Th« Pontiac Prtu Monday Octobor 6, 1969 Drive volunteers in this year’s campaign. 10:30 (2) C — Della Reese — King Cousins, Prof. Irwin Corey and * Bill Medley (A) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R C — Movie: “Tammy and the Doctor” (1963) Sandra Dee, Peter R — Rerun C — Color MONDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C—On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2)C — Sunrise Semester 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom (7) C - TV College *7:00 (4) C —Today (7) C —' Morning Show — Adela Rogers St. John, author of ‘‘The Honeycomb,” guests. 7:20 (9) Warm-Up 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather. Sports Ifi> Friendly Giant 7:45 (9) Chez Helene 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Bozo 156) Americans Frbm Africa 8:30 (7) R — Movie: “Meet Danny Wilson” ( 1 952 ) Frank Sinatra. Shelley Winters 9:00 (2) R — Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) Ontario Schools 9:15 (56) Book Parade 9:30 (2) R C — Beverlv Hillbillies (56) Let’s Go Sciencing 9:45 (56) Art Lesson 10:00 (2) RC-Lucy Show (4) C — Sale of the Century (56) Thanks a Million — Discussion to aid Torch guest. (4) C — H o 11 y w ood Squares (7)C — Galloping Gourmet (50) C — Jack LaLanne (56) Once Upon a Day 10:45 (9) C - News 11:00 (4) C — It Takes Two — Forrest Tugger, London Lee. Joe Flynn and their spouses guest this week. (7) R — Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C — Strange Paradise (56) Reason and Read 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:25 (4) C- Carol Duvall 11:30 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Concentration (7) RC — That Girl (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C — Klmba 11:55 (9) Wizard of Oz MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, * Sports 7 (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Real McCoys (50) C — Underdog 12:05 ( 56) R — Americans From Africa 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:30 (2) C - He Said. She Said (4) C — News. Weather. Sports (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal (9) C — Tempo 9 (50) C — Alvin 12:35 (56) Friendly Giant 12:55 ( 56) R - Let's Go Sciencing 1:00 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow Modernize with , KUNGLEHUT BRICK SIDING Vfe'f Raal Brick Bonded to Vi" Insulation Board (1) Glvat you Ysar-Round Insulation (2) Resists Firo (3) No Maintenance, or Painting (4) Beautifies Your Homo (5) Economical to Install KLINQLEHUT BRICK COMPANY 2903 Dixls Mwy., Pontiac Corner Silver Lake M. FREE ESTIMATES 673-7607 Fonda (50) R — Movie: “Forty-Second Street” ( 1 933) Dick Powell, Ruby Keeler 1:10 (56) Listen and Say 1:25 (56) R — Book Parade 1:30 (2) C - As the World . Turns (4) C — Doctors (7-) C — Dating Game 1:40 ( 56) R -- Reason and Read 2:00 (2) C - Where the Heart Is (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2:25 (2) C — News 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C — Bright Promises (7) C — One Life to Live (56) R — Speaking Freely 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm —( 4)-C—Letters to~Laugh-— In — Alan Seuss,Teresa Graves. Pat Carroll and Peter Lawford guest this week (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) R — Candid Camera (56) Innovation (62) R — Movie; “Dran-go” (1957) Jeff Chandler Joanne Dru 3:30 (2) C—Edge of Night (4) C — You're Putting Me On — Peggy Cass, Bill Cullen. E. J. Peaker, Jack Cassidy. Kaye Ballard and Alejandro Rey guest this week. (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Human Relations and Motivation — First in series 4:00 (2) R C — Gomer Pyle (4) C — Steve Allen — Pat Harrington, George Carlin, Leonard Barr and Terry Gibbs guest. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo (56) Pocketful of Fun 4:30 (2) C - Mike Douglas > (7) R ~ Movie: “The Girl Who Had Everything” J1953) Elizabeth Taylor. Fernando Lamas (50) R — Little Rascals (56) R—Once Upon a Day (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot (9) RC-Flipper (50) R C — Lost in Space (56) Misterogers 5:30 (9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) R — Friendly Giant j 62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) jStory teller Monday night 6:00 (2)44) (7) C — News, Weather. Sports (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Bridge With Jean Cox (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:30 (2> C — News -Cronkite (4) C — tfews — Huntley. Brinkley (9) R — Dick Van Dyke (50) R — Munsters (56) C — The River That Came Back — Efforts to restore and preserve the Au Sable River are examined. (62) C — Swingintime — Teresa Graves of “Laugh-In” guests. 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (9) R C — Movie: “Incident at Phantom Hill” (1966) Dan Duryea, Jocelyn Lane. (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New - While searching for buried treasure, Tom and Huck run into Injun Joe and his new accomplice. 7:30 (2) C — Gunsmoke — Matt helps a teen-age girl defend her brother who is charged -with homicide. Nina Foch and Ruth Roman guest-star. (4) C — My World and Welcome to It — Dogs, everyone else’s best friend, get John into trouble with his wife, daughter, editor and the" police. (7) C — Music Scene — Scheduled guests are the Dells, John Mayall, Roger Miller, the Rascals, Bobby Sherman, Dusty Spring-field and Smokey Robinson and the Miracles. (50) C — Beat the Clock — This week's guest is Jack Cassidy. (56) French Chef -Cooking with chestnuts (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — The modern cities and wild animals of South Africa are viewed. 8:00 (4) C - Laugh In -The Monkees guest-star. (50) R — Hazel (56) World Press 8:15 (7) C — New People — In a race with Stanley. ~Bob Lee’s dune buggy strikes and injures Wen-dy. 8:30 (2) C— Here’s Lucy — A Navajo Indian chief claims Lucy as his wife. (9) C — Tommy Hunter (50) C — To Tell the Truth (62) R — The Nelsons 9:00 (2) C — Mayberry R.F.D. — Howard has been chosen to write a poem for the state literary magazine, but he can't get past the title. (4) C — Movie: "Counterpoint" (1968) The fate of an internationally^ renowned conductor and his 70-piece orchestra lies in the hands of a music-loving German general. Charlton Heston. Maximilian Schell (7) C — Survivors ' Learning that he has only Th# Pontiac Pr»n Mondoy October 6, 1961 a short time to live. Baylor decides to bring his son into the bank. (9) C — Front Page Challenge (50) R — Perry Mason (56) NET Journal (62) R — /Movie: "Sun Sets at Dawn" (1951) Sally Parr, Philip Shawn Philip Shawn 9:30 (2) C — Doris Day — Doris \poses as her boss' wife to convince a husband - hunting female that he's out of circulation. (9) (New Time) Man Alive — "The Pursuit of Pleasure and All That B o g u s" examines the . personalities of Malcolm Muggeridge and Nathan Cohen. 10:00 (2) C — Carol Burnett — Steve Lawrence and ballet dancer Edward Vil-lella guest.— 17),-C — Love, American Style — Arte Johnson, Larry Storch, E. J. Peaker, Margaret O'Brien, Alice Ghostley, and Marilyn Mason star. m (9) (50) C Weather. Sports (56) People in Jazz — Joe Williams, longtime vocalist with the Count Basie band, is featured. 10:30 (9) C — What's My Line? — Panelists for the week are Henry Morgan. Anita Gillette. Bert Convy and Arlene Francis. (50) R — Ben Casey (56) Folk Guitar — Final program in series (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (7) C — News. Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: "The End of the Affair" (British. 1955) Deborah Kerr, Van Johnson (62) R — Highway Patrol •11:15 (4) C — News. Weather, Sports 11:30 (7) C — Joey Bishop — Ross Martin and Don Cherry guest. _(50) C — Merv Griffin — EliWallach, Ann Jackson." Allen Funt, Joe McGinniss (“The Selling of the President 1968"), Kaye Hart, Wes Harrison^ and Robert King guest. (62) R C — Movie: "My MONDAY Wife's Family" (British, 1956) Ronald Shiner, Ted Ray 11 11 35 (2) R -" Blond ie For (1943) Penny Arthur Lake Movie: Victory" Singleton, :45 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Anthropologist Ashley Montagu and Rich Little guesL :24 (9) Viewpoint :30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — "The Nudist Camp" :00 (7) R —Texan (50) R — Peter Gunn :15 (4) Beat the Champ :30 (2) R — Naked City (7) C — News, Weather :40 (7T^~—~ Five Minutes to Live By :45 (4) C — News. Weather :30 (2) C - News. Weather :35 (2) TV Chapel DO IT YOURSELF! 'Solid Vinyl Siding of B.F. Goodrich Goon Vinyl ONLY 11.91 Nr IN M* ft A IR6AT PROTECTION foftYOUR NOME ADD BEAUTY TO YOUR HOME Aluminum or Vinyl Siding FDA Steps WASHINGTON (AP) — Tht Food and Drug-Admtnistratjon, nearly a year after government scientists reported a possible health, hazard, is showing signs of concern about cyclamate, an artificial sweetener "used by an estimated 175 million Americans. The sweetener, known as cyclamate, has been linked most recently to severe birth defects In chicken^ - V, ■ ' . ★ * ★ - Cyclamate Is found in a wide range of products from bacon to children's vitamlne to diet soft drinks and diet foods. FDA scientists reported in late October 1068* that a cyclamate breakdown product formed by one of every live1 humans who use the sweetener causes ■ a shattering of genetic - material when given to rats. Comparable genetic, breaks in humans are associated with birth deformaties and cancer. HURRY-UP EVALUATION ' Following network television accounts of the deformed Chicks, FDA commissioner Herber L. Ley Jr. called late last week for a 30-day, hurry-up evaluation of cyclamates by the nongovernmental National Academy of Science.... On its delivery, said LeyT"I will decide the best methods of restricting the use of cyclamates.” WWW Consumer spokesmen on Capitol Hill, led by Senator Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., have complained the FDA has reacted too slowly to cyclamate danger signs, ~ ■ The agency failed to alert a National Academy of Science panel to the ■ I FDA chromosome study, the critics say. The NAS panel issued a generally 1 I favorable report1 on cyclamates in DecemJ^r. | LABELING RESTRICTIONS I And, the critics point tb the fact that Ley waited four months after the 1 1 report before proposing what they say are mild labeling restrictions bn 1 1 cyclamate use. , . I I Products would have to show cyclamate content, and adults and children 1 / would be advised to limit their intake of the substance. The proposed regula- | I lions have not yet been put into effect. Kickoff Ceremonies Held At The Pontiac Mat! Saturday Torch-Lighting Ceremonies Kick Off 21st PAUF Drive Representatives of several Pontiac Area United Fund agencies attended dual torch-lighting ceremonies Saturday for this year’s general campaign. The events mark the start of the area’s 21st United Campaign, which this year seeks a goal of $1.24 million for 55 health, welfare, education and recreation The first torch-lighting, at the Mall, was proceeded by an airplane which dropped UFOs (United Fund Objects) to dozens of anxious children in the field behind the Mall. They contained numbers redeemable for gifts donated by the Pontiac Mall. As general campaign chairman, War- ln Today's Press The Wedther V U. I, WMlbtr •UPMtf Woricait (Oataiit pita t) :V*-‘ "A.. ■ ( ■V'.iT’/; Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 127 NO, 207 l’ONTIAC, M10111 GAN, M ON 1 )AV, (KTOB KR: «, l»M) . "rv . M PACKS Get Leftovers,, Then School-Reform Plan LANSING Wl - The 75th Michigan Legislature ends a two-month recreation and research recess tonight at 3 when it reconvenes for a fall session to be devoted largely to Gov. William Miiliken’s education reform legislation. Milliken — who acknowledges it could be Christmas before much of his plan is adopted — is to address a Joint session Thursday to detail proposals outlined earlier by his education reform commission. ★ ★ ’ ★ But tonight leftovers will be the order of business. Among debris of the summer’’s final 18-hour session July 17 are 21 bills. DIFFERENT FORMS Passed by both chambers, but in dif- ferent form, they were left among other bills that were scuttled or voted into legislative “deep-freeze” until January. Bills are not the only matters being shuffled. Renovation of third- and fourth-floor offices has forced some GOP representatives to find temporary .quarters in a nearby school. The State Supreme Court and State Law Library also have been moved out. Only Chief Justice Thomas E. Brennan, smarting from what he considered a somewhat peremptory evacuation notice, is holding onto one office in the Capitol’s third floor’. , The logggerhead Issues the* two chambers are^ to______work on until Milllken”s bills are introduced and studied by committees represent months of frustration and deadlock. One measure proposes to elect Detroit councilman from single-member districts Instead of at general, citywide elections. The upper chamber’s-version would require district apportionment to be handled by the Wayne C p u n t y supervisors. The House version called (or that to be done by a committee of-the Detroit city clerk, recorder and treasurer. * * ★ A controversial proposal to substitute Michigan’s one-man grand Jury with a citizen panel operating under streamlined rules also is pending. * * * The bill would allow a judge to grant Immunity to a witness testifying in a hearing and set specific perjury and contempt of court penalties. Rumor-Spreading Charged Housing Code Foes Fuel Fire ftnflM Prm PMM by RM Unttrnahnr Golfing Great Dies Walter Hagen dead after lengthy illness — PAGE C-l. Job Program Support of small businesses needed, says leader — PAGE B-7. Green Berets Assassination not part of war ren H. Eiermanr president of Community-National Bank, lit the huge torch at the Mall and expressed hope for a successful campaign, pointing out that this year’s goal is the highest in the history of the * Pontiac Area United Fund (PAUF). ‘REACH OUT, CARE* “I sincerely hope that area residents show they can‘reach out and care,’ ” he said. “Our area cannot survive without concern and tcare for one another, and by heeding this year’s slogan, ’Reach Out and Care,’ we can prove that we are concerned for the welfare of others less fortunate than ourselves.” * * * Members of the Boy Scouts and Camp Fire Girls participated in Ceremonies at the Mall, then joined, the “care-a-van” to downtown Pontiac for the second torch* lighting,at City Hall, 450 E. Wide Track. Mrs. Vincent Bronsing, community division chairmanulit the torch from the bucket of a lift provided by Consumers Power CO. The drive will run through Nov. 7. By ED BLUNDEN Opposition to Pontiac’s proposed new housing code is being fanned into (lamp in some sections of toe city. A word-of-mouth-campaign — some of it termed rumor-spreading — and pamphleteering has been conducted in the city for toe last three weeks. A revised version of the code will be up for public hearing and possible adoption by the City Commission at tomorrow’s regular meeting, 8 p.m. at City Hall, East Wide Track and East Pike. The first hearing was held three weeks ago, and about 40 persons attending voiced considerable opposition to all or part of the code. OPPOSITION MUSHROOMED Since then, opposition has apparently mushroomed, and door-to-door callers have been urging residents to appear at tomorrow’s meeting to protest. Some opposition to toe code approaches hysteria. One pamphlet states: “This Housing Code, in its scope and intent, violates the basic premise upon which our American civilization has been buUt.” ^ The pamphlet implies houses over 10 years old with minor violations of wiring specifications or living-room size will be condemned. The pamphlet concludes, “Your home will he searched — your property can be condemned — and you may be jailed if you do not conform.” It is signed “Homeowners Protecting Their Private^ Property.” , • The new ordinance does not void the freedoms of the Constitution, but does contain more teeth for enforcement and more stringent standards, say city officials. It is concerned particularly with substandard (slum) housing. But city officials have pointed out the most important reason for the new proposed ordinance: the city must have one to comply with requirements of the Office of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). it * It Many city projects concerning loans and grants for new housing and rehabilitating old housing are pending with HUD. The city must have an ordinance and it must be a good one or the residents can forget about federal help for housing, city officials contend. At the first hearing on the ordinance, commissioners ordered some revisions in the original proposal. Concern was expressed at how severely the new provisions would be enforced and one speaker pointed out that most homes in the city would not totally comply. Housing officials ,have been meeting with interested groups in the last three weeks discussing some of the regulations! The proposed ordinance was written under orders of the City Commission by Ralph T. Florio, director Of housing-code enforcement, with the help of planners and legal counsel. Commissioners attended several briefing sessions prior to its initial presentation. Cuban Jet Lands in Detection Lag Explained Clouds Threaten Rain by Tonight Cloudy skies hold the threat of rain by this evening, according to the weatherman’s predictions. Temperatures are expected to remain mild until tomorrow afternoon or evening when they will take a-dip. Rain clouds are due to hover over the Oakland County area through Wednesday bringing sporadic showers. By Wednesday,' the mercury is expected to fall into toe top-coat category. Precipitation, possibilities In per cent are today 20, tonight 60 and tomorrow 50. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon disclosed today that U.S. radars made only intermittent contact with a Russian made MIG17 fighter plane which a defecting Cuban officer landed yesterday near President Nixon’s aircraft a! Homestead Air Force Base, Fla. The Pentagon said no American interceptors were sent up to meet the plane because of the short time between the radar contact and a visual sighting a few minutes later. — ' ' it- 2.0 ★ ■ The Pentagon declined to comment when asked whether it was concerned that no effort was made to meet the approaching fighter. . * Jerry Friedheim, Defense Department spokesman, said authorities at Homestead AFB made intermittent contact with toe MIG17, a lightly armed and older Soviet-type fighter, when the plane was 65 miles south of the base and about 90 miles east of; Key West. REQUESTS LANDING Nine minutes later the control tower crew visually sighted the plane with its landing gear extended. The MIG dipped’ its wings in the International sign of a requested landing and got a green light clearance to land at 12:23 p.m. EDT. Friedheim said the plane was held up at the end of the runway “until the air force security police had determined that there was no hostile intent.” Friedheim identified the pilot, who is being granted asylum, as Lt. Eduardo Guerra Jimenez of the 1913th Squadron, Cienfuegos Air Force Base, Santa Clara, Cuba. r The plane was equipped with one 37 millimeter guri containing“40 rounds of ammunition and two 23 mm cannon containing a total of 160 rounds. The Senate refused to eliminate the lone juror system. It alsa voted to give the jury a six-month life with a six-month extension. Die House specified three months in each case. Establishment of a youth services bureau in the Social Services Department, approved by the upper chamber, ran into trouble in the House. The Senate version called for a nine-member, policy commission and a three-man parole and review board. The bill did not specify salaries or Civil Service status. The House voted for a seven-member policy and parole commission, appointed by the governor. Each member would receive 126,000, although Civil 8ervice status was not specified. Ira Polley Quits as School Chief LANSING (AP) - Ira Polley quit as Michigan’s superintendent of public instruction today, charging that the State Board of Education had not done the job ! it was created for. Polley, whose ouster had been sought by several members of the board, which hired him in 1966, accused some of circulating “falseho and halt-trutos” and of making “wild ac- POLLEY cusations” about public figures. He said there had been pressure on him to buck Gov. William MUiken’s educational reform proposals declare that an elective board T way to administer state educatit “This I cannot, In good do," Polley declared. Milliken said that by his Polley had “shown himself be a man of great courage “Although I am deeply /borry to see him leave his position ar superintedent of public instruction, I/respect his decision in light of the intolerable conditions under which he has been forced to function. / “Polley has worked hard for education in Michigan, and all of us owe him a great debt of gratitude.” A third repson he gave for his resignation, Polley said, was that “espeically in recent months” and days, certain members of the board have acted with reckless disregard for the public interest.” “A parochiaid bloc on (he hoard has devoted zealous attention to the private sector of education,” Polley said. Area, Woman Winner SweepsTake Is $24,000 Breakthrough in War Near? | assignment, says 1 PAGE A-4- colonel — I Area News A-3 I Astrology C-9 | Bridge) W C-9 j I Crossword Puzzle .. C-9 I . BdltofEWr~T7T7rrr7r 1' Markets 1 Obituaries B4 r Smoking Series ... .. ..>..-.14 ; Sports C-l-C-7 ! Theaters - B-9 it TV and Radio Program* * . I)-9 Vietnam War News A-t ' Wilson, Earl ........ A-9 Women’s Pages WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Re-. publican leader Hugh Scott said today ‘ >4jiere may be a breakthrough in |he Vietnam war in the next 60 to 90 days The minority leader said thO'break-. through cduld .occur In either the diplomatic or military area but that "I would shade it a little toward the military.” V '*7, »li)j JlU i.i Senate Majority Deader'Tflike Mans-said, In answer to a newsman’s question, that he knew of no secret tie- . gotiations now under way to and the war. Mansfield, and Scott * word questioned in light of ScOtt’s comments bn television yesterday'In which , he predicted a change in the Vietnam situation but declined to say what, form lt may take or how. soon It may develop. Scotjt said he talked to the White House today and its reaction to his tele- vision consents had not been “unfavorable." Although he provided no details, Scott ahswered “yes, lt is possible" when asked yesterday If the both'Sides might be approaching a de facto ceasefire. The Pennsylvanian gave the same1 answer, when asked if Nixon “might be on lhe verge of something right howl.” “1 cannot tell you where there will be solid news, but there are some' things happening," Scott said. KNOWS NOTHING But In a separate interview, Vice President Spiro ;T. Agnew said he knew of nothing that was about to be revealed by, the, Nixon administration on the Vietnam situation, Agnew's and Scott's comments came as Congress appeared to be preparing for increased debate on Vietnam policy. Chief protagonist for stepping up the public debate is Sen. J. W. Fulbrlght, D-Ark., whose foreign relations committee has scheduled five days of hearings on a bill to get all U.S. troops out of Vietnam by Dec. 1,1970. “Die President has stated an intention to extricate the United States from the. war/’ said Fulbrlght. ' "The !-Senate! should give thorough study to all policy alternatives .for achieving that objective.” .1 • A nationwide student strike Scheduled Oct. 15 to protest continuance of the war has threatened to envelop Congress with tile announcement by a number of antiwar senators and representiitlves that they will boycott the Capitol that day. Fulbrlght’s hearings — possibly televised as were similar ones with far-reaching consequences three years ago—are scheduled to begin Oct. 27. By DIANNE DUROCHER The ladies at Bea’s beauty shop In Waterford Township had al lot to talk about Saturday afternoon; Mrs. Adolph Mushro, a grandmother 'who “bets on anything that comes along," was waiting to have her hair set at the Chateau Beaute Boutique, 4232 Dixie, when she learned she had won $24,000 in the Irish Sweepstakes. “Really? You’re not kidding me?” she asked calmly of Mrs. George (Bea) Beamobey, the shop’s owner, who relayed the news. A widow, Mrs. Mushro lives with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Councilor at 2270 Highfield, Waterfqrd Township. THIRD-PLACE HORSE She quickly explained thatherwinnlng ticket on the third horse, Kamundu. was held by herself, her daughter and her son, Larry Anthony of Hollywood, Calif. "That should mal|e things m' little easier with Uncle Sam,”1 added Mrs. Mushro, who is barely over five feet tall and staunchly declares her age to be 39, • just like Jack Benny.” 1 Mrs. Mushro. a secretary al Dodge Truck In Warren, said that three times a year (or the past 15 years she has jointly purchased three tickets on the Irish Sweepstakes. Her share of this winning ticket cost her $2.60. For the past 17 years she has bought two tickets a month on church raffles, ‘jbul never won anything.” She also plays bingo every week. "About two weeks ago, I hit a winning streak and won about $50 at bingo, then the following week, I won the jackpot of $118,” she said. Sr * * Mrs. Mushro said she doesn't know for sure what she’s going to do with her share of the $24,000. But as she sat in the beauty operator’s chair, someone in the shop piped up: "Hey, Betty, how about a poker game tonight?” “Okay,” Mrs. Mushro replied confidently. MRS. ADOLPH MUSHRO A—2 .":***■ :'}r^™ ! THE PONTIAC PRESS- MONDAY, OCTbBER «. 1962, But Thieu Sees Long Involvement 'Want Most Gls Out in Sagging Morale Taking Its Toll in U.$.Military SAIGON on — President NguyStfVarkThieu said today the Vietnamese people "are determined to replace the bulk of the U.S, fighting units in 1970." But he added that all American troops cannot be withdrawn as long as North Vietnamese forces remain In South Vietnam: Ilia major policy speech to a joint session of South Vietnam’s National Assembly end Senate, Thieu also said he thought that allied forces should remain in Vietnam as long ha aggression threatens Southeast Asia. n 4 ★ 4 "The most important thing is- that the Free World and, first of all, the U.S. ally, should not let Vietnam fall into the Communists’ hands. And as long as the Communist aggressors from the North still remain on the territory of the Republic of Vietnam, the allied forces cannot withdraw from the Vietnamese territory. "As Iona as peace with guarantees has not yet been restored in Vietnam and a new Communist aggression is still threatening this part of under whatever form, the Free World forces should remain < The U S. now has 484,000 troops in Vietnam. Thieu empi willing to negotiate an "acceptable" peace while determined to avold*l coalition government or surrender to the Communists. 4 4 4 He asked for increased American military and financial his government to shoulder more of the burdens of the Thieu drew applause from the largely conservatlvi notably when he said: "We are determined to continue to and democracy." ■ ■ \ • . Although he referred several times to American public opinion and aligned himself with President Nixon’s policy of troop withdrawal, he made clear that he thinks complete U-S* withdrawal is a long way off. WASHINGTON (AP) - An Army officer headed for a second tour as a battalion commander in Vietnam asked I send men out to to win, it would be "But N*w$m®n Examine Cuban MIG 17 Which Landed At Florida Air Force Base Yesterday hanging on.” .This infantryman’s frustrations and doubts were echoed by other military professionals, all im. private conversations. None would be quoted by name. An admiral whose job gives him a wide-angle view of the military establishment said morale has overtaken money as the No. 1 problem hr retaining younger officers. MANY FACTORS A WALK IN THE SNOW — Three youngsters play follow the leader and leave their tracks in snow which blanketed the Denver area Friday and Sa^ay. The wintery accumulation measured from 8 inches to almost a foot in depth. A bright sun yesterday turned the area into an early Christmas card scene. Skyjack Ppct Sought in U. N. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Eleven countries are requesting the U N. General Assembly to ask all nations to .outlaw aerial hijacking. In a letter today to Secretary-General U Thant, the countries asked that “piracy In the air” be added to the agenda of the assembly’s current session. They sought a study of legal measures that governments might adopt against a "growing menace to commercial aircraft.” ♦ 4 Sr » They proposed a resolution calling for effective laws against seizure of aircraft in flight, punishment of hijacker*, a hew international convention against air piracy and compliance with the 19*3 Tokyo convention "relating to the prompt release of passengers, crews and aircraft." < Countries sponsoring the resolution are the Netherlands, Belgium Luxembourg, Canada, New Zealand, Lesotho, the Malagasy Republic, the Philippines, Argentina, the Dominican Republic and Ecuador. Interested diplomats said the assembly probably will agree this week to take up the question although there may be some abstentions. Meanwhile, black African diplomats planned to step up their attack against white governments in Africa and against South Africa’s failure to release South West Africa to U.N. control. Presidem Ahmadou Ahidjo of Cameroon was to present the General Assembly this afternoon a declaration against colonialism and racism that the African nations adopted Sept. 10 at their summit conference inrAddis Ababa, Ethiopia. Prison Escapee Caught in Area Chase Waterford Township police last night captured a state prison escapee following a high-speed chase in which one police car was damaged. A stray bqUet shattered a light in the township fire station. Lodged in the county, jail this morning Was John T. Early, 29, who police say escaped from a Jackson State Prison work gang at least two months ago while serving a three- to 10-year term for shooting his ex-wife. Arrested with Early, a former Farm- The Weather Full U.S, Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and mild today and tonight, showers likely tonight. High today 72 to 78, low tonight 55 to 61. Tuesday cloudy with chance of showers, turning cooler by afternoon or evening, high 68 to 73. Wednesday outlook: Much cooler with chance of showers. Winds south 10 to 20 miles per hour today, S to 10 m.p,h. tonight and 10 to 20 m.p.h. tomorrow shifting to northwest at 16 to 26 m.p.h- late tomorrow. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent today, 20, tonight 66 and tomorrow SO. pnKgdlna | i Lowest temperature i A» • a.m.: Wind Vtloclty 10-20 r Olraction: South Sun Mta Monday at 4:07 p.m. Sun rises Tuesday at 4:37 a.m. i rises * t 2:29 i 4 a.it Highest and Lawast Tamaaralurat This Data In 97 Yaan itcanaba Flint Cincinnati 77 40 74—IS- panvar -13 54 Dat Mol 70 IS Duluth 12 m. ........40 Houghton 70 47 Jacksonville SO 71 S a.m..........SO 12:20 p.m........70 Houghton Lk. 44 49 Kansas City H SO f a.m. ........SO Jackson 10 a.fn. ......62 Klnroaa ——— taming 76 59 Miami I Oao Yaar Aga In Fantlac . Marquette 66 SS Milwaukee 64 60 ..........SI * Muskegon 72 55 NOW Orleans 07 7S ........ 34 Oscoda 63 49 Now York 66 SI ____ _______ _ _ .................43.S „ Pellston 60 42 Omaha 41 37 Waathar: Cloudy a.m.# rain .3 Inch p.m. Saginaw 67 SI Phoenix as 52 —• s. Sta. Marla 64 SI Pffitburgh 61 42 Weekend In Pontiac Traversa C. 57 56 Ralalah 66 51 fat recorded downtown) Sat. Sun. ______________ ■flghatt tamparatura ........72 74 Atlanta newest tamparatura ..........52 46 Bismarck 60 40 San Diego Maan tamparatura ............62 60 Boston.. ss 90 Seattle Waathar i Partly tunny Sat. and Sun. Chicago 69 35 St. Loull 75 56 San , S. Lake City SI 34 ington Towqship main, was a girl companion, Geneva L. Lieblong,34, of 85 E. Ypsilanti, Pontiac. Police sdid the five-. mile chbse started at Early’s ex-wife’s home and ended near the police station. Pursuing township policemen tried to shoot out a tire of the car Early was driving when the chase reached the police and fire stations and township hall at M59 and Crescent Lake Road, a polled spokesman said. BULLET DOUSES UGHT. ' A bullet ricocheted into the fire station garage and knocked out a light, according to the officer. Three township police cars surrounded Early’s caj^at the intersection. One of the police cars was rammed in the rear by Early’s car and was disabled. Early was unarmed, police said. * * 4 The chase began when Early’s ex-wife Mrs. Shirley Eaton, of 6222 Tangent, told police Early was driving back and forth in front of her home. % Early was sentenced in November 1968 on a charge of assault with Intent to do great bodily harm less than murder after shooting his ex-wife as she left work in Farmington Township in August 1967. FLED IN LANSING Police said Early escaped by walking away from a work gang at the treasury building in Lansing. Early was chased last night around his ex-wife’s subdivision and then north on Atgport Road to M59 and toward Cres1-cent Lake Road, according to police. Pplice said Early was driving his, companion’s car. She was a passenger » and was arrested for aiding and abetting a fugitive. The erosion of morale seems to ije a compound of factors — a war that is essentially a holding action, repeated separations from families and resulting martial turbulence, the surge of the anti1 military sentiment in Congress and the country. Air Force resignations were up nearly 50 per cent in fiscal 1969 over fiscal 1968. In the Army, officer resignations jumped about 14 per cent. The climb was smaller in the Marine Corps and Navy figures showed level, but the Navy is losing aviators and submariners. WWW The problem is growing, too, so far es attracting junior officers is concerned, with a general forecast that the antimilitary climate will affect college ROTC noticeably this year. He recalled'how, on a recent tour of ROTC units, one cadet told him: "General, you don’t know how rough it is to wear a uniform on campus." Cong Is Sticking to Ho's War Aims PARIS (UPI) — The head of the Viet-cong’s provisional revolutionary government vowed today to follow the will of the late President Ho Chi Minh and fight on to victory in the Vietnam War. Nguyen Huu Tho told the French Communist party newspaper L’Humanite his followers will remain "faithful to the teachings and the historic testament” of Ho, The Hanoi government a few days after Ho’s -death was announced Sept. 3, disclosed his will implored the North Vietnamese people to continue the fight against the United States to victory. Allied diplomats said no progress could .be expected at the talks at least until Hanoi works out leadership and other problems caused by Ho’s death. U. S. Border Checks "Choking Drug Supply' LOS ANGELES (AP) - Operation Intercept has cut the flow of narcotics from Mexico enough to make marijuana and heroin twice as expensive as before in some United States cities and unavailable in some others, a spokesman at operation headquarters says. "Generally the price is almost doubled,” the spokesman said yesterday, two weeks after the Intensive federal border-check system began. “But more important is that much of it is unavailable or extremely scarce. Birmingham No New School Talks Set BIRMINGHAM A spokesman for the Birmingham Education Association (BEA) could give no Indication this morning when contract • negotiations between the BEA and the board of It was previously expected that negotiations would resume tRla week following a formation of a new BEA negotiation team. f ... ; * * - * The. BEA elected not to ratify i High Court Begins Busy Term NATURAL WEATHER - Rain Is expected tonight-over a bett extendtogfrowr the Gnat Talma to anutfirrn i-nriTnThmy in fhr northern Rocky Mountains and in partAjefHnflftmrn Minnesota and North Dakota'. It will be warmer in the Northeast and heroes much of the We*t and colder from the Midwest to southern Texas. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court oplna a busy term today with a, new chief justice while a fight roars in the Senate over the man picked to fill the vacant chair to his extreme left. The new chief, Warren E. Burger, and seven holdover'justices face decisions on such controversial matters as churches' tax exemptions, use of the death penalty, the priority drafting of war protesfers and the rights of.. Negroes and the umjecprivllagedr I . 4 '4 4 But following tradition1, the opening session is brief and realy with little substance. Panel Will Hear Lakeside Gripes The. residents of Pontiac.’s only federal housing project, Lakeside Homes will get a chance to air their grievances to a panel of city officials tonight. The residents will talk to city commissioners and housing and planning officials, at 7:30 p.m. at City Hall, East University and East Wide Track. 4 4 4 Delegations from the 400-home project on the southwest side, adjacent to Crystal Lake, have complained .of insufficient police and fire protection and lack of other services. Taxis and ambulances refuse to go there, residents complain. , The area has been the scene in the past of disturbances and rock-throwing incidents involving police and firemen. t ■ it.. ★ 4 The meeting was sought by the Lakeside Tenants Council, which is leading an effort to beautify the project as well as restore order. tentative contradt two weeks ago because of weak middle steps in the salary scale. Teachers, however, have stayed on the job since classes began Sept. 4i. Mrs. Carol S. Thompson , of 4423 W. Maple has been named public relations coordinator for Junior Achievement of Southeastern Michigan. 4*4 Mrs. Thompson will work with 26 junior achievement centers and all high schools throughout the metropolitan Detroit area to promote the organization’s action program among teenagers. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - "How to Buy an Original Work of Art," will be the topic of a slide-illustrated lecture"by Ray Fleming at the Bloomfield Township Public Library at 8 p.m. Thursday. Fleming is head of the art department at Kingswood School Cranbrook. A question-and-answer period will follow the lecture, which is open to the public.” 4 4 4 \. On Saturday morning, the Ethnic Club for children ages 6 and up will hold its first meeting from 10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Winifred Crossley, coordinator for childrens’ work at the Michigan State Library, will tell two stories and lead a game from Africa. Different parts of the world will be featured on alternate Saturdays. Joseph Clark, photographer and poet, will speak before the Bloomfield Camera Club at 8 p.m. next Monday in the Cranbrook Institute of Science.----- Victor Kuffler also will discusa photographic and sound equipment. 4 4 4 Members are urged to bring their beat slides and prints in both color and black and white for discussion and criticism. Meanwhile, . President Nixon’s nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth is in serious trouble/ RIGID OPPOSITION , Haynsworth, picked by Nixon and At-ty. Gen. John N. Mitchell in August to succeed Abe Fortas, has rtpi into rigid opposition from labor, liberal and civil rights groups. Some of them have accused the federal appeals court judge of unethical judicial behavior,> an allegation that takes dn deeper meaning since It was an ethics flap that brought' about Fortas’ resignation last May. - . £ At Harvey, you get Professional Decorator service at no charge. Or you may take a ^ chance and use your I own good judgment. ARVEY FURNITURE 44, Abram T. Collier, president of New England Life, said his company’s participation in the development “is another example of our real estate investment philsophy in which We desire to participate as an active partner rather than as simply, a lender. ——T~-,A----------_A— , , "In addition, we are very pleased to become, involved in a project which encourages the continued economic growth of the Detroit metropolitan area,"' ★ * * The Troy development will be the second. cooperative undertaking by Campbell and New England Life. In ---- ■ : • ' i ’" "hut ; SwVtiJ <1 . ; • k VMf . After griding the apples, Qie mash Is caught in a muslin-lined bucket and then . pressed Into a juice. ■ * A A There has been only one accident wlth^ the ’press, Mrs. Wl|ljjtms said: “One time the muslin broke while We were pressing, and the mash sprayed the entire side of the garage. Unfortunately, one of our dose friends was standing on that side.” No Court Action on Clarkston School Walkout CLARKSTON Circuit Court Judge William R. Beasley ruled this morning that no court action would be taken op^ the Clarkston teacher strike unlpse^fie-gotiations between the BoajxKdf Education and the ClarksUwKEducatlon Association (CEA^com|Sletely break down. * \ Negotiations were scheduled to readme this afternoon at 3. There was' still no definite Indication as to when classes would be resumed. The Injunction suit was filed Friday afternoon by Pontiac attorney^Wallace McClay on the behalf of James F, Peters of 3723 Malden Lane. Waterford Township, a Clarkston School District resident. The injunction was filed as » dass ac-tim lulL-agfUnsriJ*nh"ffier CEA and the Icfiool board with Peters Representing other parents in the school district. The suit i asks the court to order the Clarkston Board of Education and the CEA to meet and bargain In good faith until differences are settled. By NED ADAMSON SHELBY TOWNSHIP -the floor without a title on tj appear on the surface to an extraneous expense. Particularly if that ,6: public school bullding siipported by tax payers dollars. j / \ * M * a But at the gleaming new Davis Junior High building oo Plumbrook in Shelby Township, the Utica Community School District brass think differently. At Davis,/there is carpeting everywhere/— In the principal's office, the laboratories, all of the classrooms, even in the cafeteria. 'carpet on > door may mething of school official. “And I cant help but think that a carpet on the floor rather boosts everyone’s morale a bit,” be said.l ten in the • AJNfENA PENANCE SAVING •''' The Utica administration believes carpeting on the floor will be vogue in many schools in the neflk future. The reason — savings on maintenance expenses. A \* * “At the outset, wall-to-wall carpeting throughout most of the building is expensive, but over the years maintenance itnd)) janitorial costs will be greatly reduced.” a school district sppkesman siald. 8 8 A i “Since carpeting does not require daily cleaning and polishing as do bare floors we can reduce the janitorial staff right away,” he said. And this savings multiplied over the pay for itself. And, it gives building a fine appearance.” A 8 8 - .Carpeting also reduces noise in the building, according to another Land in Troy 4 , mmrnmm m 7 ' 7"............. /THE PONXIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER/6, IMP _■ -- Long: Senate Won't OK Oil Curb WASHINGTON (AP) -Russell B. Long predicts Senate Finance Committee will reject efforts to cut the oil-depletion allowance—a controversial tax provision which has en-hanced Long’s income from oil royalties. The finance committee, headed by the Louisiana.. Democrat, now is considering « House-passed tax-reform MU which reduces the depletion allowance from 2714 per cent to 20 per cent. — *• * * "I am not going to vote to reduce It, and simply a matter of CONSTIPATED 0 MlffTIftllMf ACriMII ■ BUiK IN YOUR DIET ■ BRAN BUDS* mm mnsTER Totmti ST' A Vacation RESORT That Moves parti of call In tho WEST INDIES. Why Ml oxp.rl.nc. this marvaleut MW vocation city for younolf— AND Mt tha Caribbean at wall? For Complete Sailing Dates Contact PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE MODEM WOODMEN'S EDUCATIONAL PIMB— childs way M.E. FE1-7111 MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA Homo Oftko-loth I.IW, Illicit counting noses Would causa me to7 think that the committee is not going to ..Long said in an Interview televised Sunday. A, new element waa injected Into* the tax-reform debate by disclosure Long has collected In the last 514 years more than $300,000 inwall royalties which have been*free of federal income taxes because of the present 2714 per cent depletion allowance. RORALTY PAYMENTS Louisiana Mineral Board records show Long has gotten $1,196,915 In royalties on four state leasee since January 1964. Under present tax law, 27.5 per cent of grosr Income from eU-gas and other minerals Is exempt from federal Income taxes. Applying the 27.5 per cent figure to Long’s known royalty payments means the senator income of at least $329,152 which was sheltered from the bite of federal income taxes. ————if— Long, who has been identified with the oil Industry since he came to the Senate two decades ago, said In an Associated Press Interview that “Moat of my Income is from oil and gas." I don’t regard it as any conflict of Interest,” he said. "A long time ago I. became convinced that if you have financial interests completely parallel to your state, then ynu have no problem. AGNEW COMMENTS My state produces more oil and gas per acre than any other state In the union. If I didn’t represent the oil and gas industry, I wouldn’t represent the state of Louisiana." Vice President Spiro T. Ag-new, appearing Sunday on ABC’s "Issues and Answers," was asked about Long’s tax-free oil royalties. He responded "I think first you have got to look at the time span over which this amount of money been received by the senator and I think, If I recall, it has been a period of many years. This Is not $300,000 In one year or anything of that sort ★ * ★ "Secondly, I am very sympathetic to the Senator’s defense when he aays that his state la dependent to a great extent upon the life and the vitality of the oil industry, so that in representing the oil Industry he is not representing himself, he is representing his state.” Agnew added, in answer another question, that doesn’t view the depletion allowance as "a tax loophole to the extent many do..." The depletion alio up, too, when Long Migrants Given Garb in Colorado f or Cold Wea Fpas^lSjpmN^coio. xap) ^Students of the University of ] Colorado rounded up heavy clothing ana blankets Sunday for nearly 200 migrant workers shivering In an unheated building. The call for help was made by a Volunteer In Service to America (VISTA) worker who was at the migrant camp. There was an early winter snow storm outside and neither heat nor electricity In the building. In a little more than two hours blankets, heavy coats and winter apparel gathered by 30 students arrived at the camp. The workers included 00 children. 