depending on the student’s where students can learn at progress, Hill maintains. | their own pace can be im- * * * Itivities counselor in 1966. He proved, according to Hill. I Hill says he has found that as “^ed as assistant dean of Uiej “I have found that some peo- dfraefo^ WSU’s Institute for pie are just not ready for pro- grammed instruction,’’ he says, rhey learn by talking things over with their associates or just by listening to others talk.” Educational Sciences th grammed Instruction,” he says, slower learners progress faster They learn by talking things hi small groups. SERVED AT DIT, JUT . When asked why he wanted to He previously was chairman becQI"ePres‘dent of OCC, HillLfthe mathemaUc8 department rested this way: . land athletic director at Detroit It’s'the task of taking the in-; interested In educational| institute of Technology and telligence of a boy who can teari™se*rf^ and development that) taUght math at Lawrence In-a car engine ap'art with no15 Particularly applicable to ^ o£ Technology. | trouble and transferring it to earned a bachelor’s words and numbers. ^ degree in mathematics from HiU has some notions on how beat note,” he said, “not because of what happened at the Democratic convention but at ours. We won the nomination without splitting the party.” He said Chicago was selected as the kickoff point for his campaign weeks before the Democratic convention, during which-violent disorders erupted. | Nixon indicated that he might, Issue Abatement on the rioting! and the charges that the Chica-| go police “overreacted” against demonstrators. “1 am studying! it now,” he said. 'His Chicago schedule called for a motorcade through the Loop and themAtO p.m. CDT a question-and-answer session, on live television with jbl panel and an audience. “If I don’t make the statement, we may deal with it during the telecast,” he said. VOTERS UNDECIDED Speaking generally about the outlook for the campaign, Nixon said there are more undecided voters today than there were in 1960 when he lost a hairline race to John F.Kennedy.. "The issues are more volatile today,” Nixon said. “In 1960, there , was no war in Vietnam. Disorders in the cities were not a great issue. There was no inflation.” ' Because of the issues confronting the voters today, he continued, “We can change a lot of people’s minds.” < Asked about the effect of former Alabama Gov. George p. Wallace’s candidacy, Nixon said he "does not believe "people are going to waste their votes on a third-party candidate.” As his campaign and that of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey develops, he said, the support for Wallace will diminish. “I could be wrong,” Nixon added. UP FOR GRABS He described Illinois, California, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Ohio, "up for grabs'” in tills election. ~ hi the final weeks of the campaign, he said he plans to concentrate on what he called “the big seven”—New York, California Illinois; Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and Texas. They have a total of 210 electoral college Votes. Th* most complete personal electric typewriter ever designed! ROYAL” CUSTOM TRADE-IN ALL01 Easy 9 Men Survey Bikini to See if It's Ready for Life BIKINI ATOLL; Marshall Islands . (AP) — Nine men representing. the Bikini, islanders moved 22 years ago because of U.S. nuclear tests are back on this tiny Pacific atoll surveying prospects of returning to live. Scientists say radioactive lev-els—the tests were stopped a decade ago—now are ’ low enough for habitation. The U.S. government plans to redevelop the atoll and move the 300 or so islanders back. “Most of the trees are gone,” said William R. Norwood, high commissioner of the Trust Territory of the Pacific. “But when we look at the quiet sea with its great abundance, when we see the beautiful beach and as we see more of the island, we will more and more understand why people want to return to Bikini.” • Regularly *399" LUXURIOUS 9 PIECE OUTFIT. All These Distinctive Pieces.. • CHANNEL MUSK SOFA • MR. A MRS. CHAIRS • MATCHING OTTOMAN . 2 STEP-END TABLES • COCKTAIL TABLE • 2 DECORATOR LAMPS Make Your Sale Selections Now! Truly a thrilling value ... a chqnce to save $100 on wonderfully styled and carefully crafted furniture that includes comfortable reversible foam cushion sofa and chairs . . . walnut finish end tables and coffee table plus two beautiful lamps, iphooso from handsome tweads or lovely solid colors. Put roal Living comfort inyaur living rooml 299 $10.00 A MONTH NO MONEY DOWN ?0P 36 MOS. TO PAY Ask About Our TEENS and YOUNG MARRIEDS Terms 536 N. PERRY Just Across Glenwood from Kmart ' ; i . OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 9 P.M. Phons FE 4-9615 You Can “Clean -Up” On Financing Too! Save Up io loo A«t By “Charging" That Hew Car At Pontiac state Ths lank That OHsrs Tbs LOWEST BATE _ Of Any Financial Institution In The Pontiac Area rjagSMSErj ■ lO»» 2,500.0® AS LO *41.00 63.06 16.82 94.09 151 A3 l 3,000.00 .Sjj i It's Fun to Accessorize Autumn's Fashions for the Individual Touch Hand-carved umbrella heads “Put-together” ioith a handsome question mark necklace ask the big question of the year at the Fall-Winter ’68 Accessorama show. The party of one’s choice can now, be designated faith the selection of a Polan Katz nylon umbrella with either it stylized donkey or an elephant head. Which will it be? Pointing up the question, is a handsome auestion mark necklace designed of mesh chain thterbraided with gilded wire by Stanley Hagler. 'Barefoot' Opens at Will-O-Wgy Will-OWay Apprentice Hieatre opens Its 1968 fall season with the comedy, “Barefoot In the Park” by Nell Simon. The theatrical trade school, located on West Long Lake Road since 1940, is , featuring its director, Celia Merrill Turner and her daughter, Robin, as the cany mother and newly married daughter—who wanted to-Uve—on the moon. The production will be open to the public Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 8:40 p.m. v- Two college students from the performing" arts department of Northwood Institute of Indiana with which WiH-0-Way is affiliated will make their Detroit debuts in “Barefoot.” * They are Gary Graham, a sophomore from Marion, IUd. who plays the bridegroom of fix days and Jon Tanner, a sophomora-from Ailen ..Parish . who p, blesses the young couple with their own telephone. . ? Osage Branch to Host Country Women Group The Osage branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association will entertain a group of the Associated Country Women of the World on Sept. 11. Mrs. Fred Paotillon and Mrs. Elmer Kestly, both of Troy, will open their homes for cocktails and dinner. Another happening for the Osage unit )$ a luncheon fashion show on Oct. 1 at noon in Spring Lake Country Club, Models will be dressed by Lisbeth’s of Birmingham at the event where Proceeds will be used for scholarships. Mrs. Donald Richardson of Pine Hill Drive will host the branch’s first meet-aing this season on Sept. 9 at noon. Calendar Amuwl Antique Shew, 11 P.m., Cranbrook Auditorium. Open to file public, the show runs Thursday through Saturday from 11 a m. until 10 pm. Oakland Writers’ Workshop* 1 p.ra., YWCA.. Regular meeting. Urban League Guild, 7:30 p.m., Community Services; B u i 1 d i n g. Open meetingwith Elick Siorter discussing foe “New Thrust of the Urban League.” All area women may attend. Ernie Savoie, of Birmingham, WilhO-Way’s academic director, will play the energetic gourmet, who prefers rugs to, beds; and Mike Leo of Clawson will play the breathless delivery man. Reservations may be made by calling 644-4418. Will-O-Way’s chairman of admissions, Mary Savoie, announces the opening of the fall drama and speech courses for children, teens, and adults. Registration began Sunday. Classes begin Sept. 13. Old friends and prospective students are invited to two open houses at Will-OWay to discuss the. theatre’s production plans with Mrs.. Turner on Saturday and Sunday front 1:30 to 4:00 p.m. Prospective college students wishing to hear more about Northwood Institute’s two adfnfour year programs in the performing arts are also welcome to attend. 7 V: ..' Urge Involvement With Problems Dave Diles of WXYZ TV, along with four other key speakers will present a program on “Becoming Involved,” a community’s responsibility to kids with special problems. The meeting, sponsored by -the Oakland chapter, Michigan Association for Emotionally Disturbed Children, will begin at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Groves High School. Dr. Donald Martin, medical superintendent of Pontiac State Hospital and Ted Panaretos, community Relations director of the hospital, will also speak. In addition, Dr. James Johnson, director of Fairlawn Center, and the Center’s principal, Michael Fiorillo, will talk to the group. A question mid answer period follows toe discussions. Anyone interested in mental health problems may attend. Sorority Chapter Mans Fall Membership Tea The annual fall membership tea of Chi Omega North Suburban Alumnae Association will take {dace Sept. 15 -at 2 p.m. in the Birmingham bone of Mrs. RonaM J. Jenkins. Mrs. T. E.'-'Treadwell of Southfield is taking reservations for the event which any area members may attend. Reservations for a theatre party od Sept 38 at file Fisher Theatre will be taken at toe tea. For the snappiest handbag shaping of the season—Jaklyn’s nifty leather-look flight bag squared Off and wearing double top zippers that extend ddtpn either side for easy entry into a two-compart-rhent interior. Added plus and added fashion storage space, the flapped outside pocket with gilt luggage lock. Another double plus—its pair of straps, long enough for shoulder swinging. In the season’s important brown tones and black, the bag is in Glovetta, the vinyl with the look of real leather. She Is Getting Away With Plenty , It’s a big year for belts. So handbag designer Jaclyn belts this plump safari bag in leather-look Glovetta with a Wide strapping of leather that can slip out of its side loops and double around the wearer’s waist for a look of total accessory coordination. A long over-the-top. zipper, makes for easy - entry, while an outside zipper marks an extra compartment for plus equipment carried. In tones of brown, fall’s big fashion color, dark green and black. Line available locally. At first it seems a Venetian blind design, then it takes on the , completely abstract effect of pure color and line. There’s nothing abstract about the fashion role it will play this season. A 32-inth square by Echo of pure Italian silk twill done in shocking thrown, gray/gold, orange/green,grten(~ fuchsia. May be ordered locally.' mmammpn 'Respected' Lady Is Common Thief By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: We own a small high grade market in one of the better neighborhoods. Our problem is a very stylish lady of about 50 who patronizes us regularly. I We’ve' seen her slip] small cans of button] mushrooms, cay fa r, smoked oysters, anal similar delicacies intof her coat pocket. She can well afford toj pay for the items she! steals. We’ve considered | asking her to do her shopping elsewhere, but we. haven’t the - nerve. She is such a respected lady that we can’t follow her out of the store and demand that she empty her pockets like a common thief. Perhaps if you print this in your column she’ll realize she’s not getting away with anything. In the meantime, what is your advice? UNSIGNED DEAR UNSIGNED: Unless you want to continue to keep this “respected lady” in button mushrooms, caviar, smoked oysters and similar delicacies, I suggest that you follow her out of the store and demand that she empty her pockets like the common thief that she is. And until you do, she is indeed getting away with plenty. ★ * * DEAR ABBY: After nine years of marriage my wife wants twin beds. I can’t understand it and neither can our seven kids. Do you think she’s getting tired of me? She says she will sleep better in twin, beds. Frankly, if she slept ' any better, she would,be dead. Please tell me how to handle this problem. I like to have her next to me. ST. LOUIS * * ★ DEAR ST. LOUIS: The desire for twin beds is no proof that your wife Is “getting tired” of you. Seven kids in nine years may mean she’s getting just plain “tired." ... * . ★ DEAR ABBY: I’ve been trying to disregard this problem for some time, but it keeps nagging at the, so please print your answer soon. Three years ago, a neighbor boy, who was 10 at tiie time, tried to molest our little four-year-old daughter. Luckily it tumed out to be nothing serious. However, other neighbors have told me this boy has since been in the same kind of trouble with other young children. The boy is 13 now, and he has been •hanging around the tome of some new neighbors who have a four-year-old boy. I keep wondering if I should tell this little boy’s mother about oUr experience. M[y husband said NO, I shouldn’t get involved. .. It Worries me, • Abby. If something happened to that Uttle four-year-old kid I’d feel responsible. What should I do? WORRIED * m ★ DEAR WORRIED: If the parents of the 13-yegr-old boy appear to -be Intelligent, responsible people, tell them to keep their eye on their son for recurring signs of his old trouble. If they don’t, tip off the new neighbors. You are already morally involved. We’ll give you 3 good reasons to buy. 1. It’s a DAYSTROM dinette. 2. It’s beautifidly, styled. Epitomizing the romantic movie star look, Coquette, anew flower strewn panty hose pattern in black by-Burlington-Cameo rqakes an eye catching foil for the\tai-lored black wool coat dress with heavily embroidered patch pockr ets by Tiffeau-Busch. Tickets Now on Sale for Town Hall Series at Rochester Theatre Season tickets for toe Rochester Town Hall aeries will go on sale this week. The series, which takdk place in Hills Theatre, opens on Oct. 16 with Bennett Cerf; noted publisher and TV personality. Nila Magidoff will appear on Nor. 6; Dr. Lester Coleman on Fto. 14; and Dorothy Sarnoff on March 18. , Tickets for the series are available by writing to Rochester Town Hall, P. O. Box 304, Rochester, Mich. 48063. Celebrity luncheons will folio# each 11 a.m. lecture. Mrs. Stone Returns Mrs. James M. Stone of Rosanne Lane who is president of the Michigan Epsilon Sigma Alpha International, recently attended a leadership training conference at Vail, Colo. 1 ■ ■■■-.,■ ' Epsilon Sigma Alpha is one yof toe largest international women’s organizations *in the world with rogress._ . _____j________ WIGGS -iSS By MARY FEELEY ago was trying to help an ex- reported by the A meric a n exactly what you can expect in mSEerpity benefits from your particular group plan. The amount of maternity b6nefit& usually provided in an in-' dividual family health policy are so small they can’t be relied on ty ease the situation much. £ . According to Blue Cross and Blue Shield’s standard contracts on a group insurance plan, BC may pay $80 in maternity “Price ranges vary so widely benefits, and BS 75. Other BC-! in maternity care,” says an ^S contracts provide for more, executive at the Maternity] In fact, the*extra cost to the I Center Association based in individual for increased benefits observe and learn more about f«es. drugs and dressings. In New York City, “that it’s very' in group plans are only peanuts their pre-school children in ac- j order to check on these same difficult to pin them down from tor every . $10 over $150 1W tion with others through an accommodations in the same lone community to another. | provided the bpss can be sold run into, such as $266 for two-; bed accommo.; dations and $258; for four-bed ao-c om modations] for a four-day] stay. These included board! and care, de-Parents have a chance to livery room, lab OU Course Is Offered for Parents, reported by the American Hospital Associatelon, was ISO-ISO a day* Two yey» ago, Blue Cross figured that for an .average semi-private stay of 4.4 days in an average community hoslital, the maternity patient had a 1267 bill, not counting doctor’a fees. A comparative figure for right now for the same 8eml-privk& accommodations is put at $330. unusual coifrse offered by the Division of Continuing Education of Oakland University, i The parent observation class is limited to 14 mothers and their three and four-year-old Children. The class begins with a meeting of Instructors with both parents followed by ten- eastern metropolitan area hos- They are related to a dozen on taking on a more generous pital as of now, she made a factors or more.” group contradt. phone call. The answer: As of Sept. 1, the $266 has Especially “or more.” Those Find out early,., too, Mow who compute health costs today maternity costs vary in the Jumped to $468, and the $258 of use the term “ripple effect.” So facilities . available in you r 2M years ago to $460. many ripples circle out from pertic lar community. * * ★ ‘“'the main splash when you talk Sometimes it’s possible to ar- This puts real punch into about a day’s cost in therange to budget costs in a clinic what the statisticians say: hospital- Wages of all the people!connected with a university based hospital, where costs are quoted in a package including pre-natal care, normal blood medical costs continue to climb jaqd cost of the equipment cqn-two-hour supervised pl ay at a rate of about 15 per cent a ccrned in making it possible for sessions which the mother at-'year. Family planners musty00 to bd there make their ! tends. ! start with some sober figures in' claims on the dollar. Arid those tests, chest X-ray, board and NOTFC roMMFMTR trying, to prepare for the cost of ‘to™ keep going up. |room, plus care of the new . ’■ having a hahy. It’s variously * * * ___ jbaby. The total expense in this [ The mother takes notes on estjmatec| y,at average per day While health insurance plans;kind of setup would, of course, he? child or children at these]semi-private hospital cost- in can be counted on for some!be considerably less, than in ,in ^aul s larger metropolitan areas is help, you’d better find out earlylother types of hospitals. Methodist Church, on Eastt^,® ... EL l$85, while that >n smaller com*, ;Square Lake Road. At the aarne^^ } ^ e time, the instructor wri es u s whole ta 1967 as comments on each child which1 ’ are passed on to the mothers. ■ I Two separate sessions j parents are , available. One | begins Sept. 23 with the play ! meetings scheduled for Monday mornings for 10 weeks. The 'other begins Sept. 24 with the following meetings taking place Tuesday mornings. Bam f Baud win - Qaaum SALE Michigan Music Camps * INTERLOCHEN and BAYVIEW Used only this summer at Michigan.Music Camps • New benches with every sole • Rant at Sala Prieos • Low Monthly Paymont* baglnntng Octobor * • No Charge for Credit Ufa Insurance • No extra charge for delivery • Christmas Layaways 4 New Guarantee • Complimentary Starter Organ Lessons BALDWIN PIANOS from 8675 BALDWIN ORGANS from $795 Pontiac 119 N. Saginaw FE 4-4721 Smiley Bros. Detroit £510 Woodward TR 3-6800 Birmingham Another course, designed for both parents and educators, is an introduction to the Mon-! tessori Method and its potential in American education. The] class meets for 10 weeks! starting Sept. 2$. I Aimed at the non-teacher is a ; brand new-course in educational challenges today which ranges !from integration to negotiations to public versus private educa-j tion. In operation for seven i weeks, this class starts Sept. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice Farmer, How can I adjust a one-piece pattern for a larger bust a short back? I get a bulge of fabric in the back that seems to indicate a need for back darts. Mrs. M. B. Dear Mrs. M. B.: You make a fold across the back of your pattern just above the waistline, the width of the fold would depend on the amount of adjustment needed. At the same time, increase the size of the underarm dart according to the fold yop took out of the back. This will give you a much better fit through the bust |and eliminate the excess fabric in back. v- There is another reason why'a dress bulges in back, and |this is usually caused from fitting the skirt too tight just below the waist. Most women who put on extra weight need more room than the pattern allows for at this point. I have also found unless a woman is very, thin, she will look better with a small dart at the back of the garment.* You must experiment with these changes until you find the ones that yrill do the most for your figure. Raymond P. Gordon Jr., son of the senior More Information on these! Raymond P. Gordons of [Dear Eunice Farmer, education courses may be ob- Argyle Avenue, recent- | I love to sew and consider myself quite professional when tained by calling or writing to j was awar(j[eci a BS de- jit comes to the finished product, yet I seem to lack the courage the Division in Room 263, South] oreg p0litical Science necessary to make anything unusual. As I look through my !Foundation Hall, Oakland ■ W t wardrobe, there isn’t one thing in my closet that wouldn’t look 1 University, Rochester, Mich.| _____________^ 9 jgreat on my mother. This isn’t exactly the way I want to look University. STAPP'S for Style and Comfort . Parents: Has The Loafer Bug ... BUGGING You have been wanting • to"*weor thorn smart looking Moc Style Penny Loafers but you need extra support? Don't delay. Hurry on Down to Stopps Shoes end try on -the loafer that gives your foot. extra, support, with ’ a • special; K^.'aTteovy steel shook. right ond-' leff ' counters. These ore the shoes that hold their shope, look stylish, and comfortable. ‘at my age. Mrs. J. W. Dear Mrs. J. W.: Your letter reminded me of a friend of mine who was asking my advice about a new pattern she was considering. The bodice was in a contrasting color, and the collar and front, edges were bound in the contrasting Color of the skirt. She told me she liked the pattern, but thought she would make it all in one color and perhaps add a contrasting collar. She was thinking of the practical part of the garment, which .undoubtedly was going to take away the joy and thrill of making her original pattern. ~ Clothes are a means of expression, and leading authorities agree that they can greatly Influence your state of mind and well being. Be free; make something unusual; be courageous, and I’ll personally guarantee it' will brighten your entire life.; In this day and age, we must think young and know that nothing V is forever; we must be willing to change our ideas and not form a set pattern. j Today, we don’t expect one dress to cover-every occasion. jThis was a necessity during the depression days, and many women are still In tire same rut. We have clothes for at-home wear, sports, evening clothes, etc. This is the reason women have {run back to the sewing machine again. Please try one project! you’ve-eucr-tad" before stnd; "let me know if I’m fight! MONTGOMERY PRETTY COMFORTABLE DUTI-PALS White 13.95 Discover the delightful difference Natural Bridge can make in your busy day. Designed to give you comfort where it oounta . .. and with a whole new styling concept Natural Bfidge Duti-Pals look as great as they feeL Wearing js believing. ‘ F 20 W. HURON J| DOWNTOWN .Open 9:30 - 5:30 — Friday to 9 Serving With Quality Footwear Since 1919 Your Dale! Yoor Time! n OMEGA PPEt H U DAY AND EVENING ^SeuKitg CLASSES BLACK AND BROWN CORDOVAN Boys' Sizes: 3|V& to 6 -r BVC's D's E's and EE's- *tl' Men's Sizds: 6 Vi to 11 B'sCYD'sE'a BEGINNERS DRESSMAKING ADVANCED • TAILORING BISHOP METHOD • Certified Flint Trained Bishop Tedbhers ^CLASSES BEGIN WEEK OF STAPP'S Shoe Stgre * . 931 W.’Huron at Telegraph # ’ Shoe Store 418 N. Main St. — Rochester (For Evening hours coll 332-3208) SEPT. 10th Schedules for registration available in' first floor • sewing machine and second floor yard goods department. ' f Pontiac Mall 'Jglograph'^ won first place in accuracy | contests at both Geneva I and Neucbatel Observatories % In 44day tests, competing against hundreds oi ilie world’s finest Swiss watches, Omega set an all-time record for wriitwatch accuracy. Such performance by Omega is not unutual.'And for good reason. From blueprint to first assembly every Omega undergoes 1497 quality-checks. Components are machined to micro-millimeter tolerances. Even tlife oil used to lubricate an Oificga is > the world’s costliest, $2000 a gallon... assuring longer, life because of reduced friction. See our wide selection of Omega watches today, from $65 to over $1000, Redmond’s JEWELRY 81 N. Saginaw St.. WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS? USE A LOW COST PONTIACPRESS CLASSIFIED AD - -TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 33M181. „ Miss Conley | Takes Vows in Morning A luncheon reception in North-wood Inn followed Saturday morning vows in Holy Name Catholic Church, Birmingham. for the. Brian Alfred Kosmab (nee Mary Elizabeth Conley.) Gowned in an Empire ensemble of silk organza featuring bell sleeves edged la Alen-con lace, the bride dune a small bowed pillbox to holdher mantilla-tvne wi\ Mary Elizabeth ' Conley, -daughter of the Edioard C. Conleys \ of Birmingham \ Alfred Koemal, son of Mrs. Alfred Kosmal \Downers Grove, iu., and the late Mr. Kosmal, repeated I Saturday votes I in Holy Name \ Catholic Donmoor Mocl Take famous Buster BraWn quality—add the right touch of fashion and you've gd the-perfect shoe* for •chool. Send them back to school with the Busier grown fit tKbt's *0 important to growing feet. Sizes 6 to. 8,. BVfe to 4. B to E widths. *8” *11” BUSTER BROWN. Bloomfield Miracle Mile Telegraph at Square Lake THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 b—a tO/\ to (e semble t ing bell con 1 small mantilla-type veil. Her flowers were a colonial nosegay of Sweetheart and daisies. Jddy Paski was maid or for the daughter of ward C. Conleys ham. Serving as were Nancy McKinn Peterson and Kathy Kosmal. The son of Mrs. Alfred Kos-i mal of Downers Grove, Til and the late Mr. -Kosmal asked his] brother, Richard to be best! man. Ushers were Alfred Kos-I mal, Gary Pfanz and John Conley. The couple will make their! home in Columbia, Mo. follow- j ing a honeymoon at St. Clair. Pontiac Man Wed in South! Hampton Presbyterian. Church, Hampton, Va. was the setting for vows Saturday pledged by Kay Mitchell of that city and Pfc. Orval Larry Grimes. Parents of the couple are the Renjermine Mitchells of. Hrmpion and the Orval Grimeses of East Colgate: Street. ; Dorothy Odom attended the! bride who chose a street length j ensemble of white bee.. Her; flowers wfere red roses and lilly .of the valley. Standing as bfest man for the. bridegroom who will leave on a tour of Thaibnd later this] week, was Spec. 4 Ronald Pre-| cillo. The newlyweds are honey-1 mooning in Pontiac. Wash Inside Out to Eliminate Lint Like any napped fabric, brushed cotton denim should be Washed inside out to avoid collecting lint Put a fabric softener in the wash water to help restore the nap. To keep the brushed denim ■oft and velvety looking, always dry in the automatic dryer. Use medium heat. MRS. BRIAN KOSMAL (J Church, |jf’ Birmingham. f. Make Sonteone JACOBSEN'S (tefe, FLOWERS m&, -- ■I i i (J FLOWERS Downtown Store Lake Orion 101 N.. Saginaw St, S. Broadway Pontiac as You Enter Orion FE 3-7165 MY 2-2681 BUSY BEE Variety Shop COME IN AND SEE WHAT ONE DOLLAR WILL BUY .MATERIAL,- 3 yd*, for $1.00 and u. In School Or Out ;i& DRESSES of all descriptions, with ■ a fit or with a flare. The prettiest : prints'and plaids,are at Lion for : Back-to-Schpol, Sizes 4 to 14. 1*6 ,o$15 2 for $1.00, Ref . $1.39 E«. imen’i WALLETS - $1.00 Ea. NYLONS Men'* awl W« GO-GO WATCHES GIRLS* $9.95 BOVS* $11.95 RADIO Open 10:30 • 8:30 — Closed Mon. and Tim*. GLOBE LAMPS $2S.95 12-Transistor $^95 4676 DIXIE HWY. JUMPERS make a fashionable fall. With such a variety of styles, you'll want more than one. Availably, in solids and beautiful plaids. Washable, of course. Sizes 4 to 14. mm In a Class By Themselves *8 from Flannelette Dreamwear in flowers and lace. Pretty daisy prints on backgrounds of pink, blue, or lime, accompanied by layers of white eyelet ruffles. Sizes 6 to 14. . l MODEL'S "Rajah Tunic" in a warm blend of acrylic and wool,' Boy bred for brisk action in Model-Press, machine wash 'n. dry, never-need-ironing heather tones. Sizes 8-18. ^|Q CORDUROY* JACKETS! Smart addition for the back-to-school wardrobe of every young scholar. Wonderfully warm drawebrd pile lining, two roomy pockets, and zip-off pile lined hood. Loden, Weather Bronze. Sizes 6 to 14. MQCK TURTLES by DONMOOR in fashion-wise cotton knits. A fabulous collection of checks, stripes and* solids that keep-then* zip, in the wasn. Sizes 8 to 18,—-----—r from $4 LION will fill your every Back-to-School need. Their before your lovely, wearable, careable fall fashions. >Shop 9:30 to 9. located at Bloomfield Miracle Mile, Telegraph at THE PONTIAC PftESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 f SATURDAY-Crowded aisles are a sign of a good day for business at the Oakland County Farmers’ Market. The stalls Yent for $140 or $122 per year, depending on location in the main building Farmers Market Affords Glimpse of Past PROUD BAKER—Mrs. Edward Lempke of Utica exemplifies the Oakland County Market farmers who are proud of the products they sell. An atmosphere of open-air pelves. It Includes fresh fruits .ever, despite some crops not freedom prevails at the Oakland and vegetables, just-out-of-tbe-being as plentiful because of County Farmers’ Market. It j-oyen baked goods, holiday cor-1 storm damage." makes one reminisce about the sages, home-grown flowers and I * * * almost bygone days of melody-plants, and hand-carved wood-| There 40 farmers who less, stampless rushless grocery crafts. 'rent market stalls on a year- stores. NO ADVERTISING round basis. Thirty-two stalls * * * » There is no commercial ad- on outslde of ** main build' The 14-year-old market at vertising for the market, but, uig haye not been used yet this 2350 Pontiac Lake, Waterford people find out about it,usually iyear. Township, is the scene of busyjthrough the word of satisfied! ★ ★ ■* yet unhurried activity three customers. | “Small powers come in for a days a week; The hours are * * * , jday at a time,” said one regu- from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday «We get many customers 8e,,er-and Saturday and noon to 6 pm. from the suburbs,” said Wesley that not fllled that day-Thursday, Alien, county market master. * * * “And many travelers stop by on Each market day farmers their way up north. bring their freshest fares and % * * ★ best-made wares to offer cus-| “Our busiest day is Satur- sets, tomers. ' day. The aisles are jammed at I , - - * * ★ * * * various times in the morning. | Allen finds the friendly at- The merchandise selection isj “Business has been goal mosphere an appealing feature as varied as the Shoppers them-'every day this summer, how- ,of the county-owned market. Church groups and youth organizations also rent the stalls 'for bake sales and other proj- . Reminiscing over his pastj three years as market master 'before he retires this fall, he [points to the hours In the market as very memorable ones. ★ ★- ★ “I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my I job here, and I’m going to miss lit this fall. There’s a real [friendly atmosphere, even in the rivalry among farmers. ★ * . * The market also is a meeting place for both farmers and customers. ★ ★ W “I’ve seen people here that I used to work with years ago,” reflected Allen. “And I’ve met some wonderful new friends here,, too. HIS DUTIES | As market master, Allen’s 'duties include keeping the cus- help his parents with the tomers and -farmers happy, [market work, providing market selling sup-.GOOD EXPERIENCE plies, collecting stall rent, and] “It’s a good experience for representing the farmers at the him,” says Deuel. “He enjoys Oakland County Board of super- it, and the work helps him with visors. . his math.” * * * I Besides offering fresh garden I “This year I had to ask the fruits and vegetables, the board if one farmer could sell market also has a breakfast fish in the market. This had and lunch stand in the middle niever been done before so we of the main building, had to take it before the board.” ■ % m Albert Deuel, who raises fish Ih ponds on his farm, 17201 Cooh Lake, Armada, freezes them immediately after catching them. He then sells them Mrs. Thelma Whitlock of Waterford Township is the behlnd-the-counter manager. Thus, in all areas of the Oak-tnd County Farmers’ Market, ■■_______| | lere are conscientious and fresh to seafood-hungry cus-'proud people offering fine food* tomers. - [stuff,- homemade household unloads his truck for another ★ * * litems, and still ground-cool .. . .. „„„ ht. ha. | His 12-year-old son, Thomas, [flowers to people throughout the aay in ine ,ye rs n a is one of many children who Pontiac area. been coming to the market. ANOTHER MARKET DAY -Harold Petrie of Washington THE ITALIAN TOUCH — Mrs. Howard Geer (left) of Oxford and her twin sister, Mrs. Allie Johnston of Orton-ville, often serve this spaghetti squash to their families. After being boiled, the squash is opened and served with the traditional spaghetti tomato sauce. THE GLAD GAME—Trying to select a bunch of gladiolus .can become quite a deci-Sldri. An uriidehtifiedTustorher has just made* her purchase, still leaving other shoppers with hundreds from which to choose..- ______ TASTY DISPLAY - Shiny, fresh vegetables are sold in small containers displayed on tables in each farmer’s rented stall. Products sire washed and cleaned by the farmers before being brought to the market. ' “A LITTLE BIT 0* THIS”—Two early Cera Is one of the items usually picked $»tunjay morning shoppers get the “pick- shortly before the farmers come to market of-the-crop” from the market’s corn displays, for the day. jobs for, 11 years before taking his present position. twis ts THE PLACE—Wesley Allen will retire this trail after three years of service as Oakland County market master, Allen worked in other county THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 Girls* and Misses’ Sweaters And Knit Capris, New For Fall Girl? Sizes 7-14 246Ot Reg. 2.96 Cardigans JMWm f z% ’986 A 9-18 W^M Reg. 4.96 mm Sweaters fH 94 Reg. 3.96 Knit Pants 44 Reg. 5.96 Knit Pants Girls’ Cardigans: acrylic knit with full-fashion raglan sleeves. White, navy, pink, red. Women’s Cardigans and Pullovers: Cash-mi|on acrylic. Raglan sleeves. Rich fall colors, Capris: double knit, with elastic waistband, stitched crease. Girls' are nylon in brown, black, navy, loden, camel. Misses' are acrylic, black, greeny royal, brown, camel, grey. Like It? Charge It! Plaids, Prints and Solid Colors Misses' Coloray* Bonded Shift Dresses 4 Days Only Otrr Rag. 5.88 Q44 Coloray* rayon bonded to acetate. Back zipper. A muted plaid styled with rolled collar ;grey, brown-Solid color with stand-up collar, grey or brown, or two-tone"V’’yoke, with round neck. Floral prim in blue or grey. 7/8-15/16. mConrUmUtTM. Fall Fashion Haas Seamless Opaqae Myloas 40m ■ Bone, navy, chocolate,green, black, rust, royal blttii Stretch,one size fits 8V2-H-, Our Reg. 1.47 and J .73 Cottoa Knit French Sailor-Style Shirts 96-1" Solid color, ribbed-knit crew-neck style with "V” insert. Colors include winter white or night and Swiss chocolate. Special! Like Itt Charge Itl Kiddies'Cotton Corduroy Slacks 4 Days W47 Reg. 1.93 I Boys’: western. Navy, loden, bronze, kangaroo. Girls’: roydl, ginger, green. 4-7. SCotton Corduroy Crawlers r 4 Days Reg. 1.36 In red, peppy turquoise, pink or golden snuff. Sizes1 12 months to 24 months. 4 Days—Reg. 19.84 Nationally KnowaWatches JS 88 17-jewel watches; styles for men and' women. With matching watch bind. Sale! Lights For Every Room Pin-up Lamps and Tall Table Lamps 4 Days Only m a mm Reg. 4.33 D Pin-up * 47 Reg. 7.99 Table Lamp Pin-up Lamps: Covered Bridge, Kitten, Botany Print, Sampler, Candle Holder! Fry Pan. Table Lamps: brown floral, ceramic, 35"; 24K fired ceramic, 32"; satin brass*, . 39". *pUttd 4 Days * Reg. T.09 to 2.79 Lamp Shades To Suit Every Taste 77 Boudoir Shades. Table * Shades m Boudoir: ballerina shades with nylon and net overlay; rayon shantung on parchment cylinder. Table Lamp Shades: 12", 14" and 16" rayon taffeta. White, beige, avocado. Special! Like It? Charge It! Cylinder Shades 88a W‘ 4 Days—Reg. 2.97 ea. Do-it-Yourself Seat and Back Replacements 4^88i Like Iff Charge Itl Padded vinyl seat and back, hardware. Golden Fern in white or tan;grey white, mother-of-pearl; or avocado tan Dawn design: ~~Tffi?W.yrdndlC88- Non-Skid Nylon; Nylon-Blend Decorator Rugs .966 w'c* ^ 4 Days %0Only A. 27"x45" Oval sparkle nylon sculptured rug. -Verdian green,gold,others. B. 27"x48" Nylon/polyester, hand-knotted fringe. A Sweet Special! Hershey Foil-Wrap Kisses iBoy> ALmi Delicious Hershey milk * chocolate.foil-wrapped tore-tain freshness. A teal treat! 4 Days —Reg. 994 3 Tubs 0'Beauty Live, Growing] Green Plants i Healthy plants, thriving in ->. 4" plastic tubs. Choose-* from a large, select group. • Green plants bring livings beauty into your home. ~ like Iff Charge Itl •* —mgr Satin-Smooth. Poly Plastic, ] Choice of 5f: Large swing-top waste bihi ! round and square waste' baskets; laundry basket; ' covered hampers. Injdecd-1 rator colors. Save nowl ■ Like Itt Charge Itl 4 Days—Reg. 964 Pearlized = Waste Basket X2-Qt. plastic waste basket^; a decorative os well os ui»C fill addition to any roam£$ gi PONTIAC H mail ; ; f DRAYTON j PLAINS I DOWNTOWN I |j| PONTIAC “CHARGE IT AT KRESGET r BLOOMFIELD 1 | MIRACLE MILE j TEL~HURQN I ' CENTER ROCHESTER . . • " PLAZA « mi^m S. S. KRESGE COMPANY mm r~' P> PW'91 7 f t,i11 Pueblo Report by Reds Seen Fill A to Resume Viet Missions Pontiac Area Deaths Australian Defense Minister Allen Fftirhall accepted the sleek, «wing-wing supersonic warplane on -behalf of his government. The Australians have purchased assembly. The malfunction, since has been corrected. The-mishaps added fuel to the lingering controversy oyer awarding ol the multibillion dollar contract to General Dynamics-Fort Worth. ★ ; McConnell's comments were prepared for delivery at an acceptance ceremony marking the turnover of the first F111C by die United States to the Australian government. declaration from Maj. Gen. Lee V. Gossick, deputy for the Fill nrop-am, that the Fill, once the^TFX, is “ready for combat operations again.” The Defense Department called a halt to Fill missions over Vietnam after three planes crashed, two of which were not FORT WORTH* Tex. (AP) -The Air Force chief of staff said today die F111A fighter-bomber, grounded after triple tragedy, is ready to resume combat missions in Vietnam. “We are now ready to return the f ill to combat in Southeast Asia where it can again perform in the most challenging conflict environment yet encountered,” be said . The remarks by Gen. John P. McConnell supported an earlier Wilbur .Wright of Rochester and Mrs. Harold'Jones of Waterford Township; and a b r o t h er, Arnold of pontiac Township. Almoin” Brooking TOKYO (UPt) - A Japanese Communist leader said today Communist North "Korea may PRICE TAG 1 Gossick and Australian FlllC project officer S. W. DaUywater disclosed earlier the price tag for the aircraft, complete with spare parts and ground support equipment, would be $38® mil- Air Force investigators said the cause of at least one crash, and perhaps otters, was a faulty actuator rod in the tail THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 Mike Chires Service for Mike Chires, 76, of 173 Wolfe will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Voothees-Siple Funerm -Home- mdr-buriri-m Perry Mount Park Cemefory. Prayers will be offered at 7:30 tonight at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mr. Chires, a retired restaurant chef, died yesterday. Surviving are his w i f e. Mayme C.; one son, Louis E. of Pontiac; two sisters; and five grandchildren. Mrs. Frank J. Dennis Requiem Mass for Mrs. Frank J. (Mary N.) Dennis, 76, of 17 Cooper will he 9:30 a.m. Friday at St. .Michael’ Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. tomorrow in * the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Dennis, a member of St. Michael’s C h u r c h, died yesterday. Mrs. Dennis had tau yeagrs in the Pontiac public school system. She also taught in the Catholic parochial schools of Pontiac. TROY — Service for Almon Brookins, 87, of 1104 Vermont will be 1 p.m. Friday at Price Funeral Home with burial in | West Berlin Cemetery, Allenton. Mr. Brookins, a retired crane operator for Macomb County Road Commission, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Ella; tour daughters, Mrs Klhert Scribner, of Clio, Mrs. Ralph Smith -Oakland Townriilp, Mrs. George Konar of Shelby Township and Mrs.Jaek Mason Silverwood; four sons, Herbert J. and Richard J., both Clio, John R. of Orion! Pueblo was Township and 'Floyd A. of North Korea. Davison; a sister; a brother; 44 . ,. grandchildren; and 10 greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Stanley E. Casson BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -J Service for' Mrs. Stanley E. (Ruth A.) Casson, 59, of 21540 14 Mile will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns progress’' in negotiations to free the U.S. Intelligence ship Pueblo and its 82 crewmen. Kenji . Miyamoto, secretary general of the Japanese Communist party, returned from Pyongyang Tuesday. He did not say specifically what he found out In talks with North Korean Premier Kim II Sung. Miyamoto said North Korea was expected to make a statement on t|jje Pueblo on Sept. 9, the~ 20th anniversary of its independence. The Pueblo was seized off Wonsan', North Korea, Jan. 23. North Korea charged the spying against A past president of the Funeral Home, Pontiac, with American., Federation of Teachers, Mrs, Dennis also had been active in the League of Catholic Women and the 50 & Up Club and- Altar Society of her church. Surviving are a son, Frank J. of Pontiac, and two grandchildren. Mrs. Charles A. Lane Service for Mrs. Charles A. (Dorothy)/Lane, S3, of 5471 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township, will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mrs. Lane died Sunday. burial in the White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Casson died Monday. Frank Stadler Sr. PONTIAC TGWNSfflP — Service for Frank Stadler Sr., 87, of 3605 Joslyn will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at. Coats Funeral Home with burial in Lakeview Cemetery, Independence Township. Rosary will be said tonight at the Coats Funeral Home. Surviving are her husband; aland Anthony, both of Pontiac aon, Timothy C. of Evart; a 24 grandchildren; and 19 great-sister, Mrs. Lloyd Grignon of grandchildren. Pontiac; a brother; and a ,.. granddaughter. Alonzo W. Whitman Mrs. Michael Mastbeth Service for Mrs. Michael (Adele E.) Mastbeth, 54, of 454 Auburn will be 9 a.m. Friday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Lakeside Cemetery, Port Huron. Mrs. Mastbeth died yesterday. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Irving Stroh of Roselle Park, NJ., and Patricia Flemming of Pontiac; a brother, Max Streeter of Pontiap; three ■isters, Mrs. Clifford Moak, Mrs. Manford Malane and Mrs. Wilford Malane, all of Pontiac, and two grandchildren. Will Try 6 for Refusing Chicago Duty. FT. HOOD, Tex. (APj—The court-martial of six Ft. Hood soldiers, including two from De-jtroit, who demonstrated against being sent to Chicago for possible "riot control duty during the Democratic National Convention, is pending while their civilian attorneys prepare a defense. The court-martials originally were scheduled last week. The six were among 43 soldiers taken into custody Aug. 24. All but one were Charged with failure to obey a lawful order Mr. Stadler died Monday, jof a commissioned officer. The Surviving are two daughters, remaining man will be charged Mrs. Irving Webb of Pontiac liater) military officials said, and Mrs. Fred Sample of Losj 43 were among about Cruzes, N.M.; three sons, Negroes who demonstrated at Joseph of Clarkston and Frank this centrai Texas Army instal- Donald A. Maxon WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Alonzo W. Whitman, 60, of 6749 Eilinwood will be 1:30 p.m, Saturday at Littleton .Funeral Home, Springfield, Ohio, Burial will be in Asbury Cemetery there. Arrangements are by Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mr. Whitman, a tool and die maker for Thomas Die and Stamping Co,, died yesterday. He was a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and Anthony Lodge, F&AM. Surviving are his wife, Opal; two sons, James of Madison Heights and Arthur of Detroit; two . daughters, Edna a n d{ lation the night of Aug. 23 and the following morning. But, 17 of the 60 dispersed when so ordered by Maj. Gen. John K. Boles, 1st Army commander. When the 43 remaining soldiers failed to make reveille on Aug. 24 and again refused to disperse they were taken to the stockade. The six soldiers to be tried first, all members of 17thy Engineers Battalion, 2nd Army Division, are Pfc. Reginald Htompson, 21, and Spec. 5 Rudolph Benn, 20, both of Detroit; Pfc. Charles Arline, 24, Jackson* Fla.; Pvt. Steve Sus-well, 20, Greenville, S.C.; Pfc. Ronald McCoy, 23, Philadelphia; and Pvt. Ronald Dias, 21, Oakland, Calif. Riot control troops from Ft. Carolyn, both at home; two {Hood were\air lifted to Chicago brothers; 11 grandchildren; and the night before,the convention Word has been received thatjt™0 great-grandchildren. j began, service for—iormer Pontiac; resident Donald A. Maxon, 60,1 of Rodney was Thursday at Big! Rapids. Burial followed there. Mr. Maxon wflHdifed in a| construction accident Aug. 26 at; JacmWB- He was a pipeline in-! Surviving are his wife, LueUa;\ three sons,. Donald, | Louis and Bruce, all of JAost of Show Biz Will Support Humphrey By EARL WILSON Eddie Fisher and I were talking the other NEW YORK ■■■■■■■ Rapids; 'ax daughers, Mrs. Roy night of the importance of 11 years. Holswortn pf Remus, Mrs.! in 1957 producer Mike Todd and his wife, Liz Taylor, "Donald Witeaide, Mrs7~Ttenaldj yerfHaKrTurttelni^^—-——L Lintemuth and. Mrs. Raymond and were fluently* In tlfe chmpaiiy of a young Miller, all of\ Rodney, and united States senator; aaudia and Teresa, both at, u my wend Humphrey,” Mike would say, with a tilt to his cigar. “I may make this | ^ bum president of the United States, but he can®8^™ do it only if I can manage his campaign.” . 19 grandchildren; brothers, including Max, Louis, Curtis and Wilson, dll of Pontiac; and four sisters. Eddie, who was married to Debbie Reynolds I then, and a worshiper of Todd’s, said that he: became a zealous worker for Humphrey. He| couldn’t even estimate the number of appear-! ances he’d made for HHH since 1964, when he was merely campaigning to get Johnson’s acceptance of him for the veepship. PUEBLO CREWMEN READ-The North ship of the U.S. imperialists, read maga- Korean news agency, Korean News Service, zine, books and periodicals.” No further made this photo available in , Tokyo today, details or identification were given in the The caption reads: “Pyongyang, August caption. The UJS. intelligence ship Pueblo 1968. Crew members of Pueblo, armed spy was captured by Nort^ Korea on Jan. 23,1968. 