'Metromedia’s "Evans Novak Report," taped last week for broadcast on Sunday. There waa this exchange: Q. .. .Do you favor reduction to 20 per cent? A. I have said every time since I was reelected In 1960 that I was-not going to vote to reduce the depletion allowance ... and I would be a renegade and I would be untrue to the commitments I made to the people who voted for me to be their senator If I did not keep that. ——★— ★ : Q. Do you feel you can convince your committee that tfiat position Is correct, as of today? A. Oh, I don’t think Iwlll need to convince that committee <5f that... My guess would be that the committee will not vote to reduce the depletion allowance on oil and gas. Long-Oil A020WX: gas. 170 Besides the four leases which brought him $1.2 million in royalties since 1904, Louisiana records Indicate Long has interests in at least seven private leases. Income figures from private leases do not appear in public records. INTEREST IS SMALL The senator also la listed as one of three trustees on family trusts which have collected $901,443 in the past 514 years from tracts leased by the state. On the fpur state leases, Long has » personal overriding blter-est of .0015625 per cent of the income. The percentage seems small, but the leases are productive that In the last fiscal year alone Long received $235,005 In royalties. Hila is more than five times his $42,500 annual Senate salary. With an overriding royalty, an individual does not have to bear any of tits costs of searching lor or producing oil. tasted a Pisco Soui; fly Braniff. A Pisco Sour is like a whiskey sour, but it’s made with Peruvian Brandy, instead. It's smooth and round and a tittle bit tart You can’t buy a Pisco Sour on any other airline but Braniff. (Although most good restaurants serve them.) indeed, our beautifully blended Pisco Sours are the latest reason for flying Braniff.. (Straight op? Or on-the^ocks, sir?) Fly BranW trow Dalrolt: 8:15 am, non-«top to Mtes/Fort Worth t130 am, noi»^t»Mln/Fbrt Worth end on to Houston. 4:20 pm, non-stop to DuRaa/Fort Worth i and on to Houston. And from DoBm WlM vmiaMU* to W» Southwest, B3i» eouBiJSmoo otad N—n. FLY BRANIFF A quality company ot Unq-Jamco-¥oygM, toe. A.TV LOW IN COSTI FAST IN ACTION I PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADSI...PHONE 332-8181 Braided Cloth, All Rubber Exchangeable with. Your Old Ra-Ue Regular- 7.50 Coma in or Wroo OoUtory PARTS and SERVICE VSSmff IBM CURT’S APPLIANCES 1414 WILUAMS^LAkT ROAD674-1101 This is the way it’s going to be. Pon\iac Bonneville: For pebple who reallydig luxury. But agree that being big is no excuse for being clumsy. . , 7^*' competitors have started a piout-ln. Pontiac’s i hidden radio antenna. Endura protection on the sides and rear. Steel beams in the doors. The plushest interior ever. V ,1 * Yet Bonneville has all the performance of a 360-hp, 455 V-8, firm suspension and Wide-Track stance. / \ ' Sound like your sort of thipg? See your friendly Pontiac dealer. He knows what’s happening. 0 n • ■ . v ' ■ r^i THE PONTIAC TRESS. MONTlAV, OCTOBER ‘ V ^^—v- Colonel: Assassination Not Berets Mission WASHINGTON (AP) - An Army colpnel who twice commanded Green Berets in South Vietnam emphaticallydenies that auafninatlon ia part of the Special Forces’ assignment in thi war. ---------- "The suggestion that assassination plays any part in mission of the Army Special Forces Is absolutely false and utterly absurd," Ool. Fred tadd said In an interview * «: ■ Ladd, who headed the ftth Special Forces in Vietnam in 1M2-63 and again in 1067-68, said assassination and terrorism -are neither taught nor. advocated in Green Beret, training at Ft. Bragg, N.C. "No soldier has a license to murder'anybody," he said. • Ladd’s comments came in'the wake of a growing assumption In some quartos that the Green Beret murder case Indicates the elite' Special Forces are en-gaged ip something ^mora thar training and organising mountain tribesmen to fight the Viet-cong. cause; not discussed declined to details he about the case of the eight Special Forces men who once faced I charges of murder and conspiracy In the alleged slaying of South Vietnamese double agent. But as other officers have lately, Ladd called attention the fact that ' Col. Robert Rheault, his immediate succes sor in Vietnam until being accused ip the .case, was the only career Gren Beret in the group of eight originally charged.__ ' * * The rest were Uitelitgience officers assigned to the Special Forces. Only one of them had sqrved a previous tour in the Special Forces. A refusal by the CIA last week to let Its agents testify lnj scheduled court-martials led the Army, to drop charges against the men. •*’ •NO DIRECT CIA LINK’ Army Secretary Stanley S. Resor said the CIA was "not directly Involved," but it has been established from various sources that the pgency discussed the "disposition" of the South Vietnamese with the Green Berets. : Ladd, now serving in the office of the deputy chief of staff of-the Army, acknowledged that Special Forces have intelligence personnel, out sai is not ‘‘clandestine’’ intelligence work suoh as behind enemy Boss "p*',*tt"W|i....:;!.....■......1 Their Intelligence operations. Involve monitoring enemy lnfll-tratlon across borders, plotting troop movements 'within countries and otherwise learning what thfy can about North Vlet-m ai Rather, assignments corne l last week, also , went out or his through the chain of command way to state that the Army from Army headquarters in Sal-j "will hot and cannot condone" gam;—p—L_--------------------such "unlawful" acta as the 'eight Green BeretsSvcre alleged Simms, 98 N, Saginaw St. OPEN Tonite 'til 91 Tuoidoy and Wedneidny 9 a.m. to 8t9t>p,m« names* and Vietcong activities. In two tours In Vietnam, Ladd aald, he never received any instruction or order to his knowledge that came from the CIA. •N0T.GIA ORDERS’ 4 “Special 'Forces units," he said flatly, “do not get their orders fromthe CIA." Forces officers were highly irritated when flobln Moore, author of the book, "The Green Berets," stated in, an. interview tjhat assassinations and jnurder are a way of life In the Special Forces. Ladd Insisted this Is not so. tfie public would stand for soldiers being trained to execute such activi- Resor suggested thet assasal-n*“*~ • - ‘ n li Linkkitteh BlameslSD of Daughter HOLLYWOOD m - Art Link-letter blames LSD for the death of his 20-year-old daughter. "It wasn’t suicide,” the star of the House Party show told newsmen SundayT'*be-cause she wasn’t herself. was murder. She was murdered by the people who manufacture and sell LSD." Diane Linkletter plunged from! the kitchen window of her sixth-floor apartment Saturday as a friend, Edward Durston,| tried to grab her. Linkletter, 57, said he had! known for six month* that she! was part of a Hollywood group j that experimented with drugs. She had told him earlier about a "bad trip" with LSD, and was under the drug’s effects again when she died, he asserted. "She was a girl who was not psychotic, not under treatment,! a happy girl with no money J trouble!,” Linkletter said, had problems that teens have had aince Ume began. But LSD gives them a way of avoiding facing up to those problems. "You add LSD to a girl who is somewhat emotional and dramatic and it can be disastrous. She told me about taking it and about her bum trip. She felt she was being driven out of her! mind. "A parent cqn do little In ai case like this," Linkletter said. "No one can do anything about! It, except themselves." | ." m." 'T Just arrived — get twice the brightness with a Lenticular screen. Layaway for Christmas. II N. SAOINAW ST. In Downtown PontlM Sinoo 1914 SIMMS J* SIMMS'* THE PONTIAC PRESS : Pontiac, Michigan 1 M 'West Huron Street RICHARD M. FITZGERALD MONDAY, OCTOBER «, 1969 HAROID A. MT20IRALO PvMitiwr m*-tm RICHARD M. SAUNDERS ‘SST’ Up in the Air President Nixon has become the third president in a row to weigh the pros and cons of the supersonic transport and decide that when better planes are built, the United States must build themf He has asked Congress for an appropriation of $662 million spread over the next five years to underdevelopment of the SST. Added to the $623 million appropriated since the Kennedy administration, this would total more than $1.28 billion for building and testing two prototypes of the plane. The willingness of three administrations to bankroll the * SST can perhaps be discounted on the grounds that It Is not their money, only the people’s. But Boeing Co., which would build the plane, and the airlines which would fly it are also enthusiastic about spending millions of their own money on its __development. ★ ★ ★. Boeing foresees eventual sales of 500 SSTs for about $40 million each, more than enough to pay back the government’s investment, with interest. Another incentive is competition with the British-French Concorde and Russian Tupelov supersonic^ jets, which have already been test-flown and will be in service at least six years before the American SST. But where these planes will carry, about 150 passengers at 1,400 miles an hour, the SST will carry nearly 300 at 1,800 m.p.h. It could travel between New York and Lqpdon in a mere three hours or between San Francisco and Tolcyo in four and one-half. There is one phase of the air transport competition where America has the entire field to itself. Making their debut within the next few years wig be the supersonic jumbo jets, capable of carrying as many as 500 passengers in economy seating of fewer passenger in something approaching ocean Oner luxury. * The jumbo jets will not,be sluggish craft. Their cruising apeed — around 600 m!p.h. — will equal the speed the SST will have to be confined to over land because of the sonic boom effect. It is only over open ocean that the SST’s immense speed advantage can be exploited. ★ ★ ★ A good question might be: Does it make more economic sense to carry half as many passengers twice as fast, or twice as many passengers half as fast? Charles Bartlett Yale Prexy Is a Tough Cookie East Germany Extolls Itself NEW HAVEN, CONN.—The reaction to Yale’s president, Kingman Brewster, who is opposing the notion that black students deserve a role in the management of their institutions, suggests that rationality may be coming back into style at BARTLETT least on this campus. Brewster took his position, which runs boldly against the thrust of the student movement, in unequivocal words 10 days ago and the reaction here, and apparently elsewhere in academia, has been surprisingly acquiescent. -* ★ * He may well have spiked a trend that has gathered momentum in many “universities. Brewster argued for democracy without representation in college life. The German Democratic Republic —East Germany—is preparing to, celebrate its 20th anniversary on Oct. 9. ' In anticipation of the event, the 'Democratic Republic’ has issued a 53-page, self-congratulatory commemorative brochure which, among other things, informs the citizenry: ★ ★ ★ "With our Socialist order, we have conquered the exploitation, aggression, inhumanity and oppression that characterize the systems we have known in the past and which still characterize West Germany today . . . Our constitution incorporates the highest forfn of democracy ... Every day the superiority of Socialist society is more clearly. _ demonstrated r» ★ ★ ★ Another anniversary, little observed on either side of the Iron Curtain, occurred a few weeks ago— the eighth anniversary of the Berlin Wall, which effectively sealed the major escape route taken by tens upon tens of thousands of East Germans to fide the GDR in the first 12 years of its existence. * Nevertheless, since the Wall went up, ahother 125,000 East Germans have successfully opted for the “oppression” of West Germany. ★ ★ ★ Nearly 23,000 of them managed to cross the mined and guarded border between the two Germanys. About 100,000 escaped by using false identity papers or by. failing to return after an authorized visit to the West. Some 2,200 were fugitives from the East German armed forces^ Since 1961, 64 East Germans have died trying to scale the Wall; another 73 have been killed in escape attempts elsewhere on the border. - A "1 * '■ If the East German Communists really believed in the superiority of their socialist order, they would tear down the Wall, roll up the barbed wire and dig up the mines. - ★ ★ ★ They dare not, of course. Bob Considine He said a university can be accountable - to its students and responsive to their attitudes without yielding them fixed roles In the decision process. CLOSER TO STUDENTS He wants to bring the governing boards closer to the students, not by putting students on the boards but by bringing deliberations into the open.( The trouble with representative democracy, in Brewster’s view, is that a small handful of activists will seize tiie representative roles Voice of the People: Courtesy ofYoung Appreciated I want to commend two young mqn in-your community. Two weeks ago my daughter ona.t were returning to St. Louis, Missouri, from Mi -gan. About 10:30 p.m. our car broke down m the vicinity of Mac’s Standard Service? about ten miles from Pontiac. We lacked money enough to have me car hauled to the garage in Pontiacior repairs and the service station was not equipped for the repair we needed. We decided to ask the attendants If one would drive us to Pontiac so we could catch tne train. We met one of the young men on the way to 6ur car to offer to drive us in. S' • ★ * . ★ \ \ Arriving in Pontiac we %und the depot closed. This young maw, Jim Metros,- drove all over town for information to help us. He stayed with us until we could wait inside the depot. It seems so much news today points up the lesser potential of our youth.. It is most encouraging to have firsthand information that this is not so with ail of them. < ------ ---------MRS. LOIS ERNSBERGER . CAROLE ERNSBERGER BRENTWOOD, MISSOURI Believes Police Could Slop Crime, Violenc e A lot of crime and violence in our cities could be stopped If the police were on the job. Recently thieves broke Into my home, ransacked the house and stole money and some Korean coins and bills. There was an excellent chancy to get some fingerprints. We called the police but they never did show up. I suppose they were all sick with the blue flu. MRS. A. L. BRANDT 893 GLENDALE Bender States Viewpoints on Communism A man who links Christ with communism is a deceiver or is totally ignorant of communism. Communism denies tha existence of God and ft that essence behind many of the student strikes and teacher protests. Communism decries authority and advances the vacuum of authority In nullifying the positions of unlvcraity offictals and any semblance of leadership if it doesn’t come from the left. ■k k k Communism leads astray by many voluminous publications on the new and old left, blessed by our Supreme Court and flaunted on the shelves by privately-owned, university proximated bookstores. This, I believe, is the bone of contention in student strikes against a university-run bookstore. Seeirfs funny, but on television some of the protesters in student demonstrations look like 40-year-old men and women.— EDWARD L. SORENSON 4011 BAYBROOK, DRAYTON PLAINS ‘Feel Billboard Advertising in Poor Taste* Nixon’s Future Depends SS on Settlementof the War It seems that In thesa times of Increased automobile accidents and all that has been written about drag racing and which are made available .speeding on Woodward, the billboard advertising on the corner without necessarily represent- of woodward and Square Lake Road Is in poor taste. If this Is the only way this company can find to motivate people to buy its products, maybe the company should try manufacturing and selling refrigerators. WILLIAM E. PURVES 9920 NORMAN, CLARKSTON r reaauiis, iic 1 Ray Cromley Stakes Too Great to Hold Berets’ Trial CRCMLEY WASHINGTON (NEA) -Several points must be noted in connection with Army Secretary Stanley Re-• or's most curious statement canceling the trials of all Green Beret officers accused1 of murdering agent Thai Khac Chuyen in South Vietnam: • Resor dismissed the trials, he said, because the Central Intelligence Agency refused to allow its men to testify. But It is inconceivable Resor or Defense Secretary Laird ever believed the CIA would 'permit Its men >to testify before “outsiders” in any case Involving Intelligence operations or the men connected.with them. k- k k It ft obvious that *such an action would have exposed CIA agents and some CIA operations; seriously harmed their effectiveness, whether or not the CIA had any connection with the alleged murder, • Even If the CIA had, by some strange quirk, permitted Its men to tell their stories, it is almost certain "Resor and Laird would have had to find some reason for dropping the cases. BECOMING CLEARER It was becoming more and more clear that for the trial to be fair, it would be necessary for both defense and prosecution witnesses (whether CIA or not) to bring out details of U S. Intelligence operations inmSoutheast Asia and techniques' used in intelligence infiltration worldwide that would have put'the liy?s of considerable numbers of American .. operatives in serious jeopardy. Entirely apart froth the/act of alleged murder, toe trials Inevitably would hay# led to the surfacing of American intelligence missions # n d (nonlethal) operating techniques that would have been detrimental jp U.S. security. ★ * k To clear up the cases," it would have been necessary to tell in quite some detail how orders are transmitted, how intelligence missions are carried out add where (in some cases), how agents relate to other agents and how the NEW YORK — Dwight D. Elsenhower became president of the United States because, among other reasons, he promised to end the war in Korea. Richard M. Nixon became president of the United States becauseJie promised, in effect, to "do something” about the war in Vietnam. ■*’ ★ ★ It took Ike only from January 1953 until July of the same year to get the signatures at Panmunjom. President Nixon is now three months behind the schedule of his mentor. He has no idea, apparently, when he will ever be le to redeem his political pledges and, roNSlDINE ...e'can-be^ure, his personal hopes.--- -----------. 7 % Agonizingly, he wants a second term, knows he’ll blow It If the damn war’s still on. “* ------* He inherited a “limited war." Ike didn’t. Under the terms of that limited war, Nixon cannot (or will not) carry the fight to the enemy. He doesn’t have nearly the world support that gathered 'round the U.N. flag In Korea. Indeed, most of the world to vigorously opposed to what the U.S. is doing in South Vietnam at great cost of blood and treasure. » WILL SETTLE FOR DRAW Sure as shootin’, President Nixon will settle for some kind of draw, as tedious as the ,tie in Korea turned out to be. The only alternatives apparently are to (1) withdraw completely, or (2) leave behind a considerable military * support the South Vietnamese when they take over the I of the action. American troops will be in South Vietnam until at the year 2000. That’s not an outrageous- estimate, we’ve been in Germany a quarter of a century and in Korea — 50,000 strong and more — since 1953. There is no thought of a complete pullout from eitl of those places, which are infinitely more stable and at to defend themselves than ft South Vietnam today or j the foreseeable future. security of each maii depends on the absolute reliability of other agents, how this reHability Is assured and how counteragents are exposed. The testimony, . also o f necessity, would have to concern itself with the organization and chain of command to BERRY’S WORLD—By Jim Berry intelligence operations and The relationship between theae Speical Forces units and CIA and Vietnamese Intelligence units. k k k Now it might be said that such parts of the trial could be heldrin secret session. But if there ft one rule of Intelligence it ft this — that no secret ft a secret any longer if even a handful of ~ outsiders learn of It, regardless of how great their Integrity. Yale students are backing so many causes and engaged in so many fronts that they are unlikely, when the duat settles, to have much time left tq run the college. Since it Will never be possible to yield students much more than an illusion of power in university decisions and since the illusion will quickly be branded hypocrisy, it sfeems wiser to do as Brewster proposes and make th# management more compact instead of more representative so it can adjust swiftly__and___wisely_____to pressures for change. ,★ k fact, Brouter's ormance testifies more Eloquently lhan nls words that trong presidential leadership, communicative and flexible, may be the beat answer to the tension In campus life today. ‘Grade School Girls Should Wear Slacks* I feel it ft necessary for our girls in grade school to wear slacks. I feel the high school girls should know how to keep their skirts down and how to act when wearing a skirt. But how can a grade school girl keep her dress down whlla on the slide, swings and monkey bars? If they are going to teach sex education in fifth and sixth grades, I want my first grader covered in slacks. Let’s get slacks In grade school where they are needed. I don’t let my girls play outside at home in their dresses, so why should they at school in front of tha boys? WALLED LAKE SCHOOL MOTHER Barking Dogs Disturb Sleep in Mobile Home We recently moved into the Avon Park Mobile Homee and are enjoying it. The location is perfect, people are friendly, the mobile homes are beautiful and the scenery lovely. One thing upsets us that we don’t notice through the day. Every time we get Into bed at night, dogs begin to bark. Wo have tried to figure out the direction toe noise comes from. The dogs are not in the park and we can’t find them. They bark. constantly and into toe wee hours. NEED YOUR HELP Verbal Orchids Nursing Home Patient Receives Good Care In response to letters about nursing honfiea, I have been a patient in a nursing homo for five years and have had the utmost care. I have been confined to bed because I wasn’t able to care for myself. HARRY V. POPE ‘Remember to Follow Two Commandments* If we all would remember to follow toe first two Commandments, the world would be a better place to live. That God wtl help us to be at peace with Him and with our neighbor, ft my prayer. •« f '-LOVES GOD AND PEACE George E.1 of 110 Ruth; 83rd birthday. Haas Hoffman of Troy, formerly of Pontiac; 92nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. John Kemler of Rochester;, 60th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Oliver of Milford; 55th wedding anniversary. Questions and Answers (4) We bought a house from people having a new home built. We’re living In a townhouse where 80-day written notice must be given before we evacuate. Last July, the builder said their home would be ready well within toe 80 day*, so we give notice. Now tt Isn’t finished and we may have to pay (40 a day If we’re not out. Ady help you tout give would be apple- * THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 0, ~”V' A-7 Soviets Run True to Form: : ^Default Canadian Wheat Deal Without the slightest doubt, tiie Russians stand as the all-time international liars of recorded history. Treaties mean what they say as long as they suit the infamous Reds, When that ceases, the conniving Russians are done with their-promises. jg ^ They disavow the truth. They “lie by the clock.” ★ ★ ★ Currently, our good neighbors to the north are the victiniri. The Moscow scoundrels are. repudiating a three-year wheat agreement that they signd with the Canadians, When the Kremlin found itself running short of this precious commodity, officials agreed to take 336 million bushels of Cana-dian wheat over a three year perlod. They signed an agreement. ★ ★.••• df • ♦ Canada thus had an “assured” market for one sixth of a-'stepped-up production. The government encouraged farmers to “go all out” and produce all the wheat of which they were capable. The farmers complied. Canadian records were broken. ' During this period, the Russians went to woyk on their o#n farms arid stepped up production perceptibly with the adoption of modern methods. Further, Old Dame Nature smiled benevolently on the Russian crops and as a result they quite outdid themselves. , ... ■ ^’■ .: ;. ★.....★ s|| * Then the Asiatic stinkers found them-sclves hard pressed for cash, so they told the Cauadtans to f orget the rest of the wheat. They didn't Want it. The contract expired the Brat of August and the thieving Reds hqve only taken 68 per cent of their guarantee. - Canada's repeated efforts to schedule meetings for a “discussion of the situation" have resulted -in absolutely nothing. The Russians duck, dodge and simply evade by shrugging their shoulders and looking complacently out a nearby window. They simply won't face it, , ★ ★ ★ A few definite meetings have been scheduled but as the dates approach, the contemptible Russians announce another postponement. “The song is ended. “But the melody Ungers on.” Favor Ban on LOS ANGELES (AP) r Six-ty-two per cent of people' polled across the nation' aald they favor outlawing the internal combustion engine to force car makers to develop smogless power —Opinion Research Corp, of Princeton, N.J., said It telephoned a random sampling of ,015 households in 130 cities with this question: “Exhaust from the existing kind of automobile engine, that the internal combustion causes air pollution. It has been suggested that legislation be passed to outlaw the sale of the internal combustion engine In Car fngi ines 1975 In order to force auto mak* ers to develop other engines. Would you favor such legislation?” S:A 1 * < #r, jJ Twenty-three per cent of persons responding/ opposed the | Idea' and 15 per cent had no! opinion. The public telievlslon network: commissioned the poll and announced the results Sunday < night during “'Hie Advocates/’ j a program on public Issues. The domestic solid trash discarded In this country equals about rive pounds per person per day. - _ "We find our big ad in the yellow Pages indispensable " tayi Ronald A. Cruse, owner of East Ana ' Arbor Hardware. BtiUd higher profile for your oueineee. To be big Hue year, make it big now... in the Yellow Pages, obviously. BUY I SEUol TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI Traffic Stopped . . . 1 Our Federal Government discovered huge -quantities^ of marijuana crossing the borders between this country and Mexico. Crews were dispatched to terminate the crookedness. And what happened? It sounds impossible. ★ ★ ★ Certain Mexican cities have registered loud and strident protests with the Uriited States, declaring that we are seriously affecting Mexican retail trade in border com- , munities. They want this illegal procedure 1 to continue. Definite areas in Mexico discover that the cessation of this traffic raises havoc financially. The bums that handle the stuff are gone and concomitant activities have slowed down to a walk. Here is one of the few times on record that the termination of illegal smuggling has caused a hue and outcry against positive action. This places International Goodwill on a pretty low level. ★ ★ But you can rest assured. The termination stands. And in Conclusion. . . Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of diets from EarlWahren’s Supreme Court. The your peripatetic reporter: nation will watch with interest. Our President has begged the U.N. to give ★ ★ ★ high priority to an agreement by which all na- I was in New York the day the Mets tions would deal harshly with every airplane hi- cIn<*«d the division title and the big city , , , , , ^ went berserk and completely hick-town. A jacker apprehended. . . . - - ----°®h.?d; midweek game drew 55,000 and when it Thieves got $8,000 when they robbed that ended, a howling, screaming mob swarmed Supermarket, but they overlooked three steaks.” all over the field....... They dug up .............. Business on the Pacific coast everything in sight including the pitcher’s has been excellent all summer, including Wash- *^ mound, the home plate, three bases, equip-ington, Oregon and CaMfomia. . .. . §!&'.-•. ' morotlianl,«e»lortrflli»t,plaiB .Thay've perfected a camera now Ufat takes ; ireYreem «ntelM.£ 35,000 pictures a second...... Americana__ beer cans, soft drink bottles, three wheels Hotel girls face 1,500 wdke-up cans every morn- of the batting cage and they even broke off ing for 7:30. How they handle them is their own pieces of the score board........The secret. Overheard: “Once the Mets have always been in a ten team league family doctor drove his horse and buggy miles and have never finished higher than ninth to your home, now he has a Pontiac and a Cadil- w tenth. Now they’re champs and in the lac and he tells you to go to his office. playoff..:.............. Dept, of Cheers and i-irv-T-r A-New-Jersey school hoard voted to re-- Jeers: the C’s—Che Mets; the J?s—Met fans. store nondenominational prayer in the classroom - , in defiance of ond of the many obnoxious ver- Harold A. Fitzgerald Post-Viet Peace on Campuses Is a Myth By LEON DENNEN NEW YORK (NBA) — More than 50 years after Lenin told Communists that the subversion of democratic society justified “aiiy ruse, cunning, unlawful method or the concealment of the truth,” university president*, still cling to the hope that peace In Vietnam will bring peace to the college campus. Most Americans, students * included, are Increasingly concerned about the deep-seated questions of the country’s Involvement In the owiir- But will peace in Vletnam*-or draft re-forms and courseslk Afro-American studies .—Induce the leftist firebrands to abandon the barricades and resume their studies? According to FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover, n_NNirM the “senseless plunder” of American cam- ueninen puses will continue even should President Nixon withdraw all ( troops from Vietnam. *’ \ * n ★ One need not be an uncritical admirer of Hoover to acknowledge that he 1* one man who knows the plans of ffle totalitarian left. He Is believed to have undercover agents In high councils of the pro-Moscow American Communist What Hoover apparently knows—and this Is Increasingly clear to specialists on commimhm—Is that some major universities have become a battleground between rival Marxist-'Leninist tactions. ★ ★ ★ ' Both groups, It should be emphasized, represent only the tiniest minority of American students. But their programs are “revolutionary action.” They are well-organized professionals skillful at. provocation and publicity. Sines the recent spilt-In the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the competing groups are known to htfVe made plans to escalate campus disorders in order to demonstrate who can be the most revolutionary. Th# Ideological quarrel between the pro-Chlnes* Worker-8tudent Alliance" and the pro-Russian “Revolutionary Youth Movement” la of little Interest to Americana. What Is important Is that the pro-Russian American Communist Party Is trying to gain Influence among radical students. ★ ★ ★ Ignored for 50 years py American labor, the Muscovites have come to the conclusion that the New Left and Negro militants like the Black Panthers are their only potential partisans for toe Immediate htture. But even this new policy originated In Moscow and not In New York. The Kremlin’s first reactions to youth unrest in the West were quite negative and rioting students were castigated-as “Maoists,” “anarchists" and “Trotskyists.” The new Soviet polity is to recruit radical white students and black militants In the service of Moscow’s goals. * > According to the authoritative-Journal World Economics and International Relations, the anarchism of students Is only temporary. “Through their contact with Marxism-Leninism, students and black militants will become a Strong force In the service of communism," the Soviet Journal says. • * ★ This is also the view of Yuri Zhukov who usually speaks for the Kremlin. He describes the Black Panther program as “anarchism with all its Inherent extremism." Yet he urges the Muscovites in the United States to work with such groups. ' The Panthers, who need financial and legal aid, are apparently ready to respond, ' Says Bobby Seale, jailed Black Panther leader: “Wdlg communism. We do have some crltlcliyn of the American Communist party, and lately they have related to some of the criticism.” ' ★ w n It Is thus an illusion, to assume that • withdrawal of tome 60,000 men from Vietnam or a reform of the draft system wilt "puy time” for Nixon and the harassed college authorl-’ties. ' . The. nationwide student boycott scheduled for Oct, 15 is llkely to be the signal for a new wavs of rioting. & 1’iimnift ALWAYS FIRST DUALITY Carol Evans*thinks young fashionables should look the part— . -s~ right down to their toes! Today's well-dressed young lady knows all about coordination. And how Important it is that tights match exactly — or v contrast beautifully— with her favorite outfits.That'! why she Starts collecting at an early age. Plain or patterned,dlamond or ribbed — sbme.of each In basics and bright!. All stretching' \ to make a fashion point Ip plpek-fit nylon. v A Infants' and toddlers' sizes, 1.59; girls’ sizes 4 to 16, 1.89 ■ , , V LIKE IT... CHARGE ITI . , Happily it's CaproUn’nylon byiKrTI " | QMmtadl monp thru sat: .MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER, TELEGRAPH & SO. LAKE R0.. ■■<*»>. w A—-8 _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1969 1/ ■■/ m SAIGON (ft — The Viet-.; southeast of Da Nang. Four areas. Some 40 of the big bomb-'ship I wo Jlma. They are ached-, cong and North Vietnamese [Americans were killed and, lsjers dropped more than 1,000 U1®<1 to arrive in S»n Diego Oct.! stepped up their rocket and wounded under a rain of mortar!tonS of explosives on targets mortar attacks .over the week- and rifle Are. Enemy lone. ^ ^ m,es northwest^of 3.9M 3rd Division, end, and several sharp ground (were not known. . ril H1 h (Marines sailed from Da Nang fights were reported. But none; * * * lands rn mUes noSS and «*** j of the fighting was sustained,! South Vietnamese troops 225 mues nortneasi oi,me ^ # and the war was still considered ported killing 30 Viegtong inic P * ^e Army aiso announced! to be in a period of relative lull, two fights ln the Mekong Delta. PULLOUT CONTINUES (tad the 295th OD (Ammunition)/ Hie U.S. Command said ene-^Government casualties were re-; The withdrawal of 35,000 Co. from Hastings, Neb., and my gunners made S3 rocket and ported light. - American troops continued as the 107th Signal Co;, a National' mortar attacks Saturday night * * *. >: another 1,700 Marines from the [ Guard unit from Rhode Island, and Sunday morning and fol- American B52 bomhers made’•'k’d Division hoarded the troop- will leave Tuesday, lowed up with. 26 more .Sunday ano,her scrjes of heavy attacks night and this morning. It was on enemy bases and staging the heaviest shelling in nearly - ---- three weeks. ...* * " * , t ... 150 Sears Stores _ , to open Sundays Stops Itch-Relieves Pam Finds Way That feotlTRelieves Pain _ .. .... , . „ Chicago (AP) - Sears Roe- and Shrinks Piles In Most Cases South Vietnamese headquar- buck Co. has announced that Our Pricing and Service IS WHAT MAKES US SO BIG ! flnnip Tf| AND SEE WHAT X11 MAKES US SO GREAT!! '( Only about half of the attacks caused casuatlies or damage. Incomplete reports said at least eight Americans were wounded. Science Shrinks Painful Hemorrhoids _____I ................. ... .........| ... . «ne« discovered a medication Tine soldier killed and 24 civil- throughout the nation will be with the ability, in most c*a«a-ians and two soldiers wounded, open for business on Sundays to actually shrink hemorrhoids ENEMY TOLL during November and Decent J* bun*in* American forced killed 53 ene-ber’ e e * I In one hemowtoid cam after my troops in four clashes north-' A spogesinan sa|d tbe stnrwi m^nt waa reported and verified west of Saigon with no U.S. loss- wbicb will be oDen on Sundavl doctors’ observations. Pain But American infantrymen ---------------—--------— starts right in to gently reduce were dealt a setback shortly be-i At present, those graduating the swelling of inflamed, irri-fore midnight Sunday when'from college can expect a! tated piles. North Vietnamese troops at- starting salary of from $6,000 to! #f^*tente"byfoldingdoctowhi tacked them 75 milei south-$9,000 per year. 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Birmingham 646-7377 • AMS ILLIS Since 1945 III N. iHhiew CIMINT WORK • PATIOS GARAGES S ADDITIONS COMRLITe SUILDINO ISRVIcn TIRMS PI 2-1211 when the latest edition of the telephone book listed his restaurant under ‘taverns" in the yellow pages instead of under where it should be —"restaurants" — that error was too much. As a result, Woodward erected a billboard-sized bestowing the “Fickle Finger Fate Award" to Genera Telephone. He is carting it on trailer behind his car as he drives around town. ... LAUGH-IN* TAKEOFF Woodward also has ordered his restaurant stationery and business cards printed with the 'fickle finger” award in takeoff on the SNAFU presentation from the television show, “Laugh-In." The problem all Woodward That’s when listed his F Main Street instead of Pearl Street. — * * He said that in pages moved it but put it on the Finally, thl was listed restaurant was tavern, he said. FINAL STRAW "It’s not a Lavern,” Woodward said. “It’s a restaurant — and I operate It like a restaurant.” Through it all, even Woodward maintained hbmight have excused the telephone company one more time. But he said it was too much when he called to complain to the company and a General executive In him “Buster." Oregon is tenth in' size but thirtieth in population of the 50 York called Seasonably appropriate, stylishly correct.. .these AcrllanP acrylic double-knit separates put together a sporting look that's super. Choose deep, rich brown, luscious burgundy, hunter green or gold. 10 to 18. • Tapered pull-on pants; solids. 5.99 • Solid color sleeveless shell. 3.99 Striped cardigan |acket. S.99 Solid color body shirt. 4.99 Solid color V-neck pant top with stripe trim; 6.99 ill colon ivillibli it ill itoiwa Take advantage of savings... credit's the* modern way to shop. Conlin TnmA Hunaw. /ac., of AM Arbor. InjlmIt your profiu. Tojt Mg tkU yemr, *•*** « Mi non... I* ** YoUmpoim OPEN 10 A.M. TO * t.M. (1st; 0:10-9) Drayton opon Sunday Noon te • p.m. (Downtown elwei Ton., Wti. *1 • P-m.) DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS ^ THE FOtiTlifc PRElSS, MONDAY, OCTOBER fi, 1869 Famous maker knit coordinates reg. W Comic Robert King Mugged oo FfisWay To Karate By EARL WILSON • NEW TORE— The new statue thing in New York la to fugged. If) you have been Ignored by the holdup guyi, Mustn’t admit it. ' /. . •' Comedian Robert King claims ha waa mugged while on the^way to a karate class to learn to protect himself from muggers. ••It was about 9:30 at night, between 8th and gth on 55th. I’d just come out of Ralph’s Pizzeria. "It was dark. I hurried to catch up with two fellas ahead of me, because nobody would molest three people. "These two kids were well dressed. As came up to them, one of them said, ‘You are going to give us your money.’ ;/ "I said, ‘You’re kidding.’ That’s what everybody aaya when they’re getting mugged. "One turned to his partner and says, ‘You jerk, you forgot to ihow him your gun.’ ★ ★ ★ “ ‘Yeah,’ I said, ‘If you’re a mugger, show me your craden-tlals.’ "He showed me his gun right up Sammy foavia being a fast draw. I than John Wayne.1 "Then I was really humiliated. All I had was (11. r "They were furious. I said, ‘Listen, fellas, don’t be mad. Take my watch and my Tiffany’s pen.’ ; "They said, ‘Oh all right!" but they were me. One of them said ‘Walk slowly toward 9th.’ ‘Walk slowly toward 8th.’ I said, ‘Listen, fellas, make up mind. You’re the muggers, I’m just the muggee.’ Finally I said, ■Why don’t I just get in a dark doorway and you two guys run?’ ★ ★ ★ "They said, ’Good Idea,’ and they ran, and then I ran ... to my karate class. But my karate teacher said It was no good because my hand was shaking so much I couldn’t deliver a karate chop.” ★ ★ ★ i .THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . , \ - Tony Bennett missed two nights at the {Waldorf Empire Room because of a sore throat and Gordon MacRae substituted . . . Top name mentioned to take over MGM if Kirk Kerkorian moves In is Herb Jaffee, now with UA. John Wayne’s new home at Westport Beach, Calif., has Indoor and outdoor pools and tennis courts . . . Someone stole Elaine fitritch’s dachshund at Joe’a Place . . . Sen. Edmund Mndde ordered Maine lobster at Volstn. ★ ★ ★ , WISH I’D SAID THAT: The Gavel’s Peter Sheehan pointed out the typical commercial: "It comes on extra loud to wake you up so as to sell you something that will help you sleep."-- REMEMBERED QUOTE: Experience is the only prophecy of wise men. — Alphonse de Lamartine. EARL’S PEARLS: Marriage can be a rich and rewarding experience, if the husband is. — Angie Papadakis. A friend of Dave Barry brags about his oldest son who graduated law school and another son who may be his first client. 'That’s earl, brother. (RufcNllMra-H*ll Syndicate) THROUGH OCTOBER 13. Bring your old portable typewriter to Hudson’s and save, save, save on a new feature-packed Olivette-Underwood Studio 45^at only 64.50 during TRADE-IN SALE You'd pay a lot more for a new typewriter like this any other time* any other place. Now’s your chance to turn in a machine that’s seen better days/^- and start enjoying all the up-to-date advantages of the Studio 45 ppttable. Just look at the features: full tabulation, half spacing, paragraph keys, line-space selector, paper guide. Back this with the long-wearing quality that’s built into every Olivette-Underwood typewriter and you’ve got yourself quite a buy at1 64.50. Come tty the Studio 45, that’s the clincher. In. Hudson’s Typewriters, Pontiac; lstj* Downtown, Mezzanine floor and all branches. ' HXJ35S O NT’© Shop till 9:00 p.m. Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday at the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road. * I • . ■ PonH»c Prw. Photo by Roll Wlnt«r "Be all you? can be," (read upside-down in the open book), a good motto for everyone, wotdd seem to have been tqken to heart by Mrs. Neil E. Warren of Birmingham, whose energies are depoiedto adult education and women’s rights. Michigan Women's Commission to Explore Unjust Practices By ^UNE ELERT “There are really Important issues — and we have the ability and we have the Interest in some of/the problems that men cannot possibly have,” said Mrs. Neil E. Warren, vice chairman of the Michigan Women’s Commission, i n discussing the work confronting the Commission. “I would hope,” she said, “that we would explore the situation of the domestic worker. We found when we did the law leaflet last year, that they have practically no protection whatever. "They are not Covered by the minimum wage law nor by social security unless they earn at-least $50 a quarter from one employer.” VI know that doesn’t seem to difficult if you figure rates for one-day-a-week for 13 weeks, but a good many housewife-employers try to avoid strict adherence to the lhw, and many employes don’t insist upon their rights.” I asked the obvious question. The forthright Mrs. Warren laughed and said, “People are always asking me if I do all my own work. 1 lust tell them I do all that gets done.” A resident of Birmingham since 1058, the former Helen Frostlc grew up hi Wyandotte where her father was superintendent o* schools for 33 years. She attended Michigan State Normal College and got her BA in education- in 1986 from University of Michigan. In 1958 she completed work for her master’s degree there. «Mrs. Warren claims as her major interest, second to her marriage, volunteer women’s groups “that do things related to adult education. In this respect, Bhe has maintained long-time membership in the American Association of University Women, is a past president of the Midland branch, was education chairman for the State for four years and president of the Michigan Division from 1963-55. Over the years she has served in many appointive capacities, ail concerned with education. Sihce 1955, Mrs. Warren has worked as a free lance consultant in group leadership and program planning. This Involves working with women’s club program chairmen to selebt and prepare programs for their meetings, which will interest and inform their membership. In many cases, Mrs. Warren completely prepares the program herself on a topic selected by the club representative, and puts it in a form for easy presentation by a member or members. On the 1967-’88 Commission on the ttatus of Women (immediate predecessor of the- present Michigan women’s Commission) Mrs. Warren was vhairman of the committee which prepared the pamphlet on "Laws of Ipecial interest to Women,” which was teceived with enthusiasm by Michigan's feminine population. Mrs. Warren hopes that the new Commission can do something about discrimi- nation by sex in public accommodations. She pointed out that the Michigan Civil Rights Commission works under an 1885 statute which “does not protect any rights of women,” and that the 1964 federal law outlawing discrimination by sex applies to employment only. This means, die said, that public golf courses, for instance, can prohibit women from teeing off at the most advantageous hours, allowing men first choice, evftn though the taxes that support such ^places are paid equally by men anddmmen. It also means, she continued, that women can be prohibited from entering bars and cocktail lounges in hotels and motels, unless escorted by a man. “I think,” she summed up neatly, “that women alone need all the help they can get.” Special Quiz Supplies Jips to Unmarrieds By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily post Institute -Widows and divorcees have a special set of problems, unique to them. They have been accustomed, whether happily or unhappily, to having a man around to take care of certain responsibilities piid to provide company. They roust learn to adjust to living alone * — or as the single head of a family. Many women are hot sure what is expected of them and what they may expect in their new sltuitlon. The following quiz may answer questions of these bachelor girls. [ Q. If you have been dating a man for some time, should yeuf ;(and he) Include your children in your activities? A. Yes. A prospective husband must realize you.are head of a family not only a date, and your children must have the chance to get to know him. „ Q. Must you provide the liquor when a man dines with your regularly? A. After- the first few dates, a man should offer to provide the drinks. You can drop the hint by being out of his favorite liquor when he arrives. Q. Is it correct to accept Invitations to dinners in restaurants without reciprocating? A. No. After a few “nights out,” you should'invite your friend to "dinner at home. . - Sr Sr Sr Q, If you are giving a cocktail party or buffet, do you dp the bartending as well as the cooking?’ A. No. You naturally do the cooking, but ask a relative or a close male friend to act as bartender. Women/ THti PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 0, 1909 B—1 35-- vvv > V! You Gan Encourage, Ask; Final Decision ls+fis By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN —DEAR ABBV: Snmatimoi I «ii«px»t that in order to check on your readership, you deliberately give a stupid answer just to see how many -protests you will receive. Well, 1 strongly protest your answer to -“MRS. FUNNYNAME,” who asked her husband to change their name to something more acceptable, but be wouldn’t allow it. Instead of giving her some encouragement, you sided with the husband saying, “He’s the one who has the last word, so why fight it?” I have been a school teacher, so 1 know how a. comic or vulgar-sounding name can humiliate a child. How sad to think that 'a man: would handicap his children thus, Please change your answer, Abby, and encourage her husband to think of his children. . MRS. H. J. K. of L. A. DEAR MRS. H.-J. K.: Had “MR. Funnyname” asked me if he .should change his name because it was a source of embarrassment to his family, I’d have/ encouraged.HIM to do so. But “MRS. Funnyname” wrote to say that her husband was “proud” of his name *mrf' refused to change it (which is, of course, his right), so since he had already turned a deaf ear to is wife’* pleading, I say, “skip it.” Hes husband DOES have the tost word. DEAR ABBY: I just read the letter from the lady who elgned herself “FOOLISH BUT LUCKY,” and I must" agree, she is both. In this case she was lucky that her neighbor knew what to do upon binding her “lost” boy unconscious in a locked and abandoned refrigerator. Did you know there are 3,380 chapters of the American Red Cross throughout the country offering courses in first aid, FREE OF CHARGE? This course includes instruction on how to give mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, hdw to stop severe bleeding, how to treat poisoning, open wounds, broken bones, and\ven accident victims who are sufferinfrsfrom shopk. The course is only 10 hours. Everyone who drives a car, has a child, works in a factory, swims in a pool, or peels a potato should know how to give emergency first aid. VOLUNTEER A h * ' DEAR VOLUNTEER: A 10-hour investment which could save a human life sounds like'a pretty good deal to me. I urge all my readers to call their nearest Red Cross chapter and sign up for the course BEFORE an accident happens. ♦ . it_* .CONFIDENTIAL TO “Lonely in Memphis”: Don’t sit around feeling sorry for yourself. If nobody calls you — call someone. Get out of the house and find someone who needs a lift more than you do. You won’th^ve tolook far. I l/j Pone/ Claims Food Prices Trail fhe Cosf of Living Did Jackie Mesorf to Juc/o? NEW YORK (AP) — A newspaper lpped him to the sidewalk with * judo hold after he took her picture outside the movie theater showing “I am Curious (Yellow),” the Swedish sex film. Mel Flnklestein of the New York Daily News said Sunday night that. Mrs. Onassis “grabbed my right wrist put her leg out and flipped me over her thigh.” But the doorman of Cinefna 57 Rendezvous on West 57th Street said Flnklestein slipped while taking a picture of the fbrmer Mrs. John F. Kennedy. Neither Mrs. Onassis nor a family spokesman could be reached for comment. ofoer '|)hotogra Flnklestein and other'photographers were waitftig in the lobby of the theater because the management had notified the news media that Mrs. Onassis and her husband, Aristotle, were viewing the film, after arriving in separate cars. They spotted Mrs. Onassis walking Through the lobby from her seat to the lounge and began taking pictures. They then headed for the door. Mrs, Onassis caught up with Finkles-tein just outside the theater. He shot another picture as she moved toward him. “I thought she was going to say something,” Finklestein said. “I never figured she would do anything physical.” Finklestein, 37, said he is 5-foot-lO and weights 168 pounds. Mrs. Onassis, wearing a short leather skirt, dark stockings, a ribed sweater and a multicolored scarf with zodiac signs over her head, stalked off after the incident. * * REJECTS TV OFFERS ' ATHENS (AP) — Aristotle Onassis has rejected an offer of $100,000 for his wife to star in an American television special “A Tour of Greece,” a representative of producer Roger Gimbel said today. Gimbel planned to film the one-hour color program for release in April 1970, coincident with the start of the tourist eason. He estimated that the program would have increased Greece’s tourist revenue approximately $70 million. Gimbel has made similar specials with Princess Grace of Monaco and Sophia Loren, conducting a tour of Rune. AP Wlr.photo A young Vietnamese peasant borrowed his father’s tattered straw hat for some semblance of shade on a swing day. The child was, photographed in a village about 20 miles northwest of Saigon. By JANET ODELL Woman’s Editor, The "Pontiac Press A panel At high-powered speakers turned on /the ammunition Friday afternoon in/Chicago in an effort to convince the/nation's food editors that food is still a bargain. —J. Phil Campbell Jr., UiWer Secretary of Agriculture; Dr. Max E, Brunk, professor of marketng at Cornell University j/and Dr. Philip L. White, Secretary of' the Council on Foods and Nutrition of the American Medical Association, were the speakers. Joining them in a question -and • answer period were representativesof a number of supermarket chains. The session was arranged by Oscar Meyer and Co. and Super Market Campbell noted that although food prices are up, they have been trailing the cost of living, not leading it. He pointed out that the amount of disposable income spent for food continues , to decrease. At 16 to 17 per cent, it is the. lowest in the world. He also explained that many housewives who complain about their larger costs at the supermarket neglect to separate the food and non-food Items in their shopping carts. At least 25 per cent of every supermarket dollar goes for non-food items. Other reasons for higher food prices may be the size* of the family and its ages; bow much entertaining is done; and what kind of foods you buy. He predicted a stablization of food prices for the immediate future with a picture of plentiful supplies for foe distant future. Best bargains right now, he Said, are fruits. DEMAND SERVICES . Dr. Brunk of Cornell thinks that the added services demanded by today’s food purchases have the greatest effect on prices. He attributed' the keen sensitivity to food prices to the fact that “food is the largest single and most necessary item in the household budget.” ' But he thinks that we will continue to demand more food, better food and more services. Agreeing that food prices are high, he pointed out that a man works fewer hours to buy a pound of bacon than at any time in the past. This will not change in the future. Nutritionist Dr. White, had some specific suggestions on how to provide a good diet with a low budget. This I intend to explore in a future article when I can be more explicit. But he made a plea for all housewives to use iodized salt and enriched flour. This means we must be better readers! of labels. %. w ★ w The supermarket owners pointed out that foe consumer is the boss In the long run. If she does not like foe food or prices in one store, she can and should shop in another one. They all Insisted that the wide selections of foods is foe best way 'to keep prices down and font stores must meet competition. Careful planning on our part will save pennies. Calendar TUESDAY Kplwnpel Churchwomen of Christ Church Cranbrook, 10 a.m., in the church. Third program In four-part series on “Tbs Concept of Communication.” gt Joseph’s Mercy Hospital Nurses Alumnae, 7:30 p.m., For-tlno’s. Dinner meeting. Birmingham-Bloomfield Hills Junior Alumnae chapter, PI Beta Phi, 8 p.m., Warren home of Mrs. Robert Stewart. Film “How to Watch Pro Football.” Past Noble Grands Club of Welcome Rebekah lodge No. 846, 8 p.m., Oak Hill Street home of Mrs. Harvey May. Peatlae Area Jayeettos, 8 p.m., AU Saints Episcopal Church, Workshop on leadership training. Jacqueline Onassis, in scarf, white sweater and mini skirt, marches Tpast New York Daily News photographer Mel Finklestein on 57th Street in Manhattan Sunday. Finklestein said he was knocked to the sidewalk by Mrs. Onassis as he attempted to take her picture as she was leaving the Cinema 57 Rendezvous Theater after attending a shouting of. the Swedish film, "l Am Curious (Yellow)." -A^-TWpoae. Cwupetinq USE ANYWHERE IN THE HOME FOR BEAUTIFUL FLOORS De/Toagk/ uir^tu|ing Co/tpet You can't laugh off a mistake. We urge you to find out in detail why you'll be safe in buying carpet here. We can suit your precise needs, taste, and budget. Do come in. ACROSS from HUDSON’S PONTIAC MALL 22S5 Elizabeth Lake Road FRONTDOOR PARKING Open Monday and Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.; Tuts., Wad., Thurs. A Sat. 9 A.M. to I P.M. B—2 ^ ' T™" W! ......“ t V \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, 00 TOBER 6, 1969 0 Betrothal 'Unbreakable Philippines By LINDA CABRAL---------; When the couple consideredl Only Laura Santos, a friends Dr. Neator L, Baltsl assisted in Once upon a time, marriage,engagement, they both knew it] of Marina's from her stay in this, part of the ceremony, Phillppine-style meant Jtfi e young suitor was responsible for all expenses of the wedding; his bride’s dress, their reception and honeymoon, everything. Today this part of the Philippine wedding tradition has modified, but many of the old formalities of the ceremony re-married main. Marina Profeta of Oneida was a very serious step UNBREAKABLE ‘‘There is no getting out of an engagement," Marina explained, "Once engaged,, it is rarely ever broken in-mw country. It is almost the same as getting she said. New" York, and Dr. Donald Dawson of Pontiac, attended the service as the couple's principal sponsors. The others were not able to make the trip from the Philippines. ' marking the couple's married life which should always be spent together. 'Street, a lovely soft-spoken! 1" keeping with their respect ceremony. However, they stood Filipino married Dr. Thomas1 h>r thehomeland, Thomas and .behind the principal sponsors at A. Macatangay, Saturday Marina chose to include many the altar, afternoon in St. Michael’.s!°^th® traditional wedding sym- Vivian Menguito Following the priest’s blessing at the end of the service, the cord and veil were removed and Ermelinda A. Macatangay the couple left the church, and Dr, Cristano Torrens Marina and Thomas then assisted the couple as maid greeted guests at a reception in honor and best man during the the Kingsley Inn. Marina's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roque A. Profeta, who and make their home in Manila, their m a r r'i a g eiAb" B" piwe lit Vcandle] able to come from the ceremony. : for me cupole-during the PSpines for their Principal and iscopdaryisymbolizing their love and pros- weaang- ^ t * * S55 typicaTcomponents^IAraceli t Abrlw ^wJ^S^S the Philippine service. 'Restitute B. Miravilla placed a Kj are tt>e 2y cSSre? Marina and Thomas asked atix | V©U' over the couple’s heads and |rom 4heir family of nine living closefriends to act as their pinned it in place, marking the jn united States. •From the beginning, the cdu-|'prihcipal sponsors. These in- [eternity of the marriage. * ★ * pie adhered to P h 11 i p p i n e dividuals, termed “godmothers" Finally, a white cord which Mr. and Mrs. Aquilino R. customs regarding the proper]and'“godfathers” of the couple, had been tied to form two Macatangay of Quezon, did not conduct of two, single young serve as witnesses. They sign circles, was placed over their | attend the wedding, but chose to people. J ' [the marriage license in place of |heads and rested on their wjiu' until their son completes Tradition demands that they |the honor attendants. 'shoulders. Regina Salianza and his internship with a New York Catholic Church. : * * * .Some time before the wed-ding, Marina explained the traditions tljat she and Thomas observed prior to their mar-, Hager and - also some they planned to use in the ceremony. Resting on the ring pillow are the veil and, cord that Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Macatangay Mseditp'mark their traditional Philippine wedding Saturday. ENROLL HOW!! Class Limited To 20 Students, So Hurry. Quality Training by (tefas -f PABLO’S SCHOOL of BEAUTY 4823 Dixit Hwy. OR 3-0222 not see each other without a chaperone for approximately one year. Thomas dutifUlily visited MarinFat the apartment she shared with her sister and brother-in-law in New York City. - Similarly, Thomas and Marina did not venture out of the apartment alone, letting the excitement and activity o f Manhattan pass by. THOSI HORRID AGE SPOTS' City hospital. Then the newlyweds will be able to travel and take time to visit their -homeland. / Pictured m the hand-made gown she designed and wore for her marriage Saturday's Mrs. Thomas A. Macatangay. Her mother, Mjrs. Roque A. Profeta helps to adjust the train which is comprised of pearls,and beads on lace appliques. Club Activity Begins ( Choose a nice sunny day iif (which to launder your crochet | bedspreads. When washed, lay • a clean sheet on the grass, two sheets if necessary. Care-! The Big Sister Program”! The Club’s annual mem-fully spread the bedspread on will be the topic of Mr^. Harvey bershlp tea will be held Oct. 26|Sheet and let dry. A crochet] from 2 to 4 p.m. in the home of spread on a line may lose its Mrs. Richard Benson.|shape. Interested women may Mrs. Stewart Peck of Birm- FADE THEM OUT •Weathered brown[j rtx on the surface your hands and face tell the world you're getting old—perhaps before you really aw. Fade them away with 1 HA, that med- icated cream that BteaM up masses of pigment on the akin, helps make hands look whit* and young again. Equally effective an the face, neck and arms. Not a cover-up. Acts In the skin—not on it Fragrant, greaselses base for softening, lubricating akin as it dene up thorn blsnushas. If you hava thesa age-Mvealing brown spots, blotches, or If tog want cImutcTo lighter wM". t me ESOTERIC A. At pSrklS! drug and toiletry counter. S2.00. MRS. E. H. MEJIA MRS. D. G. DERT1NGER Wedding Bells Ring/ for Weekend Brides / ng Tw hanged and Ei J. Dise, president /of Birmingham Youth Assistance, and Rev. Herbert E. Sax man, supervisor of volunteers for Big Brothers-Big /Sisters, when they apeak before the members of the Birmingham Junior Woman’s Club Tuesday. The meeting is scheduled at 8 p.m. in Nativity Episcopal Church. ingham for further information. MEDICAL ASSTS The annual membersip dinner of Oakland County Medical Assistants Society is to be held Wednesday at Northwood Inn Nettie O’Brien, fashion A delegation ^11 attend the^coordinator for theJ. L. Hudson 23rd/annual Junior Fall Con- wlU * ^ «UMt ference iii Kalamazoo, Satur- sPeaKer-day. J ; New officers for the season are: Mrs. Robert Lenz, president; Mrs. Clarence Heth Saturday morning wedding yows were exchanged ' by Rafaela Villarreal ana Ernesto H. Mejia in St. Michael’s Catholic Church. nJMXj Rim-Full "RinAe/ npiete way i . lightened hair. Our stylist shapes your curl* and swirled coif, and before It’s set Fanci-Full ha* done it’s wonder-work. Color instantly, then shampoos out easily when youwish. No peroxide. ■_ no after rinse. Vibrant niw colors are awaiting you with Fanci-Full and a styled coiffeur creation adds the crowning touch Cut, Bel, and Koux Fanci-Full KinSr.only ^3^ Our Deluxe PERMANENT WAVE ^ inrlutlr* ifi, mi, ind Koux Fanci-Full Rlnif • only •6°° HOLLYWOOI BEAUTY Open Morning* at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Baalcy Mht. 338-7660 The couple/was feted at a reception in tne Waterford CJA building following the rites. / The daughter of Mr. and Jose Villarreal of Gage Street chose a gown of satin with lace and crystal accents. Velma Mejia and Frank' 'FtenI ! [president-elect; Mrs. R. Donald W Youth HendriGkson and Elizabeth Alcoholism Rate Is High' Membership is open/ to any woman wording as a medical assistant in a doctor’s office. Interested persons may contact Mrs. Leonard MacAbee, of] Orchid Street. PARIS (AP) — A doctor says Rivera attended the couple as one of Frgnce's most self-satis-i maid of honor and best man. ified notions-that the nation’s WNFGA * A Nkx [young people don’t really care Mrs. Edwin Koepke has been The son of Mr. and Mrs.'lor alcohol-is just another iUu- elected president of Pine Lake Severo G. Mejia of West sion. s; s j Estates brahch, Woman’s Na- Howard Street and his bride are Dr. Paul le Go, a physician tional Farm and Garden honeymooning in Mexico. for the French National Rail-n .. [ways, told a medical conference uortinger-Klomp [here Friday that the situation remains serious. A reception in the bride’s parents home followed the wedding ceremony of Kathleen Klomp and Daniel G. Dertlnger. They were married Friday evening in St. Williams Catholic Church, Walled Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin W, Klomp of East Highland Road, White Lake Township received guests Le Go said that of 740 job candidates under 28, he refused to hire 42 on the basis that they were alcoholics. He blamed the situation on the low price and availability of wine in France and the acceptance of heavy drinking. The following their daughter’s mar-lphygiclan ga|d u to 15 p* cem Ma*e * * A °f the male population was al- Piian Tui'.r nr,,i .. coholic. An investigation In qne hvESSLJ/ ijlLr *3"? large firm, he added; showed mdegroom s brother, Thomas, L. ® ’ —. . ^ assisted the couple as maid ofl9”? Ajg 2 honor and best man. a quart (Junlily I'.lenninp ShicM 1929 ALL PERMANENTS force drank more of wine per day. * * A Le Go’s report came while other physicians were discussing wbat they described as a massive increase of venereal disease in France. In Paris, it was stated, the number of cases has gone up 400 per cent in the past 15* years. The bride chose a street length crepe dress and carried a colonial bouquet. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Raymond Dertlnger of Wolverine Lake and the late Mr. Dertlnger. Name Officers Elected to office ,in the Nurs- Beet topg are high |n nutrltlve ing Alumni of Oakland Com- vaiue and very tasty when inunity College recently were Martha Collins, president; Sheron Chisholm and Jeannle White, vice presidents; Karen Messner, secretary and Irene, Spears, treasurer. Association, for the 1909-70 season. She will be assisted by Mrs. David Bradbury, vice president; Mrs. Kenneth LaForeal and Mrs. Eugene Lochner, secretaries and Mrs. George Prain, treasurer. A * ★ John Duff, student a t Michigan State University, will foe guest speaker at the Thursday meeting in the Claire Drive, West Bloomfield Township home-of Mrs. Jack Killian. He will tell of his experiences in Honduras under the International Farm Youth] Exchange program (IFYE), one of the major WNFGA projects. cooked. Wash well and cook the same as you do spinach and other greens. Drain when tender and serve with a sour cream sauce seasoned with a bit of horseradish, salt, 395 g95 Includes AU ThUi " 1— New Luatr* Shampoo 2- Flattering Hair Cut 3— Lanolin Neutralising 4- Smart Style Setting NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at S.A , 78 N. Saginaw Over Baxley Mitt. 338-7660 Women Suffer WITH BLADDER IRRITATION Common Xldnojr or BlaOdar Irritation* snoot Mm u many woman u men. often eaualns tanaene** and nervouenese from frequent, burning, itching urination. Saaondarlly. voir may loaa aleep and have Baadaohea. Backaches and INl older, tired, de-praaaaa. In such tea**. CXBTEX uau- Lose 10 lbs. iir 10 days on Grapefruit Diet HOLLYWOOD. CALIF. (Special) —- Thi* is the revolutionary grapefruit diet that everyone is suddenly talking about. Thousands of copies have been passed from hand to hand in factories, plants and officae throughout tha U.S. Because this diet really works. Wa hay# testimonials reporting on /its success, you follow ft exactly, should lose, TO pounds in days. No weight loss in first four days bul you will suddenly drop 5/pounds on the 5th day. Thlreaftar lose one pound a day until I Oth day. Than you will 1 Vi pounds every two day* until you g*t down to vour proper weight. Best on all, thara will b# no rail pangs. Ravisad and anlarged, this dial lets you stuff yourself with formerly forbidden" foods, such as stjsaks fried chicken, graves, mayonnaise, lobster swimming In butter, bacon fats, sausagai and scramblad aggs and still lost weight. The sacrat behind this quick weight loss” diet Is simple. Fat does not form fat. And tha grapefruit juice In this diet acts as a catalyst (the trigger"), to start the fat burning process. You stuff yourself on the permitted food listed In the diet plan, and still lose unsightly fat .and excess body fluids. A copy of this startling successful diet can ba obtained by sending $2 to Citrus Diet Plan 5211 W, jeffetMn L. A. Calif. 900*16 Money-back guarantee. If after trying the diet you hava not lost 7 pounds In tha.fln* seven days, another 6 pounds in the next 7 days, and l ife pounds every two days thereafter, simply return the diet plan and your $2 will ba refunded promptly and without argument. Tear out this message as a reminder. Decide now to regain the trim attractive figure of your youth. dress up your home for Fall! let us REUPHOLSTER your worn furnitui at our factory-to-you prices and . SAVE 30% to 40%! Harnrnter Colors EASY BI IM.KT TERMS OR y me rugs. After it is ted, it is ready to restring. •^GLORIA * * * DEAR GIRLS-When washing a clothesling in the washer, do wind it round and round and put it in a bag to avoid all sorts of tangles and twists.—POLLY FLOOR SAMPLE SALE! SAVE ON* MAPLE. CHERRY and MAHOGANY • LIVING ROOM • DINING ROOM • BEDROOM ,->■ • WALL DECOR & ACCESSORIES Sale include* floor samples ... soiled or damaged .>. dixrontinurd style* . . . “AS IS" and One-of-a-Kind item* ... Pay Vi down and the balance in 3 equal monthly payments with no carrying charge*. SAVE AT LEAST 20% aid Dp to 50% 24 West Huron in Downtown Pontine Open Daily 'til 5i30... ?E 4-1234 THE BEAUTY SALON PHONE 112*4940 October Permanent Wave CLEARANCE New through the end of (hit,month w* ore selling oil of our permanent waves at * 20% TO 10% BELOW REGULAR PRICES! As o result of special volume purchasing dur Ing the past ysar, we are obi# to pais the savings on to you during this outstanding sale event. Because that# prlcss ore so drotflcolly reducsd, wo can't advertise the brand names but wo know that youll find your favorite permanent on iota. Hurry while our sleek of t dlse Is Mill complete. 1 •’ PERM H*k. tix.no PERM io" r DOLLY NEWBANKS Manager ’ MRS. BIGLER Art Expert States Talk Mrs Mary Jane Bigler, professor of art at Wayne State University,, will he guest speaker Friday at -Pontiac Creative Arts Center before the Pontiac Society of Artists. I *•' ★ ★ She will discuss her year’s i study and work in Rome, recently completed on sabbatical leave from the University. ★ ★ ★ Fifty drawings and paintings done during that period are currently being shown in an exhibition at Wayne’s Community Arts Gallery. They include watercolor, gouache and polymer combined with college, metal leaf, rubbings and other] textural elements. * ★ ★ *• , ■ A regular exhibitor and consistent prize winner, Mrs. Bigler’s work is included in public and private collections in Denmark, England, Italy, Mexico, France and the United States. . It’s fun, cozy to have .col-orlively legs. Knit now! ■ * # . | Easy! No shaping — just knit ! round and round decreasing at toe for knee socks of worsted or lacy stockings of 3-ply fingering. Pattern 734; girls, women’s | sizes included. h 1r - ★ Fifty cents in coityi for each | pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac Press, 124, Needlecraft Dept., Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. New dramatic 1070 Needlecraft Catalog — inspiration'on every page!, Over 2001 designs, 3 free patterns! Dresses, jackets, accessories to knit crochet". . . quilts, toy8, afghans, embroidery, sewing, I weaving. Only 50 cents. * ' ★ * '★ 50 Instant .Gifts *r Fashions, , accessories, toys. Send ,5 0j cents.____ Book of 16 Jiffy Rugs to knit,) crochet, sew, weave, hook. / 501 cents Book of 12 Prize .Afghans. 50 cents Book No. ft — 16 Superb Quilts. §0 cent! Book1 No. 2 — Museum Quilt»— 12; rare, outstanding quilts/ SO cents Book No. 3 — Quilts lor Today’s Living. l/> unique quilts. 50 cents. Mustard Butter Cream a quarter cup of butter or margarine with a couple of blespoons of sweet brown prepSmLniustard. Use the combinatiorT^aa^a spread for toasted buns to go^with hamburgers. A new booklet, “How to Buy Meat for Your Freezer,’’ is available from the U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D C., 20402, for 20 cents per copy. A GIFT FOR YOU Germaine Monteil designs feminine elegance in a wide range of cosmetics .for you. Moisturizers bathe away dry skin. Purest of ereams crfcuted to enhance your complexion with youthful freshness. The finest in make-up to highlight your beauty. From the modest to the magnificent. $3.50 to $40.00. ’ BEAUTY CLASSICS Moisture Bath, fragrant mists of Royal Secret ofl that blend with water fo bathe away dry skin; Super-Moist Beauty Emulsion, a velvet-like under make-up moisturizer for a 16-hour glow; and ActPyTTa, performs while you- sleep to leave your skin lookings as if you had 8 hours sleep even if you didn't. BEAUTY CLASSICS, a collection of beautifying moisturizers, is yours with the purchase of any Germaine Monteil preparation of $5.00 or more, from 6th to 18th. A GERMAINE MONTEIL BEAUTY CONSULTANT WILL BE IN PONTIACJHROUGH OCIOHER 11 ALVIN'S OF PONTIAC,. ROCHESTER, OAKLAND MALL Miff "A" WAttr ft itwtlfd mpvti rtiliUnt, iwti Caravelle* by BULOVA & JEWELERS 3250 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-0930 DeMte Iiiili and Mickey 8iwiu 1 / NATIONALLY ADVERTISED WIG CO* L-Wtu/Ifr- tGaIlUMM- 6«*. 'AafeuiM/L- TOTAL FASHION for Kveniti^ THK CLASSIC FALL $ 4990 PATRICIA ORIGINAL WIG FULLY HAND TIED-STYLED „ _ _ Just I for You! Wl© CO. ^ 5905 DIXIE HIGHWAY AT WATERFORD HILL, INDEPENDENCE COMMONS OPEN EVERY NITE TIL 9 STORE HOURS 9i30 A M. ^>9:00 P.M. / WHERE YOU WILL SATISp/ iLL (MR tom nk( : • mm MERHM WIG Wild lor i lirud Opeiii), Sen I- JzdL Pi Til K rroN DDT Tolerance Limits in Fish Are of Issue UAC 1*HR8S, !MOXI3Ay^C^OBB» 6. io«9 LANSING m *nd Drug Administration probably will be asked to r&ise the permissable DDT level In Great Lakes fish to 15 parts per The Food million In salmon and lake trout and 10 PPM in other fish. Dr*Kenneth R. Wilcox Jr chief of the Public Health Department’s Bureau of Laboratories, said the five A big ad IK thf Yellow Pag** keeps Rene's Hair Fashions in Eaton Rapids set far business, Get_____ yourself a permanent stream of customers. To be big this year, make it big now . . , in the Yellow Pages, obviously. Yellow Pages per Great Lakes states would petition the FDA to raise DDT tolerance limits. 1 . "Our goal is to take this (the petition) down to talk to people at //the Food and Drug Administration within the next two weeks and submit it shortly thereafter," Wilcox said. Although the five states have not yet reached final agreement on the petition, Wilcox /aid, what we’re recommending for salmon and lake trout is 15 PPM. On other fish, we’re ask- IngHTPPM. STEMS FROM CONFAB The petition action derives from Gov. William Millikeni’s Upper Great Lakes Conference called earlier this year to study the pesticide problem following the confiscation of several tons of Lake Michlgan coho salmon BAZLEY’S EARLY BIRD SPECIALS LEAN MEATY SPARERIBS FULLY COOKED BEEP FRITTERS 79, MINUTE STEAKS 69*. 3 MARKETS OPEN TO SERVE YOU DOWNTOWN - 1220 PERRY - DRAYTON that exceeded the FDA’s hi ter im tolerance level of 5 PPM. While most publicity has centered around- the recently introduced coho salmon, chubs and lake trout from Michigan have been taken off the market because of the high levels of DDT. Thomas Brffwn, Detroit district director of the FDA, late last week initiated action to confiscate a shipment of smoked chubs that allegedly exceeded the. five PPM level for sold in interstate commerce. In addition, Brown said, four shipments oL chubs had voluntarily taken off the market by producers in recent months because—of—excessively high levels of DDT. OILY FISHES "rThad understood some of 1he chubs were running up/o eight or nine PPM,” said Wifcqx “We’ve been concerned about pesticide levels in all oily fishes, and of course chubs are oily," added Jack Bails of the Department of National Resources Fish Division. Bails said the annual income derived from chub fishing in Lake Michigan amounted to slightly less than $1.4Tnilllon. ‘They (commercial fishermen) derive more money from chubs than any other single species of fish,” he said. In addition. Bails said the department had confiscated some lake trout from Lake Mlchlgan-lhat exceeded the five PPM level. CAUGHT IN NETS Although commercial fishermen are currently prohibited from catching lake trout, Bails said, some lakers are caught incidentally in nets used for taking other species and commercial fishermen are permitted to sell the~trout. Commenting on the DDT levels in lake trout, Bails said "In many areas they did exceed the limit and they were turned over to jus. In some areas of the lake they were safe, in other areas they were not.” Whitefish — another commercially important fish in Lake Michigan — are relatively free of DDT, Bails said. He thought this was because whitefish taken from Lake are caught in the northern reaches of the lake. DDT in whitefish probably would be higher If they were harvested from southern portions of the lake, he added. Hudson’s Darwood Shop Super Suit $ale 2-button, sidevent model SALE 49.99 • Suits are expertly tailored by our top manufacturer. • Woven from rich looking wool worsted. ^ ' • Choose from blue, black, gray, brown or oliva in solid, stripes, glens, ’■! Sorry not all colors,) sizes fine) patterns available in all stores. • AH suits designed in the contemporary 2-button, side vent manher. • No charge for alterations, on coat sleeves and trouser cuffs. And’* , only a minimum charge for other alterations. • The,price is lobv — you’ll w^ot to buy.more than one. , >' HUDSON’S 3VE HUNTS STORE till 9;UU tonight-—Don't wTit—Comt to |b« Darwood Shop, Hiidion’s Pontiac, lot. Floor | branc h Oakland Community College FINANCIAL STATEMENT - r ■ June 30,1969 -'•>/■ ' , (Published pursuant to tho roquiromonts of Soc. 143, Act 331, Public Aetf of 1966} OPERATING FUNDS ASSETS - - c«h ■ Temporary investment* - Mat* S Xecnlvnblcsi j . Property taxes. Tail allowance of 520,000.00 , State appropriation Other Inventor tea » at Invar of seat or aarlcat On# iron Other funds ' V Patents ixututm 3= Account! payable Accrued payroll! Unearned student (hat Deposits Due to other tuada > 190.6U.2I 229.319.00 93,102.12 5,*97.69 139,194.35 TOTAL ASSB9 xwsrB! <2,939.97 166,767.94 100.163.00 -----44,21(,52 TOTAL LIABILITIES. iA.i'jf.W 7 "liiTiA'Ol ^| OPERATING REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES ®«NWA RRCNOAlU AVXAURy ACTIVmiS FUND M-m a REVENUES , KINO FUI& • COMBINID •tj’li . • '-.“yTsr. r' COLLEGB DEFENSE STUDENT STUDENT LOAN FUND *** 3B» J96S, a* previously reported 543,364.00 Baclaaslfieettoa of liability for National Defaata , * „ 64,181.87 J&MMD _42.000.00 1,364,00 113,313.10 Transfer Balance at July 1, 1968, as raatated Additional Federal government contribution Gift* and other grants Studont lea* interest Deductions: Csncellationa for touching aarvtaa Administratevo chars# 2,337.85 —.3*11 3,707.70 I 7,131.32 8 50,495.32 64,111.97 U4.677.16 61,649.00 BAUUca AT JUKE 39, 1969 8 3,707.70 PUNT FUND 41,649.00 2,337.89 agmJUitt ________MM 153,309.41 139,019,11 80174 90.74 -JtaWl*$a —-1.341.90 -JL&W4 — 1.431.74 1133,173.67 8137,341.37 CAPITAL Land inproronaata LIABILITIES Account# payable Accrued interest payable lands payable • Meta D Dus to General Wad TOTAL ASSETS 522,319.07 5,975,838.37 474,889.01 TOTAL LIABILITIES ,899.244.9j OALANCd 8 23,074.32 83,500,949.98 SONBS PAYABLX Balance outstanding sS July 1, 1968 Froessds frue bonds Ixpandlturas far capital additions bondsretired (transfer to fund equity) STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN BONDS PAYABLE AND FUND BALANCE DEBT BU11D1NQ CAPITA), ■ ujimsi ---------- 2HA t 23.372.81 226,955.70 «,311,938130 243.473.00 01,288.83 1*771,944.86 •46,018.70 .83,253.10 91,477(414.18 3,787,104,99 . 4.610.930.0(1 39,475,426.56 474.690.01 343,330.00 27,929,000.00 27,929,000.00 -------wu— -—1M6W.M .IkHMSgaSg -^299.934.59, 9 4,652,467.92 910,176,492.08 9 1,771,944.66 146,816.70 83,295.19 21,477,414.16 3,787,104.99 x - 4,610.930.00 12,377,467.92 ANP.RITB 82,836,044.19 900,000,00 (3,334,044.19) BALANCE OUI8TANDINO AY JUD 30, I960 9 rOFlTjON 524,913,939.89 3,336,044.19 ____&?lSa.QHP.i£S> ___(yLPJMD <27,929,000.08 (dufladt) at July 1, 2968 ____________ll*» SSfeTJESELni.' 1 Expenditures fton operetlng fund* for Cenernl Fund Expendable Roatrictad Fund ’ Auxiliary Activities Fund Expenditures for capital addition* Bond interest expense 'Bond, retired Other t • (283,973.39) 85.760,919.00 1,719,148,86 13/06.91 3*230.00 979.269.00 431,416,96 BAiANca AT JUKI 30, 1969 •/V" , - . ■ - _ »OA*D Of TRUSTEES G»«fB*R-.Mothor, Chairman) Mrs. (1,119,337.73) ”(323,000.00) 9 23,074.32 <3,500^949.36 lltM7*M1.4a f 7,341/67.01 160,341.61 38,006,00 1,741,71 2,220,374.90 329,000,00 6 4,432,447.92 279.260.00 1,719,M.,86 , 487.225/9 3,250.00 160.141.81 38,006.00 1.748,71 ((1lit,127.71) -----ttJJWUU 610,176,492,06 Daeiialr u—... -..1 . AN£ Ty^I^Y \ ,\ \\VY N THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 19fl9 \B—5 x I &S ■■ Y . vA;' drug and beauty aids, is now on in Hudson’s Drugs, Pontiac Mall WpXm* One-per-doy'multipli SI c^le^tablet or. capsuhHojto* iiuatjj fames' on Amcrest*large*s ^ily^ultiple vitamins with minerals’! 100*8*plufl a bonus bottle of 100f| Amcrest^ high-potency Vitamins' ^liBS^r^nti#bottlepfc 100 .both J Amcrest Cold Croam Soap Choose white or soft pastel shades and save on oon-alkalioe soap blended with cold cream that's extra-kind to your skin. Amcxest Buffered Aspirin Your family gets quick pain relief without unpleasant side-effects while you enjoy great savings on the handy 200 size. Amcrest Healing Pads Designed to insure long and effective •so. Water-proof and safe.' Other atplm available at 4.99 and 9.99. Amorest' Cold Capsules Timed capsules release their ingredients over a long period while you enjoy allday relief from colds snd allergies. ^ Vr\ * ' -\ * I f Amcrest AhP.C. Tablets Quick help la on the way to ease the pain of headaches, neuralgia and arthritis. Save now on family abed bottle of 200. Sale 98* 800'e HUDSON :i i Norll'tunJ LastUnJ Wntlamt Pimtim OakUnJ ■Hi mm 1=1. \v ■■ r1 ^ 1,’r‘"' T11K PONHAL I'ltlvSft). MONDAY, QCTOJBiflR 6, 186» i Deaths in Pontiac/ Neighb $200 Is Stolen in , Hfcnry F. Allen. T “Surrivi^ are tour • on«,j Frank P. King LMr»- plmcon Saturday..accident. She wio a member of Pontiac police reported today Joseph of Waterford Township, I ,mr. _ 5 , f ® p-.-i. She was a member of the!All Saints Episcopal Church and..................- * Henry F. Alien. 81. of 681 Wendell of Oxford and Ralph „ Kj„„ u ^ 4*242 kiI-7. Women’s City Club In Detroit, a ninth grade student of Went Northway died today. His body and" Kenneth, both of Pontiac; Z. mnrnlno the Michigan Cancer Society! Hills Junior High School, is at Harold R. Davis Funeral, three sisters. Including Mrs. ,ht pu h ‘~ , * I and the Holy Name Catholic! Surviving are her parents Home, Auburn Heights, ________ Flora Ostrander of K eeg o j „tter j8v Saint^ RoseviU. Church Altar Society. (three sisters, Mrs. James Surviving are seven sons, Harbor; 18 grandchildren; and ' . Surviving are one son, Johnjshaeffer of Muskegon, Mrs Tpny of Pontiac, Frankie of 24 great-grandchildren. Mpmnri,i r.mPtprv ivnv TPlancon of Detroit, and threeJerome Brownstein of—Ne* England, John of Illinois, Jim, the nipner Funpr.l Wnm* ^Brandchlldren. I York City and Elisabeth Segula David and Dennis, all of* PUfHm» r Bettoni Mr Kin» dierf Fridav He was Memorial tributes may be!at home; three brothers, Robert California and Danny In Viet- tU9en® C’ B#Moni I ".l);,!8/!? EOL&SB madp to ‘he Michigan Cancer of Marquette and John namj two daughters, Linda of TROY — Requiem Mass for Jesus Christ of L a 11 e r - d a v Society' ! David, both at home; and Illinois and Darlene of Pontiac; Eugene C. Bettoni, 62. of JM75 saints and Masonic and Shrine u l. o s 'grandparents Mrs. Robert J six grandchildren; seven crooks will be 10 pm. tojnor- Lodges „f Fairbanks Alaska tivgtl Price Segula of Corunna, Mrs. John TROY - Hugh Price, «7, of LoijIs Schrader ^sisters, including Mrs. Pearl r0w at St. Paul’s Catholic MMOns was a'piumber pStiaJrMrsefhrh’ NeSaunee;with burial Surviving are Mils wife, 6181 Sandshore~ died Saturday Bonnie’ Souheaver of Pontiac " Negaunee Cemetery Beverly; one daughter, Pamela .The body is at the Price •Townshin and Mrs Barbara1 Rosary will be said at »pm.at home; three sons, Bruce J Funeral Home ;and his mother, Mrs. Bes& ft*™*; , f* hfr’ CorUs* 2* -Allen of PonUac. ! Mr. Bettoni died Saturday.He'Hamm _ was a member of St. Allen’s Corrie and Jack King, both of! ROCTESTER — Service for Mrs. John Eicher Catholic Church'and was a'PonUac. iLtmisSchrader, of215Pine * designer in the automoUve ,,,, ' I1®' "e®w®y at !; Service for Mrs. John division of Holley Carburetor Mrs. Laura E. Metzger |William R. Potere Funeral (Esther) Eicher, 72, of 625 Co. ■ i rose TOWNSHIP — Service i**1*®’ ^ burinl in Mount Homestead will be 8 p.m. today Surviving are his w i f e , for Mrs LaUra e. Metzger, 88, iAvon Cemetery. ; at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home! Margaret; his mother, Mrs.!«» 16368 Fish Lake will be 2 Mr. Schrader died yesterday. ; with burial Wednesday i n Maria Bettoni; two sisters; and p „^ tomo?row ^at D r y e r * ; Hampton, HI. ' one brother. Funeral Home, Holly, with ..Mrs. ..Eicher ded Sahirday. , burial ^ HilI Cemetery, TShe attended St. Trinity! u r ttll ■ !Hollv Lutheran Church, and was a MrS. H. C. Bums m member of Golden Age Club,, WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - She was a member of the „ . . . . .Sunset Oub and Retirees Club for H. C. (Maria) Grand Ralplds Seventh-day Rochester, and.one brother, of Local 594. Burns, 81, of 8916 Cooley Lake I Adventist Church. Surviving is a brother. will ^ j p m tomorrow at the j Surviving is one sister, ■______i r*___in. Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home,' Leonard Gravitt «Royal 0ak with burial in Mrs. George H. Planeon Service for Leonard Gravitt, RoseUnd Park Cemetery,i BIRMINGHAM - Requiem N. Tucker of Detroit and Mr and Mrs. E. F. Humphries of Florida. Memorial tributes may be made ta All Saints Episcopal Church, PonUac. He was a retired foreman of the Ferry Seed Co. and a member of the Rochester,Senior Citizens Club. Surviving are one daugher, Miss Leona Schrader o f Segula Mrs. George H. Tozer WEST BLOOMlFLED TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. George H. (Clara L.) Tozer, 78, of 5785 Drake will be 2 p.m. today at Cross of Christ Lutheran Church, with burial in Glenn Eden Cemetery, Livonia, by the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Mrs. Tozer died Friday. that bahdits escaped with more than' |200 in two armed robberies yesterday. Donald Morris, 30, of 324 Joslyn was robbed at 8; 25 last night while sifting in his car at the comer of Harvey, and California. He told officers three men came to his car, and one of them pointed a revolver at him and asked for ail his money. They fled in a, car after taking $113, Morris laid. Power Failure in Area of City , There was a temporary electrical power inferuption for 3,800 customers in the southeast area of Pontiac from 11:10 to 11:50 ajn. Saturday. Power company officiate said the interruption was due to a transformer failure. Motorcycle Spill Injures Woman, 27 Man Pound Dead A Warren woman was injured Saturday when the motorcycle she was driving tipped over in a field near Opdyke and M59, according to city police. Officers said Betty Parrish, 27, of Warren was in fair condition today at Pontiac General Hospital Frank P. King, a 34-year-old „ plumbing contractor, apparently According to police reports, hung himself in the .garage of she was going down a- hill his home. 45240 Klinshammer. around 11:30 a.m. Saturday nis home, 45240 Klinghammer, I around Utica, late Friday afternoon, when she lost control according to police reports. I motorcycle and tipped over. In another jrobbery at the same time, two men escaped $100 from the Auto City Car Wash, 049 Orchard Lake. The attendant, Donald Brelaford of Highland Park, told police he was in his office when two men, one with a gun, ordered him to give them all the money he had. He said they escaped on foot. The moose has an unusual growth of skin covered with hair which hangs underneath its throat and is known as a bell. CEMETERY MARKERS 82, of 35 Gordon will be 1 p.m. ; tomorrow a t Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, TToy. ' Mr. Gravitt, a retired electrician with Rpntiac Motor Division, died yesterday. He was a member of All Saints Episcopal Church and Pontiac UAW Local No. 653. Berkley Mrs. Burns died Saturday Surviving are Mrs. Joseph Penoza of Milford and Mrs. Glen Hums of Birmingham; two sons, James Irvine of Royal Oak and John Irvine of White Lake Township; eight grandchildren; and 15 greatgrandchildren. Mass for. Mrs. George H. (Henriette) Plancon, 69, of 1037 N. Woodward will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Holy Name Catholic Church, with burial in Hply Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Rosary will be said 8 p.m. tomorrow at Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-Service for Mary K. Segula, the 13-year-old daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Segula of 2755 Ayrshire, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at All Saints Episcopal Church, Pontiac, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by Donelson-Jbhns Funeral Home, Pontiac. The child died yesterday, the result of a horseback riding Monuments from $195 Markors from $95 Calibrating Our 75th Amdvriary INCH MEMORIALS, INC 864 N. Perry Simie Plot— far Memorial Path Comrtwtos at BelewCametwy Prices Wherever the End * May Come , . . Cali the Donelson-Johns Funeral . Home first. Even if it be in another state, or another country, we urge you to call us first. Only in this way can the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home be in charge of the handling of the funeral. Only in this way can we assure you of lowest cost and our complete handling of the service. Call Donelson-Johns Funeral Home first, whatever the circumstances that make the call necessary. 'Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 Paxldnq On Our Premiieii 895 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Mrs. George E. Skrine Service for Mrs. George E., (Minnie) Skrine, 82, of 1691 Judson will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Voorhees Siple Funeral I Home, with burial in Elkland | Cemetery, Cass City. Mrs. Skrine, a member of I First Baptist Church of Pontiac, j died Saturday. 