'Nominating Process Needs Reviewing' Congressman William Broomfield, R -181 h District, called today for a complete congressional review of the process by which m a j 0 political parties nominat presidential candidates. ’Now that both major conventions are over, J think it is clear that the American people are ready for some changes in this antiquated system,’" Broomfield said. ★ ★■" ★ During tte past month, he said, television: has exposed tte American people as never before to the process by which presidential contenders are picked. T have tte distinct impression that they were disappointed in what took place both at Miami and Chicago Broomfield said. URGES ACDON He urged that Congress act quickly on a resolution he introduced earlier (his year calling for a national presidential primary and abolition of the electoral college. Broomfield’s request came today in a letter tfr Congressman Emanuel Celler, N.Y., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee as Congress reconvened after recess for the political conventions. > George O. McCart Jr. Service for George O. McCart Jr., 25, of 3 Bloomfield Terrace, will be 11 a.ln. tomorrow in All Saints Episcopal Church with burial in White Chape | Memorial . Cemetery, Troy by j menuone(j to Eddie that I was at a political breakfast Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. inCiMcago during the convention and suddenly found myself Mr. McCart, a printer at on my foot, applauding. -Forbes Printing Co., died Mon-i “Hey, who are we applauding?” I thought to ask. day. fie was a member of New Humphrey kids,” somebody aoswered. The family j was getting a hand. It can be forecast that most of the actors for McCarthy Hope Baptist Church in Santa Ana, Calif. Surviving are his wife, Susan F., and his parents, Mr. and. -Mrs. George McCart of Pontiac. Gerald F. Stranded ' Service for Gerald F. Strandell, 50, of 59 Williams will be 11 a.m. Friday in Donelson-Johns Funeral' Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Strandell, ail inspector at CMC Truck 6c Coach Division, or Kennedy will support HHH in the end. Warren Beatty said that he certainly Woufatr~~— “He’s a great man,” said Beatty. “I never had, anything against him except the Vietnamese situation.” < - 4r ♦ Humphrey,- to this observer, is one of the politest men In public life. You should catch him signing autographs. When, he's asked, he doesn’t use any simple words lifts “Sure.” “Why, rd be delighted,” he says. “Very happy to. New, r shall I make this oat?” \ Surviving are his wife! Marion G.; his parents, Mr. and lbs. Floyd E. Strapdeli Waterford Township; two daughters, Mrs. K e n n e t h Schram of Pantiac. and Mrs. Joseph Gouin of Waterford Township; a son, Gerald Jr, of Pontiac; eight grandchildren; four sisters, including .Jfrs-William Gerber of Pontiac, Mrs And if it’s a man who asks, he’s likely to sneak in a compliment. “Oh, I saw your wife-over there who made you. ask me.” he save. “Why didn't yon let her come over? You outmarrled yourself, you know.”' Might get a lot of feminine votes, that-Hubert. * 9r.r':-'\ '★ ' REMEMBERED QUOTE: “You can take a politician at his word — the question’is, which word?” EARL’S PEARLS: When a woman says she can’t decide between a convertible or a sedan, the wise husband starts lookjhg for a \mfisr) garage. /, ' Joe E. Lewis heard that. Cary Grant moved into the Warwick Hotel, where Joe alas lives, and cracked: “I hope Gary Isn’t trying to ataal.my tailor.’’ That’s earl, ' Area Driver Obliging to Hitchhiker Broomfield asked that the committee undertake early hearings on his bill as part of a complete review of the nomination process. He pointed out that expectations that Congress will be in session until at least mid-October and perhaps longer provides adequate time for a thorough review of the subject. Broomfield said hearings may very w^ll result in other suggestions in improving our nomination and election procedures. He said he hoped that his resolution would at least provide a vehicle for full debate. Marriage Licenses jack L. West, Novi and Patricia A Walling, Farmington John P. Hedtfer Jr„ Farmington am -----irthvllle Birmingham and Darlane S. Nell, Ferndale Thomat P. Ureu, Hoi Sheffield, 274S Chadwick Robert B, BrodOhaw.—ear- -w» lebrah L. Colllson, 566 Lenox William H. Farrall. Birmingham targaret-H,' Lumley, Bloomfield HI III »—■ Tlliay, Walled I *•— David R. empps. Highland end Patricia Royal - Oak and .Inda M. Phillips. Birmingham Robert B. Black ledge, 30 Thomaa and lanlea L. Bracknar, Warren Julius Hollis, 5*7 Nevada and BaatrlCa id Mary M, Pontiac Hires Planning Firm To be sure that the development of City Hqll property fits in with the Human Resource Center being planned on an 0 jacent site, the! Pontiac City Commission last night approved the hiring of Urban Design Associates to coordinate the planning. The Pittsburgh firm already has been retained by the Pontiac Board of Education .to design the Human Resource Center. The center would serve children from four elementary schools. It is to be built on an 18-acre site directly behind the Pontiac School District Offices and City Hall on the east side of Wide Track Drive, According to Joseph (E.) Neipling, director of public works and services, Urban Design Associates will bring together the services of a traffic engineering consultant, a civil engineer and a landscape arthitect.___ Working together they would provide a coordinated design which would stretch westerly from the Human Resource Center to the sidewalk next to City Hqjl and the police station, he said- An expenditure not to exceed $4,500 was approved by the commission to cover the cost of, the study. At least one Waterford Township man will think twice before he picks up a hitchhiker again. Charles D. Davidson Of 4290 Cass Elizabeth told Waterford Township police last night his, late-model convertible was stolen about 10:15 p.m. -by a man he had just picked up on M59 west of Elizabeth Lake. / * T 1* Davidson said he offered a ride toilhe stranger, who was beaded toward Pontiac, then stopped at Ritter’s Market, 3225 W. Huron, to get some groceries. When he went into the store, he left the hitchhiker and the keys in the car. When he came out of the store, all three were gone — hitchhiker, keys and car. , t, ■, NOHBAPUGHTS A witness told Davidson mi police officials he saw tte hitchhiker drive the car away without the behefit„ of headlights. He was headed west on M59. Davidson valued the car at about . $4,200. PoKca are investigating hut have no clues otter than a description of the fUhject and the car. . • < ■; - | People in thehlewsj By the Associated Press , They are man and wife in the “Petticoat Junction” television series. Now Mike Minor, 27, and Linda Kaye Henning, 23, plan to be married in real life. The couple — “married” on the program last November— took out a marriage license yesterday at the LAs Angeles County Courthouse. The wadding is Saturday at St. David’s Episcopal Churcflfin North Hollywood. Miss Henning is the daughter of TV producer Paul Henning., She met Minor on the show two years ago. British Admiral Launches Macy Sale The enthusiastic shopper at Macy’a department store in New York was Earl Mountbatten, 68, British admiral and cousin of Queen Elizabeth II. The former Supreme commander of allied forces in Southeast Asia led the official opening yesterday of a multimillion-doilar sales promotion of British goods at Macy’s. “Buy British!” he exclaimed as his party, complete with imported bobbies, roamed ‘the store doing jot that.- As tte tour ended, Mountbatten strode toward his limousine, his, aide following with a shopping bag Of British goodies. Finder, Not England, Gats Treasure A jury In Famhfcm, England, turned a blind eye to a state claim for treasure and held that the gold-and-jewel-studded scabbard of Admiral Lord- Nelson’s sword should go to tte young workman who found it. -The scabbard, "encrusted with 633 diamonds and said to be worth more than $12,000, was found at the bottom of the River Wey by Fred Besch, 27-year-old electrical engineer, while akm diving. Commander Edvtard May, *an’expert on Nelson’s swords, ' told a special court he believed the scabbard to be part of the sword which the sultan of Turkey gave Nelson after the battle of tiie Nile in 17M., . How it got in the River Wey is a mystery. 7 5' Tte jury ruled ttet the find should not be tended to foe crown^a> state-owned treasure, but to its finder. / “I thing it hi too valuahlq and too dangerous for nw to keep. I think fll sell it,* Besch said. , | However, it was announced, the U.S. commitment of 1963 was being met, whereby tte “flyaway” cnatof each aircraft would be $5.95 million. And while nobody said so, it appeared likely the squadron of Australian Fills would eventually wing their way Into the Southeast Asian conflict. 'It is conceivable,” Dallywh-ter said in response to a question at the end of a news conference Tuesday. 'GOVERNMENT DECISION’ “This is a government decision,” he added. “I could not give you a knowledgeable comment at this time.” r McConnell also hinted at the possibility, saying: “I have no doubt that in the capable hands of our friends and allies in Australia, FlllC will fully meet our expectations for a- major contribution to the free world's defense. 'I therefore take great pride in turning over the FlllC to the Royal Australian Air Force.” He called the aircraft “by far the most advanced fighter in world*” LAVISH PRAISE Air Force Secretary Harold Brown was more lavish in his praise, calling the Fill “a plane as replete with promise as tte nation receiving jt.” It is, he said, “the most modern fighter-attack aircraft in the American arsenal ... a revolutionary plane ... It will fly an altitude above 60,000 feet, has a top speed of mach 2.5 and has unrefueled, transoceanic range.” ★ | tr Mach 2.5 is more than twice the speed of sound. Brown added: “In testing, It achieved bombing qcores night apd in bad weather which would have been excellent' for Youth Stanch Mole Following Chase Richard Shipp, subject of large-scale manhunt in Waterford Township Monday, stood mute yesterday at Ms arraignment jn Justice Patrick Daly’s court an charges of taking a motor vehicle without permission. j. f';: ★ ★ '★ Shipp, 19, of , 6023 Gordon, Waterford Township, requested a court-appointed attorney. He was returned to Oakland County Jail with bond set at $10,000. w ★ ■- ★ Shipp eluded about 20 officials om three law _ enforcement agencies Monday when they tried to catch Mm in a field near his home to serve warrant. He turned himself in later that day- Man Hangs Self Gerald F. Strandell, 50, of 59 Williams hanged Mmself at Ms home about 1:30. p.m. yester-^ day, according to Pontiac police. HPMfacriptfu. .. ...._,— would nave neen exceueni io* daylight attacks under ideal J* ORDINANCE NO. 171 AN ORDINANCE TO AUTHORIZE »ARTITIONINO-OR *OIVipiNfl_ OF .’ARCELS OF LAND PURSUANT TO ACT 2tt OF THE PUBLIC ACTf OP 1967; TO PROVIDE A PROCEDURE THEREFOR; TO REPEAL ANY ORDINANCE OR PROVISIONS fHIMOF IN CONFLICT HEREWITH AND TO PRESCRIBE A PENALTY FOR THE VIOLATION OF THE PROVISIONS ofe~THI£ORb INANCE.—------------■ ... .--... j •,--iuu Ordains: sublect to f standard, t- - a. The min ~~ other pare -All be In et_. _ JPUP requirements of the zoning Oi the Township, as amended, a ....— — --onlng Ordinance as may na ________ .stabnshad, sxospt wtwn the partitioning or dividing of such land Is tor the Immediate development and. use of such divided or pertltkmed land In confunctlon with the adlolnlng lot, outlof or parcel which does not meet the minimum requirements of sold Zoning Ordinance after division or partition shin hot hi developed or ustd except in conjunction with the lot, outlot or parcel Immediately adjoining same. b. Any such lot, outlot or parcel that Is -- —'-'-mm tot sl«a thet hes sswar or .callable to It shoil bo connected * to such facilities prior to such partition or division or sultablo provision made for such connoctkm by filing of a cash bond with the Township to assure soma. faction 2.01, PROCEDURE FOR PARTITIONING OR _DIVIDINO OF LOTS, OUTLOTS OR OTHER PARCELS OF LAND. It ehall be unlawful for any person, firm, corporation, association or copartnership to divide or partition any lot, Outlot or other parcel of land In a' recorded plat except In s------—I— the following precedure: ■ -----ITfqN JOR DlVISt deliver -. PARTITION OR DIVISION INTO 2 OR MORE PARTS. The applicant. shall gtjMhaMia written Instrument fully ax-i form legally sufficient for with the County Register of the Township Board for Its approval. Such Instrument shall contain tna legal description of tho_portltton n conditions. '* 'It performs two to three times as well as our otter fighters with respect to range, pay-load, weapons delivery accuracies and target destruction. And, I can reveal that in Southeast Asia the Fill sustained Its earlier excellence."" The Air Force and Australian versions are similar with only the wings, and landing gear of the FltlC sigffficantly difler-ent. The wingspan of the Australian version is seven feet greater, and there is a strengthened landing gear fo carry heavier gross weights, bigger tires and brakes. CSTATE OPMICHIGAN—In ttwjfrobotu Court fur tho County of Ooklond, nil* Division. t . In tho Maltor of tho Potltkm Ci Ing Robort Woods, Minor, to Woylon Woods, tsthsr of told minor Child:' Ing boon ftlsd In this Csurt laid child comss within tho ______ Chapter 7I2A of the Corn- Laws of 196S as ana wos* previous tuliaMnoartng In T Pontiac Praia, a ntwipapsr priritad a drculatad In said County. Witness, tho Honorsblo Norman Barnard, JudRa sf Arid Court, In 1 City of Pontiac In said County, «*> s day of Sopten*er_A.D. 196S. o (Soil) a tr Dsputv ________________ - JuVenlla Division company doing title . County, which policy «. IM tht" that' tha norson w Instrument are th tha proparty d _____________ partition of tha result in a minimum lot sin tha requirements of the appllci visions of the Township Zoning ONSBIM^b as emended, or Its successor ordinance. If fUHy OXOCtnwu wirnswvis- ••• sufficient for recording with .... HR .register of Deeds end signed by ell parsons who have a legal or “•■—ble rmertN In the par cal viodglng that they understand and me partitioned or dnrlded parcel or parcels may not thereafter .be developed or used separately but only In conjunction with tho adloinlng parcels ot lend, such to’ be a covenant running with the lend and such lend to be and remain In com- S!°nTOvSiSSflP BOARD REVIEW AND APPROVAL. The review by the Township - d shell- be such that,-the public Ji, safety and welfare of tho people not bo subserved by ouch partfflon R vision. c. The sppllcent ehall pay the cost of ling such Instrumant or Instruments .. „m case miy br. d. The applicant shall else submit a plan or drawing drown to scale by a raglstored , engineer jor surveyor showing the sublect all directions from protpwrly so _________________ g'propsrly. All existing buildings and structures shell be ■—— drawing. Thu _____ __________» require m* to furnish It with such w" Township Board I force and effect. . ^ . Section 4.01. REPEAL. Any and all ordinances of the Township of Bloomfield orx any provisions thereof Inconsistent with or contrary to the previsions of this ordinance are hereby expressly repealed. * W. PENALLY. Arty person, 'wh^ehellvkJelSi' ■w &+■ • Shell br ~ partnership vision of thl: thereof may be Imprisoned for $ period not exceed Ing to days or fined a stun not M exceed 1100.00 or both, In tho oiscre-tlon of the court together with the caste — such prosecution. ’ __. Section’ 4.01 EFFECTIVE DATE. Thlo ordinance shall become effective SO days 1—the date Of publication hereof. da and phssisd by tho Township ____d of the Townshte of Btaomflold this 76 dey of *-----j ‘ ^ —| NOTICE! DUG TO THE DEATH OF Mike Chires THE DRIP DRY ECONO WASH 2395 Elizabeth Lake Road Pontiac, Michigan will be CLOSED ALL DAY Thursday, September 5,1968 B-^9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 DROP-LEAF COCKTAIL no money down. $5 a month Drawer COMMODE Mrs. Ghandis Search Is Over PEOPLES Is Open Every Evening til 9 p.m. How Choice Spurs , Controversy in India NEW DELHI, India (AP) ,T A four-year search for a house for India's prime minister has ended in controversy. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, by a process of elimination, decided to move bade into the residence of her father, Jawa-harlal Nehru. It is a 40-room mansion on a 70-acre estate once occupied by British commanders-in-chief. * ★ * The problem is that the government declared Teen Murti house a memorial to Nehru op the day of Ms'death, May 27, 1964. An average of 2,000 persons * visit it daily. •SHE’S PRESUMPTUOUS' When the choice of Teen Murti was made public, opposition politicians criticized Mrs. Gandhi, saying she was presumptuous. One member of Parliament promised he would offer “physical resistance” if the prime minister tried to move in. Various princely abodes in the capital had been commended to Mrs. Gandhi, lunongTHearthe palace of the former'Nizam of Hyderabad, once reputed to be the world's richest man. For various reasons Mrs. Gandhi vetoed Hyderabad House, as well as two other mansions with feudal pasts. * ★ ★ 'Security men. said the old-time palaces would be hard to protect. Others' submitted that the renovation of. tall-ceilinged rooms to accommodate air-com-ditioning would be overly costly. At one stage, the construction of a new building on the Indian president’s estate was proposed but it was decided this was financially out of the question. SOME COMPANY Meanwhile Mrs. Gandhi had been joined in her own modest bungalow by bar newly married son Rajiv and his Italian wife, Sonia, pliis her youngest son, Sapjay. Despairing of finding any other suitable quarters, the Cabinet —in Mrs. Gandhi’s diplomatic absence—decided on Teen Murti House. It was recalled that she had served as a hostess there in her father’s day. ★ * ★ Mrs. Grandhi plans the move before the end of this year, possibly on her father’s birthday. Nov. 14. The looming question now is: what will happen to all the Nehru memorabilia gathered there to make up a sort of museum? Peoples special purchase! Reduced to SAVE you $10 oxv every piece. Each one is really' generous in size. AH pieces blessed with warmth and charm of Early American authentic styling... see the complete selection ,,. while these savings lasfr take your choice and SAVEI Leukemia March Chairman Picked no money down • $5 a month Mrs. RubyWagoner and daughter, Virginia, of 243 Michigan have been appointed executive ind teen chairman, respectively, for the annual AL8AC (Aiding your choice save $10 on each! hard-rock northern maple tables your choice END TABLE Telegraph & Square Lake Roads Miracle Mile Shopping falter also in DETROIT . PONTIAC e ANN ARBOR • FLINT e PORT HURON f JACKSON e TOLEDO teenagers’ march. ★ ★ * Area youngsters will march door-to-door for contributions from noon to 3 p.m. on Sept. 15. Ail funds will hi used to maintain the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tom., founded by entertainer Danny Thomas. save $10! open stock solid hardrock maple bedroom pieces your choice $66 each ROUND LAMP authenticity led EARLY AMERICAN .sturdy hard-rock MAPLE tables , Pause from Your Shopping and Relax in Onr Quiet and Congenial Atmosphere Liberty Cocktail Lome - In the Heart of Downtown • vpflflHp ’ 85 N. SMtta** Looks twice the price! Genuine solid northern Hard-Rock maple tables. The finest made anywhere. ■Magnificent hand-Tubbed mel tow mapfe ‘Patrick Henry' collection. Choose from fduf lavish | detailed styles ... all on sale now! Free Parking Free Delivery up to 100 mites MAPLE Sale .. .where the savings and selection are the biggest! (if you didn’t knowx that.. .you don’t know Peoples) OUTFITTING COMPANY ... the 1 furniture peoples save $15! plastic-top early american maple dining room groups $66 each no money down $5 a month Outstanding buy of Early Amerlcan dining furniture. Rich, colonial Salem Maple dining pieces. Your choice of 424nch plastic-top Round extension Table OR 4 matching Mates Chairs, Your choice $66 ... table or 4 chairs. B—10 THE PQyTIAC PRESS, WEDNESPAY^SEFTEMBER A, 1968 Auto Leasing Seen as Fast-Growing T DETROIT Oft - Sometime within the 1970s hall the people sitting behind automobile steering wheels in the United States wont own.the car theyti driving. That’s the prediction of . William S Pickett, sales vice pres-ident of American Motors Corp. ★ * * The reason, says Pickett, is the snowballing sales of lease, rental and fleet cgrs by all the auto makers. Some others within the industry and even within Pickett’s own company suggest his forecast of 50 per cent before 1080 is high, but . such sales already account for something like 12 per cent and most industry executives anticipate growth: GROWING BUSINESS American Motors now has 141 dealers who lease as well as sell cars. Chrysler reports 291 dealers in its leasing system with 70,000' vehicles under lease and the business growing at the rate of 19 per cent yearly. General Motors and Ford dealers also are in the leasing business and, of course, fighting with those of other manufacturers for „the big volume pur-chases for company fleets and rtent'-a-car systems, Ford reported 2,450 leasing dealers. j§|* *.*.-■* GM had no figures immediately available on the number of leasing dealers, but likely has more than the others since it has many more dealers to begin with. Pickett ticked off these advantages to leasing for the motorist: No capital investment through downpayment; no worry used'-car values at trade • in time; a possible tax write-off for business people; a regular monthly outgo, regai " repairs, that Can. be built into budget; a new car every year or two at most, instead of every three or four or five or six; cheaper insurance if built into the lease instead of purchased Individually. SOME LEASE BACK Some fleet buyerrare leasing company • owned-automobiles back to individual employes as an incentive to get and keep them. Some companies, of course,, nd it less complicated to lease their fleets, since the whole bit can be written off as a business expense for tax purposes and there’s no complicated depre- ciation figuring and little administration work involved. One man leasing his car said he paid 195/ monthly on a two-year lease of a Plymouth Fury III two-door hardtop, receiving full maintenance by the dealer and both personal liability and property daifiage insurance coverage. Had he bought the same car comparably equipped without a down-payment and over a 36-month contract he said it would have cost him 1105 a month, and by leasing, he added: “I didn’t have to dip into saving for a. down payment, I’ll have a new car every two years and no worries or extra added expenses.” MIGHT BE HIGHER Your lease price might run higher. He leases his car from the organization for which he works and which deals inf large numbers with a nationwide leasing firm. A Michigan Pontiac dealer, however, offered to sell a reporter a two-door Catalina for 1144 a month on a two-year contract, with the reporter assuming- the cost of insurance and license plates, or to lease him the same car for 24 months at $145 monfiily and include in- surance, plates ami maintenance. . * ■ -V Of course, the reporter would have no equity dr trade-in interest in the automobile at the end of the lease, and as long as he kept leasing, the monthly charge would go on and mi. OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE ANNOUNCEMENT OF REGISTRATION FOR FALL CLASSES SEPT. 4 thru DEC. 21’ DAYS AND EVENINGS AUBURN HILLS CAMPUS 2900 Featharstone Rd. Auburn Heights 4805T 852-1000 HIGHLAND LAKES CAMPUS -1350 Cooley Lake Rd. Union Lake 48095 363-1191 ORCHARD RIDGE CAMPUS 21055 Orchard Lk. Rd. Farmington 48024 416-9400 TRANSFER CURRICULA Business Administration Education Engineering, Math A Soisnes Liberal Arts Businasi Administration Education Engineering, Math A Sciencs Liberal Arts Business Administration Education Engineering, Math A Solanos Liberal Arts Accounting Clerical Assistance Executive Secretarial Industrie! Security Landscape Technology Law Enforcement Legal Secretarial Medical Secretarial Retail Security Retailing Stenography CAREER CURICULA Automotive Technology Clerical Assistance Dentil Assistance Drattin Electronics Technolo y Executive Seeretarial Legal Seeretarial Meehanleal Design Technology Mechanical Production ‘ Technology Medical Laboratory • Technology M*dioal Office Assisting Medical Seeretarial Nursing (ADN> Radio and Television Repair Aeeeuntin. Audiovisual Clerical Assistance Commercial Art Commercial Cooking and Baking Dsta Processing Executiv# Secretarial Food Service Technology „e el Saeretarla’ - . Mejiei. Seeretarial ADMISSIONS REQUIREMENT “ All high school graduates ore eligible. Non-gradjates may apply; if other evidence indicants to the satisfaction of college authorities that the student is able to do the caliber of work required by the college, the student may be admitted. DAY REGISTRATION SEPTEMBERS, S, S, 9,10 (nd 11.9 A.M. *0 4 P.M. EVENING REGISTRATION SEPTEMBER 4, S, 9, and 10 6 P.M. to 8 P.M. STUDENT FEES/TUITION COLLEOEJtlSTRICT RESIDENTS Matriculation fee (for students carrying 7 credits or more) . . ....... $15,00 Student activities fee (for motriculatecLsfudents with 7 or more credit hours).. .. ... . . .... . . - • '• • • • • • • • •• • • *$10.00 Tuition „ -........^,,,....,...$9.00 Per Cr. Hr. MICHIGAN RESIDENTS - (non-residents of district) Matriculation fee (for students carrying 7 credits or morb), ........... $15-00 Student activities fee (for matriculated students with 7 or more. .. ' credit hours).|............... • • - * *f • • • • • .. $10-00 Tuition ......... ................. S12.00 Per Cr. Hr. * For Further Information - Dohtaet Admissions Office OAKLAND COMMUNITY C0LLECE TatoHwN 6474210 The cost of the lease, like the sales price, varies with how far payments are stretched, the size of the cars and the options added on; whether insurance and maintenance are included, Financing costs are a major item in new car Jbuying. In Michigan, where law limits the interest to no there than six her emit annually on the total transaction, It costs $578 to finance a, $3,000 car over 36 months — or $192 a year. A cash purchase elinjstes financing charges, naturally, and a high down payment would reduce them. Normally leasing dealers fig-. ure’than an automobile depredates in value at the rate of two per ceaLhf the wholesale (their price) every month over a 24-month span — or 48 per cent. Some figure depredation • from the retail (your price) at 244 per cent monthly. Dealers usually have* an option of returning leasing cars to the ffiyniifai-tairyf nr telling them off their own used-car lots. J tlfe1 Save! Power Tbols, Suburban Equipment 10” .Electric Chain Saw :;u 5499 lightweight, yet strong. 6-ft. grounded cord. Permanently lubricated. 1$.$G 14” Saw .....64.99 Direct Drive 17” Chain Saw SS, 159” Lightweight, fast cutting. 4.4 cu. in. engine, automatic oiler. 199.98 21” Saw.....169.99 Electric Start 12-HP Tractor Reg. 739.95 WITH 6 FORWARD SPEEDS 6691* Extra power for tlioae extra-tough or,, extra-large jobs. Has 6 forward speeds , (.75 to 6 MPH), 2 reverse speeds, all-gear transmission, heavy-duty, longlife cast-iron CRAFTSMAN® engine with; Timken roller bearings, dual headlights and a red tail light. 42” Mower Attachment . 159.fe Sears Carries a Complete Line of ; Accessories for our Tractors “T Powerful 3tHP Self-Propelled Reg. 119.99 CRAFTSMAN® 18” MOWER 89" Complete with Crass Catcher 8.85 cu. in., 3:HP engine gives faster**' starts. Height of Cut adjustment on rop ler and wheels gives fine lawns a morei." level, smoother cut. Just flip and locfr** fingertip controls to change Cut height— from Vi to 134-inches. Fine CRAFTSZI MAN® quality throughout. Gear Driven 17” Chain Saw mis 159" 4.4 cu. in. engine, manual chain oiler. Heavy duty for more power. 189.96 21” Saw Craftsman Hedge Trimmer Made to satisfy the professional, yet Regular 44.99 priced for the homeowner. Built with . • ‘ 2 separate insulation ayatems . . . you f§ don’t have to ground it. Double-edge ap' 16” steel blades cut in either'direction. . Rigid.Steel Lawn Building Has Sears 5-step finish that provides Reg. 139.95 outstanding weather protection. Wei- AWkOQ put grain vinyl finish with floral col*- JBjB 28-inch Spread Bamboo Rake No*- 466 _ tw . _m... Metal arched support pla)e* every tooth on the ground. Tine* are linked, yet flexible. Pruner Head and Poles Combination Reg- 777 - 4041 « —Z Include! combination pruner head and *aw and two 47-in. aih pruner pole*. Craftsman Anvil Pruning Shear «- "eg- 199 140 ....-Jr... Designed to cut 40% easier than standard shear*. Cut* branches up to H-in. thick. Craftsman Lawn Sweeper Extra-rugged construction . . . extra clean pick-up , . * extra-fast operation. Brush Rsg. 34.99 height adjust* from minus H- to plusil’k-ln. * Holds bV* bushel* . . . covers a'25-I Fold* easily for storage. 10” Model, Reg. ll.M... 34.99. 29 99 Sears Wheelbarrow ...with Steel Tray Rag- Q99 10.99 O Well balanced for easy wheeling. 3Vi-cu. ft. capacity . S-cu. tt. Site, Reg. 11.11.....11.11 Craftsman Carden Wheelbarrow "eg- 1,499 11.19, 14 Boll Ices, ,1-pc. steel tray won’t catch shovel blade*. 12x3.00 semi-pneumatic lira. Craftsman 24-tine Steel Lawn Rake a v 3” 24 stainless steel tines' for rust resistance. -Full-width brace,. 52- in. handle. / Craftsman Finest Pruning Sheers . is 3« Stainless steel blades. Oil hole, slide latch, aluminum handle*. B'/a-inJong. Pouch. ■ Craftsman Vi-HP ^ Etiger Trimmer 39” • Electric, 100% bait beating motor. Cut* up to L-in. deep. 119-120V, 60-cycle, AG . Open Montlay, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to Si3Q . Snort Hnrdwors and Suburban Equipment Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 •AM,'KOlCtlCK AND CA * • | 1 B-ii >w Bath Caulk ' 197 «nd abuse. Satinfinish. f|| One-Coat Latex flat Wall Paint 4-WAY GUARANTEE MsvseJM^ m IS* of coverage and lastinz oualitie* * ..^ai SAVE *2 to 2,50 a gallon Latex Seml-Glou GUARANTEE 5rU«? tffc IriSrffff? gjajf M*U a Wls._M.ljit* ilTu i lit; I. ..dttN .. .4 *> \M : •Self printing AosyKc Latex covers cyery type of siding and is cli-b mate formulated tWprovidethe performancfe Reeded for the’weather extremes in yo«r Aa, Blended with toufch pttlyestera tfckt five the paint stay-on poweiV resistance to blistering and peeling. Reg. 6.99. . ;*Ob«s Cwrt &leH*i" OU Bwe W * * 8 ■ dependable, pr 0 ven perforrn- an«. jour choice I Tough •latex Semi , of latex and dries ki 30 minutes to ' the easy upkeep off a tugged enai peatec SEARS PAINT SPRAYER SALE si 29” &«r Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to’9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 — wwsnume • cowi/vlul ■ fg* latex flat wall paint I THIXOTROPIC ^ dripli I PLEASANT FH THE. PONTIAC PRESS. WEDyiSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 Silicon* rubber caulk seals, waterproof, around, tub,, sinks. Won't crack or peel. lot. Rubber base sealer won't ■shrink, blood, stain. Helps stop paint peeling. Won't crsok. 6x9’Paint Cover Protoets your ni|ts and furniture whan you paint Use to eover table, playpen, too. compound teal, openings, cracks and window odcea. Caulk Putt...............Lit Latex Our boat with 9” roller, 14" extension handle, 2Vi-qt. tray, )crid, trim Utol holder. '’Nylon Brush 8 l47 Epoxy bonded bristles resists shedding. 100% nylon. 4”, rag. 441..........3.82 %” Masking Tape 66° Qtertor fc— GUARANJP^ 'nterior ta^eX •li? * j£«lttaiiiMMNt take-with’ L ADDER S ALE $earo Budget Latex Flat White Latex House Paiiit gal. 2 97 Smooth, easy-to-apply Ideal for any exterior latex paint in 4 colon. , wood or primed metal Dries in one hoar or surfade. Fast-drying leas. . in only Mi hour.: , a. 16-ft. Extension IF Lightweight aluminum. Sldd - resistant feet. b. Wood Extension 11V R«(< 16.D . slAIT 20’, Rag. 26.98 , .21.91 24% Rag. S2.M . .28.97 28% Rag, 37.98 ■ .32.87 c. 5-ft. Stepladder Strong, seasoned jUT QO wood. With handy pail shelf. ' IF.. 6-ft. size .......... I Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 Your .Choice Every 24 hours the motorists of the United States pay newly $23 million in state and Federal gasoline taxes, totaling nearly |8.4 billion a year. rff i 4-in-l SubjeclBook Spiral loose . leaf w/Penna % M f Hide* cover. egggf Six-Pen Pack Six Rocket' retractable "■ '®.3r:;i ball or stick. W# Weter Color Set Viayl Binder PoeC| 10 Brilliant , Zippered. Fits non-toxic, 3gg r all looseleaf MB felt-tip colors. „ binders. Jlj pen oi marker. Pack of 22 Pencils Texon®School lags Crayola® Crayons Vinyl AttackeCosos|PaddedAttackeCoso Sckool or Off ice Case 15x12x3V4". MOA File in lid. 17 x AM Metal cor- Ik3", Black, JKM 15x11*3' 16x12x3' 14x10x2'A ‘ Brilliant, non-toxic colors. Choice of sixes and colors. Webster Dictionary 75,000 entrica^OIOE. Revised illustra- M T ted edition, » Inbreak-resistant plastic jar. •Set Wu Swingline* Stapler and 1,000 staples. Dries clear. No bad fumes. 4-0x-*Sht. B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 GOP Primary Results Hold Spotlight! By the Associated Press (Iowa, North Dakota and Ne-|foP U S. senator and will face Republican primary etectionjvada. ! Democratic {Gov. Harold contests held the spotlight Tues-I In Iowa, State Sen. David M.| Hughes in the. November elec-day in races- for U.S. 'Senate{Stanley won a four-way contest tion. i; seats and governorships ini for the Republican nomination! Hughes, three-term goyernor Their District Was Dissolved Court Opens Sc LANSING (AP) — About 500 Board of Education and its youngsters from Wayne County’s financially destitute Sumpter school district will have schools to go to Thursday because of an emergency order of the state court of appeals, The court, in a 2-1 decision, directed Wayne County Circuit Court Judge George T. Martin pupils distributed among four neighboring districts, including Van Buren. The state board recommended a 3933,907 legislative appropriation to help the four districts meet the higher of absorbing the approximately Sumpter children, but the to rule against the Van Buren | spending bill died in a House school district, which suOd the!committee, state, hoping to avoid taking the : ' * * * youngsters. Van Buren claimed that since Sumpter, with a low tax base it had not received the money, and no high school, was dis- it was not required to take the solved this year by the State {children. The Appeals Court dis- agreed as Judge Timothy Quinn and Robert Burns outvoted Judge Donald Holbrook. A second lawsuit has been started by Airport school district, which also received some of the Sumpter pupils. Monroe County Circuit Court Judge William J. Weipert ruled against Airport, which has appealed. glfJtS 6 From State Vandalized by ! Hippie Youths' ! Die in Vietnam of Iowa, was. an easy victor in t)»e Democratic primary over political unknown, Robert L. Nereim. Tovert Ray, a Des Moines lawyer and former state GOP chairman, swept tq victory .1' Republican gubernatorial primary, defeating. Donald Johnson of WeSt Branch, a former national commander of the American Legion. ■ ★ * ★ j * •• Ray will meet Democrat Paul Franzenburg for the chief exec, utive post, in November. Franzenburg, the state treasurer, was unopposed, in his party’s primary. In Nprth Dakota, the republican organization gubernatorial candidate Ed Doherty, a newspaper publisher, trailed Bismarck automobile dealer Robert P. McCamey in early returns. Democratic incumbent William L. Guy was unopposed in his bid for a fourth term as governor. ' ’Dil'’ proposed constitutional amendment to lower North Dakota’s voting age from 21 to 18 was being defeated with marly half the precinctsreporting. In Nevada, Rep. Walter S. Baring,. -bidding for his ninth term as the state’s lone congressman, easily won the Democratic House nomination and State Sen. James Slattery captured the Republican congressional hid. A tight race was being run for the Republican nomination to the U.S. .Senate, with Lt. Gov.j Ed Fike and Dist. Atty.' William Riggio of Reno the contestants. Raggio held a slim early lead. The winner wiB oppose the unchallenged incumbent, Democrat Alan Bible. Lansing Reverses Stand on Baphipg California Grapes . L A N,fT'N 0/ ';:fuPI)''. U Michigan's -capital city got o.ut of the grape boycott affair Tuesday night .when the city' council voted to rescind an earlier measure which' supported the organizing efforts of grape pickers in California. On U vote of 5-3, the measure which ordered California table grapes kept out of the city-owned open air market and announced the city’s support of the .grape"i pickers was stricken from the books. .* ■ Hf, * . Councilman Lou Adsdo and John Anas propdaad the measure be taken bK>>the books because it could lead the dty to become involved in other jpbor disputes. N. Koreans Assault Yanis SEOUL (AP). - North Korean guards attacked three U5JS. Army officers with fists, stones and shovels1 in the Panmunjom truce village when the officers tried to return a lost North Korean hat, the Army said today. The Army said -none at tile -American officers was seriously hurt in the incident Monday. It Said they fought back briefly before speeding away in their car. The bat was found by Lt. Col. R. G. Huber of Kansas City, Mo., Capt. Gilbert Valdez of Tempe, Arlz., and Major Ronnie B. Williams of. Roanoke, Va., during apatrol in the joint security area, the Army said. When Huber tried to give the hat to a North Korean guard, thq guard swung at him, the anny jsaid, and another 15 grip NOrth Koreans who had been repairing a road joined in the attack. ‘We doubted that the North Koreans would say 'Thank you,’ but we did not expect this vV olent assault over a simple gesture of returning lost property to Its owner,” one of the officers laid. YOUR CHILD MAY HAVE PIN-WORMS 1 OUT OF 3 DOES HdrXini. nfrirHn,»tormentinr rectal itch we efteu telltale upic of leal expert* mj infect 1 out of every • penona irtiflftH Entire fnmiUae may be victims and not know it, ■ To mrtridofPin-Wonne, they must ' be IdUwl in the lai«e inteetine where they live and multiply. The t ’* anctiy what Jayne’i P-W tablets do .Tlaria here’s how they do it: «n. Pint—a scientific coating earriea the tableta into the bowels before their dissolve. Than — Jayne’a modem, medically-approved ingredient goes right to work—MPa. Pln-Wonns tali/chance# vnth dangerous, highly contagious Pin-Worms which infect entire ismilies. Get genuine Jayne’s P-W Vermifuge smalL easy-to-take tablets... apodal dess for children and adults. WASHINGTON (AP) - Four i Michigan Marines are listed by LOS ANGELES (AP) - Vice; President - Hubert H. Hum- ^ phrey’s southern California Ifcpar^nTamrog campaign manager says he ar- the names of 164 ki)le<| in recent headqua,?ers *° action in the Vietnam war. Two find 20 hippies scrawling oh-Michigan A ^ ^ of soenities on walls and clogging ^ suffertS ^ drains. —, , : > : j - . . . ■ Joseph Cerrell told police that! ...... , 20 long-haired youths who in- ™J* * J™ vaded the Humphrey campaign I Ro?a^ G‘ r^ble-»°" ^■Mr-offices finally left, joining-about ®nd }*™; G1®.n. Nobl /..★ I McNamara ..cbiisistently resisted embarking on a brand-new manned- bomber project, which he estimated would, cost t h e country $16 billion a n d which he said would be ineffective against sophisticated Russian defenses. The Afo Force is still trying to get an advanced strategic airplane, which wbuld be a mlssle launcher and not a Bomber — a plane which would : cofhe in at low levels in all wqpther* and fire a covey of 'short-range nuclear missiles at geound targets. •tiO REVERSAL But, Clifford has shown no •sign yet of reversing Mc-^ Namara and authorizing i u c h • ffff expensive new maimed long-Tange system, * .. ★ ' Other McNamara policies some rammed through against professional military judgment ' and congressional prote | under strong challenge by the Republicans and by Democratic “hawks’* in Congress. —* w ... w One of these has come to be known as “gradualism” in Viet-nam. V ' The G0P*s Coordinating Committee, for one. cl al m s • this Ist/ate'fcy, fathered by’ ;Nfmara and his civilian “whiz kid*,” has failed — “it has prolonged and escalated the war.” The tag of “gradualism” lias been, hung on the carefully con-trOiled application of U.S. .armed might, ’particularly in the bombing of North Vietnam, but also in holding down the U.S. troop commitment in South Vietnam and barring U.S. "round attacks on enemy sanctuaries in Laos and Cambodia. DARLING OF DOVES In the dosing months of his regime, McNamara seemed to become the darling of the doves. This was an odd turnabout, because he had been the target of demonstrations by college antiwar protesters and at least one Senate critic referred to Vietnam as “McNamara’s war.” ★ * ★ The explanation for this appeared to lie in the reports which circulated last fall that President Johnson was listening more to the military chiefs and less to McNamara in the. conduct of the war, and a concern by pomp that his departure would nesQ)t In a wild escalation. • : ★ .[>• k -k . , But surveying the war as a whole, the conclusion is Inescapable that it was fought along a pattern , cut by McNamara, rather, than by the top military brass. Besides'attacking gradualism, the McNamara’s aides] have mounted an offensive against his nudear weapons policies. ' GOP CHARGE A GOP task force, inducting the Eisenhower administration. What McNamara ran properly be credited with was a speedup in the deployment of foe Polaris and Minuteman inter; continental ballistic mlssle, Which gave the United States a big edge over Russia. . W . k ★ Now, however, there is evidence that the Russians have been doatng the gap in missile launchers, and this worries military men and advocates of strong defense policies on Cap-ltd Hill. two Eisenhower administration secretaries of‘defense, has charged that-“the United-States has been gradually losing Its technological and military preeminence.” ' vH McNamara adherents strongly dispute allegations that he brought *a standstill in new developments. ★ ★ k They cite, among others, the Poseidon submarine-based missile, multiple warheads for single missiles, foe Lance battlefield missile and the manned orbiting laboratory. But most of the major nuclear weapons advances in the McNamara years really were improvements on systems born in McNamara’s defenders argue it's not the number of missile launchers that counts, but the number erf warheads that will get through to target. Last winter, McNamara claimed a 3,500 edge over Rus-nudear warheads and pledged to maintain superiority. But even aa...he proclaimed U.S. luperstrength, McNamara tried to convince tit* Russians of foe wisdom of slowing down the nuclear arms race. MAY VINDICATE Russia’s recent agreement to discuss curbing nuclear weap-ons may vindicate McNamara1* belief that the Soviet Union eventuality would realize foe atomic arms race is “f o o 1 Lab and futlltf;” I ^ Ac'. ♦ gSl On one important issue that bedeviled McNamara through most of his tenure, he already has aim his position repudiated. This happened when the Pentagon halted all work on foe overweight, high-priced F111B warplane. This action marked the end of a prime McNamara effort to develop a single plane, IB some vai ialhats, w ttini, the needs of both the Air Force and foe Navy. % Earlies this year, the Senate j and the House both had had enough and moved to deity any more millions for the Navy TFX. ■ ‘ ■. - „ | BOWS TO CONGRESS On July 10, Clifford bowed to the apparent will of Congress and permitted the Navy part of of IPX project to foe. McNamara irked members of Congress by his attitude almost from the beginning. k '~~k. | Relatively early in his days as Pentagon chief, in 1963, McNamara assured the Congress that he was assuming much- of foe decision-making authority because he was trying to establish a “basic management philosophy” which had not prevailed before. ★ * k When congressman said some people oil Capitol Hill have concluded that McNamara liked that way, the secretary assured the congressman: “(five me time, and you will see that Critics charged — without befog able to prove it — that hi indulged in Some bookkeeping trickery, and foal the savings were largely eost avoidance ratherthan actual reductions. * * * There were charges, too, that in his zeal to economize he cut too close to the bone hi essential military equipment and weaponry. The Senate Preparedness Committee hammered at McNamara on this, score, contending he was endangering the safety of the United States and its ability to deal with problems other than Vietnam. McNamara fought back, sometimes grudgingly acknowledging some temporary deficiencies. But foe deficiencies were there. CONTROVERSIES Over foe years, McNamara was embroiled in a whole soles of controversies, many of which have faded in memory. ■ ■' ★ ★ ★ His first rebuff to Congress was delivered in October 1961-Jess than a year after he took office — when McNamara persuaded President John F. Kennedy not to spend $700 million in extra money to buy additional B52 bombers and to speed development of the 2,000-mile-in-hour B70. * ♦ 1 ♦ ' U.S. Cancellation of the 1,000-mile range Skybolt missile, designed to prolong the life of the B52, caused a temporary convulsion in U.S.-BHtiah relations because It was also supposed to give added yean to the British Vulcan bomber. But McNamara insisted that delays, rising costs, unreliability and advances in other weap-made the Skybolt .dispensable. The decision stuck. WATCHED CAREER A man who watched' McNamara from the very beginning to the very end of his years at foe Pentagon said that it was foe Vietnam war that finally got to this man of boundless energy and tough will. “I think that Vietnam wore him down emotionally,” this official said. “It rubbed his nerves raw. He showed it. He was a changed man in this respect. He was not physically, not mentally, but emotionally, worn out.” FIX BROKEN ( DENTURES' AT HOME IN MINUTES NEVER CHANGED But, in fact, lie never did to himself all the important decisions. Even McNamara’s sharpest critics concede that he Was a supermanager and that his much publicized budget reforms and enforcement of civilian authority revolutionized the functioning of the enormous defense establishment. ■ •mmJftm MOVES TO ALL ORTHO STORES! Quilted • Button-Frt* 12-pc. KING SIZE SLEEP SET! 7Ft.long,6Ft.wid« Hirs’s whit ioh l«h King . 2 King Size Box Springs • Fram*withC*sfor* • KmiSizsMiHrMiPid • 2Kin$Siz*neldcrestP*r Pfc. Richard K. Smith, ClncuS | '■ AIR FORCE MISSOURI—Capt. LM Di,-Richards, Columbia. Died of wounds: MARINE CORPS ILLINOIS—Pfc. Robert A. McAllister, Tlnley Park. IOWA—Pfc. Roger ' —— WISCONSIN—Pvt, AP£fis8ing - to dead—hostile^ ARMY ILLINOIS—1st Lt. Daniel L, lOV^-Spec. 4 Roy A. Herbaugh Jr„ MINNMOTA—Pfc. Roger T. Fast, Butterfield. . . „ Missing as a result of hostile action: Cept. Verlyn G*RM«yer, i;™Paft5arr Pfc. . Mortarty. _________, I. OiNS,..—..Ji 1. Werk. Lt. WHIIam J. Mayhaw end Lt. U.O.) larkham L. Gartley. AIR FORCE Ma|. Charles H. ,W. Read Jr., 1st, Lt. Charles L. fereevln, 1st Lt. MetvWE. Ladawlg and lit Lt. Francis L. Retter-qulst. Died not as a result of hostile action: ARMY OHIO—Spec. 4 Ervin B. Roberts, Hamll Missing to dead—nonliostile: ARMY ILLINOIS—Pfc. 0*rv C. Balts, Chi CABO. Missing not tile* action: ARMY Spec. 4 Dick D. Hamilton and Spec. WHiianr - ——— a result of hos- Last March 1, it launched the first of a new series called Navy Navigation Satellite (NNS)., A total of four navigation satellites now are operating, primarily to support of the Polaris missile submarine program. ' A ★ ' A RCA’s Astro-Electronics Division, which is building 12 NNS satellites under technical direction of the applied physics laboratory of Johns Hopkins Univer-sity, reports the NNS system will enable commercial vei to redude their ocean-crossing time by as much as 10 per cent. A * * NASA's Electronics Research Center is handling that agency’s navigation satellite program, which eventually envisions a network of evenly spaced satellites 22,300 miles above the earth. ir ir ir A ground station or aircraft could be in touch with as many as six of them simultaneously for extremely accurate positioning. Another advantage is that the satellites would send steady signal to computers and would require no interrogation by the user. There may.be up. to 180 tons of metallic iron, 90 tons of aluminum, and 75 tons of magnesium on each acre of the moon, says a physicist. WMBWBB Mungnm Win up to*2fOOO Win a great '68 Gamaro Surwiy - - Dollars ■/ Plus , At Sunoco...where the big game is UodMWMrtvara «mly. Void whom prohl blfcd. More big game winners: Howard Spiders won $100; Willis M. Wilson won $100. - Ronald L. Marino won $100. Henry M. Marshall won $100. Edwin 9. White won $100. Cheriee Henderson won $100. Alan L Pollock won $100. Margaret B. Phillips Won $100. Jack Fouat won $100. Save Big How! NEW FALL "MULTI-WARDROBE" $140“ YOU SATE ‘35.20 NO DOWN PAYMENT 13 MONTHS TO PAY Here's your year-round wardrobe-ready for everything—business, social anti leisure activity... and back to college, too. Enjoy “mixing 'em and matching 'em”—discover for yourself the many possibilities —outfit after outfit. The correct combination for evexy occasion * AND substantial savings. Sizes 8fi4fi,r^l«',1ibbi I rn !* 1 C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1068 / ' <- 'h ' : ' bbhi ■H® Dtllcloui Matt* Applesauce 220 U.S.D.A. Choice Boof Short Ribs „ Froth Sliced Beef Liver Pork Sausage 'Froth Leon Beef Ground Chuck Your family will love Wrigley’s lean, tender, chuck roast. You’ll love the savings. At Wrigley, quality cost no more. U.S.D.A. Choice Beef Chuck Steak Center Cutt ExtraMeotyl Leon Trim Fine fer Bar-B-Q MELONS .*£ 1 Michigan or '■ bset Potatoes .Ho. 1 Yellow f f#T 1' toking Onions ■ jsiWtWm Breeze Detergent - <■ - . j %_ ^Cinnamon T«g*^y wUmt1 6eld Ml CHI Stiaps With th# pure has* •( any *ix* pi*c* SMOKES HAM «iSSMQb kLimit an* par family, d with th* purchax a *f 2 Whole or Cut-up RR FRYER CHICKEHS t rSSJ&TBJ* JK Ik Limit an* par femllv-^^^Hs i Imilani dressings PORK CHOPS LETTUCE -r By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY ; Anyone can make five odd in hearts with today’s cards. AH he has to do is to draw trumps, finesse success-■fully against IWeet’s queen of , discard t diamond on i lone spade I wind up ( one chib one , Pass 2 V pass 3N.T. Pass South, hold: i ■ 4J4 ¥KJ9 8 4AX *KQ1054 What do you do now? . A—Pass. Torn* partner baa shown more than a minimum Opening but his strength appears to be to diamonds and spades and yon have only 14 Ugh card points. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding three no-trump your partner bids three diamohdli over your two besets. What do you do now? RQBIN MALONE ajpnb/uv/, wmw lONS-atASSVW, mWKMCtit*' By Bpb Lubbcra X'AipsnMHrJ Tt>Meefp&vtMas. mums pom- THE BERRYS Anyone___can JACOBY n«*ke five ■ hearts, but a good player will make oqly four! odd. He will see that his game Contract is safe provided his (opponents can’t take a dub, a spade and two diamonds, and he Will guard against two diamond losers by keeping East out of the lead. He will start his campaign | against East by letting West Sold the first trick. Then he will 'Win the dub continuation and dfaw trumps with three leads, making sure he winds up in dummy. His next play will be to i lead the jack, 10 or eight of THE BETTER HALF i ----NORTH A A.I 10 8 ¥.11092 ♦ 8 74 *A3 WEST AQ7 ¥873 ♦ AJ52. AKQJ7 EAST" A 6 5 4 2 ¥6 ♦ Q 10 93-A 10 954 SOUTH (D) A K 9 3 ¥ AKQ54 ♦ K 6 A 8 6 2 Both vulnerable Weat North East South 1 ¥ Pass 3 ¥ Pass 4¥ V 3 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—a K ) THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom “It hasn’t stopped talking long enough for me to ask, but all indications lead me to believe that it’s either your sister or your mother.”.. |:AStrologicaf ^recall BERRY S WOULD—By Jim Berry Ivltlas. Tak* l» —wpst■wmmmrn I . .^erntd. Don't attempt ft- In your way through rationing po TAURUS (Apr, MMMky JO): hfiirat movatftort^GtohB*i rL-jn't permit yourult to be tl LIBRA (Soot. 23-Oct. J2): .You could rocolvo threat* from thou who era envious. Resllio your l.'Utilize It. Defeatist* Ignore mem. ■ ■ Vku* you to alvo tip. ignore HR SCORPIO (Od. JJ-Nov. II): Friend* mey rneen well but do not hav* t Day to rely upon experience. Your • MBfJJJJJ* or i Silt Thara l forthcoming. ■ GEMINI (MOV tl ■Hiliiioi l«U fooling. ... — — extravagance rule*. You ere able to. c away red tape. ItattrrcHdno fall by #ay*Ma. Make contact*. Go place*......... r cancer (June 21-July HI: Stre** ability td adjust to changing method*. Don't be satisfied with halfway measure*. Make adluitmant* at home. Than pha*e* of activity Ml Mid place. LEO (July s*A«*k SUi What ----rock and awl. Avoid--------... ______._.lc. Monty altuatlon con bo &nt 'f A ’ B * Stable may rock and rail. Avoid •word panic, "■>-- Antroltod. Heed hive your wo It era at heart. Say no to fOolMh (pending VIRGO (Aug. Daily Almanac ______„______ of thought, action. Study SCORPIO motsage. You may bo surprised by request from lueorlor. Bo natural. Avoid any hint of smugness. Soma studyj ^ApSItoSn (Dec. 22Jan. Vvj'TC What appear* obvlou* i r*t _____ ...... — >. You. benefit. Toko ...JARIUS ------- •pant on race... ....... *ub|act of apprtlwnilon. Rami *-—a of humor could *olvo diln.....^^W .. perceive real value*. Op pot. superficiality. , PISCES (Pob. If-Mar. 20): Statu* qua -gt do today. Mean* thaka up sltue-affecting public, advsrtlilng, promotion. Be sure your Imago It getting aero**. Spook UP. Bt there In perton. . IF THURSDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY — ire discriminating; hoolth-contcloui, ....j to work hard to provo • point. Now contact* thl* yoOr hovo begun to ^ENEPAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high for LIBRA. SCORflO. Special word To ARIES: If analytical you pat valuable answers. I (Copyright, It**, General Feature* Carp.) ALLEY OOl* By V. T. Hamlin .IP "TRAVELING / I KNOW IN TIME ( "THIS IS \ JUST A Si? PILOT 1 TRIP... CAPTAIN EASY By Letli* Turner By United Preti International Today is Wednesday, Sept. £ the 248th day of 1988 with |18 to follow. •-The moon is between its first quarter and full phase. £The morning star is Mars. •-The evening stars are Saturn and Venus. £ • * *i * JpOn this day in history: Cln 1609 Henry Hudson dis- * covered the isle of Manhattan .. -In 1781 Spanish settlers (bunded the city of Lo« Angeles. J- In 1940 Adolph Hitler prom-Bed the German people he Would invade Great Britain. He never did. j^In 1945 Admiral William Halsey, aboard the battleship. | ^Missouri”, led the U.S. third Fleet into Sagami Bay, j 8 miles from Tokyo — the | - Brot-^tea in ..General MncArv. tour’s occupation of Japan: Marriage Licenses j felward A. Ellison. Hlehlg*n City, Ind.! Blfi Choryl M. Bromor, Farmhtoton. Timothy J. Mcklbbon, Union Lok* *nd Lydl* E„ Shepard, Walled Lake. Narvel D. Talley, «J C St. and Fhylll* ** ...-i si Par*---1- i»SiS^£SVM WIMord and Din Wilson, 44 Willard. .Michael P. Wagner, Union Lako and S&fr-a K. Parmeter, Union Lakr .John C. woodle, Troy 1 L.r°Mennlng, SO Linda M. Hyland, Union <.■•». Tl TWrvI* McDonald,, 17* Victory and JUtet M. Sander*, 23 Portage. ■ 'Joseph F. Humphrey*, MS LpBtran and Gtarla S. Opte, 2147 Ferndale. o IMS by NtA, In*. “I hate to say this, but it’s a Muskie!” OUT OUR WAY E£X & MEEK UADULD VOO I CDWS1D6R StXJRSBt/ / A saeUTisr, PR. J l BRrnsBuer \JJGU, A DeUTl^Ti PRIMARY FUUOIOU /S TD Fia THE SPACE THAT A CAVITY CRKATBS IK) YOUR TOOTH 1 HE ALSO FilLS THE SPACE THAT'S LEFT . BY TEETH THAT J \ FALL OUT! V By Howie Schneider SortUOJCDSAV THATVOU MIGHT COMSIDGRA DEUT1ST TD BE .SORT OF A SFACE SCittUTlSTf > ( SURE—HELP YOURSELF ) Bv Ernie Bush millet BOARDING HOUSE I Batty J. I Hanley and 3W •jar M*ry A. ■Bles R. Frank, Blrmlnphai frgaret A. McIntyre, Oak. Park fohn R. Maynard Jr., Dffro * Mascagno, Troy. Nye, Box 1« Hostel and Up—2 — ■islde. . Mary U-Fvf*. Clawson. ' ; William P. Barraco, Drayton Plains •M. Linda K. Wilson, cjorkston. David L. Hopp, Lake Orion and Shari ®^GilI?*rG.t*,2rS«S«, OotroH and ^^toton*'Royal Oak and FMflela F. Hartman. Tfjw. Jack R. Folk. 10)t Stratton and Sandro KL-tfardonburo, IMS Stratton. •ioorgo tL Stubbtoftoto, Bark lay and Cdsal A. Kota, Romeo.. . Bpiomon w. Pittman, SM Cau and liBliii r Douglas, 79f Palmer Awnk M. Dalchandt, Farmington and •jifetti M. Oka. Blrmliapart,. . . j Clifford H. Hlgglnt Jr., Farmington rnm Charllna K. Moushlan, Taylor. - f ^Ainaa ■ O. Nawidtr. U-----1 — * e. Vansteani*, Oxford. P . . lx PRir^ ^ 1 G. Swenson, 3JM Overton and Watondt, Livonia. M E. Slrmayer, 117 Putnam and F. Clark, ns W. Strathmore. HBKifn HBii Dr, » I Tyrone and Kar-i .... Columbia. -Jliham T, Morgan. Troy and Cheryl LgOran. Tray. ItarSal ’c^SrattW^^winsborough eBnwTt/FraWch, Birmingham ' ■ f '• TUMBLEWEEDS SPLENPff^WY B0YIEACHM0RNING WE ASSEMBLED AT THE SAUDON FDR AN EYE-OPENERi AFTER DOWNING A BRACING HOOKER OF CHILLED MILK, WE POUSHED OUR BADGES, AN'PIV1 PEP INTO SMALL COMMITTEES/ TO PEAL WITH MORE IMPORTANT BUSINESS! by Tom Ryan DONALD DUUK By Walt Dianey with coleslaw, great beans with] beef 1 almonds, COr n a t i c k a and firmly, beverages. /“ A* ★ *- r 'j P.S. Looking for something j pretty and practical for that, neighborhood potluck? This loaf is a good traveler that serves up quick and easy. LUAULOAF 2 pounds lean ground beef Mi cup finely chopped onion V4 cup fine dry breadcrumbs For fun garnish the top of the meat loaf with a kabob. We fashioned ours from green pepper, pineapple chunks and a stuffed (dive. Milan! Foods Inc 12312 W. Olympic Boulevard Los Angeles,.CaNfomia 90064 ‘ This recfpe futures pineapple and meat surprises hidden inside an unusual version of '•<»««>• meat hud. A shiny glaze of penned tomato sauce tops off the hthf. TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 Red-Gold Nectarines Vary Menu By JANET ODELL Food Editor, The Pontiac Press With the supply of peaches a bit on the shot and expensive side this year, ItV good to know that there is a surplus of nectarines. We've been happy that this year’s nectarines are huger than ever and of excellent flavor, It yon haven’t bought Spy of this red gold, smooth skinned fruit, youfre missing a delicious eating experience. ■ *, ★ * Buy some for eating Hut of hand or try some of the following recipes. For a luncheon with the PTA planning, committee or just a bridge foursome, plan to serve fruit salad with nectarine ice. FRUIT SALAD WITH NECTARINE ICE Salad greens ..3 large fresh nectarines, sliced 5 large oranges, peeled mem-branfe-free and diced 1 cup strawberries, halved 6 clusters seedless grapes Nectarine Ice Cream Enriches Little Biscuits Small muffin pans (available With 6 or 12 wells) hold the richest drop biscuits! ■ MINIATURE DROP BISCUITS 1 cup unsifted regular (hot cue) self-rising flow % cup butter or margarine Mi cup commercial sour cream, In a medium bowl with a •pastry blender cut the butter into the flour until particles are invisible. Add sour cream; with fori, stir just until flour mixture holds together — dough WU1 be very stiff. With a tablespoon and small spatula drop into small muffin pans (2 by 1 inch) filling to top. Bake in a very hot (450 degrees) oven until browned — 12 to 15 minutes. Serve at once. Purple Plums Don't Stay Long line t individual trays or plates with salad greens. Ar-the nectarine slices, mange slices and strawberries over the greens; add a cluster of grapes. Scoop Nectarine Ice into short-stemmed sherbet glasses or small glass berry dishes and place on trays. Serve at once. Makes 0 servings. NECTARINE ICE 3 or 4 large fresh nectarines 1 can (5 ounces) pineapple juice (Mi cup) % cup sugar % teaspoon salt % cup light cream or half-and-half Put nectarines in a saucepan of boiling water (off heat) to loosen skins; run cold water ever fruit and slip off skins. Cut up enough nectarines to make 3 cups. Into an electric blender torn the 3 caps cut-op nectarines, pineapple juice, sugar, salt and light cream; whirl ant 11 smoothly blended. Turn into freezer ice-cube 6 hot dog buns - < 6 hot dogs Chop nectarines coarsely to yield 1 cup. Beat cheese with egg, piustard, onion, and salt; fold fa) nectarine. Split buns and open flat; spread witir cheese fixture. Place in shallow pan with hot dop alongside and broil about 3 minutes until bun filling is puffy and fleeted with brown.' Serve j inside buns. Makes 6 servings. baking powder and all but 2 tablespoons sugar; cut in butter until crumbly consistency, Pat evenly into bottom and sides of 9-inch square pan. Bake on lowest shelf in oven at 400 degrees 15 minutes. Meanwhile, beat egg yolks lightly with sour cream, orange extract, and the 2 tablespoons sugar. Arrange nectarines on crust, spoon cream mixture pver fruit and bake about 25 minutes longer. Serve warm. A rich and crunchy crust, and! Makes 9 servings, the tact-sweet flavor of fresh nectarines distinguish this easy dessert redpe. - NECTARINE CUSTARD ON A CRUST 3 to S fresh nectarines 2 cups sifted flour M teaspoon salt % teaspoon baking powder % cup sugar % cup butter or margarine 2 egg yolks JL 1 cup dairy pour cream Vk teaspoon orange extract or vanilla Slice nectarines thlhly to yield I cups. Sift flour with salt, Frerii -.from - the - oven fragrance of Purple Plum Coffee Cake brings small boys and those grown tall to the breakfast table better than any other awakening. So easy-to-do, with file many packaged mixes to be found on grocers’ shelvesl There are a variety of Coffee ealte mixes, muffin mixes, and always the versatile biscuit and hot roll mixes. With fresh purple prune plums here fn our markets from ffie Pacific Northwest, it is ample enough to sprinkle the cut fruit over a packaged rad-fee cake batter before adding the streusel topping. Or feid the bits into a muffin mix blitter, sprinkling the tops before baking with granulated sugar and a dash of cinnamon. Or using a biscuit mix-made dough prepared for Tea Ring, sprinkle cut pieces of the plums over the dough instead of the Pattern Is Imic/e Meat Loaf Here’s meat loaf with a surprise in eafch juicy slice! Tucked inside layers of ground beef are strips of luncheon meat and; 'chunks of pineapple, all tapped with lucious canned tomato sauce. Cut the loaf into pretty mosaic-patterned slices. You’ll be proud to serve Luau Loaf, hot to your family or special guests. You can also chill It to serve cold on a buffet table. Leftover slices make enticing hot or cold sandwiches. Canned tomato sauce adds extrif flavor and color to this unusual meat loaf. A full pound of. sun-plumped tomatoes are simmered and lightly seasoned to make each can of this extra-rich sauce. GARNISH For fun, garnish Luau Loaf with a flourish of kabobs made from, .green pepper, pineapple chunks and stuffed olives. 1% teaspoons salt % teaspoon pepper 1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce 1 can (12 ounces) luncheon meat 1 can (13V4 ounces) pineapple chunks, drained [■ In large bowl combine beef, onion, bread crumbs, eggs, salt, pepper and Mi cup tomato sauce. Cut luncheon meat] lengthwise into %-inch slices; cut slices lengthwise into %^ inch sticks. Divide beef mixture in thirds; pat Mi firmly in bottom of 9x5x3-inch loaf pan.Arrahge half the luncheon meat stl lb. bulk sausage -1 IV2 cups tomato juice “J 1 cup celery, finely chopped :* Mi cup sliced green onion 1 or 2 fresh nectarines 1 tablespoon flour 2 tablespoons water 1 cup dairly sour cream 1 tablespoon Parmesan cheese Form sausage into 8 patties; brown in hot skillet. Pour off all but 2 tablespoons fat. Add tomato juice, celery and onion to pan; cover and simmer 15 minutes. Uncover and simmer 20 minutes longer. Meanwhile, c u t nectarines into slices to measure about 1% caps. Remove patties from pap; skim off fat. Blend floor with water, stir into mixture in skillet and cook over medium heat, stirring, until it thickens and comes to boil. Add nectarine patties and ^sour cream to pan; beat through. Sprinkle with cheese. Serve with toasted buffered English 1 muffins if you wisp. Makes 4 to 8 servings. # BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS Cut Tour Pood Budget in Half at HOFFMAN'S QUALITY & All of our beef fromUSDA Good or Choice Custom Cut, Wrapped* Delivered FREE To Your Home JustSay Charge W NO OOWN PAYMENT FANCY SMOKED BEEF TONGUES i 33 FANCY HALF PRICES AT HOFFMANS GAL. On. liSl HOMOGENIZED NILK 95‘ £zr*: THE PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 Double Turkey Sale! rAHMEn JACK'S FARMER JACK’S "TALKIN’ TURKEY” THIS WEIK WITH LOW SALE PRICES ON HIS FINEST BIRDSI Young Hen Turkeys Turkey Rolls 1 LB. 6 OZ. Cornish Hens U.S. CHOICE DOUBLE GRADI WHOLE BONELESS DOUBLE GRADED CHUCK CUT BONELESS GRADE 1 FRIES UP CRISP FARMER JACK ^FONtl|C MAU SHOPPING CENTER • GLEN WOOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER • MIRACLE MI^E SHOPPING CENTER • DIXIE N WY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE RpAD • NORTH PER|Y AT ARLENE IS Til K PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER i, iPflg JLabulmis "Double Graded Produce Buys! STOCK IIP TODAY! ALL FARMER JACK FLAVORS YOUR FOOD ( . Heinz Tomato Ketchup WITH MUSHROOMS MORTON HOUSE . , ^ Oven Baked Beans BATH SIZE LOTION PURE CONCORD PRICE EFFECTIVE THRU SUN., SEPT. 8 RIOHT RESERVED TO {LIMIT QUANTITIES SPREAD ON TOAST ALL PURPOSE COFFEE Maxwell House mi ,*r- Armour Meals BRAND Petted Meats HUNTS RICH female Sauce FOR ALL YOUR FRYING HUNTSTASTY SPECIAL LABEL 8K01 WT. BAR WHOLEKfRNEL gs - Town Pride Coni Bruce Cleaning BRUCE 6 MINUTES Wax Remover MAGIC BRAND FRESH CREAMERY SPECIAL LABEL Upton Tea Bans GREEN GIANT WHOLE Sweet Petatees GREEN GIANT , / FRENOMS CREAM Sated Mustard FRENCH? CREAM FARM MAID LARGE OR SMALL CURD ,,v. ■ Cottaae Cheese OLD FASHION ' rj~ form Maid Buttermilk BORDENS LOW CAL—K.J.*'. Neuffchalel Choose farm Maid Coffee Crenni farm maid pure Or oaf a Juice ^SPECIAL LABEL LADY SCOTT WfeClAL LABEL 454 x 4)4 LADY SCQTt SPECIAL LABEL 3KOZ. TUBE >fONtlAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER-• GLENWOOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER 0 MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER O DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD e NORTH PERRY AT ARUNE B VARIETIES FRESH FROZEN Oconta Pinner 1$100 M. 1 . FRESH FROZEN CHEESE OR SAUSAGE Jenos Pina ^CCC pkg. TREESWEET FRESH FROZEN Oranfe Juice .ICC ! CAN lU FROZEN KING SIZE Downyfleke. Waffles . *2Sr THE POKTXAC PBffltejffflpNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 ROUND BONE SMWMR lensure CHUCK RUSTS ^FIRST BLADE CUT ‘ Home-Grown Plus Gold Bell Stamp* W* r...rv. th. right to limit quanfit,., • • Nqn* told to doctor* or miners. Plus Gold Bell Stamps! Chicken, Beef h-ol and Turkey Pte CENTERCUT BLADE , [stOfeiLt FRUIT COCKTAIL 1 Pound «|0 1 Ounce Can | jr Pillsbury'; Del Monte Boneless CHUCK ROAST Very Bost Cut Whole or Cream Style KITCHEN CHARM WAX PAPER 100 Feet « Roll VB 1-Pound, 1-Ounce Can i HEAVY DUTY PLASTIC , ' , Garbage Gan liners f *gRF? .v $|B Package Peters PETERS KELLOGG'S HAIR SPRAY MELO-CRUST—8-Oz. Tube Package Hormel CHIU CPN-CARNE BORDEN'S Quart Carton ill FREE GOLD BELL I stamps With Purchase j of 3 Pounds or More of f] Jl FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase 2 Packages Of More of^ STEWIHS BEEF OFREE GOLD BELL Steseto With Purchase of 3 Pounds or More of OHIOHS M FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of 2 or More Packages of PORK CHOPS Efl FREE BOLD BELL t Bill Stamps With Purchase of 3 or More Packages of 4 COOKIES w| 0 FREE BOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of 10 Pounds or More POTATOES Seheel Supplies FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS fcSBSI 3EE 1 1 nsr I 7H Auburn Avc. OPEN SUNDAYS •di Orchard Ur. Rtf. OPEN SUNDAYS' Elitabith Laictf Rtf. ■ alHurcn St. ' OPEN SUNDAYS 1 SaitStatf. | I Ctrncr •( Perry H -I Oft* SUNDAYS »» ■' TftlX SMS? % at* Everyday Low Prices •Friendly Service jtGold Hell Slamj >& V e—io THE, PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1988 Retired Episcopal Presiding Bishop Dies -(J11®00" BETHEL, Vt. (JB - The retired presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church of the United States, the Rt. Rev. Arthur C. Lichtenberger, died at his summer home Tuesday. He was 68. He was an early fighter •gainst - racial discrimination, and he believed in stressing the similarities, not the differences, of Christian churches. He was elected 21st presiding bishop on Oct. 11,1958. # ★ ★ ' Bishop Lichtenberger served until 1964 when he was forced to resign because of Parkingson's disease, which had affected his speech. Since fhat,time he had been a visiting professor at the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, Mass. In 1961 he met With Pope John XXIII for the first such meeting between a pope and presiding bishop of the U.S. Protestant Episcopal Church. Bishop Lichtenberger said later, “We did not discuss our differences. That would have been quite beside the point." RACIAL STAND He took a strong stand on racial issues. "A'* class church is not a Jan. 8, 1900. His .father was1 a church," he said. “Onlywhen grocer and, for a time,, city the church is serving all people, council president. The figure when it appeals to everyone, is bishop played baseball and foot-it doing what it should. This isbnll in high school and entered the kind of church we must be,the University of Wisconsin in-are becoming, and in, many tending to become a lawyer, areas already are." i ' ‘ " 4* * * * Dissatisfied, be quit college to Bishop Lichtenberger was awork for the Waterloo, Iowa, relaxed and approachable per-Telephone Co. He became inter-son who became riled on occa-ested in the ministry .through sion. He was known to murmurhls future father-in-law* the a resigned “Oh, hell’’ when anRev. Martin Tate, a Waterloo impatient motorist sounded a Episcopal clergyman. horn behind him when traffic - ............... ahead was blocked. George Washington died at He was bom in Oshkosh, Wis., 10:20 p.m. Dec. 14, 179$. on >Mnda/ Uquor! ALLEGAN (UPI) Allegan,1 VALDOSTA, Ga. (UFI). County supervisors, v tmngj Late mat Friday night, Robert Tuesday lot a second lime the IC. Redd of Plymouth, Mich., same day, approved the sale of i phoned his father from this liquor by the glass on Sundays suiall southern Georgia "“n . ^—P# t ami *a(H - tic would hr by a vote of 20-19. ■A vote earlier Tuesday ended in a 19-19 tie. But John L. Gurney, of Wayldnd No. 1 District, challenged the vote when he learned his ballot had been counted as A "no” instead of a yes, and a miscount Was ruled (and said he wpuW bring * no FLIGHT PLAN St. Petersburg. The trip firopi| Florida knew, there was some Valdosta should have taken bad weather in northern Fionas between two and three hours. |that night and thought he may But the plane hasn’t been have waited for that to pass, seen since. surprise when he arrived at his fethpr’s St. Petersburgh, Fla. home tba next morning. The surprise was supposed to be a visit by Redd’s brother, his wife and 3-year-bld son. Oregon wak the first state to adopt a motor-fuel tax in 1919, . No search was made for1 file With Redd - 28, were his' airplane until Mondey, And that brother, Edward, 27, Edward’s I proved fruitless, the Eastern wife, Shirley, and their son Aerospace Resaw. “J4 Tommy. Recovery Center at Robids Air Edward’s family was from'Force Base reported today. Westland, a Detroit suburb.!Civil Air Patrol planes and HI ............ ' Redd, who got his pilot’s license spotters; alohg with ground The four left Valdosta late last March, hadn't filed a flight parties scoured a ^square ridav in Redd’s small plane, a plan and thus was not officially j mile area In southern Qhygl* Friday in Redd’s small plane, a plan Pipet- Cherokee, on the last leg missed when he failed Of the trip from Plymouth, to his deteinatjon. His parents im success. to reach1 and northern Florida without. rwecare In our great country we’re lucky. Our government trains and employs experts... men who inspect and grade beef at hundreds of locations throughout the nation. They protect you..,and retailers, like us. That’s why A&P is happy there’s a U.S. government inspector on the premises of our meat plant serving this area. Also important are A&Ps own beef experts. Their job is to see to it that A*P Beef measures up to our own “SUPER-RIGHT” quality standards... standards which don’t exactly fit our government's grading categories. For instance, some beef graded U.S. Choice just doesn’t meet our “SUPER-RIGHT” specifications. No wonder we don’t hesitate to guarantee that the “SUPER-RIGHT” Beef you buy Will be as flavorful and tender as you think it should be, or your money back. Bo, you don’t have to become an expert to choose great beef for your family... just shop AAP! V - — CbiPValfrHTy^ MCUTCTt* CO.; INK ■f- k OFF LABEL—DETERGENT Wisk Liquid.... . & 69' UIFTY PLASTIC 30-GAL. SIZE m j Trask Cun Liner* 6 49 129-FOOT LONG 4| Hondi-Wrup..........««» 27 Sandwich Bags.. ."»«■* 29* Sandwich lags.. .*”^ 49' KEEFER Aja. Lunch Baas.. . ... SLfi 39 GAL JUG 39 REGULAR FLAVOR Crest Toothpaste.... PRILL Concentrate Shampoo Fiat 1 s ‘ linuid Shampoo.... ROLL-ON __— f 1 Secret Deodorant.. 8c OFF LABEL ' Scope Mouthwash... 6*«-OZ. TUBE 3-OZ. TUBE )V*-OZ. STL. TW-OZ. JAR 12-OZ. BTL 75’ 79* 55’ 79 75’ Choose ''Super-Right'7 Quality Meats! "SUPER-RIGHT" MATURE, CORN-FED BEEF Porterhouse.... *1” BONELESS M || ■■ M BONELESS STEAKS TopRound ...“I” R O A 5 T Bottom Round *■ l" BEEF Favorites t r ^ * . 4 ’ axial W09 Chip Steaks.. >1* VALU" | » Strip Steaks.......»2” Rotisserie Roast. ..»!" Swiss Steaks & 98‘ Bathroom Tissue 13* Jane Parker Baked Foods! Save on Bright Sail Bleach - }.«» Mdlyw HrvcM*rlH — SCOTTilS^Wliita m Ci»fen Facial Tissues.. • 200-CT. BOX REGULAR OR CUSTARD FLAVORED JANE PARKER SLICED 1NSTANT SHAVC CREAM ANGEL WHITE LADY SITTY Cucumber Wafers 15-02. jar FOOD BREAD FRESHUKI Sweet Peas..... FRISHLIKI Wknla Vantal Ct%rn 14-OZ. OO* CAN AO . 12-02. QQ* . XX ■ r 30* RING ^0 jf Jj 1 Vi-LB. OQC ftf LOAVES FRISNLIKI ■ m. 5hf»*str(iui Beets "an* 15 BITTY CROCKIR GERMAN • AO. CIhk Brownie Mix *««■ W 39 Beef Stroganoff... *«* 69 tafoda Tea Bags.. , 4L" 49 Ch*«se Tidbits... . '^ 35* tuHik MAYONNAISI STYIR AA. Pat«*to Salad...... ^ 29 .frbupufvi facp \ .m iii/;‘ m jtc. Pi^-mle Juice 6 # 59 SCOT DECORATED ’ 1M ■ Big Roll Towels .T."W:3jt ‘ Homestyle Denuts Twin Dinner Rolls I Lemon Pie Coffee Cakes < IFECIAU SAVE h 1-LB, ML > • • a a »ih 59* 29* 43’ 35* Boned Chicken ........ 79* \ ■' t . ■ > f IT'■■ "■ ; . r Stuffed Cabbage ■ .«..... c**’ 1" y.ls ... •••»*• Stuffed Peouers .mr.KM ........ as- l" Johnson’s Glo-Cgat.^........ "a0178* Air Freshener ..... . . .. ss 68’ Gaines Gravy Train .. 25 a 2“ THE PONTIAC,PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 C—11 Air Time Offer 'Unresponsive'-Daley CHICAGO (AP) The National Broadcasting Co. has offered Mayor Richard J. Daley a special one-hoar program in,re-sponse to. his request for air time to explain "what really happened’r during the Democratic National Convention. But a spokesman for the mayor said Tuesday night Daley termed the NBC news offer “unresponsive” and said the mayor probably would tend. Daley said Tuesday he sent hour of prime time to peunter-act’lhe one-sided portrayal of the controversial events that were telecast” during last week’s convention.____V ^ Reuven Trank, NBC news president, said in New York he invited Daley to “appeak for a discussion of these events with a panel of distinguished reporters and editors on a special one-hour edition of 'Meet the Press,' Friday, Sept. 13." Reacting to the NBC offer, the mayor’s office spokesman quot- letters to the three major televi-ed Daley as having said, "This sion networks requesting .one is not what I requested. There no need for a panel of report-rs." ■ 1 '* v 1, , Frank said, In extending the offer, that he could'not accept Daley’s description of NBC telecasts as a "one-sided portrayal” The other networks, the Columbia Broadcasting" System and, the American Broadcasting Co., did not reply immediately to Daley’s request. Daley announced his request during a three-minute news conference Tuesday in which he read a statement and then left immediately, refusing to answer newsmen’s questions. The statement said in part: .. Under all, principles of fairness, the background and plan- ning for the purpose of disrupt- demonstrators which resulted in f< The mayor also said he had named a committee to investigate the violent confrontations between police.and young peace ing the city and the national convention, the tactics used by the demonstrators, the biogra: phies of the organizers and leaders, the role of the law enforcement agencies, and the grave implications of these events to the cities of America, which were not portrayed during the convention coverage, shoqld be presented to the American public."_______... .____ 500 arrests and injuries to many persons, including 24 newsmen and 152 policemen. * ^ * -An aide to Daley said the committee includes James B. Conlisk Jr., police superintendent; Robert Quinn, fire commissioner; and members of the Chicago Corporation Counsel’s office and the Department of Health. Romney Makes 4 Appointments LANSING (AP)—Gov,. George Romney Tuesday appointed three persons to the State Board Examiners for Sanitarians terms expiring Dec. 31, 1969. Named to the board were Bruce Reynolds of Lake City, Samuel M. Stephenson of Holland and Robert R. Dalton of Lansing. ¥ ' ¥ ' ¥ Romney also appointed Margaret Steffens of Holland to the Stote Board-tor Libraries. Mrs. Steffens' term expires June 24, 1973. Israel Holds Egypt Boats TEL AVIV (AP) — The Israe-S navy is investigating two Egyptian fishing boats which it captured in Israeli territorial waters six days ago, an army spolflmmfln imnnunrad today. He said the two Arab boats entered Israeli waters on Aug. 29 “close to the Sinai area,” the Egyptian desert east of the Suez Canal which Isrdfel forces occupied in the 1967 war. ★ * * The spokesman said the two boats were escorted to an Israeli port. He refused to say how many Egyptians were captured with the boats. . The army also announced another Israeli-Jordanian duel m the North Beisan Valley, where shooting across the border is an almost daily occurrence. w1 * e ______________j A spokesman said the Jordanians fired first with light arms, just before'dawn, and the exchange lasted 50 minutes. Almost immediately after, he continued, the Jordanians opened up again with light arms and mortars in the North Jordan valley, and a 10-minute exchange followed. No Israeli .casualties were reported. we care Whole Fryer legs or FRYETOKiJSTS with Mbs Attached SACKS REMOVED 59 •OSTON-STYLB BUTT Peril Roast.... >... “ 59 CUT PROM BOSTON-STYLE BUTTS M a. Pork Steuk........'69 "SUPER-RIGHT" COUNTRY TREAT m Pork Sausage “{?‘ 09 “SUPER-RIGHT" PROZIN ■ 39 Hamburger Beef Steak 1 WHOLE LEG JX A# Leg O’lamb..... '89* All-Meat Franks.. “ 69 Fsfllly Cooked flSH Cod Fillets or JL Ac Ocean Perch Fillets • . . .W#1 Fish and Chips..... s 69* Fish Crisps..........S& 39‘ ENDS AND CENTERS MIXED Vi Pork Loin ■■xar Smoked HAMS CENTER CUT Ham Slices PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SUNDAY, SEPT. 8»h IN WAYNE, OAKLAND, MACOMB AND WASHTENAW COUNTIES It Unable to PUithaio Any AAvorthotl Item—Pleaie Request o "Rllll Check" CUT INTO CHOPS • • # • 75' “Super-Right” Sliced Beef Michigan U.S. No. 1 Yellow LIVER ONIONS - 59* 3 29‘ "SUPER-RIGHT" FANCY Sliced Bacon 1-POUND PACKAGE 75 Savings A-Plenty on Fine-Quality Groceries! I0M YELLOW CUM HALVES OR 0% ■ 0%, Sliced PEACHES 3^79 NESTLE S SEMI-SWEET CHOCOLATE — _m- WtTANA SAUR Morsels,. .. p| 47 Dressing.... A 39* IN TOMATO SAUCE—IOMA ^ 12^)1 ^ A C Pork & Beans "" 10 Wheaties.. J ™ 34 BROADCAST Corned Beef Hash 1-LR. 9-OZ. CAN #0( WISHBONE ITALIAN—4« OH Ubtl 00 Salad Dressing.. CONTADINA , ' Tomato Paste.. ■ J|( FLAVOR HOUSE BLANCHED ‘<5n 14 Dry Roasted Peanuts CONTADINA ■ ■ Tomato Sauce « ^19* Dog Food..... 2 CONTADINA ' ' ' Tomato Rounds 1-LB. 1S-OZ. CAN Enriched Floor 5 31* 49‘ 6Vi-OZ. CANS KAL KAN T«M ««d Chick.. A Cal Feed...... 2 SIMONIZ, NON-SCUFP ___ 1-LB. 11-OZ. CAN 32* 49* 43* 39* 79* •- ANWYAGE SPAGrtrrTTOR Elbow Macaroni.. SULTANA ' JA Fruit Cacktuil... ANN PAGE Tomato Ketchup.. KLEENEX 2-PLY Dinner Hopkins.. KLEENEX 2-PLY luncheon Hopkins Ms- sr 45* 19* 26 26* AGP VEGETABLE SALE Cat Corn, Cut Green or French-Style Green Beans YOUR ^0 Ml ^ At CHOICE ,K®- JTU Hawaiian Punch 2 «•«. 39 if - • / BANQUET Tu*.y W Chickm • m m Frozen Meat Pies 5 «» 99 HOWARD JOHNSON'S FROZEN ’ JLf%< Chicken Croquettes j»r 69 HOWARD JOHNSON'S FROZEN #||( ShrimpCroquettes m 0" POPSICLES 12 49‘ 7? Cream Cheese. .2 ««• 25‘ _____________ fleer Wax...... m A *■># SIMONIZ, NON-SCUFP 2-LB. 1 29 Enriched Fleur 10 &> 97 Fluor Wax..........,! A4< 1Mt 41i uJ Drain Cleaner....«« u ■ Lotion Shampoo s-oz. BTL. Soft-Ply TOWELS ' M ™35* lie OFF LABEL Ivory Liquid. FOR PRE-SOAKING LAUNDRY Giant Axion.. • 1*PT. ' / A-OZ. #A,«» 43* 69* Fresh Fruits & Vegetables! LARGE 5IZE , Honey Dew Melons WESTERN GROWN ~ ; JA ’ Fresh Carrots a NIITLEY MARGARINE Stu OAt ct&s. ._ BARTLETT PEARS 25* Gwra Peppers 3 - 29‘ i • P. C—13 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER A. 1968 Compare anywhere! You’ll find nobody but Kroger, in this entire area, offers you this outstanding combination of sayings and service features.. ♦Top Value Stamps—the extra savings feature that offers you a no-cost way togift-shop. Compare any time! ♦Weekly sale-price specials on items you want arid need. ♦Deep-cut discount prices in every department every day of the week. ♦Kroger Tenderay Brand Beef—and Tenderay takes tne guesswork out of buying beef. FULL SHANK HALF Smoked Ham WHOLE OR BUTT PORTION SPECIAL LABEL Palmolive Liqiid ■M9r SPECIAL LABEL l|n All Porpose Cleaner l-RT ''Iftf' ii-oz an. erw We RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES AHQ ITEMS EFFECTIVE At KROGER IN OETROIT AND EASTERN MICHIGAN THRU SUNDAY SEPT.. 6. 1968. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT 1968. THE KRO-, GBR CO. - t 1/4. NO. I Jonathan Apples 3^69* WITH THIS COUPON ON 2—PEGS CUT-UP FRYERS <$-PKGS FRYER PARTS 2—QUARTERED FRYERS OR 2-SPLIT BROILERS tM The 'See., Sept. 8, 1968 m At Rieger Oct. A MK. Mick. I with this coupon oh AMY . 3 PEGS BUDDIG SLICED LUNCHEON MEATS' VdU Thru Sun., Seer. A 1968 At Kiemer Pet. A Sect. Mick. TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS ONLY AT KROGER Copyright 1968, The Kroger Co. SERVE N'SAVE COUNTRY CLUB FRESH ROLLED S TIED COUNTRY CLUB Sliced Skinless Boneless Corned Bacon Wieners Perk Roast 2T 59 69. AM -“0». i .69* •I4* SWIFT'STENDER Sliced Beef Liver ......... OVEN-READY PRE-SEASONED Meat loaf.............2 GLENDALE ALL BEEF I Bologna or Wieners............ 59* GORDON’S ROLL Pork Saasage,........ ...... 49* Save GOOD OLD FASHIONED Heat’s Catsep .JXtl 29* FRENCH'S BRAND Mostard....... . HUNT'S RICH 17* 21* i19* GREEN GIANT Niblets Corn..... PREEN GIANT JUMets Moxkom.rc°»24* BREAKFAST TREAT-BAYS English Moffins.. 19* AWREY'S FROZEN DOUBLE CHOCOLATE Dessert Coke....'^™ 69* VlfA-BOY DELICIOUS * Bacoa Xfhps 29* NABISCO SHORTBREAD COOKIES ioraa Boones....!??™! 45* INDEPENDENT CO. Fadgo Cre«es...2 %59* /ft ’Knefvtf SPECIAL LABEL-WHIPPED MARGARINE Blue Bonnet..,.....';** 31* BABY CEREALS Ho|ax 6 Pack..;... ,*« 24* BARLEY,MIXED OR OATMEAL Heinz Baby Ceroal^JS* HEINZ STRAINED MEATS Bttby Feed........ *122* JUNIOR HIGH MEAT Heinz Jaby Food 17* BLUE RIBBON Anunonia...,....~«tu' 29* SIMONIZ NON-SCUFF Moor. Wax..., • • H-OZCAN *1'* Noruoar TEMS~jOHmOH’S Baby Shampoo..J TAHITIAN LIME ConMaad0EODOKANT»?f£ 90* 89* TAHITIAN LIME COMMflRfl DEODORANT WT~CAN*V9 Hurry! Last chance to complete your 'bend Insulated Holiday Thermo-Ware Set! Sale ends Sat. Sept. 7! & Sect* STAINLESS STEEL Gillette Razor Blades 5-CT PKG 59* JOHNSON A JOHNSON SHEER OR PLASTIC STRIPS FOR RELIEF OF HAY FEVER AllarastTablets $1IS PLEASANT TASTING Micrin Mouthwash Sk $l,f FAMILY SIZE TOOTHPASTE Papiaiait ....^...irruatMM1 WITHGARDOL FAMILY SIZE It (Olfati TOOTHPASTE wttube 63* FOR WHlfER TEE TH FAMILY SIZE I TOOTHPASTE WTTUBB 59* Stripe TOOTHPASTE WTTUBE 6*« Crest Toothpaste FAMILY m J6< , SIZE6MZWfr J 0?'ied6 from tun Ouot& . KROGER SLICED Bettercrust Brand 4.,1 LOAVES ■ Kroger 4 varieties Sandwich Cookies KROGER BAKED Pound Calcs 204 OFF KROGER APRICOT OR APPLE Turnovers FOR PRE-SOAKING LAUNDRY Axion r mm* 5 0 TOP VALUE STAMPS CA TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS 104 OFF WT TUBE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 Cr-^18 AN Prins sIiown here on EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES! You'll find theae tamo it.ms at these same low prices week, after week, to help you save more qn your food bill when you ahop at Kroger rqoularl^ CENTER CUT RIB GRANULATED LIBBY’S Pioneer Sugar...5»«49* Pineapple Jeice SEMI-SWEET CHOCOLATE ASSORTED FLAVORS Hestle’s MorselsJrfli99f Jell-0 Gelatins. ASSORTED COLORS RECIFE Boanty Towels 2% 42* Pink Salaioa.... GREAT LAKES CHARCOAL " SEGO INSTANT Briqaets....... 2(Muo 99* Diet Mixes..411 »CTN FROZEN 5 VARIETIES H-GAL CTN SPECIAL LABEL Joy ligeid......<-&>in.i SPECIAL LABEL Ajax Detergent.-«««* SPECIAL LABEL Fab With Borax^zml SPECIAL LABEL Dash .............. 2-OZFKC JUMBO 6 SIZE HMeydew Melons Kroger Coffee CHOICE OF GRINDS Betty Crocker Fruit Cocktail Freshlike Vegetables WHOLE OR CREAM STYLE CORN. SWEET PEAS, CUT SPINACH, FRENCH STYLE OR CUT GREEN BEANS Northern Tissue > pr<3iseife"»*' PARAMOUNT PICTURES promts Color A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Mtae6Mfo iGEORGE pfPPftRP CAROL BARER torrid together COLOR • COLOR • JOSEPH E LEVINE i IKGmm i‘il//uw8Mitr ^pumouNO BlutShi^ News in N of shell of Sfdfe Leaders i THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR ] S»M It Khaol districts wsrs unabls to bagln classss on schtdolo becauso ot teacher disputes Tuesday and a statewide total of 15 districts face the same throat Winner of 2 A C—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 mm huron isms! ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST ACTRESS! KATHARINE HEPBURN BEST SCREENPLAY! WILLIAM ROSE Spencer TRACY Sidnetf i P0IT1ERJ Katharine HEPBURN guess who's coming to dinner Ik-] THURS.-FRI. 7 and 9: WEP.-SAT.-SUN. at T-3-5-7-9 Jhe TwoFaces of Comedienne Phyllis Dilleti (EDITOH'S NOTE She etandt on stage with an out-wig, incredible clothes and a long cWarett0 holder and makes herself the butt of her best jokes. Her cackling laughter is ’■ familiar to .millions of She, her leoond husband and four of her five children live in a 30-room mansion in a posh Los Angeles suburb and her fif vorite of eight family dure, is a new Rolls Royce, / On Sept. 15 NBC will unveil for an audience of fellow time* “Hon-ey! But a real sewer, with girls who wets actually supposed to mingle with the guests later. Well, Bob Hope came there with friends, too, and I thought I lust can’t go on Width him there. But I had to, of course, and later he came back w * * * and told me I was great and to ia, if you believe what you Btick with it.” ■, hear, the possessor of the “Bad killing boueewives, to top-rung stardom From the outset she chose as nor own the, area of comedy subjects that rite understood best; hump and children. And, she turns aO the hutoor and satire upon herself. television fans and nightctab he,, new Sunday night variety spectators, But what’s PhyB» hour, “Tito Beautifdl Phyllis DiUer like off-stage?) Diller Show.” While the pro- __~ ______ gram is lodged In a late-evening .. - Kj^‘- CYIWA feOWliy, -• 'time spot which....hss -■ g \ AP Television-Radio Writer bootjy trap for a number of pre- jproval;” lief mythical husband he^is^closely1 matehed ty Jack j She' still has pleasant words Diller, decessors, Phyllis is sailing in ji* Fang; her mother-in-law isjJaar who |ound her at New labout her first husband-‘‘he al- the youngest, who at 18‘is finishing high school. ” * 1 Although her routines sire studded with dreadful remarks about her offspring-r-tfae kindest is: “They’re for sale”—she ia actually a doting mother who cheers Perry at school basketball games and is likely to brag unabashedly at Pete’s van, a singer, to whom she dedL rated her amusing “Phyllis Diner's Marriage Manual” in tM following words: “To My Darling Husband, the Richard Burton, of the Geritol Set.” ■ .';4’\ That makes things sort of nice, since Miss Diller has been described as “the Twiggy of the Geritol set.” Housekeeping Seal of Disap- Hope is her greatest hero but lability as a writer. nrnval • ” nor mvmipfil niicHonrl . . . , . , • < of ill hoe nloo HOLLYWOOD—Phyllis I ex-Alameda housewife, created Phyllis Diller, the creature who says she brushes her hair with an electric toothbrush. But any similarity other than a wild and rafter-shaking laugh, is strictly professional. The real. Phyllis Diller, who had her 50th birthday in July,-will make a million dollars this year in nightclubs, films, concerts and television, as well as From records and sales of two slender advice books, both bestsellers. without trepidation - after all, Captain Bligh, and her sister- she managed to Survive, intact, a teal disaster of a situation comedy a couple of seasons ago called “The-Pruitts of Southampton.” ‘PRETTY AWFUL’ <“It was all pretty awful, she moaned, Hut it did one thing— it gave me a children's audience: they loved it.” Phyllis has gone, in 13 years, from a funny lady clowning at the Alameda, Claif., laundromat PLAIN THE STORY BEHIND RDftWM THE ADS IN WRAPPER "-"“""-il NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS! LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct 1 The Democratic National Convention chose ..... as Its candidate for President. 2 Which of the following offices has the candidate NOTheld during his publlo career? a-Mayor b-Secretary of Labor c-Sena tor d-Vice President 3 The flaming Olympic Torch 1b being carried from Olympia, Greece, to the site of the coming Games in ..... a-New Delhi, India b-Mexlco City c- Phoenix, Arizona .4 -Top Caseh officials, including Communist Party leader..... returned from Moscow saying they had reached an agreement concerning their nation's future. a-Josef Spacek b-Ludvik Vaculik c-AlexanderDubcek 3 News stories. ahouL ,‘YloDieal,„jajad^^MQhes.li - concerned.... - a-groups protesting in Chicago b-Brltiah youth gangs v c-tribes in India PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for eaeh Word that you can match with its correct meaning. X.....invade . 2.. ...cardiac 3....liberalize 4.. ...fraternal 6....prohibit a-ban; forbid -b-having to do with the heart c-attack an area by send-, iagtntroopi d-make more, free e-brotherly PART HI - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. ..Ludvik Svoboda a-soviet Communist Party newspaper 2 ..Pravda b-President, Czechs* ' Slovakia ^ 3 ..Walter Ulbricht c-Senator from Hawaii d-East German Com* mpnlat leader , Czechoslo-, , 4.....Prague \ 5....ilanlel Inouye 90268 e*capltal, vakla • VIC, Inc., Madison, Wisconsin in-law is Moby Dick, Her dreaded next-door neighbor, the snooty one, is alWay Mrs. Clean. Her own hair is rather thin and those outrageous effects are obtained with the use of wigs. She ha£a dressmaker whom she calls “Omar of Omaha,1 who-whips up those Incredible stage clothes. She does' not smoke but uses the long cigarette holder as a prop to punctuate her gaga. BIG .BOOSTS Her vqyy distinctive appearance on stage provides , endless gags by others. ^Bob Hope, whom she adores and who has giventoer big boosts up the ladder, calls her things like “Tne Liz Taylor of toe Twlight Zone,” and added to tot bad housekeeping legend by noting that “Her refrigerator door has so many fingerprints on it the FBI uses it to train agent#” Even though toe public Phyllis Diller is something toe dreamed up, how does the real Phyllis Diller feel about all'toe “ugly" jokes for which she to the butt? “That doesn’t bother -me a bit,” said : Phyllis., seripualy. “That's contody. I know—and If! , .. think that' the public really ' knows — that I’m not a bit like I ‘ that The truth i8’ I m 8 very ■ 0^9 good housekeeper, and with all ____________ due immodesty, I’m a great cook.” am JW# **' She talked about the new Sv T '• show, occasionally telling about ‘he tou«h ,ean years wh?n>wUh ----:----- .------------------------------- - .....___ fierce determination, she was Star Of A New Sunday Night Variety Hour learning her business of ' comedy. , FOREVER GRATEFUL | “One of my guests ’on toe show is Raymond Bijrr,” said. “The first booking I got in San Francisco at toe Purple Onion. I was perfectly terrible, nobody laughed and was miserable. But Raymond dropped in one night and that blessed man came back three night? in a row after that and brought people with him. I’ll be grateful forever.” York’s Blue Angel.' From his show in 1957 she took off like a rocket, j . * Off-stage and off-camera, she a funny, witty woman, but tends more to anecdotes than one-line gags. She really and truly plays the piano T or harp-sichord — and has managed to learn to play one song on a saxophone. The sax and toe song will be used as a running gag-like Jack penny’s violin and 'Love In Bloom” — on toe variety aeries. Her oldest child, Peter, is 27 and married. Then come three girls, from 24 to 20, and Perry, ways, encouraged me to get into { show business,” she says. She is now maitied to Warde Dono- nrrormrmnnnnnnnnR' DANCING 3 Thursday - Friday Saturday - Sunday __ IBM Highland Road iiMNi* STOCKS are our stock in trade. See us for data and advice on the corporate stocks we think ore best suited to your . investment program. For informed investing, sea the specialists at FIRST |ACK HLL drums a complete First of Michigan Corporation WMI NTIAC LAKES 742 No. Woodward Birmingham ■ 847-1400 THE PONTIAC PRESS Wednesday, September 4, 1968 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. Soviet Communist Party leader Leonid ( Brezhnev ancient Egyptian temple arrived in toe U.S» France tested, its first hydrogen bomb-------- U.S. girls set World swimming' records la Olymplo trials Pope-1 Paul rvi vldlted Colombia ■Cv it’s backeto-sdipdr ... ,iivitime again for many ATLANTIS -txicients scientists still seeking clues about this legendary continent mm mmm Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy DENDUR Arthur Michael Ramsey, Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury U.S. Ambassador to the UN George Ball H&N DO YOU RATEf 4 (Seem lack Side «fQuls Separataly) 71 to GOpeinti - Good, ft is 100 pallet - TOP SCORE 61 la 70 points - Fain •1 to 90 points - Excellent. 60 or Under???- HW FAMILY DISCUSSION QUSSTION Which, candidate do you think could do the best job as President In the next four years? THIS WIKK'S CHALLENGE.