108 N. SAGINAW ST. - DOWNTOWN PONUAC - CALL FE 3-7114 OPEN TONITE 'til 9^prrr- DAILY HOURS 9:30 am to 5:30 pm Swing Mishap Fatal | to Ray Twp. Boy EjifruL Qjpuidt SaduujL "tb CefieW tUJKO-s Ejefoui Qjpuiol Edewfc TI A Ray Township boy '_________ fatally injured Saturday af-l ternoon when a rope broke on a swing, dropping him on a metal support for a clothesline pole. Dead is Robert W. Welch, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Welch of 65350' Romeo Plank. He was pronounced dead on arrival at Almont Community ........, State Police reported. Visit Every Department to SAVE on Exciting New Merchandise From Finest Makers ] STEREO-TV & APPLIANCE DEPTS. Police said the Welch boy was || playing on the swing with group of other youngsters in the | yard of a nearby residence on Romeo Plank Road. Perdue to Air City Courses John F. Perdue, director of. School-community and human i relations for £ontiac School! District, 'will be one of the speakers at the 54th anniversary meeting of thef Association tor the Study of | Negro Life and History in Birmingham, Ala., Wednesday through Sunday. Perdue will discuss the Afro-American History courses in thell city’s social studies program for j grades kindergarten through 12. ‘BROWS’ 30” SUP-IN GAS RANGE Reg. *129 -SAVE *21 The range with built-in ''freedom from core" .-. . lift out door and top for easier cleaning. Standard broiler oven; Carries Good Housekeeping Seed of Approval. ‘GENERAL ELECTRIC' PORTABLE TV with CART ! Others attending the meeting! fiom Pontiac will be James Varner, community school) director of Bagley Sch®M, and! Mrs. Harriette Brooks, Central Elementary School principal. m Anniversory Sale Price 90 City Firm Reports $700 Burglary Enjoy all the conveniences of o portable as well as a mobile TV - all In one set. The versatile GE set features on easy carrying handle plus a mobile matching cart for room to room use 172 tq irj screen. City Products Copr. of 183x( | Cass was broken Into sometime j Saturday night or Sunday morning, Pontiac police feported today. ; According to officers, tools [I and equipment valued at . 9700 I was. reported missing. 1 ; Police said the breakin oc*!| eurred between 5 p.m. Saturday] 9nd 6 a.m. Sunday. Fntry was! gained by breaking a window. IRREGULAR? PUE TO UQM or FOOD " RCA BIG 295 SO. IN. COLOR TV SET $45411 REG. $499.95 SAVE $45.07 MILK IN VOUR PIET BRAN BUDS* Big scregff (23" diagonal, 295 Sq. In.) consol# TV with brilliant color tube. Powerful 25,000 volt chassis* RCA model GL6II. RUGGED STEEL DESK With BUILT-M FILE DMWER 1 VAULT $39.95 Value-SAVE $10 95 As shown — modern compact designed desk with 3 roomy drawers, built-in light plus loadf of storage space, Finished in baked enamel. Smart ‘SALEM' ROCKERS IN AAAPLE OR MAHOGANY $69.95 -SAVE $20 15 Comfortoble Salem Rockery with colorful tapestry upholstery. Choice of Maple oV Mahogany frame'. N|ot exactly qs shown INSTANT CREDIT AT WKC Liberal Credit Terms with Easy Monthly Payments Arranged SMALL APPLIANCES FREE 5-PIECE ASH TRAY SET with Purchase of Any Appliance SAVE $2 on Rpg. $9.95 $"V95 AUTOMATIC CAN OPENER ... f SAVE $2.11 on Reg. $12.99 $1f)88 FARBERWARE HAND MIXER . . I U SAVE $2.00 on Reg. $15.88 A -- W F92 $1088 STEAM-SPRAY-DRY IRON____ 10 SAVE $4 on Reg. $19.88 SUNBEAM AP72 $1u88 COFFEEMAKER............. I J SAVE $4.0?on Reg. $26.95 <•> a a mm SUNBEAM $0088 4-SLICE TOASTER T75........ LL SAVE $7.07 on Reg. $19.95 $101 'GE' F49 TRAVEL IRON ....... \L SAVE $4.38 on Reg. $16.88 SUNBEAM ELECTRIC \ $1050 TOOTHBRUSH CT7 . . ........ \L PARK FREE In Our LOT at Rear of Store or l-Hr. In DOWNTOWN PARKING MALL-, Hate Ticket Stamped at Caihler't Office m \ 'T; THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY; OCTOBER 6, 1069 y A- B—7 Head of Job Program Calls for 'Grass Roots' Participation By USA CRONIN AP Business Writer NEW YORK-The president of the National Alliance of Businessmen would , Uke to see a “grass roots” movement of businessmen to attack the problem of the hard-core unemployed. contracts because in negotla-with government and NAB, management often gets a better understanding of what’s 'ad in a program for the hard-core. / ' Hie corporate giants alone) cannot meet the need of persons presently unemployable for hiring and training, said Paul w. Kayser, a Vice president of PepsiCo Inc. on leave to NAB ♦ • w it Kayser Indicated the nonprofit businessman’s organization will broaden its efforts to enlist the efforts of smaller businesses across the country. The NAB he said, would “go national”-the organization now operates in 125 U S. cities. v ★ * * ^ “There are about 3.3 million businesses with less than 100 employes in the United States, Kayser said.; “If each hired oi or two hard-core, our job would be almost over.” ADMITTEDLY UTOPIAN Acknowledging such a dream as utopian, Kayser said the task of convincing businesses large and small to hire and train the lowest level of the work-force isn’t always easy. * * * Participants in the NAB program work on the “hire first1 principle, he said. “You are asking them to completely change their hiring practices, Instead of taking the best man they can find, they are asked to take die worst and train him." ★ ★ '★ However, Kayser said, business cooperation has grown steadily. NAB employers have so far hired and trained almost 250,000 workers with 134,567 still on the job.---------------- ♦ ★ * This success prompted the organization to revise its goals from 500,000 job placements by June of 1071 to 614,000 jobs. NEW PROGRAM To meet that goal, NAB has embarked on a Jobs ’70 program to enlist the cooperation of more businessmen. A pi goal, Kayser said in an Utter-view is to encourage businesses to take advantage of the labor department’s MA-5 contract that reimburses businesses for hard-core job training. it it ir Only about 25 per cent of businesses in NAB now take advantage of the government contract, Kayser said, partly because of die businessman’s tra ditibnal fear of government interference and pardy because previous contracts have been somewhat unwieldy in operation. SIMPLIFIED The new MA-5 contract, Kayser said, has been considerably simplified and “a lot of red tape has been cut out.” The simplification plus the enlistment of about 1,000 labor department employer service personnel to help businessmen understand and use MA-5 should considerably broaden contract use, he said. A •* . .* NAB, he explained, generally prefers businessmen to use the Festival Rocks California Town JACKSON, Calif. (AP) Amador. County settled back into its rural routine today after a weekend rock music festival that drew ah estimated 40,000 young people. Sheriff’s deputies and local police said they made no arrests at the festival site, 30 mites southeast of Sacramento In the old gold country foothills. . * * ★- • T|ie only problems were traffic and about a dozen persons who suffered from overdoses of hard.drup, authorities said ' \ * * A . | Newsmen saw marijuana smoked openly, and said harder drugs moll aa LSD alio woro being taken freely. Ronald Cur* ram h county undersheriff, said as he watched scores of youths swim naked: “A man woqld have to fa* cra*y to walk into that crowd olid pull somebody out. They ,would leer you Festival sponsors, headed by Dr, James Davis of Stockton, repoitM soiling shotR 20,600 tickets and said about an equal number of persons attended free at the alto next to‘Lake Amador. - “This isn’t always true,” he hastened toaddr*Alot of companies do a magnificent job without taking a*nickel.”'However, he eald, email businesses will probably find it easier to government participate help. , I ' *'i *' 0 ' * / V Broader business support, Kayier said, will help protect NAB programs against the pos- slble consequences of a rise of don’t get that expansion, we may have a problem.” NAB also expects to help with the problem of unskilled veterans returning from Vietnam, and eees the aervice industry unemployment business slowdown. Increased unemployment probably won’t hurt NaB’s programs, Kayser laid, but “if we participation as a possible antidote to industrial slowdowns, he said. 5 1 w it: <&t: . Ultimately, NAB hopes to put Itself out of a job, Kayser said. After the, 1971 goal Is met, the organization “hopefully ' will have so changed the atHttelav of American business that its Job can be done throupi the regular business organizations.” SHARP 13* aeraenol portable TV. Con- cooled hamllH. lor* phono look* Cloor* once aolo priced.... prica tad *68 ZENITH portable TV. DoIumo full featured. Now in cartom. While aupply toati *89 general electric par,anal portable TV. ZENITH 19**. With mote control. Doluao leoturel. Price amoshl w *125 MOTOROLA 12” port-Obi*. With handla and onlnnno. UHF/ *79 SHARP •ivn* It" portable. Handle, antenna. UHF/VHF. *99\ blWR S AMPLE MAND fcODD LOT ■ w ■ 01 Tapa awdiL ■ Salld aMtk Raawra ■ playback. While oup- §| tb hot ♦1477 ■ PANASONIC portable H batten* asiwtsd H pop up OONIOrtO fopo H recorder. Hornet.* | ailka»*apa *29 1 zssisnsr ■ R.mata conbol aillce. | With bahwy *29 I *4.9* ADMIRAL t- ■ liana. padW radio. ■ With aaipbim and ■ baMwweay tweet •3“ sit.es « am - m bam. pnH, mm*. AW. Salld atata. •11“ mduiwAM.IM.FM. •taraa fadla. Salld atata. Will, A.F.C. *69 FREE 10-DAY HOME TRIAL ON COLOR IV .Try Celar TV hr 10' Jeyt A* It teNffjHIt,: * "v / ■ FREE 0FF-0N REMOTE CONTROL WITH ANY TV y. Turn TV #» ar ell. Free with TV rut- THE PONTIAC PHESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, I960 __ _ _ ____ __, . .._ __ : , Know Why You Smoke Before You Try to Quit (EDITOR’S NOTE - Hm is ihe setmth in a 14-part series On how to stop smoking and not pain weight.'The Newspaper Enterprise Association series offers a double pronged solution $o the problem. It is written by Julius Fast, novelist, medical! editor and mystery writer.) .By JULIUS FAST NBA Publications ■ Before you can stop smoking, I you must understand what sort your own smoking habits for at letist two days before you bucklff down to serious categorising. ■ KEEP A LIST Become aware of every cigarette you smoke and when you smoke it. Keep a running list of how many you smoke and when you smoke them, then try, as much as possible, to analyze the motives that made you reach for a cigarette. Not all smWrs fit one alone. You and brings him to his Jull (cigarettes and he ban go back poteMiaif without it he’o to them for relatively small and vaguely uncomfortable and iess [often illogical reasons, than/complete), if he succeeds 2 ***** something to do ft ilUing : hnhi. X^ wifl) my hands. It was just alWays substitutes another habit in excess. He becomes the chronic eater or drinker once he stops being the chronic smoker. * a ★' The “handling” smoker (his gratification comes f r.o m something to hold, somethihg to manipulate, something to watch), finds it extremely uncomfortable to do with o u t boredom, I needed something “Relaxation” smokers (the cigarette is a symbol of comfort, relaxation and ease), quit easily but can go back to smoking just as easily. ■ a a a They are convinced that it is no real threat, and they can rarely see the need to tn-i convenience themselves b y doing without a smoke. *' a a • it ') • The ‘^crutch’* smoker (smokes to relieve tension, to overcome that moment , _ stress), can give up cigarettes easily enough during a calm period but could start smoking again at the first tension-producing incident. The “habit” smoker (lighting the cigarette is so unconscious an act that no thought process accompanies it), surprisingly enough, can usually stop If he really wants to, and he can go for a long time without cigarettes, particularly if he is aware of the harm cigarette^ can causb. HABITS He may, however, turn to other habits such as eating with automatic nibbling taking the place of automatic lighting up. W * i ★ ;• He's the refrigerator-door- j opener who prepares a midnight snack without really knowing; that he’s doing it. (NEXT: Ask Yourself Why?) | KEY PUNCH# / 6 months experience BOOKKEEPER, * I year experience figure clerk EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY with fringe benefits Apply in Person K MART ENTERPRISES 3000 W. 14 Mil* at Coolidge Royal Oak Interviews: Week gays 8 a.m.-4 p.rrt. Sat. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. . Ah IrimI Opportunity imployor i . y Stop ^ Smoking Lose overlap but for the most part j each smoker wiU fall Info one, category more than another. A * * Whatever you are, “habit” or -t'erutch” or “relaxation” smoker, “stimulation” or “craving” or ‘‘handling’’ smoker, you must try to analyze yourself to be prepared for the next step, a program of cigarette denial geared to your own motivational profile. Each WT,—v *‘7"r 7 ■ — of smoker you are and why you |moke. *. * * . . By the same reasoning, you ban then approach the problem pf the weight gain that goes t; With, an end to smoking and type is different. i The “craving” smoker (“a craving for the next cigarette begins to build up the moment he puts out the last one”), if he ever manages to stop, will probably stay off cigarettes for a longtime. ~ decide on the dietary program that will stop you from gaining any extra weight or will help ypu lose the excess weight you live. i .# * * .We hove pictured the six different types of smokers in some detail, but only you can decide which category you belong to. | ■ it it it [The first step is to analyze EXTREMELY DIFFICULT His psychological addiction, linked to his physical need, makes it extremely difficult for him to succeed in giving up cigarettes, but if he does suc-i ceed he has a good chance, ; better than the rest, of staying off them permanently. The “stimulation” smoker ; (the cigarette stimulates him RIAONSi rwtfen* Mrimlr l«t.ndln» I* *u» WboMo ea* mmI far th* «»*«'• (fatalM book Check and Comparer Price • Quality • Trim • Selection ■SA „ NOBODY SELLS BETTER MEAT! FRESH r - — Stop-Smoking Book o/o The Pontine Press—------ Dept. 410 P.0. Bax 489, Radio CHy Station NowYork,N.Y. TWtt----------- Please send ..... copy (cepios) of "How to Stop Smoking and Lose Weight" at $ 1 each tot 1 NAME addrf^r 1 . | A\ CITY STATE ZIP 1 I ir limUm BmIl* Allow 9 wmEb fir dititiry) i L Pentagon Lists 3 Viet Casualties From Midwest WASHINGTON lA-The names of 13 servicemen killed in action In the Vietnam war have been announced by the Defense De- They included three from the Midwest; . ARMY ^ MISSOURI - Pfc. Clinton S. Millar NEBRASKA 4 Me. Sinnl.y W. Doak OHIO — Pie. Larry. C. Vaillna Mcparmott. Changed from missing to dead —hostile: ARMY MIchMl ILMNOI8 - Sr Mjfitrf# Parktrsburg Died not as a result of Hostile IOWA - Pfc. Donald B. OHIO - Spec. 4 Dam •rails. , MARINB CO MISSOURI - Pvt. Do IK®. 2 Dead GIs'Moms to Aid Viet Hospital WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) — Two women whose sons were killed in the Vietnam War plan to travel to that country for the Christmas Day dedication of a hospital built with funds collected by Worcester area resident* Mrs. Gladys M. Berg of Paxton and Mrs. Bertha E. Tofferi of Fitchburg, both Widows registered nurses, said Sunday they will atay at thy “Project Concern” hospital near Da Lat until the end of December to help It begin operation. Ihe women said they are making the trip In memory of their sons, Marine Corps Pfc Ralph R. Berg, 19, and Air Force Capt. Charles E. Toggeri 33, both of whom were killed in FRIED FILLETS OCjEAfl PERCH Ac 5* Whole fryers Special Pack Cai-up Fryers Funeral Services Are Held Under* the Most Favorable Conditions Here... Convenient location Z, Homelike chapel 3. Parking lot 4. Competent staff 5. Provisions for family privacy Huhti ~~z/umMa£-rwm4 7t OAKLAND AVC. CALIFORNIA-134 SIZE Valencia Oranges C “SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY Bailing Beef FOINT CUT—BON BLISS Beef Brisket...... ‘99' CHUCK CUT—BON SLISS Beef Roast . • 5 9 3-LBS. OR MOBS haa. Ground Beef Chuck .. * 79 "SUPIR-RIOHT" SKINLRS pj|( Ail-Meat Franks*. 59 FANCY SUCH) HA. Rath Bacon.............™ 89* FOR BROILING OR FRYING A 4th. Halibut Steak .........../if 9* DOZEN 39 Yellow Onions.. .1059' Fresh Carrots..... 2 & 29* Sgeesh1 mm. m ‘ 19* Red Delicious Apples f ft 125 SIZE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY* OCTOBER 6,1909 Inter-City Paper Boy f.. He Has a Hard Times' Route By TOM TIEDE NEW HAVEN, Conn. -(NBA) Every day, morning and night, more than a million boys deliver newspapers to homes throughout the nation. TUESDAY SREOIAL! SPAGHETTI DINNER IMktallM. 44*1 25 PONTIAO LAKE INN TIN Highland Road PHONI8TS4000 Doug DeUne, aged IS, Is one of them. The Job is not altogether kid stuff. Almost all of the young entrepreneurs have hazards. " Ram makes their socks aog-gy, dogs nip at their ankles, subscribers who fall to get papers call them after bedtime. INNER-CITY ROUTE But for Doug DeLine, things can be even worse. For his is not the green grass and flower gardens of normal (suburban) newspaper delivery. His route is part of the crumbling inner city. And his routine reflects some woes of contemporary urban living. LAST TWO NITES at 7:00 A 9:40 HURON I MrmTGoM^ 1*1 PantuWon’.nd Matrecotor COMING WEDNESDAY Jack Lemmon and L luck Hudson Catherine Deneuve by Plaaidla “The April Fools” IS A Fine Pair The youngster delivers/the New Haven register in this town’s troubled Hill Section, Doug calls it an area of “hard times,” ‘NOT EVEN A DIME’ “Sometimes, the newsboy says, “when I got extra papers, I just give ’em to the older people 'cause I know they ain’t even got a dime.” Doug DeLine (his given name is Brian, but he doesn’t use it much) gets out of school at one each afternoon. He has study periods after that hour and the school allows his absence. > ★ * t ' He goes-home, eats, rests , a bit and begins delivery about 2:30. ,..... . He uses a shopping cart for transportation. And he’s off with shriek, confident gait. ‘NOT 80 BAD* • ^ “The Job,” he says, tossing papers left and right, "really isn’t so bad once you catch on. “There are some things you just don’t do around here. like, I always stay with my papers. I remember once I left a bunch on a corner, just tyr a minute, and when I got back they were swpied. * ★ * “Kids are ajways trying to get your papers. They want to sell ’em on their own. They come right up to you and fool Living loom Carpet ‘50V NYLON ,wv *149 Completely Installed 12'x!5' Room Price Includes: • Sponge Rubber Pad • Tackless Installation BEDROOM CARPET 100% Nylon Textured * 0 Colors to Choose From Reg,9.9B 3 93 YARD NAME BRANDS-lst Quality Carpet KITCHEN CARPET 100% Continuous Filament Nylon Space Dyed Tweed-Flat Level Loop 40% Sponge Rubber Back h< «* 4 95 ■HER KNOWINGLYIMKRS0U NYLON-SHAG Super Heavyweight Luxury P Carpet Tweeds aed Solid Colors 9 Colors to Pick From *•*,M* HB YARD around. They’re just showoffs, mostly. • . .. "But kids aren’t the big problem. The big problem is some of the . people In the neighborhood who won’t pay for papers. KEEP OWING “I know lots of ’em are poor and everything, but'some of ’em are just trying to beat you put of the collection money, they keep telling you to come back next week and after awhile they owe you as much at $10-$12. See that house? She never pays me. See that one? He doesn’t either. “I don’t know .what It lt but some of ’em just seen'to go deeper and deeper. They don’t pay anybody. . “I got 129 customers. And 43 more papers I put In a vending stand at the old folks home. I got ’em all — black, white, Italian, Puerto Rican. A lot of foreigners. The Jews g e t Hebrew papers, the Italians get Italian papers. It makes it kin-da hard to round up any new subscribers. ‘NOT FUNNY’ ' “We even got hippies, but they don’t buy papers. I don’t know why. Maybe they ain’t got the money, or maybe they just can’t read. People are really funny here.” Funny or not, Doug DeLine says he likes the people on his inner city route. So much so that he’s been serving them for nearly five years now. B—4>‘ | Smogless Day In Los Angeles | LOS ANGELES (AP) - Dry, hot desert winds swept in from the east and gave the people of Los Angeles a view they hadn’t seen clearly for weeks: Los An-gates. Jr # # The Los Angales Times marked the first smogless days since midsummer with a frontpage picture of the downtown skyline in today’s editions. ■'iOAo Open if am Wad, mm sat. aatf 2iS0 pm Sun, Men., Tues. _ SsUbfrawSHSeftSIMSH m Endi Tundoy He says the ones whopay lake for those who don’t. Heseys he’s saved up more than $L3MKln his own bank ac-I buys his own clothes, pays for his own haircuts and is, he says, “pretty' independent.” And as for his occupational Well, I don’t think about them much. I consider myself lucky to have a good job. I Great Lakes Are Dropping to Their Winter Levels 075 W. Huron St. Phone If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! o <►<><> DETROIT (UPI) - Levels of the Great Lakes are gradually dropping toward their winter readipgs with Lakes Superior and Ontario below 1968 levels. * * * • The US.i Lake Survey reported today Lake Superior was at 600.76 feet, 13 inches below levels a year ago i four inches below last month. Hie survey said the northernmost lake should be one inch lower a month from now. # ' * * Lake Michigan was reported at 699.25 feet, seven inches above the level a year ago and five inches below last month. The survey said the lake should drop another three indies In the next, month. 6 MORE INCHES Lake Erie reported at 571.30 feet, nine Inches above readings of a year and five inches below the all-time high level set in 1961. The survey said Late Erie was seven inches below last ith and Bhould drop five moreinchcs during October. Lake Ontario was reported at 244.10 feet, eight inches below readings i year ago and nine inches down from last1 month. A four-inch drop In the next month was predicted. Lake Huron was reported at 000.25 feet, seven inches above levels a year ago and five in ches below last month. A three-inch drop was predicted in October. ike St. Clair, the smallest Great Lake, waa reported at 574.55 feet, 11 inchea above a year ago and eight inches below the record high for the date let in 1032. ’The level a month from now was predicted to be three inches lower. mean, a lot of kids around here would like to have a good job.”- . /ZZ2 KEEGO GEORGE SEGAL URSULA ANDRESS ORSON WELLES JAN HENDRY . coupon sPeoial tonite a wed. FISH-N-CHIPS REGULAR 99c WITH COUPON. 3 SWIMMME portion* of our IngUth roelpo Mod fbh and hoop* of French Mm, 77? IUSK IS OK P. tST T.iKE-Ol'T 7fifiND»RV«T 93 N. TELEGRAPH 756 N. PERKY ST.— m»ui PONTIAC - 338-9493 uuffi1 YOUR NEWS Q|IIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct 1 Communist China marked the ,..,.th year of Communist rule. a- 16 b- 20 c« 25 2 Chinese Communist leader ..... appeared In public for the first time in mpre than four months, thereby ending rumors that he is in bad health. a-Chou En-lai b-Chiang Kai-shek c-Mao Tae-tung S 8 The United States has begun withdrawing 6.000 of the 49,000 troops it has stationed in the Asian nation of...7 a-Thailand b-India c-Burma 4 Vdters in the West German federal elections failed to give a majority to either of the nation's major political parties. Name the two parties. 6'Father James Groppl of Milwauftbe, Wisconsin, led a march on Wisconsin's state capital to -protest ----a- Va tic an rulings ... b-state welfare laws c-alr and water pollution PART II • WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you cap match with its correct meaning. 3.... .capitulate 4 ...subsidy 5 ...amnesty a-money aid given by the government b-violent publio disturbance c-general pardon for offenders d-attack violently e-surrender, give up PART III . NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match With the clues. The Pontiac Press Monday. October 6,1969 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures op symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. 1..... nation marks 20th year of Communist rale 2..... ' * ■ October 8-11 le National 4-H Week Communist China test- RYE7! 0YF7I ad a nuclear device v,tts Czechoslovakian Premier Oldrich Cernik United State* Supreme Court tieglne a new term tide week 8..... military took over government in a coup this la National News-paper Week world aynod of Catho-l)o blshopa begins meeting at the Vatican Willy Brandt, leader of West German Social Democratic Party J Ootober 5-11 is Fire Prevention Week 1....Hugh Scott 2.....Carl Stokes a-Mayor, Cleveland b-President, Tanzania O-Senate Republican 3.. ...50.vanna Phouma 4.. ...Maurice Stana 5.. ...Julius Nyerere e-Premler, Laos d-U. a . Secretary of Commerce HOW DO YOU RATI? ) (Scot* Each Side of Quia Separately) 71 to 60 points - Good. 91 to 100 polnti • TON SCORE! 61 le TO palnti - Fair. •I to 90 polnti - Excellent. 40 or Under???- HW FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION in what way* do newspapers act as “guard lane” THIS WEEK’S CHALLENGE! no Kell 10-6-69 1VEC, Inc., Medium, Wlteemln Name the Chief Juetice of the Unijed States Supreme Court. . Save This Practice Examination! . STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exami. J-01IR-6 IM'9 ll’MV*9 <0’9 «r-P <0*1 >0*3 H*t WltD 10RMA9 laSjns -a uamM nnuiiivun M ‘P'9 jH »’l ‘III 1BY4 4 i uiJJfM ilDNlilYHO a-g le-y ie-g !p-g lq-i :|| XBVd q-S I<|bjooujoo |e|oog 'i|ijooui*o u»injjqo-$p is«| lo-g tq-| i| XMV4 ANSWERS TO TODAY'S NEWS QUlf ■1 We have faith in Pontiac We're proud to announce installation of a million-dollar com* puter complex at our main office. When it's completed later this year, it will help us serve Community customers even betted. It will also, be the latest in a long line of CNB investments in downtown Pontiac that already total over $3 million. Community Natiorial has been part of Pontiac since 1933. And now that we're Oakland County's largest bank with 130,000 customers at 21 offices in a dozen communities— downtown Pontiac is stUl our home. We have faith in this city. And as the items at right demonstrate, we're willing to back our faith with major financial investment. • Community National Bank Main Office Building • Chief Pontiac Annex • Instalment Loan Annex (including Auto Loans, Personal Loans, FHA Loans, and Master Charge) • Auto Bank, on Wide Track Drive • and now, main office computer installation. National I Bank Munson Shakes. 'Daze' to Dazzle Browns THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBER 6< 1969 C—1 Twins Send Miller V Against Baltimore ST. PAULrMINNEAPOLIS (UPI) -The Minnesota Twins, backed into the corner by two extra-winning defeats, called on Bob Miller with a so-so 5-5 record In the hope of preventing the Baltimore Orioles from sweeping the American League title playoffs In three straight today. The Orioles go with Jim Palmer, who compiled a more impressive 16-4 record in'regular season play as the best-of-five pennant showdown switched to the Twins’ park. , * < W ' : W jt Before heading here after a 1-0 WALTER HAGEN Golf Great 'the Ha Dies at 76 TRAVERSE CITY (AP) - Charles Walter Hagen, this father of modern professional golf and one of its most colorful stars on and off the course died of cancer about midnight Sunday. He was 78. Hagen had been in • coma about 10 days and ho died bi his estate here. Hagen underwent throat surgery in January 1967, third such operation since a cancerous larynx was removed in 19M. One of “the Haig’s” last public appearance came in August 1967 when many of the great and near-great of golf gathered In this northwest Michigan resort for a testimonial sponsored by his -local friends. MILLION DOLLARS Among them was current star Arnold Palmer who, in a moving tribute to a man he idolized, said, “If It were not for you, Walter, this dinner tonight would be downstairs in the pro shop and not in the ballroom.” “The Haig," as he was reverently known throughout the golf world was one of the first men In- sport to earn more than a million dollars, of how he made it—and spent it are legion. “I never wanted to be a millionaire. I Just wanted to live like one,” Hagen wrote in his autobiography. “He’s in golf to live—not make a living,” Chick Evans, a former U.S. Open winner, has said. Just Under 6 feet, with weather-beaten features and hair slicked down in the fashion of his era’s matinee idols, Hagen won the U.8. Open in 1914, repeated In 1919 and finished in the money until his playing days were over. He was the only man eves .4b-win the Professional Golfers Association title five times or four times In a row. He won it In 1932, 1924,1925,1926,1927. In 1922, he became the first American-born pro to win the British Open with a victory that spelled the beginning of the end to British domination of the sport. He won that title tour tidies. JONES ROtrrED Hagen also whipped the legendary amateur Bobby Jones 12-up and ll-holes-to-play in a fe-hfte mitch. It brought him the biggest purse ever won by a pro until then—|7,809. He bought Jones a $1,000 watch, Although the triumph seemed to establish “The Haig” as world champion, he shrugged off the label He said the match showed only that a champion could beat another champion oh any given day if one was “up” and the other wasn’t. ' (Continued ON Page C*7, Col. 1> defeat In 11 Innings at Baltimore’s Memorial Stadhftn Sunday, Manager Billy Martin acknowledged his Twins had thelir backs to the wall but grimly insisted the picture could change on their home grounds. The Orioles weren’t making any premature victory claims either. “We still have to win one more ball game,” pitcher Dave McNally said after blanking Minnesota with three hits. LINE-UP CHANGES Martin Juggled his line-up for today’s contest, naming John Roseboro to replace George Mitterwald as catcher and sending Ted Uhlaender to take over the left field spot from Bob Allison. The Twins sorely need some hitting punch. They were held to four hits in their 4-3, 12-inning loss Saturday and held hitless by McNally in the last seven Innings of Sunday’s struggle. W „ w' w Pamer has a 1-9 record against the Twins this year and also spun a no-hitter against Oakland on Aug. 13. The trig right-hander completed 11 of the 23 games he started and compiled a 2.34 earned run average, the best of Baltimore’s starting rotation. Miller, a 39-year-old right hander, saw service with St. Louis, Houston, the New York Mets and Los Angeles in the Na-tional League before being picked Up bjr the Twins last year. He made 37 relief appearances and only 22 starts as Minnesota drove to the Western Division title. ★ * W The Orioles, winnlngest team In baseball this year, captured the second playoff contest when pinch-hitter Curt Motion slapped a single into right center with two, out in the 11th to score Boog Powell with the only run of the game. They Won the Opener wheiLPaul Blair laid down a perfect squeeze bunt to bring across Marie Belanger from third with two out in the 12th. Lions' QB 'Take in 2821 Comeback Win AP Wlriphot* COLLINS GROUNDED — Detroit’s Lem Barney (29) applies the brakes to Cleveland's Gary Collins after the big flanker hauled in a pass from quarterback Biir Nelsen that covered 21 yards and gave the Browns a first down at the Detroit nine-yard line. Moving in to help Barney on the first-period play is Tomm/ Vaughn. Detroit came from behind to win In Cleveland, 28-21. Pearson Nips Petty NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (UPI) -David Pearson of Spartanburg, S.C. outsped Richard Petty with four laps remaining to win the Wilkes 490 NASCAR grand national stock car race. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press CLEVELAND — Bill Munson became the “take charge” quarterback of the Detroit Lions yesterday, after many weeks of “ifs," “huts” and “maybes” as to whether he could do it. 7TTW------*---*---- The lanky quarterback, who was In a complete daze and almost knocked out on the (second play of opening series, guided the Lions from a frustrating first half to a 28-21 victory over the Cleveland Browns before 82,933 Municipal Stiadium fans. “It was the best two periods of football we’ve had In a long time,” said coach Joe Schmidt,” Munson mixed the plays beautifully, Farr and Eddy worked well together and our defense came back and showed what they are capable of doing.” W W W On his second play from scrimmage, Munson was hit hard by Jack0 Gregory and in the pile up he was kicked in the head. After an incomplete pass and a punt, Munson went off the field and coach Schmidt noted, “He was In such a daze from being hit he didn’t even know what playhecalled.”—--------- ----------- Muns and finjall /19 minutes to go In the half. With six minutes left, the Lions started a march, Munson hit Saunders, Earl McCullouch Larry Watkins- with passes and |ly climaxed the march with a 13 yard toss for the TD to McCullouch, with .1:24 left. Errol Mann made It 7-7. wee The final 73 seconds of the half had the Lions reeling in frustration. Bob Scott returned the ensuing kickoff 65 yards to the Lions' 36. pir the third play, Nelsen’s pass was Intercepted by Lem Barney three yards deep in the end zone. The shifty cornerback cut toward the left sidelines and as he made a move to shift the ball and elude a Browns’ tackier, the ball squirted out of his hand and Fred Hoaglin recovered on the Detroit 23. DAYLIGHT AHEAD -------------1-- « “I had clear daylight all the way,” said Barney,” I don’t know how the ball got loose.” At any rate, Nelson immediately passed to Gary Collins for the $3 yard touchdown with 25 seconds left in the half. KIIMmW lb J O 0 ( (Tovar cfl» 10 10 BufeiD HI I IC 10 00 Blair cf 4000 1000 FRoMmn rf 10 10 wiiva it 4 01 6 Fowall 1b 1110 Alllaon If J 0 0 6 BRoMMn 3b 4 0 3 0 Raai* 1b *4 000 DJohnion lb 4 o 1 o Mltiarwld c 3 0 1 o Mannar at 10 0 5 Cardenai w 4 0 0 0 ifcMBrn C 10 0 0 Boswell p 4 0 0 0 Honolwn 0 0 0 0 0 Parmotkl p 0(00 Motion ph 10 11 McNally p 4 0 0 0 Total . 14 0 30 Total Mil 1 0 0 0-0 ■Itlmora 1?.' LM» Oawna It " 14 Cd Rlcif Downs BmM| .;... i ) fiBBU'::::::::::::: sW J N«t Xuimno 144 7f Nat Baulng ,..../ 1S7 IIS pffm . smii-s fo.iM .., Punt* and Avcraoe ...... e-35.4 a-ds.e | Fumblac and Loaf. 3 M NnaHlaa and Yard* 7-44 S-SS AS Wlraphala KEEPING WATCH -New York Mets’ Cleon Jones (21) heads toward second base while watching the ball hit by teammate Ed Kranepool bounce out of the glove of Atlanta’s Felix Millan in yes-, terday's National League playoff game in Atlanta. The play came In the.first inning and the Mets went on to win, 11-6, Met Batters Take Up Slack When Star Pitchers Falter NEW YORK (UPI) - The New York Mets, who came up with a batting punch when their star pitchers failed, send rookie pitcher Gary Gentry, 13-12, to the mound today in hopes of scoring a knockout over the Atlanta Braves In the “third round” of the National League playoffs. * w w Pat Jarvis, 13-11, another righthander, was named to pitch for the Braves by Manager Luman Harris, who admitted his club has “one loot in the grave” after losing the two opening games of the series In Atlanta. ■ J * * * Is to wrap this up as soon as possible,” proclaimed Mats’ Manager Gil Hodges after the Mets slugged their way to an 11-6 decision In Sunday’s game at Atlanta. w w w And, with their howling band of New York faithful on hand as .the series switches here lot the third game — ahd any more that might be necessary after that.in the best-of-five series, the Mets now are solid favorites to add the overall league pennant to their Eastern Division Ex-Spartan Injured PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Defensive back Jimmy Kaye of the Philadelphia Eagles Woke hli right arm Sunday in a 36-7 loss to the Dallas Cowboys while attempting to tackle Cowboy quarterback Roger Staubach. Raye,- a second-year man from Michigan State, is in his first season with the Eagles after coming from L6s Angeles in a trade. title and qualify for the World Series starting Saturday. - The Mets tore into Braves starter Ron Reed like they never heard of his 18 wins this season did thought he was still Just a pro basketball plager. After getting one run In the first inning on a bases-loaded, bad hop single by Ed Kranepool, they kayoed Reed In a three-run second Inning that included a two-run homer by Tommy Agee. They added two more in the third and two in the fourth and Jerry Koosman, the snappy southpaw who won 17, had an 8-9 lead. •WWW Amazingly he couldn’t last even with that. The Braves nicked him for one run In the fourth and then flattened him with five in the fifth, Including a three-run homer by Hank Aaron. That five-run burst had narrowed the gap to 9-6, but a two-run homer by Cleon Jones in the seventh wrapped it up. NBW YORK ^ ATLANTA K1 «hrhbl abrhbl Aon cf 4 111 Mlllon lb 1110 : Garrall 3b I f f f SonialM ft 4 0 cjontl II 1 3 3 3 HAjran rf 1113 V Shamiky rf I if I Com If * ? I 0 dinar rf 0 I11 Cipodi lb 4 1*1 Bo'wall lb J?l3«oy.rlb 40 11 McGrow p 0 00 0 Odor c 4 00 0 Knmpool lb 4 in 1 Oarrldo » 4 0 1 0 Gratae 3 1 0 0 8"WOO 9 5 9 8 Horralion BR.ft 111 B9IL* *58 8 fe » m _tev!|ii PipiiftSt , ■on, COHMji . HOrralran, SAW Jlii 0.4000* IB-A0bb 1, OirrOfl, C.Jona«, - ,. h IR M 10 fTiylor : I ft f 0 0 0 | P= |! . 0Upiho'w . h ill j J | l 1 "te. A- 10,370. f * V # * ' The Way the 70’s are going to be , ^ . ** * . 1970 Pontiac-Tempest-Grand Prix See and Drive Them Now! LET ONE OF OUR 17 SALESMEN SHOW YOU THE WAY! 1970 Pontine Catalina Hardtop Coupe 1910 Grand Prix (JO) 1970 Pontioo Oatallno hardtop Coupe tOP TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE! fi .. •, '. ! the Pwtftat Rebut Store 65 UNIVERSITY AT WIDE TRACK DR. -PONTIAC 333-7951 - Mon. - Thur*. 8:30-9; Tuoi., Wed., Frl. - 8:30-6; Sot.-0:30-5 e—2 iiK. mm 11.U' 1‘H^s.s. MONDAY', OCTOflKR 6, 1969_ Vikings Put Dimmer on Packers Snow Sparkles in Ram Win LOS ANGELES (AP)—Roman down passes from Bill Klim Gabriel threw four touchdown to Dan AbramoWlcs from 12 passes, three to swift receiver and to Andy Livingston for. Jack Snow, and the Los An- to Dan Abramowict from 12 out geles Bams defrocked the New I and to Andy Livingston for 16 | Orleans Saints Sunday 36-17, to yards, remain unbeaten in the Coastal short Bookie Tom Dempsey, who, was born with a deformed right Division of the National Foot-I ball League. The Ram quarterback fired (scoring strikes of 35, 24, and 74 to Snow who gained a total of 133 yards with the recep- PACKER TRAPPED — Green Bay quar-. terback Bart Starr is about to be dropped by Minnesota Vikings’ end Jim Marshall for a six-yard loss during the third quarter of their game in Minneapolis,- Minn., yesterday. The Vikings blitzed Starr seven times and tossed him for losses of 56 yards. Minnesota won, 16-7. \ ^ Lions Stop Browns, 28-21 (ContinuedFrom PageC-l) -rushing in the first half, fin-i After Weger intercepted The Lions had only 92 total|ished with64, while Eddy picked | another Nelsen pass on the dmim yards in the first half and up 55 more in 11 carries. Detroit 36 with 5:06 left, finished with a total of 301 for (turning POINT H fltt the game. The Browns had 209 tnllbe first half and finished foot, kicked a 55-yard field goal for the Saints, second only to] the one of 56 yards booted by Bert Rechlchar for the Baltimore Colts against the Chicago * * * (Bears Sept- 26, 1953. New Orleans, now 0-3 In the I ^ took the opening Capitol Division, scored touch-jk|ckoff and marched 79 yards] in six plays for a touchdown, setting the pattern for the afternoon before 54,879 in Manorial! Coliseum. Lester Josephson contributed a 15-yard run and ani (16-yard gain on a pass from °jj Gabrielson and Snow,addedthe 7j final punch with his 35-yard •’ pass reception. NFL Standings Cl$vilin3r "T'T 0 Vtt St. loult ............ 2 2 i i .4 7 mJJ 2 o with 264 forthe game. Nick Eddy, who came into the gaipp |n Ah* second half, was thi running spark for the Lions. F|rr who had only 11 yards The turning point came with seven minutes left in the third quarter when on an attempted field goal, from Lions’ 21 the high snap from center rolled to midfield where Mike Weger recovered. Htx-urgh capital DWiMon ......10 0 i.ooo i 1 1 1 .500 I ..... ISO .333 I .* y IS i WESTERN CONFERKNCB Caotfol Olyuw* praan Bay J 1 # ■*}’ ; 4 3 0 il Olvlaia 3 0 0 ’ t 0 .333 2 0 .333 45 30 Red Wings, Rangers^VS r.T^‘ fettl© to Deadlock j >n,e Lions' defense then « - , | started to pressure Nelsen and fatW YORK (API—Two goals when in (Bar third period gave the Do- “ trfllt Red Wings a 3-3 tie with Munson picked up three first Naw dowps in ball control and the' game ended on the Browns’ 24. | oatroit “Coming back like that really cwcaSi was a team effort and it showed the morale of this team;” said Schmidt, who also admitted that Farr and Eddy, “could be the starting combination we’ve been hoping for*? . WaihTngion 17, San Fronclicp 17. ___ _ * * * - , ILSi^f«,SL and M^n’s conversion madeTtj The Lions we now in a three] ggjfif0r'«"* 21-14 with 3:33 left in the period. “**w 371 FumblOi loot I 0 0 KiullloO 10 0» iMnt 10 0 0—17 Anoclts 12 10 14 B-34 at-Snow 35 p»*» from Gabrltl (Got* Yards Li Naw 0 Los An Botro't M. 'Clovtlond 31 the New York Rangers Sunday night in Madison Square Gar- Wayne COnnelly scored twice In the Wings’ second-last exhibition contest and Pete Stemkow-ski picked up the tying tally. Scoring for New York were Dave Balon, Jean Ratelle and Bob Nevin. Hie Wings close out their exhibition schedule Wednesday in Boston ahd open the regular season Saturday in Detroit, Toronto. Joe Robb recovered Cleveland 31 On his 5th rush of the series, Eddy drove over a hole opened by Chuck Walton for a one yard touchdown and the game was tied with the kick. way tie with Minnesota and Green -Bay for the Central Division lead with 2-1 records; and will face the Packers,1 Bears and Vikings in order in their next three games. EH NO—Livingston 14 (Dempatv kitk) ' NO—fg Oimptcy ( LA—Truax 1 pan I Mtt kick) ' la—Snow 74 NAMATH SCORES — New York Jets’ quarterback Joe Namath (12) with Emerson Boozer (32) running interference, cuts around left end to score his first touchdown of the season in the third period of the game with Boston. New York won,.23-14. Unitas to Mackey ID Gives Colts' Victory 4 Field Goals by Cox Help 19-7 Victory MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (AP) — Fred Cox kicked four field goals and an opportunistic Minnesota Vikings defensa throttled Green Bay Sunday, pacing thy Vikings to a 19-7 victory over the Packers, j A seven-yard touchdown pass (from Bart- Starr to Dave Hampton with five seconds left in the I game cost the Vikings their first shutout ip 115 Nations! Football League games.' The win pulled the Vikings Into a three-way tie for first with Green Bay and Detroit in the NFL’s Central Division, all with 2-1 records. STARR HIT The Vikings’ front four threw Starr seven times for 58 yards in losses. The Packers got past midfield twice. On > the first occasion, the Packers had a first down on the Minnesota 13 early in the third quarter. Blit Starr was dumped on successive plays and Mike Mercer eventually missed a field goal from the 42. The' Minnesota defense recovered two fumbles and intercepted one pass to help the Vikings teir»0- Flrat B3 Los Angftlts >1 San Frxndico PhUadtiphI*1 a? Boffimoro Pittsburgh at Naw York Dick LeBeau then Intercepted a Nelsen pass at the Browns* 44 and with Eddy and Farr picking up the yardage, and featured by a 10 yard run by Munson to the two, the Lions scored with Farr going over. The second half was filled with penalties and fisticuffs Hie Detroit pre-season record with players on both sides being stands at 6-3-2. {ejected. Field Goals Help Jets; Oilers Whip Bills, 28-14 Mam Jilt CMtMfoll Cockrt' ' city-Cockroft kick Dat—Wright It pass front Munson Mottnjtjtjli Dot—Edvy 1 run, (Monn kick) Oot-Farr 1 run (Mann kick) AFL Standings ■ASTERN DIVISION 3 0 .MO 77 Western otvtsi ,r#m ®.br... io» ATLANTA JAP) - Johnny! Atlanta took a 14-7 lead with iron, oabriat coos- unUas rallied'Baltimore’s sput- 40 seconds left in the half but tering offense in the fourth Baltimore came right back on a quarter Sunday to a 21-14 Na- 92-yard kickoff return by rookie tional Football League victory Jim Duncan with 22 seconds re-over Atlanta as the Falcons maining. failed to take advantage of nu- eotts Fokons merous opportunities. Ftr»t downs V F f . Rushing yardage . 104 134 * * * Passing yartfag* 154 111 Unitas hit John Mackey for a pm! v*rd'0* 14.744 six-yard touchdown in thermit*, ,0,t 4“ i M, game’s only score in the second -*•’** half. The two teams had battled SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — to a 14-14 draw at intermission 7 3 3-10 Minn—Osborn 3 run (Cox kick). Mkin-FQ Cox 41. Minn—FO Cox 32. .. GB—Hampton 7 post from Stsrr (Mor- RedskinsHit on Late Pass to Gain Tie ?S »* J! Sonny Jurgensen flipped a four-]with two of the TDs coming In i city I [ ! :2S ’1? §iyard *cortofc pass to Jerry]the final 40 seconds. i 1 Son''Sfio^VCfhelnnoll14 Sunday's ttssvtt Now York iTlotnn 14 Houston 20, Iwolo 14 , Kansas City 21, Donvor 13 mwdoy't Omm Boston at Bunow . Cincinnati at Now York Son Dlogo at Miami Sunday's Bomoi Houston at Kansos City U. S. Seniors Winners Over Canada Team ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (JR — Curtis Person of Memphis, Tenn., shot a 2-over-par 74 and steered the United States to a ] 21-stroke victory over Canada in ] the World Senior Golf championship Saturday. A. : W The American amateurs retained the trophy, inaugurated , two years ago at Pinehurst, N. NEWTON, Mass. (AP)— usual cranky knees but showing c., with a score of 908. Broadway Joe Namath picked no sign of the chronic problem,! Canada had 929 in second apart Boston pass defenses in passed for one touchdown and!place ^ Great Gritain-Ireland establishing a strong running later shocked the Patriot* by! was third with 931. game and Jim Turner booted running for his first six points of * * * ;cost the bookies three field goals Sunday as the the season. 