* MO SCOII ’ Rumania’s President. .... criticized the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia: STUDENTS v.i«b7.T^!lc^wi”i7« ANSWERS ON REVERSTMOE . v- ■ ~ .. noastntsa»*|OS!N :30N311VH3 V O l !fl-6 n mvd s-9 53 43% 43% 43% + 1 3 47% 47% 47% i+ 1 15 32% 32% 32% 126 95 93% #5 i 11% 20% 6% 5% 26 45 .82.75! ................. 2.00 !r bleached, bu..................3.00 _____jle, bu. . — o-ao Escaroie, pleached, bu. . Lettuce, Bibb, pk. bskt. Leltucs, Boston, doz. Lettuce, Head, bu. Lettuce, Head, Bz. ... Lettuce, Leaf, bu. ' Lettuce, Romalne, bu. , 32% + ie 121% 120 .120 4 41% 41% 41% — % 24 71% 70% 70% 23 41% 41 Poultry and Eggs BoisCes ,25b Borden 1.20 BotoWer 1.23 BrlstMy 1.20 Brunswick BucyEr 1.20 54 57 56% 56%-' 46 62% 62 62 26 31% 31% 31% -f lulove .30b DETROIT POOS DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)—Egg prices paid per dozen by flrsf ■■■ art including U.S. Grade A I umbo 47-53il •klra largo 45-48%, large 43-46 15-36%, smalt IS-lf. f' DETROIT POULTRY Detroit (AP)-(USOA)—Prices paid Mr dozen for No. t Itvo poultry: Heavy cal Flnanl Type hens 13-20; heavy type broilers 20> CampRL .4» fi; heavy type roasters 25-26%. , Camp Soup l iS • CHICAGO EGGS Cenlew .60 .CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercsnlilo CoroPLt 1,36 - — i-—-------*-!r-*tobuylngC»roT*T.76 AA 66w sSPHrai 31 34% 34% 34% + 19 34% 33% 34% + 202 16% 16% 16% ■ 35 44 43% 43% 116 214% 213% 213% + (hds.) High Law .Last C 122 76% 77% 76% + % ProctrG 2.40 PubSycColo 1 PPG Ind 2.60 Polaroid .32 Publklnd .ISt Pueb Sup .44 leodyr t.so iWt 30 4M 4 33 86Vh I 25 Wk 1 13 105WU_________ 21 54^ 54 54'A + V% 201 » B| 226 SStfc 52 4116 _______a-., . 15 5714 57% 5716 — 26 44 4314 43*' 51 2314 2314 23 Blidvlnn .30 iflySuo 1.20 BmastKt 80 IdahoPw 1.60 Ideal Basic 1 III Cent 1.50 Imp Cp Am IMA Cp 1.40 94 27V6 27V6 371 10 85 84% IS 2 3716 37% 37% r W 31% ft TO6 ■4^% x52 3096 30% M% + % 77 84 H% 84 rH 33 35% 2414 25 4* V6 64 41% 41% 41 Va 1 II —H— 32 76% 77% >6% . _ 20 61% 60% 61% + % I 42 34% 33% 34% + % 6 42% 42% 42% — % 19 (1% 60% 60% -1-1% 6 15% 15% IS% — ' 11 62% 62% 66% — Rancolnc .92 106 36% 36 36 —1% Raytheon .50 203 36% 31% 31V ' Reading Co 1 '22% 22% 22U ■ RaTchCh .46b 56 15% 15% 15% + % Repubstl 2.50 47 42% 42% 42% + % ' -* 13 65 14% 64% + V 166 39% 39 39% +1 560 36% 33% 35% ff 1% 67 40% 39% 40% ' 4 56% 55% 56% Revlon 1.A 13 33 29 11% 16% 1 I 65% 65% 6f% .. 36 23% 23% 23% + RheemM l.o RoenSel .69* Rohr Cp-JO RoyCCola .72 Rby Du* .99r RydorSys .60 Safeway i.io StJosLd 2.80 StLSanF 2.20 StRegP i.40b 14 29%- 0% 9 Scherlng 1.40 Scltntlf Data SCM CP -60b 263 20 27% 28 + % 34 75 74% S + 70 91% 90% »«» + 126 40% 39% 39% + 70 29% 21% 26% + ■ 12 G% .4"- Sears Ro 1.20 Seeburg .60 SMronSt 1.50 Shell Oil 2.30 SltellTrn .66# SlwrwnWm 2 Signal Co la-Sinclair 2.80 SlngerCo 2.40 SmtthK 1.80a SouCalE 1.40 By JOHN CUNNIFF I change Commission appears to AP Business Analyst be’Saying that there to^no rea-~ son why this old, clublike St- un os phere should continue, especially when the Welfare of 24 million shareholders is involved. At least' three decisions or charges are establishing the new patterns: • A ruling in SEC vs. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. that stated, in essence, that nobody can trade for personal profit with information intended Only for corporate use, knowing that toe informa' tion is hot publicly available. The case was developed after the SEC detected purchases by Texas Gulf officials prior to the announcement of a major ore strike in Ontario, tocalf people’s capitalism have • Accusations by the SEC been made to glare. that Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fen- — ^ —ner & Smith, the nation's big- The emergence of a middle pst broker violated ahtifraud class with money for stocks has|laws in that it provided irforma-thrown the naive in with the «I m earnings (tocUne a phisticates. And, next to expert: ®^ Airoraft to' tastitationa ence and basic tateliigence, the ‘nvestors difference is primarily one of in- rom smaller investors. Merrill Lynch denies the charges. -phere <- ~ *—t H!«v«ritv J. * A vision involving Nick 1.20 Pap 1.35 T*T .15 ___* Bee* lowaPSv 1.20 72 16% 16% M% ........ 124 36% 36% 36% + % . 9 46 45% 46 + % . 30 34% 34% 34% _______ 2 31% 31% 31% + % South Co 34 338 337 337% +1 , SouNGes 53 33% 33% 33% + %ISou Pac 42 21% 21% 21% + % * ------- 52 37% 37% 37% — % 130 33% 9% 33% 30 50% 56% S% ..... 6 64 64 64 — % 3 23 22% 22% + 7. 15% 15% 15% + 9 42% 42% 42% . 43 66% 65% 44% -f 514 3R% 33 33% 4 14 41% 41% 41% . 23 69% 60% 69%. ft-% 1 43% 43% 43% + % 75 46 64% 65% +3% 92 35% 35 35% + % 24 71% 71% 70% + % JObhMan 2.20 7 19% 16 36% + ‘1 74% 74- 74% 4 61 15% 15% 15% JBH 4 33% 33% 31% — % K 16 26% 26% 26% — %! K if Kanntcolt 2 Karr Me 1.50 KlmbClk 2.20 Keppari 1.60 —K- 231 16% 35*A 16% +1% 2 21% 21% 21% + % 23 22% 21% 22 ‘ g 4 33% 33% 33% 15 39% 39% SlOIIInd 2.10 nOIINJ 2.409 sioiioh 2.50b St Packaging StauffCh 1.10 Starl Druo l StavemJ 3 ,51 52% 52% — ] 60 22% 11% 22 —1 137 47% 46% 47% 46 20% 20% 20% + 1 3 37% 17% 37% + ’ 11 44% 43% 46% ft- • 18 20% 20% 20% + \ 104 44% 45% 44% + ’ 05 53 52% 53 + 1 174 70% 70% 70% + J Sun Oil 1b Sunray 1.50 SurvyFd .64a Swift Co M A + % % + % A — % i — N — rf 1 52% 5V% 51% + 29 30%. SO IS 49% 49 „ 9 S. Texaco-2.f- - —- •« O. U. TexETrr Tex G Si 10 44% 47% 47% + ^ ,, inti, trot -lam + % «ex»-i.o 246 49% 46% 47 —2% 21 7% 7% 7%... 67 29% 28% 29% + % —T— 1 27% 17%k VVa 90 5049Vi 50Va +' 92 A 66%, 909*| 65%; 69 C 60%; cars CarterW ., 60 B 60%; *9 C 62. r«ok , Eggs steady jo firm; wholesale buying carie toox to 2% r ? CatarTr 1.20 CelaneseCp 2 im* 3® ......Grant A Whiles 45%; ; standards 32; checks 20. CHICAGO POULTRY . . CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Mva rSw, suit— —buying prices 1 >«—• -- -.. .. ...ilora 1(%-26%, J. ..—., tad White Rock fryers 21-22%; few young'chlMM stP P to—%- fad W___________ .. hen sturfcays , 25-24. rt-teed .80 I Stl .00 6 70 77% 71 — % Lohpcom .60 50 15% 14% UVt ' — |M 23 16% 16% 16% I 47% 47% 46% 36 43% 42% 43 II 61% 61% 61% J4 44% 43% 44 32 42% 42% 42% 24 42 MU " 146 II 23 31% 11 * Texhr 21 m 22% Livestock DETROIT UVBSTOCK DETRo!?**^rKw>A)-Cama 300; imr.io Cities Svc 2 Clark Eq 1.20 ClevEIIII 1.02 Coca Col 1.20 Lily CUP 1-20 ■.......Ling TV 1.33 41% 42 ■ Litton Ind „ 35 37% -4-1% Uvingstn Oil 19% 19% 19% + % LgckhdA 2.20 -10 66% 66 -46% 1 ‘—MU " 3 55 54% if' 6 33% 33% 33% 63 65% 65% *65% + % LonglsLt 1.24 (22 44% 44% 44% + %,Lorfilard 170 122 56% 55% 55%-1% Ltv : » 26% 36% 26% + % LuckStr . ml «u «ns u. sat 1 unu a Can) 1 1- % Lanas Com < 22 40 Tl% '40 + % 41% 41% 41% 66 67% 66% 16% + % 57 73% 71 71% + % 551 13% 13% 13% + % 30 55% 55 55% + % -^Ssr» ”18S.888 25 57% 57 57>A + %|untonPacH 56 87% 06% 07,, + %|Unlrr— * CMHrtRad JO ^____________I 'fr ...00-26J; good 24.50-26.00. ComwEd 2.20 . Hogs 200ru.S. 2-3 200-230 pound bar comsat , routs and gilts 20.75-21.00; 2-4 220-240 rS, Ed's 1.00 .pounds 20.i5-20.75; U.S.1-3 JOO-tOO pound conElecInd 1 sows 17.50-18,50; 24 400-600 pounds l645- conf=ood 1.50 . 17.50. , ConNatG 1.70 . Vaalart 100; high choice -and prlma consPwr 1.90 . 30.00-40.00; choice 3^.00-30.00; good 26.00- Con|alnr 1.40 , Sheep 300; couple lots-choice 90-110 Cont^Can 2 .pound springs slaughter lambs 24.50-27.50; cantlnr * **-scull to good slaughter dwas 5.0M.50. cant iHPHP , CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Cont OB 2.80 . CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) -- Hogs control Dale ,5.000; 1-2 210-&5 lb butchers 20.75-21.5h; cooptrln 1.20 1-3 330-400 lb sgw« 17.50-11.00; S-3 500- corn Pd 1.70 400 lbsiS.25-16.75. , CorGW 2.50a - Calves MOO; calves none; tew loads Cowlas .50 mixed fim^gnMe and Bilmo slaughter CaXBdcas .50 steers 1,150-1,275 Iba yield grade 3 and — - 4 28.50-29.00; choice lTlOO-1.300 lbs «M grade 2 to 4 27.75-20.50; load .mtxad high “ prim* tplb alauohtsr heifers 7 56% 56% 56% 54 40% 47% 4gt 26 40% ?»% “* i i ifiirii 10 43% 41% 43% 4 12 31% 32 —M— 34 26% 24% 16% 15 51% « Uniroya UnitAirL... . UnitAlrc IJt Unit Cp .40* I Un Fruit I.# Ulrt»f“ ‘ lus^i I 1 49% 49% + %. MaytM J.0# , 2 43% 43% 43% . ,. UlRyCb.. 1.jt 29 .27% 27% »% 442 301/3 26% 30, 52 90% 06% 60% __5—34%-34%-T4%. 47 53% 52% 53 23 17% 17 17% 11 37% . 37'A 37% 44 37% 37% 37% 37 66% 66 68% 33 14% 14% 14% 18 31% 30% 30% 54 50% 50 50% . - 107 34% 33% 34% +1% —u— 64 24% 2440,14% -345 44% 41% 44% +1 68 22% 21% ?2 rt- ' 47 .59% 5t% |{%"+’ 27 S«%. 53% 53% — 1 32 40% 59% 60 ... *f7 60% «% % + Si. 13 34% 14% 34% ... 9 25% B% JM + 23 06 “ ' Teachers in another 35 districts reported formwork even though contracts had not been signed, the governor’s office added. The teachers agreed to work while negotiations were were still in progress. 2 TEACHER GROUPS Of th* 15 districts that failed to open on schedule, 12 involved the Michigan Education Association. In the remaining three districts, the teachers were represented by ttie Mich1 igan Federation of Teachers (AFL)CIO), the governor’s office stud. Settlements in Dearborn No, 7 and Bessemer districts were reported Monday by Milliken, named by Gov. George Romney to seek school-teacher agreements Across toe state. ★ ★ W- Authorities pointed out that the situation across Michigan is improved over last year when 53 districts were struck. Schools are expected to remain closed for at least two weeks in toe Adams Township school district in Houghton County because of the resignation of the superintendent and school board. New elections have to be held before negotiations can resume, authorities said. PACT UNSIGNED Many pupils to the Gladwin school district reported for classes Monday but were sent home by the board of education which had failed to sign an agreement with the Gladwin Education Association. ^inere is 1W.'dte|^ taf™™ Construction Corp., a toe quality and timing of toftop j§gger and operator of bowling mation avadable to thejublic in £ , prospectus compared with that to which a information ^ect ^oup ^priio’. .^ Hthat might ^ construed - -been the situation for so long ® that it is thoroughly ingrained: roSaw,y-1 + ^ itbas in fact;^en the basis on j Individuals claimed they pur-tfade madC chased stock in BarChris with- ineir money. out realizing to was^ also an op- ‘NO REASON FOR IT - ' | erator of bowling alleys, which Now the Securities and Ex-j you might remember suddenly li 30% 38% 30% + % USlSSSr M 166 M 25% 25% qhmp'BBG prim* 925 lb ilauahtir S7Sheeph°r* MM<* -**- ? ciww*_Cor'L H *2, CrownZe V» “ \ end ehelct 2..0O- Americari; Stock Exch. A|«xM* .10g Am Petr -32e ArkLGw 1.70 Awmri oil Audtm * 6 AtlasCorp wt BraSlLtl^*81 Brit Pat .44a Campbl <££ 7| 34% 36% jj% i % 3 23% »% 65 30 36% ■. 21 6% 6 9-14 4 M6—1-14 33 6% 6% 6% — % 16 3% 3% 3% - % 5 29% 29% »% f % 69 16% 16% 14% j+ % taSham l.o > mm a duPont 3.75a pSq Lt 1.16 Dyna Am .40 tynteidp JO Taehnlcol .40 ’ Cs)iyf$||hiSSr by 17% TCwoWteOFi 11 49% 49% 49% + % MayiM 1.00, 24 33% 33% 33% ... McDonnD .44 13 34% 34% 34 %+- % Mead Cp 1.90 X 65% 65% 65% + % Melv ih 110 95 29% 29% 27% — % Merck 1.60a 6 42% 42% 42% + % MGM 1.20b 37' 43% 43 43% + % MkrMM „ 19 17% 17 17 ...MldSoUtll .12 15 55% 55% 55% . • MlnnMM 1.45 2 105% 105% 105% — % MlnnPLt 1.10 1 20% 20% 20% - % MobilOU 2 50 -67 44% 47 + % M9h« ’ 237 133% 131 131 —1% MOnaatl 1.60b 10 45 44% 45 + % MontDUt 1.40 31 40% 40% 40% - % Mont Pw 1.54 7 296 296 277% —1%, MonIWard l 4 14% 14% 14% .... Molprola I . 4 55 55 65 + %M1SITT 1.24 1 30% 30% Mb + %i S r 8S SS + ^HMAimn .30 ’■if SX S% 8Sh Kr.!iifib,# 17 25% 25 15% + % N«|CMh 1J0 n 'N Dairy 1.60 "-U-— —— Nat Diet 1.66 12 23% 20%. 21% — % Nat Fuat 1.60 ! 41% fl% 41% - % Na* Genl .20 ,! s» s» S.JSBSL 11 1(% 10% 14% — % 30 25% 25% 25% 10.20% 22% 20%-% 60 32% 32% 32% 15 »% 72% Wh + 15 61 40’A 60% -- 71 72% 74% 75% +3 30 36% 16% 16% + 27 1N% 157% Mb . 1 20% 30% 30% 10 20% 20% 20% + % no ______46% 46% - 7 42% 41% 41% .. 5 55% 55 Auto Club Seeks Halt in Road Toll Forecast DETROIT (AP) - The Automobile Club of Michigan said Tuesday it would ask state officials to stop predicting the number of traffic deaths before holiday periods and counting them after the periods are over. "Ibis practice gives the wrong impression that our safety problem is the holiday driver going on a long trip,” said Fred Rehm, toe Auto Club’s general manager. * ★ ★ ■It is not. It is the person who stays at home and takes short trips on two-lane roads,” he added. Forty-six people were killed in. Michigan over the Labor Day holiday weekend, one of the highest statewide totals to the nation. The figure was two less than the number of people killed during the same period toot year, when--*-record--was- set. dropped out of favor a few , years back. . This case seems to, leave any-ie connected with a misleading securities offering personally liable for damages. It includes accountants, officers, directors, underwriters. ~ There are several other cases in which toe withholding of information or the release of misleading information is attacked. A couple of cases, at least, involve suits against accountants for not discovering errors in profit reports. , It is still a bit early to measure the consequences of these decisions.. Not all have been very clearly stated, and perhaps they have not been thoroughly tested either. There is even the chance that, with a new administration in Washington, following a different philosophy, the SEC might begin to forget its pursuit. ★ ■ Until clarification is reached, however, thousands of persons remotely or intimately connected with shares in American industry must walk a tightrope under the most distressing circumstances, for they are quaking inwardly. The analyst asks now if he must eliminate hunches and tips and concentrate instead on hard, factual information. ELECTORS WORRY The'H&rporate director worries that by serving on a board he might leave himself open to a; personal liability suit from ,a disgruntled stockholder. The company president fears’ to talk with his wife about office affairs, lest his wife innocently divulge inside information to a I bridge partner. A * ★ Tie public relations man who casually drops hints to the stock market gossip columnists now wonders if somebody over there in the SEC is watching him. > Treasury Position (AP)—Tin cash potltion y compared with corre-i year ago: 1; 1740 ' Aug. 20, 1767 13.267.25 0 4,u0,322.161.06 Tier July 1—v ■" WASHINGTO (AP)—1 f the Trauury comp; •ponding date a year age: Depoilts Fiscal Y Supt. John Bruce tfaid the [UNSAFE GEA rejected a $1,300 mtoi-i Rehm said preliminary analy- Michigan’s sheriffs are generally “woefully understaffed” to patrol these rural two-lane highways, said the head of the Michigan Sheriffs’ Association Tuesday, Ingham County Sheriff Kenneth Preadmore, president of the association, noting the Auto Club study of Labor Day holiday deaths, said, “one of the pri: mary missions of the sheriffs of Michigan is to patrol these so-called 'back roads’ where toe fatal accident rate is extremely high.” • "At toe same time>” he added, “our last annual report showed that the average sheriff to Michigan is woefully understaffed to perform this vital task.” Preadmore urged the state and county board of aupervisors to increase spending “to provide the manpower and equip- dow-jone* averages . ment to.develop an adequate'M°mdustriatt * Assets— 10J47,027442.51 13J0M14JM.7* .. Includes I64hl65.768.40 debt net subject to statutory limit. an Wed. 'ey. Day ■ek Ago ,.JWl Ago Vojsr Ago 1760 High 1760 low BOND AVERAGB5 id tar Tho Associated Press 7i i « It IB 10 Ram lad. UHL Fta. LYd. 66.1 18.4 01.2 07J 0L7 “ * “' «.t 07J It J 70.4 «L5 __ 00.7 11.4 .... HR 64.0 14.3 71.4 00.0 73.0 75.0 M.7 72.5 07.4 64J 04.1 — ’ - ■ — % USGypsm 3a * •/- » m vn 47 72% 72 ~ % US Smtlt ib 1« g* *2* 1*% l0%+ % Uplohn 1.60 14 46 45% 46% - % 40 . 41% —1% , . . 3 B% 22% S% + % Vartan Ass*. 34 Igg/t 2f% 25% mum pay raise, but declined to reveal present salaries. William Dunham, president of the GEA, called the board’s action “shockmg.’VlH I . ..,.t. 4r Bruce added that the three schools in the district would remain closed on a day-by-day basis. The opening of . school to Charlevoix was postponed for a week. Monday after sis by the Auto Club showed 83 per cent of this year’s Labor Day weekend totalities happened on two-lane state and county roads at speeds too fast for road conditions. ^ . Eighty per cent of the fatalities, Rehm said, happened with-.emhosEoetaoshrd ties, Rehm said, happened within 25 miles of the Stiver’s home, not on a long holiday trip. 176 42% ___ ______ % VarIM Asso _____104% 104% + *• * “* 4 23% 34 12 31% 31% 31% — % 170 I £ VseIpw^I-OO 30 «% 3% 32% .... as m m-» _w—x—y—z— ^ + % WsmLsmb 1 3| «% S% jj% + M S ii% 3T 31% I %:W9SW«1J.20 iM|RH| ..In AlrL 1 i Banc 1.20 0 31% 31% MM + Jiia “ 110% M ig T ---N---- Whfrici 1.40 51 22' 31% 32 +M ^UJJWjJ TO* 466k 46% 44% -%'Jinnu'x '•» 1 51% 51% n% -M,$2SSb140 50 126% 125% 126% ..... VS 7 23% 22% + > ' Jy£,«K* 1.60 *3 3Mb 37 32% S% jj% + % 7f 2W? TO* ig ^2% IS? I 47 ! Salts llflures / M.Imi nther 1 Stetel 2. 1 TW .6. i/adaPw 1 ...srborry .60 MSngEI 1.40 HOwmnt .2.60 l-l® NorfolkWst 6 NqAmRock 2 MOWQBO 2.60 fior Itet 2.60 NoStaPw 1.6* t Air J nd Johnson nP wsharp Fansteal Inc 'R*M07k .60 Fed Mog SSy* Flrestne 1.50 FstChrt 1.241 Fllntkota 1 -,*■ cP Pin* 37 77% H % +,'t 20 32 M% wik'ii'ik S 41% 4^k 41% + % wrA i 35 67% 40% 47 + % 36 If l|)b If + % 26 20% 20% 28% +;% » 41% 41% Ml* 1 32 17% »M MM 17 fM* 30% ipk . . 132 35 33% M +1M (b 40% 37% <40% — it m mi «o. .... m 42 41% £_ + ForMcK .75 FreepSul 1.40 FruMCg 1.70 I 36% 51% WP\- & P .^ 35% 36...+ S mi ii% in* - % -us- #p jili xa SilFS Illfli4 a- c 1 Is ; i i, K 25 25. 37 22^4 22Mi 22V* . - 12 IS 14% 1* + % 3 42% 42% «% — % 7 31% 30% 30% —1% ai rMUllr xl3 31% . 28% 28% .+ % r0|towing footnotes » «% M% 63% sSHT oxtroe. Czech Scientist at Stanford U. Denies Defection STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — A Czechoslovakian Scientist denies that hi defected to the United States. ” > Dr. Jan Klein, an authority on transplantation genetics, made the denial Tuesday to a state- Rehm said his organization, goNDiT ................ also would call for temporary *5* posUngGOf 50 mile-per-hour];® limits on two-lane roads 110 imfuatrigis during the day and 45 m.prh. limits at night, “with adequate police manpower” to enforce the limbs. A 14 per cent rise to totalities throughout the state this year and a 40 per cent rise to totalities to Detroit, he said, are paralleled by a drop to the amount of police manpower 703.7343.42 251.0740.06 130J640.10 322.3240.60 0476+0.14 Coming Gil Dow Cnornl RBI* rte* Record Mi* , INCREASED _ JS .. 7-27 IMS REGULAR M • 7-17 IM0 Gloss Wks .625 Q 7-14 *7-30 .40 Q 7-30 1M0 requested. the -delay to given fact-finder time to review con-tract proposals. PAY PLAN SPURNED . Teachers have rejected salary hikes from $748 to $1,390 in 11 steps and raises of $1,057 to $1,553 for a master’s degree. Jackson-school teachers Monday approved a new two-yeaT contract giving starting teachers with a bachelor’s degree $6,775 annually. The minimum scale will be boosted to $7,300 Chippewa Valley - were University Medical M Rsiser Ce. scheduled to open.until Thurs- ncws . re“ ' ■lYffiS’day. But authorities held little] Q—I’m a widow living on dividend* for toe most part, hold 1,87$ shares of Utah 6»stniction« a family Investment going back for two ' admit “ Q—My husband’s company is merging, and the profit-sharing plan is to be discontinued. Ho will have to take hh stake,and we both are troubled by the feet that reinvesting this money will raise our Income tax liability tog about purchasing tax-exempt bonds, ai we are already per cent ?, surgB 17 53% M% 53 30 30% 30 30 30 43 42% 427 Nort Simon ... Norwich JO QRCWant ,40b OMoEdls 1.42 OkteGE 1.04 Hi 112 * OlInMat 1.20 Omork IJIt Ott* EMv 2 fi&rrjj- 42% + % HHH 2 30% 30% '30%' sfa* 34 38% 37% 30% +1% 4 ai* TS,/ Cl V, osttaBtart cash y«Juo « •x-*jyl*Jtel k.ui I__ML ijd PacTAT 170 PanASul 1.50 Pm Am <4K Panh EP 160 ParkaOavis 1 PormCan J.40 PannOix .60b <15 20% 20% 20% + % 30 . 35% 34% am 1C 30 26% 26 26% +1% S 32% 32% 32% + % IS 61% 63% 63% -P-y- *'■’ so w*1 a . a% . H 15 ' 27% 27% 27% +. % OO. «M.. il Mte . ,, W ■'»% 33% Wb + % 11 21% 21% 23% — % . 70 »%' Ink 27% + % in 20% 20% 10% 7 35% 15% 35% ' ' # » 20% 20% nun r piim PhllaEI 1.64 m PbBf Pot 2.60 103 65 pjpyfi fM 'll 170% DM 170% + % 54 43 63 63%--- *«M 3 . + ji% si M% + 44 aSwJXUrSiffi ibuted. wl—Whan Isa—* HiMf;,!?. As?. vl—In bankruptcy < panics, terest a recalverthlp or _______________________ ttw SaBkruptcy Act, or soewmm assumed by such c— lies, tn—Foreign Issuo sublsct to . ^ ment. I need mure income and i »» .. . • c»an kave been adviied to sell nil wM aver the BVMIIhvi that contracts would beL le*™A*L1!^h a2ato^m>art of Utah Constructiin. What bracket. Could you name a few, m** ,n am) fHo W«,1H nnnnlj^d ^ 8 ^ do yOU S8y? - V. P.. |»nd d» _yW ap$|fl«----------- that arrangements for Ms trip Ar-I say you have been well had been made seven months advised. You have over ago. {$100,000 of capital returning U S. and Japanese officials, barely 2 per cent ip dividends said he “obviously" was h de-land another $4,000 to Kaiser fector, but a U.S. Embassy Cement yielding i per cent, I spokesman in Tokyo declined to shall not repeat here what I r,in«gjfy him officiaUy as a de-have recently recommended for jagw otiier readers wfth yow sun# ■ , [problem. Tiough sentiment has . no place ih the stock market, ! hi . D>S*( (appreciate your feelings and News III D1I61 isuggest that you cut back to 600 « , j <» - .1-{Utah Construction., Tien con- (3cero Bates of 196 Hnghci iS}^er gQme 0j my elections tor signed and the doors would openl 1 schedule. * ★ it Districts which failed to open today included Bedford, Jefferson, Lincoln Park, River Rouge, Romulus, Trenton, Ecorse and Taylor. Districts that filed to open Mtmday included Adams Township, Charlotte, Northville, Oscoda, Riverview, Willow Run, and Heintzen. Stocks of Local Interest OVUR THE COUNTIR STOCKS Quotations from the NASD at* representative Inter-Peeler prices of epprext-'msteiy 11 a. tn. Inter-dealer markets : change .throughout the day. Prices do 1 not inefirie retell markup, markdown or , ,7 «■ u, - u sioer some oi my sencumg told Pontiac policy yesterday reinvestment o{ your capitai. that someone entered hte hofjpe your ^pany is in a strong by unknown means andstole a earnings uptrend an(j has in. stereo-radio valued at $300. ........... • Mi _ 65% + % 35 17% 17% 17% . oneV McManua tohStMilfheUteld^ won't ®v»n head and lt won’t off, it won’t t° • *V.” • Miss McM“uS funded twice ?^ho had been j { ^ house \the hip. ran ned they went to the bJJMr ”atUk^ in get the suitcase were only downaW’ minutes whej I a like a thump two tj® screamed three tim^, who W“oiice in jSeS ment had E081® Wtne report' shooting^ > ‘SBSSHSL Ike's Progressing, 'Final' Dunes Effort OK'd so Doctors Stop Daily Bulletins W A SHIN U 1 vrw 7 — Dwight D. Eisenhower’s/ progress recuperating from his sev- enanj^M^«_»a®hed Point where doctors have topped issuing daily bulletins. Por_ the second straight day doctors at Walter Reed Army Hospital said Tuesday, “IBs Progress continues io be favorable They added there would he no further word on the 77-year-old general and former President until there is a signet cant nhnnpp m his condition. His latest attack was Aug.'lS, *he fourth ip a series that start-®d AprU 29. pEt34aed Sept. 4 MACKINAC ISLAND Runs guistfy at expressway speeds Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 ScaTS Downtown P0^c • Phone FE 5-4171 Sears SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Never Run Short of Hot Water Thrifty 40-Gallon OAS WATER HEATER $50 -withPriM fFCr Provide* up to 30.2 pllon* of hot water per hour at 100* temperature rise. Clam lined tank; 3HteWtn...4Ml Itl 1 Stage “42” Gaa 40-GAL. WATER HEATER Reg. 79.95 „.With Prict *72 (Jp to 35.3 pi*, per hour at 100' temperature i|*e. Ru*l-proof gla»» lining, fiberglau insulation, safety cutoff. ‘Flame-with-Brain’ 30-GAL. WATER HEATER Reg. 79.95 TakfWilh Prlre M9 Takr-Wilh Frier Gas heater provides up to 44.5 gals, per hour at 100* 44.5 gals, per hour at lOtr tenijielrakure ' riae. Pilot grt' -ind high temperature cutoff. yp Sears Best “75” 40-GAL. 8At HEATER *92 Reg. * : ■ 99.95 TmkrJtlth Prtr* Sear* “flamoorithodMuin” ha* pilot ga* and high temp, cutoff, pilot filter; Save! Sears PONTIAC STORE 154 N. SAGINAW im Bengals Pad League Lead ONTCOLOEl RETURNS SAFELY — Third baseman Sal Bando of Oakland gets umpire Steve Valentine’s decision as he slides back to first base ahead of the tag applied by catcher Bill Freehan of the Detroit Tigers during fourth-inning action of their game in Oakland last night. Bando'overran first base after singling to rijght and Freehan had moved from the plate to back up any'play at first. Tigers won, 6-3. THE PONTIAC PRESS SPORTS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 D—1 Swim Trials C With Record Effort LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) - George Haines doesn’t think it will be too tough a job coaching the U.S. men’s Olympic swimming team, for he says: “Show them the door to the pool. They’ll do the rest.” A record-shattering performance by UCLA’s Mike Burton in the 1,500-meter “freestyle, clipping 20 seconds off the world’s previous best, wound up five days of Olympic trials Tuesday night. “We have better depth in practically every event and the swimmers are more mature,”’ said Haines, the Santa Clara Swim Club mentor who heads up the U.S. staff for the Olympics in Mexico City next month. Burton, 21, a 5-foot-9 inch, Brum senior from Sacramento, Calif., swam the gruelling metric mile in 16 minutes 8.5 seconds. FASTEST 800 Previous best ever had been the \ 16:28.1 by Mexico’s Guillermo Echevarria last July. En route, Burton swam the fastest 800/ meters ever recorded— 8:34.3. John Kinsella, a 16-year-old high school athlete from Hinsdale, 111., was second to Burton and furnished the only competition and that through only about the first 600 meters. - Ktnsetta, a strapping-frfrantt 180,-" finished second in 16:24.4 also bettering the world record. Yale’s John Nelson took third at 16:40.8. • - An indication of the U.S. strength came when a freestyle quartet of Zach Zorn, Steve Rerych, Ken Walsh and Don Schollander swam to a world record in the 400-meter relay the1 sixth ip-■ ternab^l mkrk for the'itew Bdmont Plaza Pool Henry, 6looming Buckingham, Santa Clara) Mika Burton, Arden Hills, Carmichael, Callt.; John Ferris, Arden Hills; Rick Gilbert, Bloomington, Ind.; Gary Hall, Long Beach; Jim unon, Ind:; Charles Mlck-, Ind.; Jackson Horsley. Mitchell Ivey, Santa C Chet Jastremski. Bloomington, Ind.; Brian Job, Santa Clara; Dave Johnson, Philadelphia; William Johnson, Los Angeles; John Kinsella, Hinsdale, llli; Chuck Knorr. Cincinnati. , Philip. Long, Newtown Square Pa.; Kan - McKenna, Ble Nelson, Pom; Douglas "Russell, Arifng^,S^rex*’ Keith Andrew Strank, L Princeton, NJ.I ------------- ---- ----- Beach; Mike Wall, Sente Clare. Peter Williams, East Lansing, Mich-; Bernle wrlghtaon, U.S. _Navy; Win Young, eioct&rietan-Jnd.* Zachary Zorn, ‘Ll(t?Hml*rf>, Kelth Russell, ytrlghtson, , — Veengaed fposs,jr> dbqtCIJL ^ ’ Students Offer 'Olympic7 MEXICO CITY Vfl — Members of the Student Strike Committee have said that if the government responds satisfactorily to their pleas they might cooperate in putting on the 1968 Olympic Games. , In a public announcement published by some of this city’s newspapers the Strike Committee said: —"Once our problems are solved by %e government, students from all university and polytedinic schools will aid the Olympic Organizing Committee actively arid Without pay ” ~ , 7 The students, who have been attacking the Olympic Games, which begin Oct. 12, as put of their campaign to press the government to accept demands ranging from firing of certain police officials to reaffirmation of student autonomy, said ' they personally do not have anything against the Games. “We want Mexico to be calm and to fulfill all of its international commitments. However, we also want true democracy land respect for our constitution,” the, committee said ip the announcement. ■'!MAY SWEEP-.,-■’ • The students said their collaboration with the Olympic Committee may go as far as helping to sweep the streets daily, dean all foe walls wad bouse facades, which they have crudely painted with slogans and anti-government drawings, and ad at interpreters and guides. NorthrtipSparks ligef Win OAKLAND (AP) - Detroit’s Jim Northrup probably will be happy to bid the fair city of Oakland farewell when the Tigers finish their yearly business there tonight. The Athletics certainly will be glad to see him go. ★ * ★ Northrup, who fought his way out of newest season after Yankees Keep Birds on Skids being floored with a fastball, had some more ups and downs Tuesday night before stroking the key hit in a 6-3 triumph over the A’s. GAIN GAME The victory, coupled with Baltimore’s 6-1 loss to the New York Yankees, sent the first-place Tigers .right games in front of the fading Orioles in the AL stretch run. Northrup committed a damaging error in the eighth inning as the Athletics rallied for three runs and a 3-2 edge, * ★ * He then sent home the tying and deciding runs with a single in the ninth, sparking a four-run Tiger comeback. The Detroit right fielder started the night on the downgrade, going hitless in They were timed in 3:32.5, one-tenth better than Zorn, Walsh, Don Havens and Greg Chariton had swam at the Student Games in Tokyo last year. Thirty-eight were named to the swimming and diving squad. A late addition to the diving list was Chuck Knorr of Cincinnati. -TOP QUALIFIERS The first three in each of the swimming events qualified, plus the fourth man in the 100-meters and seven who earned places on the basis of aggregate points. These were Chet Jastremski, 27, of Bloomington, Ind., on his third Olympic squad, Bill Johnson of Los Angeles, Dave Johnson of Philadelphia, Ray Rivero of Santa Clara, Andrew Stenk of Los Angeles, Peter Williams of East Lansing, Mich., and Mike Wall of Santa Clara. Mambari swimming Tuesday; BALTIMORE un — For the first time since he became manager of the Baltimore Orioles, Earl Weaver looked downcast discussing the future. “I’ve got to figure out something to get us out of this slump,” Weaver said after the second-place Orioles had lost a 6-1 decision to the New York Yankees Tuesday night for their sixth loss in eight games. A....! *..* .... “Let’s see,", he said. “We pitch McNally Wednesday, have an off day Thursday, and then come back with Hardin, Phoebus and McNally. If we take all four, maybe we can pick up two games on the Tigers. We still have three his' first three trips to the plate and stranding three base runners in the fifth. He singled to open the eighth — and was‘picked off first — but got back' safely when John Donaldson’s throw hit him in the head: ★ * * With the Tigers clinging to a 2-1 lead in the bottom of the eighth, Joe Keough laced a single to right. Allen Lewis raced home with the tying run and Sal Bando scored from first when Northrup booted the ball. FILL THE BASES But the Tigers filled the bases again in the ninth and Northrup made amends for his miscue with a two-run single to right. Mickey Stanley scored the third run in the inning on a wild pitch and Northrup tallied the fourth on an infield roller, beating the throw to the plate with a sweeping slide. * * . ★ Last May 26 at Oakland, Northrup was hit in the head by,a Jack Aker pitch, but picked himself up and charged the Athletics’ relieVer, setting off a free-for-all that emptied both benches. The victory went to Bat,’Dobson, 5-5, who relieved Earl Wilson in the eighth after Wilson hit his atlxth home, run of the year in the inning before. ★ * ★ Doubles by Stanley and Don Wert, pushed across Detroit’s first run in the third. * * ★ meet the A’s In a makeup with John Hiller, 6-5, going against Chuck Dobson, 11-12. Hungry Tigers Inch Closer —The countdown hag itarti&l! ,. Any combination of 15 Detroit victories or Baltimore losses will clinch the peniiant for the Tigers. The Tigers now have an eight game lead with 22 games left to play, the same as Baltimore. DETROIT Baltimore Boston . - -........ - -Chicago; f, 10, II, .U-qf Washington; 13, 15, 15-at Cleveland; 16, IT, 18- at Boston; 20. 21, 23—Chicago; 23, 24, 25—Detroit; 24, 27—Cleveland. Sunday Game for Firebirds While the Pontiac Firebirds were still attempting to fill the gap at quarterback, signal caller Bill Harrington, out with injuries for the past three weeks, engaged in light workouts yesterday. The Pontiac gridders meet Ypsilanti at 4 p,m. Sunday at Wisner Stadium hoping to get back into the Midwest Football League title chase. * ★ , * , Head coach Tom Tracy indicated' he has been talking to several quarterbacks hoping to fill the void which resulted when Bob Pomeroy followed Harrington on the injury list. After winning 13 straight games, the Firebirds were hit with Injuries and have lost to Dayton and Lackawanna, the twe--current MFL leaders. The week off has helped mend many of the injuries, according to Tracy. Kosco 1b - . . . . Cox 3b 3 0ft P______________ - FPttorsn p ’3 0 8 0 Brabandr | Michael pr 0 1 0 0 Wat; p 0 0 0 0 Womack p 0 0 0 0 Vatonflna ph 1 0 0 0 Draboskv P 0 0 0 0 F,Peterson (W,»-»> s 5 Womack it Pltoabus (L,13-14) 5 2-3 5 Brabender ... 11-3 3 Watt ........1 0 ■essr* mm s NAILED AT HOME - New. York Yankee catcher Jak$ Gibbs applies the tag to Baltimore’s Don Buford who tried to score from second on a hit by Frank Robinson in the first inning of their game in Baltimore last night. Outfielder Joe Pepitone fielded Robinson’s hit and . tossed to Horace Clarke who flipped it to Gibbs in time for the putput. Pontiac Driver Gains After Track Accident MILWAUKEE (AP) - Tom Swindell of Pontiac, burned over 20 per cent of his body in a sports car accident at Road America near Elkhart Lake Friday, was reported considerably lm-proved at St. Mary’s Hospital Burnt * Center Tuesday. The hospital listed SwindelFs condition as fair to good. He was injured when hi* car hit. a tree and burst Into flames during a practice run for Sunday’d Canadian-American challenge cup race. HURRY! LAST FEW DAYS OF P0HTIAC RETAIL STORE’S SALE Two Wings Ai Training Camp Set OUT THEY sidelined. Goalie Roy Edwards, 31, is hospitalized with a virus pneumonia in Hamilton, Ont. and will unable to play hockey for about a month. He expects to he.released from the hospital in ai week qr two-; Captain Alex Delvicchio, 36, underwent intoftr unrgery Tuesday for what the club .. described as a “perenennial minor ailment” and is expected to be ready for the opening of camp. Injuries Hamper 'M' Grid Practice ANN ARBOR (DPI) - With six players suffering from a variety of injuries, Coach Bump Elliott put his University of Michigan Wo 1 verine s through a series of hitting drills Tuesday. Despite the aeries of training camp . injuries, Elliott reported hfr football •quad wb8 in good physical shape. Among those stim suffered injuries in the earlier practice sessions was Hon Johnson, the Ibvt string halfback who last year set thq all-time , atagie season rushing record for Michigan with 1,006 yards- He was named captain of the Wolverines frifowlng last season. Comptcfe fid® Out! Mileage and Demonstrator Cars! Hurry-While SELECTIONS Are GREATEST! muffler, chanting ml; for bracket* •fortab I - ' By John Carter Although quarterback* I supposed to bo the brainiest on a football team, it's surprii ScaM Carrieg i CompIete Line oif Tailpipe* and Exhaust Pipes to Fit Most Cars 12-Volt Underdaah Radio Keep tab on the latest newt ana enjoy the latest hits as yot drive alofag. Bnilt-in 4-inch speaker. Bolta neatly under dash. Manual tune. 7-transistor. Chrome plated front. Fits most cars. When your staffs overloaded DETROIT (AP) — Hie-Boston Beacons scored a pair of. second-half goals to nip ted Debpit [ Cougars 2-1 in a North Ameri- day night before 3,229 foifc. The Detroit goid came After 20 minutes In tee first period. Scotland’s Johnny -Kafr beat Boston goalie Walt TtkrnawsU from eight yards out. Boston got its first goal-after three minutes of tee second period. Ruben Sosa’s shot went off a Detroit defender iad info fo# net. Three minutes later, Elik Dyreborg of Denmark scored. AM-FM Portable Car Radio Rag. SI. 95 4-Track Stereo Tape Player Adjustable volume, tone* stereo bal- lu. AS « ■nee. Solid-state amplifier with 8* watt power output- Built-In noise filter and pilot light. '»wav Speakers for Taps Mayer, IAN Pr. WWwW Downtown Pontiac * Phone FE 5-4171 Call with confidence temporary help from MANP0WER Take this Sears AM-FM radio every-wlfar* you. go. Locks into bracket under dash. Ums car battery or “C” cells. 2 speaker*, lighted dial. h D—a THE PONTIAC PRESS, *WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 ^Cardinals Edge Redlegs, 5-3 I pH 11 . Light-Hitting Dodgers Unload Against Phils W j By Ike Associated Press 3 The Los Angeles Dodgers, 3 whose banjo-hitting style of at-5 tack often causes their pitching * staff to sing the blues, suddenly •blasted out a baseball version of £8» Anvil Chorus teat all but cabled the walls qf Connie dfoml '-Mac! ick Stadium. Banjo hitter is a term that refers to a singles hitter, but the Dodgers were anything, but that \ at Philadelphia Tuesday night. They pounded out three ho- mers and five ‘doubles to produce eight runs in the final two innings for a 10-9 victory over the Phillies. Of tee Dodgers’ other four hits, three were singles and one was Ken BoyeVs two-run homer in the sixth. Elsewhere In* the National League, first-place St. Louis topped Cinciimatr5-3 in 11 innings, Pittsburgh edged Houston 3-2, the New York Mets beat Atlanta 4-3 .and then lost to tee Braves 74 iq 12 innings andthei Jim Lefebvre struck out, but Crawford greeted John Boozer Chicago Cubs Francisco 8-3. LEAD-OFF BLAST Willie Crawford led off tee eighth inning by slamming a Dick Hall pitch off tee right field light standard for a homer. Then with one out, Bill Sudakis homered over the right field wall and Boyer hit his second homer; off tee upper left field stands. trounced San pinCh hitter Len Gabrielson walked and Gary Wagper relieved Hall. Tom Haller greeted Wagner with a double, and Ron Fairly dammed a pinch double that scored Gabrielson and Hall and tied the score! 7-7. Philadelphia took an 8-7 lead in the bottom of the eighth when Gary Sutherland walked with the bases loaded, but the Dodgers came right bade with some more cannonading in the ninth. With a double and - scared on Davis’ double. After Sudakis struck out and Boyer popped up, Lefebvre walked and Gabrielson doubled home Davis and Lefebvre. Don Lock homered for tea Phillies in the last of the ninth. St. Louis sent Cincinnati to its sixth straight loss when Curt Flood singled home one run and Roger Maris’ sacrifice fly drove in another in the 11th inning. 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It’s Quick and Convenient at Sears Low Cost Installation* Available Fit* Moil Car* Regular Sale — Lilted Below Price Price 59-64 Chevrolet 15*99 9.66 - 64-67 Corveir— 11-49 -9.66 64- 67 CheveUe 65- 67 Chevrotot 10.99 9.66 65-67 CheveUe, Chevrolet 10.99 9.66 54-64 Chevrolet 11.99 9.66 (MTOaqll, ' 64^7Cli,nU*. 65-67 CkrvraUl .10.99, 9.66 H 60-67 Corveir 10.49 9.66 vs-Ion Auto jack Stand Reg. 4.49 For moot U.S. compact* and other*. 4Vi to 28V'2-inch lift. ; lift* ear ii first of a series «• Big /’m football prospects by Jerry Liska, Chicago AP Spofti Editor on kis 14th annual tea ef midwest camps. Today, Northwestern. By JERRY LISKA S<iX&N, 111. <* - Alex Agase Agase of Northwestern gince jast winter. Thpy :rimpict these toUgh teams, but by the same token they don’t fear them.” for openers, all right,” grinned Agase, “but other people Ore talking more about those first five games than I do. '■ it' -t.M "Our kids, teough, hava been getting ready modally and physically for this nigged start Johnny Bench’s two-out, two-run homer in * the Cincinnati ninth sent the game info extra innings. BEAT ASTROS Pittsburgh heat Houston when Willie StargeU’s 22nd homer snapped a 2-2 tie with two out in the sixth. Houston bad tied, tee game in the previous inning on John Bateman’s run-scoring double and Jose Herrera's RBI single. The Mets Won the opener of their doubleheader by scoring a pair of runs on two fielder’s choice plays in the sei ning. New York get its first two runs on-J. C. Martin’s homer in the second. In the nightcap, Art Sham-sky’s eighth-inning homer tied the score at 4-4, but Atlanta gained the victory when Tommie Aaron singled home two runs’ and" Marty Martinez singled hi another in the 12th. New York came back with two in its half of the inning before Cecil Upshaw got the final out. Ferguson Jenkins won his 17th victory against 12 losses for tee Cubs as Randy Hundley (irove in three runs with a pair of singles and Ernie Banks hit his t^ con~>had knee trouble last springand 27th home. Willie McCovey ^ - - ---- - . w. uit. belted his 32nd homer with i man on, and Bobby Bonds * slammed a solo shot for San , Francisco. didn’t originate tee football g coaching cliche that “you can’t ^ beat the beat unless you play g HAVE EXPERIENCE But tee affable Agase, . 7™ n. starting his fifth Wildest! Charging into tt* frtj WlDbe season, certainly seems to be the most expa^leowad ig a career of stepping Northwestern squad Agasa has into an early season meat-had since he took over in ,1164 tWFfon,' . ' , . when his former boss, ;Ara By the time the campaign is * half finished, Northwestern wili|Parse«hian, shifted have bumped consecutively into Dame. Notre Miami M Florida, Southern California,' Purdue, Notre Dame and Ohio State. It was somewhat similar last _iason, when Northwestern finished 3-7 over-all and 2-5 for eighth in Jhh liig Ten. PLAY MIAMI The Sept. 20 season-opening A senior-dominated array of 26 lettermen, hubbed around two exceptional backs, o Kurzawski and Bob Olson, gives Agase six holdover sterters on offense and eight on defense. , - ★, < it ■ • That quarterback is a question mark, with only slightly- invasion rf Miami is only a hot!*8*®*! Dan8 Woodring back, and humid breather compared . doesn’t seem to bother Agase. (to the back-to-back tangles witb|.Nor ,does the f8ct that'Woodring wc*po .. .. Smm-* « o me iwu tup uauuuai nut tenders, Southern California and Purdue, followed by powerhouse Notre Dame and tee Big Ten’s ready-fbr-bear club, Ohio State. ’’That’s a pretty good hand ' his backup man, Mike .Bryniarski, suffered an ankle fracture in the Spring intrasquad game. ‘'We have a couple of sophomores who could come to Columbus '9' the quarterback front,” said Agase. “They are Darrell SpUtooff, Dave Shelbourne and Dennis Lyons, not necessarily in > Keeping Flag Wooes Alive Agase has a hard core of players as good as any far the Big Ten, but the only privately endowed school in th? con- (I) and May. W—Ellli, 4-4. L—01 12-13. HR—Pltt»burgh, Stargell (22). ' traditionally thin. Kurzawski, one of the most Grangtr 01) add McCarvar; Culver, Car-roll (5), Quota (7), Abernathy (91, McGinn 01), McCool 01), Ritchie 01) and Bench. W—Hoerner, 7-2. L—McGinn. 0-1. HRa—Cincinnati, Rota (*), Bench 02). Flrit Gama Atlanta ..... ...... 001200 000-3 * 0 Now York on 000 20*i4 10 0 d Torre; Seev-ln. W-Soaver. ..._________ .-IR-New York, Martin (2). lacond Gama . Atlanta......... 210 too 000 003-7 1* New York ....... 003 000 310 003-6 12 Britton, Road ^"koRov (10), Up*h< (11) and Torre* Koonco, Ryan (3), Shi.. (7) .Salma (10), Jackoon 02.) Taylor (12) and Greta. W—Upshaw, M. I______Jackson, 3-7. HR—Ntw York, Shamiky (10). By United Press International <0-5 12 0 Although Columbus is 1% versatile'backs in Northwestern ’ " 2 g“**es behind^ Toledo in the. history, heads an array of such international League pennant standout, seniors as Don Denny Net Table Duel On Tap Tonight The Pontiac All Star Table Tennis squad will take on Playboy squad from Detroit this evening at 8 at the Elks Club on Orchard Lake Avenue. The Detroit team will be headed by Graham Steenhoven, president of the United States table tennis association, along with George Buben, president of the Michigan association. race, the Jets are actually one game up in the lass column and, Ken Larsen kept their pennant hopes alive Tuesday night. ★ ★ ★ Larsen 10-6 spun a two-hitter as the Jets topped the Richmond Braves 4-1 to boost their season record to 77-61; Toledo four more victories, 81* hut has lost 62 ’games. Larsen lost his bid for a shutout when Dave Nicholson clubbed his 31st homer in the second inning. The big righthanded slugger now leads the league in home runs. In other action Toledo defeated Buffalo 7-2, Syracuse beat Rochester 1-0 and 3-2 In a twi-night doubleheader, and Louisville took a pair from Jacksonville 5-2 And 8-4. Murphy Rises ‘on Golf Tour - Ex-Amateur Champ in Back-to-Back Wins 254, Angelo Loukas 230 and Tom Ziolkowski 225, interior offensive linemen; Jack Rudnay, 240, defensive tackle; and linebackers John Cornell and Ron Mied. ★ * * Getting back to the subject of plotting a climb from eighth in the Big Ten against the brutal early season start, Ages a asserted: “I’m the kind of coach who thinks every game is important, conference or non-conference. We gear ourselves for every game we play and don’t save ourselves for any game. “One thing, we’ll be able to make a field study of the Heisman Trophy quality of Southern California’s O. ii. Simpson and Purdue’s Leroy [ Keyes. We look at them back-to-iback.” I Next: Minnesota Horse Mart Busy During First Day of Canadian Sale WETHERSFIELD, Con n. (APj-^T don’t miss it at aU ” Bob Murphy said Tuesday* The winner of . two consecutive professional golf tournaments remembered that wily 10 days' ago he was one of tee tour’s afoo^rang who must qualify to play on a week-to-week basis. His victory' at Philadelphia two weekends ago made the rotund former U.S. Amateur champion from Florida one of tee professional golf association’s exempt players, who need not engage in qualifying rounds through tee end of 1969. -- — j His |3D,00d victory Labor Day (ttS fpatMontclairfNJ^ tetheThun-derbird Tournament also made ! stadium ««. W9. 63Q -jMurphy one of tee richest play- | w long and *o th« track it*oK I ers on the lour this year, with * itznssi: ,l*« »*»<■«" <* 1 would tov thov wo I Murphy’s former companions in misery were forced through another hard day of qualifying Tuesday in tee teat preliminary to the 3100,000 Greater Hartford Opai Tournament, which starts here Thursday. TORONTO (AP) --Twenty-nine yearlings arere sold for a total of $652,800 Tuesday on the opening day of the annual Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society’s Sale. Twenty-one* of the yearlings were cosigned by E. P. Taylor of .Toronto, earning the owner of Windfiekis Farm 3521,300. The sale was to continue today, and Thursday with Taylor consigning another 18. Cragwood Stables of ffcwark, N.J., made tee most expensive purchase—384,000 fa* a bay colt by Northern Dancer. Owned by Taylor, Northern Dancer won the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Queen’s Plate in 1354. "There ww h* buyc»T~idi • Northern Dancer-Canadiana filly which had a reserve bid of 3125,000. Detroit Cougars Fall to Boston's Beacons W THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 D-* South African Met Pro Surprises Favo EAST LANSING (UPI) Coach Duffy Daugherty liked th* first- dav of hie Spartan’s contact drills Tuesday and WINNING SWING - Mrs. John Kerr follows through on a shot for the cameraman, flashing a swing that carried her to victory in (hit Bloomfield Hills Country ClUb ladies tournament. Mrs. Kerr won 3-2 over Mrs. N. H. McCuen. FOREST HILLS, N Y. (AP) This may be the era of long-hairs and youth in tennis but a conservative, 33-year-old Australian with a neat $2 trim is the new favorite to collect the f16,000.first prise in the tJ.S. Open Championship. 