1 Four players — all over 55 j thousands of dollars. New York Jets handed the Pa-] Turner kicked ' field goalsiyears — made up each of IS j *. * i triots a fourth straight Ameri- from 17, 24 and 13 yards out as teams. The be^t three scores at] Prince de Galles, the -5-i can Football League defeat 23- the -Super Bowl champion Jets] the end of each day counted in | favorite in the field of 26 Sweepstakes to Favorite NEWMARKET, England M -Favorite Prince de Galles won the Cambridgeshire Handicap Sptufday, made fortunes for persons all over the world and 0 mo 04 in Smith with 26 seconds laft FORrF punt V* 'the game to give the Washing- ™^”?” , ton Redskins a 17-17 tie with1 The Colts’ winning score was the San Francisco 4«ers Sun- m «P when the Falcons failed day. Washington missed ai. . VB „ VHHH tempt for victory with two sec- f^r-yard lrne. Forced to punt, onds left a 56-yard'field goal after calling for a fair catch On a punt. The kick by Curt Knight appeared to have the distance but was wide to the left. past from Barry (Elfor * All—Colloy 3 run letter kick) SiV^ - - ! - — ClMOlt _ JL TW.1 Bears' Lead Erased on Late Aerial to field a David Lee punt and al-at. lowed it to roll dead on their .... „ec- The Redskins tried Co,ts took over on Atlanta’s 34 and Unitas took over from1 there. I The tie evened Washington’s National Football League record at 1-1-1. The 49ers are 0-2-1 in NFL play, and, counting exhibition games fills season, are winless Washington’s tieing score was Baltimore scored, first in the Opening quarter, when Bubbn Smith recovered a fumble by Jim Butler at the Falcon 22. Unitas set tip the touchdown with an 18-yard pass to Mackey at the one, and Tom Matte carried it in two plays later. The Falcons took the kickoff and drove 77 yards in 12 plays. - ^ - climaxing yrith * six-yard pass set up when San Francisco aaie- . m „ y i,__", v, ty Alvin Randolph was called from Bob to Junlor Cof- NEW YORK (AP) - Fran Tarkenton, punished much of the second half by Chicago's brusing defense, threw , a 26-yard touchdown ioJot M°rr Iron with 59 seconds left Sunday and brought the New York Giants a 28-24 victory ova the Bears in a National Football League game. Tarkenton's fourth touchdown pass of the game—the other three were In the first half when New Yak built a 21-7 lead-came a little less than two min-Cowboys' Calvin Hill utes afta Mac Percival had giv-|en Chicago a 24*21 lead with a Paces 3ff-7 Win 25-yard Held goal. Dallas Rookie Rides Eagles PHILADELPHIA UR - Super rookie Calvin Hill played only the first half, but fils 163 yards running, receiving and passing, lead the Dallas Cowboys to an easy 38-7 victory ova the Phils The Beas had tied the game late in the third perfod when quarterback Jack Concannon plunged Into the end zone from file one after setting up the. score by running 31 yards on a u n 101 d ] for pass intoference at the V Redskin two-yard-line. Three 1 (plays lata, Jurgensen hit Smith Namath, playing with Rookie's FG Ties Raiders for Dolphins (snapped - a two-game losing his1 streak and evened their record — 2-2. r— • Rushing Yardags Passing yardaga Return yardaga t Pumbias tost Yards Penalized Naw York Baatan NY—FG J. Turner the overall score. David Goldman, Dallas, Tex., won the individual title with 75-73-74-76-298. George Bigelow of Canada was second with 80-73-76-76—305. The Old Course stretches 6,-581 yads and carries a par of TOM..orJ3«-3«-ra. ridden by England's Frank Durr, took the lead one-quarta of a mile from home and won the ltt-mile test by four lengths. President Nixon 20-17 in a heartbreak- First Setback for Bengals §0—Sal Ian (CappHletti kicKj j NY—Lammons 10 pass from Namath (J.Turnar kick) MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Rookie u Turn* rMe'0 Karl Kremser kicked a 39-ytrd bo—None* * run'lcupp-n.m kick) field goal to give the winless A“J4,5*d ___ Miami Dolphlm a 20-20 tie idth HOUS33 POM tflMilak kek) _ Cnl—Wolloeo I pan Irom Concannon Pgrclv* Iklck) NY—Hartmann 17 pom Bullilo mni m . «-ya,1rS3!>|/llxk>(Mlngo M pom from Hirt (aokkon Philadelphia gained a quick lead in the first period as Snead passed 38 yards to Gary Ball-man for a first down at the Dallas 35/ Tom Woodeshick ran fa 19, and after Leroy Keyes picked up twoj Snead'tossed to Jackson Just Inside the right end zone sideline marka for the touchdown. S Pimm ,Cb**mi .V.W-aoS 4^11 i-i) I—Danny II efvgriuck) Chl—Conconnon 1 run (Pordvol kick) Chi—Po Poreiypi 74 - J irrloon 74 pam from Tarkonwn kick) 19 Gridders Ailing on Holy Cross 11 WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) -nineteen Holy Cross football playas, Including seven stert-ers, tf e victims of hepatitis, the college said Sunday. V . Holy Cross head coach BUI Whltton said “Ws’rs past the point of no return. We jiat can’t play undei* these circumstances. Hie healthy players are affected mentally.’’' Holy Cross director of Athlet-Vlncent G, Dougherty said welting toT results of the kSP3*^**"14 H" ,rm •"•**» "••Sef I blood testa, but said ha may aak ho-hfiijtioi rocovarou tumble in one officials of the Essterh College " Sb (dory kkk) , „ Athletic Association and the Na* 47 poi. U Morton (C|.rk gg Collegiate Athlatio Asso-77 POM from Motion (Clark olaUon fo Wily# th| rult gnd Si-I pom (ram Morion (ci.ri. frgghmen to play vari)ty w*'4 ’ ball. a.,*.. yr.w«i» as maul ‘fei1 i|X4;'>wiiw Ll-1 m TEE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTORER f, m4\ m \vm V- '.V*A I WINGS CUPPED - Detroit goalie Roy Edward* ia a split-second late as the puck slides under his stick and into the net for a goal by New York Rangers’ Jean Ratelle (not shown) In the second period of the. game in New York last night. In on the play are Detroit’s Matt Ravlteh (18) and an unidentified teammate. They played to a M tie. WOLL Falls to St. James Dales' league leadPadded Wigman, Ramson Pact 28-6 Victor/ ~ FerndBle Sf. Jaine»"moved Romeo No Match for Unbeaterr Utica The Chiefs of Utica High School rolled to their third consecutive Oakland-A league victory and fourth win overall by . criHMnB ROnieu SatutUay night, one step closer to the cham- m pionship of the Northwest H'alfback Hlch Redd was the Parochial league Saturday. The Dales increased their winning string to four by defeating Waterford Our Lady of Lakes, 28-8. Frank Wigman and Tony Ramson were the two big guhs for tho Dales running attack which racked up Zl5 yards as compared to WOLL’s 184 total. Wigman scored on a long 55 yard run for one tally and flip ped a 14 yard pass to Tony Bieliskl for the other while Ramson scored on 15 and 45 yard runs. Only one other team In the Northwest league has managed to score more points against St. James. FEW POINTS Orchard Lake St. Mary, In the opening same of the season, tallied for eight points against St. James but still came out on the short end of a 40-8 final score. Jim Tracey picked up WOLL's touchdown midway in the second period after St/ James had taken a 8-0 lead on Wigman’s 55 yard run. The Lakers drive originated on their own 35 yard line and continued to the Dales four from where Tracey went over. ★ * * St. James picked lip steam and struck for two more touchdowns nhd a successful conversion in the remaining minutes to hold a 22-0 lead at halftime. > '★ * Wigman connected on a 14 yard pass to Bieiski for the first score and Ramson completed a St. James 70 yard drive with a 15 yard run for the second. STATISTICS lino . •Him Panamas and Yard* fsj—Frank Wigman 55 run (Dava ohnson pan) fsj -Tony Slalikl IS paw from Wig-nan (run failed) fsj -Tony Ramson IS run (Soldi pass) FSJ—Tony Ramson 45 run |ran fallad) SCORR BY OUARTt WOLL Its t s—ss a s a a- s strong man for Utica as he garnered three touchdowns with runs of 13, 14 and .eight yards, plus one two-point conversion Romeo, which was hoping to keep—its—one-game—winning streak alive, now finds itself Roeper Loses to Flint 11 with a 1-2 league standing overall. The Bulldogs, who were kept to a minus 49 yards in rushing, yards Titans, Eaglets Suffer Loop 0LSM Is Fourth df Farmington 8-0 Warrior Streak Ends Dwyer galloped to Pontiac’s 42 before being hit, but a 15 Always tough Birmingham!scrambling after the ball. Hei On the next play Oatig yard holding penalty put the’Brother Rice found 11 i e 1 f was tackled on the 15. .McGowan crashed bis wayWfr ball back on the Monarch’s 41!knocked out of the lead position! The Warriors drove to Cen-|and McGowan’s pass to John where the game ended two in the Catholic league’s central tral’s five yard line but then|Rayn put the Detroit toatiTTn plays later. (bracket Sunday afternoon when]lost the scoring chance on a'fwmt. :*/ HOPES AUVE Farmington Our Lady of Sor- I rSMk!?iitS(t,t|lehopCgaiiVf,n| Rice, which hid shared the the Northwest league and four Mntra <,iviaioil lead wMh Notre game wipning streak going by^ after thrM wing Mw finds itself tied with Catholic Detroit Catholic Central! fumble, the Warriors, 144). blanking Orchard Lake Mary. Only | defensive unit enameu tn e; Notre Dame is only one-half Farmington team to remain ;game in front of the second undefeated as twice ii> the finaljplace team8 foIiowing an u tie Central for second place behind Lane erjthe Irish, enabled the St. Francis Cabrlnl spotted Pontiac Catholic an early six point lead on a first quarter touchdown before roaring back in the final period to slip past the Titans, 7-8 Sunday. In other games, Detroit St. Rita pulled a 20-14 upset over Utica St. Lawrence, and Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows trimmed Orchard Lake St. Mary, 8-0, in the second division’s Northwest league. CabrtnlV win lifts th e Monarch* standings In the first division’s A-West bracket to 3-1 while Pontiac Catholic’s record now stands at 1-3. ! _ I v atp gin v minutes of the game Orchard againgt DeLaSalle late rally Lake threatened but was denied * * The Titans were observing]scoring, their first annual Mom’s Day Neither team could sue cessfully penetrate the other’s defensive line until Orchard Lake gathered momentum and drove to Sorrow’s five-yard llne| late in the third period. With a first and goal situation, John Hejka plunged for a two yard gain and was attempting to crash his way sent Central’s would-be punter through the line to score when he fumbled the ball. Farmington recovered and started its own drive which resulted in the game winning touchdown 10 Brother Rice Upended, 14-0 Flint Holy Rosary completed an all important two-point conversion'by running in the final period to nip Bloomfield Hills Roeper Saturday night, 14-12. The Roughriders came back to score and tie the game at 8-6 late in the first period after Holy Rosary had taken the lead. A 15 yard pass from quarterback Gary Smith to Dan Whitney put Flint ahea<^ Roeper climaxed^ a 60 yard drive, following the kick, with Greg Carter on the receiving end of a five yard pass from Dale Scarlett. The Roughriders increased I their lead to 12-6 when Scarlett connected with-Carter on a 50 yard pass play Just six plays Into the second half. With four minutes remaining in the game, rosary gathered steam and bulled 70 yards downfleld with Dan Whitney going the final five yards. Rick Calvin's run put the game away for Holy Rosary when Pete Sweeney connected to Sieve Dzuris late in the fourth period for Romeo’s only touchdown. Utica rushed for a total of 325 yards, while picking up a total of 15 first downs. honoring the mothers of each team player, and almost pulled the game out in the last few minutes but for the alertness of the Cabrlnl defensive backfield. With three minutes remaining and trailing 7-6, Catholic took Cabrini’s kickoff and marched tn the Monarch’* 49 yarri line where Glen Chappel picked off Joe Spadafore’s pass Intended for Barry Burch and raced to ]the 37 before being dropped. On the second play Dave Boyer recovered Cabrini’s fumble on the 50 yard line giving Outside of an early scoring opportunity in the first period which evaporated with a lost fumble, Brother Rice’s offensive drive was not to go beyond Catholic Central’s 35 yard line. FIRST BREAK Rice started fast and received the first break of the game when a bad snap from center CtaMc Central tank an M J lead in the second period when „ * 4®.y®rd. dr,!'e Bob JeSs intercepted a Brother Rice pass on the Warrior’s 18‘n.th-e endzone fnm two and raced to the two yard! „ , .... „ . where he was downed. | Halfback Mike Pa*> —.— ------------------------—on runs of 9, 63 and 15 yiras Saturday in leading Dedibit (Country Day (34) to a 26-6 tfe. oessions rOSTS tory-over Hawken. Jlm Thorsen — . _ . , intercepted a pass and rambled Racing Triumph 47 yards for the other six-pointer. Mike Lucow collected a SALEM, Ind, (AP) - Sam two‘point conver,ion « • Sessions charged past Larry Dickson with two laps to go Sunday and* won the 30-lap U.S. Auto Club Spring car feature at Salem Speedway. ■ * * *r Rollle Beal was second, Bill Puterbaugh third and Dickson fell to fourth after leading for ft laps. Flrtt Down* Ruthlng First Down* Potting Pint Down* Punt* and Avorago Fumblaa • No. Lott Panama* and Yard* . SCORING PLAYS MORS BY OUARTBR* The Chiefs, behind Redd’s Dwyer-three tallies, Bruce Harms -26-1 yard Tun and Jeff Dykestffs 24 yard pass interception return, rolled to a 4(H) advantage at halftime and then scored twice in the third period and once in the final. Romeo’s lone score came after the Bulldogs bail, stayed Utica’s offensive attempt and took possession of the ball on the Chieftain's 30 yard line. Two plays later Sweeney connected with Dzuris for the score. Plrat Downs Rushing ... First Downs Passing ... First Downs Panamas . Yards Rushing-Passing Passas Intarcaotad KORIN* PLAYS U—Bruca Harms M run (Rick Radd 14 tun (Gary Baglnskl run (Dava Hall run) U—Bruca Bramman SCORB BY eUABTSBS S g S 4- 4 opportunity. Spadafore hit fullback Mike Albrecht on a short pass which moved the ball up to the Cabrlnl 45 and then attempted a long pass to end dlen Boyer which was intercepted by Jim Shrine Drops Out of Lead Detroit St. Ambrose knocked Royal Oak Shrine out of first place In the Catholic league’s first division double-A bracket by handing the Knights an 18-8 defeat Sunday afternoon. The throwing arm o f quarterback Mark Sapoliga proved to be the undoing of the Shrine secondary backfield. ★ ★ ★ Sapoliga connected on passes to Chris Horvat and Joe Bom-marlto for 57, 15 and on* yard to pace the Cavaliers scoring attack. KORIN* PLAYS Dal. S.A.—Chrla Horvat S7 pan from ark Sapoliga (run fallad) Dal, S.A.—Chris Horvat 15 pass from ipollga (run fallad) Dei. S.A.—Jos Bommarlto ono pass from Sapoliga (run fallad) R.O.S.—Bob Brady nlna pass from im Swartz (Swartz run) SCORR BY QUARTERS . Amhrosa ...........I 4 S 4-11 irlna ...............0 S • S- S Lancer quarterback Greg Hurst hit Dan McGrath on a long 55 yard pass for the touchdown ST. LAWRENCE FALLS Detroit St. Rita rushed back from an 8-6 halftime deficit to post its ‘first win in the Northwest Parochial league by upending favored UUca Lawrence, 20-14.--------- Lawrence went to an 8-0 lead early in the first' period when defensive end Jim Valin fell on a loose ball in the Rita end zone after a blocked punt attempt. Find Downs Passing .. First Downs PanalMM . Yards Rushing-Passing Ponaltlas and Yards SCORING PLAYS PC—K.ill. Doan Summarvllla kick) SCORB BY OUARTRRS First Downs First Downs F . .. BHPMLmie SCORING PLAYS FOLS—Grog Hurst 55 pass from Dan McGrath (MCOralh run)' Buying something nice for the home is fun when people like you... people who want better thin^ to happen now. ASK GAC for shopping cash. LOANS UP TO 91000 GAC FINANCE CORPORATION PONTIAC 3444 W. Highland Road • ROCHESTER 20* South Main I SCORR BY OUARTBR! I I I S—SS UNION LAKE 8280 Coolay Lako Road • ROMEO 67126 Van Dyke Hoad First Downs Ft *{SEsfl Etrsg Conor so peso tram ocorwn (ran foilod) . - hr—Gary Smith 11 past from Dan tiltnoy (run nlffdl- HR—bon WMtnoy ono yard run (CGI-n run) SCORR 1Y QUARTERS oeper ................,| • I t-lt Holy Rttary ...........4 • 4 1—14 Cranbrook's Win Streak Halted by Mt. Pleasant Mt. Pleasant handed Craft-brook its first football defeat in three starts Saturday night by pipping the Cranes, 8-6. Tha Oilers bolted to an *4) lead early In the first period when Howard Delink capped a 60-yard drlva by tossing a 20-yard acorlng pass to end Jim Diets. Jim Sandy ran the conversion for two points. I I Although both teams Tudor Queen Wins Mill threatened several 11 m a s throughout the game, neither could mount a strong enough offense until the Cranes scored late in the final quarter. W ★ Cranbrook started a drive on Its 35 and reached Iff. Pleaajtnt’s five where quartorbadt Andy Gordon hit Jim William* with a pass for the scors. | I williams’ attenipt for the extra point, which would have tied the game, was stobped. ITATIITICI NKW YORK (UPI) - John H.|p! i« ■ By Stafford's Tudor Queen, Canadian fitly ridden by Avcllno Gomez, won the 1133,025 Frlzette at Balmont Park Saturday by on* and . a half langths by covering the mile course in 1:38 M. .Down. Panama. , ■Yard. Ruihlng-Paulng PilMi We’ll Match Your Savings W* automatically match your savings, dollar for dollar with Accidental Ufa Insurancw up to $16,000.00. At your savings grow, you ineroaso tho amount of insurance at no cost to you ft 4y«% Interest ig compounded and paid quarterly, which gives an annual yiald of 4.318, a high rata of Intoroit paid an regular Inturtd pa.(book saving.. $2,500 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn 4%% interest when held for a period of 6 month.. Earn 5% interest when held for a period of 9 months. $10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn 514% interest yvh*n held for a period of V2 months. 761 W. HURON STREET ’ - Olarkston - Milford - Lake Orion - Waterford - Union Lake - Northeast Ironsh THE PONTIAC PKKSS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1900 \ Speedy Lansing Backs Sweep Past firebirds AP Wlraahote END NEAR — Mando Ramos stands over Yoshlakl Nu-mata after sending him to the canvas In the first of three knockdowns in the sixth round of their lightweight cham- ■ pionship fight Saturday. Numata was unable to continue after the third trip down. Trevino's Course Record 11etpstfcS:mWotM Cup the second quarter all three starting llnebadcers, Jon Izer, Steve Szabo and \Chuck Nurek all hobbled off the field. The Firebirds' q f f e n s e meanwhile was helpless against r- the onrushing defensive linemen and linebackers and with the SINGAPORE (AP) — Flam-tour-tested Americans and fell!help of’five lost fumbles, three • 1 t Lackawanna • 2 LANSING f- With quarterback Doug Holcomb ait-ting' out the entire game because of a shoulder injury, Pontiac Firebirds were literally “swept” off the field by the Lansing Alll-Stars, 43-6, in their key MFL game Saturday night. Displaying great speed with sweeps around the comers, on reverses and halfback options, running and passing, the Lans-ing team tore the Firebirds vaunted defense to shreds. * * 4r Holcomb who was injured late in the Lackawanna game a week earlier and re-injured in practice during the week was hopeful of playing* but prior to game he was unable to lift his arm, thereby giving way to Bill Harrington as the starter. HIT WITH INJURIES The Firebirds' defense stood fast for one period, but early in speedy backs including Eric Allen, tun Kifert, Gordy Het-trick, Lou Pasteur and Dick Evans with reckless abandon in rolling up 405 yards rushing and 137 passing. FIRST BREAK After a scorless first period, the first break of the game came when Pasteur fumbled. He then picked up the loqse, ball, was being chased all ovkr the backfield, 20 yards behind the line. He stopped and passed to Tefft at the Pontiac 17 to set up Garrett’s 17 yard run for the first tally in the opening minutes of the second quarter. boyant Leo Trevino shot a course record 65 and teamed with placid Orville Moody Sunday to win the 17th World Cup Golf Tournament for the United States by a whopping eight Trevino, the wise-cracking Mexican-American from El Paso, Tex., took the individual honors with a nine-under-par 275 for 72 holes on the 6,692 yard, par 71 Bukit course. well back. Japan finished second in the team standings at 560, followed by Argentina, 661, with Taiwan and the equally-surprising Thailand team of two amateurs tied at 562. Burly, balding Argentine veteran Roberto de Vicenzo matched Trevino's course record six-under-par on the final round and took second lntheln-. ,, dividual standings at 276. He Moody, the 14-year Army vet-|wa> fonow#d b„ Hseih Yung Yo eran from ^een, Tex. . had atof faiwan. Moody and Surkee final« for 277, giving the Unit- of Thailand, «u at 277. od States a team total of 552. T - two stroke lead over the United 6tates going into the final round of plhy under a broiling sun, but wilted under the charge of the Carol Mann Tops Mickey Wright] Tournament Field LAKE SAN MARCOS, Calif. (AP) — Carol Mann of Baltimore, leading money winner on the ladies' pro golf tour, fired an evenpar 73 Sunday to win the 121,150 Mickey Wright Invitational Golf Tournament by nltMlaiM Yung Yo ... ilwan iukrm Onihnm .. 71-70-44-44-174 47-7#-71 -00—177 , 44-70-49-70—277 n Ante Phlllpplnti kankl Kom Japan ruo Yatudt irtlnPRo*lln in the end zone, it was the worst defeat ever suffered by a Pontiac team in the MFL. ★ ★ ★ In fact it was the first time Lansing had ever beaten a Pontiac team in MFL play. The victory gave Lansing sole possession of first place in the Central Division apd now the Firebirds must hope for either Southwest Michigan or Dayton to untrack the Stars. ii W" * • I Dayton, back at full strength, stomped Grand Rapids 35-9, while Flint defeated Detroit, 7-0 and Lackawanna trimmed Southwest Michigan, 26-16, in other league games. , Former Michigan State track star Jim Garrett, a junior high school coach in Lansing, ran through, around and over the Firebirds for 160 yards rushing, and three touchdowns. Lansirig used a bevy of tt-n 73-71-71-74—345 72-74-71-73—315 72-49-74-74—345 72-47-75-74—395 .Thailand Angst Gallayru .... 73-69-72-71—245 Elnuterio Nival .... 70-7547-74—314 PhlllppIftM Flot^ Van Donck .... 74-72-71-49—1«4 Donald Swa«l«ns .... 74-73-70-44—417 Btlgium , Bill Dunk P.I.r Thomson R#B,c&.Ml“ Alton to Bohorquoi .... .... 71-70-72-74—3S7 ;... 72-74-71-71—SB! It was a come-from-behind victory for Miss Mann, who bad been tied with Kathy Ahem at 69 after Friday’s round, then shot a 70 to fall two strokes back of the 20-year-old lass from Corpus Christi, Tex., on the Lake San Marcos Country Club course. g g g Miss Ahem, bidding for her first triumph In three years on the circuit, fell apart completely firing a 79 to wind up tied with Shirley Englehom of Caldwell, Idaho, for fourth at 216. The $3,000 top prize boosted Miss Mann’s winnings for the year to $44,765. Miss Whitworth, collecting $2,300, raised her total to $44,001 Carol Minn ........ 43,404 49-7473-314 Salt!/ Whitworth .. 43,300 72-70-72-214 /™«»a Caponl ........<1.400 72-73-71-215 t Snalahom .... 11,375 77-7l-73-2i( . .... ............i 74-72-73^-311 JoAnn Prantlca aw Zi Mya Ayo Burma ■ Turn 90 Unltart II ML Taf bb&«& Batty Rawlt Italy Cullan fatty Bara Sharon MQIar Slit Banting Olarla Wilcox Jarr farrarli Mariha^WUk’l. BS 13,000 72-75-71—21S ■ _ 72-71-73-214 ,375 47-60*74—214 . M47 74-72-72—218 .... $72-71-75-218 $73-72-73—218 . $437 73W3-217 • W37 73-70-74-21? $525 74-72-74-220 *525 71-71-71— $403 74-73-72-221 . $408 71*74-74-221 , $409 71-74-74—221 Brian Huggatt 73-71-72-7 Bobby Cola . South Africa A,M 74- 47-72-71—21$ 70-74-71-71—2S$ 72- 72-70-74—21$ 73- 72-74-4?—28$ 4?-72-70-77—28$ 75- 73-41-73—2$l 72- 73-71-72—211 73- 71-72-72—210 mbjsr&jacssi 544, Blimp 173, Auatralla 574, coiomDia 475, Walu 574, South Africa 577, Canada 571, SnOland 47», Italy S7»; Braill 510, Maxlco 511, Egypt ill, Now Zealand 515, Scotland 544, South Korea 54*. OU Harriers Place 11th Oakland University’s cross country team finished 11th in the Ashland College Invitational Classic Saturday. g m g g Ashland topped the field and Buffalo State was second. it 1 1 * Mike McCartan placed eighth for Oakland. Mark Dutton (50th), Sandy Petiprin (65th), Ed Kammann (74th) and Dave Haywood (75th) also placed for O.U. Driver Kil|ed in Race Mishap MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) — The right rear wheel snapped off on a late-model stock racing car, sending the vehicle Into a rollover and killing the driver Saturday night at Mount Pleas-it Speedway. Killed was Leg Spalding, a 41-year-old racer from Flint. Spalding’s car was the third. turn, alone on the track in a time trial, when the wheel broke loose. The auto rolled over twice and came to rest on its roof. BRAND NEW «19B9m P0NTIACS Must Be Sold Now The Pontiac Retail Store 333-1951 Add More Living Space to Your Home CONVERT Your BASEMENT into a FAMILY ROOM or RECREATION ROOM v BASEMENT 24x40 COMPLETELY FINISHED *2,095 Everything In Modernisation Financing A nailable CRfeedon BEDROOMS REC ROOMS • ATTICS • KITCHENS DORMERS • OARAOES FAMILY ROOMS • ROOFJNfl Member Pontine Area Chtimber of Commerce In Pontine Since 1991 flbnshutttmifla 681-2500 1032 WEST HURON .. _ PONTIAf JB manna Ftoo tatimoto a • Planning “UN UAL. • Decorating S.rvlc# ckswiit lUKMAPtt After that, nothing t h e Firebirds could do was right. Martyr Malatin took the ensuing kickoff, fumbled, was hurt and taken out of the game. * * * The Firebirds then had an opportunity to break the Lansing momentum when Dan LaRoae blocked an attempted field goal. Chuck Nurek recovered on the Lansing 47 and on a pass to Bemls, Pontiac had the ball on the Lansing 29. But Harrlngton was off target In hia passing, and until late in the third quarter, the Firebirds could inuster no kind of an offense. It was 12-0 at halftime and after two 'minutes of ’the Third quarter, 'Garrett broke it open by sprinting 55 yards for a touchdown. *. * * He was Trapped In his own backfield rat squirmed away from a half obcen tackleri and down the sidelines. Three ftimblea late In the second half, all in the end zone, accounted for a touchdown and a pair of safeties and completely demoralised the Firebirds. COWBOYS HERE Next Saturday night, the injury riddled Firebirds meet the Deiroit Cowboys at Wisner Stadium while Lansing travels to . St. Joe to meet, Southwest Michigan. STATISTICS _ Flrit Down* Paaalno .. Kpit' Pima > Poneltloe . Yard* Ruihino-Pawlng Si te 409-137 (CORINO PLAYS ii.—Qarratt. 17 yarm. Kick fall* ii,—Surratt, 4 yard!. Paw fella, ix. -Garrett. 55 yards. Oarratt I Lana.—Safety. Newton hit ky. Jordan. Pont.—Hettrlck 10 yard*, lataral to ywa4.K lek falla v —... (ana, wait ra- RENTACAR S^gOOs Mas 0* fir Mila 1970 Chovy Nova RENT A TRUCK HP®::; Plus To Par Mils Plokupor Olisvy Van C.A.R. RENTAL ft LEASE, Ino. SS&SRRSMKU FE 6-4181 TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE LOW PRICES Sin 1 Price M.T. size PRICE P.I.T. 650/700-18| 16,00 1.81 735/775-15 16.00 2.21 695/735-14116j00 2.06 515/825-15 1630 236 750/775-1411640 XI9 845/855-15 1830 2.54 B00/B2S-u|t64i0 235 885/900-15 1830 231 S$a/S55-t4|l«J0O 235 MUD AN° SNOW TIRES 16 MOST ANY SIZE, PLUS F.E.T. Whitewalls $3 additional. Rugged 4-ply nylon cord runs quiet and smooth. Powerful snow-grip. Save blgl UQQH U3 esj IQ33R E333 093 E22I23 E3 EC9 022223 HQ EES S3 H3 BH ESI I IHI'HIU S3 CTl.UVISSn EH S3 bbss BH so nB2sn nn on PREMIUM TIRES F.I.T 4-ply nylon cord, Resists hoot, road shocks. 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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, I960 BjUWMLifc Tilton* M I 33, Central Conn It 7 State 47, Nichole Cold c*w^fS!T Aifri io ”,v,n DarlmouNi J», Holy Crou « wSi I. HoMra Unlv 25 LMMixHi valley *< Uralnw * Main* *8, Rhea* Itland 7 ManMIald *» 38, Chaynav Itoto Montclair 38, Curry Colioo* t Muhlenberg 44, Havorford Col I now Hempehlre 14, Cm Norwich unlv 37, Coaot i MAtt MVT*"9 « suiquohanna 31, JuiMota Collog* 14 Tompto 34, Wayna It, Mich • Ttxao AIM 30, Army VI Thlal College 31, Waihlngtn I, Jot 8 Tuft* 40b Colby College 13 Vermont 38, Norfheaatarn 31 . Vlllanova 57, lento Clara * Wagner 11b Upeele College 0 Waynaoburp 30, Calif Slate, Pi, 0_ Weileyen SI, iowdoln 10 r wait Che»Hr 48, Mlllerivllle It 13 Wllkae College 4, Moravian Col 0 .Worceetor IS, Middle Yale 40, Colgat* 31 Alabama 33, Mleelaslppl 31 Alabama AIM 33, Men’ll Brown 17 Anaalachlan St 34, lion College 30 AraaneM State 38, Tannaeaa* Tech 33 Auburn 44, Kentucky) 3 CareafrNewman3V,nurmonUnlvn Catawba Col 45, Bmory a Henry 14 CenfnTst, Ohio I, Kentucky itata 7 Centre Collage 14, Waoh|ngtn a Lee 7 Chattanooga 7, Middle Tenn St 3 31, Georgia Tech 10 I INffXEllW), Time Kll-pelalnan 74 (4), Dr. Roy Smith 73 (5V»>, RENT A CAR $89 - 1979 Chevy Nova ALL MAINTENANCE INCLUDED I With a V-4 • CAR. RENTAL 8 LEASE, Inc. Ill Oakland at Oass Phone FE 5*4161 Mika Karr 74 (7). Paul Titans Club II Posts 20-0 Win the week tightening the defense and trying to sell the Spartans on the idea that they can beat the Buckeyes. CONFERENCE OPENER The game at Columbus is the Big Ten opener for both squads, and for the Spartans it could be the start of a trip to the Rose Bowl in Pasadena New Year’s Day. Duffy was both shocked and puzzled by the ease with which the Irish handled the Spratans here before some 59,000 fans,_ “Well, they just outplayed us. ball to the Missouri 18. AI really didn’t think Anyone fumble ended the threat. I could stick it in our ear like The Tigers then got the they did. breaks and capitalized, for 24 HARD TO BELIEVE points in the starting with Statistics prove Duffy’s point. Notre Dame ran 102 plays to MSU’s 69, and Theismann made good on 13 third-down plays. KEY PLAY They key move by Theismann, the one Duffy called the turning point, came in the third stanza with MSU trailing, 21-14. With third and IS from his own 24, Theismann hit Ed Ziegler with a 22-yard pitch for a first down and the Irish marched on for a touchdown and a 28-14 lead. DRC Entries Windsor Entries inns Ml I « vl4auai Have* Prince ms* Evla's Choice 4 ; Neanderthal W&IH! Wounding Arrow ling Arr Cfgjr Block Orchid Glynn* Jackson Ronny C. Grattan 3rd—4444 Claiming C JR Rythm Billy DaM Rockal Ko Anna C|M| ". 4th—174# Pacai I | Jtrry Waning Tammy China Jr'lS Ona NlgM Stand Kino JsW A. term. Colas Hots : Rapper-Yale* Jehnnla Duka Pally Milt PuImUJ(I i Johnslort-----Gary* Jn Anne Count Ton* Prosiy M< ' Bang Go Classic Brandy (oijal Rlghtt-Skl Dll (dor rWr’fings: „ Prld* and Though Clolmlns Pace; wMN iption plana'— Joclr rlh Vala D Claiming Pact; gajaf Ivy Hacktn Corky of Clinton rw Amlo't Chior Posey’s Gold Go Flying Swoot Eva Gon* Milt I Sashay Around, CommWCinlCod* - mho 74 Vardoi Krackomslllf Bom* tool Prospectus G Til Iff# Quoad Homo Ploco L Mil* A. C'o ' Avolon Von B t Song Gladlal jssn cond quarter, 26 yard field goal by Henry Brown. The Tigers carried the play the rest of the quarter, scoring its first touchdown on a two-yard by Rod McBride four plays after Dennis Poppe intercepted a Moorhead pass at the Michigan 28. McBride also scored on a one-yard plunge with only 13 seconds left in the half. It capped a 68-yard drive which took 10 plays. ’The big shock was that our defense didn’t contain them,V continued Duffy. “I don’t mean I thought they wouldn’t move the ball. We knew they could. I just didn’t believe anybody could do that to us.” Job Staggers scored the other Missouri TD in the second quarter with a one-yard buck. The Wolverines rallied for two touchdowns in the third quarter on plunges by Garvie Craw. Missouri’s Joe Moore burst off left tackle in the final quarter and raced to a 62-yard touchdown that broke the backs of the Wolverines and made the score 34-17. Earlier Brown had kicked a 24-yard field goal. The Tigers’ final score came i an eight-yard pass from Chuck Roper to Steve Kcnemore with two minutes left in die game. It was the first loss in three games for the Wolverines and the first for their new coach Bob Schembechler. The Tigers upped their record to 34). Rushing Yordog* i3t 4 14—44 Alchlgen . Mich—PG Killian ■ mo—fg Grown 2* , .... MO-McBrld* 2 run (Brown kick) MO—Stagger* MO-Staggar* i run (Brown kick) MO—Mclrldo I run (Brawn kick) Mlch-Crow I run (Tlloi kick) mS-PO Brown 24 Local Drivers Post' Victories in Drag Boats yards. The other Irish six-pointers came on a short dive, by Barz and a four-yard run by Dennis Allan, who lugged the ball 20 times for 102 yards. BETTER DAY MSU’s Bill Triplett had a better day at quarterback, hitting on 9 of 25 for 178 yards and one touchdown, but it wasn’t enough to offset the potent Irish offense. Several local drivers were among the winners* to yesterday’s drag boat races at Oxford Lake. Pontiac’s Richard Bigler claimed the top spot to the 90-95 miles an hour class of the in-boards, and he was first in the middle d lv Is ion of the eliminators. Other Pontiac pilots potting wins were Richard Rice and David Dili, both in the inboard Clawson 10);^ Richard B^A"nPtaA.r'(te,D,ic™kd tYDROS — Skip HoMHon, Lake Orton, blown got) Mlk* Forguun, Bloomfield lit, unblown fuel, Loo Stratton, cheater, Mown gas. *LATb6tTOM4 - Prank Data istland. unblown nail Ed Sobleak! MvlllaJ unblown fuel; Via Wataor LHfla I_____ _______■ _ » Dill, Inboard; Juniors puana ttanklowlcz, Middle: Dick Bigler, Pontiac; Top: Mlk# Porguion, Or. Theisman flipped scoring win tosses of 11 yard to Bill Barz, 39| b** yards to ZieglAr and 23 yards to u , p . sophomore Tom Gatewood, who Jozd Pork,Entr>OI hauled in 10 tossed for 1M c&uor shorty • Mar tv Wayne State University won • all four Opening Contorts to in . r^tlfw facilities on campus during ****" '196889, copping the inaugurals in football, baseball, tennis and track. Triplett hit Gordon Bowdell ith a 35-yard scoring pitch, while the other Spartan scores came on a four-yard run by Eric Allen. The Spartans knotted the score twice, at 7-7 and 14-14, but each time the Irish came back with long thrusts. ‘NO FLUKE’ “There was nothing fjukey about their win,” said Duffy. They did it convincingly. They played better today than to their first two games. Ara (Parseghian) said that, too.” 7-25-2 24-22-2 7-34 3-12 Mr* DMM ------------- 7 14 14 MaMgSB into ........ 4 14 7 N.D.—Strt, 10 pa* Msingsl klclO M. 4.—Lovt, 4 run (Boyc* kick) N. O^-Ban, 1 run (4*. 8* Pontiac Scrap Co, 135 Branch IrtranoGGiiHMitt* 332-0200 Water softener ownersi end brine-tank clean-out AND NUGGETS are available from 'many retailers sslling water conditioning salt. For mors information and a list of dialers near you, write: PUIS Hazel Park Results* SATURDAY? RB4ULT4 -41744 Cond. Tret, 1 Mltol Speed Song HoBo'b Laurie Prince ilby ).» 3.20 2.90 DiamondCrystal Salt Compaity EllCTRiC HEATING ...AND YOU i*VB MONEY ON MR (ONDmONINS From Lmwqx comas a fresh, new Mnd of oloctrle heating: Now with accurate tempera-MSgintrot, and balancod ’. No otelOMtL or Only Lon- house comfort possible. And. mum coat 6et tha facts on MUHAIr electric Dofl’t li satisfied with IfM than LENMni FOR A LIMITED \ TIME ONLY, 1 $100 TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR Op SYSTEM CONVERTI Most Fords, Chevys,. American cempaetf Dynamic safety due-— Words Town & Country shocks installed and li eomploto front ond alignment. For « smooth rido. CALL TODAY: 33S4SII KAST HEATING & COOLING III T4UBMW M. tot Sr.lm4 U. MaJ Pontiac Mall Than*! 6424940 fi mm 'iM ' v,\‘N\ \i fp THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONNI>AY, OCTOBER 6, 1909 s '...pp W v% 111 s \ i Hagen' in Golf to Live-Not Make Living' ‘ (Continued front Page C-l) ' Hagen w«i regarded as the beat ahotmeker In golf and was never happier than when behind and In trouble. It gave him the chance to pull off ahota that make a gallery gasp and he revelled in it. “He had more ahota than aitybody in golf, then or now," aaya A1 Watrous, dean of Michigan proa and a frequent! Hagen opponent. , Born In Rochester, N.Y.J Hagen was Introduced to golf aa a caddy. PARTNER OF KINGS ’ He left the game 40 yeara later the cloae friend and playing partner of president* and kings, grateful he had shunned a promising career in major league baseball. Hagen is regiffded aa the man who opened country club doora to; the men who play for pay at a time when professionals were tolerated, not lionised. Sporting division of Wllsoh Goods Corp. > Until hta death he took part in conferences on design and hew products; In 25 yeqra of competition "The Haig" began a new legend almost every time he swung a club—or hoisted a drink, which vied with squiring lovely ladies as his favorite activity besides golf- / ‘NEVER HUNGRY* / It waisn’t a drink to Hagen. He called them “hyposonicqs" and relates in his autobiography that he often stopped for a quick one as he came off the 18th green In the 36-hole championship matches he rarely lost. “I never hurry. I never worry. And I always stop to smell the flowers along the way,” Hagen was fond of saying. Besides being one of; the most [wrote in his life’s , story, “I colorful In his antics, Hagen set i always had the other eyepeeled a fashion tone that rarely has!for myfeminiqe gallery. That’s been equalled, even by such where my imported Austrian latter-day stars as Jlmmysweaters, Japanese silk shirts Demaret and Doug Sanders. with the French cuffb and “In as much as we are told to British cashmere sweaters were keep one eye on the ball/’ helvalusble.” . TT5S “Soul” Dodge Fever Rellevert |"T" Are Here in Pontiac m mm coma in and tan now , ^■foul . fojlowon YOUR ■ Dodgp favor, Motor City Dodgo baa Ibo con, Mr, Watt) and Mr. Stonloy.hoyo tho ^H'daah. fliumrhv Ho ProUrm ■motor city DODGE ■K|||9H9H[ lit Oakland Avs. ■■■■ 5 1 338-9222 ' ■ I I “Hagen led his fellow pros out of bondage/’ the Detroit News once said. “Hi won more than 75 tournaments and over million /dollars. He gave victory medals to friends sourvenfrs and spent his win-, nings on their entertainment.” paying, “I just couldn't bear! to shoot another 80,” Hagen quit competitive golf about 1940. He played socially until 1945. Then he quit altogether except for hitting occasional shots from the lawn of his lakeside estate some 10 miles west of Traverse; City. Twice divorced, Hagen moved here 11 years ago. He lived in a trim, stone and frame split-level on 20 acres with his secretary-housekeeper of IS years, Doris Brandis. SERVICE SET A son, Walter Jr„ of Detroit, survives:—— Funeral arrangements have been made through the Hibbard Funeral parlor here, where agen's body was to lie this afternoon and Tuesday. Ho is to be at the Bell Chapel In Birmingham, on Wednesday and Thursday, with burial scheduled in the family crypt at Holy Cross Cemetery in South-field. Hagen was 21 when he cap. hired his first U.S. Open. He later added victories in the British Open in 1922, 1924, 1925 and 19$9 and in the prestigious Western Open in 1916, 1921, 1926 and 1927. After his competitive playlpg days ended, Hagen directed operations of the Hagen Golf Co. in Grand Rapids until 1945 when tile firm became a Rindt Breaks Jinx to Win Grand Prix WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (UFI) — Jochen Rindt had to break his own jinx and keep a tradition to win first place and 950.000 in the Grand Prbi of the ^United Suites Sunday. * The 27-year-old Austrian driver flashed across the finish line nearly a minute ahead of his nearest competitor, winning the first Grand Prix victory of his career before a crowd of 100.000 persons. It was a grueling race for most of the rest of the field however, with only seven of the 18 starters i still running at the end of the 248 mile event. Forner world champion Graham hill of England, who has won the U.S. Grand Prix three times, crashed his Lotus-Ford, 14u laps from the finish. IRANI NEW “IMS” PONTIUS Must Bs Sold Now lose FIREBIRD The Pontiac Retail Store at Wide Trask On 333-7881 INSTALLATION AVAILABLI for ai long m you own Si* cor on which yovr Rlvoftldo A Doubl-LK* nvfflor wt provided H romolm on that la any Wardi branah and wa will raalaia U froo. II Wardi oflglnolly In- Sant nal apply la waHlor. Save $4! WARDS SAFE DOUBL-LIFE MUFFLERS! 99 Hts mast Fords and Chovys REGULAR 12.99 Don't talc* a chance with a worn-out faulty muffler. Wards Doubl-lif* is made of double-wrapped steal and is designed for a sura fit to the tailpipe. Lifetime replacement guarantee. Installation AVAIlA|ll (IXTRA) Save 3.10 TOWN & COUNTRY TOUGHER SHOCKS 44 ]3 EACH INPRS. REGULAR 8.99 EA. Top quality, ruggod shocks koop your tiros on the road, ktRp£ yfctir car under control. They fight sway on curvos end slow, down tiro woar. Constructed toj eliminate fluid loss, failuro. * aOUs JhkjLr OJoaJL OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M, SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4910 . { . V,M 'MiitM XM THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1969 Market Drifts in Slow Trade Wednesday. Produce The following are top prices covering sales of .ocally grown produce by groweru and sold by nT«lL^lC«.Saf!frn,iSRhv,th. NEW YORK (AP) - The [certainties of the economic out-193 onlhe indication that the Jus-Quotations are furnished by ^ . drifted indecisive-1 look. Itice Department might chal Detroit Bureau of Markets as olL |n r|ow trw,ing early ^ afti Th'p p„w j„nes average of 30 lenge its proposed acquisition of ernoon. [industrials at noon was up 0.79! BP Oil Corp., U.S. subsidiary of First-hour volume of 2.0« mil-! at 809 20.* f i British Petroleum,, as avlola- MJJi lion shares was the lightest for! The Associated Press 80-stockition of antitrust laws. British fSUhe period since Dec. 26,1968. - taverage at noon had dipped .2to Petroleum declined Vt to 16. iso; * * * 1283.7, with industrials up .5,1 Trading in Madison Square Brokers expressed disappoint- (rails off .5, and utilities off .4. Garden was halted to allow dis-ment that the market had failed * * * i semination of news that the Se- to follow through Friday oh the Declines and advances of indi-] curitles and Exchange Commls-brisk rally that had develpped vldual stocks on the New York sion has sued the company and Thursday. They said investors Stock Exchange were about | others in connection with a tend, apparently had retreated to the even. •>, er offer for Roosevelt Raceway, sidelines, in part because of un- Standard Oil of Ohio fell 3% to I The last trade was at 7, Off Vo. Applti, McIntosh, bu. ApplM. Northern Spy AWit, Wolf R Ivor, Gropes, Concord, «ik Poochot, Rod Skin, bu...... Poors, Bartlott. .tobu..... Poors, Bose, bu. ......... Plums, Stonloy, <5 bu. ... VEGETABLES Boons, Groon Kentucky Wondor, bu. Bodts, Topped, bu.......... . Broccoli, dz. bch. Cobbs BO. Curly, bu. ....... Cobbags, Rod, bu. .......... Cobbogo, korouts. bu;------7 Cabbage, Standard Variety, Carrots, dz. but. , Carrots, Cello Pak, I-dz. . . Carrots. Topped, bu. ........ The New York Stock Exchange I.SOl NEW YORK (AP) Cilery, ................. York, Exchange selected afternoon pciees Mat Nit I Gen Tlri lb lhds.1 High Liw Last Cha.IGenescp 1.60 A____ Go Pit .80b Gerber 1.10 4 73 72to 73 + U GittaOII .389 13 43to 455k + Se1 Gillette 1.40 11 mil 135k n.fkt Ik Gen Alden 350 Tito 78V, 70 4* Vs Global Marin Confidence in Future Sden Waning in U. S. CUNNIFF cans-all locales, all walks of. The preseht dfop in eonfl* life, male and female—and!dence, he has found, is the queried them on their plans. |flrst such radical drop among GENERALLY CONFIDENT Throughout the sixties, Amer- forete||g a shurp turndown of leans generally felt they would the economy. ~ be earning more money sixj pe0p|e worried about Jobs be-months in the future, that their gln t0 cut spending. They delay jobs would be secure, that business in their areas would be good and that their financial situation was satisfactory, Sindlinger often listens to the interviews, , for they are conducted in one room at his headquarters in Norwood, Pa. He could measure the optimism or worry in the voices, detect emotions, adjudge the nature of fears. It 435k 4IW 43kk + to GOodyMi It 178k 17' SO kEWili- 131 17% 178k 175k.........., .... 93 38 27% 38 4- % GmnlloC SH 158k W =—.... Goodrich Goodyear GraceCo 1.50 GranltoC *“ GrantW (hdt.) High Low Last Chg. 22 17% 179* 17% . 27 29 4Mb 28% *1 44Vk 45% 44 f to Qukltor .* 10 |SVk 34% 35 Vk + 8k 33 57 54% 54% - % 1053 438k Jito 41% - % R,|,|0„p 34 88k 8% 88k Ranto Inc >» M% 23. 3» + 8k gJXih 33 32% 32'A 32 % I or a i 3940 21% 27% 27% • AA 28 26% 27 139b 13% _ BR .. . ■■ ,61 AiiP 1,30 90S 21% 21% fTVb— % Gt Nor Ry 3 (113 26% 25% 26 G) West Flnl 24 329b 32 3f%4- % QtWnUnR .90 7 2274 'WTfSi \Srmm M 14 49% 49% 49% + 9b j Greyhound 1 2i 14% 14% 14% + % OrummnCp 1 131 37% 349b 34% . .. Oulf 6M J.S0 12S 32%, 31% 32% — % GulfStaUt .94 34% • 52% 52 88% 107 45 Hal llburt 1.05 HoornWal .82 18%1 114 30 73 29% ar/8 a? vs.... 70 (Ml 41 % 419b + % 45 40 89% 399b 4* Vb 57 209b 20% 20% — Vb -24 30Vb 29Va 29% + % 114 10 99b 99b f H 34 33% 339b 3Mfc + % 38 10% 1Mb 109b + Vb 205 279b 87% 279b + Vb Wnn„vu,. ! M 22 349b 359b ff% —1 .H22K Vui 489 509b 50% 50% - H H! 141 21% 279b 28% + 9b Vn 99 51Vb SO 51% + %^^met .70 57 45% 459b* 45% + 9b, 197 n 27% 28 + % U 47% 47'4 47% - % IdahoPw 1.40 3 iL 20% ft + % Ideal Ba 1 * 3 51% 5j% 51% m % III Cent (p Am _ ..... INA f * “ 3i 34% 34% 34% f H 93 31% 319b 31%*- % 93 319b 319b 31% — % 37 45% 45% 4|%— % 205 102 100% 102 4*j% 4 489b 8% 489a -11 28 27% 27% X24 43 429b 43 134 25% 25% 25% - 54 44 45% 46 • -r-9- J}--30 “ 30% " 43 119 b 18% 189a 23 28% 21% 289* . 194 33% 33% 33% - 44 20% 209b 209b - 219 219b 21 21% * —H— 44 49% 48% 49% J 27 489b 41% 48% • 57 27% 27% 279b - 24 349b 34 34 30 100 98% 100 * 3 27% 279b 279b - 34 109b 10% 109b ^ 73 39%i 399b 39% - Reyn Met .90 58 ReynTob 2.20 354 RoanSel .35h 110 Ratir CP .80 RoyCCola .54 By JOHN CUNNIFF ffi AP Busioess Analyst NEW YORK—From his office near Philadelphia, Albert Sindlinger listens by telephone to the sound of America's confidence] in the future,] particularly as] it concerns the] economy, a n dl he finds it waning. For most of] the 1960s the] sound was ot| earners, spenders, eager buyers. Now he detects worry about jobs, about the stock market,-about the large sise of personal debts and ~ , I money or a job tomorrow, the relatively small amounts in .. . . . . Should the confidence index the bank. uHlB metho* he c,am*- ^ continue to decline for another t. * it. [been uncannUy "furate in de-|month sindUnKer believes, the Sindlinger, a former associate. tectlngthenation nation’ almost inevitabjy will of George Gallup, is a profes. night in im, for JJ find itself in a recession, rsional surveyor of-the-market- interviews.^9°°^ ° place, especially noted for his live turn. Something obviously; BUSINESSMEN WORRIED 'accurate forecasts of automo-1 had unnerved Americans. «For the first time In eight Sales Execs Named bile sales. Corporations Buy his' Lyndon Johnson, it seems,!years I find businessmen wor-! studies, for they know that to- had just televised his State of ried,” he says, _ to New Assignments day’s confidence foretells to-the Union Message. He had 1 The turn in confidence began !morrow’s sales. looked old, sick and worried.'in early May. At that time the I Every day for the past 13 Subsequent questions proved,!index showed signs of deterio- Two Pontiac area executives sindlinaer’s telephone in- Sindlinger claims, that this poor .rating, but it plunged beginning B *?? h have promotEsd by PonUac^ . * the appearance worried Americans'about the Fourth of July week- if MssjmWgSE-S ssaSri buying cars and they switch to cheaper cuts of meat. They adopt a recession psychology, the opposite of an inflation psychology. * * * r During inflation people buy "now” to avoid higher prices in the future. As the recession psychology develops they save now because they might not have the (Mb.) High Low Last Chg. x35 11% 11% 18% — % —R— 34 23% 25% 23% + VI 4 25% #8 25% . 32 3998 39% 3998 - Vk Ilf 42% 42% 42% + 9t 5 1798 17% 1798 — % 34% 3498 34% -Iabout the future; Royal but 2d 247 43% 43% 43% -98 1.10 42 25% 2598 25% T % ridooi batfc 1 59 22^12% W + % CarrlorCp ,40 and Eggs __ OBTROIT POULTRY OETROIT (AP) - (USDA)- Prices peM TufsUey per pound lor No. 1 live poultry. HipMWe hens 30-221 heevy tape roost-ers 25*27; broilers end Iryere, 1141 n. ___ DETROIT MOB DETROIT (API — (USOA)—Egg pew per dozen Thursdey by first ers UMUdlno U S ): Grede A lumbo soil Vi; extra Terge 4t'/>-4t; lerge 43Vj 47; medium 39-43'/,; small 14-25. CHICAGO BUTTM AND EGOS ■ OllSAM (AP) — (USDA)—Thursday butter: wMlesele selling prices Vk lower) ' 13 score AA 72; 12 A 72) 10 B unquoted. Eggs: prices paid delivered to Chicago 2 lower ip I higher; so per — belter grade A wMels 49-40) white extras 40vk-4Uk; standards 40-42. Livestock Ml. a. I B I M ■ ■ 27.25-27.50; 2 and 3, 220-240. j fSe&lZoQl 21 JO-23.25: Caltlt 200, slaughter steers, couple I and lots choice, eso-noo hounds, 2_______ 29.00; mixed good and choice, 27.25- r«r*rai 28.25; good, 24.25-27.75; slaughter heifers, cSlo Pail 1 20 couple lots choice 7S0-950 pounds, 24.75- roinnRiifi flo 27.50; other gredes not tested. rAoinist Veelers 50, high choice and prlma 42-44; ?i,f,n1TV-cholce 38-42; good 34-38. — rSuOat Sheep 200k choice and prime ed'™ ‘■"'•■"I - ?- • wooled slaughter lambs 29-3p; good slaughter ewes 7-11. CHICAGO LIVlSTOCf CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) -ceipts Thursday wara 2,500;—butchers opened mostly 25 higher, later steady 205-230 lb butchers 27JO-528.00; 225 haei 205*230 lb butchers 27.40-528.00; 225 hea t0 a planet supposed -is MV. 3*to 26W8 . to exist between Mercury and I 71 '* m jo', ‘ it the sun. Its existence was never ’0 7/to 27to 27to 4 to 1 48to 43to 4$to + vz'Proven. STEVEN J, KULCHER (Ml.) High LOW Lilt Aarolat .50* 4 ISto 15to I3to It Wail i ( 1|to llto llto-Alax Ma .200 5 70V. llto 20to - Am Pair .Mg 4 3lto 3lto 3lto ■ AO Induit 3 5 to Jto a to ■ Ark Batt 30g I 3lto 3lto 31 to ■ ■ ArkLOot 1.78 II Mto Mto Mto + to Aiamiri Oil 111 23to ink M + to AflaiCoro wt 111 J Barne* Eng 4 llto llto llto BraicanLt ja 3 14to 14 I4to +. to Brit nit .47g 100 MM M tito - to Campbl Chib 4 1 I'/. Ito Cdn Javalln 4.JJto I3to 13to Clnarama 4 10to loto Mto Crania 3.400 8 32to 32to 33J4 ml* pint . . f im ito ito...., pTxlivn corp II 34M 25to 24to 4- to, Dynalgclrn 14 Ito ito Ito — to Bquit Cp .03# 16 4to 4tk - to RfarcM , 37 ito 6to 4to — ] Fronlfar Air ! 4 Ito Ito ito +. Giant Yal .40 37 llto tOto 10". - ’ Golittlald 77 Ito 6 6 ?’ Ot Bain P4I II 4to 4to 4to - 1 Husky Oil .30 3 ISto ISto ISto . .. Hydromatl 3 joto jo 0 Impar Oil .30 44 M tito Ijto - to lyjTfOflt . |0 7to 7 Hi + ffe i KOIMr in .40* 33 llto llto lfto + to Moslwi. i f i£t« SolybdTn ” 'J »to 84to Mto Nalinar Brot 1 llto ISto 13to + to Mn ,S S .S^to » 4\ 4 iff Lopyrlghtid by Tha AiMclatad Fran l|M' BENEFIT AIRLIFT — The Oakland University Fly Club, in conjunction with the Pontiac Urban Corps and the Oakland Aviation Agency, sponsored a benefit airlift — providing free airplane rides — (or Eastern Junior High School students ' Saturday. Boarding a plane are (from left) seventh graders Terry Woods, 10, James Albritton, 11, and Reyes Gonzales. 12. Chuck De Hart piloted the plane. §3 r v PON l'MC P Bridge Tricks From Jacobys NORTH (D) , l s 4KJ94 ¥AJ65 1 ♦ 42 1 4 AK3 WEST EAST 40532 4? W 10 7 ¥43 ♦ K10* ♦ QJ7083 1, 4QJ100 47052 SOUTH 4AQ100 WKQ9S2 ♦ At *14 Both vulnerable West North East South 34 Pasa IV PUB 3V Pats 34 Pane 44 Pate 4N.T. Pais f¥ Paw 5N.T. Pass 6 V Pass 74 Part Pass Pass Opening lead—4 Q By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY Jjm: "It was wonderful for 'mother to win itor Championship at the Summer Nationals;” Oswald: "And very proprlate, too, since the ‘The Dallas Aces/ consisting of you Bobby Wolff, Bob Hamman Mike Lawrence, Billy Eisenberg and Bobby Goldman took home the Spingold Cup.” Jim: “Didn’t your team, ‘fhe Four Aces/ win it the first time it was put in competition?” much easjer then. There were only SO teams entered then, as against 140 this year. Incidentally, I am delighted wth your success. Now I can really retire from the very tough team competition and watch your team take over.” \T.‘‘ w w * Jim: “I hope wa can. It will be quite a task to match your seven wins, including four the 'The Four Aces.' How about a hand from the first Spingold?” * * * Oswald: “ ‘The Four Aces' included Dave Bruce, Mike Gottlieb, Howard Schenken -and myself. We added a fifth young player named Charles Goren that year. I played with Charley and this grand slam helped him win his fint national title.” difference between the 1930 ‘Four Aces’ 'system and Stan-dard American. I had to stop drawing trumps )n order to ruff out Charley’s third club. Then I got rid of my losing diamond on his fourth trump and his losing diamond on my fifth heart. Incidentally, the few times we have played .together, Charley and I have had no bidding prob- Jim: “The bidding looks like expert modem style. It is interesting to see you found the spade suit. The hand makes seven spades but only six hearts.” . Oswald: “There wasn’t much! V+CfiR DSetM** , Q—The bidding has bean: West North Eaot) South Pasa 14 Pass 1* Pass 2 4 Pasa ? You, South, hold: 4K876 VA2 ♦KQ4 4J853 What do you do? Paaa. You have a minimum open. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding two spades over your one spade, your, partner jumpe to three spades.-What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow MONDAY, OCTOBER. yiatw Oswald: “Yes, Jim: “I should say so! I hope that ‘The Dallas Aces’ will I always bid as well as you and it was Mr. Goren bid that hand.” -Junior Editors Quiz on- BLUEBIRDS THE BETTER HALF "If an organization is decent enough to sponsor a television program, the least I can do ig use their product.” QUESTION: Are the bluebird and bluejay the same kind of bird? ANSWER: Picture 1 presents the true blue bird. Just about everyone who lives in the country will know about him. How eagerly we watch for that inspiring flash of bright true blue, with chestnut red on the chest, and listen for the soft warbling song which sounds like “purity, purity." Bluebirds like to nest in hollow trees. Why not pot up a blue bird hollow log nest next'spring? Entirety different from the gentle bluebird, of a different bird family, is the aggressive, noisy but extremely handsome bluejay (2). He has true blue on crest and shoulders with a ■e on tail and wings. Patches of black and white remarkable color scheme. Bluejays live the year around in many parts of eastern North America. Apart from their beauty, they have some bad habits, suph as stealing the eggs and young of other birds. A beautiful little bird, entirely blue, is the indigo bunting, whose blue color looks different in different lights (3). The blapk throated blue warbler (% boldly patterned in blue, black and white, completes our collection. v ' CAMPUS CLATTER THE BORN LOSER this\iJ7itrustumm Pmiumt M <4 wmw cmms, ufJ?d m tlc n By Art i NUMBER-OUE iWTrP. Astrological Forecast By SVDNIYMMRR w clMnlllt I certain hygienic meaiurei OUT OUR WAY Day to emphoilio ■t homo, now it time to makeup for l . Altar morning hotiny people tend to no more precite. In effect, the party It over, the garnet ire gut owoy. New batic iuuet will dominate and t VIRGO Individual could grab newt nice. ARIES (March llAprinfli Your concern about toxet# legal pipers it retolv-ed. Key It to iiMlTtO the boilct. Leave flamboyant geituret to others. Guard health. Protect yourielf In the dlnchet. TAURUS (AprOFMay MX Create -expreet True feelings. No tlmefor playing emotional gomoe. Accent on children, affairs of the heart. You find out tow you really ftol about member of opposite tax. GEMINI (May 21-June »): Spotlight on homo, past commltmonti. You ehmild compistscurrent payment! before edging new retpeniibiiitlat. Day It -------- plttlon. not lor now itarti. CANCER (Juno ti-July »):. Some pressure lifts/ you find yourielf tree io tekFttorf iMirnoy. Catch up on mail. Write and call — communicate wlih relatives, neighbolT. Pint lor making short-range plant. LEO (July 22-Aug, Ml: Gain BALL-CARRYING PRACTICE? SORTA SILLY, I SWT IT WHEW YOU KNOW r VERY WELL >OUR OP* PDNEWTG AREN'T GO-. i TO STAMP IPLY ,ROUND WHILE VOU 1 RUN "THROUGH THEM/ OH, THIS SET-UP REPRESENTS MY OWN TEAM / I'VE SOT Id RUN THROUGH THEM FIRST—AMP THAT’S JUST ABOUT AS HARD AS SETTING THROUGH THE OPPOSITION/ hods tend to lucceed. Strait on money, poitetslont. II you enop wisely, you obtain bargain. ■. ■ ■■ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. Mli. Cycle hlght r ircumttencet turn In your fnyor. Tpke Initiative. Be verietlle end willing,*- — perlmenl. Social Ufa Improves. Sul wear yourielf out doing toe mu * USRA (Sept. M-Oct. Mil Excellent tor breaking routine. Bine out; attend theater. Working within group devoted to cherlteblo prelect I. eipeclally bwjeflclsl. Be aware of foctt, figures. Hove mom at h*sc6RPto (Oct. jg.Noy. it) i spotlight on career, ambition*, reletloni with thote utm make one at home happy, fooling It r*CAPRtC0RN (Dee. JWen.jyti Trovol i may be .oh agenda. You muet get views I on record. Future mltunderilendlngt could orlto, union you oro -tgoclfic. Act AQUAlmis (Jen. 10-Peb. fSJt. Intereet Ih occult end the unutuel It highlighted. wira with ttoto who hold oppgilng vlowt- bo itrilntd. Bo dlploreetTe., Ono wfr a pride teerlfleer H .®k§ . Mreti undortftndlng and »V. . IP TUSIOAY IlNoUR SIRTHbAY much to you. Your totno.. It important Mpnkeynaper No se Better Now I SALT LAKE CITY l s c o p a l1 Church. Envelopes are hvajl* able at the funeral home. Com No. 69-9-1 Tho W 190 fool ot S 500 foot ot E IS acres of W 30 ocrog of S V* of tho &e >/4 of Soctlon 16# Wotorford Township, except S A0 foot UMd tor M-59. W 3360. Requesting to change zone designation from C-2, General Business District to &I® VfiA WHE nS/YT/ioS. ,0 * Sewers and Manholes will be re- 10 ton,Trwl 1 1 Township I ^htrfor^Kr J* fALLIY, Clerk ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS SANITARY SEWER Job No. 69706 WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP, gBk fifigJNT“ »r tho MR chord UUti Rood i hlDvgtlCOI, • Ml prSbosals" E.S.T., ... will bo 7:30 p.m„ BUY! SELL! TRADEI ,T. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I AFTER-THE-SALE SERVICE - YOUR GUARANTEE FROM FRETTERS! FIGURE Oil SAVINGS clone chord ___________ October 20, 1969. 2T-P! 0 evening. Controct documents, 1 drawings and spec If leaf ions examined ot tho Township offlco tht offlco of: Noroo D. Allx, Consulting Englnoor 30729 Oreenflojd Rood Southflold, Michigan 48075 Phono: 313-LI 9-2114 Coplos may bo obtained at tho office of tne Engineer upon payment of $5.00 for each controct sol. This deposit is non-rofund6blo. A certified chock ( Bond for a sum of i.. proposal amount OaMohd County, Michigan Oct. 6, 30, 19< COUM No, 24209 STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Probata Court for the County of Oeklond, Juvenile Division. In tho matter of tho petition concerning Joyce Kelly, Minor. To Joseph Kelly, folhor of sold minor child,.......- r-~~ Potitjon hovlng boon filed In this Court alleging that said provisions of Chapter 712A of the Com Ejfttrn Is Set forSuspect in Break-Ins b • required dapgait acceptable Bid the present whereabouts lass than flveleald minor child ' violated child comas within the o, 1948 as amarfdad, In that of tho State, No, proposal once submitted may ba[i ulthdrawn-for-- al -laast sUlv 100) days. in me n iftar opening of bids. The Township of Mlcblga .serves the right lo wolvo any In-1 tho hnrlni Court House, Oakland County! Builder, October 1347 NEW LOWER PRICES NOW ON Compfota Satidactlen APPLIANCES • TELEVISION • STEREOS RCA 15" PERSONAL PORTABLE TV *99 Whirlpool 2-speed, 2-cycle Washer American Make PORT. COLOR TV SaUd-Hate/tuIra chassis, 1 stage amplifier, dipole telescoping ai tonnes, 11,000 volts tf pletui *199 Whirlpool Automatic 2-cycle Dryer ZENITH CONSOLE STEREO COMBINATION WHO FM-AM, fM/Stereo Radio *199 Hatpoint3D"Elac. Self-Clean Range ADMIRAL 2-DOOR AUTO. REFRIGERATOR storage, estre deep dear sterage. *189 Admiral 10-Ft \ Upright Freezer A man Bloomfield‘Township] police believe is implicated In at least seven break-ins o r burglary attempts faces preliminary examination tomorrow in 48th District Court. The man, William Thompson, whose last known address Is said to be Austin, Tex., is in Oakland County Jail in lieu of 810,888 bond on a charge of breaking and entering. Police arrested Thomspon early last Tuesday after receiving- a serier of burglary complaints in a subdivision LEGAL NOTICE Notice It hereby given of a Public Haarlng to be held by the Waterford Township..Planning Commtsslon—an October 24, between Lahser and Cranbrook j Ju(|Chiaan te*«mslder,iihe following undi Township, Zoning Ordlnam Waterford Township High School, located 415 Itaan complaint, they said, they found c«oAno. «•*-? V. cortter of car and a gun, said to be stolen, I*^B snseI;iion,tifn'«* u.o toot) ttw nearby. IllSpio^te ih?Vi affT w RK» croKwruta'aort,,p^wc, duo S along 'A lino 416.36 foot jo the i OunsibKvaAsvd! wnufitaHj beginning Ot • point d stent N 3»°3» IS “Tst™ teet from the SW socllonaFcor- under iSKRINK, MINNHS C.; October 4, 1968; 169 Judson Street; age 82; dear mother of Joseph, Ralph, Wendell, and Kenneth Skrine; dear sister of Mrs. Flora Ostrander, Mrs, Bernice Ottaway, and Mrs, Luelia Bullock; also survived by 18 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will he held Tuesday, October 7, at 11 a.m., at tVoorhees-Siple Funeral Home, with Rev. Robert H. Shelton officiating. Graveside service will be 2 p.m, et Elkland Cemetery, Cass City. Mrs. Skrine will lie in. state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9). ** ^P&"S|TOZER, CLARA Ia; October 3, 1969 ; 5785 Drake Road, West B1 oo m f 1 e 1 d Township; (formerly of DetroITT; age 78; dear mother of Mrs. Richard (Corinne F.) Cotter, George E. Tozer; dear sister of Mrs. Amada Lienau, and Mrs. Alma Dratt; also survived by 6 grandchildren. Funeral service will be today, at 2 p.m., at the Cross of Christ Lutheran Church. Interment In Glenn Eden Cemetery, Livonia. WElSTrOBERT WILLIAM; October 4, 1988 ; 66358 Romeo Plank Road, Romeo; age 18; beloved son of Calvin and Nyla Welch; be loved, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Welch, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fox; dear brother of Darlene, Judy, Carol, Danny, and Brian Welch. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 7, at 1 p.m., at Roth’s Home for Funerals, i Romeo. Interment in Christian Hills -Cemetery, Rochester. Robert will lie instate. at’ the funeral home. NORMAN R. BARNARD, l judge of Proboto MARJORIE SMITH. Deputy Probate Regiiter, Juvenile Dlvlelon JS'! Com No. tf-f-3 Lots 1 l t 1 .. .... Subdivision, Ssctlon fO, TIN, Merchant1 :»E. Wetei County, MKM- 40 through 44 Moil i, Oakland oUmtMMfWMt ige nos designation fronT C-V, 'Local Business .District to C*3, General Bushiest District. ARTHUR J, SALLEY, Clerk Charter Township ot Waterford Oakland County, Michigan Oct. S, 30, 1M | Recovery Is Slow for Gun Victim Recovering from his lat* | est gunshot wound has proved more of a strug-| gle for. Thomas Arthur Jr., 41 N. Andrews, Lake Orion, than doctors had predicted. Arthur, 24, was shot In the chest last month allegedly by a former Air Force sergeant who police, believe later killed a Romeo patrolman. Arthur is #| recovering in Pontiac || General Hospital. ★ * ★ Last week Arthur con- 1 traded pneumonia and 1 doctors found lead poison- i ing in the lining of his 1 lungs. His condition 1 worsened until Friday. I Then he began to show f signs of Improvement. A recently returned | veteran, wounded three ^ times in Vietnam, Arthur | didn’t feel he was getting i any better, said his ? mother, Mrs. Arthur. g FIRST SOLID FOOD § ’’But on Sunday he had s first taste of solid 3 , beginning it • point dlitent N 0°44'30" E: 7rr.l5 teet from the S D , N 0 44*30 E imOJ Ieetj tttence S !ot°»* w .*«•» wSjfiMU JLIT*LJ Leke Shores; thence N 73*»*30" W 3W.M feet; thence left, radius ecuali ltOO.O faat. Chord N i 04*47*10" w 300.44 feat, dlatant 314.37 teat, thenu N KW*04" W 301.00.. faat;! thence S 70#09*M" W 100.44 faatt ttianca I Death Notices *W.£S5£onihW th^owrahte of! ALLEN, HENRY FRED; October 6, 19 69 ; 681 l?*.T3Ni..R»EJ Northway; age 51; beloved son of Bessie Allen; dear father of Darlene, Linda, Tony, FYankie, John, Jim, David, Dennis, and Danny Allen; dear brother of Mrs. Juanita Wallace, Mrs. Pearl Vermette, Mrs. Irene Wanke, Mrs. Violet Leonard, Mrs. Bonnie Souheaver, Mrs. Helen Kenny, and Mrs. Barbara Gelow; also survived by six JP8RPV88. grandchildren. Funeral ar- INI ■ i’^X%TiTfoiteMtel rangements are pending at !»••*» .....—r.s I Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Mr. SHl IWt und N 0-44*30" E 345 foot pnd N W*13*aO*' w 30 teM from fj» S V» SS5' (1^40* W l» toot* ttSnc?*N 1®14*44" e 676.81 l£lL1!^cW,72S|00lJ US WsTw* E %*.40ef" thlSci BOX REPLIES At 10 ml today were replies at The Press Office la f C-18, C-25, C-27, COB, 034, 038, 038,081, 048,044, 0-45,058,018. In Memerlwa IN MEMORY OP MY 1 Wilson, who passed i 1962. From Clyde end 11 Sint or beglnnlng containing 2^l| acres, I i more or loss. ^ I w vurrvx roS I Dlotrict to RT. Multlpte \t(wolllno ARTHUR J. SALLEY Dotod: Sopt^M. i uwmi TERFORD, i his | food since the shooting,' I she said. 1 His father drove the I 1970 Pontiac GTO young | Arthur had ordered but I never seen to the hospital 1 yesterday. \ Arthur looked I at it through the window I and beamed. It Is the fjrst I car, he's owned since en-I listing in the Marine I Corps four years ago. J ‘"Die doctor said he has | / some rough days ahead,” I said Mrs. Arthur, "but | we're rea\]y hopeful now 1. . . 1 think he is on his way.” | U S. and Canadian po-| lice are still searching for 1 Vernon H. Jones, 38, of | 4384 Plnegtove, Dryden | Township, in connection 1 with, the shooting. TowntlSp *° p'tennln'g H Allen will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 tonight.] : (Suggested visiting hoyrs are; Tf to 5 and Yto I.) t*4* eYcHER, MRS. JOHN {(ESTHER); October 4, 1989; 625 Homestead Drive; age 72; dear sister of Herbert Oltmann. Funeral service will be held today, October 6, at 81 p.m. at, Sparks-Griffin| Funeral Home. Mrs. Eieherj will lie In state at the funeral, home. (Suggested v i s i t i n g hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.V Contributions may be made to the Lutheran Hour. Tuesday, | the body will be taken to, Hampton, Illinois for burial; Waterford. Wednesday. ninth I __________ LOSE WEIGHT infRhf jylkl MX Dint Tnblnit. only ft ennts. stihm'n Brat. Pruen. I r~~h COATS FUNERAI. HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 47*4441 C. J. GObhAftpT PUNBRAL hSmI Kntgo Hnrbor, PH. Ml mi. DONasoFMbiws PUNBRAL HOME_____ Huntoon— FUNERAL home tf ttltt ,or SPAR KS-GRIF FIN FUNERAL HOME Thoughtful Snrvlcn** FE 14314 VoorheeoSiple FUNERAL HOME. 33M37I Entnbllihna Ovnr ASYggrs Camtttry Ut> * irk 4 LOTS. WHITE CHAPEL, MM. aaa-aoaq CHOICE.COMPANIOlf LOT. Anrdnn of HIT Grace, Chrlntlnn Mnmorlnl In Lnit Supper, by owner, Write Box_C-3l, Pontine Prnee, Pontine. Personals _ 4l OILL PR08LEMSI -CALL_____ DFBT CONJtULTANTS___ 334-0333 CATERING SERVICE for pertle, ** femoneble now Housing Code—It saarchod for vlolotlohi. IF Wntnrtord Township, HighSrho®1* il 1415 Croscont Michigan *' Wotorford Pontiac f ........... g under Township Zoning' Ordlnnncn Wntnrtord Township, 0 n ki n n d Highlands Subdlvltlon, and daicrutad a» follow*: ni Commencing M tho $E corner w mw the cnntertirtn ot M-3* hfgh|nvj tjionei fOTfrln'crNM"-* 30* 3IW00 feat slrVs.r«,riA»: W 331 M foot to the centerline of Pontine Lnkn Rond; thence along said can-tnrllne on n curv. to the right hsvlng a radius ol 8W.31 tent; a delta angle* otJJW' 30*33'"; a chord ot S 34* 30*11, B 13.44 lent 1 an arc lanoth cl 33.44 teat; thence ■--* ---:e at^e 344.34 teat) thence 30*34*’ W 140.01 teal to1 the nlng of this dotcrlbtd properly. Sublacl Ip on tasemanl tor road purposes oval the Nly 33 teal and also subject to other sasements ol record. Contains 10.34 acres more or less. “egvesting jo chango rone de.lgnallon n. c-f. Local Business District and AC. Agricultural District to C-3, I Business District. Doted: September 33, 1*M ARTHUR J. SALLEY ( HARTSR TQWNSHI OF WATERFORD OAKLAND C‘" MICHIGAN thane* S GRAVITT, LEONARD; October 5, 1969; 35 Gerdon; age 82 | Funeral service will be hold i Tuesday. October 7, at 1 p.m. at Sparks-Griffln Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Gravitt: will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) SEGU1.A. MARY KIM; October 5. 1969; 2755 Ayrshire Drive, Bloomfield Township; age 13; beloved daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Segula; l beloved granddaughter o f Mrs. Robert J. Segula, Mrs. John N. Tucker, and Mr. and Mrs, E. F. Humphries; dear sister ol Mrs. James (Lynne) Shaeffer, MrsL Jerome ..(Lindsay') B f o w n sY6TB7 Elizabeth, Robert W., John and David Segula. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, October 8, at 1:30 p.m., at Alll Saints Episcopal financial dif w Huron, FE 2-0181 Mr. and Mrs. Homeownor Do you nood llnanclil odvlco on lapoln, remodollng. paying R4al It lata Taxaa, grouping blila. I(c1 11 you do, Call Mr. Voaa at 304-3147 ,4-5 Dally axcapt Sal._ L FREE WIG, WiS partial, Wlgland. FE 3-3933. 474-4433. ___ \ wig paSYiBs. wiga b~Caldaron. F E i-TTO,_____________x_ Lost and Found __________6 Bi.ue Shetland coilia, tamaia, olfar reward casl * Pontiac; 334-5859, Reward. OST: TmaLKPUPPY, goes by'the name of HOldl. If found call FE 6 LOST: SMALL WHITE and poodler belongs fo youfft who Jtod a cerebral homo Telegraph, Square Lake af’ta. 332-coiiit, will the to-1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER fl, 1968 for Wont Ado Dial 3344961 Mrt aad N—d * •LACK MAI 'MSmmm SaaNWotf,._______ ChWr«»^n*(»«wIirS.* 33M41*/ " ' L08T—R Itw^R'Di lerpt btack loST blind tom cat with MM collar, answering *o nama of paarMu or ^S&SsSiW*'1' ■ SiTB MJ ~ Grieving C 000 bacV 2 PART TIME MEN $50 WEEK dabla. Call I74-H33 from 5-7 p.m. ACCOUNTING , ovorhtad anolyilt. Wo worn ai hand la the compiotoi coat rotated function for the con-trotltr. Dogreo not nocessatY. Ap- Induitrlal Row. Tray, Mlch.t between U and IS Mila Rd., off ACCOUNTANT OR CPA, SI0.0C0 SU.000 PLUS, .COlA'Pj. BUSINESS, PHONE 4IS-NM. i Holp Wonta# Molt CLEANER AND SPOTTER tael BULL TIME SERVICE gBBPB AUTO Y|M|Pd || CHECKERS DETAILERS Special Machines Automation rftjl1 Ml WENT FOREMAN MiftW Walled Labe, 'Mlchloan, Pa’CT^TWEK; Mechanical OS tWS swl PM., «and part-time U to 5:00 P.M. Apply In perion, Ted', I flee Mall. 0AS ifAttON ATTENDANT, Self Wonted MMt LICENSED BOILER OPERATOR MMlimiM full HIM, paeHIOM awr«% HOSPITAL IIS! w. Unlvorilfy Dr. __ Rachaaty LATHE OPERATOR BuealMM man wll parlance, liths. or viwaf ' iw machines. In BmpS, S IMMEDIATE VACANCIES-POR GROUNDS KEEPER I | MECHANICS $2.73-$3.30 PER HOUR 1 Needed ..TSIl . Plus: Family Blua Crou-Blua I frlnoo benetlt, qalore. Shield Ufa Insurance Rollrotnonl plus Socle) Security Legal, lick And vacation day, __ M'Sffiri AUTOMATIC education. raaldant of Oakland County, daalrabla that applicant. IntaraaHng outdoor work, good i Oakland County Court I N. Telegraph Pontiac THE PERS0NNEf*DIV., PH.: 335-4751. Eat. MS ' SET-UP OPERATOR TOP WA6ES, ALL FRINGES. ! m-rm ■ IBAR+ENDBR Pbl WilSlNOS mull bo foal dRdBIta attar 1} noon por(unity Employer. CLYDE CORPORATION ISM W. MAPLE RD., TROY DESIGNERS CHECKERS______ LAYOUT MEN DETAILERS TRAINEE ._______ Poe.* reference*. Fuller jgyancomonf, QgTf, Tolograph and Maple u IwilOp b¥N-SMltH,'MUFf~hovo machinal q ^ shop experience. Wrlto Pontiac,.,, PfMl Box U| S—11— iil»h I Musa. A accurate. 442-4355 ij7» PER HOUR, onporloncod duct Initallor and fabricator. Tima and a halt for over tlma. Steady work. Mutt have awn tooli. O'Brian Heeling, 371 Veerhali Rd._j 10 BOYS -WANTED Tutsday - WwdnMday Thursday Oct. Tttlp Itti. tth From 12 Noon to 4 p.m. Must lo Ft Loost 14 Y«r» of Aq* AFFLY IN FMSON LYLE McLACHLAN Mall Room THE PONTIAC PRESS 10 MEN WANTED DAILY FOR: CASUAL LASOR LANOSCAPINO WAREHOUSE FACTORY MISCELLANEOUS JOBS BUS BOYS Pull tlma, part flma. All o pany benefits, paid vacatloM. ELIAS BROS. RIO BOY RESTAURANT SO S. Taiaoraph KTB i tha big one. Y< ready To atort I train. SS1S i.lary par mo. to atort. h-t-vt _-***-. 4_T>|t... Richard', Co., MIC. For appf. caS Mr. Ballsy » a.m.-l p.m. 1-Ml-4341. “BRANCH MANAGER TRAInEI-Ont of tho largott consumor finance orgonltoflont In tho coun- . ( -RST ichadulod—frlnpo bonolltt. Phono Mr. Brown it 544-2711 or op-ply—Po It now. KOLTANVAR ENGINEERING CO. OSt Maple Rd. Troy Employment office open 'til 4-p.m. dally for nlrlng Claims Ropresontativt Excellent opportunity for on ox-porloncod adlustor to work tho Oakland County area. At lo«t one -General- Foundry Laborers. Wanted sc vttomnt 4 n which ncomt i Rngular .Ibtral • mpleyea tenants, your omploytr will not bo contacted without your permission. Coil 473-1221. H wttkdays only. Mr. M. S. Kuzoppo DIAL FINANCE 44H Dlxla Hwy.e Drayton Plains: BUS BOY WANTED. Cafeteria styls RWnd ply and Sat ua fall you lb* Beverly otory and bocamo o mombor of f-Bovorly family. You - rewarded. Wo will tr at Bauifly Manor Cantor, 532 Orchard Laid M will truly to vSssst time. 1# W. Huron._ Draftsmen, Layout Inspectors, Electricians, Hone Operators Set-up experience required. Excellent benefits, atoady employ- """’ m. c. division KELSEY HAYES CO. IS Indlonwood Rd., Loko Orion, MS-S3I1 An Equal Opportunity Employor DRAFTSMAN Jahnien Stroof (Pontiac DISHWASHER POR . NIGHT A Batkof of Birmingham, WAGES, Time nactuary. Fast advancement fwr I hard worfctra. Call 474-7733 4:38 ■ A.M.-IS naan tomorrow enly. | 25 MEN WANTED EVERY DAY 6 A.M. _ _ DRY CLEANER AND ipotlor, Blue Cron plans, perlenced, good pay, holidays, --------------------- :Xr%W£T Will trpln. Ago no barrier. SystemotioTr 7S444 Novi Rd., Novi. GROUNDSKEEPER Pull tlma position avollabol for experienced groundskeeper In maintenance dept, of local heipllal. Wo altar on oxcollont salary and fringe benefit program. Apply * a.m. to 17 noon. Personnel dept. st. Joioph Morey Hospital. too Woodward, Pontiac. Or coll for appointment 33S-H1) oxt. 731. GLASSMAN, AUTO or raifitantfib will train. AppHcattans will to told In confidonco. Apply only at Avon Glou Co., IMS E. Auburn, , Rochester. H p.m. _,____- OAS STATION ATTENDANT. EX-per lanced. Full dr port-time, welled lake area. 474-3S44. 474- GOOD PAYING POSITIONS, growing printing company, doya or ovtnlngi, full or port time. Start at *7.75, top rata SS plut fringe benellts. INTER-CITY PRESS NOVI S4MftB STATION otton HARDINGE CHUCKER, overtime, good wagoa and ^r bonoflts Inckidtng fully paid Blue Cross, afternoon ihlft. Apply *‘ Benton Division. 7170 Induetrl I Ext. 79f, MO a.m. only. KELLY LABOR 175 N. Saginaw Rear Entrance OPEN 4 AM, DAILY REPORT PEADY POR WORK An Equal Opportunity Employor ASSEMBLERS Kill fringe ban*____ BENTON DIVISION AUTO MECHANICS with experlonco, oxcollont flat rale, atMLall fringe banaflti. Inquire to Hill Borland, »• Orchard . GrTmALDI Buick-Opol AUTO MECHANIC CHRYSLER axRtrlaiica praftrrtd, Blua Croat, plenty of work, aoodl working conditions. OAKLAND CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH 774 Olklond AVO. __PE-5-04341 Guaranteed 343-4154 between Cleanen, 954 Joilyn, Pontiac. firm. For Interview call---------DESIGNERS jtomallon-toole-Oloe . BUILDING SUPPLY Warohouu 333-7000 gs#*1 ”TR5imEEtjr«esr Licensed or able to obtain llcanaa In a months. Excellent fringe benefit program. Including paid blua cross and lilt Insurance. Apply St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, MB woodward, Pdntlac, between 0 a.m. and 12 noon, or call for appolntmont SSS-fltt oxt. 238. ____________ BENCH BURR HAND. Soma ox- Troy- Equal OcL^mSRmptWOrl CHRISTIAN EKOEDING and Solos DRAFTSMEN > movu Into doiign. JMFANY I---- BENEFITS FULL COMPANY PAID thtn cull for Country North of Aimont on VanDyko. Coll or wrlto Brtckby Dairy- Forms, 1757 E. McNkkols, Datrolt. TW l-7373.__________•__________ Accountant Consldsrobto oxporlonco In counting with graduation from occrodlMd collage preterred. . . least throe years supervisory of - administrative oxporionco^ Ojjoii Apply Court COOK, S to 4 nlghto, must to ox- 6 Hslp Wanted M«l* 1 WELDERS &• HELPERS Flat wtlders $3.58 psr hour, htlptrs $3.28 p«r hour. 9 paid holidays, paid Blua Cross, BIue Shield, paid lickntss and accident insurance. We will teach you welding after 30 doys Employment. APPLY PORTEC INC. PARAGON DIVISION 44000 Grand River Novi DESIGNER Special Machines Automation an person Kaot Hooting I 5)0 s. Telegraph Rd., EXPERIENCED Ml! erf' Mb Wll Homs Dr., Pontiac, Mich. EXPERIENCED SPRAY pa into i needed. MKhtgon .Tfn " i P.0 r Trailers,' Inc. 4SSS Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plolna. IkPiRlONCiiD WELDERS am general laborars noadad. Apply it Michigan Transport Trailers, Inc., 4SSS Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. EXPERIENCED SERVICE man air-conditioning. vesr teum employment, hospital Insuronco, paid vacation and othar frlnga banal Its. Apply . In parson Kast Haating and Cabling Co., sso S. Telsgraph Rd., Pontiac. --------EXPERIENCED HAVE OPENINGS for 1 guards. Must apply In pe Ilia or 3» N. Talagraph, HYDRAULIC C O M M B R C I A L ASSEMBLER. Experienced trainee. Plenty of overtime, wages and fringe benefits eluding fully paid blue cross, shift. Apply at AMBAC Industrial Row, Troy. Eq Emp'oysr. 2170 LAB ASSEMBLER, or tralqom Plenty of overtime, good wages, and frlnga benefits, Including luliy paid blue cross. Day ahlft. Apply •> Bbnten Division AMBAC Industrial,' W* Industrial Raw, .Troy. Equal Op-portunlty “—'-------- HELP WANTED for SO |oto. and unskilled production wot S3.I0 par hour, Rlua Cross bsnatlts, ask (or Bill Abbott, L__ In perion st TfttO Orchard Lika blnemtl*0Dsyil Olid' oftomoonr 7721 mxrsrSapsr^ SALESMAN r*i.?^HXkJsSb,«::' 634-4443 LATHE OPblkAtoV MILL OPERATOR Second shift only, top rites, all fringas. steady nonaeosetial employment, apply ki “ Pyles Industries, tstto Wl Wixom# Mich , NEEDED AT ONCE I Younq man to do clean up, parts chaser and station work.tor now car dealership. ftin&Tig1 jSumtt pom tlac, IP MS4 In Lokt Orion. OPPORTUNITY mfibu wnti iMBMnicBi •unifyi :htncu n Mm BttwrtBMiKt o( •tn«r Dttro MnufluV ContVct Parional ax Pontiac Gonoral Hospital, ssmlnole at w. Hurdn, Pontiac, Mich. Phiina 33B-47H Ext. SIS. Sporting Goods Salesman Full time opening Hr man Wll ■wusWiMs tiihing. Fay cemmanaurata .wll background and axparlanca. Purchau discount Paid vacaftamhaildayi Insurancaganslsn programs Apply In parson It a.m. la 4 p.m. Halfi WiRtsi Mala____J Box C-1ft Fonflocp I TRUCK DRIVER u$£b CAR PORTER drlvtrt license and |774 Oakland Aye. wages and triage benefits, wartime, days and Apply . at ¥. an tj. md U LATHE, MILL Md shaper bands t progressiva. dlas,„stsady SS l weak, all fringes. 334-4S73. PULL^OR^ Enginoorlng Co. 4701 ^1 Milo R(Tj mag Shelby Rd. 4IV4W0, 1 “'Production Workers Mtchlnt Operators, Prslght Handlers rmblert, common Isborsrs TRANSP. AVAILABLE Rapoir ready tor srark 4 a.m. to 4 p.m. EMPLOYERS TBmporory Service, Inc. rnnmSSt gTKTmn •Ml E. 10 Milo _________ ihifts available With sr,feamvn,ll,T. Art there any marrlad hyglahlala in tha Mlltard, Highland or While Lake areas who toyld want fa ga back to work 1 *r 2 day* a waak. If so write Box «' Milford, Michigan. AMERICAN GIRL Ht* *uh5'“tl''n’por*rv WE NEED EXPERIENCED! Stsnos'and Dictaphone Oprs. Typists — Jr.. Sr., Sal. ^^^^Ky^ddlng Mach.) — Incidentlly, we pay A Young Lady Over 40 TO 57,200 to train tar parionnal Interviewer position, Mrs. Hardy ■ABY SITTER MORE POR home man waoas. 401-0144, BABY SITTER LIVE IN or out, waakands off Rechattar vicinity, .-call 4Sl-aS72. ___ 'babysitter, -MY. HflMti,»(einiiy of Crescent nlghtl, SIS. 335**340, no calls after •XRMAtDTlSAYSrNO-SundiyiT'»x-parlsnca not nKsuary. Apply In parson at Dali's Inn, Sill Elizabeth LlkaEd. BABYSITTER, CLARKSTON area, Itvo ln or out, 42SU547 aHar S. SIVBRLY MAhOll O^PRSTRTN.'i, L.P.N.'s, NURSES AIDES lha oppertunlty to cars tar aur agad ladles and gentlemen. Maks a real contribution In nursing by serving people who naad YOU. Pleas* apply and let us tall you tha Beverly story and bacoma a member of fh* Bavarly family. You will truly to rawaruad. W* will train l 1243. Htlp WeiitEd Male 6Help Wanted Male Real Estate Offict 333-7156 Miller Bros. Realty IAN WITH BODY Shop, txpsrlonct, 6934?oo*"d P* n*’ n L,l<* Arlan, SHIPPING AHD RECEIVING hsTpor, ^r,rikX",^*'Hr Oak’ll I work in furnltur* itar*. MEN WANTED tar general factory work, itaady employment, apply In person to SS Eaaf Plk*. maIRYenanci man .. Full tlma and part ftmo- Many Needed at Once ?ndhr«« ®Wnc« SS? fringe benefits. Pleas* sand a short autlln* of your Interview to Press Box No. C-24, Pontiac Praia. RETIREE FOR PORTER WORK BIG BoViSrVv 2440 Dixie Hv * Salesmen ^r^w’Sl-d.irftfrrfiK! parson, pratar sqm* sales mi Salesmen Appointments I'M RJALLV EXCITED-BECAUSE I HAVE ENOUGH LEADS POR 3 MORE GOOD, EXPERIENCED SALESMAN WHO WISH TO WORK IN THE POM TIAC AREA AND IaKiT (Wifi 111.084 PER YEAR. PLUS LIFE INSURANCE, HOiPiTALIZATION, AND PAID VACATIONS. FOR PERSONNEL AND CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW, PHONE A. E. Van Bibber 342-3425 SALESMAN w, good working conditions, prefit, call Hally Mablls good i Homes. 634-4443 SERVICl STATION Ga full time days, |und*' Ml 747708. _______ SSoHl^i ting for si MV* position patrolman an tna none* Dept. Minimum raqplramanta Include: 1 — U.S. Citizenship, resident of Opkland County upon appolntmont. Minimum ag* 21 yaara, high school education or III a Michigan drlvara criminal racord, I tarvlaws, I &d partial may attain Turret Lath* Operator Sat UP and jparita aircraft (gurtF TRAINEES Tray ana plant. G Goad physical candlflM • Excellent tab tar veteran* G Pull banaflta and eaaf of «»- • WlR ra-traln from ofhar ac-Thfi?"company la axpandln* and Today _____FE 4-0586 _____ TRUCK DRIVER POR raaldanflaj rutabaga rout*, good wagaa, ahart hours, 2f3-1114 after 4 pm' TXlLdlT Puli time and part time, (ring* banaflti. SACKS TRUCK DRIVER irt or lrnalf truck/ yard •tC.1 ttvadVr 4 d«y»# J4hg saAJS Assemblers and Production Machine Operators No Expgrience Necessary Pontiac Motor Division General Motors Corporation Pontiac, Michigan Employment Office Open 8-11 A.M. 1-4 P.M. Monday thru Friday - IMMEDIATELY 10 SHARP MEN 18 TO 25 Contact: Mr. Roymer of 332-3639 Buyers— Salters Meet thru Press Wont Ads. 6 Help Wanted Melt IVfiAiiNCBD FURNACE Instsllsrs, year round amployifiant. So s. Tatagrgph Rd„ r-3*- »»» Rd*. Clsrkstan, ____ FOREMAN Detroit pasad In • t r u m a n f manufacturer requires- auparv tor ter small Imachln* shop oparatlon, turret lathes, tmglno lathes and To. TRERICE CD. 1747 Watt Lafayatta Datrolt, Mien. Fhona 743-1417 Production Workers NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY JOURNEYMAN PIPE FITTERS All of thi GM Benefit Programs will accrue as you «n|oy Top Earnings with a Winning team ? Make Application at Our Employment Office ,8 A.M. to 4 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDJLY FISHER BODY . DIVISION 4 ' '. . , x B ' I ' ■ ,, , ' Jtoo BALDWIN AVI. 1 FONT I AC ^ Fhona (111) 922*4941 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER TELEVISION TECHNICIANS RCA ImmadiatE openings for television technicians, experienced and trainees. , These. are career positions offering excellent sqlary and fringe bonifjts thpt include paid vocations, holidays, sick Isays') msdical insurance, life insuronco and a modern rotiromont plan. Additional earning possibilities, planned advancement, compafiy-providod vehicle and tools. Extended train* « ing program in advanced electronics. - CAU MR. BARRETT FOR INTERVIEW. 335-6118 - ■ '•9. A.m!-6 P.M. ’ MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER PLANNING FOR A FUTURE plana, Thu protection of your Company paid banaflti Include: Employee and Family anca, Blua Cross Madleal and HeapHU coverage. El Sick and Aceldant Ir - — rernlum of IMS. Top UntM Ratal plus many ethar banaflti. ‘TO OPENINGS FOR: • JOURNEY TOOLMAKERS • JIG AND FIXTURE BUILDERS • BORING MILL • VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL MILLS • LATHE AND PLANER HANDS • EXPERIENCED BENCH HANDS - • WELDERS AND wilder fitteps • PIPEFITTERS 56 Hour Week Long Range Program ’ USI-Artco, Inc. - ’ MACHINE AND TOOL DIV. SUBSIDIARY OF US INDUSTRIES^ INC. 3020 INDIANWOOD RD. LAKE ORION PHONE 693-838B For Wont Adt Dial 334-4981 HAOtieiXN, ruil“orT»rrtjm., I 474-3541 ____- DIIHWASHBR p« Sundays, I My 7 p.m., liberal Sim ««W 4H»I. iMvitTYIR. pm" Pi jWrt timeTmy tf. £r \.-h >-^*o»v aa, Ftitnorstono Unlvariltv im LdMjid._^ # lAiy Wm~ w*nif0Tpit«i«*'ftitt iSMwtfcdfBrMMACfvpfffi address Pnd phone —eliijiL- jii . -__■ *3EbMjHK*wm BUFFETERlX HELP Auiitont Manager Cashier Goad npportunltv i mature women, Ex-benefits. personn'el DEPT. I 2hd FLOOR Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL ’ An egual eppertunlty employer BOOKKEEPER With teme-tmtlincer'~ ■ xMNiiNcio housek!eper far executive home. Ret. required. 434-4744' eeli atisr I p.m. _ ^EXECUTIVE- SECRETARY Mcroitrv — key position. DIRECTOR OF PERSONNEL “nitroy Convar»lon_D#vli Aii Equal ^8 IMS TROY .41014 Frl. 474-2377, cell liter » p.m. BEAUTY OPERATOR Full time end pert time. Top pay. ;—Apply alAndraV Beauty Salon, U N. Safllnaw. In perton only. Ieautician With some perleoce to work Into Call attor 4, lit-MW. VaRMAIDTPuCTSR pert MSS attar |3 noon tor ape lARMAID AND waltreiiti pert time, nloht ihlft, ll will train, apply In pereoi P.M., Airway Lounge, office work/ ealary wltti a ” Sad fringe Hr FT* Id.. W)i An equal opportunlti EXPERIENCED DENTAL Aeelitant, Clarketon area, full time, ms-jus after I p.m. _________ EXPERIENCED SALESGIRL . full or part time. 582-7340. experienced food and cod . waltmiae. Donolll'i, 2775 Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Experienced. Mutt be able to typo SO word! per min. on electric machine and .ehorthand at 10 word! par min. Excellent starting aalary. Birmingham Management Company needs you. If you qualify, please call Walter Ponder at 44>-750e. t a.m. to S p.m._. FULL~1fiME gat station attendant, -muel-tie 11 ____ ■ ■ uary. Birmingham Cleaners. lisa s. Woodward. Ml 4 4410,• hABYSITTER LIVE IN room' and board 810 week, own room and TV, mustllke animals, attar 4, 334-1203. i 'Ear waitress; NIGHTS,-excellent wages. Central Ear, 21 E. Pika It.' Sea Ron after 0. _-------— loo'K KEEPER-TYPIST, experienced through trial balanoi. TYPiraSO! - words per min. Good starting; salary. Birmingham Management Company needs you. If you mjtruftm: Pandi lARMAID AND WAITRESS, will f train. Apply Payton Place, 71 - Baldwin. toUNlBLOR, *11 you need It ability to work with tho public. Call Anglo Rook, 322-7157. ___________| tOLLEGS STUDENT, tor molhor'i Fountain •Sales Full time. Part Tima Contingent $1.83 to Start -Uniforms Famished Laundered 250 N. WOODWARD Near Hamilton. BLOOMFIELD SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Maple ADAMS SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER B, 19ftO •r F, PANTRY aiRL, Experienced only.1 Apply Bms Club, 114 Orchard Lake, Pontiac. ' • RECEPTIONIST ^ 'PERSONNEL otllco, oorsonoblo parson with In* taresMn^ubllc canlacl soma typ- SHIRT .MARKER ANOVackagar for dry cleaner plant, wilt train, apply SHAMPOO OIRL rtqu'lred. must ' llcansa and*toed appearance. Way, Friday, 1alyrd a y, Ingham area. Call 447-S44S. _ SEAMSTRESS EXPERIENCED ONLY FULL OB FART TIME APPLY ALVIN'S Huron at Telegraph ORDER COOK, day work no iundtyi or holldoyi# Ingham, Minimi, ; WVMlir'Vmnrincome to mist ms In my k. CHoots your unllmllsd. For ml, csll 331 9 am. ] ji ‘—•“SANDERS 363-9411 CLERK-TYPIST Branch offlCS of nstlonsl fInane# company. Abovs average working condiflont. BxcsHsnt company APPLY MONDAY TUES.-FRI. 7-if A.M. OR 8-5‘Ai IS THE REASON IT'S GOOD Tologroph. Call Mrs, Corby, 443' , Pnybylskl, 3344734. CREDIT WOMEN Cradlt work and collections ratall More. Ail phaaaa of i_ credit. See Mr. Lester. I oINIral LAUNDRY help, ex'. KAY, DAUM I perlence not necessary, Pontiac 144 W. Maple, Birmingham Laundry, 540 3. Telegraph. ___ ttlANINO LAD I E S, ALSO1 OBNERAL OFFICE, - Sales ----p , prefer Plash deaneri, 331 IA Huron. ' CHRISTMAS SELLING SEASON le here with AVON. Uee yeur _ .............. j and neighbors will lova buying a fabulous line of gifts. Call now FB 4-0429 or writs Drayton Plains# P. COUNTER HELP WANTED for quality dry cleaning plants. Apply MALL, tliahfenir Rd* nr'cell 8%2371. **1 ^^COOK, NIGRTsT ■shf qualify dry cleaning plant. Apply I houeewerk, will train, FE nt 1-Hour Martlnlilno at Miracle Mre. Reach. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS REGISTERED NURSES Licinied Protical Nurses. 3 p.m. to 11i30 p.m. shifts 11 p.m. to 7i30,a.m, shifts TOPSALARY REGISTERED NURSES $650. to $787. per mo. Licensed Practical Nurses ^$496. to $607. per mo. "Shift Differentials REGISTERED NURSpS 3 P.M. TO 11.30 P.M. $3. PER DAY 11:00 P.M. TO 7:30 A M. $4.50 PER DAY Licensed Practical Nurses 3 P.M. TO 11.30 P.M. $2.50 PER DAY 11.00 P.M. TO 7.30 A.M, $3. PER DAY Excellent Fringe Benefits PAID LIFE INSURANCE 12 PAID SICK DAYS PAID HOLIDAYS Paid Individual Employe's Blue Cross After 1 Year 2 week paid vacation after 1 year 3 weeks poid vacation after 5 years ADDITIONAL BENEFITS TWO 20-MINUTE COFFEE BREAKS IN ONf'DAY MEALS AT COSTki FREE GARAGE PARKING PLUS MANY OTHER FRINGE BENEFITS. Our hospital has many other benefits for our —employee's. ——— We are proud of our staff And feel that we have the friendly atmosphere that makes our hospital a good place to work. We offer you security with a bright future. Contacti PtmtiaejOsteopathie Hospital 50 N/Perry Pontiac Phi Personal Office : mlsston'end Knuintcr»lerL* Apply 338-7271 Ext. 262 or LWV Assistant Director Of llonel_BuMdJng,_Room ip/-- Nursing: Miss Clifton wSuHdinge. 3M4eee e!fer *7 ?_ Ext. 383._______*OMEN WAN7nO-for Vrt flm. INSURANCE AGENCY WANTS In perten, 3335 S. Blvd. nt Squirrel mature elllclent penon far 1 men Ra„ Auburn Height!. '_ WAITRESS WANTED. 7 g.m. ihlfj. apply In perion, Cracker Barrel Restaurant, SMI Union Lake Rd., Union Lake. 253-2040.___ WAITRESSES COUNTER GIRLS Are ; You Ready for the Next Step? 1 MAINTENANCE lupsrvl Relit'## welcome. $6,000. Jim 1 Atioclafas Psriorlnsl# 332*91 V 2 SECRETARIES/ #xcell#nt typlsf, 1430, Ajigls Rook, A 61 o c I a f a s Par wnn# I, 032*918/1 15"''GENERAL'' OFFICE 'posilfloni Light lyplfig, 13110. Angl* Rook, Aitodalei Parionnal, 33ft197, i Teller trainees. Good toca* Mon# M25. Angle Rook# AiBOClafot PersonnaL 33M157. 10 MANAGER TRAINEE8, fee I64SOO. Jim Raed. A hoc 11 I Fertonnel, 332*9157. $60, $80r$100 I STEN0-TYPIST 1 par m Tiling hi Work WfliifMl Mafr A f CARPENTERS Father and Ion. Largo or amaM |obt. 612*9137, ’ 17 CARPENTER/ W6UOH~ AnD r; FINISH# FB 5*3445 ’ ‘ * Xf^cAWpiNfili ^6Rk "7, AT A FAIR PRICE! Addition*# family ioomi,. kitchen cabinet*, garagei, Biding, rOQflng# cement# afc. Large or small job*. DEW CONST RUT ION CO. PS * 2191 or PE 9*3529 Open ova. 'Ml 9. ATTENTION RESIDENTIAL BUILDERS Finish carpenter craw Booking employment# officiant and reliable, Wonted Rial litate IMMEDIATE CASH For hom*e In Oakland County, no pnlnte, no commit.ion, flay up Id } monthi, epeh In 24 hourt. ,, YORK roomlWwIm, watery l|80 UC, M — ict. z ~‘ \ a part mar welcome# 624-3382 after I. ...“MS. ref., call Dick Cutcher# 651-2973. CAR A“ATRtl"NGr^U9T“ end dlngi taken OUt, FE 2*6064, ! 674-1691 or 331-6993 EXPERIENCBD CUSTOblAN wihfaj IwItTcml i. Igying f <6flr "WVLrC your aqulty looey call ,aganf# 6 kAyl a 7 ^0AtNA^i" CASH FOR A STARTER Bomb in Oakland CfOUNTY. CALL AOENT, friend* and Influencing people? $400-$600 FEE PAID Hive you httn eatUng l.nqlhle. ar MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Inlanelblti with .uce*..f ln fin(nc. ,nd Aja Sam* callage halplul, Cal Oo you thoroughly anlny making Ill'llV" *TI0NAL loftw^ur j $7200 UP & FEE PAID „ point all COLLEGE GRADUATES challenging For management paalllen In I with a Halde. Call: ' lor renting INTERNATIONAL FBRSONNEI. ei-H» lOEG W. Huron I ADMITTING CLERK F E S-7175 . OE 4W5I ROOM AND prlvata bath, newly painted, In Pontiac, M2-SSM. R6bMsrfir¥Lo6*rpsa' rasn child walcama. Carport. No pala. Sec.dap. 144 BueMjTV ROOW UNFURNT AFf;~tdr rant. 5.00 par weak. Application taken at 20 Pontiac Lake Road. ound Pontiac. Agent# i S ROOM. ADULTS “O N L Y , | 691-0374. | references# dap.