'Now Hut Rod Laver is out of it, you have to pick Ken Rose-wall,” said Arthur Ashe, the new U.S. amateur champion, who might have spoken i few words in his own behalf after a straight-set victory * over Roy Emerson of Australia. Laver, winner at Wimbledon, king of Hie pros for the last three years and No. 1 seed here, was unceremoniously dumped Rom the competition Tuesday by Cliff Drysdale, a 29-year-old rookie pro from South Africa who hits a backhand the way Mickey ManUe swings a baseball bat. DOUBLE FAULTS The score was 44, 6-4, 3-6,6-1, *6-1. Laver’s serving collapsed and he delivered 14 doublefaults, five In the'final set. Ro6ewall, who was champion of the pros before the appearance of Laver, playS big Ron Holmberg of Highland Palls, N.Y., today in one of the remaining four men’s fourth round matches. In the others, Pancho Gonzales, 40, the onetime king of the courts, faces second-seeded Tony Roche of Australia; Tom Okker, the'giant-killer from Hie Netherlands, opposes Britain’s Peter Curtis, and Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield, Calif., faces Nicola Pilic of Yugoslavia, who put out Charlie Pasarell. Two more women will enter the semifinals. Hie favored Billie Jean King of Long Beach, Calif., the Wimbledon winner, {days Maryna Godwin of South Africa and Margaret Smith Court of Australia takes on Maria Bueno of Brazil, thd girl she whipped last week for the U.S. amateur title. The winners meet for a finalist spot. A pair of British girls clash ih the other semifinal. They are second-seeded Ann . Haydon Jones, who beat Peaches Bart-kowicz of Hamtramck, Mich., 1M, 6-3, and hard-serving Virginia Wade, victor over Judy Tegart of Australia 6-3, 6-2. The elimination of Laver provided the tournament’s big shock Tuesday but two others, Newcombe and Raison, had narrow escapes. Newcombe, seeded fourth, was three points from elimination once in a 3 hour, 45 minute match, he won from bearded Tor ben Ulrich of Denmark 4-6, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-1. Ralston was down to little Joaquin Loyo-Mayo of Mexico in a delayed third round match before ning 9-11, 6-2, 3-6, 7-5, 6-1. TOURING EIGHT Drysdale, Newcombe and Ralston all are members of Lamar Hunt’s so-called Handsome Eight touring troupe (now numbering nine with the addition of Marty Riessen). So are Pilic and Roche, meaning the Hunt gang has five survivors left ' the tournament. Duffy Happy With Spartans' Workout promised the squad at least another week of the hard-hitting* work. After three days of conditioning work without pads, the 1968 Spartans spent Tuesday morning and afternoon in light contact work — mostly one-on- The Spartans’ number one quarterback, Bill Feraco, was put through a series of passing drills in the afternoon! Feraco, a senior, and sophomore quarterback Gordon Longmire spent the afternoon flinging short passes to split end; A1 Brenner, ■ flankerbacks Frank j Waters and Charley Wedemeyerj and tight end Frank Foreman. | Golf Champs Crowned of Golfing crowns were handed out qt several clubs over the weekend. At Bloomfield Hills, Mrs. J. S. Kerr won the ladies championship with a 3 end 2 nod over Mrs, N. H. McCuen, and 16-year-old Jack Murtagh took the club’s jtaiior title with a 2 and victory over 15-year-old Jdhn Quad. Mrs. Flora Schwartz posted a 64-hole score of 259 to win the ladies tiHe at Tam O’Shanter. Mrs. Morton Wholman was second with a 266. In the men’s play at Tam, 17-year-old Elliott Spoon became the youngest plsyer ever to win the club, title when he downed Bruce Carnick in the 36-bole finals, 4 and 3. The junior crown went to 15-year-old Louis Meldman who carded Steve Fishman was medalist in the men’s tournament with a 75-' 61-156. At Plum Hollow, Tom Rex took the club title with a 6 and 5 win over Don Stevens. Rigney Offered iongOontract Angels Manager Also in Line to Move Up ANAHEIM (AP) — California Angels” owher Gene Autry has offered Manager Bill Rigney a multi-year, contract and chance to own stock in the American League club, informed sources said today. Rigney, now wrapping up his 12th year as a major league manager and the senior pilot in the junior circuit, reportedly broke a golf date today to confer with a-tax consultant and stock broker about the offer. Hie 50-year-old manager has v worked under one-year contracts with the Angels since Vets Feel Gridiron Ax as '68 Season Nears By the Associated Press Youth must be served, and none know it better, than the batch of pro footbai] veterans who got their walking papers Tuesday. - Among the jobless were Buffalo fullback Wray Carlton, the American. Football League club’s all'time rushing leader, and Bob Scarpitto of Denver, the AFL’s leading punter the past two seasons. Others who got the pink slip included Washington defensive back Jimmy Bur son, a six-year veteran of the National League for whom the Redskins traded during the off-season; offensive guard Bookie Bolin of the ” York Giants, another six-year man who played on two Eastern C d n f e r e n c e championship teams, and Baltimore defensive back Jimm/ Welch, who had survived eight campaigns. WAS TOP CHOICE A couple of big-name youngsters also got the ax. Washington asked waivers on fullback Ray McDonald, the team’s No. 1 draft choice a year ago. And Boston gave up on quarterback Don Trull, a three-year veteran acquired from Houston in an effort to shore up the Patriots’ of- fense. __________ That handed the signal-calling job to Mike Taliaferro, obtained fromjhe New York Jets several weeks ago for, Babe Palilli, and rookie Ton Sherman, a rookie free agent from Penn State. McDonald, a 245-pound bruiser from Idaho.was philosophical about'his Teiease; although he averaged 4.3 yards in 52 car-season despite missing six games because of injuries. New Champion on Golf Team NEW YORK (AP) - Bruce Fleisher, the freshly crowned U.S. Amateur champion from B ! .... . Miami, Fla., was named Tues- their birth in the league s 1961 day to the four-man American “I hope no other NFL team puts in a claim for me,” he said. "I want to make the Redskins’ squad. I know I can play football, but I need more experience.” • If no one claims him, McDonald Will play with the Virginia Sailors of the Atlantic Coast League. Carlton and Scarpitto also said they try to hook on other clubs, Ciriton, 31, joined. Buffalo when the AFL was born in i960 and gained 3,868 yards over the years. SET RECORD Scarpitto, who also has played split end oh occasion, set an AFL record of 45.8 yards per punt in 1966 and averaged 44.9 last year, including a 73-yarder, longest in AFL history. With the AFL getting under way this weekend, Bo learned that fullback Jim Nance' has only a 5040 chance of playing in Sunday’s opener at Buffalo. The hard-running Nance sprained an ankle in Monday’s exhibition loss to Philadelphia. He led the AFL in rushing in 1966 with a record 1,458 yards and again last season with 1,216. I In San Francisco! veteran John Brodie was. handed the 49ers’ quarterbacking job by' (teach Dick- Nolan, beating off another challenge from George Mira. ARMSTRONG THE SAFE 4-PLY NYLON expansion. Before thatr^romJ^sw~-fBr the World Amateur 1956 to 1900, he managed the National League Giants both in Near York and San Francisco. Autry also reportedly assured Rigney that he is next-in-line to succeed Fred Haney as the dub’s general manager. Haney, 70, reeenHy said be fads given no thought to retirement . Doesn't Need Flag Robert Morse didn’t need a flag to score a hole in one it Sylvan Glen yesterday. Morse, of Fenton, used a 5-iron on the ,157-yard No. 16 hole for his ace. He shot a. 45 for the nine. The 'phi was missing from .the hole. Holly Golfer Scores VU» Adams of Holly fired an the No. 1 bote, a 199-mtar, at Davisburg Golf Chib nr the weekend with a 4-Iron, e carded a 35 for the nine. team Golf Championships Melbourne, Australia, Qct.>12; The others named fay the U.S. Golf Association are Marvin Gilesm, 25, of Lynchburg, Va. who was second fay one stroke to the 19-year-oU Floridian in the amateur championship; Jack W. Lewis Jr,, -21, Of Florence, S.C., seventh in the amateur and a Walker Cup player in 1967; and Richard L. Siderowf, 31, of Westport, Ctehn., the tew amateur in the U.S. Open championship. William C. Campbell of Huntington, W. Va., a former U& Amateur diampion mid Walker Gup captain, was named non-playing captain. Rough riders Win REGINA, Saskatchewan (AP), — The Saskatchewan Roughrid-ers used a running and passing attack to defeat Edmonton 29-2 Monday te a Canadian Football League game . . , - j BRAND NEW ALL WEATHER IV Any one of these Sizes 0ME UW PRICE 1.11x11 L1M4 Ufc1< $1 095 Btackwall IC Tubeless WhRewsttsHMore EASY CREDIT NO MONEY DOWN Matthews-Hargreaves Chevy-Land 10th ANNUAL EVENT. We at Matthews-Hargreaves Chevy-Land have hundreds of new 1968 Chevrolet Cdrs and Trucks to bn sold and SELL ’EM WE WILL! Once Again It's Red Tag Days at Matthews-Hargreaves One of Michigan’s Largest Automobile Sales Events.. Choose fmm a big selection of new 1968 Chevrolets in stock. Many cars and tracks in stock are ready for immediate delivery. Come early for best selections! TMs Is What You Get When You Buy Now! 2. MUCH LARGER TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE on your present ear sothot wemay build up our ttock. - 3. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY within the same day on mart cars be-causa of our raadinoss to handle a fast flew of cars at this time with extra help an our sains staff end extra mechanics in our garage far Martas. Matthews- Hargreaves HATES TO RE UNDERSOLD! BUY NOW SMEM-SJiOWI- DON’T MISS OUT ON THIS ONCE-A-YEAR SALES EVENT !!! Immediate delivery on most cars and trucks in stock. A wide selection of body styles and colors. DEMONSTRATORS AND MILEAGE CARS AT HUGE DISCOUNT PRICES! Savings Service ngglnit MATTHEWS Hargreaves 631 Oakland at Case, Pontiac Michigan's Largest VeUune Chevrolet Dealer FI5-A16I m: THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 Boston Defeats Twins, 4-1 Red Sox Are Ready to Concede to Champ Chuvalo Wins Easily Over Forte MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) ; By The Auociated Press jeacli drove In two runs and I Canadian heavyweight cham-l Bogton Manager Dick Dick Ellsworth pitched his way plon George Chuvalo, 210%,!^ Tu conceded Wsj(wt of two bases-loaded jam* as bulled his way to an easy sec-: I . , . 1 _ ,l . the defending American League »« b'”M lhtir "»j over Miami’s Levi Forte, 193,j^e came within a whisker oft**8 . ^ ^day nighty , j conceding the pennant to De- ^ m U- >home Chuvalo indicated he had an| "We’re not out of it mathe-|ffter F°y singled in the fourth early ending in miBd in the matically,” said Williams after:}""1^'stakin8 the Red Sox to a opening minutes of the sched-!his third-place Red Sox stopped13-0 Ieaa- . uled 10-round bout. He swarmed'Minnesota 4-1 in a 514-inning alt over Forte, had the Miami!game halted by rain. “But it Then Foy singled off the left boxer back stepping, and scored will be awfully tough to catch field fence with the bases loaded heavily whenever he had Forte!them.” in the fifth for another run to pinned to the ropes. I ★ * ★ finish JJpf Merntt, 1M5. Carl ★ * ★ “We had our chances with De-1 YaStrzdmski held up at second About a minute into the sec- troit and didn’t fare too well,"jon Foy’s drive mid wag thrown, ond round, Chuvalo set Forte up he added. "We’re just trying to out at home. I with a hard right to the chin, maintain what we’ve got.” J Boston had scored afun in tnej Forte retreated to a corner. In other American League atv Brat on Foy’s RBI single. Chuvalo barraged him and setjtion,, Washington beat Chicago * * * him down for a nine count. [2-1 and Cleveland thrashed Cali-j Minnesota scored in the fourth ★ * ★ . ifornia 7-2. [on Nettle;’ double, a single by The loss was the 16th for! * * IRick Renick and Jerry Adair’s! Forte in 38 pro starts. ! Reggie Smith and Joe Foy error at shortstop. An infield j single by Cesar TOvar loaded' the bases after the nm seored, but Ellsworth, got out of it when Reese grounded back to the mound. > i£The Yankees caught up withj Tom Phoebus, an old nemesis, jin handing the Orioles their sixth setback in eight games, j Phoebus, who took a 6-0 lifetime record against New York Into the game, blanked the j BIG TRIPLE | Russ Snyder drove in three Left-hander Fritz Peterson I runs with a single and^his third protected the margin until the j homer and Lee Maye also hom- BOSTON MINNESOTA lb r h bl »b r I Andrews 2b 3 12 0 Tovai Adair ss * - - I ~-v-itrmskl If 2 0 0 0 Reisse lb Foy 3b 3 13 2 RsMbers c R Smith cf ,21)2 Noll let rf Gibson c 3 0 0 0 Renick ss Scot* 1b 2 0 0 0 Quillci 2b Elliworth p 2 0 0 0 Merritt p BMIIIar p .1 0 0 2 1-4 0 0 0 1 0- N LOB—Boston ninth, when Roy White’s bases-loaded triple* and Robinson’s second RBI single wrapped It up. Peterson, 9-9, was hit by a pitch in the ninth and Dooley Womack finished up. ered, leading the Indians past the Angels. Southpaw Sam CHICAGO - M r It M Aparlclo ss 3 0 0 0 Mctiowell, 14-11, needed late re- Yanks on one infield single untillwho had inherited a bases-load- ......... ........ [the sixth, when they knocked jed jam from starter Cisco Car-.itefrhelp frpm Vicente Romo, him out and grabbed a 2-1 leadl]08 j on a walk and four singles.' | , * ~ # * abrh bl J 3 3 2 Davallllo cf 3 0 0 0 0 too Freaosl it 4 2 2 0 4 123 Relcnardt It 4 0 2 1 CALIFORNIA HB eorhbl .Move’ll 8(&H} Mvls 3b . ’301 0 BrouW St 40 0 0 4 2 3 0 __ | 2 1 1 0 Cottier 3b > 0 0 0 Krkptrlck MGIOthln | Mmo 1 Morton rf 3 010 ill* Fuller 2b MDoWell Roftto p 0 1 0 _ . 0 Knoop 2b 0 0 0 Hinton tb * * * Satrlano c « « ■ £ajj2j — ?ll„ lift ■■ Iffii Edit p—^-111# Mlncher ph 10'' Champ Eying Nevvlineyp bn Dragv/ays INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -Drag racing is readyteBpjit into separate amateur and prq-fessional groups, says threetime national champion Don Guilts. ‘ “Drag racing can go to total tirafeiSionaJism” said the 36-year-old former Detroit resident who moved to Tampa, Fla., to escape “thode obnoxious winters.” E—Tovar. ________ ______________ Minnesota 7. 2B-Nettlet.HR-R.Sn (11), S—Adair. IP H R ER Bl Ellsworth (W.13-6) 5 6 1 1 Merritt . tinydsr, McDoweii, off tjje track,” he said, single in the sixth overcame o >«» » •& “ » “He has as much right te run 1-0 Chicago lead and Joe Cole- , ______eoU* p . iH * I {' i i as me. You’ve got to let them man , made it stand up with a tjw 20141 Totji 0 0 t race or they’ll go back to the four-hitter as the . Senators wbSB&ibp' "....000002 mI*i MBLJ. « \UJL} L 4 * streets.” climbed within one game of the | wS&in&Sn T jb-w wniiSSfw *•■ - - -ninth-place White Sox. ---, ] 0»^*. s^p«rieio. - H RER| | Carlos . (L.4-13) ' Cullen delivered the 'winning aSKinM riwavM ‘ l—Josephton. AUTO DISCOUNT CENTER SAVE FROM 4.95 TO 14.95f ON A 36 MONTH OUARANTEED PREMIUM* TIRE *Grsde, line, level or quality representation relates to private standard of marketers. No industrial standard exists tor premium but this is a FISK Premium Tire OFF OUR REGULAR SELLING PRICE _____#1--------- New York 4, Baltimore 1 Washington 2< Chicago 1 Cleveland 7," California 2 Boston 4, Minnesota 1, S Innings, rain Datrblt s, Oakland 3 Taday's Gamas Detroit (Hiller 4-5) at Oakland (Dobson 11-12), night Clavaland (Tlant 18-2) at California ---------- Wl^njght ^ Cater' Sak " seriama MK nigm Davaflllo Cal New York (Bahnson 140) at Baltimore Carew Min ............... ....-----!T-----------l—' “"fan D,t FISK PREMIER SPORTS SPECIALl 4-PLY - TUBELESS • NYLON CONDI 36 MONTH GUARANTEE , ANY SIZE LISTED! FISK PREMIER 4-PLY • TUBELESS • NYLON CURB 36 MONTH GUARANTEE ANY SIZE LISTED! $1 Plus Federal Excise Tu and trade-in lira. BUCKWAUf TiiBiiiftt tint NKNo PRICK KACH 5.60x15 19.95 5.50/5.90/ 4.00x15 20.75 Plus Federal Excite Tu and trade-in tire. I HIM P.I.T. i ra ANY SIZEh“-| 22.95 I 23.45 23.95 1 FISK PREMIER 4-FLY • TUBELESS • NYLON C0RD | 36 MONTH GUARANTEE ANY SIZE LISTED! 22 Plus Federal Excite Tu aad trade-in tire. _ a^$/y.Miis 3i.es GarHts became te f It st three-time champion on Labor Day when he. spun his Dodge powered, AA-fuel dragster to a b 11st eying' one-quarter-mile speed of 228.7 miles an hour. v It was Garlfts’ second straight victory at Indianpolis Raceway Park. His first was in 1964. Yastrzemskl Bin Andrews'* Bsn F. Howard Was 125 453 67 129 .285 135 512 70 145 .283 130 488 52 138 .283 126 421 38 119 .283 130 491 45 131 .251 fa gtt n ITT a __jton (Ball IB-10) (Chance 13-13), nlaht Thursday's Games Chicago a» Washington, night only game scheduled. National League ' Wan Loot I Minnesota Campaneris Oak 138 558 75 155 .271 ward, Washington, 39; K.Harralson, n, 33; W.Horton, Detroit, 3T# RDIIkson, Oakland, 26; Fowefl# Baltimore, 21; Fraehan, Detroit, 21. Runs Batted in K.Harralson, Boston, 1B2; F. Howard,' Washington, 98;i Northrup, Detroit, 79; Powell, Baltimore, 78; W.Horten, Detroit, hiladelphia . 65 74 .468 23Va louston 64 77 .454 25V% lew York .......... 44 7* -M* 24Vi 01 Angelet 40 TV .432 28Vi Tueedoy's Retuiti Chicago 8) Son Francisco 3 Pittsburgh 3, Houston 2 Los Angolas 10, Philadelphia 8 , St. Louis J, Cincinnati 3, 11 Innings Boston, 8^1, .482) McNally, Baltlmoro, 18-8, .482; Culp, Boston, 11-3, <>•- Elliworth, Bostc Bl Based on lit al Today's Oamts ■— ,tj—o-o (Nyo 5-1? • San Francisco (Herbal 0-0 and Me- f Jormlck 10-13) NMira 13-9), 2 . . Angeles (Sutton 4-U) L, Jackson 12-14), night ■UP Louis (Brlles 17-9) i (Maloney 11-8), night scheduled. Thursday's Gams > scheduled. 123 304 44 144/.324 138 371 44 1W J11 124 420 48 120 J8f 131 341-44 141 .287 140 313 48 133 .287 121 418 41 143 .287 127 43t 34 129 .283 138 3(0 14 148 .281 Tuesday's Fights ly The At—“■ MIAMI BEACH, 310W, Toronto, sto ! McCovty, San Francisco, 32) I Philadelphia, 21) Banks, Ch i H.Aaron, Atlanta, 24; Santo, C B.Williams, Chicago, U. Runs B“"—1 •“ , . ....__ McCovey, San Francisco, By The Associated Press Chicago, 4* - ■ — -George Chuvalo,Iperel, Levi Forte, 192, | Philadelphia. 77; H.Aaron, Atlanta, 27. "-igmon Lewis, 141, Los ll^Dadsfins Shelly Lyons, 141, LasIMarlchsl. San Francisco, 24-7, .7741 AnO*let! 10:'Bobby Rodriguez. 120, Bast Gibson, St.Louts, 20-4, .748; Kline, ins Angeles, outpointed Victor Jlmlnez, Pittsburgh, 11-4, .733; Blass, Pittsburgh, 127, Tlfuana, Mexico, It. 13-3, .729; Ragan, Chicago, 164, .714. Horse Racing klfprices plus Federal Eiciie T#« end trede-ln tire. WEDNBSOAY ENTRIES 1st—tiooo Cond. 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SS.BB SACM Jk OS a #AV* ONtvi Wf QQ ALEMITE CD 2 66* REO. PRICE ■ 97* ■ | MVS ONLYI 43-1225 43-1226 VOLTAGE REGUUTOR $6.97 Jt QQ Rag. Price4.97 ■ - -t—-j, - 34-2000 Special at Only 3,97 REG. 29c SERVICE MOTOR OIL m 30 Wt. Only AUTO RADIO rig. price #RR32M ^rl9.88 71*1001 PtOd Inetallalion - Perfect!: (4,7) Paid 351.00 7th—siooo Cpnd. Pace; 1 mil NorthCP 5eatty - X40 3.00 G Extra Expanse . ___ 0 Opt. Twtn DouMc: (PI) Paid I100.M 4IN£«M| AHawanc•; 4 Furlangsi Evening Edition 13.20 3 GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD II 1 Mila M Yards: -SAB 4.00 2.10 ; 17JB 4:90 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 D—8 jUtHf the Outtjcw- Trail with DON VOGEL—Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Pres* Commission Action Due Thursday Streamlined Fish Regulations Proposed The Conservation Commission Thursday will consider a streamlined package of proposed changes which would simplify the state’s fishing regulations for 1969. The one day meeting will be at Caberfae near CadSlac at 9 a.m. Some of the revised measures recommended by Conservation Department fisheries men are restrictive, aimed at improving the quality of sport-fishing and providing greater protection for species which need it. Restrictive or liberalized, the proposals generally are being offered for the sake of greater uniformity and to m a k e Michigan’s fishing rules easier to understand. season on trout and salmon in Others are in the liberal vein, designed to allow more angling action when and where rules can be relaxed without hurting fish populations. the Great Lakes; 2) Extend the regular inland trout season through September rather than closing it the first Sunday after Labor Day; 3) Lift the closed RECOMMENDATIONS season on trout in inland lakes .other than designated trout Among the recommended|lakes, changcs-are three which would -stretch the special fall 1) Eliminate the closed fishing I season on salmon and'steeltieaT in designated streams to the end of December; 5) Set a uniform season on muskellunge, northern pike, walleyes, and saugers running from May IS through the end of February, except that the muskellunge season in Lake St. Clair would be from the first Saturday of June through Dec. 15. *r the heading of creel iieaJt ”--Gnder Quarantine Set for Hatcheries A blanket quarantine on all commercial fish-rearing firms in Michigan has been imposed as the latest tightenlng-up measure to check toe possible spread of a deadly fish disease recently discovered at three private trout farms within the state. Under an emergency order Conservation Director Ralph MacMuilan issued to the state’s ICO fish-breeding businesses, owners of these operations are barred from moving any trout and salmon stock or eggs in and out of their facilities without having special permits duly issued by the Conservation Department. The “freeze” remains in effect until Nov. 16 at which time the department will, under a new law, establish a comprehensive set of permanent rules to regulate private fish-rearing operations^: The source of trouble is “whirling disease,” a highly fatal infection‘which was first uncovered at the Roundhouse Trout Earn at Kalamazoo by the Conservation Department. It was quickly traced to Round- house’s brandt hatcheries, the Robinette Trout Ranch at Harrison and the Clearbrook Trout Farm at Augusta. Three Coho News Centers in Operation The Department of Conservation has put into operation three new information centers in the Manistee. Frankfort and Platte River areas to keep anglers posted daily, on'the weather and coho fishing conditions in northern Lake Michigan. Up-to-the-minute Information covering all breaking developments on the lake’s coho scene is available for these field . outposts between 5 a.m. and 8 p.m. every day of the week from now through Oct. 12. Hie centers are equipped with telephones, and ihe numbers to call for latest information are 352-9286 at Frankfort, 723-5372 at Manistee, and 882-4901 (through the Frankfort exchange) at toe Platte River station. All three come under Area Code 616. Besides these “hot lines,” the reporting stations have 2-way radios which keep them in constant contact with aircraft, boats, attd grotibd units. * and possession limits, the Department would like to adjustments to; Make catch and keep quotas the same in all waters for trout and salmon (5 singly or combined with an extra limit of 5 brook trout from streams); reduce the limit on muskellunge to 1 daily and in possession in all waters. Standardize the creel and possession limits on northern pike, walleyes, saugers, and black bass at 5, singly or combined; trim these same limits on white bass to 16. UNIFORM SIZE Another proposal calls for setting a uniform 10 • i n ,c h minimum size limit on trout and salmon in inland waters. JJnder one exception, the minimum size limit on brook trout would be left at 7 inches, consistent with the biological fact that this species doesn’ grow too large and matures at a smaller size than other trout. TRIPLE-TEAMED—Three Pontiac anglers teamed to land this 28-pound muskie at Lake St. Clair last week. Charles Kentros (right) hooked the fish and was assisted by PmNM Prttt Phot* Louis Kentros (left) and John Samson. The fish was taken on a Bayoy Special. The battle lasted one hour. Crisis in Conservation Department Eyes Public Aid Rounding out the recommendations are measures which would extend the present 10-inch size limit on trout in the Great Lakes to also cover salmon in these waters establish a 13-inch size limit on saugers; and place a spearing ban on muskellunge and lake trout. Other matters coming before the commission include proposals to acquire lands in the Pointe Mouillee State Galtte Area,- Monroe County; Bald Mountain Recreation Area, Oakland County; P. J. Hoff-master State Park, Muskegon County; Ionia Recreation Area, Ionia County; Island Lake Recreation Area, Livingston County; and Petoskey State Park, Emmet county. 'Know Ducks'. Clinic Slated identification Primer , for Rose Lake Hunts A pilot training program will be introduced this fall aimed at helping duck hunters to be moTe selective in their shooting. The “know your ducks” clinic, a primer for qualifying to hunt the birds at the Rose Lake Wildlife Research Area this season, will be held at the Woldiuhar Natureway Center at 5539 Lansing, west of Lansing. It will start at 7:30 p.m., Sept.| and run for four more suc-i cessive Monday evenings through Oct. 7. On that final j night,'hunters will, be tested at; Woldumar to see how ytell they; have learned to identify ducks. j Identical exams will also be; conducted at the Rose Lake j Area near East Lansing on Oct. 5 and 6 at 1 p.m. and on Oct. 9, 18, and 25 at 8 p.m. Participation in the training: phase of the program is op-: tional, but sportsmen must pass; one of these tests in order to | hunt ducks at the Rose Lake! Area during the Oct. 10-Nov. 8 duck season. All sportsmen who have; hunted ducks in the Rose Lake Area during the last three seasons have been sent invitations by the Conservation Department to attend the five training sessions at Woldumar, each of which will last aboult 2 hours. Others not contacted are also . welcome to join this training course. Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Pe-| riods, as printed below, hasj been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good .cover during these times, if you wish to find j the best sport that each day! has to offer, E»t*rn^Daylight Tim* Today Thursday Friday 1 wMalar 3:35 T0:J«! 4:45 11:45 5:55 njjfi By NORRIS INGELLS The Lansing State Journal “Our first responsibility is to the natural resources, not to the public or the Legislature. Hunting and fishing are privileges, not God-given -rights.” This is the view of Charles D. Harris, deputy director for resources management of toe “Where possible, we should depend on natural reproductiqp, but this is a difficult principle for people to pick up,” he observed* noting that one sportsman’s group has as its slogan; “More Fish and Game, Now!" a priceless legacy, of public MacMuilan views the basic Michigan Conservation Depart- k°*e °* If* conservation ment. It mirrors the attitude of department as improving toe ownership, and it will be up to us to protect it. The end of large-scale .purchases for recreational use may be in sight, but we must continue to buy key parcels — Great Lakes shoreline, stream frontage, open spaces on the urban fringes — almost without regard to per-acre cost.” our needs — including money,' he stated. Hdrris also feels that Legislature “generally has been quite fair with us.’1’ Foxhounds1o Run in Annual Trial Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday many scientists, public officials and conservationists. Raply A. MacMuilan, director of the department, believes that public understanding and sup^ port must rank high on any list of conservation priorities. “One of the biggest inhibitors of progress in resource lagement ii the -preoccupation of the people with immediate selfish interests — f more game, NOW,” he stated. MacMuilan acknowledged that environment that will help fish and game thrive, as well as protecting the natural resource base of toe state. Ttesaidhe expeets-eritieism of many of the department’s programs. “Controversies over fish and game are prett* much toe same all over. They aren’t unique to Michigan. History full of tremendous, boiling controversies over deer and fish management. It Isn’t Common for sincere people to BETTER RELATIONS There is a general feeling among many conservation officials that the relationship of Ktee—department—- end-—Hrej-Legislature has improved in recent years. Harry H.. Whiteley, chairman “The appropriations for con-i servation are not adequate to The Michigan State Fox meet the needs of the people, I Hunters annual field , trial and but any state agency could say bench show gets under way at | this,” he observed, adding that dawn Friday. Need a typist -.temporarily? toe lawmakers are faced with a| “big decision” every year just how the tax dollars will be spent. “I don’t envy them,1’ he declared. (NEXT; BesteNeedef ole pilagi artificWiy?«M*d-8^^ gam* and planting of fish are mad about such topics," he basically wasteful programs, when too real answers lie in helping nature naturally propagate more wildlife. TWO EXCEPTIONS An exception, he added, is the introduction of new species like toe Coho salmon and elk. ‘Renewable resources are a product of the land, just film farm crops. Public impatience for more fish and.game, right is a wasteful dream," MacMuilan continued. declared. The conservation, director was asked just how potentially harmful public pressure is to toe and the stale’s natural resources! 'Since taking over , as head of the department, I’ve been very much impressed with toe lack of public pressure. People are pretty much aware that we have to preserve our natural resources. They even have to be goaded into taking enoujgi deer, nowdays,” he observed. Safety Tips Listed Pond Building Booms Pond construction,)* booming I in Oakland County. So is the hazard that goes with any body of water. seems that just about anyone with a suitable site wants to have a pond,” said Efts G. (Bill) Humphrey, work unit conservationist with the Soil Conservation office in Pontiac. . *. “With toe development of body of water, comes toe possibility of drowning Humphrey gives technical advice onproper construction. Relisted some tips for making ponds safe. These include: • Find cut what the community and state laws say about liability hi the case of accident or death; locate the pond so that it will not get drainage fromfarmyards or sewers; have the pend built by a reliable contractor. REMOVE JUNK • Remove all trees, stumps and rubbish that*'might binder safe swimming or boating and eliminate sudden dropoffo and. deep holes near the swimming area. • Mark the safe swimming areas and provide adequate lifesaving devices such as ring buoys, ropes and plqpks. Additional information t provided in Bulletin No, PA 396 titled, “Make Your Farm Pond Safe.” It is available nttheSCS office in the Federal Building. of toe conservation commission, said that 'during toe past two years, more good conservation laws were passed than at any time during the last half-century. “The Legislature has become more interested and realized stoat our. , problems are. They have a better understanding of Field Trial Set The Michigamme E n g 1 i s h Setter Club will conduct licensed bird dog field1 trial Sunday, Sept. 15, at toe Silo {course in the Highland riwrea-tion area. A d efi t i 6 n a 1 information is available from Sidney Ackerman, 329 53 Thorndyke, Farmington, 48024. MEN in ACTION WEAR But them are pressures that are of concern, in addition to the “Game Now” philosoply. MacMuilan pointed particularly to those who urge the department not to go too fast on wrier pollution controls, especially as they affect the economics of industry and Other interests seek greater use of mineral* and timber on public lands. And, there is the continuing conflict among various groups over ihe use of pesticides. But MacMuilan said he feels that with the public’s backing, the department has been, and will be able to resist pressures that lead to improper exploitation of the state’* natural resources and public lands. “As toe population increases, we can expect increasing pressures to release putyic-owned lands for private needs of all kinds,” MacMuilan predicted. “But the foresight of our predecessors has left us FOR COMFORT... ALL-DAY LONG Crafted for extra ruggtai i Right for your work. • Cailulosf cushion insoles • Spring VmI (hank • Hypalon tola* and hoalt • Burgundy Dresides upper far n Como'In. See our complete line. We’re headquarters tor Red Wing’s service oxfords. PAULI’S SHOES The RID CARPfTS Out for You ot 35 N. Saginaw Pontiac, Mich. Hounds will Cast at the same time Saturday and Sunday on toe trial grounds at toe Youth Camp on Lake Qeorge Road, six miles east of Lapeer. 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THE PONTIAC PREfrg^ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 196S Though Russia claims Furvin Kryakutskoi trapped foul* smelling smoke in a bag and rose to the height of a birch tree in 1731, historians credit Joseph and Etienne Montgolfier with the invention of the hot-air balloon in 1783. Today this invention is almost unchanged, and' hot-air ballooning is again touching the imagination of adventuresome people. Of the approximately 50 registered hot-air balloons owned in America, two belong to the Stateline, Nev., Quicksilver Productions Corp., of which Deke Sonnichsen is president when not a Lockheed Missiles and Space Company Senior. Vehicle Test Coordinator who resides in Menlo Park, Calif. Deke, co-founder of the Sport Balloon Society of the United States of America, which is affiliated with the Balloon Federa-tion of America, last year filed claim for six new World records to the Federation Aeronautique Internationale, which formulates records and sanctions all air events and rules H throughout the world. wm But it is not merely for competition that Deke, wife Joanne and son Kirke, use the two flying machines. B On weekends, neighbors are invited over and the smaller balloon, tied to a lengthy tether line, lifts friends and children above the treetops. At other times, Deke helps brain future balloonists at the Daedalus School of Free-Ballooning, the first in the country, at the Menlo Oaks Balloon Field in his city, or at nearby Tracy, Calif. Before and during firing up the balloon, he explains its history and workings, then joins the student to rise-skyward. When speaking before flying clubs, aeronautical groups and schools, Deke discusses the relation between ballooning and the mighty rockets for outer space which Lockheed produces. 1 , In the sport of hot-air ballooning, there are two controllable directions: tip and down. The winds create lateral movement and any ascension might end miles from take4>ff. For Deke, whose brightly-colored aircraft (representing the Orange, red and yellow of the heat spectrum’s lower end) have replaced his parachuting efforts ( he led the U.S. Parachute Team in 1962, 1963 and 1964 to FAI meets), these moments of free-flight have replaced free-fall. He shares the silent ride above the rolling California country with those who seek to be up, up and away in that magnificent flying machine. - Wile Joanne guide* the lifting balloon a* Deke pours In the hot-air. IfiSSSSSflK - Jijj Son Kirke gets a fatherly ride at home. ThU Week’s PICTURE SHQW Page by AP Photo Editor Janus BnseoU THE PONTIAC MlK.SS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEJV1BEA 4, 1968 state Decision' Commission Rejects 1 Doesn't Suit , - . * Caseworker « of 5 Rezoning Bids JP~T. Death Notices Br^f a^onrw* Count* wet of pi!op*rW m Eastwjy for ex- * Pike, 390 E. Pike and 431 E/ hours 3 to .5 and 7 to 9.) fare caseworker, insists the|pMlsion W * bMil«Jing supply; state of Michlgah has'agreed to company, was rejected by the h |Ponti*? Ci‘y Commission by V c^imiKionC*on thefour F“r •*?. j>mirA>.. on claims against the ^ ichanges wwe approved- I says Bryant is badly mistaken. _ * * * * * * Turned down was a request of A dog is at the heart of the I®6 Foster KUby Slipply Co., 837 conflict. | Auburn* to rezone 61 Eastway, It all started test'May 15 from residential to commercial. ; when Bryant was bitten by a( * * * dog while making a house call. John McGrath, an attorney His suit was ripped. He sub-1 representing 20 home owners on mitted a claim to director John! Eastway, told the commission Smith of the state Department that residents are concerned of Social Services. ■"Thursday, September 5, at 2:30 p.m. at the Donelson-j Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Lahe will lie in state at the funeral A proposal to rezone a parcel commercial, are at 44 State, 349 home. (Suggested visiting MASTBETH, ADELE E.; Sep- No objections were received tember 3 1958 ; 454 Auburn;j. age 54; dear mother of Mrs/ Irving Stroch and Miss Patricia Fleming; dear sister of: Mrs. Clifford Moak, Mrs.! Manford Malane, Mrs. Wilford Malane and Max Streeter;: also survived by two grand-j children. Funeral service Willi be held Friday,. September 6, at 9 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Inter-], ment in lakeside Cemetery, j Port Huron. Mrs. Mastbethj will lie In state at the funeral j To Buy, Rent, .Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Hours* 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. Day{ Following 1 First Insertion Help Wonted Male Butin Kettering Due New Official I Card of Thanks THE FRED BESSLER family withes H fj He. Commerce Township v rtment. Rev. §■ fit. Josep. McGat-ry ______, Elton DiacK Home, Fisher Body; to thank at st. Joseph Mercy Patrick ’ Church; Funeral Home, t-isner Fisher Local 516. All our relatives. BILL PRESENTED ... . ™ • into the residential area. Smith told Bryant to replace ^ - . the suit and present a bill to] 4,u. . „ . , . , ? . the State Committee on Finance’ !ts „bou"d have„ “ ad, and Claims for review. He did ®" Uieir property, just that — said McGrath. “Many hre However, the committee rec-lnearin* retirement age and ommended the Administrative The Waterford Board o f that rezoning would lead to Education tomorrow night will home. (Suggested visitihgi other businesses moving |urther name a new assistant principal: hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9. kindness shown for fhe flowers and messages of sympathy during our recent berevement. The family of Fred Bossier. fiti wIlsy pierce family wishes to thank Rev. Everette A. Dell, Voorheis-Siple Funeral Home, Crlttendon Hospital, ail our many friends and neighbors for their -...jMeSrn . starting w tcltnciouk t.._ BHSR! In person to westco Heating & Supply Co. 237 W. Clarkston' Rd., Lake Orion. , / ___,___ 3 NEAT APPEARING men to work 4 evenings end Saturday,s Car necessary. New subsidiary of Alcoa Aluminum. 371-1700, ; AETNA LIFE & CASUALTY EXECUTIVE SALES . Career opportunity for an executive salesman to work in Estate Planning, Estate Analysis, » Analysis and Group In-> Fields. Excellent starting salary, plus bonus, plus commission. Finest training program with Initial training of 3 weeks school at home office In Hartford, Conn, commencing Oct. 14. Must b? able to- meet highest qualifications. Call Mr, Capoecla or Mr, Garrison for appointment; 353-4400. Ah Equal Opportunity Employer ACCOUNTANT ........... Expanding medium size CPA firm with diversified Industrial clientele. The partners invite applicants to discuss with us. or any member of public accounting and ewdflcally our firm. .Send resume to: JANZ «■ KNIGHT, CPA's 1100 •' N. WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM MICH. 40011. Replies will be bald Id absolute c—‘----- for Waterford Kettering High , School. Former assistant, principal Gerald Wallace r e signed - recently when he accepted a -I___.. j .________,. J. post as principal of the new .1 can t afford to have this occur. 1 , t iWalled Lake Central High Board deny the claim, and the NO OBJECTIONS School, board did so at its Tuesday] In denying the rezoning the * * ★ meeting. ; commission went against the The board also will discuss * * * recommendation of the planning recommendations from Schools Informed of the action, Bry-i commission. Supt. Dr. Don O. Tatroe relative ant said there must have been ★ * * to minor boundary changes in- The four other properties, all volving the Walled Lake and. some mistake. He said he still expects to recover his $78. ★ * ★ The board rejected the claim! on the ground that personal items can only be replaced if damaged by “an act of a patient of a ward,” and dogs do! hot fit that category. ‘MAfTEB OF POLICY’ “It’s a matter of’policy,” said! board member Russel A.j Searle. McCART JR.: GEORGE O.; September 2, 1968 ; 3 Bloomfield Terrace; age 25; beloved! husband of Susan F. McCart; beloved son ’of Mr. and Mrs; f George McCart. Funeral serv-j ice will be held Thursday, * September 5, at 11 a.m. at the AH Saints Episcopal Church. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. McCart will He In state at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to Allcbach and the neighbors for their ient. — The Family c recent bereave rezoned from residential to Huron Valley school districts.! 5 and 7 to 9.) “ Waterford is expected to give up some of its territory to the Huron Valley district and is. expected -.to .acquire some new territory formefly handled by WaUed Lake, Tatroe said'. Seattle Snipers, Hit Police Car SEATTLE (AP) — Two shots hit a police patrol car as it an-.. Coincidentally, the board swered a call to Investigate a passed on a similar case Tues-jfi ht , s ^ predominantly day involving a welfare worker , , “ . in the Saginaw County Depart- ■^8™ !in orison for causing the death! TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) — A REINFORCEMENTS RUSHED 'in prison for causing the death! recount of paper ballots for a1 Several other s^uad cars hur-bf Mrs. Grace NeU. district judgeship will be held ried to the scene, and officers • ★ * * Mondiy in four comities on on foot searched the older resi- Mrs. Neil, 43, of Livonia diedj behalf el Glenn Aylsworth, who dential area, where shrubs and from an overdpse of sodidm1 Cemetery. Mr. Stadler will lie] lost the primary by 20 votes. trees supply considerable cover, jpentothal: An abandoned gasoline station V-u; Ormond Danford was the at 34th and Pike was examined, winner of one of two runoff spots Officers thought it might have p. +U NT +' in the November election for been the place where some of J_/©0tn INOtlCOS 13th Judicial District judge. The the shots were fired. nxccnM outu a judgeship is for a new district , * * * CASSON, RUTH A.; September including Grand Traverse/ One of the bullets grazed the, Leelanau, Antrim and left front fender of the patrol '"Charlevoix counties.---------jrarr-The other struck the righf ♦ '★ * ' front tire and punctured it. I A recount also will be held in * ★ ★ ! Traverse City on behalf of, Officers found a large-caliber, . .... _ - . He lost the rifle sheU, two short 3«1 7-0700. Off. S12S to 1160 SIGHTING APPLICATOR Guaranteed year round work rr have experience, top wage. Preferably with own tools, contact Mr. Black, 336.2925.________ STATION ATTENDANT,. MUST be at least 21. Apply Standard station, cor. Orchard Lk.-Maple R-1 ;e Rd. Holp Wanted Malt 6Help Wanted Malt EXTRA INCOME SO, IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR EXTRA INCOME, DO NOT DELAY We have positions available now from the hours of 8:30 a.m. to 9:30,p.m. and choose your own hours. Lack of experience or age no barrier if over 18. Interesting work in circulation sales. For interview call: MISS DOWNS 338-9706 Join The Leader! . FORD needs experienced, graduate TRUCK ENGINEERS If you have a proven record of professiorial engineering accomplishments in the "DESIGN AND/OR' DEVELOPMENT ENGINEERING Of any of the following components: • CHASSIS AND FRAME • BRAKES • - SUSPENSIONS- • DRIVELINES • ENGINES • STEERING"- l • BODY-ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS • COMPLETE VEHICLE systems Air mail your resume (including salary record and requirements) or write today for pn application to: H.,-0. ERICKSON , * m / * Recruiting Sectibn^ Product .Development Group ... * P.0, fox 2053 Dearborn, Michigpn 48121 WANTED MECHANIC end pin lumper ofr Brunswick machines. Lakewood Lanes, 312) W. Huron. WANTED: AMBULANCE DRIVERS, must be experienced,, neat appearing, paid Insurance. Apply US s. Connetlcut, Royal Oak. . WEST BLOOMFIELD TWP. mm Dept, is now taking applications for a field laborer. Starting salary 16100. Also many benefits. Apply at 4460 Orchard Lake Rd.. Orchard Lake,. Mich._______ _ ' WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY for ambitious men to earn exceptionally high Ir ““ Income. We nave insurance debit c ncctuirr. ,ciii juh Interview, 3627259. YOUNO MEN LOOKING for I future In the building trade*, wiling to loin carpenters union as aa apprentice. Call -Don attar f p.m. YOUNG MEN W* nead 10 younft map to start work Immediately In our Pontiac Office. No typing necessary. Wa will train. Must 6b 11-22, napt appearing, eager to get ahead. Salary discussed at. Intarvtow. For appolntmant. Call Mr. Nev- FE 8-0350 9 e.m. to 1 p.m., 1 Help Wanted Female, 10 Women Needed PUNCH jPRESS OPERATORS; must b. Dairy, ■ eight si tlchardsi Full tlma. CASHIER i. Night shi Benefits. V*< mature pent... Elias Bros. Big Boy Telegraph and r*--- ANINGLAD ....eakaepars, .Blrir isitowanct. 60-7960. COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY claanlng plant. Paid vacation and holidays, will' train If Mcastary. Apply 534 . and Lashar, vacations. Apply Proscription, if M Birmingham._________________, CAREER SALESWOMEN a t Orlnnalto ara successful selling our products. If you have a selling personality, seme previous sales experience and a desire to IMlW higher eamlnr ““ train you to sell oui color TV and stereo, teinWiy pianos HIS preferred music it Grtnall's Pontiac COLLEGE GIRL, part tlma, cashlar, light booltoeplng. Apply in person Hansel l Gretel Short*, Blrm- Ingham, Mich. ______ OOK — SHORt ORDfeft, 0611. aft. 11 a.m.' jl but will train. 363- COOK Hospitalization, Life Ins. a pay benefit*. Apply In parse TED'S PONTIAC MAUL Kelly Girl Of Kally Services, Inc. 12S N. Saginaw 338-0338 or 642-96S0 An aqual opportunity amployar. SALES CLERK, PART time, Ratoll experience — We need and 2:3c 335-9261,____________ » RESTAURANT WANT! waitress, day work, 852-9755. SHIRT LAl/NDRY, SORTER work, paid f 682-2360. . ..OEIt. PROSPERITY automatic equipment. Experienced only. Bob ”“-u-^aaa|f| *“ to 0733. KITCHEN . HELP TOR-homo, must have own t. lion, Union Lk., EM >4121. LADY FOR WAITING „ marking and assembly. Cloanars, 379 E. Pika. LADY. FOR COUNTER I neighborhood dry cleaning she Must like meeting people, top p. to right Individual. Holiday •' vocations paleL Call 4734333. Mg Wcfted Fepdg WOMAN PART TMUt for 232, Pont'ac, Mlchlgen. Giving roXV Giving full ARE YOU REALLY ‘Ivlngf Or lust ^wlatlngT CaiL Mr. Potty. YORK Real estate iwafi ' , ^ it*WflconB ARE YOU *N A Rut? Coll Mr. e resume. FOR DR iRY cfaaning -—it assembly. S. Totograpn. IEAST salary, companl... - lady. 5 day week. Live In _. Light housokoaplng tr* cooking. 609-4944. After 7, 62641792. WOMAN TO BABY-SIT, days n a a d a d . Must have mm transportation. Birmingham area. 642-2177. A-neg” B-neg., AB-nog JJ0 tH^MtCHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CEtFTER '_______ mtloc PE 4-9947 1242 wide Track Dry w. Aon. thru Prl., 9 a.m.-d p.m. woman te Interview control to procure ------------------- positions. Must -be Intelligent, shary and neat appearing. Only thoee who can *mrt work Immediately need apply . ;;r 3145 WEEKLY SALARY To start offer-to oil successful sp- YOUNG LADY, 19 to 8. Tolophom Ing, mailing, soma typing. For Interview call Mr. Fofey, YORK REALTY, 5744063. d. 1 p.m.-7 p.m. DETROIT FREE PRESS mirta Drivers — Single delivery. Weyne-Oaklend good part time work. Call 2490, is.ni. to 2 pjn. EMPLOYMENT COUNS E L OR ‘tore's your opnortunltv f o nllmltod earning: isslonat field. Ci MU-2471, Snolllng a____________ PEEL LIKE LIFE I* PMCbigYou by? Cell Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-0343. JOB WITH A fvtiim. Call Mr. Foley. “—IK REAL ESTATE. OR 4-0363. )UR INCOME Adequate? Call Foley, York REAL ESTATE. AFPLIOSTIGNS J^gJt ^ __________ .—p. tSU Drlve-ln Theater. , ySgViFWB: 647-8880 MIDDLE AGED COWLE OR tody for help to rooming house. Room and beard- plus wagot. Call 333-1705. ,* lEstAUlAMT ,PERSONNEL,JiMll time, wtH train, twrtnos, dining room waitress, cafgnrla waltrsss, counter girls, ttoMifai |*rtog.jia< -ita“ "wii, mails and untforms paid Mua Cross Lite Apply Graa nr laid , 72S X. Hunter Blr- ____ Should You - ______ MAKE AN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE? NOW IS THE TIMHI Michigan Ball Phono: I93C745 Should You make an EMPLOYMENT CHANGE? NOW IS THE TIME I Michigan Bell Phono: 393-2745 WANTED: DEPARTMENT manager experienced In Lodltt' Wear, Federal Dept. Stores, 5000 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Plains. OR 3-1275. WOOL PRESSER, EXPERIENCED desired, full or paft,W“ Cleaners, W--"-^—■* STENOGRAPHER Walled Lake firm desires ... perlenced typist, . with g o o d shorthand background, variety of; duties including telephone roc—1 tionist and order typing. Hours PhOno 624-1338. SHAMPOO GIRL. NINO Hair Stylist, call 2507 w. Maple, Birmingham. 7‘tob ------ STOCKROOM CLERK Advertising Agency ■ fofot Ml Res pons lb a —c““" ah co... 6-1000 PHHHPP Good salary J pony benefits, call-Personnal Department. ■ An Equal opportunity amployar -----TV ADVERTISED AVON MOSMETICS A. G. K0SIBA CONST. CQ. — Asphalt paving spaclallzlng in DRESSMAKING, raturfaclng, petchlng, and seal coating. Proa art. OR 3-4310 or OR 3-3776. ihTdRIOR. Guarantee* first atoso work. John McFall, 482-2373, JOHNSON PAINT WORKS. 10 yaars exporlonco, for frw wlmrto call day or night. UN 1M407. T QUALITY WORK ASSURED PAINT- WAITRESSES COUNTER GIRLS LIVE IN HOUSEKEEPER to core for 2 small chfldran, more t -----ttidw weges 6P-3475 etter 4, LIVE IN HOUSEKEEPER, lull time In doctor's homo, oxc. working conditions. Matur* women. " to train. Apply In aarswi only. Howard JotmpMrs Restaurant Taiegraph at Ma^to Rd. ASPHALT PjSCOUNT^J asSalttaving Residential and commarclal No lob too small. „ . Work guarantaod. Proa estimates PGNTIAC ASPHALT CO. FE4-Q224 ASPHALT AND SEAL coating. Free estimates. PE 2-4631. ASPHALT PARKING. LOTS AND roadways. Sam* " location aftws 1 1928. Also selling asphalt *"< - sealer. Ann Arbor Construction i MAPI* 5-3891. DOMINO CONST. CO. .halt Paving. Pro* Quotas. 474- M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED Complete oovostroughing service. Proa est. <73-6566, 573-5662. ROCHESTER AREA " . HOT TAR, BUILD UP ROOFING, 15 ■ ----- experience. Robert Price _________. FE 4-1024. Proa estimates. NEW ROOFS FOR OLD HOT ROOP. Shingles, 24 .hr*., free artlmate, repair roofs. FE 9-1725. ------— DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST. Free estimates. Call - LP.N. $3.50 Per Hour Plus many other fringe benofi full or parr tlma. Union Lake an EM 3MWI. WAITRESS WANTED, ... .... ~ omploymant, 1100 guarantied. Ap- ------------------- “ experience. Excellent year around working conditions and ovar*1—* 2921 Industrial Row, Troy, bo....... 14 and 15 Mil# Rds., oft Coolldgt WAITRESSES WANTED, top wagoy, excellent working conditions, C try Kettle, 39 M-15 Ortonvlllo WAITRESSES, EXPERIENCE required, good pay, exc. < paid lunch and relief -pari— hospital benefits, paid vacation, pleasant counter, m cooking, i dishwashing or portorlng, Biff’s Grill, Talagraph at Maple (IS Mile DURING MONTH OF^uausTpelta Asphalt Paving to torturing Pbvinp ^ at 28c par sa. ft. 345-4714,242-6157■ BitGEIGB* WotGrprOGfiBg MAtONRYPAINJ^NGOPJ^i * or small, FE •- • RON'S ROOFING Backho*. Basamants. 474-2639. Braokwatir Conrtrucfion front end loader byt* B A-l BULLDOZING, ___________ ______, gravel, top soil. M. Cook. 6136145. BLACK DIRT, VIBRATED process, loaded and dellvsrad, 7 days, lit Opdyke near Auburn. PE 4-1731 or UL 25462. dltlons Ml 7-3033. MANICURIST, North Pur......... (Southfield, Mich.). 9 to 3, 3~---- •' WAITRESSES FOR DAY or evening shift, full tlmir only- Apply Ellas ~ •roe. Big Bey R.*st * Telegraph and.H-- CONSTRUCTION CO. BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Fencing MATURE WOMAN pgmmpgiMIppwpMi si is in ms mui .' Bluo SJor Rosteurant, cornar MEDICAL ASSISTANT Pontiac. n WAITRESS Resteurant, ir, 137 Oakland Avo. WANTED, OJ n oj PP ly drives. 1265 S. ACKER A-l PENCES ARE r Fell prices. 25 yr*. -tr | area. Pro* ast. 6S2-5482. PONTIAC FENCE CO. ' ’fTltorad ” b'tock jlrt.***aolil r—eonable. 623-1372 or 52M8f6. FILL SAND LOADING DAILY 50 canto par yard, 459 Williams Lake Rd., Union Lako, AAA 4-4335 or EM *3516. INTERLAKE SAND DENTAL ASSISTANT, NEAT, dOstrlous, fast working girl w ability to work w'“ — --DENTAL-BUSINESS--MANAGER ry training for 2 modlci oocTors, 335-6725. '________ 1 METAMORA AREA “I Experienced cook wonted to llv In. Babysitting . and 11 e h housework. House available. Sotory 575 per week. Phono Lapeer, MO 4-6614. variety. 21-35, accurate typist, —-* -ii-o-i- < g|r| office, IS. Drayton Plolh* 476-3715. Medium and tight punch prou tx-porlence preferred. Day and nlgfc< shifts. Apply between 4 *.m.-6 p.r Employers Temp. Service giS^Liko iw. 65 S. Main Clews: ftapty to Rorrftac Rresr-Bex No. ^C* V MEDICAL ASSISTANT, prfforrad, typing nocosi clinic day shift, 482-9*55. 7 NEAT PLEASANT WOMAN, OVOT 25 ■ *------noral housework.' Must dtou| 3 days 540. Call aftor 5, WAITRESSES, FULL TIME, day work only, no Sun. or Holidays, Birmingham, 646-4333. WAITRESS, FULL TIME, days, ov*r 21, no Sundays. Coll before e p.m. 334-5760. _____________ WAITRESSES AND GRILL cook wonted. Gives Grill, person, (7S Baldwin Avo. ’• WAITRESS SATURDAY NIGHTS, ' j----tone* necessary aftor 4. Dell' h Lake Road. mBjH for i i WANTED: A WOMAN around kitchen hail.. HHPPHi aftor 2 p.m.__ WATEO COUNTER dlrl for plHorta. ■ itod In Bloomfield Hllto. YOU 1 bo over IS and have your .....transportation. Hours 5-10. For lurthor Information 642-3555. Building Moderizotion RAGE 20 X m — 1173. Canton! fork, fra* estimate. Springfield Jlda., Co. 62»-2ia._________ j LICENSED BUILDER, alfdranons, * 5m--------ideling. Free estimates. . 674-2637, or 33P128)________ Septic Tawk Senrfce COMPLETE SEPTIC TANK, tOWOT NO JOB TOO SMALLI Brick — BlOd' ■ • lumlnum Skiing Carpentry Rooting Comsnt work Whet Have U? * WEST BLOOMPIELP TOWNSHIP IS CarpetCleanini KAPPER CARPET SERVICE ' w rotes, 335-47^* Carpentry M CARPENTRY, NEW and r 338-1427. __________________ A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR - Floor Tiling Clarkston Floor Covering Sals* and custom Installation of -carpet, tile and linoleum. Free In-the-home estimates. 7012 Dixie Hwy. 625-2237. 741 N. Perry. PE 2-4090. Tree Trimming Service AL'S TREE SERVICE, FREE ESTIMATES 682-1397, 673-7160, 62S352I CSF TREE Sarvlca. Removed, Trimmed. Proe esL TR F6B57 MOSQUITO CONTROL, alto “■ shrub spraying. Call foi .... C B M Spraying. 474-3945, 628- -IfREE —.CU'tTINQ |, AND P R * 1 Tree CUTTING AND cleanup, free , ertlmatos, FE 2-1115. 1 WAITRESS AND l Pin* Cook, full or part lima, also kitchen help, , apply Ricky's, 819 Woodward. 1 uto dormers! .porches, re erss t lon MERION BLUB SODj pickup or -M- rooms, kitchens, bathrooms. Stole ^ M43 Sherwood. 639-7000. Sr. licensed. Reas. Call after S p.m, —rvT: ■ - BEAUTICIAN, must ba good Igs. Good Woman In loan or finance wor to S dev* a wk. Good .typist: i position for qualifying pei Rnnri nsv arid hnUrs. Ptlom or .W^,R5Vff7?fo^ *r.' Vofs> PE 5-4631 ft Accounting Clerks Wo have 3 openings tor war with accounting or Uyroll parlance. Must have figure tltude and be able to run en — ding machine. Many fine company c benefits. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. SECOND FLOOR Montgomery Ward EXPERIENCED TELEPHON solicitors to work from our offtc apply 1346 W. Wkto Track. II EXPERIENCED GIRL or woman f general housework.. Must III children. Good homo, oood warn Live In. 647-3316, nt opportunity. 0.474-0236. NURSES AIDES 30301 W. 13 Milo Rd. 1295 Farm GIRL—WAhitfeb, _____ . no typing or Shorthand. of DInottoS. 334-2124. • . PART TIME COSMETICIAN and drug-dark, good hours, good poy. PERSONNEL CONSULTANT $5,000 UP . Birmingham office^ Bait raying, fartflizmfl frea atflma J & E TREE SERVICE 353-7295 EXPERIENCED SALESLADY full lift time, Lena Bryant, Pontl ..—It. 6C-7500. - FULL TIME CASHIER, filMI MNi, good working cQndttlone. Fringe Benefits. A. L. Demmen Co., Bloomfield Plaza, Telegraph and Maple Rd., 6254010.____. GENERAL O'? PICE WORK. PLArriC INJECTION MOLDING Co. has ooanlnos for m s ch 1 — J t b b Heating cooling^ ( PRESSER FOR Dry Clean deportment. Will train. Eleanors, 379 E. PIko._____ S' REGISTERED NURSE FOR 2 J'I GENERAL OFFICE, CASHIERINj can live In or out. Prefer otdorl woman. 634-5411. ■ , ERING n.w , soma typing required. Full tl JiToiri? Apply at Borg Cleaners, 6700 D poristion IJSSimfmJ* . -Receptionist- Lak* RC. Of^rd UkoT ' WITT - AMERICAN GIRL. MRIOIf'wxr, •mlBKc Adswaa.B’tx WOOL* PRESSER Pull time, permanent job, mutt be experienced and b* able to do top quality work. Top poy. good working conditions, paid vacations and hdMays. Drayton Maftlntztoe, 4714 Walton Blvd., ASK FOR MIKE MBTRICK. 474-6*11. WORK AT SANDERS! to experience necessary. Opanlngs tor part tlma and cnntinoent fountain sales, terry. 1.73 to start. iaMaaiiiiim nth Apply In person, Mion.-Frl., arm. er*t ta I pjn.. .— BtoomftoM Shopplng Cent 6596 Telegraph at IMP 350 N. Woodward, nr. Kami (next to Domary't, Blrmlngl FRED SANDERS TOTgRroWMWL... . 1^ 40 years exporlonco, FE 7 B/SswSlEgS cdmtrt BO ** PANELING MODELING, ■ ' ■ ■ WE ARE CARPENTERS, ,do work ountolvat, specializing,. - . ' Ttlons, roc-rooms, roofing, siding. Guarantot work-bonded. Deal with a gen- __contractor. Cal' ” t, 34M714, 731-3927 < Cement Work Ml .,pes of cement work, ft— blocks, bosomants and ate., OR 3- 7193,________ ' ■ BASEMENT. DRIVEWAYS, Pattos. ■ ratalidnB -wellg- Fror astlmatai. j. . wnancATMutlhB. PE ATMS. • -------- SEEDING, soddl 1, tractor work a MMEMI ________ Gilbert Landsca Sarvlca, 6BM7W, 673-1463. »fRT SODDING, aaadlne m mu*, «nW5D. Lawn Service I DEPENDABLE lawn maln-nanco, cutting, •rtlll-'*' tan up. 673-3992._____________ LAWN SPRAYING, fertilizer, wood killers. Call tor trie art. 474-3945, jasTm c b '~ *-—^ ■ HAULING ANO HuBGiSH. NAMI . your price. Anytime. PE 5-0095. LIGHT HAUUNQ AND ODD lobe. Phone 335484. LIGHT HAULING, REASONABLk RATES. 339-12667 „ IGHT HAULING OP any kind. Odt lobe, FE O-OOT LIGHT ' HAULII«AiZ.JftA?EME>r*Li' - 1025 RAILROAD TIES Hardwood lumber, all slzat banarrt use. a6-7653. v ' TAMGTT'LlfMBBR I Glass service, waod or aiumtiwm. ■ulidtog and Hardware supplies. Oakland FE 4-4595 - lighT and h^aW TRUckiNU, I and front-end loading. PI 2- Trucks to Rent ASSISTANT MANAGER,, sal*rY ------1. Apply Chlck-N-Joy, 756 TC soma wages, c ASSISTANT BOO KKilPIk I------ office, uull-ttme 40 hr, Expsitont < working con office. _____ Excellent ______________ dltlons. Apply GrlnnaM'S I GIRL FOR GENERAL OFFICE Work. Must tto accurate typist, -good at simple methemetlcs. 1 nova cashlar experience. M week. Salary to match your a Greet d___ Answer phono Downtown Birmlnghe 647-8880 . woman FOR’ DRY .Cleaning block and CEMENT work. JPV'litopi, . Gifts rai MSrtfpto- * Pontiac Laundry, J40 S. Telegraph. 7IMp Wanted Female Pontfec, 291-1173.__ *>■ <=g«^,iar&9ero,tcHt* ^ LIGHT AND HEAVY hauling, con- Vk-Ton Pickups lto-Ton Stoke — —— -3— TRUCKS — TRACTORS ■ AND EQUIPMENT Semi Traltonf Pontiac Farm and Indusrtial Tractor Co. .....ns s. woodward^ SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving Oixkestrn ATTENTION M0THERSII Are you looking for something d ttrtnt? SELL TOYS! tie 1 parlance necessary, we train yt For further Information call — THE PLAYHOUSE CO. FE 3-7377 673-1740 BABYSITTER, BABY -.liTTkn HAjtoMQNP' .Lotto BABY StTTtNG AND { GENERAL OFFICE Exparlancad, call 642-6000. Ask far Mr. CotlBtoT GENERAL OFFICE Oood poy with fatntfjti.. rechln^tolS. TMusntS'b**?^8 with figures. Exparlancad preferred. Apply 1:30 to 4 p.m., 715 Auburn Avo., Pontiac. FE 2-0252. Equal Qppertomty tmptoyr- Gd With The Big i If you wloh femporory W-... JRH fair and am oxportonced In:! General Office, stenographic, sacratartol, bookkeeping, key pSidilne, etc. - CALL NOW 331-0306 "MANPOWER'S" TALE N T1 MARCH IS ON. Ah Equal Opportunity Emptoyqr GUARANTEED EARNINGS SaK Toy* i" Gifts, Ain.-Oac. Pr**| ““ttti Gifts. ■Mr' ^ Hftto GABY SITTER Wanted, good hour and wanes, cat! bdtort 1332-7749. BABY SITTER, VICINITY of Flshor Body, day*, 332-1702. Supplies ai daltvaring —. r— IM Grace Hodges 4929127 or write "Sandra Parties", 7207 E. 4 if 1 Detroit, Mtoh. 4*212. WE-ARE EXPANDING * A good telephone voice and if you are 18, or over we /will teach you in telephone sales. Very interesting work in circulation sales.' Your choice of hours from 8t30 a.m. to' 9:30 p.m. ■>" ; For Appointment calls MISS ROSE 338-9^62 C066MERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL nd residential. Block and camant GUINN'SCONST. CO. 334-7677 0091-3671 Atios, oifivfci, S'XWK*II OredH Advteers _ IP IT'S AT ALL possible — our best. Read Classifies ftton sa* or call Debt, AM. 504 Community Bank Bldg. FE 2-91 It - CHETS PORT ABLE WELDING, wrpBiwt Ir demolition *«fc Wat* m HAND C THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 *>—»■—t fmrwUfi 37 Rant Houses, Unfurnished 40 Sale Houses D—9 ■ OR 2 ROOMS, carpeted, new appliances, 775 Scott Laka Rd. HOUSE, (IN month, ■ «hu ,«t month In advance, pay own rtfltUOl CMmMHabir ------- " —— —■___________ * BCUKUM, LIVINO FOOITI and J ROOM FURHJSHED ^BACHELORJ fining room, *150 per mo, plot •P*- Reference! required, ft 5- dapgsjt. tn Oxtertl. <0-7131. IMMEPIAtt OPENINGS FOR 1 MEWTO SELL TNt- NEW 1969 \ FORDS and MERCURY TOO .commleelon. Paid vacations) g^ggggar•™s RAY REALBSTATB SALESMEN” WANTED Rmaohable. in-jm CLEAN SLEEPING room dose li 1 mwniieo. one day Mrs. McCowan FE 44*67* uauV siTTwe -_____ mSin_____________ EXPERIENCED Lfe&AL seciiiiry Mairu work 2 or 3 days a week isrfBpor*nr WOfk ••“•"’"•"i' 0* BAKERY^CLERK, DAYS, Mon'.. INSURANCE SECRETARY, 2 yean fxperWM*! general ■“ —--‘-ToWy. tfe Beauty Rite Hornets HUNTOON SHORES . fj.v„F $25,550 Colonial with 1.21} aq. ft. Thti home ha* 3 bedrooms, i walk-in doiet, formal dining ---i, and 2 car garage. Now -----itlon. 80x150 ft. Snle Houses CITY OF PONTIAC Alumioum sided 3-bedroom. . hill baaomont, gas heat, 2-car oarage. Full price only >9jc Terms. Call: YORK WE BUY ' / WE TRAD OR 4-0363 "• 4* 4713 Dixie Hwy. * AH? 1 noOMS, MarNght In Bath, birch paneling, newly decorated Jmm *50 deposit, from $25 a week. 1 child welcome. Cell between tg «.rn. and 2 P.m. 335-2136. 2 ROOMS AND1 BATH, vary ti 5?on2lL£p'.J3S!!!r!a- at a* * NICE LARGE FURNISHED sleeping ™m — ~ **“* f Mgr. KI1r*“-£fl* State, . Ih trees. day, 4 1 to 6 Ml ■ —_____________ at 6744136 or 544-7773. • pats, utilities Are »U dlsatlefled? Do you went U ’’Drayton'pisInsT 5£So ^ .*15.-000 to IRONINGS, ONE DAY service, i dlgnlfledpubllc service wotkFyou'll devote 40 .haws a weak to your lob 1M0-your aarnlnga wlTl be handsome -Mr. Brown Williams, betwet a.m, and S* p.m. Friday, timber 6th at the Holiday in Telegraph Rd.,ln Pontlee. ' time will not be waited," C necessity. Na ana limit _ citfrats m IRON IN MV.hDme. Phone 67*0190 tSScTl or 2 ursoni 0, Drovtan P ihiBr---r-r- - - -'i-Barruiioei t. See MATURE LADY WISHES cjiriTot 3 ROOMS, DEPOSIT REQUIRED, ___________Coil ft 8-4410 5 LARGE NICE FURNISHED r. and basement, with garage, H might comldor amair child, no drffiklng. soc.~dm., 6824672. j tr WILL CARE FOR 3 or '■ my homo while mo Devs only 335-hN6. _________ » Buildin9 SorvicesSupplie* 13 t MIDDLE-AGED t and factories. 332-112 * IaBy, kitch If desired. 612-1150 I BLOCK FROM Fisher's taking privileges. No m to light drlifang. 233-3051. lOOM'S WITH 2 DOUBLE beds, TV, radio, telephone, carpeted, private 'bath, 2 persons, payable weakly, 04.50 ea. a dayi 1 bod, 2 parson's, *3.15 oa. a dbV, Seville Motel. 1120 N. Woodward ot tm Milo Rd. SAGamDrE MOTEL, SINGLE OC- BEATS RENTING! I 016 par me. on this HILLS 3 bedrooms ..nmod‘ ‘--------- $34,500 FE 4-2845. BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD Near Somerset Shopping Extra nice IV* story bride. Llv-tog oom with fireplace, dining bedrooms on first floor endj 3 ROOMS AND BATH servlce,__JV, telephone. 71* : ROOM, EMPLOYED . Tiled paneled r A-l VARIETY spot for general el flee duties, light typing, fliino. : <32h . call .Angle Rook, 332415$, I Associates Personnel, * *•*» Young gai. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. I Auk, 32-9157, Associates Pereen- ADVANCEMENT POTENTIAL this general office spot, tore., location, *390 call Kathy King. 3E-9157, Assoctetes Personnel. Dtbbb—Muf A TeBeriBg 17 S, ORE 3*4-6837, weekly, 33*0261, evenlns. ROOMS PRIVATE BATH nicely furnished, baby welcome. 6*2-8494. ROOMS, AIR CONDITIONED, maid service, no children, no pats. i. STUDENT TEACHERS near Owen, - ana Alcott Schools, 335- Rsbbu with B—rd PRIVATE ROOM, HOME mobto. 335-1679. Retired man, quiet c homo, 635-5150, oftor 6 p.m. Parch tiled, paneled and permanently enclosed. S m e.l I easily malntatnad yard. Is oardner's delight. New carpeting. New electric water heater, gas Incinerator. AIR CONDITIONED. S27,9r 5 ALTERATIONS. DRESS MAKING. 3 nmr downtown, 3364962. LAWN CUTTING 3 ROOMS, ms WILLOW Batch, Cess LARGS AREA, PLENTY of perking, i Hi " ‘ rates by the year. MICHEALS REALTY LefcaAVanus. 6*2-1747. Roy, 336-2417. SnellIng a IAL OFFICE: Need today In thli large $400. Sue Merwln, Ing end tnelllng. Good Placement Service CALL 334-4971 HONtf B. FE M FOR TWO elderly ROOMS AND BATH, clean working couple only. No emokers, drlnke s, pets or children. *50 deo. 334-604U) Oft. II O, it Moving bb4 Treckieg A PRICE TO SUIT you. Light ing, anything, anytime; tree mm and titnaval. 81*4049. BASEMENTS AND GARAGES BACHELOR. MAIN FLOOR -arpeted, vary nlct. q u 1 - ‘ lorfhend, vacant. FE 2-4376. BACHELOR APARTMENT, _____TIM bath. Ideal ior couple or 2 girl*. Beautiful grounds and view. Near Ellnbeth Lake Rd. ond -Oxbow Lnk»"RdrftSO per—— 647-1476. ..... „. ______________EFFICIENCY 2-ROOM, all utllHtos estimates. OR 34304, or OR S-29S6. furnished, good condition, from *50 ....—..4. .uidTi..... . i deposit, rent *23.50 a week. 10 OJn. to S p.m. call 3332090, PaiotiBg ami PBCorating 23 LADY'S DESIRE INFERIOR peln-*'ig In Wetertord.- area, fraa ifftr—— ----------eg — - “ifa , LARGE AND LOVELY, • rooms en Z4-A bath, near airport, 651-9515 after, General Office . Credit Analyst, yi General Office ... Exec. Secretory . Key Punch .... Stenographer . .... Advertising Clerk . General Office Cashier . rn:: Nurses Aides .. Secretary ....... tone's.,.. ■ Lob Aulstant . :::%S ... *500 .... export* reupholster ---- furniture at half the price. Coll 335-1700 far free etfimeto^MHB homo. Com*l. UpbolOtory. S WaatBd HowliBld Goods 29 CASH POR FURNITURE AND appliances, 1 piece ** Poerioti's. FE 4-7*01________ HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good -—-lure and appliances. Or what you? B & B AUCTION 5009 Dixie Hwy. _ j OR 3-2717 LARGE DEEP FREEZE. MALE Serviceman . Dataller .. , Programmer ............. Distributor Sotos ...... Stott Adlueter ......... Sr. Computer Operator ,. Mgt. Trainee ........... Collector.......... ..... Drug Sotos, car, expense; Accounting Trainee ...... Shipping l Ree. r,- Sales Promotion ........ Technical Writer ....... Management Trainee' • Engineer ........... Automotive Design — -siiSm ... 89000 ..*10400 (13400 ... *700 Rgt*H Sotos Credit Manager ....... Electronic Technician . ....$7200 JhtFB ora many, many mors positions in thssB fields. Many ftt poid. ' Ragistar Now. “ md esoy he ,334-1471, S MACHINE OPERATOR; Local s> MS terrific opening. (6,200. Jo Park*, 336-26717 Snelllng and Sn * Management trainees Unlimited career potential tor the Ktoh school gradt. Earn whilr —■ Item. Good tatary and bet I Including e college autotonce pro- "iN TER NATIONAL PERSONNEL llQO S. Woodward, Pham. 64302 PUBLIC RELATIONS: Com mo., sense gal tor busy office. S32S. Sue Merwln, 314-2471, Snelllng mad ■am wnue teaming, ent- mramia all benefits. $600 pintIrnational personnel 1100 S. Woodward, Bhem. 642431 .. WILL train ... I girl for thto fascinating J»0. Kov R«y. 134-2477; iriibo Stuart. 2144471, SnelL Tyler's Auction, Rood. <7BdS24. WaatBd M|scbMobbous COPPER, BRASS, RADIATORS, starters and generators. C. Dlxson, OR 33140. NEWSPAPER - K cents " " Royal Oa roper ana mOtOf Co., 414 Hudeon, Rpyel Oik. LI 1-4020. Waatad ta Haat DESPERATE, wanted to rent, bedroom house, . have 32 FAMILY WITH 2 ment or bout ---- Bower*, EM S- eon 11 Shore Uviag Qoartsrs 33 HOMES, LOTS, SCSIS9S PARCELS. PAMU, BUSINESS PROKRTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke FE HISS Urgently need for Immediate si lei 1 to 50. LOTS, ACREAGE buy .. —PUBS* you cun for your ____ M ppralser la awaiting your coll 674-2236 McCullough realty 540 Highland Rd. (IWSf) 4 Sb :W> I ■' | ■ “* ALL CASH For homat anyplace In Ooklai County. Money In 24 hour*. YORK fl BUY M TRADE ■A 4#P FE S-71N 4713 Olxto Hwy. 1702 S. Tttoorogb ELDpiLY COUPLB NEEDS tnine lOTnSBMTl ctoeing. REAL VALUE WALLED LAKE, Th rooms, to it from lokc,. S12S o month, stem d^tslf required, adults-only. I Apartweats, UataralshBd 33 BEDROOM, S14S WITH tocurlty 1- 2-BEDROONL NEW. NEAR__________ — Carpeted. Appliances. Air end count conditioned, heated. Rec. room. Adulto, no pats. From *140. FE 5BSIS. 4-ROpM LOWER. Hoot i water furnished. MS mo., dtp. See coin St. i ROOMS AND BATH,1PMMR iferepce raqulrod. Holly 634-* lor 4 p.m.________________ APARTMEh applications OMMRB .parfments, nex avail. Oct. 1. No chlldron, r 3365 Wotklne Rd. 673-5168. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY .Coral Rjdga Apts. SECOND-WILCOX ROCHESTER.'.^ . 1 BEDROOM APYt. $145 Mo. Includw oil UtUIttos, except ei trie. Office open dolly 'til 7 p.m. PH.: 651-0042 BLOOMFIELD MANOR LOVELY NEW LAKE FRONT Apartment with swimming pool, luxurious ot S135 ■ mo. 6244933. DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS 1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 I* Mil# Rd. at J-M Madison Heights Near J. L. Hwdsan'o-SMri Oakland AMU ■ncliid**; Sun dock — pool a- air conditioning a¥wBOiMoi'Popt otoctrlclty ^^"sKl1125^: “r President Madison APARTMENTS 14 BEDROOMS FROM $14S ________ John R between 12 apd 14 Milo Rd: todlson Heights near J. L. Hudson'! and Saar* All utilities wo** Electricity Atodels Open 11AM-6PM 5886300 i, Sl 30. Utlllttoe' included. Reot Hearn, FaraMiBd 39 TYPISTS Over SIM par waak, axe. fringe benefits. Advance mint to I secrehirtirdBIlM;^YWwrWMEl*. INTERNATIONAL PBRIONHBL 1MB sTWirndwird B'ham, WO*1 WILL TRAIN ALERT wUlIng worker with madMidcal ability ter unusually high earnings. _< Adorns 8 Adams 647-8880 lB«tn>ctlBE»4diBah ^10 ATTENTION , DAY-NIGHT CLASSES STARTING BEPlVJfc FOR AUTO MECHANICS Enroll now start training an AuTY-ARC WELDING HELI ARC WELDING l«f» Pottow Cotltolon ... WOLVERINE SCHOOL MKh. Oldest Trade School A«SKcgii,," 14MW.F0rt._Sy WO 3-0692 Income Tax Instruction Associated Income tax ewvloe wll conduct IP* annual tax school. Thto BTS ” tthfFoi- emwllmonfcell 674-2312V T write 4811 omr tHttL. Drmrton Plains 4*08). Licensed by Stalk of li" HAVE A PURCHASER AGENT S74-16M LOTS WANTED 50 fl. or tong*r, my location. Cam buyers. YORK 674-0363 GUICK CASH ft* VouB home. Equity or land contract. Call Clark Raal Eatata, PE 3-7888. Rent Office Space Of bMutifully paneled offlct tor lease. Sep«rate private Walton-Baldwln now IN ONE op GROUND FLOOR, AIR conditioned, office, space In Pontiac Mall Office Building, tig aq. ft. ef choice office space with street entrance el Pontlee Mall Shopping Canter, avail. Immediately, heat and Janitor turn., call 612-0123 or WO 1- OFFICE POR RENT — Approx. I sq. ft. on west side of town. CAl Jack Ralph, FE 6-7161. Rent BmiEOss Property 47-A 1 BAY GARAGE WITH office tor rant or letse. Union Lake area. Near Oakland Community Collage. 363-9433 or 363-5433. and 1-75. Lets of parking, FE ■“t S p.m. suitable far vartoui Ostaopathlc to suit ten 25,200 SQ. FT. t bldgs, acrom 1 ; Hospital, will ran ant or will provide BMP ..........parking on site 120x140. Contact Bruce Annett personally. Annett, Int., Realtors 20, E. Huron St. 3284641 Offlct Optn Eyningt I* fufutoyi 1-4 4615 DIXIE 00 aquare ft. warahousi lufaettng bldr M Dixie Hwy. 623-1040. Reot MlKBlIaiNBM INDOOR BOAT STORAGE. Clerkston. 625-2899. Sale Houses______________JI9 2 BEDROOM RANCH Ilea location, black top street, ■rge lot, gae heat, 114,200. FAMILY AUBURN Haights, S11.0 for *7# V„ lust S2J00 . car-port, covered Holloway Realty Co, 112 Milford Rd., Highland 1-684-2481 HANDYMAN SPECIAL 2-bedroom home on 95‘x340' lake front lot, N. of Clarkston, MMBi plenty at work, let alone price of *10,000 with *2000 d< land contract. I fireplace, large ffiMPOHPmi possession, land contract price *11,000 with *2000 down. MENZIES REAL ESTATE 9230 Dixie Hwy. Officer<23*415 EVES: *23-3013 NEW HOMES AVAILABLE NOW DESIGNED FOR HAPPY LIVING. You'll find chartn and convenience plus prestige and pleasure In a home built by Pontiac's leading bulktera. frushour-angell MASON CONST. CO. HOMES BY BOOTH, INC. u . BELAlRE HOMES, INC. YGj'II ilka their models — and the price. Wall worth your time to vielt these models at WESTRIDGE OF WATERFORD, left oft the Dixie Hew, at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic. Church, or LAKE ANOELUS LAKE VIEW ESTATES, right off Cllntonvlile Rd. onto Cute Mean, and FOX BAY, right off Williams Lake Road onto Perry Drive, left to Fox Bay Drive. You’ll discover haw wttl they’re built easy to maintain. You'll bo prow_ punch to own one. Call your O'NEIL REALTY representative today. WELL MAINTAINED HOME Dryden, Michigan, 2 alary, frame ... large lot, sloe ef scnael, near champion, traitor Co* 1 bedroom UMr 2 up, Wlfh pgselblo third, full MR..Ant, forced air heat, Inclosed porch, tto car garage, garden space, 121,300. C. A. WEBSTER, Rsaltor Oakland 0-2515 MV 2-2291 IMLAY CITY - 3 B E D R OO A >y owner, 724-4415. SCHRAM BIG VALUE , finished stairway to appolntmant. List With SCHRAM O'NEIL REALTY INC. fi Pontiac Lake rd. OR* 4-2222 IAKLAND UNIVERSITY SECTION. Walton Ttelghts sub., 3 bedroom ossumo 6to per Payi ________ __________________ and insurance. $14,000. FIRM Priced. No basament or garaga. Washer-dryer space in' kitchen. Insulated. Aluminum $ 4 $ Awn-'ia, oil heat) living room carpeted. Owner, TU 4-9023. PONTIAC 3-bedroom broad front ranch Large utility — decorated Ilka i — nice lot — vacant — *450 rho -you In on _F HA mortgage — for PRESTON BILT-H0MES AND REALTY 673-W11 And Coll the Van _________________________ EARLY AMERICAN-----mi j&pleynn 6avvees- and srE «47,tR^!SS? 7-^^ b«Z. .^DROOMBRICK, ^ w.lk Whlttemore ' YORK'S SPECIAL OF THE WEEK Avon Township Large ior, iots or exTras. can: YORK Mnjpah decorated. Owners agent ARRO JACK SPRAT AND HIS WIFE PAT FOUND TH^MSELVE* OVER A TO EASETHEIR'WORRY AND GET CASH IN A HURRY THEY SOLD FAST THROUGH n bungalow located h a lot, It hai i, 2to car garage. i. New U' concrete excellant Waterford Location BUILDER - OWNER. 673-SI91. EAST CITY VACANT give t this parage. Full price FIVE BEDROOMS, TWO bath*, tri-level to union Lake. Cyclone fenced patio anctotad with garage. Excellent, buy for only *26,900. FIVE AND ONE-HALF ACRES. Completely renovated three-bodreem noma bull* •• m the century. Truly KENT Eitebllshed In 1916 VESf SUBURBAN - Clean bedroom heme, full baiemqni, fenced yard. *12,500 with S2,«» GOOD LOCATION ~ 4 rooms and bath, get heat, large tot, lake privilege!. 66,500 cash. . FLOYD KENT, INC., Realtor “* Dixie Hwv, at Telegraph | ' F8T2-! 0221, 852-5375. -{spacious WOODED LOT i. In quiet neighborhood >t a kind. i. *37,500, FE 30123 ■7342 LAKE PRIVILEGES adroom, built 1961. Baaa-. large kltchan, lto hatha, ,,ulng roam with carpet.: ---- *rge fenced tot, 2to car garage. A-t condition, Drayton Plaint. *21,500. Broker, SSS4BR. Drapes, li large family room-v^M fireplace. Quality construction for only *31,900. POUR-BEDROOM Quad level BROOCK 4139 Orchard Lake Rd. At Ronfiec Trail MA 6*4000 4444890 FHA TERMS# 3-bedroom, corner I with extra loft# close to Ma Agent# 383-8613 or 363-9531. FARM HOUSE Remodeled l 042,500, land contract fine available. MILTON WEAVER INC., Raalto In the Village of Rcchstto 112 W. unvlertlty 6*1-1141 SOUTH SIDE a and bam, z ueurooma, as *750 down and balance at ... month. Walking distance to — Motor* Truck Pf— ETH G. HEMP! REALTOR FE 4-8284 , 1*5 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. SUBURBAN LIVING, 3 plenty el f house new terma. Agea 363-6613 or 363-9531. SEMINOLE HILLS Nearly new 3-bedrsom ranch, JO? living room, full batoment Ir cludmg wether and dryer, ge heat, only 824,500 , cash t kTlTeMPLETON, Realtor 239 ORCHARD LK. RQ. 682-090 ^Lauinger COUNTRY LIVING Brick and aluminum rancher. l| bedrooma. Largo family country kltchan. Largs tot. Assume land' contract. LOTS ulldin ..otertr rma. Building. BUILDING . ____.it. Full baiemant. 3 attached garage. Excellant I .see our i— ite possession. »■ Ml 6-7109. Ih 3636713 atter 6, LAKE LIVING Huntoon Shores Quad Level 2-car attached garage, custor kitchen, II x 14' family room wit beautiful fireplace and walk-oc gatlo, 13x150' tot, 031,900. 673-8141 FIRST IN VALUES RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxes end Inaurenca ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DlNINO AREA -WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS LAZENBY GO SUBURBAN 2to acres located Ideally West a town, near schools and shopplni area. Large living room, separsti dining room,' nice sized kitchen lto oaths, nail basement, Tto-car garage. Glatse-ln '— - R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor Optn dally 94# Sun. 1-5 AA4BA IB# “‘Bltorv 1 OT,^E’srcM‘'w,Dow* people WITH CREDIT PRO- LAND CONTRACT TERMS VACANT ling ranch, now gat bedrooms hardwood REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 GAYLORDS YORK REAL ESTATE WE BUY WE TRADE FE 8-7176 OR 4-0363 NICE S BEDROOM plus type ream on third fla neighborhood on north s down payment, easy term 2121 or FE M691. r-WD^Sr-TelBgraph™ '4713 Dixie HWy. LARGE 2 POSSIBLE 3-bedroom MODEL OPEN DAILY 9-V SUNDAY 2-8 P.M. running through proparty can make the taka over a mils tong. Talte_a_hpk at ttsia ana. MY 2-9ni Orton 1-9693 or FE 64693. «A/'-0«D INC. HEARTHSIDE REALTY I# family? travagance" mean more "FrusboupAngal’" *-■“ -That's why nrJlMMRIVII now home of your dreams, built en your lot for Only *19480. Why don't you bring your family over to Inspect our modal at 1032 N. cess Lake Road today. Sales exclusively VACANT tile bath, large utility room. This home la In A-t shape. Total price, $12,938. Only S500 moves you In. Vol-U-Woy WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES - attractive si layer, 1130 sq. f * — WARDEN it largo 8 Iroquois S replace, 10 Street. WEST SIDE A gracious on E. Ir__„.. natural fireplace, tormel dining room, lounge rum, 3 bedrooms all yaar sleeping porch, gas garaga, wall manicured ' large shade lion on **■■-I *22,000 WARDEN REALTY Huron, Pontiac 6*2-3920 PHONE: 682-2211 6132 Cass-Ellzabath Road MLS REALTOR OPEN DallV 9-9 XRUSHQUR REALTOR WE TRADE ROOM TO ROAM IF YOU WANT some room to roam — then give a took at this buy. This Is a 5-room, 2-bedroom buuty, with loads of room, the bedrooms are 16X14 and 16xllto, largo living room, kltchan and dining room r— It hat a real nice recreation rum with Mr and -walk-out. Te top this home off — It’s on 7% ecru ef beautiful land with 300 ft. of frontage on blacktop read. All this tor only *29,980. Lat -u* taka your present home to an trade, TAKE THAT STEP NOW The step to horns ownership. To make It May for you, wa would Ilka to show you this moderately priced 2-bedroom hoini, > HM aluminum aid Ing, paneled Itving ream, and don, mil basement: and attached garage. Has a nlct shady back yard plul' laka privileges. Priced at only $11,108. MLS 674-0819 674-2245 3730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. AVON WATERFORD SCHOOLS Largs 2 story Colonial, > 4 bedrooms, ito' EMM, family’ room with fireplace, full Mae-mant completely mad, 2to car attached garage, laka privileges. Wideman CANAL FRONT RANCHER With prlvllegu on Sylvan and Otter Lakat. Slate foyer with fi— ... _______range. baths, double vanity. large recreation room, /mu ... .... IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 334-4324 EVE. CALL 332-4498 Wolvirina Village Lovely 3 Bedroom Ranch, —*i h—1 y* r—t* *18*08O*r,°*' ertge, UxU \ L1??. located In Both epartmi bath. Snowlnt LIKE LAKE LIVING?— * room and bath 1 story « 3W Down will our *»'» go low on land contract. J™* thada tad oaraL-. ----- ... patio attached.'Y nuun ■iwwi.w .swimming pool. This Homo must bo soon to bo op- praclata trist. A Bill Eastham, Raoltor li 25" 15*20 Highland Rd. (M-5*> II Jock Jell 402*t » WATERFORD PLAZA JOHNSON ANNETT .ROYER HOLLY OFPICB ,„.uc .raos. Unusual alont *5 tebl ot lake frontage and Ml oeap. Only 85000 down on L*"*1 Contract. Wurren Stout, Realtor 1*50 N. Qpdvko Rd. / FE 5*1*5 Gay 90's Dream lUPLEX , * bodroom, 1 story, stone dream Pontiac Motor and . that hat bean changed vary little ^^ggBh ~~ tech since if wei built. Modern 12'x(5' full, kltchon, new gat. furnace, end - modern balh with marble fixtures, 14‘xl*' parlor, 15'XIO' living room, 12'x17' dining room, *' celling! and beautiful oak, and ' cherr y J irk, 17W unfinished 3rd extra large screened - - “-eploces, full flnli_ on a beautiful lergs toy, 7 rooms on each aide, including 3 bedrooms, full basement, separate gat furnaces, elate to schools and but line. lull -----,.d loti, LR irepiece, separate OR, matter be droem, * and acreeMd-ln — STOUTS _Best-Buys Today ENJOY- SUMMER LIVING?— Unusually attractive 3 bedreen brick ranch home with puststan-dlng finished lower level. 1 fireplaces. Streamlined kitchen with bullt-lns, 2Va baths. Attached 2 car aerege. 12x1* sun deck plus porch. Big shaded lot Avtrlooklng Otlclind L i K t I NORTH SIDE Attractive 3 hi large fenced ci CLARKSTON • Sale Howee Lange Realty 6c Building Co. White Lake near Town Hall. Beautiful homa with dream yard. Gardens, Ponds, Flower Bed. Stone --■- --roughout -—- - TIMES Ufa—Acra«ia LAKE FRONT HOMES, . New and Used. j, L. Daily Co. EM a»7Tl* OXBOW LAKE W. T pSi!«iu[a.neh Includat °3 bedrooms, family 2| fireplaces, TV* baths. 2.8W, W-.J-jswiALL ACEEABE, M T (gteag transportation.^ hr tnqu#l^ SACRIFICE. Need, ceah. Almost t srSvSPwanffi must bo soon to, appractoto the beautiful surroundings, 7R(Cnoetor araa. Call *51^W« morntoat. SMALL PLATTED lUjWj|ft|W».to West BtoomtleW Twp._ Somt ^eka 7711 Highland Rd. (M^l OJ i CLARKSTON A beautifully landscaped corn« lot la otfarad wllh Ihla * rom^ brick ranch featuring paved street, community water, family room, full basement end 2 Car attached garage at only S25.*». This WOTffTHtriFi w*nrt everyone Is looking tor so cell us now l 1800 SQUARE FEET And less then 2 years old. Wo hovo a beautiful quad-leyal |ust outside the village of Clerkston with almost 2 acres ot land. This lovtly homo faoturos 2Vi both*, largo family roor •— ' twin aim wer-wlndows, formal TOWNSEND LAKfe 100 «. 1*500. 10 par car SIS10CK & KENT, INC. . 130* Pontiac State, Bank Bldg. 338-»2*4 ________ mfn* WALLED LAKE SCHOOL dlstrlct-exceltentloto.somew^^iPriv-baach area, price from S1**S. S30 mo., Bloch Bros., M*0 Dlxfo Hwy. Ph: *23-1333 or 541-7711. WILLIAMS LAKE, Btaimful JOUOIa terraced canal. lot, E-Z terms, Bloch Bros.. 5**0 Dixie Hwy., PH: 633-1333 Of 5*0-77I1. __________ 51-A fnlng rc .........4»t in em* Offered at — will arrange your finan- SMALL FARM i Da'vlaburg. *vi acres v der homa that has imodalad and faatur carpeted Ij LOTS AT LAKE Mlramlchl near , Evert, 400 It. from lake, lake | privileges, bolh lots S3000. 338-7827. ^ Rwort rr»|»rty_______________________S2 SAGE LAiCE, FOX'S Shores, Lake PHi «23-l333 or 54»77U. _ WATERFORD HILL r; One at the. few beautiful tots toft’ on -1 Waterford Hllh S*,00» , *nd Salt Farms 56 front eiid'channel lots, new eub--j| division, uhdorground utlUltos. n sandy beech, restricted. Davison n1 *534*48 or <53-6840. ________ ....... ...njlata—Ayagt and dining room. Kltchon with----------------------------1" ",.„l cupboards to spero and lots of i* ACRE LANDSCAPED LOT, 135' closet space. The land Is rolling, frontage, 225' deep, Rochester, end there Is a small born. Of-1 Avon Township, 25 Mill terod on land contract, terms fori Adorns area, t*,2Q0, 54»-7755. only 824,500. ' ------------ rgnn Broker Write or Coll 5iyE7B«7 Headquarters — Dean Really Cirl, or 517-28I4127 - nlehtS. _ . „ 120 ACRES N. OF HADLEY .IBM new expressway, farm buildings, on pavad road/ 859,500. Will taK your homa or , land, contract , ,ln trade. More land Jvaltobto, ; WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU •JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" wftito Its best. $18,350. area . — Wonderful Op- idroom older homi ......... ... excellent location where the youngsters can walk f school. Offered at 123*900. THE R0LFE H. SMITH CO. Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph Rd. 333-7848 EVES. 601-0603 "BUD" LAKE FRONT 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL \ Near Davlaburg, within 20 minutes floor laundry, full t ir attached garage, business. . .Zoned Commer 3 b.r, paved road ~ 810,000.00. dHU- Lake Twp., tteje. pleasant cottagi Beit' Offer Vi Medan Lek< ART LANGE 363-2514 Commerce, Mich. STRUBLE WE TRADE A Gl BUY OVER 1 ACRE LOT ...... ______.... LOCATED In Waterford Township, HO fast laka frentape, underground!»ffh taka privileges, a nice large lawn sprinkling system. Quick home with .2 ;bedrooms, family sited -----m priced at t**,*00.00| kitchen, dining room end attached .it—. a choice piece ot i lots of fruits trees. All o money down, call for rend) ly 82*.*0 I wall located close li Showing good Only Reduced F6r Quick Sale i 4 bedroom Capa Cad on 5 acres, between Holly and Grand Blanc.! , ■RICK RANCH I Large living room with tlroptoce, . DCA. yilTIF * .Built In IW1 Union Laka oroo full boaomant, with rae. room, A REAL Ulllt containing'3 badrooms, LR, DR, Utility room on let ftoer, also a just a sharp as can be and SflSw wim/fneSB-ins, u-xs*- pool it was mm AfiriTrJS eluding ratrlgprfiiif. family room I .... north oJ. Po"'1*'- ‘ room ranen SjanEEShiJar®!; GOOD STARTER HOME w ^ ^ R2IoNE 6238204 1 bedrooms, large 12'xll' Hying1 PHONE: OZ3-8204 kltchan, plui * UtmtyiWE WILL TRADE Holly Branch Holly Plata SliSIN LAKE- wnj'p&e' a INVESTMENT DEPT. 377 S. Telegraph Rd. ■ 338-9641 Weekdays oiler 5, Set. A Sun. - Cell FE *410*__ HOT SP0T- Cornar location In Auburn Heights, ideal for many purposes, good professional service location. Size *5x11*. Terms on short term contract WARREN 5T0UT, REALTOR 1*50 N. Opdyke Rd. - FE 5-H4S VALUABLE COMMERCIAL corner, paved toad and M-5*, 'N^trtorO Twp. Terms, By owner, *12-1*50. d Businoss Opporlunitios 59 CASS LAKE LAKE FRONT MARINA V f ront« — Adjoining 1 Boat wells .. Mobil gas ( ige—approx. Slat* Park closing, terms or lot's trai Of looking a* specious areo Ip this home. This 2o REALTOR ii. » 20 ft. recreation room. 12 _ living room. It x 13 dining room. Bedrooms llxl*. 12x12 end 12x22, 2VS car. garage. 2 lull baths, full basement and fenced in yard-! Quick possession. Priced for byick safe at only $21,300- Celt right SYLVAN VILLAGE - lm bedroom home with men* — garage, Jarg In porch — Priced with 32,000 dn. on a/ land contract. Peym* I $11,500 ,P*81*5*00 beautiful’ Long Lak utility room, |V> cat of cupboard space I kltchan, 7 tots that 5*25 Highland Rd. (M-5*) Next to Franks Nursery __674-3175 O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? COMEINWOH Elizabeth Lake Prlv.' 81.150 down! to the existing land contrar ~ only 855 par month at *Jd 11 wisely an thanoma at your diett*-THE RISK-FREE WAY. NEW MODELS RANCHER: 3 badrooms, m baths, cuatom-bultt kitchen, full beta-C3tt_ w:?PEN SAT. A SUN. 14 p.m. and pmar tlmiA by ^mptoal^lVS oaramlc baths, custom kitchens with talit-ms, oak West Huron end Vaorhah Rda. OPEN BAT. A BUN. 14 p.m. and BmLy Mpi Mattingly WAITING FOR YOU— Is mis delightful Jtoom bungalow In ■ good closo-in location. Included ere 3 nice bedrooms, separate dining room. THINK YOUNG Lecated in the village. Wolverine Lake this - | brick and alumlnun. Ml ranch has kll ol me Ingredients necessary to please the young el heart, it has a full basement. 3 spacious bedrooms and aluminum storms and- screens. Tha large living room, separata dining room with door wall to balcony and tha family roam are great tor entertaining. Situated on e nicely landscaped lot with lake privileges and can be yours tor lust S2I.900. YOU'LL NEVER REGRET ‘ Taking tea .tima wt to took •* this 2 bedroom’ Trims ranch; You'll Ike tha large Hying room, seperota dining room, full bast- California. Priced at S14.SOO.- -OPEN ! MODEL HOME — rustic ranch with, heavy beam celling and neturelj fireplace. S bedro ment, 2-Cer » maleriels through yr^jBfaalPII ’I BUILDING SITES — Lako front lots' this country ■■ ■—■ Mm* Irons one vnuiia,. street beck to the next street. Lois ntgle and tree nursery. l3 acres i ' elbow room. Beautifully fhe famed Pine Knob Ski A Sprlr J-------- pnd tro#».jL,k, g0|f c|ub area. m equipment. h0me blends grecetulh ame today. natural, splendor of the landscape.j ■a -this tine hi sided parcels. LEST BROWN BUILDERS & REALTORS 5*1 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD (Across from the Pontiac Mall) ______ FE 2-03S2. ___ HOWARD T, KEATING 22IMW. ujRltle tolrnrslnatshrr irear. Th ivileges o ike. Full O' DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY OFFICE 'MODEL 612-9000 OR 4"55*1 Val-U-Way 2 BEDROOM Extra (harp bungalow on North side wim Tvk-ctr garage. Large living room with wal' to wall carpeting, convenient sbto kitchen with ample citobaard ipaea gjd dining arpa. ttto bath, gat heat, fanead yard., Only S550 needed bn . FHA terms. - - DRAYTON' PLAINS A heme with room to spare Is mis i * bedroom ranett-lypa aff*-'— : huge caraatad living room, n kttahgtti large Ret utility ream, Mill ..- ,%^isi'%.mL#esai 823,510, FHA larttss. alagant. 'blends graceful' 1 ‘ splendor of th. .. .. . iwww- luxury permeates every burch ills MNogjarearaj. SKSSSJSra U&SSk “wt: ‘Hr- Pitt me bullt-lns In kitchen. Laundry .... „y*l211~i*|room on main floor, hobby and rec. ous end completely f*need. „m ^ basement. 2 car., healed landscaping of this property « Fine garden “ iut fault and the Interior >•1 lv “ lly the seme. 3 I • r #_e,» horse ......... .... _ romiwruon jo mi. Hardwood floors. Com- J4, M0 By appointment only. tff weterWHAT A SETTING ’ f C00ltX .^nd water ■offntrt Don,l TQfr h^zmtlful f—t of Elizabeth Lm I miss ^ ua Ihla todayl ‘frontage. iHard. Mfe Mndy baagr. u*-' This* desirable lake front ^brick S ROYER REALTY, INC. - I 674-2236 LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3*77 LAPEER RD._______391-3301 I HI-HILL VILLAGE, Hl-Lur* Drive, end eppre 105 x 1*0. lovel lot. $3100. 5M-7177. 1 zoned mu -------; ; j coil on INVESTORS-DEVELOPERS - j ^ J4.3^,49’ 51 acres plus, long frontage on 2 0 NEIL REALTY OR 4-2222 roads, plus tots W lake ^frontage ] —I- :--- . Priced et 815.101 WHAT'S YOURS? room Ior $l7,»»0 plus lot? A 4-\ bedroom 2-story cqlonlel family room and "basement tor $]».**# phis lot? What's yours? Cell i'-1*’ ' Grovelend Twp., Prlca STS,SOI — I 4-H REAL ESTATE. *23-1411 ef--.*21-2*71. LAND Exclusive ■■■ ____ m 2Vi ACRES with state land1*across DPI ,w. details on ona of! road, surrounded by nice homes, vrS 5S3 Sire xz.zrzd *mi■ ZJWV. I SKjaLMrr aarja:5 Ortonvllle, railing uml-wooded, KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" IN SYLVAN VILLAGE " And surrounded by many shade trees is 'the location ot this beautifully landscaped home. It has a full basement, two car garage, fireplace, formal dining' room. ’ and of Course water and i sewers. The beach tot on Sylvan 1 Laka 1s ona anvwhera. This •p and at ohiy S3*,*W1f VdiTv* b«en II • i tor choice lake Irani prop#.... II your O'Neil representative today pR 4-2222 And he will erfuga ur private showing. No. 1543 MAGIC WORDS Rochester Colonial" one ot Ihose are finds In a *cenlc area north of swn. A custom colonial situated on jpprox. 3 acres. A small asiato tor a growing family. .Secluded f~ private Ilka rood. An akcallant -ind location. Call far nfor-egerding Ihe many details his fine nomtl No. 1*-3 330' frontage, ____.mo. you can see me wwny, n*aiwy-nn»i«,m,i■ area, 85250. TED'S CORNER -THE REALTOR bra‘PH. ... ■ . In real^ estate. Pratossjanal becauseACREB^ MI^GSSS TI per lUtt * C Ik clean i bedroom brick ranch with 2W ■ car surslv sell oaraoc, Vb baths, handy, kitenan IH5T Excellent condition. Polntment. Finished basement with g k s aria? vjrftsm thb 1 lovily - homi - WSM .Oft U..S TT and drapes. Pecan paneling needs hop end a lump from Silver;S25.*00. No. 13-33 no upkeep. Slone barUacue. Fancedl L,|,e Golf Club. An arde ot nlcei In corral, allowed to k*ap 2 horses. homes end the price has been WQ ADJECTIVES ' J * ™r£l”» ny.r*rnimySj n" r«doc»«5l Cell tor Information. Jujt # fir^taiprwntjhet this 3 to mortgage. By eppol ma« • ECT cmr inriTinil bedroom brick home Is by far — ~* A Inusctrnint WEST SIDE LOCATION line nlegktSr—| A Wonaerrul 'nvaStragnT w ^ ^ older homes soe. Located ..A-----islted tor. Boma at prlca at S2*,S«. Details *V KENNETH O. HEMPSTEAD _ FE *428* — 1S5 ELIZ. LAKE RD. 1 PAMILV" APARTMENT IN. Pon-tlac. 2 apis, completely fu--'-'—■ Total Income _per monk Price $17,500. PHA terms ^"fitKOSIEAITY __*82-7131 or 331-1*95 MODEST INVESTMENT \ ............... building' sttts! WE , PROVIDE COMPLETE Also, good pond possibility, 110,951, TRAINING SI,800 down. ; _ ... --• 1 Writ* P.0. Box 3214 lit, 875*5, « Wr C. PANGUS, Realtors , OPEN 7 DAYS, A WEEK I M*-W<- 5 M-15 Ortonvllls CALL COLLECT *27-2115 FOR LEASE Gull Service Station, 7t*S ’Dixie Hwy. at M-15, Clarkston, Mich.* liey, 255-0550, evtnlngf LARGE LOT FOR rent for mobile home. Near Imlay City. In town. On ^payed streets. Call Pontiac, LOTS Sf LOTS. And acreage. Fowler Really, 3*54*13, 3*3*531, *25-305*. ' 83io: ORTONV1LLE REC. AREA, ] (mall,1 acre*- 750” frontog*. private la terrific to vestment, $1,000 an at ----j- E-Z terms. Bloch Bros., 5«*0 Di Hwy. PH: *23-1333 of 50-7711. MAKE MORE Forget about tong, drawn dut ■ strikes end lay-offs. Bo your own boss. We have some Gulf Sarvloa Stations tor tease. Excellent locations with bays or without. Only a small Invostmont ’ .......M started In your vary & Lake Property 51 „.jn Suslnt HR _______ CAMPBELL; ED WHITE or LARRY TRSPECK,-. *74-3114. _________________ Clarkston School district. Recreation arte, travel. traitor campsite an almost private laka. Approximately 12 miles tram Flint. One 2 room cottkgt, not Modem, two 3 bedroom mobile, homes with lVk baths. Electric stoya . and refrigerator*. On* strvict building tor Trailer park wllh service tor too trailers Including showers, lavatories, wash bowls and AtojT sinks. ly. j cold watei I. each. Two U gal. -------- .W . EAST SIDE Sharp iW4toty 3 .hed.