# prlvata entrance, age cleaning,'LOfs"*- WANtPD IN PONtlAC „334 2823. r-——r^r. Immadiata closing. REAL VALUE 1 REALTY# 642*4220. Work Wonttd Female 12 CWllff. j l Famiilail office cleaning# 0299. LIGHT HAULING ate. FE 3*09lt. anlnni. Call 394- IRONING# 1 day service. mooiR Fifttni Walton# between Jotlyn and Parry# . 373-5691. J j EXPEllINCED T R A CTTC AT NURSE Companion for prlvata I duty cate*# no live in# tNcallant roforancot. 332-3729. SPOT CASH JR JQUITY# OR OTHER# FOR QUIC4 CALL NOW, HAG REALTOR# OR 4-0356 $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR portunii»-f in >1S.SHl I FOR___YOyR BQUITY, VA, FHA.l ACTION tdwniihauMi, ad|ac.nt_to 175._0nly career opporlunnlai m ail Mold*, tall: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL platted git r_o _. mm, ■ dally end Sunday 12 to S coal Thure. Far mar* IM cell 22S4Hn. ■■■■ the Pontiac area, haval S ROOMsTBATHri cfiird" wn jeymenl, will takel n» pete. 343-Wt._____ my, AMERICAN HERITAGE ^ If APARTMENTS ' ‘1 l and 2 bedroom, all conyenlancee, V, „ I _a!r.-Conail loned, all Otlllilae In-^“2l elliSiad. In rant. No pale. Adult, ■f nly. 4755165. , , Canterbury Apartments Opposite St. JOMPh Hospital And The New Sheraton Inn -and -bedroom, able., balcony, ________JNP.. Huron Building SGrvicts-Supplies 13 ,0' ,wim'n"’# ■ t*rp"‘50' GENERAL. OFFICE ' PRE.FA, garage d.i .hinki^amn., cS u.j $300 TO $425----------erected. 5*er.;0|trcon.ti Numerou. patllloni. Type 40 to SO ■aiikMiwIlirita toekkaaplra Business Service 15 Jairaraeh WET , I Oll'blxle Highway . . . 473-3441 FORMER MEDICAL racaptlonlit, detlrae amploymant In phyelcian, TRANSFERRED? dantlit otfic*. or clinic, Drayton house and Ida* rv ,,,a nanarni Aoolvl Pl*in*, Walarlord area, good [ Aganl, Ml-0374. Par.ohn*r Otflca, Crrtfinfon •J'1''*' *Tf* » «'««»•! WE ARE^READiTTO BUttO Hospital, Rochester, 451-4000. g»r n?inyla, slalo Outley houri,, w, need late. Caeh lor — gweeSuiVi! Ve am---------- t!” O. Box 301, lots or acreage la support EX-SERVICE MAN _ Orayton Plains, Mich,______ larging building program, c Wendtrlng Wherfc,!P fa? w* have OAY' wORK'WANTED and Ironlnot, rls A Son Ranlt cllanll lor ~ income RdraT' cond. Sorry no cnlldron or pits. “g—jQHNSON la ITU . Talaarash #1 .4111 'ollHl^X1 Swk'ollL^*' Frank's Rnstauranl, WAITRESSES KITCHEN HELP Jack's brlvt-ln 22 W. Montcalm, apply In parson. WAITRESSES . Night ihltt full or part lima, mi b* II ytara of ag* or elder, 31.50 an hour plus nil fringe bantllts.i Apply In parSon, Eilat Bros. Big Boy Restaurant, Talteraph and Huron.______ WANTED: Dental assistant', ax- narianra preferred but not HHf. ‘Writ* BOX 43, Mlltord, , giving name, aga and working ax parlance. necaitai Mlchlga WOMAN FOR FULL TIME otflca work. Apply Pontiac Laundry A Dry cleaners, 540 S. Telegraph, Pontiac. Ne phen* call*.___________ WOMEN II AND OVER to work on telephont In modern, air .con-dltloned otflca. NO experience Sultlcltnlly mature and perlencad Id operate i fijdjjrtga ah his awn a, .. .-----lAdanft »■ Adamt ____________„. Willy going places. MANAGER TRAINEES 1 . $500 UP f lh* foragolno sir ikes a Wonderful oppertunltlaa ter 6------ ------ ------------ ---- bilious vouna men, educal • shorf but #ll-lncluBiv« outlin# AVON-TROY CAR PET WAREHOUSE 3735 or 332*1404. ORGAN TEACHER, b«ginner», method for adults, morning available, for information eal 1225.______ _____ _____' Moving and Trucking LIGHT HAULING 33A«W4 WILLI BUY I ilty — Cash direct to as title work Is erd la dated , .... ______________ $151 . .. >175. No pale or children. Call Mrs. Schulti, 474-0547, 1 to I p.m. isT^'mlmitas Puinfing and PECordtiwg 23 TimGS Realty G I. O DECORATORS Inttrlor^Si Extarlor--■■■ Wall washing, rug shampooing, paintig# wall paparlng# minor rapalrs. Dally PLY GRINNELL'S - PONTIAC •Imt# over 16 . .. Dixit Highway._ | KEEP YOUR FULL TIME job' as wife and mothtr.# full tima pay#, part time work# fra# 13 4 2 wardrobe# no collecting# n o delivering, wa train. Car ami phona necessary, Queens Way# 673-2139 jind UL 2*2291. kitCMEN HELP WANTED. Irrv-madltta openings. BEVERLY /j&HsMjC ONVALESCENT CENTER# SM Orchard Ldka Ava, KEYPUNCH OPERATORS high school gradual* with good gradat, aga 20, or above. General office duties Including typing, soma figures, and moating m* public. Goad starting aalary. 5 day waek. Liberal amplayt bamflts. so* Mr. Ldhmiiiffr, Dill Flnanca Co., 10 W. Huron St, An aqual opportunity DRILL AND MILL' aparatgr, parlanca necessary, excellent op-portunity tor qualified applicants. press Bax C-t#.. ity Writ* Pi Pontiac, Mich. DEPENDABLE PERSON work. Donnell’s, Rd , Lake Orion. HOUSEKEEPER. ALSO Moor* at 332-1522, ' CURB GIRLS A WAITRESS 1 Union LOka Rd. Nlahts, Blua Star Drlve-ln. 3005 roin rnnx Opdyka ltd., Pontiac. Apply In wlu COOK parson anlv. . ■- .......... CIGAR CLERKS WANTED, matura, Cunningham Drug, Tal-Huran. CLEANING & KITCHEN Bxcallant working conditions, t or 4 days wsak, •ttractiva salary, EM 3*4121, ____ CuAi ildLB. DaVs, avanlngs, tupar Chlat, FE 2-4151,________ CASHIER-TYPIST E 9*7934# GR ILL COOK# A FTE R NObN5,12^l Apply In parson Mr. J's, 1971 general kitchen 2778 8. Lapeer 7TIV Call for a p p o I n t r HOUSEKEEPER, FOR BEAUTY Salon# part tlmt# 4 day wk.# Barnard Hair Stylist — Ml 7*2033. HOUSEKEEPER - BABYSITTER wanted. Mon-Frl.. 11:30 to 6ap.m. Birmingham araa. Call attar 6 p.m. 147*9691. HOUSEKEEPER. .Live In. Own room plus aalary. Small child welcome. FE 4-9740. After 4._____.___i HOUSEKEEPER# 9 day*, recent references# mu»9 have Own transportation. 626*7946. __ HOUSEKEEPER: Experltncad operators naadad day and aHarnoon anlfti In Pontiac art*. Good workli dltlana, Tap My. Call Mils or vleit our omca. KELLY GIRL m ,VoS1ln** 642-9650 An Equal Opportunity Employe KEYPUNCH OPERATOR" Tamp. Aielgnmanta, all ahlfta Call isan Johnston 642*3099 family typo roataurant. Wapffar t‘ 0 Complel# training program a Above average earnings • Paid vacttlon, health and II working condlllont And what lolling axparlance you hava had and wlm what raeulti TO Fonllac Free! Box C-17 Your rapllai - twill be held In the alrlctasl «l men I delay EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE - apply at Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake Ave. ___ OAKLAND UNTvERSTtY The unlverelly hat two Immediate vacancies for: Reproduction Machine Operator Audio-Visual Equipment Operator That* positions require experience and offer e fine benefit program. If auiilfled, contact: , The Pareonnal Otflca ■Walton A Squirrel Road Rochester. Michigan 45043 An aqual oppartunlfy employ_ PART TIME WORK with'the'Dalrdil MALE HELP WANTED CAREER POSITIONS OPEN IN • MANAGEMENT TRAINING • ENGINEERING and DESIGN • SALES • CHEMICALS ---B "ACCOUNTING • ADMINISTRATIVE Adam* & Adams LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR pain ‘ting near Waterford araa. Fra* aitfmala*. ORMB04 or OR 2-2754. Wanted Household Goods 29 5170 DIXIE HIGHWAY 123-0400 Realtor Sean 7-7 Offlc* Open Sunday 1-5 HEADQUARTERS FOR INDEPENDENT INVESTORS INC. if HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good 3 _ROOM, BASEMENT aparhnant. i furniture and appliances. Or what have you? 1-------B & B AUCTION----------- SOlT Dixle Hwy. _ OR A2717 n#w- furniture, wanted nTce Clean lurnifur* a* »"dj>* RECEPTIONIST $425 UP Enloy an exciting carter with the public# typing North suburban araa. Fee, Paid. - _________MH________442-4241 COPPER, B R SNELLING & SNELLING 2 AND 3 ROOMS Nawly decorated —Ilura, prlvata anlr:— Wasnlng facilities, s carpeted hallway, appreciate, child apartment Oep. required. w.loom. Inp springs. M, C. Llppard, 371-1757.' 5.3?802. _ public, typino required, Wonted Miscellaneous 30 2 room”a^ bathT*io n, c«s, ______rben area. Fee, Paid. no smoking or drinking. Ideal for l INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL -oppBR, brass, RADIATORS, K™..«*• •'»"•' “» «»' 5 starters, and ganarat^t, X. Dix< Now Leasing BRAND NEW LAUREL VALLEY T0WNH0USES . 1, 1 AND $ BEDROOM APTS. QN PRIVATE LAKE INDIVIDUALLY CONTROLLED CENTRAL JEAT AND AIR CONDITIONING Luxurious wall to wall carpatlna, bath and a haif (axcapt 1 bedroom apis.) ieunErCdpdltldne-d-throuahaut. infMwai mrm P"d laundry raom*. Insulated elaat throughout, g a r b a g a dlspaaals. Mailer TV Afttanna system, paved private parking. MODELS OPEN FOR YOUR INSPECTION RENTALS FROM $155 SR HirK^vA^ dr; (ON HIGHLAND RD. BETW. AIRPORT AND HOSPITAL RD.) 673-8686 deposit required. 1192 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 334*2471 SALES: Bright girl who. an|o business head. 6303. ______OR 3-5649 TOP PRICES PAID for furniture -----------.,1-xka-y------ ' 2-ROOM APARTMENT, Clatin WANTED: BUYING 17*5*..*yvar quiet, near Pontiac AAotori# a., paying 15 par cent, 682-138J. I only, deposit required. 294-4629. $75 dap. HOTPOINT FIRST WITH FEATURES WOMEN I WANT MOST inquire at 273 Baldwin Ava.# j PONTIAC, LOWER 1 WE BUY OLD furniture.^ dishes# 2 ROOM EFFICIENCY# prlvata an-1 3 Townehous© anuai Mmortunitv amnlovar BILLING CLERK: Sam* knowiedg* glassware; anything eld. 473-0415. trance and bath, newly dacaratad equal opportunity ampieyar of adding machlna. 1303. Call AAary!w'ANTED—GOOD USED I" ar 10" and new furniture. All utllltla*, It Bridgas. | ubla saw. PE 2-5341. I child walcama. 135.30 wk. Sec. : dapetlt. 33M047. ______ ______ w 3 ROOMS, ADULT day worker*, ne Apts. SWITCHBOARO: American Girl _ Wbodward at 7 LiVe IN BABY 8lfffel#~ prlvata room# vary mm aW|| — birmingingham WAITRESSES# No axparlanca ra-qulrao# good say and tips# pleasant in in* I cauntar ward, allarnaona, Blit s B can-1 Cana* Shop, Telegraph at Mapla Broaka1 fis Mila). 445-1712; ___, WOMEN ie do cleaning woi flees and tchpew. In 1hd; Rochesfar and Blrailnviai la *1.90 par hr, S day* a J.m. jC«IIS47-a43f. _ -__ WAITRESS, lull lima, nlBhle. Harbor Bar, 412-0338.____________ WOMEN WANTED FOR general KM«rF YOUNG WOMEN 19*29- d eraew ... please . * Wa train pleasing Imrad'al* ai^loymanT.* Excallanl timing tor thoae who qualify. Ne typalng raqulrad. Far Interview call Mr. Falara bafor* 2 p.m. 333- Ing helpful. Hurry now Mary Brldeae. CLERK: Excapllonal gal i ; for figure* and a happy | jjrab^ this one. 8499. RECEPTIONIST: Alert ! cheerful sm*" Ann Carter. WOMEN WITH SMALL children, wants 2 or 3 badr apartment. 332-1745# TRAINEES IN PONTIAC AREA l irig helpful. Hurry now 1309. II TO tt YEARS OP AGE ■ - $84.50-1135 PER WK. ___Coll Detroit 963-0088 Z Registered Pharmacist Salary Rang* $904-$l,085 Ara'Tartlr! Sha?- Livlnn 0«art«r* bedroom houM or 3-ROOM. DEPOSIT raqulrad, 33G4410 after 9 _ ■n^BWmSSty Church ® V^Hhoe, privaYC wishes to , rent 3 bedroom house,1 ---------------- for eatlstant 3 ROOM! 'mTshedi AVAILABLE FOR RENT 1 BEDROOM. BATH ANDHALP FULLY CARPriTfD Union Lake BATH# nicely1 O well carpeting, adults only, no children or pets.i 937.99 per weak. $199. dap. req. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Cell AIR CONDITIONED BRAND NEW 7 3-7299* ___ • 331*6954, 33 3 ROOMS AND BAtK $69# ref, 1180. HoOWiftKFiW; Pontiac, Mwh. ER-47l1c __Opportunity Employer Registered X Ray rat?,8tv. ¥$«J•' wSk!ITechnologist I. raqulrad, Rochailar, 4S1- JM'.._ | 1*8? mafer In aeSuntlna,9pr | divorcee mother ....... | 667-4943 to discuss further. ;^lll|gg|H«lB Wgnftd M. or f. 624-4679 2661 PONTIAC TRAIL WALLllD lake Der mo r-—- ....Ntw ymi mu. KEY PUNCH: Nice appearance and 2 WORKING GIRLS looking for 1 of 3 ££<3^ AND BATH, nlca building.) ciarkslon has ¥ vacancies . lal. Large reams, -ft.—— ,Lut | pram. lake rronr name, comp, v.v.v.■ v 3 rooms, private cam, meaiy pmvir uarpaljKI, Rft#|B*faj^'. afternoon and evening shift,' . • furnished, rani $S5 PIUS utilities, furnished, baby walcorn*. 4I2-S4M. JSS?*' SLtiflliw plus $2.50 for each 8 hourX shift worked on weekends-! caMVcaro?,Br*nt., v,’un,, 8111 MM' JKS2!? 01J “h0#l *•*chlWr,n- 3 rooms and bath, uiintiaa, »r Sal hr aaritwiare. aLm# Excellent fringe benefits'M4M4ft-B. „„ r,oh, ___ . , . 'MANAGER: Trainee# go rlghl to the MALE ..TO SHARE house ana,, podaac and rati program. Contact! topi This career is tor you I Today, facilities with seme. SS0 P*rr tr.nc. 51 wriono jiglhe deyl Greell 14,000. Cell Jim month, good deal. 4at-17S7 after pg aoiae. ^ Pontiac General Hospital programmer: it you pra tops.!Wanted Real Estate 36 3 p^miYc' Gwiere^Hospit.i, ob.so this le for you. This le the pot at| ■ -—------_ „ . ^ per wk. 345 depoelt, FI 4-5444, gold! Coma todayl Gol $12,999. ■ •* «%av TACU after 6 p.m. - . . 335-4711 _ I Cell Jim L*nt. cr.« vni,D uniiscnp LOT V ROOMS, PONTIAC Eaet Ewel_Opportunl?l!_.Employe — ... --------" ,h. F0*n^^WlLL°T aU'UKS?5 ‘',°- t _ _ around upl Then PAST FRIENDLY SERVICE —i Deve Lee.*^* ‘°P W ‘7'°M' C,"‘ Aaron Mtfl. & Invest. Co. 1 w.ra, dtpND.nd8raT.H'rra 332-1144 ____ 662*3204. -----.- i . ; “APPRAISALS FREE j11 JggS^mSHS ,ATH' 'ct,lld| P-R-E-V-l-E-W GUARANTEED SALE :J NICE ROOMS, heer downtown, 77' If you don’t mind. • III SUI4*MI ________ lurnlehed akcant alee. MMnl. ., WALTON SQUARE APARTMENTS 1675 Parry Rd. North HOURS 12-7 FE 8-1606 373-1400 LADY TO LIVE IN wiih 'mafgr m aecouniira, prjerj Salary Range $57l-$685 **p«r — -1—per mo, DRUGS: 5*11 th* bast to th* bast. Slap In and move upl Park upl This company jtatds you I •5,500-1 ! Call Dev* La*. ■ INSPECTOR: Qaallly caunla her* Roll up your sleavei and dlo In nowl Advene*, last) Gal. 57,500. eatery,■ , Include DO YOU ENJOY CHILDREN: YOU CAN KEEP YOuW HQUj AND BAEN MONEY TOI Drive a Bloomfield Hills school but. Guarantaad St* hours a day, 5 days a week. Excellent pey end .fringe benefits. PHONE 332-0412, Dining Room Waitresses inaurence vacation# , ----- m j m person 10 iwr*. anonKt* weioron Homemakers 8IIW ^ Your skills at • homemeker could MAID TO AkSISt porter,-In general be edded Income ter vou. Wa era nroientlv aceaptlng our part time swill# application leller^ehould ____^ phan*d "US ot Lavlout^Additional 50c per hour tor DRAFTSMAN: structure this rlghl m»'-up,' ediiltid ^r.xpari.n?"! afternoon and evening GeitS ^V^ricV^PenSr^^L I Plus 12'5? fpr 8, hour C.I.S.v.1... BLOOD-DONORS . shift worked on weekends.! 334-2471 23351 debris, I aiia ot I I partly r>ind fully compleh Hudson's Pontiac Mall INTERVIEWERS TRAINEES 5TAI Contact: arine, laantly. KT WOI MISS NEWELL AT 332-3437 IMMIDIAff OPENING for olllc* girl, apply In parton only balwaan |4 p.m. Efua Sky Orlva-ln Thaatra. 3110 Opdyka. IMMldlAtE OPINING FOR lull lima hoepllal food itrvlc* workers. Pxparlanc* desired but not nacassary. Apply In parton only. Dialary Otllca, Crlltaninn Hospital. HOT w. University, Rochester. Help Wbnted Female 7 Help Wonted Female 7 Stenographers ^Immediate Opening# Stenographer l-$5,000-$5,50tl Stenographer ll-$6,000-$6,800 Excellent Fringe Benefits , ' In Addition to Salary i Including! i Pull peld family Blue Croet/Blua Shield 13 paid lick ikeve deyt per year-unllmlled eccumuletlon 10-M paid annuel leeve days par year Paid ieeel helidtye, im eSvencement Excellent working i 1 occupatli SHORTHAND SKILL RISBNTIAL APPLY NOW TO: THE PERSONNEL DIVISION Oakland CoOn|y Courthouse 1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac, Michigan / A Merit System end Equal Opportunity Employer URGENTLY NEEDED ■ "m MATURE WOMAN, PERMANENT Excellent f rj n g e benefits a? so program. Contacti gy.50 Personnel Dept. Pontiac General Hospital 30 DAY LISTING I We euartnlee Man., Prt. 0-4 I *E_LL THE Pontiac Mich. 338-4711 Equal Opportunity Employe Can You Sell? Intoraetad In making money. Ex-parlanca halplul, hut no will train, plenty of floor time mission tchadula. Far Interview, tor va NEAT AFFEARING CAlFiT6R A ■ panarat; ealas, pleasant spas* telephone vefca, no uperl* nacassary. Cell 115-7840 batwa* p.m.-» p.m. only.________ call Mr. Taylor, OR 441104. Evas. . IM #-7jM4. COPPERCRAPT. B 8 AUTI P ift heirloom placet, denier or hava a pony. r«u vestment# 334*9779. COLLEGE OR RETlKiMiNt semi retirement managamanl of ... ■ I , -man! e -Troy.—Handla tanant rfla-lion*, minor maintenance, lawn cara and hall claanlnp. No rantal necessary'.' Apt*.' yillltlet* *Phone plus; salary. 566*3199, COUPlTl PUXL fiMl for working manaaar of apartmant oomplax In Pnnllac. No chlldran or IMifl. Ex* ilnfananca A PAST GROWING COMPANY# wanting young man and woman from 19 to 25 to work In tholr Pontiac araa off lea. Experience1 Btary. Will train i to sir INFORMATION yoy up to $159 por benefits. .FOR INI B............. w... w foHL MKf WiUfMAN AT-69T copporcraff | ^79. SECRETARIES $450 TO $550 SECRETARY Manufacturers rep. In needs ambitious yeung woman with peed typing tkllle, pic* location, ^MQWMMMQMMMiliW^^WaeE^R#EEEI_ or'>E'i44ts.' __ .... I....-v-K-uw- |CL03i TO DOWNTOWN, 2 and 1 mu ream., nawlv dacoreiad, axe. can- OPEN EVERY DAY dttlon. Chlldran welcome,! v #-aii lri aonn soundproof# waihlng facilities, pvt. _CALL: 03I-42UU iCRIAO E MJ'M wk' UPSTAiRS. 3 LARGE room's, prlvata •USINISB ______ bath and antranea, utilities, near BBBPHMBa________ LAND CON- CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN, 1 rooms, R-Mart Shopping Canter. Dap. quallflcatlone, w* have th* post- tract. ™w furnltura, prlvata entrance, 375. 1)33 rantV UL1-2444, lien* avallablt. North Suburban !.,4dDCM rTnilT Dnnltnr carpeted hallways, pvt: parking-!— " ^- area. Fa* Paid. WARREN jIUUI, KBaiTOr bafn Chlldran welcome. Must sea; INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1450 N. Opdyka Rd. 373-1111 to appreciate. Pram 333.50 wk. 135- Hint HOUSES, MMUMI JY 150 S. Woodward, B'ham. _443-814l Urgantly need tor Immadlala sal*I J 2134; | —-------- SALES"TRAINEE I rBSSS* Exceptionally nice i ixidroomis rooms and bath, utmtiaa rant pence | Dally til I _ ,n. i„ pontiac rei deo. UL 2-' In exchange ter wltee part time MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE _ I 1457 | service, tmell child welcome. Rear Tiivifflrrra | 1 TO 50 HOMES# LOTS, PARCELS# $500-$650 PLUS CAR I -multiple UStino servicei_ ’«?. ”1”“ ' II fields. Age 31 and up, soma BY . PRJVATE PARTY, Prlnclplasi furnished 1BEDROOM aparl-oiiege heiptuT: Call: ; only, 3 family Incom* wanted. 414- m(n| uillltlat paid, no pals ar NtFrNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5473........ .......... ............ chlldran, dap. roq., call altar 4, for ‘ CASH NOW ster. No polnft. FREE SECRETARY for appoint.# 335*3153. com-'FURNISHED UPPER apartment. I baby walcome# 735 Portland St. rds, good tenant! Wiltlnft. DANIELS REALTY. 6653 md (M-59). OR 4*4129, Daar- management •» M^unll n«W awft- pr^|irrw^,, buV wnl ^traln. Classes ---r T.^ U.»#I. tenant rela- &rtlng ,v*ry g«:urday- .f-t-#®,t- Cell Mr. Bogar or Mr. IcJjram far: aooolntmenl. IVAN W. SCHRAMe Reellor T R A HU InsYrucfions-Schoois MEN TRAIN NOW IR A BIG PAY JOB AS CLAIMS ADJUSTER 10 FE 9*9471 leiman for 't i MBfrm and rantal excellent lalary plu and ufllltlai. 969*2131 m p.m. Monday through Friday.^ dARlTAklR'_CD'0FLl7"FULL ilm* lor large apartment prelect at 757 n; Parry. Wit* le clean, husband to do minor malntananca, help t cCtiTh^R~MO'fICTfUi I tTm# or WORl Naadad by credit firm la help asfahllsh new accounts. 415 0 weekly guarantee to man meeting, our roqulramonta. Write Manegtr# Box 4117, Cleveland# Ohio. 44123. SALESMEN . For predraselv* drawing Heal Cslata olllc*. panonal broker asilslanca, ample floor time and flbaral commleslon split, All closing! done In our otflca. Join a firm wham you become part ot a itift at dedicated k n a w I a d g a a bj'a salaspeopl*. Call th* Raillor for Adluitars tFXVr'XintiW Increas* “ WaakdayiTf " *0-4 fieiff,!!| 3M-J claims rasultlng Irom automnhll* 5350 Dixie Hwy. 42M70J From 133 50 wk. Sac. deposit, if] BEDROOMS. BRICK carpeted wall eeddante, fires, burglarlas, rials,).......r'ACUl ............I 41 ^ ^ . la wall, eoupl* only, fanead yard, storms and Industrial accidents. LAbhl : call altar 7. 331-4334. ft^s’U'rh Z'V0^: your Aportitidnfi, Unfurnished 381 1 flohpack*Jnneld?lull'or pe,r?,Vlm#.i AskPforVowner. >W “"’ ll BEDROOM APARTMENt, heetad,|‘^0M8 W'fH iAl^, «wTmmfna Work at your present Job and train I ..lkA ..|M,D OCAITV clean, 580 par me. FE 3-7313. F001' l,rO* BirdOn saal, 5230 * at homo, than aMind two wogks WM. MIUER, REALTY , , ma:.7*curity d*po*llandrat.5»». Resident Training al School owned 4 33241242 ' 1 r.ii W 4241 allar 5, v y VOTa-.™ .*"3 7Tmc#" 6IMM# “• j f-r ------ NEVADA. Nallonwld* employment Brought up t° data yourcredl| igl;bqooWs, ~Ab'ULW.'Sec„ dee., lij badroamfcMWt^ ................ asiltlanc*. For'FRiE In^rmatTonl Can _worl^ Aoyl rental It, rtQ. ug-MM. unit, mSBir 1|*7 BAtH, stove, Font. 225-4171 price FIRST MARK REAL ESTATE COMPANY _ 1 75? s. Telegraph......3324)124 CASH PROMPT^Co'ur'tBOURSERVICE Cc?0'ifLBt(> BRIAN REALTY Wa Bold Your Nalghbor’s Homo I lurnilure. Multiple Lllllne sarvlc* Highland born, LO x4iix. UPPER 5TRAits DQEli 2 Sidreom ham*, complataly turnlshad. I car 1 te 4 mot. laaea, 4*2-7447 BIo'rT't jYt!?. coupl*' "0 c ,ar,"'!R»n» Hbusbb. Unfurnished 40 ED* grguntf lallwayA. w i 1 child# i 1$-.2 BEPROOM# Torrac#. wall fo carpaling# no chlldran# ma L cmiplr, firsf and lait monih'o J'! no callB afl*r 9 p.m. 629*1201. 3 room house, aduili, sac., 'APPROVED FOR VETERANS NURSES AIDES, experienced o train, aftarMan or mldnlaht i muii be aver M and have transportation, Union Lahd EM 24111, \ i assary. will (rain. Cell 494-771*. rTcFTW Personnel Consultant $5,000 UP Frail lee Blrmlnehtm oitlce, be# rets nlui Incenllve plan. INTERNATIONAL PBRBONNCI WHEN VOU SEEK OURIERVICB VJOIN THE'mXwCH tovTlMES” I, ' UNO*#! 0,1. niLL tor meiure persons, iswnmi v«T| ii, t~> \ 1. ’ and Irlnoa banatili. Apply In 'T,jrr-C-C; Kortf TV For prompt reply wrlla to: person to Mrs. Shanks. Waldron 1 1 ITlcJb lltrUll 1/ INSURANCE ADJUST Hotel. » ■ • P'KO »*•■ ►•"Hoe. 5M, DIXIE HIGHWAY , IfftTO' Mich. 134-0707. 423 0400 REALTOR Open 7-fpslly |g«,i irMOr' fXPdftinft6*0 , DEAFERY Olllc. Open Sunday f\ 1 Calling All Salespeople!!! ““ Hk YOU ARB WANTEDHI YORK It on tne lookout for eon ecltntloua ealf-itartart with oulgolne paramiaMtjaa, It fill out coupon and mall today: Chgrrylawn, Divorce-Foreciosure? rafrlgarator, tftftlM RJr Baldwin Ava. Cai! 33i" i City? Mo, w Irving WOMWI Ava., Rlrm.# rafarahcai. apply 179 FURNITURE SALiiSUh ‘r Far navy daparlmani itora, tap cammieelon, paid vocal lam, holidays, ilek pay, eroup Ilia and medical Ineurahce, employe discounts, excellent chance lor ed-vancamanl, should have same sales axnarlanc*. Apply W. T. Grants, .aka Rd., union Lab* c.ooley >plnd Fla YORK REAL ESTATE :*ll Mr. Fblay al 4J403M OME STUDY COUNCIL ST Ir3# appraisal. 1574.0311 _ Laulngsr 471214s COUPLE WifH ej.OOO oown deslres j 2-bedroom ham* In Watarlord I 'T) _ __ i: F)_ _ __ araa. Agent OR 4-1441. 3324M1. 1 rOfltiaC rr©SS ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS home, > near Mali. Cash. Agent. 331-4773, 1 474-1447, ___.. ____ I Will Buy Your House 1 Anywhere, any condition, n o point!# no commission. CASH NOW MOV! LATER , Cash Investment Co* 93W W. Huron 333-7156 HANDYMAN* -- buying houso» in Pontine find surrounding orons. Will P«y oil coth. ^gonte 611-9374. Want Ads For Action-TUST CALL .33,4-4981 w • JI|CLARX«TON M-li iSs MO, Ma. attTc ^ M 627*3649 827-2629 291*9779 FReE RENT At SERVICE for landlords# good tononts wolfing#1 Art Oanlol! TMilfyrWIM;, KEEOO HARBOR AREA^ ) bod room Vary Chlldron and ptfi reasonabla, 396-6563. LARGE BRICK J-BEDROOMS N#«r Rochailar — 24 miles, hei aeraae, large lot with trees. , .. $295 PER MONTH .add'i ot Feniiae sei-Mae MONTH. 198-5632. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 8, I960 For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 siar j«ihKS~7*fa (AVI 1 COTTAGBI FOR will sleep I, T Will >1 •IS ROOM AND dotal, I *OOM FOR GENTLEMAN, north end plants. SM-mr. I'OOM POT RENT.Sift.Jilt itvlna roam and Mnent tic. I 111.00 pOtwilt. Ph, loot Offle# Sg—* _ NOW,LEASING PRIME star* _ tlom In MW Opdyk* lauira Shopping Contor. My (IN up to IMS* square foot. Excellent parking. Opdyk, Road north of Sou|f Blvd.. i 8 OFFICES lUnjlusInsss rraptrty 47-A tab Nmw ""IUyoIn realty Tonnyion, MM on-It., u ^r.uuWbri'ii ei'li Two, Carpeting. Dropoi. Soma furniture. Idoal tor Imuronco oNIco or root oitato, Me, SMO per month , plus utlllttoi. writ* Pontiac Prau lexC-il. 1000 SO. Pt NWOPFfCB tor laaw - N. Adami Road, to mil* to M-St Expressway — Avon Township, 0 mlln to RBchaMar, 4 ml las to Pontiac, 2 mllaa to 1-75. Partition to ault your nooda. Pavad parking, air condition COMMERCIAL BUILDING •— B conditioned, ■tad at IIM ylvan Lake. JSS-J4I? aft. pianty of parklr Orchard Laka 047-1743 bat. 0 P 7 p.m. 3-BEDROOM HOME. Garage ami ■BEa?h • —country hon». »7i-5l5». — t daslrabla 41x3* office. • Ideal tor SoOMA ND BOARD tor elderly I tax, Insurance, atc. ltormarly used paopla undar «5. 331-1401. 1 | by accounting sarvlca tor * yra.) —-----------------------— Air ccndltlonad, Boat, alae. tom,, Rent Storgg 4 46i Tor LEASE - STORE With 1 ,safepMiftw, ixsjsf^ssMtzur* Buyers — Sellers Meet thru!dixie and holly Rd>.( so‘x7o-. Press Wont Ads. I JJl M x4#‘ c#nm"rel'' 425' t story, full bMamanv. lerqe to», petie. excellent condition. *19,960 on land contract terms, FLATTLEY REALTY tto COMMERCE RD, 343-4741 3-bedroom Home, carpeted, DINING ROOM, PULL EASE-MENT AND OARAGE, ALUMINUM SIDING ON LARGE SHADED LOT. CLOSE TO COL-LEGES AND EXPREIWAYS. IN auburn heights, mi cash, TERMS AVAILABLE. BY OWNER UL 7-5733. _______ 3-BEDROOM RANCH, large kitchen and dinette, carptted living room and hall, 42‘xS42' lot, pavad itraat. Only I14.J00 FHA plus cloalng coata. CALL 4*14*7*. GMC ? BEDROOM. Ito iATHS. family room, carpatad living room, r-‘— goragt, careotM living room, o.mn* mom. and both, doubld lot, lako and arlvato park privileges, close to school, by owner, 411-7145. Attar 3:3b. ___-_______ 4 BEDROOMS Homa In Auburn Haighti araa Avon Twp. Lire* living mom, 7to cor garage, paved drive* auto, hot water heat. 100 x 225 ft. lOf -- extras. REAGAN REAL ESTATE 7751 N. OPdyka _________37341154 5 BEDROOM COLONIAL,, 2 toll « TO SeIe Neuses , S BEDROOMS *0.'PTHo{fTlvjNO SrSa. with carpeting to I room., alto having hill SBHKffi gerage, setting an to acta tot, with excel l ant landscaping. Available on PHA tarma. *17,500: CROSS Raally and Invaalmant Co„ Inc. 3417 athabaw Rd.. Drayton Plalra 674-3105 'MoNtWCYrsioo m d6wn. s4m m, baaamant, Ito bath at. 1337 Charrylawn, 3354171 $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR UNPRECEDENTED OP portunFty - FOR FAMILIES WITH. LESS THAN HMI i-COME. T. I AND 3 BEDROOM fowNMouafes ADJACENT TO I-n> fiStT MIN. TO DOWNTOWN DETROIT. OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY 17 P.M., EXCEPT THUR MORE INPORMA1 ■rpeting, lumnil, .mr GMC 5 ACRES Lake - Orion* family 4-BEDROOM RANCH ON YOUR LOT. NIX REALTOR 15^59711 CALL JtAY TODAY lorkifon. b 15,900. P-5. CALL RAY TODAY I 474-4101 RAY W' STARR;* WALT X l*ia«8Hf ranch, garaga, no baaamant,. new FHA, 113,400 or attar, earner, 444-_15SL______________________ 104 wEst tennyioM vacant 7 bedroom ranch, ne bailment, new F H A, S13.V00 or of far, open Sun. SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS •CRBENED-IN OR ,LhSS ENCLOSED EAVES TR0UGHING, Continued Seamless eavaatroughlng. Wa Bring Factory to You. PAST SERVICE -^IjlAUTY WORK CALL NOW- — J3AY .OR NIGHT—411-7500—TERMS _ DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RBO AntEHEE Strvicd ANTENNA SERVICE—Imtollad and repaired. OE 3-1*74. CVrchett A SON ANTENNA Strv: leg. Alae repair. 3IAM74. ._ j and Staling PE ±SM_______________Praa Betlmatii asphalt Discount, paving* re-cep, free eatlmetea. PI 5*1107. DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955 IfLtoELB^^WALT^Wtractorr patching and aaallng driveway., parking tola. 331-1714 or atTOj Basement A Garage ccountent* tired. 451-0 account, desired. 451-D077. A-i ADDITION! AND garagaa,.a-mant work. Call tor eur free estimate.. Springfield Bldg. Co. 111*171. . AAA' - ADDITIONS, AtTfeT, bnaamanla, racraallon room*, kitchen., mmodallng, aiphall Ilia, porch anctoiUra, aiactricai and plumbing. Expert carpentry. raatonably prfead. 343-1117. _ H. A H. HOME IMPROyEMENT, aluminum aiding, rooting, am carpenter work, additions, (big pi *mill(«b»i,4l7-7«0t. _______ MODSr'nTZATION — Addition, ol alt typaa. Camanl work. 425-5515. Re MODE L ING.-"" ‘ " family moms, lab. 472-0714, A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR -Pdmlly rooma, rough or flnlihw dormara, porches, recrebtloi rooma, klidtana, baihraoma. Stab llcanaad. Raa». Call bftar 5 p.m. CARPENTRY AND CRMBNT~work 7m» aatimala., *52-8752.__ CarpENtry at its Baal, khehi bath., and rac-rooma a apacla call 353-012) or 442*154. ■'.CARPENTRY WORK | MODERNIZATION, rapalra, 20 yaari ax- 107 add parlance commercial or raildanllal, lor cuatom |ob you will be proud o Place'. Madernizatlon Company, INTERioR FINISH, kitchen* Ina, 40 year experience, Fl 7 Ia CARPENTRY and roofing estimate?. 734-7177.____________ ADDITIONS AND amratiena, porch CEMENT work repair. FE 4J331. Corpst Clsanlng CARPETS CEMENT AND BLOCK WORK, (real GUINN'S CONST. CO. or. Oanaral Cement Contractor*. 3734523.____________ FaFRATE A GRIMALDI C O, Specializing In patioa. driveway, and sidewalks. Fra* aallmataa. 354- GAS. OIL, Forced air or Hot water. Air condlllonlna. A A H Sole*. 442-1501. 474-434T Landscaping l-A MBRION BLUB IOD, pickup or dol. 4443 Shorwood. 477-2000. Ctrwte tib DAN'S CERAMIC TILE. Mold floors, bio alllb. Install In homo., old iow, Froa oat. 474-4341. 425-1501, DOZERS, EACKHOE, LOADER Salts & Rentals Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. 3775 E, Auburn Ed. _____532-35. 20 YRS. EXPERIENCE Fobrlea-rods-3 wk«. dol. 631-0307. Dance Instructions_____ COOPER SISTERS DANCE. Studio. DrMsmaking, Tailoring 1-A ALTERATIONS, SUITS, COATA droesoa. 335-4207. Mra, Soboiko. ALL TYPES ALTERATIONS — pick up - delivery. 673-0104. ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT draM«4, ia*tlwr co*to. 44Mto2. i Driver's Training CHUCK'S DRYWALL AND toping ••nftet. N«w and ramadallng, also painting. 399*3415 Bafora 1:30 aftar 6 P.M. DRV WALL SfRVig(i7~t55L,— remodeling, guaranlaad. 135-103* or M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED Electrical Sbrvicbi ADRIAN'S PROMPT ELECTRICAL strvice* reasonable rafts. 573-2712. K ELECTRIC wlrlng-SarvIca Excavating BULLDOZING, Finish Grading, ■ckhoo, Basaments. 474-3437. FE A-1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, specializing In mtllnlng walls. Free eallmitM. J. H. Wellman Landscaping. 3734444. ___ A-1 MERION BLUB SO*, on Peat, 43 cant* par yd. dallvarad, 412- 17*4.________________ A-1 MERION BLUE Sod, on Foal, 43 canto par yd~ dallvarad. 432-1704. Al'S LAWN MAiNTENANCK, Spring and fall clean upt. Culling, WrtHliIng and apraylng. 423-37*2, COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Sodding, loading, shrubs. L lean sod Nursory Man. 442-7150. DON PORTER LANDSCAPING, tortlllzlng, lawn maintenance. Sodding, delivered and layad. 4734777. UNIQUE LANDSCAPE dnlgna, or —Plato landscaping, unusual reasonable prices, fast Soptlc Tank Sorvlco PLETE SEPTIC WORK, sowar ' water lines, 442-3042, FE 2- TOWNSEND'S SEPTIC rIpaTRS TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or aluminum. Mall lax Poitg ~ MAIL BOX POSTS and flog polos GILL'S TREE TRIMMING AND Itmaval* vtrv iw> rati, fiHMMl, DON J IDAS, tret removtl. Ktrand Lon^g^distanc 334-45W'or specialists. FE 44344. Pointing and DBCorating 1-A CUSTOM PAINTING Free estimates_________432-443 1-A RELIABLE PAINTING, Interior _OXlortor. Freo ost. 3344574. 32 YEARS-EXFERIENCE,_palntlnf F« Ory*l Gldcumb 573-0474 A1 interior and oxlorlor painting, oxeolltnl work *1 reasonobto prices, call anytime. 135-3402. AT| PAIN T lNO - W GUARANTEED. . Frso esllmotos 4IM420. A-i PainTi.no AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON 373-1121 GEORGE FRERICKS PAINTlNOp DICORATINO* com QUALITY WORK ASSURED; Paint* Tngijtom^m ........M Well Woshlngi SPRAY PAINTING 10 or mor# loads of fill, 42S-5735. BULLbonTiG. ' BACKlidE work, bosomont, grading, 412-304(2, FE2- OULrooZiNG f BUCKING.' rooo. reliable, freo osllmatos. 473-1143. Fencing A-i CHAIN LINK tone*, initollgd or rtpalrod, one walk sorvico. frao ost. 331-6277 or 4743*41. __ , ffflTlN LINK FEbicTNG ’ InslalloG repaired. Quality Wprh. tost serv-let* ask for Hon# 58**t959% -Chain linX a«6 WWOWCf Plastering Strvic* 1-A PLASTERING, NEW WORK or pitching, trap estimates. 343-5407. PATCH PLASTERING, oil klndo. Mayors. OR 3-1345.__________ Plumbing & Heating CONDRA PLUMBING S HEATING Sowor. wolor linos — r G S L PLUMBING S HE _ George Do It. 473-0577. BIG BOY DRIVE-IN DIXIE AT Silver Lake — Telegraph at H 24 hrs. Hal far, shingles, repairs. We will not bi undersold R. DUTTON FBI-1725 RE-ROOF SPECIALIST, all types, roofing-gutter work. 30 ymatodM perlenco. 3153713. IHIN6LIN0. B«AUtli»UL lowest orlco In town. Jon BY OWNER; 2 BEDROOM homa starts and school. OR 3-245* Spraying Service DALBY A SONS TREE SERVICE NOW ELM SPRAY. 2733470. SUSPENDED CEILINGS _______ *743007. ,_____ Trot Trimming Ssrvics esllmolos. Very rots., 3353744. OAKLAND TRIMMING SERVICE" Tre* Trimlng and Removal - “ Insured-Free ____JasSfcaL-V, LIGHT ^MOVING,^TR ASH haulad A-1 LIGHT HAULING REASONABLE RATES. 33S-1246 I P.M. light I 5743233 HAULING AND RUBBISH HAULING AND . RUBBISH. Nam# ; fb > LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS garages cleaned. 4741242. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish. Fill Girt, - gravel and tront-end TRASHHAUUNG i odd lobs. FE 41724. Track BEital Trucks to Rent to-Ten pickup* lto-Ton « TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailer* Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co 125 S. WOODWARD. ’ Upholstering ________J ACT NOW I Fall sal* prices on chairs, M raupholslarad. 335-1700, fraa a mataa. Evas. «nd Sat. 425-4545. uphoLsteriHg by RICliARD Quality Fabrics and work, pick up and dallyary. *423174.__ BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS, Walls cltaatd. Rtss |........... guaranlsed. Insurtd. FB WALL WASHING,‘45 per un, also carpal claanln p*lnljngtcall.«4l:204l. WATER SOFTENER problem* Far tarvle* only, call Warren S»“ repair. 67337W or 3M-3M5, 5469 HEATH »aw. 1 doTe/mSonald LICENSED BUILDER OR 3-2837 M, 5441332. AVON BARGAIN HUNTING ktTTo ditfanct to BhoppIng ctnfi HOMES BY WEINBERGER 1530 CROOKS RD. A 24* X 4M Nouse. mt*T Rough In on your luf. _________ Construction Co. 33S-219I or 331- FARRELL NorthErn High Araa .BAR 127,500.' FARRELL REALTY N. Opdyk* Rd. Ponllsc ILIZaSS*LAKE “ privileges go with this Inum A slant 2 bedroom homa Icouw be 3) an I. laalyn Strati. ExctHanl condition thrauenaui. Hat llnlahad rac. roam, 2 car garage, pavad drive, beautiful landscaping. Sa* It today. Just 323.700 with farms. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac M2-3720 if no answar call 343-7440 ”—niirnrwniTi r~ RENTING WE ARE NOW TAKING APPLIQLTIONS - ' PpR . .. HOMES WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS HrafiBlwr igRKtBt. widows Bala Haw , *9 NEW 4 BEDROOM BI-LEVEL Brick SmmM rumiMv nciunij ck and atbMfos 9 badroom ranch* XHW™ YORK OR 4Q353 _FR 07131 ROCHESTER, BY OWNER Brick raldnlal on beautiful I ocra woodod lot. all electric, lots of bullMns* walking distant# of nsw high school. 155,000. *11*1935 after * RANCH WITH FULL Mssmti 115*99$. Mortgage BMriil RENTING OR DIVORCE , PJLSPLI WtYJf CREOI PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. SUN. y or Cam* to 274 W. Konnatt Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For ImmediotB Action Call FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 BLIZAEETH LAKE. ESTATES, bedroom# city water* lot and \ , 3&9315 or 151-1071.__ HALLMARK TWO FACTORV Built Rd^lis 1 ly fransportatf and erected ^ PERRY PARK i basement ■ Gas heat* ____ ■ ________Xgft“1br-|rF nation 753-0935 or 54M315. TWIN BEACH GOLF *. CC Nlco starter home# now 3 badroom ranchor* full basamanf* ready for occupancy* $19*550* FHA. 1950 down. FRAN KjfilARQTTA £ ASSOC.* 3195 Union Lake Road* Days 3634325* tvanlngs SS7-4554. 574*4123 4S21 Highland Rd. (M-59) Next to Airway Lanss ----JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR 427 ORCHARD LK. HD. 33M1I4 KEEGO HARBOR 4 spacious reams, formal dlnl room, 3 car garaga. Piua la prlvltoa. Call YORK LEACH down to existing tract with 190 a no agents* 593-2050. trl-level* sharp, lota of month paymont, A beautiful 3 5925 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) 4742142 473-74.7 LA4CE ORION, Badroom wllh'llvlnq tan and BRIAN REALTY Weekdays 'HI * 5270 Dixie Hwy._____ BRICK FRONT . bedrooms, targe dining araa, gaa hs proved a» S15.500. CALL MI-0370. GMC *Li OWNER, Rochester area, .2 &s 'Ktoto living room* dining room* kl I enclosed porch. W lot* 300' from " *— **" * * - privilege*. 914*000 K. 1. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2337 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 412-SM CLARKSTOl). RAY CARROLL LAKE fl*w 3 bedroom beauty. deluxe carpeting, paneling. S1.40S move* you In — In 3a days. Don't mist this an* If you want the moat tor your dollars. CALL BETWEEN 14 P.M. -BROKER 3*34*7* tor further CLARKSTON NEW LAKL. BRICK. Ejjjl ft li*5 MO. FHA. LAKE FRONT 3 BEDROOM ' LTINS'. fc-- XPANDING *24314* *27-2123 153477* Clarkston School Area WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES, located west of Clarkston Gelt Court#. Enter from N. Eaton AI#iM$EblATB OCCUPANCY !«iWvai-::::;:^ 4 bedroom ranch .*42,500 47344M SYLVAN DRAYTON AREA—4 "IjSSJ lining araa. Cara«l)ng an fxcallanl conditioh, area Estate, *744101. LAKE PRIVILEGES WOLVERINE LAKE MAND0N LAKE PRIVILEGE! — 2 413,450. FHA TERMS. C0SWAY_ REALTOR! 681-0760 __ MAX BROOCK 4137 Orchard Laka Road At Pontiac Trail (IA 6-4000 , 444-4890 MONTEREY BLVD. bath, In qulaf residential neighborhood, gaa hot air furnace. Utility room alto hat a separata Incam* apartment which hat i— living room, Mli*l badroom bath ranting tor *12* par mo Raqulraa substantial down payn on aal* price of *17,000 Buyers KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD Realtor 175 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FE 443*4 NEED A LARGE HOMtf This 111), 3 bedrooms, dining roam, full SIW : 1 Call Ray Today P-33 4744101 fNO steps to climb doll heuta. 1 bedrooms an crawl apact. nm, tastefully ng and beak lit I* a i Wrg." ' decoral wiwnM, Full Erie* Located In Watartord saahabaw Road' • WATERFORD REALTY. 1273. . . ^^ NEW 2-BEDROOM iT.iid Nothing Down All you need It a good credit ratine, a steady lob, and you can own this modern 2-famlly dwelling toCatodon Baal akto of Pontiac. Rant from' m 3-BEDROOM RANCHERS on , FHA mortgtgi k Marpfla <* Asioe. OPEN 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M. 2274 WILLIAMS LAKE ED. Dlr.j Orly* west on M-37, 1 north an William* Lk. Rd, Bedroom ranch,-lara* family fa full boatman!, Slt.fVO. On your BEAUTY CRAFT HOMES 474-4221 Apartimnts, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 RIDQEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS • One, Two and Thrt* Bedrooms • Roper Gas Rangss • Hdtpoint Refrigerators \ i * Carpst and DrapM ' • All Utilitiss Except Electric • Air-Conditioning by Hotpolnt , * * Swiming Pool and Pool House FROM *17* WITH ONE YEAR LEASE. NO PETS ALLOWED CHILDBBN O.K. Between East Boulevard and Madison-2 blocks from main gats of Pqntiac Motofs. ■ ■ , ; 957 N. Pirry if;- Phon# 332r3B22 ' - open Deny 10 A.M. *> go closets, fri sd big kitchen. MAINTENANCE PEER MOVE IN FAST i crtdif problumt.—OK with ut. •ok tor model sign on Carroll tko Rd.* botwoan Commorct and •oioy Lako Rda.* or coll — wo II allow you. tho modal. TUCKER REALTY REALTOR 703 Pentlae-Stoto Bank Bldg. 3341S4S WOODSY LOCATION THIS NEW 3 I, comfy gat hast, *20,7(1 smlc bath, cr 70S. S25W town it, no down Gl. HAGSTR0M, REALTOR 4700 W. Huron OR 403M MLS Altar 4 p.m, FE 47005 WATERFORD RANCH, t-badroom big kitchen, gas Iwal, 50' x 147' let, Zero down VA. Only 411,700. CALL 4714370. GMC Webster-Curtis Oxford-Orion .arge 3 bedroom ranch ham* an I conic aerta, full basement, red-eom. 2 flraptacos, b r a a i a w a y , 'bsJroom^nawwi ’ramtoalad^taki rant homa, .. jalhroom, fli parch. 127J00. Excallant 5 . HER Thomas St., Barhlty. OA 42515 *®^0Wn 4734343 WE'LL BUILD any Stvto houM on your let and save you * lol of WATERFORD 1a(% Msamanf, garaga. Hurryl 2 bad ream ranch, 2 car garage, with attached screened & ssr«jau<9sssan FHA approved al $17,300. MARK 17*2 S.'fiiwragh C0l,l|,in!i324124 BACKUS BLOOMFIELD HILLS Cuitofn built I badroom trHayal i k*XntowilhUbulll-ln» arjdbraakto araa. micliut, PSIwlMl toflH 3ngW,;h^«.d*M I car attached garaga. City weier and sawar. can aaauma 4 gat cant mortgage. Call Joiiy. ----AUBURN HEIGHTS 4-b*droom . ranch, large living room. Mpgrato dining roam, full BaywiMM with racraallon FHA tarms. Call today. BACKUS REALTY 532-1312 ___ 3141473 HEARTHSIDE BRICK RANCH — 3-badroom. 1W HIGHLAND - x garage. Large tot. Early cupancy. FHA tarms. *14700. BRICK BI-LRVBL - S badrooms, custom built, extras gaiera. 155,000. VACANT LOTS are %r%BQ Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER EILT Russell Young, BMg. . S343M0 — 53V> W, Huron SI. WATERFORD - Alum. IMM ranch, 3 badrogmSf lull glvldad bassmant, with Walkout doorwall, carpaling In llsln* room, vastibula and cantor ball, doorwall fr«n living room to captains walk. FHA approved. SwSemKSr^ GMC WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 724 Rtkar Pldg.__ 3 BEDROOM BUNGALOW IN WATEEFORD TWP., silling an to acre with Vh Car garaga, carpatod living roam. GuTck oc-cupancy. Available on land contract tarma. FULL PRICE LAKE FRONT BEAUTIFUL RANCH With • varlaaklng excel Ian I ly basamant. 2-car garaga, Inkling m callant neighborhood. Homo la In top conditlpn. available on land contract tarma. PULL PRICE 115,700. Laka Oaklond Shores Dr. BEAUTIFUL 4 BEDROOM, COLONIAL In an excellent location with laka prlvllagas an Laka Oakland. Included with homa room!^ Mtoh^'ln^kltohan, "it? CROSS Raally and Ihvaalmant Co., Inc. 3457 Saahabaw Rd., Drayton Plains , 674-3105 . . REALTY YOUR HOME HARRISON — ■ complatoly furnished cabin, slaapa 7, panaind gtosaM In gerch, baiutllul secluded „ salting. Ideal tor dear hunting and summer vacallonlng. Front on canal adjoining laka. Vary liberal terms. CALL 4444540 OR^EVES. 4444117. LAPEER 47470, 40' aacludtd GAYLORD OFFERS HERE IT 19 ~ fastest growing araaa. 5 &&rSSFJ8BktS?\ farms. 4444540 EVES. 774 4744. _ LAPEER 47140. Mra It. Ili* . SS.'fiW® board toncad, vaarround live Stream runt Ihrouph property. 103 acre* and madam home can M your* tor only $54450. Land contract available. CALL 46 4-1540 EVES. 7244270. IMLAY CITY 47220,. 40 building ill*. Only S22.M0. Very liberal tarms. CALL *441540 EVES. 724*270. I EVES. PONTIAC EVES. star eg* ’ salir P ■n lx ii f^AU pF9t»nJ# rm • and drivt, eholct IMLAY CITY 69454* this tarot country ntito It .jg vary tout growing araa* 130 rwil'WTJaB OK 464-6559. GOODRICH ARBA 4911 • # country ham*. If you wttoy »#'•= JAP® *%! yWgwtB rSS.'i&SSTiSr4B and paid barn, iwera land aval labia. vary liberal tarms, CALL 4444540 EVES 421-474). / JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. 127 W. G.W^..k WATERFORD AREA. 2 badrooms, full basamant, 2-car garaga toat palntad on lha 4Fp» rg»*ri«8K GMC Ke .3 ir. FHA tarms, ON THE LAKE Large 7-room homo with 4 bedrooms, stone flraplaca, tone** yard, balh house with m baths and clasaf, boat housa with new dock. Thla hem* can os purehai tn land contract. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION and an a nic* tot for aniy tizjoo, land “"Tgjf^LORD INC. W - HBTOl OPEN Two Models ;olonV HEIGHTS. A luxurious haim paved winding log lota, centra Spado i storm (l Buwtr» .000 Inc. for aEAGiowf*lNTiVi,f WWW aka Elltabalh Laka. Rd. Mi Mil* tost tram williams Lain Read to irlck ranch. I badraami, SrB 4*0 contract torms available. SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT IN ROCHESTER A W. Unlvtrilly (2nd finer) eo .. er , 3*4310* "TIMES ~ Sprawling Ranch In Wqtarford — wlffi . M,nT.^«uTKl'A^ 020,500 and yo proianf tow , Newlyweds or RitiriES. Features Include: 24*droemst gas Mat, storms SM scraan* and large ,?c'h¥“VhT. 3'/t Acres STnH $S;soo. Call right away top your personal appolnlmsnt. WHEN YOU IKK OUT SERVICE "JOIN THE MABCH TO TIMES"_ Times Realty ---owica Open Sunday 2-S Val-U-Way VICTORY DRIVE 5 BEDROOMS Raally nice brick front ranch horn* finished with baautlful frulfwaed paneling In lha »»tra torga Uv ng room and dining ream and lha vary ettradlv*. ne. roam, lltad balh, madam kitchen. Nice tot. Pavad itraat. Ilito# dawn plu* coata. Hurry on ttila anal HURON GARDENS Largo sharp 4rcom. IVb-atory horn*. Faatorlng 3 bad.roams, con-vanlanf kitchen and dlntoo room, lam* living room wltti natural finWECto 2Vr baths, Tull baaamant with gaa haat plus 1-ear garaa* on a 100x120 ft. let. Assume pavmsnto of only *10* par mo., wlfh *7,500 down. ROCHESTER AREA MSffl ,M.«'nT- scaped all alum horn* featuring: c< kitchen, handy g living roam with i extra TV room, roomy r Encknad front porch. Full balh plus full basement with gas Mat. S'/b-car giraga.A saparoto heated workshop. Ah this for an.y 131,500. Tarms avallablt. VOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY HOME WE HAVE FOR SAL* Vol-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 a Oakland Av*. Open 74 HIITER y *17,700. ( SS ACRES — •WTJ WR BUILD — 3-badroom rancher* with oak floors, Juif --------------- alum, aiding. S14.000 i Call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3771 Eilz. Laka Rd. MMOtO, after s I. PE UPS._________________ CLARK PIONEEE HIGHLANDS iviiegas on sylvan Lika, 1 .awfully dacoratad custom built and anctosad perch, In ceramic PERRY PARK Thla ranch bungalow with ' hat gas Mat, andos 2-e*r garaga CLARK REAL ESTATE 1342 W. HURON ST. 4*2443 __ OPEN 74 — ML* STRUBLE SUBURBAN LIVING :,o i «crt. ___ ...... i* pirtect fur lift!