— ^ with basement and lanced Urge - living, .rat— —“ kitchen with j|«§W. YOU caRtrade for any HOME WE HAVE FOR BALE Val-U-Woy Rtalty and FE 4-3531 « Oakland Avt. Open ♦ ..to * you htVI features - ■ beauty art large I tormal dining ram tertalnlng, family _ generous size bedi many r“— *"*•'" ■-- - yc_ .. 1 with tern Highlands, a I... HR - schools and i! churches. Full Itoished basement, , garage and - —•“*** A HEATED POOL In tha city that can provide •round awlmmlfig. Tnta 91 In-ground pool lT«MWpt diving «gim> lliterlng sv..— end highlights the many features ef this v three bedroom tri'— ......_______ 3500 gaiT septic fink tar' service. building. .One disposal station for tall contained traitors. A 1500 gal. aaptle tank. Two water towers. One tor pur* drinking water — qne tor tank cleaning. Two water fountains tor drinking. Electrical system will . accommodate 100 IraHart. 1 both. 22 tables. Also 17 rented tables. Drain (told maato state spec nice Hons. Deep lake covers epproximateiV 35 acm: Appraxlmatoiy M ecres of lend which Is mama.,. Beautiful Ire**. 20 acre* has been rezoned and aceaptod tor tha abova part. _____________________________ f m. ?8S fffi ; w et It's fin* Matures, eooa assumable mortgage with monthly payments of 1*5.00 at » par tent Interest. Asking S30.7S0, No 9-43 INCOME PROPERTY 3 tomlly Income plus 1 sleeping rooms brings In $2*0 per month. Zoned: commercial, reel dose to downtown. I rooms plus 7 car garage, can > be purchased on LC Prlca 816,250. NO. 12-21, DIAL OR 4-2222 This will ba the most Important call workshop; ’plw many . o?5e* ’mj^JSinlaflve1 wlll'olve leelures. lt s toc**ad aj. ™, ™ you all the particulars on a brand no'*!? am*..”! JV M. *!?!" 1 now Hating. In wards Orchard priced af 015,too "Wlttr"PXCI 824,950. Make an appolntmant To Finartcino available. If you hurry you sea It today. icn diB ba moved before sgitoai . starts. No. tS4* _ OUR GUARANTEED TRADE I M PLAN IS DESIGNED^ FOR YOU, I IOMEOWNER -"■•“■■■ . ,—. HR special assessment. Good percaiatlbn. On gravel read & or cMorldad). Baa"*™ woods. Tarrain retting and Doing business. Goad , Ini Owiiir Wishes to travel. 8160,000. Slightly flexible. C NELSEY, SALES AGEI .; Doyisburg ’ 313425-32*0 ff BIIMI -Evening Cslls Walcom* HOMEOWNE.. ....— - I.CIXIUUC ■ ___ YOU MUST SELL BEFORE M?,*h M^Tteto fuS-10) to ...w Aw W..W - — - LaiM Chun* TO TRMBE Ttw HOWE Y FOR THE HOME YOU WJ tor Bob Harrell. Otota Hoi--- — Kerr, Bill Mountain, Eltoen Moyer, Elaine oert. Emei. K«n Hsfl. •fimn. BinniH hmu q-w «JO-! MODELS SHOWN AT YOUR CON* Os vs Bradleys Dick Bifysn* VBNICNCR ^ CALL TODAY FOR t Butler* Dorms Gooden or; YOUR APPOINTMENT. «•" RAY OSNEIL REALTY 1071 W. Huron st.! MLS, PE 44*211 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD. AFTER 0 P.M. CALL , OR 34111 OR JSS# MU OR 3-1 WALTER'S, iWbui LAPEER « ACRES hwTtoal At-ltOl-KOO0* SYLVAN BEDROOM ON DOLLAR ..... (RRI CONNECTS TO CABS LAKE. GAB Choices, 110 HEAT, LAND CONTRACT,. IMS ----------- KENRICK - VACANT. - AtMOST AN acre. Lakefront, tractive 2, posaiow, 1 oeoriwnii home plus ln-(*w or Income apt. ----- large 2 car garage. Fruits —- — Dixie ' ling silts.; t->. , . Partridge RHODES I garden. Nasr “Terms**’ ’ Established 37 years with increasing yearly prolita. Has two highly advertlswd franchised franchises Mr I’d counties groiiilng over 1300,000. HIQHLAND-MILFORP. ACRE; down, choice building spot. Bloch Bros. 5M0 Dixit Hwy., PM: *23-1333 or 5*5-7711. . rrjnrT. Dixie, LAKE udTS !7 tlec. Wooded a $35 per month. BRIAN REALTY id rolling homssltsi. LOVELAND PONTIAC LAKE , HOMEBITES. Lako Drlon. Call today tor details. A. J- RHODES, REALTOR FE 1-230* 151 W. Walton FE 541i, MULTIPLE LI3TINO SERVICE. ROYER OXFORD OFFICE ZONED MULTIPLE This beautiful rolling 13 acre! parcel, excellent location, Ju*t 1 mi from downtown Oxford. Ex-1 Invostmont. Excellent trap' return oh multiples. Will] , SUBURBAN PARTY STORE Here's a buy — • Boar, win*, and; grocery buslnatt thet * r • Vs vu 11*0,000 In 1*47, Business end MM Estate cen be yeurp for B7S4W wjffi 120,000 down plut stack. Call • tattay make this party store make money for you. Ask for Nd. 14-J254-G. - m . restaurant'. _ ■ Here's the hottest buy Id Iho Flint eras. Prlca 034400, terms to bg •**•• --nged. The location and *he iintst are the hlehest end tet ■ —"'i. The are* to hat and is Mr all. to* tuna. No. 14 _____Enloy teing and awimmingi and live -In s qutot pMcaful ef-i mosphere . S1A500 to Site tem. Leona Loveland, Realtor '-tor goad n build to sui Ask for No. .f^>. _ UNUSUAL 10 ACRES This beautiful Ibwcre parcel with excellent high building sift, north' ... of Oxford is split right In half. Ap-iSubuf-... proximate ly * ecrae an each, side rtwr- „LSSS^an'. oftheroad. Siote toll price/L»5 NeiM.'- tetej ] contract terms. EM dMWL Call1 Wm.aMJgf ! for details. Ask tor Na. 4B9-A. | Ne. 14-(.88500. | ROYER REALTY, INC. L PHONE: 628-2548 (Oxford Offlca ‘ SB S. Lapeer i i use possia CLASS "C" BAR . , Flint area — Hi Gross. No toad .— Real there. lISMI'datyh. Itote by •paointmant only. Ask’tor NO. 14- (MAN . . gaa imam. Cal on AIK FOR FREE CATALOG MYMPrinranfcrani 1150 west Huron SI.. Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 I>—11 Sal* HeaieheM Goods 65 1 OV*r' 21, married, prefer ■WIN) children having batty titling ------- “ — Kr, end ip > 343-7150 problems. Earn $2 per I MACOMB COUNTY BAR i room •stata Inc), for $ HHUMB^AREABAKERY Specializing In European beklna. H coflee shop. Large brick building mein *wUI?w« torge apart"!' up. Total nrtap Ind. rial estate |i si34 W: Huron. Pontiac '; 012-3120 motel MIAr PdNtiAC — cellent gross, separate I guartera, mom forexpanslon. tor further Information, *l National Unclaimed FURNITURE •rend new Sott Mrb Mrs. Chain 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 DELIVERY FE i-7tsi._____________________________ 65*. 334-0273, 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 solid. Vinyl Tile .. .i . leaa. Vinyl Asbestos tile .. ... 2c ea. Inlaid llhh«x» .....2c ea. Floor Shop-2235 Elizabeth Lake ‘Across From the Mall'" FuTlywaranteed" Terrific savings! Terinkc '■ CURT'S APPLIANCE MM WILLIAMS LAKE *0. <24-1101 ...mi mil lull iliilMijM bads. 3096 comm----*— Walton and Perry. PAUL BUNYON itirgasbord a Restaurant u to i 12 X 26' ACRILAN CARPET, now, never used, soil at less «n*n hail ot original cost. >24-2773. training, no oxperienco required, for Information call Continental Franchise, 473-7*90, . hirZA SPECIALTY RESTAURAN' Shows good growth. 63,000 dowi isoo a mo. OR 3-3944 after 3 p.m. I 1968 TOUCH-A-MATIC os! " 1 * ... , New sewing machines, does fancy stitching, makes- buttonholes, etc.. Sold far S124^L balance only S31.I0 or pay Sl.it ear week, call day — night, MS-2344, Imperial. RHODES LARGE CLEAR SPAN BUILDING, 58x98, full basamont, gat heat, 826,000. Terms. , A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 8-2306 23t W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE " - SPARE TIME INCOME rw'Tyr'wis! coin-operated dispensers. In. your iMhE^ 15222. include Phan National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand-new Posture Mattress a> MLS Qptn~;f4 V ** V JOHNSON 1706 S. TELEGRAPH Rd. FE 6-2533 Wnntod CoRtracts-Mtg. 6 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See ut before y deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 1650 N. Opdyke Rd. PE M165 Open Eves. *tll I p.m, CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS 4-5400 OR EM 3-4086. LOANS BAXTER A LIVINGSTONE FE 4-15: 196k DlAL-A-MATlC Brand new aewing machine. Lett In ley-ewey. Sold for $119. Balance due only 634JO. Or will accept 81.25 par weak. CaH anytime, 334- i - PLENTY OF USED Washers stoves, refrigerators, and trad- '-furniture .bairaetaa, Little J Trade-In store, Baldwin at Wa Blvd. FE Hia 7 Attention Housewives “-hast prlr --- appllan triple tr___________ ___ complete, 649.50 and u Furniture, 210 E. Pike. SSL SAVE UP TO 50% WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE On FWer iemplee one. e^^e kind. ranges, refrigerators, washers arid TVs. ■ Little Joe'e Bergeli Baldwin at Welton Blvd. SHOP AND SAVE Lowest Prints in Town 5 Piece dinette, 649. 3-Way rectifiers, 165. Sofa, Mr. 4— fiW Scotchguard. Ri Mattress ar' Italian Seta Mrs. Chairs, _________________a. cushions, 811 Mattress end box spring set; 659 — --- matching chi 6239. rafrlg., 6134. v piece dinette 669. ■ 4 ptofct bedroom suite. 8105. Bunk bed set, 659. II" color TV with stand 6319. Maple Dinette and 4 chairs, 316 Stereo Conaoletto AM-FM radio, I Carpeting, .100 per Cent i tlnuoue filament nynn, 64.95 tq. 1 32" Stereo Cental, 6 speakers, AM-FM radio, 8149. Traditional sofa and matching chair, 6129. / 14 tu. ft. Refrlg., 6109. Indoor-outdoor carpeting, 65.95 tq. yd.1 E-Z TERMS HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 452 Elizabeth Lk. Rd._____335-9263 By Dick Turner I Brand NeW Fresh Stock Bolen's 10 H.P. Tractor 42" MOWER, 6-SFEEDS, LIGHTS, ELECTRIC STARTER SPECIAL ONLY *929 .HOUGHTEN'S POWER J floor” sandei_____________ ^ WALLPAPER STEAMERS ILUE LUiTRE SHAMPOOERS *1 A DAY , 952 Jotlvn FE *61(8 BB BUY YOUR WEDDING —| at iltoauiw from, Dixie, prayton, OR 3- DELUXE WASHER and dryar tat, 695. Steva and refrigerator, 145 aa. Sofa and chair, S2S. Pool table, S50. Roadrece set. Infant dressing table, etc. 33M595. DISHES AND' MISCELLANEOUS Items, lota of odds and ends, 397 Cteyburn off Elizabeth Lake Rd. near Crescent Lake, Thurs. and Frl. 10-2, ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over the bathtub with' a beautiful toftMritauP enclosure, aluminum fra...„ _______ sand .bleated Swan design, 628.95. a - ------- m3f w. GARAGE SALE SIZE 10 to 10. Good or Winter clothing, record yerj alto 2 precision skates WE CURE AND SMOKE MEATS. Ceil FE 2-6155.______________________ CHICKENS, COCKATIELS, DUCKS, pheasants, Persian sheep and lamb, joveblrdt. 637-3199. Farm Produce 83 Travel Trailers Wet ■ 11-45*.— Ooodell Trellera. _*7»-07l4. Metorcyde* 86 sept. 62? YELLOWSTONE TRUCK CAMPERS PRICES SLASHED t-11‘ self contained with showei TO1 self contained with shower e sleeper. These 2 campers I be sold. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 1 3721 Highland' (M-59) 4*1 GOLDEN BANTAM SWEET earn, tomatoes, pepptrs;, 4 kinds of squash, cucumbers, sgg plsr j merits:^ cabbage, fresh eg CAtitiiNG ' PEACHES, _ 64.50 PE# -'-met, 2001 Pontiac Rd., Just off Perry Rd. Farm Equipment 1967 SEARS, 12 h.p. Tractor, snow Made, cart, whoa1 -and chains, 6600. 625-5330. I-A Beauties to Choose From WE FINANCE-TERMS RICHARDSON DELTA MONARCH DUKE HOMETTE LIBERTY COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 2-1657 620.1310 25 OPDYKE 5430 DIXIE 1969. Toil ut whst you got .to trade. AIM, tome good Industrial tractor loaders and beekhees at big savings. Sharp Cass tractor loader and backhoe S2995. See Bob Hillman at Pontiac Farm Industrial Tractors, 125 f| ■ —• -- FE4-1441 “That ol’ Miss Pool I had (or a teacher last year went to summer school but she didn't learn, much—she’s right back it) the third grade!” CLEARANCE SALE, Whsel HOTSO Tractors, save up to $200, 10 or 12 hp. Tom's Hardware, 905 orchard Lk. Dally 9-6. Sun. 9-2. FE 5-24*' 8, etc. EM 3-7374. GARAGE SALE. 2320 P Cor, ot Mlddlebelt. GARAGE SALE: Maycrost, Pontiac. AIR COMPRESSORS/ lubrication equipment, hydraulic lacks, steam Cleaners. Welding MW-----* jMB Pontiac Motor University Dr ' - 4»42 PORTABLE WELDER, TRUCK. ■ Fri., Set., 9 to. 5. 3766 GARAGE SALE: Thuraday-Frldi 3517 Werrtoghsm Dr. ptf Willie; Lk. Rd. CUSHiONS — CtlS+ltDNS Custom made tor Danish, Colonial and Contemporary chairs sofas. 20 to 50 pr* group of fabric.. ComL Upholstery Co. SINGER SEWING MACHINE, good condition. FE 24W._______ sqpaI muIholsTered. SAVE 335-17** TRUCK LINE ORDERED SAL* Of slightly damage*! ranges, TAP-PENS, 027, GE HOTPOINT with teflon liners, 6101; ethers 876. 62. down, 02. a weak. abcwarehouoee storage 41625 van Dyke 1 bl. south of 22 mile Utica __730-1010 GARAGE SALE: Antiques, crystal, knick-knacks, back to. sc ho o’ clothes, you name It, it's here. 369! Halle, 6s ml. N. ot IS Ml. Rd., - “—-— — Lehser, Sspt. 3. 6. Used TV'S 819.93 ibs, 650. Breakfast table end ~ sirs, 625. Electric motor for: WASHER PARTS pricaa to sen. e,uuu id. ni-iow. exc conditionJ2l 100. Blvd. Supply. 500 S. Blvd. E. S3S-7HI.________ TOOL BOX ANb complete I grinder 3-2761. 1 CLEVELAND SUPERIOR Corona SALE: I ALUMINUM windows with screens, ..... —... floor bottom, 2 reclining chairs, dithwei^eimynte. 635E 673-7341______________ EVERYTHING MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR end furniture, mite. StSWErEdlth. .......... ...i 61195; Grtonell was 5*95; - Wurlitzer wet 6695; .... DANISH MODERN leather sectional, ft chairs, *15 ea; < table and lamp, ---------- ------- cube table-walnut, 66. 335-6793, ' WAREHOUSE SALE OPEN TO , PUBLIC. Entlra Inventory of now refrigerators, ranges, washers, etc. Every item dls- e,»cu.v .... bottle hectare. H are terrific values In gusllty heaters. Michigan Fluorscent, 393 Orchard Lk.) pe 6*462. - 16. LAVATORIES COMPLETi *2(1.5#_____________, I —'--a 614.95, also bathtubs, toilets, Kimball * terrific Lowrev r Iht; 393 Lewrey * ..unted. Scratched eccordingly. No rest. Bank forms. Sale tomorrow. 10 a.m DEEP FREEZE, AUTOMATIC wether 625, refrigerator S35, dryer 635, electric water heater S4S, 30" ------- mlsc. 6, Harris, FE 5-2766. DINING ROOM FURNITURE 5 PC. maple, $45. S pc. dropleaf set, 645, 5 pc. maple dropleaf, 659, a pc. btorid with china cabinet, S95, odd dropleaf teblae, SIS to $39. M. C. Llppord.113 Nrsoglfi- Illenco, 2416 14 Mlta Rd. between Weodword end Crooks Rd. WAREHOUSB DISCOUNT sale -(brand new) 2 pc. living room sat 647JQ up, 4 pc. bedroom eat $79.50 up. Seta bade 649JO up, 3 pc. Hying , room Sectjgnal 1139 up, reclining chairs 839.50 up, - I---- apt. get range, 879.50, itac. rang* 699.50, 2 stag coffee table 614.95 tor i tresses tor most overythl .. ------ " away beds, hide away LA W N^.SP^NXLING SYST E Mj LENOX FURNACE. 95,000 BTU,. IWW duct work, for 8 rooms,; 5 double hung windows. Ilka now; 3 owning type windows, like new; l, pic ure window 70" X 7T' opening, 1953 Ford PICk-up, 473-0074. National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new 4-pleca Bedroom Suita —ily 091 26 eat* to Ml. 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY ELECTRIC STOvk, Korim Deluxe, and 3 piece bedroom Coll 330-1500 altar 5:30 p.m. ter stalls. Irregulars, terrific values. Michigan FluaMMf “ Orchard Lk., FE 4-4062. as 61205; ss 81740; ■s 81740; now 0695 now 649 .now 679 now 6650 now 61391 now 1149 now 6795 j ottar refused. Sond-Gravei-Plrt 7 WE ARE NOW EXCAVATING series of basements In the Alrpoi -Drayton, Waterford aVea. Wo 6lw have several hundred yds. ol i II OR 3-8935, 6 a Pots-Hunting Dogs NA 7-3292 Your Homollte and New Idea Dealer—John Poore Parts Galore SALE New McCulloch choln taws model No. Mac-15 with 15" bf “* choln. Regular prlca 6129.95. SALE PRICE ONLY 1 6109.95 KING BROS. I FE 4-1662 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke_____ 1 AKC MALE Apricot Mint ------ *■“ 673-0969. - P. 665. Travel Trailers Atfor 4. 1-BASSET HOUNDS, COCKERS. Poodles, Norwegian Elkhounds, toy Poodles, chocolata and black. Doxies, tropical fish. Pet supplies and GROOMING, Uncle Charlies Pet Ship, 6*' *u ------ E. ot Tola Sunday 1-4. 2 LONG HAIRED KlrretfS, free to a good ***— 11W ALUMINUM TRAVEL trailer. Attar 5. 613-4545. __________ 1963 14' FROLIC, sloops 6, 6450. Excellent condition. FE 6-4254. 165 PACER, air MlMewtglned.. Ceil Carton Fall FE e-4511briwaw> 11: :30 a.m. — I p.m. 334-9195 10 . Call 482-5571 attar a BEAGLE PUM. ili faONTHS. ell shots,, spayed. $60 - —T- “ each. 6036042. ________ •A POODLE GROOMING, pupfries, toy stud service. FE 4-6430, l-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, ESTEI HEIM KENNELS, 291.-1009 AKC IRISH SETTERS, 4 months, I or trada? 679-0491. AKC COLLIE PUPS, AKC COLLIE PUPS, sables 4 “ ' ----------Sired, 651-3766. Free panting Free lessons GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1710 S. TELEGRAPH ALASKAN HUSKY, Oil. ~ ALL PET SHOP, S5 LIKE NEW SCREENS, for 12'xll' porch. Including door, 675, 442- MAPLS BABY BED; net playpen FE 4-0564 also stud eervlce. 691-6136. .OPEN MON.>AND"fRI. TILL 9 Bargains in Used Pianos Uprights and grands, all clean, tuned and delivered. Morris Music 34 S. Telegraph MUST SELL MISC. Furniture and beautiful hairpieces, reasonable. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Zlg Zag sewing machine — cabin embroiders, blind hem ■- 1966 model. Tal ELECTRIC STOVE, EXC. condition, 335-7942. Pofltlac ROOOtO SflQP. ELECTRIC STOVE, 625; GAS etovO, 635; Rafrlgerator with top freezer, 649; Wringer washer. 640. G. Har-rls, FE 5-2766. IGI DA I I Prussia — much morel Chapotte Henry Antiques. 32t0 Lake George . Rd., Like Orion. 651-1942. (OHI Orton Rd., be*. Rochettar and Lake; $5.90 PER M0. for 9 Mos. GUARANTEED Universal Sewing Center 2615 DIXIE HWV. FE 4<90! !| NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE AKC SHELtlE PUPPIES, SIS. 394-0278._________• AKC POODLE PUPS end etud dog. BUNDY FLUTE, good condition, S50. CONN ALTO ^ SAX, $150; like new. GUILD STAR-FIRE o AKC tiny white toy, etud eervlce, reasonable, S BLACK POODLE, Mela, I COLLIE PUPPIES, AKC, malat, haalmy, baautlfiii. SMHSjg. - CROSS BRED, SIRE Gar mi Shepherd, mother ■ t a n d a i Schneuzer, 1 male, 1 female. diehwaiher. , R | UNDER-counter ...... exc. condition. Cost 6239, toll' for $70. Kitchen sol, table/ 4 chairs, like new, cost $69, tell 630. 1 wicker rocker, SIS, 2 wicker chairs, 812 aa. 1 canister vacuum, 68, 'gMaggftto' BLOOMFIELD ANTIQUE Pair, Cran-I |—" -”J“orlu«n Dl"* hard S, 6, brook Auditorium. 550 Lone Pine, NEW SCHOOL DRESSES for Ridge, Bloomfield •-*- -* ——1 dMMM — ,*"“r _______ by Mlchi gen! Rescue League. I furniture end;PIANO, ACCORDIAN AND guitar — PMHPIRHIPwiiy. T"— —n Brooklyn, oil Baldwi ...JNDER ...jgiHMVH case, like new, 693-2762. jPRIGHT PIANO, 640. Uhlth Van Linos 10 S. J* CUTE PUPPIES^ 65 EACH MUSTANG GUITAR and {J!™rament' --“C-ncw, |p.«n i remperemeni. UPRIGHT PIANO, £mj|Uf|MM||d| tamperamarit. MY 2-2409. and rapalri Moihftat. II types, 363-936), man WASHER, AUTOMATIC, Hitchcock heed boar" ibber raft. 151-3: SUMMER SAVINGS ON PIANOS AAany medals tram 635 up - English pointer, to run, moving, FE FREE KITTENS. UTTER trained. M Dr., B like ^ew’ sS: GATE-LEG TABLE, NICE, Y-Knot . . A ntUliae let riaifltnlirn _ OoBn A GATE-LEG TABLfc, nil Antiques Jn Davisburg Dayi. _____________• EAGL* I. SWEET'S, 10101 GAS STOVE, NEARLY new, apart- . 6 M.W. Dlkte Hwy. 634- . OFFICE DISK, PILES, cabinets, portable and • typewriters, adding mlChi dratlng tablet arid other It GERMAN 4HEPHERD Pups, mixed. 11 GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS AKC NEED UP TO $5000 You may be surprised how clwoply you can odd new rooms, repair or remodel yoyr present home by doing your own^ work and using our. money for materials. Whatever -"Voui^numo' neansiwr" ’ *•" Voss & Buckner, Inc. 209 National Bldg., Pontiac 334-3267 96 Ruth 51.. 332-4443. National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new Nylon Soto-441 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 free delivery rt« Hi-Fi, TV l Radios ONE 16' SQUARE PyremWleal A — Tent. Call ottar 4.6024046, .V hoover SPINDRY WMltajr-IS 11" RCA COLOR TV, hjco picture, will deliver set up and guarantee 6150. Coll ■ 45 E.WeHantiaarEaWwlh , COLOh TV BARGAINS, IJTTLB •s Bargain Houmi PE *4tB» ! PM starae adapter, PING PONG TABLE. ~. tlmet. Ilka new. 630T363-9377. PLUMBING BARGAINS; FREE standing JgB *16.95; SGgaHon heater, *49.95; BoScil .bath jata. 199.95; laundry tray, trlm, *19J5; shower stalls with trim, $39.95; 2- £ bowl ttak, 62,95; levs., 62.95; tube, I $20 and up. Riga cut and tm SAVE PLUMBING CO. Baldwin. FE 4-1916. 16" Vanity, 89.95 Tollatt reverse trapf, 124.95 Toilets B grade, 619.95 town brands, prices GRINNELL'S FE 3-716S . GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPR, AKC, . excellent field and show prospects, reae., 3324451. _________ LABRADOR RETRIEVER, mother " pups. MA 6-2465. 1 r-" * ifo. miniature schnauzer PIES, AKC, champion brad, mole. 0121. Attar 4 P.M., 60S-4091, DAVIS MACHINERY CO. ORTONVILLE “* U 1965 YAMAHA 250 ’CC Scrambler, angina and tiros, 0210 cash. Li >50*3 anytime- j ISA, LIGHTNING SUPER 90 HONDA, holmat an ir carrier brackets. OR >7440. 1966 HONDA SCRAMBLER 305, lui pointed, 6500 firm, FE SG672. 1966 SEARS 250CC, good condition. ww _____________.____________ 1966 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 250 Cd- 1967 YAAAAHA, 250 Sccomblor, 6450. 1959 PACEMAKER HOUSE traitor, . bedrooms, oxc. condition, SO'xlO' wide, cell 606-W35. Mlltord. 1967 450 CC, HONDA Cuetom, owner. 505 actual miles. beat infer. 2'* SUB 1961 DETROITER 10 X 55 I -bedroom, 17 ft. living room, carpel. On tot In POnfjac. j 1964 MARLETTE, 10x50 1964 GREAT LAKES, orlglf.................... like new. 10 x 55 with tide and front tlp-outs. 330-1225 or 549-5456. ■Mov stay on *-* 1966 RICHARDSON MONTCLAIR, 12x60, 3 bedrooms, axceltont con-ditlon. 6500 down end assume payments. 4344147. 1963 COLONY, 12 X 60 PARK. I960 ROYAL EMBASSY, 12x61, fulh furnished, 66,000. 50 Brentwood Cranberry Lake Mobile Horn: Village, or call 6744094. AUTUMN. SALEH! ___ Our 1949'a are how coming In! end,wo still hove a tow I960'- | ___ I kTlz-CroitT Sprlngbrook ^COUNTRYSIDE UVING 14 Oak lor 88 Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Marietta Champl-.. Royal Embaiiy LaSoto IJKta* American Victor MARLETT^EXPANDOS-' FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP WITHIN OOP'MILES. FOR SAL!'-MINI BIKE rssft otter. WB. ______. HONDA, l50ce, exc. condition. I960 TRIUMPH _ miles, 61100. Ml BONNEVILLE, liot I 4-4687. __■' ANNUAL SUMMER SALE ALL 1968 MODELS ON SALE I BSA, TRIUMPH, HON DA,, NORTON. DUCATI, MONTESA, AND MOTCM3UZZI.---- ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 1665 S. Telegraph PE 3-7102 BACK TO SCHOOL CLEARANCE 200cc Scrambler, was $640, now...............j$520 250cc Scrambler, was $725, now............. $575 Plus many mora to choosa from at graat savings i MG SUZUKI SALES 4657 Dixie Hwy., Drayton 6724451 Mini blkei from $144.50. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right' to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demoda Rd.. loft ond follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phono 629-2179._______________ DUCATTI 125 CC, $140. I EM >0621. HONDA holmot, S375. 363-: HONDA, 4100 or g 1951, $5,200.00 V extras. SOioT 3*34377. 41 pick-up --------------- -- nt models ot truck canwere ose from. 14' travel trojtorz, While they W«t. Wo will bo August 25 to Saptambtr 4, ■cotton and Invontory. Bill end'get a demonitretlon i ivwnfr Trailer Setoe, 3096 9 Huron (plan to loin one ot Wall CENTURY YELLOWSTONE travel trailers___ QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59) Check our deal on — SWISS COLONY luxury trailers FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 21 ft. on display at — Jacobson Trailer Sales Wlllleme Like Rd. OR >4W! ON DISPLAY AT; ■ ■ Cranberry Lake M Heme Vlllag etwlllle’mil BOB Hutchinson's 21st Anniversary i SALE YES, 21 YEARS Bob has been in Mobile Home Sales Bob Hutchinson Invites you to see the all new $22,000 DOUBLE-WIDE KR0PF HOME 1400 SO. FT. FLOOR SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITERS 64295 AND UP Free dtlivery up to 31 Bicycle* 96 A-l REPAIRED BIKES, bays, glrw. Boats-Accessorles 12* ALUMINUM BOAT end trailer. 425-3155, ________ ■ ■ - 4', 35 HORSEPOWER meter, skis, trailer, and accessorise, 651-7352 etterS, 4 FT. FIBERGLASS BOAT, 3* horzepower Evlnurde, trailer, 6400. ■ml. THOMPSON SEA LANCER.. 1 -h.pTjohhten and Gator Walter, 61)25. 707 Pina Traa, Laka Orion. motor, axe. tor Greet Lekee Cohe «aWri.3st« best offer ever 6900. 23' CARVER CRUISER, ) 9.0 4. 1968 Stareraft Campers Inside display cruise out, Inc. ~f. Walton Dally 9-4 Open Dally *tll S p.m. Saturday end Sunday 'ttl I DRAYTON PLAINS 4301 Dixie Hwy.(US-lO) OR 3-1202 DETROITER. EXCELLENT . con-ditlon. I bedre— — * —* Incloture. 62095. Shermen Court. Orlonvm*. wabTlSi DEER HUNTERS SPECIAL — S' ------ elaepe 6, leWtoontaln-" to. Cwt 614t5. *73-140. CAMPING TRAILER, 1*'. flood con- CHATEAU ESTATES. 127 Danish King. Set up to edi tton. Many extras.. Cali attar J. _• 1 HANGING AVAILABLE, Alpine 10 x 55', 2 to furnished* clean, imnu 3-V Hull* 15 to 17 ft. — / INBOARDS • 1968 Correct Craft • Mustangs 16S 2-USED OUTFITS Complete with 48 b. BA UD I luutedl. ' HILLTOP tent traitor, 1**6 hardtop. Sleep* ». Sink, stove. Icebox, water tank, dinette, bottle LABOR DAY SPECIAL APAOtB MESA etwlp>**l with eteve. s, dinette, battle g< me., Bloch Bret., 5440 Dixie Hwy PH: 42H33I or 64*^11-- MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Featuring Parkwood, Holly P*f and King. *»°"lY: layiMjjyo Your car, n^lto hem*. boat .etc. taken In on trad*. Large, sevltw 'tar everything to etock., Pm* delvlery and let up wlthto 300 miles. We will not knr-1—*" — undersold. lien b graoe, siv.v? , Thompson, 70M 'M49 W. RUMMAGE SALE end 3 for SILVERTONE '• For Sole Mhcell—eeoe HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL RUMMAGE SALE: *i-i—*-* Church, — __________Collins Rd. RAILROAD TIBB liT delivery, FI 54120._______ J!*W' *5*;.J_ AMC t^A^L RtFRIGERATOR, *2*1 plane, Brass, courses. Music taculty Includes: Mrs. Tom q Melon*; A. T. Humphrtoe; Chi " ■ ——|i - th Ohmen Lehmann. GUIIAR. stsaONi, SpertiE* Bead* end white, 652-2431. n concrete, dell in Lerideospe. 33 ptaW UttOgLiUM BUGS. 63JS EA. Cowrey organ, double keyhoerd, Iharp ltris FORO GPiwta herdtep ter pickup cr yen. 4204272. SPRINGER SPANIEL, AKC, 1 year box'sfK'ing"and 2 »*nw I »as,igSMnblW FURNITURE CO. 17- E. HURON____B* 1-1501 Celling tile — well paneling, cheap. BAG Tile. FE 44M7.107S W. Huron 12" RADIAL IMi. ilk* imF. SOFAS UPHOLSTERED AT halt the price of new. Call 335-1720. Coml. Upholstery Co. SINucK DIAL-A-MATIC Zlg Zag sewing machine — e»wflques*bStonhotosJ*s” j wed. Pay off: $54 CASH AAA GOLFERS End et .season cleerence ----- Largest Inventory to the city ot all YORKSHIRE Tl name brand merchandise a* r « unheard of dlsceunti. YOU CAN'T BEAT OUR DEAL PRO GOLF DIST. 903 S. Woodward / tsrr................ Auction Sales WANTED: OLDER USED turn] will SWAP electric guitar amplifier tar whet hove you. 4744710 after 5. Sole qetMi1 BACK TO SCHOOL SALE: Teen Girls and women's ctotlrtng. sir- T-14. Met attar take*. Ml 7-544*. ES size )THES - D __ _ lust like - J coat,.size 6X. 1 UghtwetaM ce size *X. seme play clothes. 4 <6U— ^ 'iv..■; We Heuseheld Geeds 65 Vi WHAT YOU'D EXPECT T6 PAY J 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW TURNITURE _! National Unclaimed *' furniture ■| Brand new Mepta arjjjmjnut Cheet, !*= 45116 CaMttltica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY KIRBY SWElPER Kirby Service & Supply Co. 1617 DIXIE HWY «U BALLON TANK tar fjlterlng iron f from wattr, F| 5-f90Z bttor* I , P.m. rr—T---------——Z~~ 105r000 BTU NBVb M funwetg Ih- ■atfttjr smr-*" t» CADILLAC tlWdtap, ditlon. 6200, else 6-yeern guMPik, Spark)-Infrewltre ton^elumtoum ^ng. ■HK& B AUCTION. - EVERY FRIDAY ..7:J8 P. BOWS AND ARROWS—3344349 EVERY SATURDAY ......7:0} Pi... GENE'S ARCHERY-414 W. HURON | EVERY SUNDAY ..2:0* P.M. or $6 per month payments Divtoq |Mr,2 regulars end wet suit. | vyeR*UY 7-«J-L-trade UdwriSIW, c.«w 4^k‘S! 2615 DIXIE HWY.- ^l*3fc 7 YEAR 'OLD BLACK gelding. Pleasure horse, etandatdl Bran, sound and gantla. 191-2709, G — k. 32.50 each. 27lnK“" no Holly Rd..tHolly ' H OAKLAND CAMPER ( covers end slsepers. Parts PIONEER CAMPER SALES Traitors: Jubilee, Otoh* Star Campon: Stringer, Mackinaw, Travel Queen, caribou, Berth Cov*rs:Stutx Bearcar, Merit____ ' — eel-0720 Trailer Parts AND Accessories JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS — 517 E. WALTON BLVD. FE 4-5053 Suncrait ACTIVE SOW' Mobile Home Rogulor price 54,695 SPECIAL $4385 — (one only) TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE- HOMES, INC. —Telegraph et Dtal* Hwy. 334-6694 Open Dally 1* am., tel P.m. Open Saturday 18 a.m. to 4 p.m Open Sunday 1 p.m. te 0 P.m. BRAND NEW 289 FORD ENGINES Complete with plug*. MlheuatoG oil filter, clutch and towur* plate, csrburetton end heed a. $495 TRAVEL TRAILERS yconS*Stt! obi* ROAMER AND TALLY-HO -..... ALSO ‘■“Ir en* Gam pi'- Ttres^ete-Tteck — W 2—900x20 10 PLY TIRES.' BEST *t- w BL used wheela. -MARKET TIRE, .-2635 OrohSe tlEO Rd- Keogo. Ait* Sentlcg — Rtfwlr 93 MOTORS FACTORY ITI car*, trucks, 8*1 . i performance apeclella M^m]Etwlne«rB7-lll MeterSceeteri RUPP MINI Cycle, ) h< rancra emt j* iisa-rv, ,000 1b. float tl beat*, 14', 52*9; IS* 5359 — runabout ...........5J9S trailer* ....... 51» 3634301___________________0024301 BIG CLEARANCE i960 boat and motors, trailer end 63 E. Walton F* *-4401 bally *4L Set. »4 Closed Sundays COHO SPECIAL 1963 Silverllne, Rlverle, 18' trl-hull, 16*, Merc., crutoat, POWtr trim, with trailer and brakes, many extras. Completeself*. KAR'S BOATS & MOTORS 405 W. Cl«rkstenRd.,.Lek* Orton COHO BOATS PINTERS .AM, 1 (1^75 it University Exit) CRUISERS AUTHORIZED DEALER TROJANS ___LEFT OVER SALE- NEW 11'TROJAN Voyager Sedan TB 21' TROJAN Voyager Ixa. TS 21' TROJAN Skm Exp. (Tngta -26' TROJAN Sedan Bridge -——— 24' TROJAN Exp. demo CHRIS-CRAFT—NEW 25' SEA SKIFF Sport Cruiser 17'SKI boat 210 HP __ USED CRUISERS 1965 26* Owkns Exp. new 'Mint, fully equipped; redto ..HJJJ 1905 25' Owen* Exp. ......... 64595 MANY OTHER BARGAINS COHO BOATS NEW-USED LAKE & SEA MARINE S. Blvd. et woodward ’ _ PE 4-9557 HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Yeur Evinrud* Dealer" 099 S. Telegraph IMdl "7*! OWENS in' CRUISER . Twin engine*, 1963, ship 9* ahore, depth sounder, two «*m-peses, new convertible top, anlttar, a Ilia preservers, bumptre^ carpeting In grid' out, icrMM, pressure water, new automatic wS* pump, deck chairs, and trim .tab*. CUN. Can-1m arrange ttnencllW. Andy - Body. SB2-9400, 1961 Glespar 14'Marathan. ' . . 1961 Glespar 15' Trt4w^7A‘M»®J: 1 Ray Greene saltboets. Several Mlrro-creft deep wide fishing beets, and several . Grumman . Taira**M-59 to W. Htahlend. Right ■IsMlnM Ridge R(L to Demode Rd., left and follow tlgns to DAWSON'S SALE! AT TIPSICO LAKE; Phene 41*4179. 1>—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1982 Wl hsv* W) OtaGart tS' nas... USED BARGAINS m, e# h.p. . Crestllni ITiada 1M 1944 GMC Vi TON pickup. 4 cyl. -gxjnjir*™™- * : Vi TON. rant good, IMS FORD W-ten pickup, «». 473- IMS CL CAMINO 396 * _ i __ „J engine H_____ *'395 tranv. 24.000 ml. 01800. top-1 ldet-att-75 1947 FORO 4, • TonSteki 4 spaed 024561. is”Alum. Wolverine, 35 h.p. #toc.|._ 14' Modern. 35 h.p. elec. . trailer, . 13* Blue Star alum.. 35 h. Johnson, trailer......... 14' Key 38 h - 7 down. TURNER FORD. Ml 4- “Tornado warning!” only.---- New and Uiad Curt 186 1967 CHEVY Wagon h —*—the, power steering, s with p white tap. $2295 GRIMALDI Your New BUICK-OPEL Dealer 2lp Orchard Lafct _Ft BWI4S New and Used Csrs T 1964 Ford Flannary Motors; Inc., 580 Hwy., Waterford, Michigan. _ 1965 BUICK LeSABRE, custom., S door hardtop, lull power, good condition. 651-1292: • __1 1966 BUICK Elcfctra 4-door hardtop custopn, full POw< factory air conditioning. $AVE Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 W. -Moplo , Ml 6-2200 1965 Buick SPECIAL 4Woor, v-o, automatic, (tearing, radio, haator, wl On M24 in lake Orion ___MY 2-241T. . ,>;■] "19653” CORVETTE Convertible Ith 4 speed, power steering, ekes, Grasse Potato pletlnu— ilsh. Only— $2597 Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oakland Avo._F« 445 1947 CAMARO BELONGS to little old lady from Pasadena, cr" 4. FE 5-5134 or FE 4WI14. 194$ CHEVELLE MALIBU hardtop _______________ coupe. Low mlloago. ford transmission. Power steer ing, — -— brakes. Tilt wheel. Extras. Mint condition. Ml 44417. CAMPER ™ 1ST ■ 1965 SPECIAL Suburban Olds' * CHEVY slightly Used MO ,. wood^r™™ mi mih 1968 GMC Pickup, 396 gsl chrampl^l^ *'1 to. in. engine, heavy] interior, 6742120 before s. duty automatic transmis-lion, power brakes and Tms Cadillac power steering, factory] ^w«kmeTUitwr iflteriot, air conditioning, equipped * black finish, Only— I CHEVELLE COUPE. . ewer steering, auto., rodk ells, 7^00 mT.. 02100. *SL»3«. save money; at mike, savoh downi TURNER FORD. ^ASwidT —*'e£nd!WS*^- _ niwftrcud? — HanKruoir — Divorced? --. problem? Call Krl White at gtad Auto. 4S14EW;;- —-7,-^p* 1967 MUSTANG HardtoP; WltK_y0, automatic, radio, heotar, power steering, bpWrtWI metaillctur-quolse, with matching tatorlor. Spotless conditton. Vecrtton »P«W ■I only SUM. Flpl Plica. .Just SIM dawn, and S5S.7S par month. 5 yoar or 50,000 miia new corwarranty. JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 430 Oakland >w F* i*4!*. rss-nsss.'Sft'siatf. radio, heater, power steering, brakes, like new, live a bunch on this «e. BIG TRADB AHowento, 1,000 miles. , ' John McAuliffe Ford 130 Oakland Ave. FE ' U $1095 FLANNERY Waterford 1968 Falcon t SOOR SE DAN * with 6 cyl. dirtornpilce gretn flnli low milts, tnd rttdhF to go tt— $1995 FLANNERY MOTORS, INC. (Formerly Beettl. Ford) Waterford , , , '**' olds^ wlr .w'wrwnS; C“T oldsmobile stab fjrE rjwer, low m(l«Me.-ak**!|bnt ditkm, 5595. 363-5795. 964 OLDS, IS HOLIDAY ^ brakes, MwidlhrtCOT 1968 OLDS 98 Holiday Sedan — "Vln^top? .» $3995 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM : 19*3 PLYMOUTH heater, power steering. $495 See ttale auto at our iraw location 1 at the TR FE 5-4101 1964 Cadillac sedan. JOHN McAUUFFE FQRD 630 Oakland Ave.____FE 5-4101 | ~ CADILLACS ON "TOP 00LLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CAR* 152 W. Huron SI. FE 4-737i i FE 4-1797 We w o u I d like to buy late modtl GM Cars or wi II accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER .buick: 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 ■ Junk Cari-Truckr 101-A with cab-over camper. SALE HOURS 8:00 q.m. to 7:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday PONTIAC'S TRUCK CENTER GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS AVE. FE 5-9485 j Auto Imuraitce-MariiM 104 AUTO insurance Low Rotas — Brood Protection Easy Payment Plan | Cell today for quotation ANDERSON & ASSOC., INC. 1044 Joslyn >_____FB 4-3535 ferEigw Cqr> ' ' . 105]w 1950 HARLEY CHOPPER. 8*00. It to |»g ^sngTpW .. m. 673-6138. llOM FORP ? beautiful metallic autumn mink "r—‘- -i leather Inter1-- Mil ______,-se. Vacation m--- only 8t388 tall P«M, (ust *188 down, and 853.07 per month. JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 030 Oafctand Avt. FE 5-4101 HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME CADILLAC CO. $1695 Matthaws-Hargreaves 451 Oakland Aye._FE 4-4547 1945 CHEVY IMPALA convertible! auto., double power, power win- 5 CHEVY BE LAIR, 2_d like new, SUMS, Buy Hera iy Here, Marvel Motors, 25’ ikland Avo. FE 2-079. Oakland Ave. 194$ CHEW Z 4 DEALER MltfOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1944 Chrysler 4 door wdan, at . double power, radio, whitewallj, blue with blue Interior, $1695. 677 M-24, Lake Orion. MV 2-2M1. taTCHRYSLER NEWPORT custom, original owner, 5.500 miles, like new, gold, black vinyl top, 4-door $97 down, TURNER FORO. I 1965 Ford STATION WAGON Country Sedan, with VI, a._ radio, heater, A-1 warranty. Only ' $1495 FLANNERY MOfOHx INC, Ha Ford) v 1964 OLDS, NINETY EIGHT, 4 door hardtop. This car has eyerYthlng, vacation special, only SIMS, tall price, lust sill down and 545.65 JOH?FmcAULIFFE ford 630 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 1965 .. FORD GALAX) d 500 eon-vertible, VI, automatic,, radio, hooter, power steering, brakes. Beautiful artlc white with black top, and raady for the. fun poopls. Vacation special only ttON tall price.. Just 508 down, and S41.65 per month. 5 year or 50,000 mile JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 54101 1965 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE. V-8, automatic, radio, power top; 1962 DODGE DART 4-door, 4 cylinder automatic. $295 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mtrcury Salts 1955 FORD MUSTANG. V-8, ftan-dard shft, 1 owner, 8— —«• 1965 T-BIRD convertible, , . and factory a t r conditioning, vacation ipoclal at only — *1868. Full price, lust *181 down, and 855.75 par month. 5 year or M,—“ mite now car warranty, JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 630 Oakland 318-7238 10 wide Track Dr. - ... ________________________11963 FORD 1 floor v» .. . 1959 VW, GOOD condition. 5425. 334. 1962 PONTIAC VI automati --- 1967 CHEVY impale VI .. ly 1965 CORVAIR Convertible condition.' complete with ex-| JK* StiiXYJ:!. ' * motor and lror-wrt|^w||HM| 1*960 KARMAN GHIA, 1325. 693.1045 _ 1961 VOLKSWAGEN. SUN roof, body rough, ongina good, groat tor dune OUggy. Olfs. 4SM760. __ 1962 PORSHE HARD TOP. will con-^olhor car.os pert payment, ^ Ustd Avto-tmk Parts *27 ENGINE ANb 209 engTrw. 5130 oedi. H. t H. Auto sole*, or 5- 1*23 T ROADSTtR. >t finished. 0 offer or trade, coll bOtar* 3 p.m. only weekdays. FE 2-9077. 1957 FORD UALp T6N, bast pf ever *50. OR .... 1961 FALCON, WRECKED, eno Transportation -Specials- 1960 DKW, STATlCN V 3076 Hill Rd., Off' r 1965 FORO Wagon eutc 1945 IMPALA 4 DOOR hardtop. 29,000 actual milts, very clean 51,200. Call 332-7145. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLbS 1945 CHEVY 17 ton, with I ft.! ■ fleetsido. 4 cyl. slick, radio, fraih air hooter. Only $1195. Over 75 'other cert to select from. On US 10 of Ml5. Clerkston, MA $-5071._I 1965 CHEVROLET I L Impaia Convertible Power stearins, power brakes', V I automatic. • . $1295 - Bob Borst 111*51 Lincoln-Marcury Sales $39511940 W. Maple Ml 4-221 .!!!! 1*66 CHEVY CAPRICE, lull powti *"*5 alr conditioned, new tires, 24.0C »”5| miles. *1050. 3344B03. 0^5 1964 EL CAMINO. 1966 DODGE MONACO 4-door hardtop, dark bli with black vinyl roof ai matching fnterler, v automatic, radio, h a a t # i power steering, pows brakes, power windows, a conditionln! . down, ond 552.47 month. 5 year or 50,000 mile lew car warranty. JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 1965 FORD LTD 4 Burgundy, .0 automatic. inlng. $1895 MOTOR MALL, ‘^BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1965 FORD COUNTR passenger wagon, molalllc burguno black ell vinyl __________ automatic, transmission, ________ heater, power steering, power brdkes, chrome luggage fUjgaf Dv far the. nicest oh* li vacation special, only 51 price, lust 5108 down an< 1966 DODGE WAGON VanCamptl Chevrolet ..... ... engine, 24,000, 81500. 682-6561 . IVETTE, -lOM-eOttPEr-X-teOT 350 Horse, 3.70 post, bast conditioi 451-1454 after 6 p.m 1954 CORVETTE, ALL original 1*43 VW SUN ROOF. NOW whitewall tire*. Good cond1*1—' 1944 V.W., CLEAN. 1 owpar, black. 56M, 179-4277. 1965 ENGLISH FORD, GOOD < tHtton; aril 682-9243, etter 4i30 p. IWk GREKNJ8GB,gppd conditio 681-0775, 0ttiTp.m. 1957 CHEVY,.4 door, V-S. automoHc, good ——* —"*u:“ |Uj| 371-11- 1957 CORVETTE. Needs ongint, bast 1966 VW FOR SALE* ****11*1 dltlon. Asking SHOO. 363-2555. ___ 1967 JEEP, GOOD CONDITION, 7500 ■ g, 81900. 6*5-1737. 5 Chovy V-l; BM3-2312, A CLEAN SHARP VW, ^On N. Milford Rd.-VSItord 416-1025 Auto., FE 5-3270. RGLAS1 pli ». alter 5. " COMPLETE 1947 MUttANG '209 KoUR, 13 INCH CHROME wheels," How and Uind Trucks 103 YOUR CHOICE ■ 1950 Ford, 17 ton, pickup. ■ . 1950 GMC, Mpt^taleKMs. 1950 GMC, Vi fen, pickup. - Marvel Motors, 151 Oakland Avb. Buy Hera - ftojr Hero WB'PB83trW:iToW" PtekupYsiiii*. 1953 CHEVROLET 1-Tftti pickup. Runs good. M0. UL ir~t240. TkSf CHEVY pAnEl TRUCK. Bast bttor over 0180 651^150. 1*59 CHlVY Vi TON PICK-UP 5150 ..I ' TOP QUALITY NEW AND USED IMPORTED CARS ARE FOUND AT GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND AVENUE VOLKSWAGEN DEALER SPECIAL 1962 Buick spoclel. 1 door, V6, stick. »«tn rlenn. ehmlutel* no rust. IOW, mlloago, save at $595 IMS Ford . Galaxld* 'convertible burgundy with white top* power steering, power brake*, like new. lutf, ; $1195 1966 vdlkswagan sedans, 2 to choose tram, both good condition, save. $avo 1966 VW Sun root, rad with block Ilka now condition, with drat only $1345 BillGoUing VW Inc. 1621 May It lawn* BM» (NT Maple Road , '. (15. Mill iRd.) ACROSS FROM RERZ AIRPORT Rochester. IS1-1414. Boo r. ______2 tops, 283 engine; _______*1000. 63LM67.___________ 1961 CHEVY 0, 2-DOOR, clean, auto. *295. 36341011, dealer. CHEVY: WHEN YOU Buy It let --RKBT TIRE Blvt It a Tree itjr cheek. 2635 Orchard Lake *fiCHBVY, 6 STICK, *1*! MY 34MSL 1*42 CHEVY IKK CONVER TJBLE. >aui tires anH Sbvhatltt. SMO. btfOTI a recently overhauled. Ic SALE BUY A NEW 1968 American 2-Door Stdan for $1888 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Automatic Transmission or Radio for —Just South of Pontlsc Ml 2-4900 . •sr. mm.......... wtfw^-'aawi tppwivjwta Pontiac Press Want Ads: i, For Action lc NOW AT Village Rambler 666 S, Woodward . Birminoham / 6464900 1963 Chovy Waflon $495 Bill Fox Choyroltt MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ! 1*64 Chovy convertible, auto., dou-l bie power, radio, whitewalls, light] green with black top. $1495. 477 M-24. LPke Orion. MV 2-2041, , TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY^)LDS 1*64 CHEVY impale 2 door " J— M automatic, power i, heater, Whitewalls. 1966 CHEVY* Impaia 9 Passenger sr,*'lr®nk,^,|*JJ'nJ°w*r st^lhB. povrar^ brakes. Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM eulometic, radio, h 0 • t * r, power steering, Pewer . brakes, deluxe ruggpoa rock, - txcenenrcinwrmBn: $1895 Sot this-auto at our now location at the. TROY MOTOR MALL on M*Pta Rd. (15 Milo) IVi mite* oast of BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1944 Chew impaia SS, automatic, double power, radio, whitewalls. Silver with blaok Interior, thorp car. S199S. 477 M-24, Laka Orion.1 MY 20041. BIRMINGHAM Chryslar-Plymoiith TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*44 CHEVY Impel# * passenger Station wagon, with va, automatic, power- etnrtng, rabta. 'heater, whitewalls, locally owwd, new car trade. Balga finish. *1*95. Over 75 athar ear* fo salapt fram. On US 10 at MIS, Clerkston, A8A S-5071. FORD: Whan CMVY IMPALA hardtop, ■wxutlful._midnight-blue—With metchlno tateHor7 v-*, aUtomatlc transmission, radio and heater, power steering. Power brakes, vacation special only 518*0 ty» prim, |(|tt. SMI down and S54.1t par month. JOHN McAU 830 Oak lend Ave. TOM RADEMACHER . CHEVY-OLD* 118* CHEVY 84 ten with 11 ft. fleeNMe box, 4 cyl. etlck, radio, trash air heater, heavy duty tires, and sprtafs. Only S1495. Over 7$ ether cers to select from. .0" 10 at MIS, Cterketon, MA HS71. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1944 Chevy Malibu t door haVdtop, auto,, power steering, r.a d IP, Whitewalls, SIS95. 477 M-24, Lika Orion. MY 2-2061. 496a MALIBU Sport Coup* fi V4, automatic, powar ffttrlnf* ft trlrn, Aftac bronxa flnlan, $1847 Matthews- Hargreaves 451-7*00 431 Oakland Ava. KESSLER'S DODGE CARS ANb TRUCKS OA 8:148* 1967 DODGE 500 l-doer hardtop, copper with matct|lng In ter lo r, VB ■•itniMBtir ran i n t heater, $1995 see m» aiute at our new location at the TROY MOTOR MALL, oh j—|m power brakes. 5 OLDSMOBILE 442 Cl -ouble power, 4wpeed, W-bwrt rase, otter, 451-3750. 5 OLDS LUXURY SEDAN, White WMi plush Wu^av taterlor. jill power, excellent condition. $1495. MY 2-3773. 1965 OLDS 88 2-doer hardtpp, power ate power brekss, llke-new. $1495 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM MS 1, woodward__Ml 7-Sin 1966 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan Full power, factory air ditlonlng, vinyl top. 2 to choose i tram, both priced at enly‘. $2495 1 SuburbanOlds 194* W. Wld* Track "ajassg&ar "TO' LUCKY AUTO “* ---------- ““67.___________jfil-----m HAHN- CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER AND JEEP 3 Dixie Hwy^HLS^t*) Clarksteh 196$ Pontiac CatalfiS dame ... ■ save 1965 T-Blrd c*nv. ...SB- 1966 Catalina 4doer ..-Egt. 1965 Chevy Impel* Cony. ..... 1966 Catalina 2-door ..• jlSf 1965 Chevy imp*1* s*.iffij 1945 Tempest Conv.. 1964 Cate na 44oor ...} 1964 Tsmpest Station Wagon 15SWraH».::::::: ,MJTSrP0NTIAC Kaeae Harbor - 1963 PONTIAC, IMS COMET, *»■«•" wagons 2, 1*64 Pontiacs 2 door hardtop, 1943 Pontiac Bonneville*. Plenty other cheaples and trucks, ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE ________ FE 4-21I1. LOOKING FOR A BARGAIN?-trY\THE PONTIAC RETAIL J STORE FE 3-7951 S *93 .13*1 5 295 ' 452-34*4 . CONVERTIBLE, 11395, 473-7745, TOM RADEMACHER CHEVYvOLDS 1*4* OLDS Dynamic f* J * sedan, wf“- — GO! HAUPT PONTIAC HUBS" JOHNSON i PONTiAC-TfeMPEST , On M-34 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 1964 RAMBLER WAGON 54*5 .Wlta *97 down TURNER FGJ^D. Ml 4-750T MERRY OLDSMOBILE ROCHESTER,'MICHIGAN FED A CART - N«w in the eraeT - Repossessed? - Girnliheed? -Been Bankrupt? — Divorced? - probem? Cell Mr. Whitt uto, 681-0802. 1967 OLDS Delmont 425 3-door hardtop, power eteerlng, power brakes, automatic, turquoise finish with ntetahtag Interior. Suburban Olds I BIRMINGHAM . ~ 1964 PONTIAC GRAND Prtx. Meroon cordova top, power steering, brakes, windows.. Sharp. 51,005. FE >95»7. 1964 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, *9*5. "*" down, payments, $5.93 week. Cell Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1964 BONNEVILLE PONTIAC, door hardtop, red, VW auto., i ble power, radio, heater, 5) Flannery Motors, Inc., 5106 D Hwy, Waterford, Michigan. 1*64 POtJTIAC STATION Wagon, lust like new, no money down. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track 1965 FORO GALAX IE 500 with V8a automatic radio, -- powar steering^ beautiful tu-tona groan with matching Interior, Vacation toaclal only 81Q88. ft - - r*r JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD 63* Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1965 FORO CONVERT. SUBS with $97 down TURNER FORD S“ 6 IMS MUSTANG, HAS EXTRAS,! MILOSCH $d; M-24I Lakq'brt*n.r%f Vearhelt Rd.) 682-8308. 1968 OLDS final clearancB -—LOOK- TO BEST- FOR THE BEST SAVIN6$ AND VALUES BEST OLDSMOBILE, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenu* FE 2-8101 IMS TEMPEST, VW J money down. > LUCKY AUTO Factory Official CARS All Models Power Equipped —Many whir Air-Priced From $1895 Village Rambler, 666 5. Woodward Birmindjram 646-3900 1959 FORD, GOOD, CLEAN, GOOD 1*83 PORD, 2 DOOR, AUTOMATIC, 5. lev* Auto, FE *- TURNIR ford mi »»sb. down TURNER FORD Ml 4-7SBS. 1963 T-BIRD LOADED, S795 withi *97 down, TURNER FORD. Ml *-7l<|8. ____ 1963 FORD_____ . Country Squirt 9-pass*ng*r station , waf • n automatic, eeweyteetlna- Bob Borst HB3 PORDGALAXY 3 door hardtop, beige, 4 cylinder auldmaHc, power steering, radio, Iwiter, 1775. Flannery Sfotors, Inc, HP ™** “““ J M Waf»rtord. Mtchlgail. 19*4 FORb' GALAXll. 14 DtXta Hwy.. »E 4-503. 1*44' FALCON JMNVERT MM'v *97 down TURNER FORD. Ml 1«i45MUSTAI«B XmysAt MM VI..-. 8*7 down, TURNER FORD, Ml 4-78*8. ■ vL~' , 1 tiw* ^BBTcouyrRY BQUIRlT! 1965 Rambler convertible; with * eyl. automatic, radio, heater, blua with blue Interior, A-1 warranty Only — $1095 FLANNEBY MOTORS, INC. (Formerly Beettl# Ford) __.... Waterford 423-0701 1*65 RAMBLER American, 6 cyl. engine, automatic, spMtess condition, vacation special only. **•*, lull price, no money down>__. JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave. - NEW 19M AMERICAN Ambassador Demos, and AMX Demos Lest of the 50.00* mite warranties'. Mutt tell and will sacrifice In order to make room '49 model*. ROSE [-JEEP, Union Lgke, RAMBLER-EM 3-4155. ' I960 JAVLIN SSt Red, VW, 343, full pew* tat. and wheels, vinyl top speed, take over peyt, I 683W308, etter 4.____ 1940 W. Wld* Trai lc SHELTON pontiac-Buick-opel 555 S. ROCHESTER ROAD 451-5500 : tl550. Ml A3B78. 1966 TEMPEST rXUSTOM 3-door, VW autometic, - - AUDETTE BUY A NEW 1968 Javelin 2-Door Sedan for $2469 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Automatic , . Transmission or Radio foil * NOW AT 22 Village S Rambler^ 666 S. Woodward. <, Birmingham 646^900 Youa Center In tho Greoter BloqmfiBld/Pontioc Area r stMrlng, power brakes, elr conditioning, radio, whitewall*. $2395 1MB Pontiac LaMarls, daap blue, with Mack vinyl top, automatic with power, radio. 1943 Corvalr tpnvertlbta, euto- mafic, radio, togMjfmaBM 1*84 Pontiac Bonntvlltak convertible, vw, Mftoimqttb jmh power, new ertap evil tires, aavp at *995. 1M3 Chevy Bat Air, >IW PUlM malic, excellent gandhlan. and ready to Jb at the rR ! at sail. 1**4 Chevy Van. Painter end carpenter, special, pood r condition ..save *t ....... *-/ " ‘‘ Y $495 Telegraph Rd. just North of Square Laka,, Rd. . PHONE BEFORE YOU DECIDE SEE HILLSIDE! 1967 BUICK Riviera ' I powar, t A baautlful $3995 $2195 mty with matching to-. —.... , >uio, heater, r— one tor sure. 1965 COMET "202" two doer. Looking .for raal economy? Facet your eyes on this one. tlx cylinder, stick, radio, hector, whitewall*. 1967 DODGE Poloro station wagon. "313" vw. Cl________ Makes, chrome luggago rack, power res mium tires. Certainly one of the nicest. $13fS wWp*, 1964 PONTIAC Catalina * . V*8, automatic, powar ataarlng and brakai, radio# haatar, whltawalli. \v -v V 1965 PONTIAC Catalina . *______________■... convertible. All Whit* with rad Vinyl tatorlor, VW, ellta-metlc, power steering ana brakes, radio, heater, wh wells. Saa this on* for aura. 1965 TEMPEST Custom station wagon. Burgundy with all vinyl tatarler, "1 VW aujamjggc. raiifc haaW^J^ttetaells.. A locally ewi $6«5 r $21$ $7f5 $1385 $1495 HILLSIDE UNCOlN-MESCUllY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 mm i- —Television Programs— Progiam* furnished by stations listed in this column am subject to chango without noMeo THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 D—Mr Cheeweltt 2-WJHC4V, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXVZ-TV, V-CIO.W-TV, 50-WIMP-Tv/lS?~WC?*‘ WEDNESDAY NIGHT 0:00 (1) (4) (7) C - News, v Weather, Sports (#) R — Dennis the Menace *- George Sanders, Herbert Marshall 12:99 (9) Window on the ■World 1:99 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:29(2) R — Dobie Giiiis .(4) C-PDQ 2:09 (2) R - Highway Patrol 2:30 (2) C - News, Weatht ^LY MORNING 5:46 (2) da the Farm Scene 5:56 (2) ct lfews 6:66' (2) U«M. Television (4) Classroom . 6:36 (2) C — Gospel Singing Jubilee (4) C —Ed Allen 7:66 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C-Today (7) C — Morning Show 7 :55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-* Go-Round 8:00 (2) C— Captain Kangaroo (9) Tales of the River Bank 8:30 (7) R—Movie: “Penny Serenade” (Part 2) (9) C — Upside Town 0:00 (2) C-Merv Griffin (4) C-Steve Alien (9) C— Bozo 10:00 (4) Cr-Snap Judgment (7) C — Virginia Graham (9) R - Hawkeye 10:25 (4) C News 10:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) C — Dick Cavett (0) R — Friendly Giant (50) C — Jack LaLaone 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:99 (2) R - Andy el Mayberry (4) C — Personality (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C - Kimba 11:25 (9) Pick of the Week 11:30 (2) R-Dick Van Dyke (4) C — Hollywood Squares (SO) R — Little Rascals 11:55 (9) News THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) (4) C - News, Weather, Sports (7) R — Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:39 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Eye Guess (7) C — Treasure Isle (9) R — Movie: “Down Among the Sheltering Palms” (1953) William ^-tundiganr Jane Greer Joan Blondell (50) R - Movie: “The Crowd Roari” (19 32) Country boy tries to gain fame on auto race track. James Cagney, Joan Blbndell 12:45 (2)> C - Guiding Light 12:55 (4) C—News 1:09 (2) C—Love of Life (4) C-Match Gama —(7)-Dwub..H«m»- -——-.1:25 (2) Q-News. (4) C Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C - Let’s Make a Deal ~ (7) G — It’s Happening 1:55 (7) C - Children’s „ Doctor ; 2:99 (2) C - Love Is a Many Rendered Thing (4) C - Days of Our ■' Lives " (7) C — Newlywed Game 2:99 (2) C — House Party (4) C- Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (S0> R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C - Divorce Court (4) C- Another World (7) C — General Hospital (0) R - Route 60 (SO) R C — To Tell the Truth 1:25 (50) C- News 1:10(2) C -Edge of Night (4) C-You Don’t Say (7) C —One Life to Live (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:90(2) C-Secret Storm (4) ,C— Woody; Woodbury (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C —Swingin’ Time 4:30 (2) C-Mike Douglas (7) R C - Moviet “The Wild and Innocent” (1950) Audie Murphy, Joanne Dru (50) R — Three Stooges 6:00 (9) G — Bozo--' -~ (50) R - Little Rascals 5:30 (4) C - George Pier-• rot — “Fantastic Cairo” (9VC —Fun House (50) R — Superman 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant 64Cardgame . 06 Banal 57 Garden flowers 58 Pith 59 Depot (ab.) 00 Diplomatic M Arrival (ab.) —— 27 Preposition 4 Beach area 29 Family name (pi.) cCPaulVX 5 Bullfight 31 Western cheer spectacular 6 Manuscript 38 TV group (ab.) 36 Norm 7 Head Asians covering 38 Behold! 8 Surrounded 39 Cyprinoid by fish 9 Ulan----, 40 Spelling Mongolia contest 11 Having 41DMant chanted 21 Hors* color 23 Ampere (ab.) 24Mauna—, Hawaii 25 Hostelry 28 Enemy 30 Far (comb, form) 32 Flatfish 33 Compass point 34 Chemical 2 3 4 JT r r 4 6 IB if 12 16 14 l 16 r 26 33 94 K 1 ■ tl p r it ol 63 63 64 ■ r r 67 F 1 t 4 A Look at TV Kuralt Specialty Hailed By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK—Television has way of pigeonholing its perforifi-ers and commentators. * * ' .* At CBS News, for instance, there is Eric Severeid, Instant international analyst, Harry Reasoner, house humorist, Walter Cronkite, impartial journal- To this list must now be at Charles Kuralt, Americana specialist with a special ability to dig up and dramatize good news. it it it Kuralt many months ago was given a camera crew and a white camper truck and traveled the back roads and byways of the nation seeking out happy events and pleasant people to tell about. * ★ it CBS patched together a number of his reports about this segment of the American scene fen* a half-hour special Tuesday night. It could not have arrived at .a better time. it it it - Kuralt and company Investigated autumn leaves in Vermont, Greek sponge divers in Tarpon Springs, Fla,, country tic in Maryland. Be found-a jaunty college professor who retired to become a janitor at his college and, at 87, reflected that life was still exciting—“good books to read, good fish to catch, pretty women to see, good men to know...” Progress Helps Keep Ike Alive ■7 By Science Service WASHINGTON — Fot me r President Dwight D. Eisenhower probably could not haw suffered a seventh heart attack a few years ago; a second or third one would have killed him. What has kept him alive so long is progress that has been made with electrical shock treatment, monitoring and drugs that are accessible to heart patients in most modern hospitals. it it * Lidocaine, the anesthetic being tried experimentally on heart patients and the drag that eliminated Gen. Eiseiihower’s dangerous heart irregularities for a time even when pacing shocks failed, is an example. ★ ■ ★ * Dr. Bernard Lown, director of the S. A. Levine Cardiac Unit of Boston’s Peter Bent Brigham Hospital and an authority on intensive hospital care, says lidocaine, the drug found most helpful to Gen. Eisenhower, being used on ail patients at the Boston unit who show heart irritability or arrhythmia during heart attocks. SUCCESSFUL TRIALS He introduced this drug three; years ago for use with siich patients after successful trials with animals in the Harvard University laboratory in which! he' prevented heart arrhythmias. “Many more lives could be saved if there were more coronary care units,” Dr. Lown says. “Many deaths could be prevented in heart victims if; proper care is given t o' monitoring the heart rhythm.” * ★, ■ Lidocaine was used by dentists a$ a local anesthetic for many years before Dr. Lown; and his co-workers tried it on) animals as a preventive and treatment of arrhythmias, which account for apj proximately 40 per cent of deaths in heart attacks. KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $O-CQ00 COMPLETE CUD 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQQ00 COMPLETE CDD INCLUDES: Upper and Lower Cabinets, Counter Tops, Sink with Faucets, CALL FE 8-9880 Abm Daily a * ADDITIONS ★ FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDINQ COLOR ALUMINUMS W00DFIEL0 CONSTRUCTION ; G & M CONSTRUCTION S ELLIS "SUIIDINO IN PONTIAC SINCI IMS* • ADDITIONS • ALUMINUM SIDING • BREEZEWAYS • ATTIC CONVERSIONS • AWNING WINDOWS • AWNINGS • DENS • PATIOS • GARAGES • RECREATION ROOMS • CONCRETE WORK-MASONRY* KITCHENS • FAMILY ROOMS • BATHROOMS • STORM end SCREEN DOORS and WINDOWS IPI0ML FINANCE PUN ■ 86 North Saginaw'— Downtown Pontiao I Free Estimates Operator on Duty 24 Hourt ■ Term to Suit PHONE FE 2-1211 ■•■■■■BaaiiiiMiiiaiiiiiiiiiii The discovery that this drag is effective in 80 to 85 per cent of the cases in his hospital came only after laboriou animal experiments in which ihe four or five antiarrhythmic drugs being used were tried out systematically. Although th Food and Drug Administration has not licensed lidocaine for heart patients yet, it has been widely used by thousands of doctors throughout the world. Australia, almost as large as the contiguous United States, holds only slightly more people {than metropolitan New York City. — Radio Programs* WJR(760) WXYZQ 270) CKLW(SOO) WWJ(9S0) WCAR(1130) WPC>N(1460) WJBKQ 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) ..........Marti WWJ, Ncwi, Sport* wx/z, NOWKOP*----- WJBK, Nows, Honk O'Noll WCAR, Now*, Ron Rom WPON, News, Phono Opinion WNFI, Don Rosco -tiW-WWJ, Todpy in Roy low,. Emphasis ' S “ WJR, Businc— _ THM fTrsvtlsr Alto-MOfc*’ • - Tilt—WWJ, Nows, SportsLIn* WCAR, Nows, RldrlWWT, WJBK, Nswi, Tom Doan .VRoifil, Business, Sports T:J0—WXYZ, NOWS, Dave Lockhart ^3% ' . WJR, Reasoner R eporl, _____IFI, Tom Coleman CKLW, Scott Regen »»jW.*',,d0,cw t*:IS-WJR. Mustcel Showcase 1*:«—Tlper Root; Bssabsll lltaMWlCL Dooth Notices, . Ovomlght Itito-WXYZ, Nows, Jim Devla CKLW, Prpnk Brodle WCAR, Nows, Wsyn* anil line WJBK, ------- THURSDAY MORN I NO StlO—WJR, Music Hall • WXYZ, Nows, Dick Purtan WCAR, News, Bill Do lull CKLW, Nows, Chuck Morgan WPON, Nows, Arlnna Weston .WJBK, mss, Marc A very <.-so-wwj, Morris Carlson 7:M-whfi, Gary Puttee WPON, News, Chuck Warrei BiSB-WJR, News •rtS-WJR, Sunny tide S:>a—WJK, Music Hall PlW-WJR, News .. »:tS—WJR, Open House - WHFr; One* Jay « .CKLW, Mark Richer 1*:B*—WJBK, mm y Patrick WXY^ News Johnny Ran-WPON, Nows, Jerry Whit- Wcar*"nows, Rod Mllltr WJR, Naws. Music lttM-WJR, N*ws, Kaleldo- WHP), Jim Zinssr THURSDAY. APTBRNOON 1I:S0—WWJ, News, Emphasis WJR, Naws, Farm CKLW, Jim Bdwarda It: IS—WJR, Focus IStSB—WWJ, Marty McNaalay WXYZ, News, Don McNeill ~im=wsKrnt trrr-xtuwr ' 'SaijiM tiSB-^tXYZ, Johnny Randall JrSB—WPON, Nows, Pst Ap-polson WHFi, Rill Lynch lifB—WJR, News, Dim: 1:11—WJR, Music Hall S:0e—wcar. News, Ron Rom WJBK. Nows, Hank O'Nall CKLW, Mika Rlvars WXYZ, Naws, Dick Purtan f: IS—WPON, Lum 'n' Abner S:iP—WPON, Pat Appplson PROTECT YOUR HOME “Let’s Talk SIDING!” BEAUTY AND PROTECTION WITHOUT COSTLY UPKEEP _ Guaranteed test lor the Easy life’ KAISER ALUMINUM low MJUNrmNANcm mxrmmiomm KAL-SHIELD PLASTIC FINISH • ROOFING •DUTTERS • WINDOWS • AWNINOt • STORM DOORS • SHUTTERS STDiyi Only FREE - 6” Whits IhmiMim GUnER WHhEvs^SianuJok l ALUMINUM TRIM Customised far Yoor Home IMM m COMPANY ^ SETTER Than Hid BEST! NO PROBLEM TO RESERVE NOW AND PAY LATER N*v«r has Ski-Doo offered a biggtr telec- * lion of moctofa, or a wider prica range. And nevar hat Ski-Doo mada it so easy for you to gat the exact model you want • Our “no problem" financing tola you buy In summer — pay In wintar. Choose your 1960 Skf-Doo now — while selection's at itt best. OamtmrtitonR ' HF ' MS skt-doa. MAKES FUN NO PROBLEM ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 1645 $. Telegraph Read FE S-7102 GOLF CAR DISfRIBUTORS S72 $. Saginaw St. FE 4-9585 HONDA OF ROYAL OAK ■ 4100 N. Woodward at \V/» Mil* Rood LI 9-4866 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 Installed* 2-Temperature Gas or Electric Dryer Installed* Kenmore Gas or Electric Dryer Installed* 3-Temperature 2-Cycle Dryer Full-Size Kenmore Washer with Filter 2-Speed, 2-Cycle Automatic Washer Wringer Washer with Drain Pump s 9988 s 11988 Gas or *1 ^9 A88 Elaotrio InlrV s 139*8 a 16988 Visi-Matio Wringer # Features Heat and “Air Fluff' temperatures, 3-hour timer, top-mounted lint screen. Load-A*Door fold* down for shelf. 2-temperature dryer with top-mounted lint screen. Load-A-folds down, makes a handy shelf. 3Jtr. timer Cycles for normal and Permanent Press fabrics. Top-mounted lint screen is easy to clean. Load-A*Door folds down. "Washes a big 14*16. load. 6 vane agitator loosens stub* born dirt, built-in maze-type lint filter works Bill time. Cycles and speeds for regular and delicate fabrics. Washes all washable fabrics with choice of 3 water temperatures. Triple-safety because all you do is push, pull or press; wringer rolls stop, pressure releases. Fiberglass wringer. NO MONEY DOWN ON SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN Automatic 2-Oven Gas Range Still. Width NO MONTHLY PAYMENTS TILL FEB. 1, 1969 25#“ Totally automatic cooking with set-■nd-forget ov«n«, electric clock with 4-hr. timer, timed applianeo outlet. Kenmore Electric Range IMneh Width 199“ FttUy automatic oven, set it and forgst It, it oooka for you! Fluoret-cent light, back* guard eon troll, eleetrle clock with timer and timed appliance outlet. 30-Inch Electric —Range Sears Lew Priea 259“ Cook in two handy ovens at once. For added cooiringco»n* * TchiCTice' ■tfaweV,tit^ timed appliance outlet, non • glare fluorescent' work* light and lots of storage apace. Hood extra. 30-Inch Gas Range Auto. Oveli 189“ Fully automatic • oven: deluxe back* guard: fluorescent ligdats high, medium and , low burners; built-in griddle and Visi* Bake oven door, Kenmore Range Dept. 14 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator with 108-Lb. Freezer Ruggfd eteel shelve* New Only are easy to remove "zr™* for eleantag. Con* fWIT venient door shelve*. " 21 Cu. Ft. Capacity Spacemaster Supermart Automatic lee .geker .. for a eonatent *up-’ utg.esea lily of ice r obex. Com- /i QQ88 pletely' .fteet-frce. Automatic Defrost 12.3 Cu. Ft. Coldspot 3.11 cu. ft. HMinual do* n_,„ front freest r hold* 109 lb*. Cold control ad- $1JM| •juste to need*. 18.5 Cu. Ft. Sidediy-Side Frostless Supermart Our mo*t compact Suprrm*rt feature* ln.5-ih. meat keeper j end 2-L5-«juert crixp- Now Only 35988 19.4 Cu. Ft. Spacemaster Supermart ____Regular 479.95 ._ mu • Select-O-Cube Automatic • Spacemaster shelves „make space more usable • 228-lb. full-length freezer is completely frost-tree Ice maker lets you select the size ice crescent you want, and refills die bucket for a constant supply. Porcelain meat keeper holds 21.2 lbs. All-frosUes*. lira Mahrr In.iatlntlon A rail able Seors Refrigerator Dept. 16.6 Cu. Ft. Frostless, Chrome-Steel Shelves No defroiting ever'In n.i.. either 137 lb. freeser or refrigerator. Twin vzfii porcelain criiper*. mWUF S 29.4 Cu. Ft. Frostless Coldspot Spacemaster Sparemaxtrr xiorage . let* you adjust f I "*l terier to fit yo need*. Twin crisprrx. Open AU>ad«?* Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 Sears Downtown Ponti$c • PhoneFE 5-4171 SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. The Weather V. S. Wtattler Bureau Forecait VOL. 126 — No; 181 In Today's Press Farmers' Market County facility offers glimpse into the past — PAGE B-6. Daley vs. Networks Chicago mayor calls NBC offer “unresponsive” — PAGE C-ll. Addison Aide Quits Another member of the township planning commission resigns in controversy — PAGE A-4. Area News ............ A-4 Astrology ...............04 Bridge ..................04 Crossword Puzzle .......D-U Comics ............ 04 Editorials ..............A4 Food Section.......... , 04 Markets .............. .015 Obituaries ............ B-8 Picture Page .......... B-8 Sports D-l—D-5 Theaters .. 014 TV and Badio Programs . D-13 Vietnam War News ....... A-2 WUson, Enrl ....B-8 Women’s Pages ......B-l—B-5 THE PONTIAC PR1 8 PAGE ★ * ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968—60 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL McCarthy Again Shuns Efforts to Set Up 4th Party By The Associated Press * Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy says he will not become a fourth-party candidate and will not join the effort to organize a fourth-party drive. McCarthy, who has said he might support such a drive if its programs and leaders were acceptable, reiterated refusal to directly participate with a statement yesterday in Washington. ★ ★ ★ But the New Reform Party of Montana ignored the statement and nominated the unsuccessful contender for the Democratic nomination as its presidential candidate. Marcus G. Raskin, whose New Party hopes to get on the ballot in 25 states, predicted over the weekend that several state groups would put McCarthy’s name on the ballot whether he wanted it there or not. RESPONDS TO SUPPORTERS McCarthy said he would deny official approval in those states requiring it to put his name on the ballot, but said he would try to “respond” to the wishes of supporters in states that do not require offical approval. He urged his supporters to work instead for the election of senators who agree with his opposition to Vietnam war policy and his stand .on domestic priorities. .A A A McCarthy said he has asked that his name be withdrawn in Iowa where he said it “would have little bearing oh the outcome;of the national election” and might hurt Gov. Harold Hughes’ Democratic Senate campaign. * A * A top supporter pf M c Ca r t h y ■ s Democratic bid—former Democratic Na-tionabChairman Stephen Mitchell — said meanwhile , he will now support the party’s nominee, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. Humphrey formally kicks off his Democratic presidential campaign Monday in Philadelphia. He planned to interrupt strategy sessions at Waverly, Minn., today to return to Washington for a National Security Council meeting. Humphrey’s running mate, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie said yesterday Wallace’s third-party campaign is a greater threat to the Republicans than the Democrats. Wallace and Nixon, Muskie said, “are competing for the same votes.” Pontiac Press Photo RIGHT THIS WAY — Fifth-grader Susan Foster of 18 E. Cornell shows the way for Richard H. Hoffman, new principal for Owen Elementary at 43 E. Columbia ih Pontiac. Also assisting in the introduction is fifth-grader Alan Hahn of 122 W. Cornell. Today was the first day of school for grades 1 through 6. Seventh and 10th graders start tomorrow, and eighth, ninth, 11th and 12th grades Friday. Kindergarten begins Monday. Showing of Films Sets Stage for Senate Debate on Fortas WASHINGTON (AP) - Supreme Court pornography decisions and the uncertain impact of the presidential nominations were key'factors today, as opponents renewed their assault bn the nomination of Abe Fortas as chief justice. Sen. Johq L. McClellan, setting the stage for today’s resumption of Senate Judiciary Committee debate on the nomination, showed three stag party films yesterday to staff aides of noncommittee senators. The Arkansas Democrat, presumably trying to drum up support for oppostion to Fortas outside the committee, called the films “degrading.” ‘ Fortas, as an associate justice, voted with the majority that found two of the films not to be pornography. The vote became a major point in opponents’ arguments just before Congress broke Aug. 3 for the political conventions. McClellan’s showing of them yesterday made it clear that the opposition to President Johnson’s appointment of Fortas to succeed Earl Warren has not slackened. Aid Airlift to Biafra Gets Nigeria's OK LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)—The Red Cross begins an accelerated airlift of food and medicine into besieged Biafra tomorrow, following an agreement with the government permitting daytime flights for a 10-day period. Meanwhile, Lagos said its troops were battling for control of two of the rebels’ three remaining towns. * 'A , A ■ The federal Ministry of Information announced the airlift agreement with the International Red Cross Committee yesterday. The Red Cross and other private groups have been flying emergency supplies to two Biafran airstrips at '-night, but the amount of food they have been able to deliver is negligible. GTW Operations Normal as 40 Engineers Return Grand Trunk Western Railroad operations in Pontiac were back to normal today with the return of 40 engineers to their jobs. Showers May Cap Today's High 80s Today’s sunny skies are expected to become cloudy this aftemoori with showers and thundershowers moving in tonight and tomorrow. Temperatures, in the high 80s today, will turn cooler late tomorrow. Fair and cool is the outlook for Friday. Tonight’s low will be 62 to 68. AAA Southerly morning winds at 40 to 18 miles per hour will continue through the day. i Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 30, tonight 50, tomorrow 60. The low prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 63. By 12:30 p.m. the mercury had climbed to 82. Weekly News Quiz Starts in Today's Press Are you up-to-date on the events of the nation and the world that are making the headlines today? To check your knowledge of current affairs, The Pontiac Press will offer a weekly news quiz, beginning today. The quiz, geared to the young and old, is on page C-14. The quiz will appear each week. Check yourself Blethen, superintendent of the Department of Public Works, said, “Although no monetary loss has been experienced in the installation of sewer and water services since the last change in rates, trench maintenance costs have greatly exceeded funds allocated for this purpose.” “The labor charge-out rate was recently increased,” said Blethen, ‘'from $4.90 to $6.40 or 30.6 per cent.” RECOMMENDATION He recommended the increase * in present rates — “both to the total and to the amount allotted for trench maintenance.” The commission deferred action on a request for air-conditiong for the Baldwin Public Library. more specifics. The object will be to determine “more specifically” the desires of the board and to take into account possible remodeling. <\ “A project this size has to be deferred until budget time,” the spokesman explained. NO INTEREST In other action, the commission passed a resolution stating that it has no intention of purchasing property at the southeast corner of Maple and Southfield for any public purpose. It was reportedly felt by the board that the best use would be by private enterprise. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - First Lt. David W. Noyes, 24, of 4235 Carey was recently awarded the Silver Star medal for his actions while Vietcong platoon-s^ed combat base came under Noyes a graduate of Bloomfield Hills High School and Western Michigan University, was a Marine platoon commander with Company “M” when his platoon-sized combat base came under a mortar and ground assault. ★ ★ ★ The son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Noyes, he began his tour of duty in Vietnam in October. DAVID W. NOYES Plymouth Valiant to Sport New Features - The 1969 Plymouth Valiant, traditionally an economy compact, will offer new features of value comparable with those of more expensive^ models, according to Plymouth officials. Other new items will be aimed at increased economy and durability. In the four Valiant and Signet models, both a two-door and four-door sedan will, be available. The standard 170-cubic-inch displacement and the optional 225-cubic-inch six-cylinder engines are again offered. . Area dealerships that will be offering the Valiant lineup Sept. 19 are: Hahn Chrysler Plymouth, 6673 Dixie, Independence Township; Colonial Chrysler, 209 S. Main, Gilford; Oakland Chrysler y Plymouth, 724 Oakland, Pontiac; , Birmingham Chrysler Plymouth, 2100 W. Maple, Trey; Wheaton Chrysler Plymouth, Novi, Novi; and Milosch Chrysler Plymouth, 677 S. Lapeer, Lake Orion. ★ ★ ★ New to the 1969 Valiant line are improved automatic brake adjusters, sure-grip differential and refinements in the cars cleaner air system. A six-cylinder warm-up and nonicing starter relay mechanism are also new. STYLING IMPROVEMENTS Improvements in styling include a new grille treatment,' new taillights and redesigned interior trim. Options available in all Valiant series automobiles are fold-down armrests on bench seats and carpeting. The 200 decor package includes optional body side moldings, steering wheel with partial horn ring and dual horns. 1969 VALIANT — Economy is still the main feature of : the 1969 Plymouth Valiant line in the Signet model pictured here and the 100 passenger ear series. Styling improvements hi the lineup include a new grille treatment, taillights and refined interior trim. Comfort options are fold-down armrests on botch seats sund carpeting on all models. m I THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBE] CYCLONE CJ—The Mercury Cyclone CJ will compete in the 1969 intermediate passenger car series for Lincoln-Mercury division. Black-out grille, competition handling package and white-sidewall F70 fiber glass- belted tires are standard equipment. Sports options include bucket seats, racing mirror, turbine-styled wheel covers and rim-blow steering wheel. New Mercury Model Is Offered New in the intermediate division of the Lincoln-Mercury Division is the 1969 Mercury Cyclone CJ, Featuring a 335-horsepower CJ 428 engine and a two-door fastback hardtop, it is labeled a Ljfl ow- price supercar." Standard equipment on t h e Cyclone is a black-out grille, hood, tape stripe, white sidewall F70 fiberglass-belted tires and competition handling package. * it it Extra cost features include Ram Air induction, hood scoop, black or silver paint stripe and functional hood lock pins. Bucket seats, remote-control steering wheel are also optional. The Cylcone power train ranges from the standard 302-cubic-inch V8 engine' with fully synchro nized three-speed, manual transmission to a 390-cubic-ineh displacement V8 with 320 horsepower. A full complement of Ford Executive Dies TORONTO (AP) - Alan Bruce Munro, 64, vice president and managing director of F. W. WoolwOrth jCo. Ltd., died Tuesday while working at his office. He also served on the board of the parent U S. company. Motor Co. safety equipment includes a dual hydraulic brake system, energy absorbing steering column and wheel, and safety designed door handles. Maximum convenience features include a five-dial instrument panel cluster placed directly in front of the driver for easy visibility. it ★ it The 1969 Mercury Cyclone CJ and Mercury Cyclone are 203.2 inches long with a 116-inch wheelbase. Area auto dealers include Don Spiker Ford, 130 S. Milford, Milford; Hillside Lincoln Mercury Inc., 1250 Oakland, Pontiac; and Bob Borst Sales, 1950 Maple, Birmingham. Dodge Coronet for'69 Unveiled The 1969 Dodge Coronet line meets family-size standards with an intermediate passenger car price tag. Five models with 17 body styles comprise the Coronet series: the Super Bee, Coronet R-T, Coronet 440, 500 and Deluxe. Safety features include innovations in the automatic brake adjusting system, improved disc brakes, wide tread tires, automatic speed control and transmission refinements. * it it Area dealerships featuring the Coronet series Sept. 19 are: Hunter Dodge, 499 S. Hunter, Birmingham; Kesslfer Auto Sales, 10 N. Washington, Oxford; Spartan . Dodge, , 8 55 Oakland, Pontiac; and Lloyd Bridges Traveland, 1010 W. Maple, Clawson. Power plants available in the Coronet series range from a 1 7 0-cubic-inch displacement, slant-six model to the 440-cubic-inch, four-barrel, Magnum V8 engine. LEAST EXPENSIVE The least expensive Model, the Deluxe Coronet, will be avilable in a two-door coupe, four-door sedan and two-seat wagon. The Super Bee will compete with the Coronet R-T as a member of the Scat Pack series. Five models Will be offered in the Coronet 440 line, a two-door coupe, hardtop, four-door sedan and six-and nine-passenger station wagons. The luxury car of the series is the Coronet 500 with two-door hardtop, convertible, four-door sedan and station wagon models available. A bumblebee stripe accents the Coronet RrT Series including a two-door hardtop and convertible. A 440-Magnum engine, and rally-type suspension, brakes and tires are R-T characteristics.' Scholarships S6t GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-U.S. Rep. Gerald R. Ford says five scholarships to military acad-amies will be awarded to young men of his 5th District of Kent] and Ionia counties. Ford, a Republican, said the district in 1969 is entitled to two appointments to West Point, one to Annapolis and two to the Air Force Academy. Applicants must be high school graduates by next June, unmarried and under 22 years of age. ON SALE SEPT. 19 - The Dodge Coronet series will feature five models in 17 body styles including the Coronet 500 , pictured here. Exterior changes in the 1969 models include new grille and taillights. Safety features available are improved automatic brake adjusting systems, transmission refinements and disc brakes. ADO-A-ROOM Let us assist you in your plans far a bright new clean and comfortable room for your growing family. There are new ideas and we use only the finest materials and craftsmanship. Special Prices Now! AS LOW AS IlF P.r Month SATHHOOMS • BEDROOMS • RIO ROOMS • KITCHENS •ATTICS Everything in Modernisation DORMERS • OARAOES • R00FIN0 e AWNINGS EAVESTROUQHINQ • STORM WINDOWS • PORCH ENCLOSURES ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING DAYS ... NIGHTS.. Ofeedon (Tonstruriionffia AND SUNDAYS CALL 1032 West Huron 2 BLOCKS WEST OF TELEGRAPH PB 4-2597 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 MAKE OVER PACKb Hie following are top prices •covering sales of locally grown] ■V produce by growers and sold byi diem in wholesale package lots. I Quotations are furnished by theI 'N. Viets Fight Bulk of War' Teachers Out in 15 Districts PARIS (AP) — Ambassador Detroit Bureau of Markets as fP^verell Harriman said today of Friday. that North Vietnamese troops are doing almost all the fighting Produce Iin South Vietnam and the Viet- j cong is playing a minor role. >n.nflQRbJTS tsso The veteran American diplo- i>, bu0' u 4.00 mat, speaking to newsmen as he n?OTh,Spbu tew iso; went into the 20th session of the "^-qt^'crt. 4 “ Paris peace talks with North •Vjbubu 33“ Vietnamese envoy Xuan Thuy, mb*r Gem, bu. 5 » I demanded that Hanoi quit fight- Peaches, Hale Haven/% bu. s!oo! And he called on the North Peaches,' Reri Haven, ^Jul ... silo Vietnamese once again to say PearseSilapphFitor^ bu 5 precisely what they will do if Wefermelons^bu bl>‘ iso American bombing pf the North 1 VEGETABLES 4 0 is stopped. $3 50 . - ■ Beans, Lima, bu. 6 50 Beans,' Wax. bu. ?! Tl k| !EL»cbnUbu in hP NPW Cabbage! Red.y bu^' is C HCW . Harriman said: would comply with Harriman’s “The fjghting is almost entire-demands. Hanoi has consistently nOw by North Vietnamese sol-'ly refused to acknowledge the diers—very few South Vietnamese Communist soldiers. I will point out that it is inconsistent with the program of the National Liberation Front in the South which is demanding an independent and neutral South Vietnam. Therefore, what they Sre doing is completely inconsistent with that, and they are breaking the Geneva Conventions” which in 1954 ended the Indochinese war. 91,000 Pupils Home; State Mediators Busy presence of North Vietnamese^ army units in the South although they have asserted the LANSING (AP) — Thousands right of all Vietnamese to de- of pupils stayed home today as fansi aii ni viatnnm teacher disputes prevented fend all of Vietnam. Harriman said he would tell Xuan Thuy the Communist attacks in the past two weeks have failed. “They have been senseless,” he said, and killed many hundreds per day of North Vietnamese soldiers and achieved There appeared no likelihood nothing except misery to the that the North Vietnamese I people of South Vietnam. schools from opening their doors. In some cases, pupils were celebrating their second additional day of vacation, Lt. Gov. William Milliken said. A total of 15 school districts involving 91,000 pupils were reported involved injthe disputes. Most of the districts were located in populous Wayne County, the governor’s office said. Mediators and factfinders reportedly were working rourtd-the-clock in an effort to bring boards of education and teacher unions close to agreement. Teachers in another 35 districts reported for work even though contracts had not been signed, the governor’s office added. The teachers agreed to work while negotiations were Si were still in progress. *2 TEACHER GROUPS Of the 13 districts that failed to open on schedule, 12 involved the Michigan Education Association. In the remaining three districts, the teachers were represented by the Michigan Federation of Teachers (AFL)CIO), the governor’s office said. Settlements in Dearborn No. 7 and Bessemer districts were re-m -J% I ported Monday by Milliken, * ■ wj named by Gov. George Romney 26% 28'/s - % to seek school-teacher <2% « «% :_ V ments across the state. ^1 M 64% 64% +'%; ir * * 31 42% 42% «% - % Authorities pointed out that 24 62 6i 42 +1% the situation across Michigan is i» 78% 78% 7»% + % improved over last year when “ t * 53 districts were struck. Schools are expected to re-5?* J4% + %lmain closed for at least two weeks in the Adams Township school district in Houghton ^County because of the resignation of the Superintendent and PPIIJP■ school board. New elections 78% 78v. 78% • % have to be held before negotia-ii% _ j/Iltions can resume, authorities %jsaid. PACT UNSIGNED Many pupils in the Gladwin school district reported classes Monday blit were sent home by the board of education which had failed to sign an agreement with the Gladwin Education Association. Supt. John Bruce said the ,'[GEA rejected a $1,300 mini-■jmum pay raise, but declined to reveal present salaries. William Dunham, president of the GEA, called the board's action' “shocking" As SEC Crocks Down Little Guy s Protected CUNNIFF By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORKX — As the Impact : . recent charges and court ises is absorbed by the financial community, the significance of recent government moves is becoming ap-They are attempts to] protect the] small investor. As the num-;r of shareholders increased forfbld in 1$ years, inequities in what some people on Wall Street like to call people’s capitalism have been made to glare. ★ * " * The emergence of a middle class with money for stocks has thrown the naive in with the sophisticates. And, next to experience and basic intelligence, the difference is primarily one of information. There is a great disparity in the quality and timing of information available to the public compared with that to which a select group is privy. This has been the situation for so long that it is thoroughly ingrained; it has, in fact, been the basis on which some traders have made ] their money. ‘NQ REASON FOR IT’ mosphere should continue, dally'when the welfare of 24 bullion shareholders is. involved; At least three decisions' or charges are establishing the new patterns: A ruling in SEC Vs. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. that stated, in essence, that nobody can trade for personal profit with information intended only for corporate use, knowing that the information is not publicly available. The case was developed after the SEC detected purchases by Texas Gulf officials prior to the announcement of a major ore strike in Ontario, Accusations by the SEC that Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Sfnith, the nation’s biggest broker, violated antifraud laws in that it provided information on an earnings decline at Douglas Aircraft to institutional investors while withholding from smaller investors. Merrill Lynch denies the charges. A court decision involving BarChris Construction Carp., a builder and operator of bowling alleys, in which a prospectus failed to indude information that might be construed as derogatory. Now the Securities aigi Exchange Commission appears to be saying that there is no reason why this old, clublike at- Individuals claimed they purchased stock in BarChris without realizing it was also ah operator of bowling alleys, which you might remember suddenly ] dropped out of favor a few I years back. This case seems to leave anyone connected with a misleading securities offering personally liable for damages. It includes Auto Club Seeks Halt in Road Toll Forecast accountants, officers, directors, underwriters. There ar# several other cases in which the withholding of information or the release of misleading information is attacked. A couple of cases, at least, involve suits against accountants for not discovering errors in profit reports. It is still a bit early to measure the consequences of these dedsions. Not all have been very clearly stated, and perhaps they have not been thoroughly tested either. There is even the chance that, with a new administration in Washington, following a different philosophy, the SEC might begin to forget its pursuit. ★ w ★ Until clarification is reached, however, thousands of persons remotely or intimately connected with shares in American industry must walk a 'tightrope under the most distressing circumstances, for they are quaking inwardly. The analyst asks now if he must eliminate hunches and tips concentrate -instead on hard, factual information. DIRECTORS. WORRY The corporate director worries that by serving on a board he might leave himself open to a personal liability suit from a disgruntled stockholder. The company president fears to talk with his wife about office affairs, lest his wife innocently divulge inside information to a bridge partner, w ★ ★ The public relations man who casually drops hints to the stock market gossip columnists now wonders if somebody over there in the SEC is watching him. ' Bruce added that the three I schools in the district would re-^ main closed on a day-by-day Lasis. . ] The opening of school in Charlevoix was postponed for a «% 4 «* # % 4» H ' By ROGER E. SPEAR I Q—My husband’s company is Qo-I’m. a widow living on merging, and the profit-sharing dividends for fee most part. I hold 1,272 shares of Utah Construction, a f a m 11 y vestment going back for two generations. I admit to some sentimental attachment. I also own 132 shares of Kaiser Cement, I need more income and have been advised to sell all or part of Utah Construction, what do-yon say?—V. p. A—I say you have been well advised. You have over $100,000 of capital returning He said he )was visiting Stan- barely 2 per cent in dividends ford as a research associate in and another $4,000 in Kaiser fee genetics department and Cement yielding 3 per cent, feat arrangements for his trip shall not repeat here what have recently recommended for othef* readers wife your had been made -seven months ago. ____ and Japanese officials said he'“obviously” was a defector, but a U.S. Embassi spokesman in Tokyo declined to classify him officially as a defector. News in Brief Citizens Utilities Detrex Chemical Diamond Crystal . KOIIy Sr- ■— 4¥3.4 jvf.o iar,i • • ■ -.1......... 413.4 198.4 136.5 292.81 Wyandotte Chemical . : io.” ilia MOM’S RUmmagC: Thursday, ' wo Jr S 9 to 12, Indianwood and Bald-w'afwin ■—Aidv. ODO Rummage, Friday, September 6, ClA Bldg., 5840 Williams Lk. Rd., M pm. -~Adv. problem. Though sentiment has no place in the stock market, I appreciate your feelings and suggest that you cut back to 600 ytah Construction. Then consider some of my selections for reinvestment of your capital. YPER YEAR v,, Plus Commission V.; Plus Bonus OUR MEN AVERAGE tsSSO TO 815,000 PER YEAR. AGES 25,50. WE TRAIN you, WE FURNISH : Customers, car and all EXPENSiS. WE- HAVE THE NUMBER ONE RETIREMENT , PROGRAM. BLUE CROSS INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE AND- VACATION PLAN. YOU FURNISH THE ENTHUSIASM AND THE DESIRE TO EARN MONEY CALL FOR INFORMATION FE 4-4507 ANYTIME. ‘ I . ELDERLY^ OR^ RETIREDtojr * ENGINEERING"" ASSISTANT Bn OF TROY $2.95—$3.80 per hour Excellent opportunity for on-the-|ob o^engfneerlng®work’ Good^ working meiit. 5W WCt Big Beaver' Rd^lfroy, 689-4900. __________ EXPERIENCED WELDERS AND MACHINE OPERATOR Immediate apenlng*, days and atteteww^wi^traln^relirtNi men perience. Excellent year around working conditions and dvartlme. 2921 industrial Row, Troy, between 14 and 15 Mila ds^ oit CooIMpa Hwy. _________ • , - ^||, MAN WITH MILITARY obllgaHOR completed to work in ceramic, manufacturing business.^ Job^ con- to start.P°No "experience necessary. Norwest NOYJtty Co, 3 2 " * :hauffeurs license, local ri 573 for appointment. _ N FOR LANDSCAPING. AMT CORP. HAS openings tor stock handlers oo all 'three shifts. Ap-pilcanis must pe «• least I8^yrv between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. at 1225 £. Maple. Trqy, Mich. , AUTO PAINTER, GM experience, no Saturday work, fringe benefits, contact Ken - Dudley, Body Shop Manager, Jack . Haupt Pontiac Sales, Inc., Clprkstbn. 825-5500. BARTENDER MANAGER - 6 . .. — |n --jiy experienced bie to assume BLOWING WOOL Applicators, experienced only. Steady -work; good pay. Call Dunrfter VE $-3131. . BUMPERS ed to earn top wages. Fringe Is above average dealer. Call Gill for details. $48-3300. Bus Boys Ted's of Bloomfield Hills •TED'S WOODWARD AT SQUARE L BUS BOY WANTED, ful employment. Apply In perst Keego Harbor. BUSBOYS, DAY or Evenlnc liberal benefits, 1 Restaurant. Woodward and LaKt Rd. CARPENTERS. ROOFERS, EXPERIENCED MARINE mechanic. . Steady, full time worker ohly need apply. 335-5560.____________1 EXPERIENCED ®>yF^RSs(a|f[l2s5 flme. 335-ei80o!elal ^ 1 ,nd Pa * EXPERIENCED" BRUNSWICK pin setter - mechanic, top salary, vacations, Blue Cross Insurance, sick pay. Apply 114 Orchard Lk. Ave. EXPERIENCED COOK, MANY benefits, apply at 114 Orchard LK. EXPERIENCED . PARTS MAN EXPERIENCED MILL, hand call 478-3510 or apply 31164 W. 8 Mile EXPERIENCED^ ^LATHE hand,~1 Dy^|"co',|^n262^awililamV’" Dr" EXPERIENCEDSIDERS " Top wages, profit sharing, retirement plan, group hospitalization, year-a r ound work, paid workmen's compensation, Call 332-5231. EXPERIENCED AMLLI^NG^machlne s organization. Op-... consideration. Call , 6294231, Fenton or ~“^MANAGER MAN'S HABERDASHERY Clothes, Pontiac Mall. MEN NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED $193.60 includes expenses per ,4-dai week. Opportunities for higher earning a ft e r 90 days. Yea r l) gross $7,000-59,000. immediate ful lus company pays isurance.r8Requirements: 1. Must e 26 or over. 2. Married. 3. Good riving record. 4. Excellent har*CF0R5 INTERVIEW7 PHONE: FE 8-9444 EXECUTIVE OFFICES 15032 GRAND RIVER AVE. OPEN 7 A.M. TO Iff P.M. i- Sr'lney FACTORY WORKERS Employers Temporary Service FAST, GROWING FULL TIME CLERKS, reteH store, good working conditions, fringe benefits, iA. L. Dammon Co., Maple Rd., 426-3010. ____________ FULL TIME- HARDWARE Wlee clerk. Retail store. Fringe benefits. Part time clerk for nights, Saturdays, and Sundays. A. L. Damman Co., Bloomfield Plaza < Telegraph and Mapla). "|jhmetlc,‘ FACTORY WORK FOR must know slmplr mechanical experien Steady work. Days o FURNACE INSTALLERS helpers, good pay, year rauaM----* hospital ins., pal y and commission. GAS STATION HELPER _____take Orion, Michigan ____ GAS ST A T I Q N ATTENDANTS, managers, supervisor trainees’. An equal opportunity employer and Vacations, ^retirement amP other . fringe Benefits. Apply at 625 Orchard Laka Rd. or 5604 Highland IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Part time and full time - qtlca. Mt. ClBmens and Detroit area. Top Union scale paid — Blue Cross, vacation and holiday benefits. Call fast food operation. Good jes. Hospitalization. Vacation n p«y and other benefits. Apply .. Ellas Bras. Big Boy Restaurant Telegraph A I-------- GAS STATION . perience, mechanic HANDYMAN TO WORK INSIDE and outside for^epartment building. Pontiac 627-3840/ Datroit. new and older homes In and Ortonvltle area. Call Ortonvillta or 393-0770, HOUSEKEEPING LAUNDRY Fulll tim e and part time positions tor men in both of these ■nts. Experienced prefer-not necessary. Starting departme ENGINEERING AIDE 1 $6200 to $7000 PLOs EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS AND OPPORTUNITY TO ADVANCE. - Work Includes drafting amF prap-aration of -proparty descriptions, a Requires high school graduation, with completion ot High following areas, drafting," surveying, preparing property, descriptions, and-or conducting ’ title searches. Interested applicants should apply to:' The Personnel Div„ OAKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE____________ 1200 N. TELEGRAPH PQNTIAC LAND SURVEY or^wlirtra'n! Gmesp?e Assoc. Inc? ■ 6444668. ’ ■____ LANDSCAPI NG - LOCKE OPERATORS and Trimmers, 241S Woodward Ave. Phone 332-1237, LANDSCAPE HELP, experienced /preferred,! 18 or ovgr, year around LOCKE OPERATOR. "1-54$. 16 YEARS i SServlev • sa,p,?rar^k1 15 WEEKLY SALARY t otter to all succassful a MECHANICS Alsb helpers^ and^_ parts Tderkir any slllft. k Oil S, Refining Corp. dealer position. Experience not required Excellent beginning pel S. Hospitalization, j Equal opportunity employer MEN WANTED FOR LAWN CUTTING. 673-8797 Need Part Time , Work? We heve schedules in^|ur maintenance department for Enen who can work the following hours: 5 A.M. TO 10 A.M. 5 A.M. TO 1:30 P.M. Montgomery . Ward An equal opportunity employer PONTIAC MALL MALE HELP WTb 6. Need Money?? $800 PER MONTH If you meet our requirements. Opportunity to earn 812,000 per year after you prove yourself. Applicants must be over 2t. have tin . and be available at once. Part time positions also available. Call NEW CAR PORTER ■rating new car dealership, orklng conditions, pay - * position. and benefl... .. _______ Please see Mr. Jim Pedes, -jmMI manager Hillside Llncoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland. NOW HIRING necessary, we will be IB-22, neat ap- \ pearing and able to start mark immediately. Salary discussed at interview. For appointment, edit Mr. Miller. 338-0359, 9 a.m. to 1 P.m , Thurs through Tuts. OPERATOR FOR A RUBBISH route, - chauffer's license a must. Working employment heed apply, qe layoff. F^r interview cell 693-2801 between* OUTSIDE MAINTENANCE help, doit course, geod pay, steady hours, FE*2 M2X‘