# onM. Only 2 blocks from X-way. GOING STREET An txlra clean 2-Mraam,, full vary ntoa^ark. I13.7M PHA. Call rP*.....WY. HAYDEN REALTY 1404 10733 Htohtond Rd. (M47) V> Mlto witf If Oxkew L«kii OPEN OPEN r«A%WWAPPT. I badroom, family roam, m Mihs, 3-car garaga, tri-iavsi, only ill,an on your let. ^1^^541®.'“'*"'*“ “>** GIROUX REAL E$TATEV ^ m» highland road_ 473-7*27 47S4ME WAfl'RPORD TOWNSHIP. V*c*nt l bedroom, posslblf 4, 2 story homo, STOUTS BEST BUYS TODAY RETIREMENT SPECIAL— itGllf spolloss aluminum family tiltd contains 4 ■M M with full bast-plus largt 7x21 screened Cheerful flraplaca In llv-am. Land cantraet farms, location eft Silver Lake WIST SIM COIONIAU , ssvtuwnjsi IMMWimm with oat ’t < Nddl- itoanap drto* and garaga. ■L Aaauma an axlstlng PHA maH- WARREN STOUT, REALTOR For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER fl. 1060 D—^ Caih For Your Equity HACKETT __ 363-6703 ... HALL I ACM SMALL FARM located In CwraMM »;•». Including a 1. hrtroom br ck ranch with full MMiraht, V't-ur attached garaga. Home toalurt* many extra*, V Solo Housti // ■KMfljA. ' in kitchen, i Don't nun i a in . built- WF* WATlPjSIO AREA — S-hedronm alum, hem# with file bain, large carpalad living room. Hama la ax-tra clean and neat. 114-car garage and beautifylly landscaped lot. ol-fared el anlv 111,500 with M termi. Don’t wall "" BUD" SUPERB I It lha wart that describes f gong want aide location, art value of thlt 1-elory home Ida In fog- condition. Llvlrt ™ with fireplace, fermdl room, carpeting, kitchen l?X I .We I , LET'S TRADE B HALL REALTY, Re, I Dixie Hwy. IRWIN taka a look at rm tlormi and Kraane. FHA BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS >11 Watt Huron—Since 1915 PE 5-9444. After 1 a.m. 413-4043 _..... rfi contldar smeller home In trade. . Price, IM,000.00. INCOME l-famlly, ideal for rellred couple. VON Assumo 5V4% Mortgage Thlo 3-bodroom brick ranch lo |uet waiting for i Thrifty buyer. Nr mortgage coots. No high Intern* rates. You can onfoy luxury llvlnt In suburbia. Community water paved afreet*. sidewalks, ful f basement, IM-car ^garage Frlgldalra bullt-lns, awnings. Man] other pleasant surprises awal youl Pull price only SM,900. ' Gl TERMS Neal nhh family room, 1-car oarage lot. Rachoetor area, lie,200. VON REALTY Sal* Houses 49 Salt Houtts 49 KINZLER 4-BEDROOM RANCH uKEM Interest rata mortgaoa c«n bfl ■iiumtd on Bpty FHA termi. Your pfaaanf homa or lot In tram. DRAYTON PLAINS A ranch beauty and ont at Hu beat values That wa have seen. ( roams , Includlnu family room, basement and ettaclMi 1-car uaraga. Plush car iM' wanis. .mmm, 770' with variety of fruit barrios and fliwrl. Owner This Is ana at a kln« NEW LAKE FRONT In Clarksten school a ran. S colorful rooms and attached 1-car garaga, Air oak fleers. double giasa win dpws and marble aim. IdhSiM lets. On PMA ar Ol terms.. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor MulffpalVfirSiarvIca Open ItSjfiS Wideman WEST SUBURBAN vllagr m •I FA •raga. much Call tor appolntmant. NEED ROOM TO RAISE THE FAMILY? Hare la a good solid homa al a moderate price. Eost side location, S bedrooms, basement, oas hoi water hoot, largo garage. PROST SCHOOL AREA - FHA TERMS. 3E A6cG COMMERCE AREA ' $13,900 ' Riel nice small family, featuring 1 bedrooms. | BBmwtoi farms, ■a sura to stop by our l»;o mac display on Ormond Road, tundei ANDERSON & GILFORD Building and Rsalty Ml Hlghjand Rd. (M W) M1-T0M ARRO NORTH SUBURBAN S-bedroom rancher. Pemtly--*ti kllchon. Oak floor. Water aoftom Aluminum aterma. and acraai SI 5,000. FHA or Of farms. SPACIOUS LOT With 1 bedrooms, brick and fret ranch In excellent condition. Erick fireplace In living room. Id' roar fwCgallon*fu!?rtonk, frutt°tSos, a AB| partly fancad yard. Exceflini neighborhood. 7 »0BU N-5/ homo, ITMENT living iM, Realtor t Rood Sun. H SCHRAM GILES ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES s-Badroom< brick- Colohiol, wl finished rae. raam art , basami Iwood tigers and plaslarad Wa Ik far quality In this well-built •, excellent bead abeto Lk. MARGARET MCCULLOUGH, Realtor 1141 CMMInibih Rea-1 682-2211 491 Sal* Housbs LAZENBY Independence Twp, I bedroom brick ranch style home In spotless condition. Cerpeted ®ihout. Including the Targe kit. Only $25,200 with now mortgaga availabla, ' DRAYT0FTPLA1NS----- , large carpalad Hi iireptoca, formal good sired kitchen with bulll-lnt? This homa has,all of this and many mere fine r faaluras. such asi full basement ,, and 1 ear garaga. Call us today, * gw I ACRE FARM, 19 acres elaarsd, t ouf buildings. In dear area, 4 miles E. Of U «l M-S5, 1 ml .an Beach Rd. Martin Ca Pratcow. MIchMiB, CAMPERS SPECIAL iv, acre, wooded campsite - MUNTERSII omplaialy faelllflas, axcallat huptln I fishing. 80,300, 81,300 down. - - furnlqhart yai uttklrh of Ha can hava honata « MR. CLEAN maculate t-badroom JBHSHPBIS mant art. 1 -c*r^p»r*gt, )i*M living farms. • , badraams are uBi . and.' lSxis,| rqYCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open dolly 8-8 4A26 W. Walton OF 4-MO Claude McGrudsr STio iiitabtto Lk, Rd. ______... Multiple Listing Service Open 9-9 MIHER RON BAUGHEY REALTOR AUBURN HEIGHTS 1 badroon homa, full bsimt., attached garaga living room, dining room, porch, ' RE5-8183 NO DOWN PAYMENT On this three bedroom ranch lacatMJM East side of Pontiac, VW battii, carport, .ttnert rear yard, decorated Inside art out. cToalng costa will move you In tc this vacant homa, OFF BALDWIN •Ml rang*, ano FHA approval SEMINOLE HILLS ■ 9ara< fancad yard. Carpeting, built HIM conditl . VACANT. , SCHUETT EV go Cammarca hd.' .. I KALKASKA PrMevelopmanf sale LGH-AcrtotB 14 KAMPSEN ~ Lake Angelut Lakevlew Estates Lektfrenf, - canal front art idh* privilege lots. Paved straats, community watar, rx c a l I a n 1 parks. Buy new art build' latarl TERMS TO SUIT. GraBD Lake Lake Front J Over / Vt $er§ »lte Idaally suited lor walkdvt batamanf. 110 ft. or tha watar. Tbli you should saa 1—TIRMS TO SUIT. i Clarkston Area Two excellent building sites Ir an area of haw homat. ISC' > 110' and 110' » W - all parked and ready lo go. TERMS TO P . ad m-1, camant jif. building 14x40', ntw lyigfal Forbes, OwVfT47.7aa.. OR tinker. Eaa this today! FE 2-0262 ■■PL 414 W. HURON OPEN V TO 9 Lind contract farms available. Trading 674-2236 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY a frJI Fisher Bodv. Ideal for gaa station aval labia. PONTIAC CENTRAL AREA LAROB 3-bed room family largt living room, dial fit (sb£ d Contract, — Call us for IVAN W. SCHRAM LlfTVyi.TH 05.HRAh|l| FE M471 wfsfe-GROSS llna, all on one 180* on Dlxla Hwy., $62,000. tract terms available. siQTIEIL ICROSS Ing gasoline, frontage on Dlxla Realty and investment Co., Inc. 3487 Sashabaw Rd., Drayton Plaint 674-3105 ......... 3 hr*, from Ron- Wooded rtraat on country road, easy1 accon/ W1 min. from **!■*• 71. $29 mo. toko ital Thla poyment Call,, Merihall, collect,] Salt Farms ---------------- 56' 60 Acres Near Hadley I room house. Large barn. Otl buildings. * ' ' racrsatlon, 473-1333. ___ OWNER TRANIFERkip; tike ovtr! APARTMENT MOTEL ',ll.rrr hr'H!,(f^'^": L«^ut',Lr,,!!UM,U S,m^raD:y'Wrl,'; jsBBk ma* Interest from 7 per cent | per yoar “ ‘ mm 423-1333. Built Hi 1843. 720 SQUARE FEET i make an ideal office, loc Waterford NEWLY DECORATED Clean and sharp Madraam complete carpeting In Wah Township. Formal dining room chandelier. Newly decor, throughout, naw cabinets and' cop-perton* fixtures In kitchen, ceramic | Mth, full basement, garaga, IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. AND CALL THE VAN 1111 Joalyn REALTOR ANNETT WHY NOT TRADE? VERY SPECIAL For the , 4 bedroom family. Al ranch. Ilia bedrooms are large, baths, basamanl completely finis wlfh walk-eut te a beautiful tv mlng pool with all lha Lam kitchen, wHh all l schools, dose to M-14. Taxes ISLE IN LAKE ORION I contract farms, call i Lots—Acreoge 54 1 ACRE ON CASS LAKE ROAD NORTH OF M-5t FLATTLEY REALTY 420 COMMERCE RD. 343-4811 1.4 ACRES, 3 mlltt ’ north of Clarkafon, —ay larma. 425-2774. sVs'ACRE PARCELS, zoned so horses are allowed. White Lake area. Price 15,800. Al mniy Or Bab Bartalbaygh Contract farms. . McCULLOUGH REALTY, INC. ROYER REALTY, Inc. ' weaaWJM:--------------S!m' 83!jrleh ....mllwhww Owwrf aHbi BARS! OTTAWA DRIVE BRICK ; 3 bedrooms, large formal LR A only 1170. Prlct *34,95«. No. 4-43 ia|,a property 51 SOLID, SUBSTANTIAL, 1791 pratt rd.. metamora, »■ -----nr. south of Lipigr, w mi: west w 1474, year round homa, on large aka lot, with saa wall, cyclone 80 TO 800 ACRES In Lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, beef or howl Nam# you 187 FEET COMMERCIAL, comor < I" ‘ hm id. Rer------------- forma,4jfr8324 or 412-3054, FOR SALE OR Ioom — 1700 sq. ft. 2' *"n CLARK OIL --------Hon In Katoa Harbor, •II imri-*z-1 SUMPTUOUS ftmA lAl th other oxtraa, $11,750. JUST THE ONE FOR YOU marlcan Legion Post. Just right f< H -------slonil man who wants l business as wall as live ! Priced below reproduction coat of1 F®J| upstairs, full beaemen Neat ano cioan, 9 neoroom ranen in elPkK m ..................... tha Pontiac Northern School district, WEST side brilk family raam with , brick flroptac* I aluminum storms m hatha. Sal* Houibi OXFORD OFFICE NORTH PONTIAC AREA Bus service and clotf to shopping, axlr. elaan story and halt bungalow wllh carpeting throughout. Full rtsamant and gas heat, Hand rear yard. Loads ol closets. Only 111,100. Asksd for 144-E. UNION LAKE-COMMERCE AREA Large comer lot, full brick story end half bungalew, axfre large caragt dial's suitable tor light mechanical work, plenty of room tor lha handyman. Only 014,1m. Land confraef.- Ask tor M0-E. CLEAR LAKE-BRAND NEW Only IllifOO full prlca, 10 par cant will handle FHA. Carpalad LOW DOWN PAYMENT-TERMS FHA Brand naw carpeting family room, 2V* car. garage, landscaped BludlM 823 S. LAPEER ROAD aluminum awnings, wind storms and screens, plaster ioveiy enclosed front porch, 2 rooms' bedrooms, 1M» baths, large living garage, room with ipllt tieidstone, natural Price ■ J Is the fireplace, new carpeting, carpeted1 prlca with land contract terms kitchen with birch cupboards, large available. Quick possession. By appt. utility with attached lto car knotty pine 1 ACRES, between Detroit end Flint. FE 2-1I4V. P.O. Box 131, Blocmllaia Hills. 40011.____ 100x150' LOT WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES. Only " HOWARD T. KEATING 4-H REAL ESTATE, 22040 W. 13 IKf l company, call Jerry * Eddt Li 8-7222 after 5 p.m. 271-3524. EXCERlOto business Is for sale. Call 434-8891 tor epaalnlmanl. ______ FOR SALE OR LEASE, Carry Out rmnt. Terms Mornlngt. haotod’il'xM' pool, MrtlS,Patlach«i EWfilBfU carpeting, custom draftoa art In-clnaralor, many giMF Mtrr~ now, far your paraatial artel IMMEDIATE POSSESION, MODEL OPEN 2 TO 6 REDUCED TO $40,800 This contemporary rancher I mm HH Shear garaga, excellent tacintl.s and area at dlitinc- -----js today, fallow m-» Airport; turn left on ' I Lakes Sub.) and attached iw-car beach facllltlta tion. Coma aea watt of Pontiac________ sunny Seech. (Twin Lakes than , iw, “ other axtrai from SIT,MS an your lot. McCullough Raolty, Inc. 5440 HToHLAND RD. 674-2236 624-2400 Pontiac Walled Lakt REALTOR MLS REALTOR Irwin "YES, WE TRADE" OSMUN ST. WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME PRICED RIGHT! INS ALUMINUM RANCHER tirt s l 40W, price-411,95*. GOOD TERMS. #17 CONTEMPORARY BRICK RANCHi Decoratod EASY TO OWN I at 41S.7M and ready TWO FAMILY INCOME EXCELLENT INVESTMENT. In business tor yourself. Don't mlit thla opportunity. CALL NOW 11 #3S SOCIAL. SECURITY LAKE FRONT ON DEBR LAKE: WANT PRIVACY! with alaEincal Colonial sized rt Into./ CALL FIVE NEW MODELS OPBN SAT, AND SUN. M p.rn dr by appolnlm.nl COLONIAL AND MID-LBVBLi West-Huron al Vsarhtlt Rd. KKYLON RANCHER AND TRI-LEVEL; Hiller Rd. il Kavlon Or. AVON RANCHER i Avan Rd. |UBt tail el Craekl Rd. ' REALTOR • PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LKi 3187161 625-2441 651-8518 36341711 it gai in.f t heat Nice 1 I living re •ndlull art hut « PHA terms. CLARKSTON AREA 1 bedroom ranch tort bungalow with large family room, lto baths, — — fireplace and situated, an go lot. Wa have HM key. ns MODEL HOME ■droom, large kitchen, ctramlc bath with vanity, toll basalt, alum. aMlM, staled lows, marble sills, oak priced at under S1KMS. MULTIPLE LiSTiNBlHfRyiCl EVERYONE WOULD LIKE A WORLD OF HIS OWN ■u can have lust that In this us alum, rancher located In c Township. Designed to taka advanlaga of the woods and tha view, you hava your own private Dad to thla four bedroom homa. arge living room, atop aavlng itch.n and ana and a half balks. Mnlshad recreation room In tha WILL , „ Realtors 28 E. Huron St a Open Evenings * Sundays 338-0466 EASTHAM REALTORS SEE IS TO APPRECIATE This 4-badroom heats on I Blvd. with living room, dir room, flraplact, 1-car Baraga, kitchen, ramodttod. Largo, IMt, rot. with .a variafyjtt wylt priced S11.9M, PHA. Wa era waiting to hear from yog. WEST BLOOMFIELD EXECUTIVEe 3 HraplactB, 2 bath*, dlshwaiher, qliPOiil^ •UfiJ? |M Mtlo. family rwm, taautHu njan wooded tot, OH VBBI ill,, J™ necessities. Ilka 3-badroom, Hying room, dining room, kitchen, _wl«i bullt-lns, JFcar oaraga, 445,900. A BEAUTY! DO YOU HAVE SO MANY CHILDREN Your don*t know what to do? Lot ui holp you buy a largo homo in tha countiY tor thami T IVk baths, a dining ro 2-3/10 ARCES ON LAKE and Incomt home. Prlert. jWW W land ««" tract. MAKE YOUR CHOICE. fhA l-badroom full rttamanl, Cedar shingled homa, A umlnum screened, near GMTC priced 114,500 FHA CALL TODAY. J 363-8303 674-3126 335-7900 KELLER IMMEDIATE POSSESSION; Urge 3-Bedroom brick ranch, 3 lots,. 1-cat garage, toko prlv--------- retiring. Shawn b| 471-0791 49 mm “IT'S TRADING TIME" SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME . W ~ . by Mlllng tha birch frtM tram this two acres focalad near 1-75 In thn Rochester and Oakland Unlvaralty arts. Than an|oy country jiving In tw lovely, fhrao badroom brleh ranch wllh formal dining room, plus acting apace to the, kitchen, beautiful, apactoua llvlrt roam w|(jt natural stone fireplace. 1W ear garage, full Mtomenl with stone tlraplaea. Priced at 445,000 with 010,on down on ■ Lind Contract with an inviting 7% moving to Florida FOUR-BEDROOM Separata dining basement pnd a j______ ■ p with bvarslzad 2 car garaga with extra* ' > lad, pi $4000 >wner will snow it, 8 Sun. Oct. 12, from tract. 332-3745, i tfAici ffvTi Lakt, rastrlctlona. CI a American Kttchan loads of cupboard landscaped lot will Bay Rlvar-Alpana area. Sl* mo. , and Ifs youra. Call collac* flraplact. full 413.1133. Ilh load-B*ifnd LAKE PROPBRtY. POSHbla' Ufelgl mLSrQ In basomant, ».«' g%..h".15’0OO^W UP ^ i tarmi, cdll way 474-4101. LOT ON WHIPPLE SHORE Drive, access to Whippy taka, |p| || I terms, 482-1412 or 425-5841 LGwER STRAITS LAKR FRONT |2Vk ACRES. Clarkalon, - * Mai area. 3 bedrooms, and a paacafull atmoi replaces. Thermo win- rolling good view. 84,2 Out lowar level. Many! 7Vi ACRES ily landscaped. Good horses allowed, cleared, $8,459 5557. SHELDON, 425- | Phono 335-3141. 17 ACRES—only 15 mile* Rochester. Priced Tennyson Says: in! How dull it is to pause, 45 BEAUTIFUL—rolling acrti. I To moke on end. I To rust unburnished 71 ACRES-N. of Not to shine in use. The Dutch Cookbook says sraiii! ^ another way: 343-1794, Evoo. after 7, 441-MOO. FLAT-GARD DISTRIBUTORSHIP CAN YOU QUALIFY? MOST AREAS OPEN your awn wholesale BUSINESST Would yeu ilka to open your daora tor fcuslMas with FIFTY DIALER ACCOUNTS HO CORNER LOT termt. 473-4041. n; Better it is alreody A LARGE FAMILY Ilk4 nice thin Igh coif of llvlrt >y awning Shin l .. _ve an incomt frn flat flat. 1 badroom* up and down, 1 h», baxmant, 1 car garaga. •hown any time. P.H.A. and mi, and reaionubly priced u , AKF MO. Call todayll No .7-13 L*,,hfc NORTHERN HIGH rp 1 bedroom Irl-laval in fine city illon. close to aytrylhlng. lO'xtl' ig room Ilka ntw carppflng- lv> garaga. Mead lot. Ceramic tiled it, plenty of dining area, kttchan ga and rafrlgtrator Included to prlca of 411,300. No mtga. wor-an tttl* ana. Juit about >1500 to ontotlM LAKEFRONT l alto, ACRES, |i fall ting. 8800 par acre. C. PANGUS INC, REALTOR OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK i CjIlL COLLECT 477-1515 _____I.........feaSTS rttt5,.i ANj^NA mjmrn enclosed porch, tarty beach. I v*lu* «•?»* Easily cenvarlad^to ywr wound lat> - liy. largo lof *5.000 down an land contract, . tonn.,^ A FEW NICELY WOODED acres. jtO WOOf OUt, thOfi TUSt OUt, Manistee County. $2,400 C*“c 83,000 terms. 508-1808. ACREAGEiso Wjjiyi 10 ACRES Lapeer arai. sc.mc uina, An #w#r tsultcllna It good woodrt, Plato, ar rolllno. *5.950, 5 Upp#r cau)d g, rtflnlihad parcaj*_to choo«p from. ... qMrt«r*. Lowar - I 15 ACRES, rt*r S^n*!!!*L..',,J!X'I antiques. ^Itti, variety itora. MARKETING DIRECTOR P.O. BOX 20591 DALLAS, TEXA5 75220 For Information call JAMES A TAYLOR, Realtor, OR 4-0306, Evas. EM 3-7544.____ __________ ------Plktf FRONTittqMer J. L. Dally Co. 4-17 HANDY MANS SPECIAL ranting tor <05.000 a month. One condemned. About two hundred yards from Cat Lake. Large ito'xMO' ygrt, lots af poaalbllttlai. Total prlca <10,900. Land Contract farms. NEW MODELS. Lake Angahia Lake West on Walton to,-.. To toko Angelue Road Clarkston Meadows 1-75 Is M-15 Clarkston 10-54 FHA IN WATERFORD ------ pha Ijifliia H all oiu wah i It* car garaga rarrigtrajor. pining room, iiying room wiin WoaSSgrh^ Place. Titti homa.Mi a baauinui view gf Lotos Lake art, privileged MM Mart ar laas away. Also, lakt front lit •aia ecrtta lha aiFMlI A v . LAKE FRONT LOT ON LOTUi LAKE r~\ rtautiful frost, Cm .M told an Land future ami call ui today. PRICE REDUCTION . \ \ ) Wooded lake front Wa Hava Mortgags Monty Avollabls to Holp Our Buyon Financo '... 4 WE LIKE TO WORK . . . to kMP buoy, wa naad Ljiltogtl if you would liku to haw a Lee BrtSt l)8|fi *i?Ltth* Laon 1071 W. Huron Sh i’ ’Iryan, ifalna Si tf Dave Rradlay, MLS 681-1000 LOVELAND CASS LAKE 4-badroom war around homo with gas heat. Fancad yard. W, Bloomfield School Dl»lrlcf. Immediate possession. Priced at SI59.00. Bal-act land contract. *5,000 dawn. Leona Loveland, Realtor 1100 Cass Lake Rd. 40M155______ Lake front, lajc! pRTyiLBGl|p lot*, Cammarca Coder ..Island, Middle Stralto, Big Lake*. Fowler, 143-4377, 400-1404, 34MM5. TAKE OVER PAYMENTS, MUST tall, lake living lit# an hill overlooking aand bottom spring fad lake. Call owner, 413-1333._ f RAfLlRS- g| tif MOVE ON NOWi ' IM hour* Tram Pontiac, 4 mlnuta. from^T-fS^Ownar^ m^st^ll. SI* Salt Housb* 49 _____ _ $750. Call 402*3741._____ _ ___ BY OWN¥Rf with aaptii ______ terms, additional availabla, North Branch an 2270. jl ■ ___________ BY OWNER. Cranberry Laki* erry La 1154507. __ BEAUTIFUL HiLLSiDi^BUIth)NG sites, low down payment. Walter* i Lakt a Ciarktton, 384-0058. Clarkston School Areoi ! Waller* Lake privilege*, Sawral choice building alia*. Parc ta*ti availabla. country *for* ar ladle* dross tti&r #St "hiUaii Or' CALL'AC/214 638-3552 number* — may rayaria charge*, i---oOLKsfAWO'N- IM . - .. .n it.. For l*asa at rtrrtr of Pontiac Orfonvllla Also in Davisburg ! Lake Rd. and Watkln* Lake Rd. .... owner »ald - toll building muflj ^toc^wlA high Mtrm (at. I be sold for n gas station - It !• IfflFjfr, StoO Py» to'ooMd mrtarn can- tRSSiC7Jfn.Trt*YiP&^! i«Tl ATfi aS.itSa?z%i0 Light Switch III... ; YOU M WWA—. |l POTENTIAL INCOME 473-3408 Sylvan CLARKSTON , S choice acres with 200 ft. of frontage, 2.7 mils* north of 1-75. Across the street from 8850 M*15. Full price $7,500. Terms avelleble. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac Stala Bank Bldg. 330-9194 330-9175 CHOICE BUILDING ill., 4 1-3 >cr«. rolllno. wooded. OA 0-1035. 10410 LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING NOW HEAR THIS! Extra dean 3-bedroom IrMawl, praclat. II. IW-car attached 0* price M,71400 SERVICE, to any customer seek- down. balanca 7 par cant tort contract. 10 year* or rttora. Payments 474.31 per month Including Intoratf. Pea* net jncluda| group of su IMAGINE a business Mrvlce t repeal attor repeat ondars, art you hava a COPY AND PRINTING CINTER. ALL CENTERS are You are Invltod to saa o lion In action, examine COMMERCIAL BUILblNG Located on tha camant black w . , „ ■ ^ 1 Cep be bought an tort contract. Scott Lakp Road, toll pqlc# 477,500. Pi REDUCED-LAKE FRONT WITH A PRICE , baths, Tear garage ai $27,800. RIMIMBKR ff RADI FRUSH0UR REALTY REALTORS - WL5 5730 Williams Lakt Rd. m£s NELSEY, SALES AGENT Davisburg, Mich._______ IGHT MANUFACTURING TOOL I. DIR (HOP Smell »hop comploto w 11 machinery close to Dlx a Talagraph. Onwar can as*]sl_ subcontracts. Just MOTOR PARTS ", bldg, with 40t .ol 170x100 Busltu A bldg. 405 N. Opdyka Rd. Ponttoc _______375 4551 __________ i CITY OP SYLVAN LAKE " GRAND BLANC .X TtTSU 10. Acral on Baldwin Rd, Will room for expansion divide In 10 acre parcels, fxcallant j building sites. 5 ACRES—HADLEY AREA Country setting. Trap covered rotting land. Ideal building ilia. On good " blacktop road. M ml. off state highway. Ttrm*. 29 ACRES-HADLEY AREA Live stream. Tree*. I roads, frontage. Nice ’peaceful rolling land. v ROYER REALTY, Jnc. MF* \Z?BL W KING-: CHOICE Dav|t Lake Irani lols, 10B* X 170' otters great view! *10,500. Ttrmi. 75’ x 140' Building tots, closa oltlca or itoei street, water <■ s* to TaitBraph Rd. Other Commercial Proparttoa Annitt Inc.' Realtors\ E. Huron St. $38-0466 le. Op*n Bvonlng* A Sunday 1-4 Toka-Out Shops Earn ExcBlItnt Incomb • Own-operete unusual h, aaml* automatic take-out dinner ihep billion dollar (rowing demand for taka-home, partle*, worker*, plc\ nlcs, trip*, catorlng, etc. Mlnymym labor. Short houre. simplified. Can keep pra.ant |ob. Report In M-ttonal. publcallont. Law co*h In-vastmenl of SIA7SA Wrfto or phono tor InformaHon, \ \, Coato*yllto,‘Pa. 19370 Whtn Cooking Out... KWIMToOK'S Wl _________ iTquorbaR I parcel Z STSSSBST fUTJrtd OaXtort .vnw, I potentto*!*WIM'dlvIdV.*Itt5M*oir aert, j tutotrtiW d^ffi11 W ** ^ ** KING-PHIPPS AGENCY I BATEMAN - !^ WARDEN^REALTYM 1097 s. Laoaar hd. . 4M-lj*3 |NV|STM|NT a COMMERCIAL1 CO. 3434 W|,^rJ^J?r rail 34M440 L A K 6 PRIVILEGED home (lies. I 177 I. Talagraph 1 no grW>sJ|Kh Brat. Lorn W 338-9641 ‘"jACOBlTBS A SCHULTI Attar 5 (.m. A Sund»y-CALL SlAltu-.L 473-1144 I >*« |99Uii* P5 . ' - fesa , SC24, 'U« ORION X S*^ln&rnarWWAMPl1 SALE y ! Ethan Allan Maplo BRAND NEW FURNITURE ft I' SI. 30 ceht all. All $297 your convonioncp. ten tno ierm* on this on». ■rl» A Son Realtor. 474-0324. PR&PTfASlViUSINESS OPPORTUNITY C tonally high Mill sorority In 'SUNOCO sorvlco i Pontiac Aroo. 'Sunoco oPPERSt • MODERN STATIONS It you era an aggressive looking tor esecur* Mure today to loam tho dotalls. Days—Tom Plihar—A LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN furniture . 14*1 Baldwin at Walton PC 2 am? Acra» of Fra* Parking --4gv»AT--lif t s Sit. *tll i^lsf Itrma APIECE BEDROOMS, brand"naw. 19? Little Jog’s Bargain Mouse. 1451 lawwm« FBJMMt, Vxl) All wool Rato martial Qradt) ruQ and pad. rad# 883- 331 3 Trice SECTIONAL, fchairi. S •nd tablGi, 2 lamps. PC 44013 9x 12 linolaum Rugs $4.95 JSg-S ■ m 11 Pina ch«st, alt. _ u WI6GS M w. Huron at Polttloc skua only. 0»E "ELECTRIC STOVE with pioco 7 •uto. ovtn cltantr, brand naw. ' MM.lt, We sdrvlet ... .. Obtl TV, 3S07 Rtlsobolh Lotto Rd. 612.1030. ■ ■ , clIWancI~6n 1 AfflT'ft JP^J1 tos MlCARNIVAl stock. RCAi trlctd fronr up to HIS. Dinette sgI. Sgwg _ mf mfoWjLikWiWW* " ~rotb'Rlrv*s for less “ Also save planty on floor iampia scratched refrigerators, Itovti western. dryers and dishwashers Llttla j Jot's, 1411 Baldwin, P« I WSH Natural wood, covered 4142, ^ ^ with vinyl stats. I alactrlc kitchen COLOR TV BARGAINS. LITTLE dock. ’ Knight ./ Itirto amp.. 40 iM't SirMln Houm. f watts, drassmakars form, slia 14. oil burner, with GE ’• honapowar motor and Ignition ntrol, a LIKE 30. 332 lipt- NEW REBUILT^dGtof guaranteed* black and white and up. OBal Laka Rd.. Inlaid Tilt. 9x» 7c ai Floor Shoe- 2255 EHzatwth Laka "Across From the Molr HOOVER type f o r t * washar. spin drjFtjr 335*1234, HOUSFHOLb SPECIALS — use VOUW CREDIT - BUY 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Co* o room outfit with 2*pc. n suits 9 stop tables. 1 .jbla. 2 tab** lamps and 9'xi?'. TV. 3501 Ellzabath ... .... ___ M0, MAN UP ACfOWfli 'FCLdS l*OUT STEREO WALNUT OR "MAPLE CONSOLE Diamond (toadies ESR 4-Spaad chang.r 1050 Huron. Pontiac, -Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" | iron fabricating plant ! Property ond Busin*** tor sale. Ream tor expansion, includes house with 2 apartments, Main Highway close 1o X'-wov. Profitable. Priced to sell. Shown "by appointment. ABIC POR-PREC CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron Sl.p Pontiac 1ST 31 It „ WO 5-0759 • Open Weeknltes til * . ' WHY DRIVE TO WORK? Good golnp business, ^gai * la hen. altachaSf* ^xcellant opportunity! tall on land contrail. quality carpats. vtiiiik »»a rehouse, cli ‘“ and salas. FE 2-4734 I2‘~ CARRIER FREEZER, yprlflt 8200. FJ 2*744$. _ 10" FRIDIDAIRE electric stov good condition. First SSS takas cocktail Si,. ml MR bedroom sunt innarsprtng math box sonnq »r ‘ “ .S-piect dinette chairs an ‘ credit It nth _j bet and maid 2 vanity lamps. STEREO National Business ~ F| 3*7041 ^ANT TO £ ClinIc War^®u *• ,n*n®’ r#pai mill' Wymans WYMAN FURNITURE CO. IJil«v - „ .. HURON - 4jp ,pq WM2 i jaLjgyrJcondmon' KELVINATOR ELECTRIC UNIVERSAL 2415 Dixie PE 4 0905 Daily itii.vi Tut*,, sat. It WALNUT cabinet. 1*40 USED SINGER GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW Model 440. lull price SI69.k3. Call Midwest Appliance. 354-3312. 1969 USED SINGER TOUCH ANO SEW clock and tlmar, good condition. SSOe 335*7430. KELVINATORDOUBLEbvEN.40", bast offar takas It. Call 391-0400. KIRBY SWEEPER buttonholas. fancy EXCELLENT CONOITION-S45 etc. Cabinet included FULL GUARANTEE - e new. over 1200. Full price Kirhy ^Ervlcfi & SuDDh CO. 334 3312 Ph°nt AW"*nt* MI7 DIXIE HWOT. ™ 1969 USED SINGER 1 WpWp». ^rSnT„0rS.?EJs TOUCH—AND"SEW—Matures do Auburn Ave. FB 4-70*1. nV'*".};. TeYln.rrnc.ftff LEFTOVER Compere new. over 5200. Compare < . iflar. French f speaker cabinet. 3150, NEW COLOR TV's priced from Westinghouse Color TV Sets IS Different models at Close-out Prices -Terms available tor Service ! 1370 Wide Traci Pontiac. Mleh.\ By Dick TumotlStart Igalmnitt yi|NH.Naaawi Gff» . „ WjUmtedt_____________ AXC DAOtSHUNO. j *!^\T?|S*^r?,t*Laone6^^ sBi''LM‘-.......... Art MEAT CUTtTNO. PREBIIR ■ aaa.. .........puppiea. PEVw.7 .............~ T mixed. rtRET cutting. _____ - | rt fn Mld: Jro«itta, MWM1, i _______MU......_.... AKC'fSS^^TW^^ciT'i^lfwiB fradtiw IS ( . *M4. y 1 — BROWNING It Bln PV* i |iar.1 I j* ... ■> .t I a-tflHi Wlyjhaatar M4t, .41*-... sisj, I talndra; m W, Huron ' * SmNV.^Tl» V.n Uda*KC DAC<MW4. TBV MW A’rtTC C ATt SNBWStOEILES, ____— ------- Panther at Pontlec3SS-SI4*. AkC^loiVriRED barman AiTWv'lWlTOWlaola. tank .WSLSft.JP: , rftet Cell todav tor details. akc TOY OR pocket toy poodle RHODES POOLS puppy. *a3jy4ga___ . c abuu tu uu Walton AIRE DAL S FUFjET™ AKC# axcalianl . *! • . - -.ju ^1*^39*,.____tamllv dog. 330*3241. i' dozan tor 41.00, 50 BROWNING LIGHT It fl a IMI a^ ■rit’trlhM aTii l ” PUFS Loveable, potatoes, 11.49. Boros euiemalle ikal nun with amnio.. BOSTON^,, BULL 1^1^. # Lovaama. Markal, 2250 DIxH Highway. rpl^^Al^lbiranrir'l,1 POTATO**. ONIONS, AND dry * J | baana. Ini* Watartord Rd. 4W-1SS4. CUT* AWtOTfirtN*. traa Farm Equipmtnt 87 1 EVERSMAN LAND LIVELIR. ‘Hey, Mb! Sis and her boyfriend are in cahoots ----------------—agaiftU!--------------------- laWTil boots - tloihlnj. Oakland Oui E^y^lwg^ri. * ^' -- 4*4-3*14. BRbWNnw fl «*0j»i^^ma*.1 COLLIE PUPi. -mixad Ml mi. I regular II43, MM74|. i Toy Collla. M. a>S-*w*. i amwiw ,________ Divers w|t lUlt and walaKTbalt, dillHUAHUA. Pox +arrlari, whlto, 3 PLOW DIESEL Trader, 1 year 040. SdS-TM*. __ apricot toy paodlaa. all rag., stud old. Ilttad prlct svir S4.SOO. anwunH^VuyTlrade. 1 tarvlct on aama. FB _2j«*7^-I Jacrlllca for ti.M0. Loll of opllona. Opdyka Hardware 373-4444 BoilRUAAM PINCHBR. roll fmmif a»r-4427. ___________ aiikic'~ATfkit~~rilKic— a.m.-n p.m.. aik lor Rob. 330-34oi. ariens and toro GUNS-GUNS-GUNS 6b*El^N_plNiCHBR_^.;"Axc I w display One of the largest selection in rMlstered. Iioo-* * --- WroltS?by. 5yrA‘--‘*r^7-JLn.JL' aralleble, S3I-1713! Celt an* ^|n tiootiso. 1*1717. nirhW«sw*miT?lols: iNOLISH BULLDOG PUPPIES. Ml, Dl'lSfcKriP* P* 5-3424. ■ ■: CHAIN SAWS NEW MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS PHONE '335-616*\ For Salt Misce'lanoous For Sale Mitcellcmtout 67 For Sal* Miscallantou* 67 ■ «*» RUMMAO* SAL*. |OM_E anl^ues. SICI-DOO'S ROYER REALTY, Inc. HOW Sale land Contract* 6 ~CA*M~ "Of. Hjjjj SPKT*ACT* 4S40 Dixie Hwv.. — OR S-13SS 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See u> befot you fkibl. Warren Stout, M7.72 Phone Mldwesi Appliance. 33U.3312 ■ . . . lrUSB D~SINGE R GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW 5159.95. Call Midwest Appliance. 334-3312. L™ FLINTY OF USBD"weshers, stoves, rafrlgtratorse and 434*8204 Model 440. _____Blvd^ f B 2*4842. A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN I pc. living rm. group Iwte. chei a beaulllul tables. 2 lamps) i S I bedroom (dgiible dreeier. r “ I oerore mattress, iprlngt, lemp.1. I bunk bed - 5 plroe dinette. Itor Any item Sold Stperetelv IT"r. ■ All for S3N — SI0 Monthly * -asiifffl • p.m. KAY FURNITURE tHI* DbOTRACT'WlBliwily »Sd to. Nexl to K Mori In Oltnwecd Center T »7 S5* wim tt,(M down7 J per cent ANTIQUE WALL CLOCK. BUS. Interest end *65 p*T month. Will Herveil table, and Deacon. Bench ■SbESit 11.007 Other land con- and 4 main chain. 5200. Closed .recta available at good discounts.! eer_Jpp carrier, 40x51x14, *25. ul Call and aik for ChraM ■■■■ ihogany condition. SSB. 363-04116._ NORGE GAS- DRYER, S-VT6. S50. Call altar 4 p.m. 473-3M7. OVAL MAPLE DROPLiAP blasted Rwan ipson: 7t GAS OR basuilljil glass lub | FINE...ANTIQUE KITCHEN rangai P.y*flt |HIM,_,MVh^!?,>.fn,lrc--h. *°r-ggL—g - I mroam*Va.m. fflT Blrm- j ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER 67 bathtub with a beautiful enclosure, aluminum fti W INCH COPPER WATER PIPE, 2|| ”n’M,»"o!^! antanna, S40. UL BROKEN CONCRETE dally :iay, lawn. hywIL^J. H. Wall 4 HORSEPOWER, Craftsman lawn mowar, used S tlms* I-car. I 4-1035 and PE 2-C203 SURPLUS! OFFICE CHAIRS Othar mlsc. trifle* furnli to Mil, Hi tawabla Fraction Prlcad rablo-lyp* I of Onglni VARD SU 300 S. Blvd. E. warehouse 1 547 E. contracts, homat, lots or ELrEBUB W.p.w*-'. u/i will o va you cash for vour roulto. Contact TED MeCUL-LOUGH JR. 674-2236 mccuuough realty gw mjhtond Rd. (M.5,1 "jg 1 to 55 I LAND CONTRACTS | Urgantly naTOad. Ou ui batora you dadl. _ - r j Warren Sout, Realtor ! 1450 N. Opdvka Rd 22J-1111 Onan Eves, -til 0 p.m. LOANS *25 to 11,000 Influrao BAXTER Walton at Joslyn, 373*5540. BIG JOE DORAN'S warehouse Admiri........... color T profit. BIG JOE DORAN has bramT naw Sylvanla gas i i heaters at Vi the profit.. betonca 8*88; Hollywood bee mattress, box vinyl head board, unclaimed balance 349. Colonial sofa and matching chair ripparad reversible cushions, sell dackad, 3319 valua, unclalmw balance 3237. Young married* credit avallablt without a cosigner. Many similar savings. FREE DELIVERY HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 461 Elliabtlb Lika Rd. Naar Talagrapb) 0*1-23*: 10-9 dally GARAGE SALE - Boys 5 spaad Schwinn, antiques, clothing, mm* largo suits, dishes, old. books,, dome axcalianl Christmas gin*, all good dean things. Andarsonvllla Rd. to ■ _______ — 065. Tasnaga. boy's Clamant to 4006 Hlllcrasf Dr. MSS from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. only. , oakdala. Baby clothes, lormels, S GALLON ELECTRTcXl humldlisr". THE SALVATION ARMY t^.awS fvgrythlnato i---- Clothing, Fumi CLOTHES, toys -- *5 -eechr gtrPe-ematf-0 whut M. 6*1-0545.___________________ USED STEEL crenk-dut house od for cebln, best e .............. $40, 2 speed electric °^n^GmlKAlilti ten. SIS, call elder 4:30. 6*2-1304. JftxItJm-Mon V-TuiVi 6;7IIlN-4 ; JO1 DIRT CONVEYOR, .dining rdom qarAGE-SALE: 1439 Alme, off, 20*0 Geltoway Ct„ Pontiac Airport or M-59. Mlsc. clolhlng ell USED HOT WATER TANK, electric, sizes. Appliances end o t h • r |0 months old. *25. Cell 391-CS29. household Items. Oct. t thru 11. 9 WANTED: OLD LAMPS end old _______________ a.m. fiir ____________ ______ .... ... dolls, 852*4919. _ ^f73*lf1f r _ _ ....... garage SALE: Octobar 2,. 3, and •* u/Tijfcn fn 'BMV 270' CHAIN LINK fence, top rill, 21 4th. 9-» P/n flS Cojfs IRd._Out WANTfcD 10 BUT line puts, 1212. 473-0969 ilttr 4. Baldwin to indtonwood Rd., or off Ludtd glass lamps or lasdad glass Seymour Laka Rd._____________ . i shadas. @4421 ■ Larga varle^1 washing MAC hTn"ITn GOOD * CONDITION. "" ' ' Open Dally ond Sundays EVINRUDE SKEETERS BOBCATS '70s HERE NOW Fabulous snowmobila aavl a* camp traitors 5444703. LAKE i SEA MARINE IRISH WOLFHOUND-PUTPIES °d. st Saglnsw PE ____________________474-6*39, 474-1936 I RUDE..OftEETl^R'^ ^ now on lqno HAlRBD jcIttons AKC. show and llalri stock. ika M49 to 1 Hickory Rldgt Rd.lo Dame loft to follow llwit to DA) SALES. TIPS CD LAKE. PIBERLAS DUNE BUGGY Body solid colors, or matal flak*, dlrad from manufactures, phon* 620-20*5. HUNTING CLOTHES - MEN'S SIZES 40*42. WOMEN'S SIZE II. CALL 473-7121. 2 1 JOHNSON SKI HORSE M0T0 SKI SNOWMOBILES Complet* line of » n o w m o b 11 NEW EQUIPMENT togder, Lendsc--- 1MF2135 freefer. Lee special. IMP 133 Tractor. DEMONSTRATORS, 1MP2200 lack hoc and dletdl. 1MF3165 Loader. 1MF2244 Crawler loadar diesel. 1MF2244 Crawler dozer dleul. 1MS2SOO Fork lift dltul. t Tiger lint 3 exit dgmonstrafar l Tiger line 3 exit trailer new. USED EQUIPMENT IK Ford 3 cylinder get dozer -----I' actor wllhlrerir ■ trencher, 1-4", l**". EQUIPMENT. 10 h.p., 12 Snow thrower*.____ 7 h.p. recoil tractor i PONTIAC FARM AND TRACTOR Cy or Dev* Lockhtrd ■25 South Woodward DAVIS MACHINERY, ' ONE MONTH OLD couch i modern. *173, 493-7363 eft choir, irehouio has wishers, dryers, TV's and S&reos PRIVATE PARTY WANTS good BIO JOB DORAN'S waohrose has *d Spanish living room turnlti trade-in refrigerators, ranges and I Call oftor 6 p.m, 6*1-0673. washers cheap. Vs the protlt. 567 REFRIGERATORS. Stoves, laf E. We ten at Jeslyn, 37S-S560. I and chalra, mlsc. SSB W. Huron, BUILT-IN"APPLIANCES IRECREATON BAR with 2 laalhar Larga display of bulll-lns.| tioola. 39t-S27*. Dishwashers, heeds, surface units. fEBDiABDafria JSJ! Hit«bUirom* ssl'es*’ farms w,,h B'ushed chri dmerte. sets from S24.9S forms, m frost, secrlfe sump pump; building lacks; heavy GARAGE i duly rralwr; 1949 Yamaha clolhlng, lurnlture snowmobila. Call all. * p.m. OR 1315._________________________ It,000 BTU GAS SPACE haater bunk bgdo. -1 bunk bad Iran OR 3-1941. Frl., S Sat. bike, condition 3’q ■0.000 UNIT FURNACE, like new, *100, after 3. FE B9977. ___ 103.000 BTU OAS FURNACE, com plstelv Installed to present duel work. S40S. Pontlec Htetlno* 674 2611. 402-3*74. 1965 ALUS CHALMERS b-lf with TS-500 loadar and «i GARAGE SALE, FrL and Sat., 3-4, “ riyUferar1- "#,rlMr,,fl,|H.Bd To.ls-MachlR.ry 68 0^¥V.Hu'rrb,Vl GARAGE SALE. Octobar 2-4. 10-4.1 04 E. Brcoklyn._______________ GARAGE SALE, FRI. 9:00 ond Sot. ’ FACTORY BUILT wall dl machine. Mounted on Dodge truck. Tula Included. Musi self-due to Asa Sto FRONT end loedef y:w» aw can divb. awmi. ^ ifjTffflH GARAGE SALE: 2nd, 3rt end Alt. M540S3, »* Forest. Baldwlm,^----1COMPRESSORS GARAGE SALE lectors ttsms and •7, 702 "" Antiques 8. col- equipment, hydraulic locks, nlsc. Horns. Oct, cleaners. Wpldin------------ W. Pontlec Motor I University DrlVO condition. Call 673-0672, Dally 10*0 * 729*1010 Tuo*, 'III 6 I________________ 753*9090 BUN KBEDSSAVE PL ENT Y! L line Joe'*, 146tj!Beldwln. FE 2-4843. BR0106 GARAGE SALE7prld6y Si Saturday, BACKHOE LORAINE L-36 1946 9-6. Baby Items, adult l> childrens yard bucket. Dozer INI J clothing, mlsc. 294 Tllmor, Rantlgc.l Dure 250. Oinoralor*. 622-0662. HP.........-v.. . off SCOIt Lk. Rd.__________I FERGUSON 202 backhu and let Orchards, Mon.-Wed., Oct. 4-t, 9 0E DELUXE RANGE, push-1 comblnatlonVOLt-iMk iM-Mh ----->____ I buttons, daap-walL clock, tlmar, P0R SALE PBWALT 12" radio i MACHINS, >29.5*. Portable! light. Excellent condition. *75. Slot-: uw Call 333-1722 before 1 p.m. Mr,. rK. set. lots of. ireek. m HOUp^S~OA6iir¥^ifd PEKINONBftB* 485-9942 _ and New Idea parts jnrc'H B"ST i"B and ORTONVIJAi. JJA 74292. _ upples. 315. 473-4787. new IDBA* ONI ROW corn picker, IB DOGS* females No. 7, 8150, cell after 5, UL 2*4953. 451*2845. .... ------T-" 7.--------------1---BB •anted either mixed Travel Trailers 88 buy complete litters, ! 1-A TRAVEL TRAILER STORAGE Dravtnn Plains v' OR 4-0411 ^REBKU GERMAN Shepherd. Secured storage far travel trailers, pr*Y19ILgi*>y . i \pupsfS35. 482*7518. boat trailers, can. NEW 1970 SKI-DOO'5 ! FUFWEjrMIXEb BRliDrsj Vech. n|rkUD and PUII«rvh c.ll Arvl'. COME IN AND PICK OUT THE I 263-7677. 47S Washington. Union LK. fl15lt .lfS- *n^.lW!Y*rv' €,H Arwl* MQDBL YOU DESIRE WHILE poodCI PUPPIES, raasoiiohra. Also —__ THE SELECTION IS GOOD, j pups fraa to good born*. 6r 3- • ALASKAN CAMPER ON 1964 '---- —------------------ Chavy pickup. 01500 complita.good tor hunting ond fishing, 6*2-2072. YOUNG'S MARINA Oun dolly 9 'til t Sunday 10 to 4 t Dixit H^y Loon Lake AND PICK OUT THE MS-7677, 475 Washington, MODEL YOU DESIRE WHIlB pooDLE PUPPIES, reasonable THE SELECTION IS GOOD. 2 PUI " I ' ' PRICES START AT ONLY 849S. 69IS. ______ ALSO WE HAVE A -GOOD STOCK b^5j?tl5>NI'iheD OF RECONDITIONED USED SKI- r«0l*lered. Utter, DOO'S, ALL PRICED TO SELL KING BROS. 37341734. . . the but deal, come to JIM HAR* RINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT, ml, E. of Lapeer Sundays. 664-2022, SNOWMOblLE TRAILEhi, , ilngtos 16-21. Opon T~ TTTaTN“CB Rabbits for sale, soma coops, cell oftor S, UL 2-43S3. ST. BERNARD PUPRilS jJ671io papers, fifltdltt. shots, 363-3317. iT. BBRNAAp fupRiII. ak6 rMl.lsred. SI50. 473-7237. st iBIpMD PUPPitS, AKC. structure, 3150. 626-5837. I ............ PUPPIES 535. black Brand tomato*, no pipers, shots, 363-3317. and refrigerator. Foil height doaat. Sleeps 4. 1016 Whlto Like Rd. Acrou from comp Pontiac, altar S “ 15' TRAILER, $1695 w,,*,fesaaB1350 Pdcksg*. OR 34)293. 60 14VS FOOT TRAVEL froMar. 2050. 052-4529. C O PPERTONE REFRIGERATOR NEED UP TO $5,000? : rmo"X4t% You may be surprised how choeply cTXa“n CAB Ite-Tone sham 849.95 Clerk »1on. ANCHOR FENCES" NO MONEY DOWN__________FE 5-7471 ro’ cObinaL Taka oviir paymanls of: APACHE CHIEF: Colt..M f'l 12' O. $7 per Month for 8 Mos. EX*" m*?'', irKcWpu^.» *ne2 PESSIONALLY with professional 0r $56 Cash Balance (Stow ^ ALUMINUM SIDING wilh” >69.50 sq. 3304966. SNO-JET newl^Prlced 'frommi^'r’Fr*chi7,SIAMESE KITTENS, chocolate" Power. 3297 E. Pontlec Rd., Pen- sul point. 6 Wk>. 334-9049. floe. 373-0007.__________ WALKER PdX DOOS. yoi flNT, OUN CABINET, wodors. I old, S3 on up; OR 3-StSl. ■ H.^ula,«tla ,uta-11 i: ™,, ^YoRpg?&Lil THE ALL NEW 1970' on fif” | SKI-D00S Pel SuBBliat 5ervict ______________ ,57fc127l j NOW IN STOCK-SNOB BABLY I , LAVATORIES COMPLEYb.-S24J0 ComBrUS • JdrVlCB 70 5PBC,USBD SNOW,M?»ILE TOOWWj 1-A GROOMING V.IUO 114.95, also balhlubs, toltoto., ' .... CRUISE OUT, INC. „r. gJLuds- Mtoh P«h7o *12.50. Bookcaus, 524.50. Posteoe "Triif otorff fope^tc?!Wsffifo.' « W HOUSEHOLD items and antiques. - w ' ■ Musi ba sold, moving to Florida naxt weak. Frl. and Sat., 10-4, 3553 Darcy Drive* N. of Maple off LOCK 70" MOWER ”373*0051 | I ARCWELDEBr 325 amp., W is, A-1 i equipment Voss & Bucskner, Inc. 1408 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 334-3267 «« . .... ...... __ rl__„ Still Under Guarantee SST. Borrow what you naefi UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER from A to Z Rental Canter, 2327 2613 Dixit Hwy. Dixie HWV,. 674*4)66._______ SEWING MACHINES CARPET SALE in new cabinets. values. Michigan Orchard Laka — '___________ LADIES PLATINUM O I * MOWD ■ JF1;. —-------- ■ s^*A-uii£0iG”d*___________ 2-YEAR-OLD, Ilka naw. Sllngarland drums and ci JO* fln oWPkals. 1400. tll-o monitor noidi'SmoiS ring^wllW'dtamonds * PIKCE 1-UjOWIG 6RUM' monnor. wr!ghlng approx. IVj karats, cymboli, >200. MA 4-2354 "i^7i-r| Appralsad at *3,600. Will aaerlflco, 22R LESLIE SPEAKER, | 335-5259 1970'S NOW DISPLAYED i TWIN CYLINDERS SPRINT BY BOLEN'S THE SNOWMOBILE EVAN'S EQUIPMENT , 629-7111 Ctorklton 625-2516 Open Mon.-Frl. from 0 a.m.-l p.m, li Saturday till 5 p.m. diamond!, totaling l}» I praised at HOOO. Ladlu 1 diamond cocktail ring » diamonds tolollng VV karat TRAIL BOSS USE IT ALL 42 MONTHS DOG HOUSES, MOST with Fancy styles. so All carpeting told at 81.00 cost. First grade quality Large color selection. FALL SEASON SPECIAL 1949 ZIG ZAG v. In beautiful cebinef, doe___ great zig-zag stitches. No at* motor, and trailer, for Apacha type; jj^.95 WOOD BOAT, 10 hp ...........r, for Api have you. Value 5275.' PK 4*5712. 16 GAUGE AUTOMATIC tor snow water sporting aqulp- trada, 152*5065 *92-35*1. _____________| mr RIVERSIDE to CC tor chain mw. Halmat Included. 692-W06. S*9 ROYAL ENFIELD, 750”CC, ax-celent condition, will trade for pickup or a car of equal value, 391*1429, evenings. _ " ’ CASH F OR CBM ENT MI KB R. 482-2557 _____ 1\IAL MANUAL" POBTABLE organ; dresses l________________ ... . PULL PRICE 842,95 tax Inclu or pay 84.29 per mo.. Cell Capital 129.50, Dasks, 812.50. matars# . dupii-231 W. nylon carpeting, 85.95 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT »y«m. 651*6292. ____________________ dlllcn. 673-7192. -------- *a51>11 6S07a0lJto°Hwy *a3ai1*| AuctlOtt SolQS LAWN SPRINKLING 9yal9ms. to ALT0 SAXAPHONE, B PLAT 1300, Oun Mon.-Frl. from 9 a.m.4 p.m. .„rTlnkl _____ Inch Plastic plu. MAS Mr 100, 1": like naw. AU..UU. Saturday fill I p.m. glass ^ prosed gtolio. chtoa,™ Trull' tors, bottto*. silver original palming. Sundgy on. 13, 1969. House of Ardylh. inch ptoitic I pja*t|c pip*, plastic pipe, Dtoslic plu. i Thompson A 100. G, n5 BALDWIN ACROSO^I 1C pfeno, f yrt. A. f old, perfect condition, best Wfer, PB 2-4572. PEDALS, and Scott Lk. Rds. SPRINKLING PI priced from i Son. 7) MOTORIZED PARKER GRASS and I tool catcher, like mw, ill for 159.50, 135 Shinty. Concert Organ __ I ^ • koytw Excellent I NEW STOREY-CLARK or* 01 nlsh with bonch, rag. now uto price 0550. E 15 PER CENT FT44721 trade for something of DRYER 835, STOVE 835, 3-5257. | by side refrlgeri lltlon. Rd. Betfei BELOW FACTORY PRICE, comf trailer axles, closing out, 840 i Machine CrUI, Dept. , RSI P.m. J PHONE 729-4610 If foil call collect ^ Store St. off Voorheto Rd._ __________________ ___________ 5 YR. PARTS ANO LABOR BRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING | uTcE OLD ALL GLASS Chine I CORNETS, TRUMPET*; GUARANTEED _ announcements el discount Irons, ..... “— U..............*--*- -*' UuSm »*■ THAYER -COGG I NS walnut living {•?«* 4S00 Dixie. Dreylon, OR *■ itchen _9toT_________________________ BOAT, motor V) horn end Ireller, 1130. Cement mixer, $63. B 20" TriyCi*. rem256ark*tori ***’ ^S Aperirnfnto’,' A*Pair* It i’ASE^NT”s""ALE.""42_Norlfi_lin’ DISHWAHER,, .1 month old, 513*. ^SED TV u»s_ _ 1175.00 BASEMENT SALE: P RAOIO ANO APPLIANC room furniture, formica Many other similar savings, frte "*m*- ,M* TAPP0N'^AT4tpy"t7_G» Household Appliance «o«rfm»nf» «D«r'm*nts, TV~sets Service, 332-1311. LD ALL cabinet, library i docks, i wneei 853 WbodjMd, Siwdarwdairt n SERIES OP EXCAVATIONS ihd»M'BMe,u Ltenord* Twp1'^ to you for the cost of hauling. OR 3*8935, 4 a.m.-iip.m., Sun. incT. DIRT, GRAVIL AND sand, all kinds, dailvarad, 323-1485.. extlLlilllf TOPSOIL, black dirt, clarinets, ate. ‘ 334- 332*7342 after i freezer 875, , 474*2842. ROOFING' FOR CASH OR ANYTHING ___nf value 424*1379 Trade king midget. 305 *n< or sell, 8350; 3730444. V&TCl imp] NEW- mo Spa guitar end case, for deer rifle < 473*0934. WHAT C*AN~YOU iwen e’eonden house for? After next Tuesday may find out____ Sal* Clothing AUTUMN HAZE MINK stole, celfent condition. 8100 C dresses sizes 8*12. Boy's raincoat, zip out lining, size 12. Man's top- coat, aize 38. 447-5875. ___ CANDLELIGHT GOWN of Peeu da sole Alencon lace end seed pearls. Matching petal headpiece and veil. jyiOO, 489*5485 or 4734812. _ Clothing SIZE 7-U,' odds end endi also. Reasonable. FB 54427. MINw PAWS COAT, excellent corv dltion liy il, FE 2*8741. MENS* BLACK LEATHER coat," size All 1949 Models. E-Z terms. TV, 835/ bunkbedsi eoertme^ stove, 835/ mlsc., G. Harris, FE ’ 5-2784. DARK WALNUT DICING ROOM SUITE. Table, good cc MISC47 422 W. t ZIG ZAG' ~ IN CABINET 1969 SINGER SEWING MACHINE, in e condition. Complete with t n#w cabinet. All controls I to make button holes, sew tons monogram, overcast; hem dresses, fancy stitches. -----CASH 842 “ j Or pay 84 28 < 334*5477 ____ . ______mm MBlfipqrhdBlf, 335-4431.1 UN. Cernem mixer, 145. B 2>‘ | NORGI UPRIGHT S fut. - ------ --------------- n.rk.inn......i natural gas lurnaca. hourly BTU j GIBSON J-S0 OUiTAR, 19M modal. Clarkston. I output if,WO. S75. 36J*»9e4. | $ijj. 229-2110. OR.IENT'AL SARqOiTfUG, li' X 1?, HAMMOND-B~V~AND Lulto,' Cdil 9", Amar can Or into If X It',1 n.u. S'30. eg 3.37*5, bail clocks, bronzs Chinas* vasts, | o?arSim cioitias. ski*, tic. 56*5 Dvorak,] cbrysfal and slivar candlaabras. —..wnn—,5/r* *vb Clarkston, 623G474. Anytima. , sliver serviu, and Iron*, end *P_^ YOUR WIJLO CAN CHILDREN- ANO- .dull. -qu.HIV; ?'£»■ ..!?V.JliP 1 £ fcuWL.1!iLgllM clothing. Toys, ......-ap48,^!."""MORIUS MUSIC w w.wwr., u,«..,v,wx sweeoer! 3s.*rrr” “““ attachments, ladles cono,T,on'| heaier,"849/95/' 3-piecer bath' ttSSySH?uSi..1* -------I 859.95/ laundry trey, trim, 819.M/ shower stalls with frlm. 839,95/ 2-bowl sink, 829.95/ lavs., 829.95/ _ —H ■ ---,| fubif v 810 -and up. Pipe cut eno Forbes Printing end Office sup* threaded. VAVE PLUMBING CO., OCt. 3-4, 9-4 CUCKOO CLOCK, elecfroiux sweeper infs, ladles coat end 14. Good condition, pricer eesortment—of~ rlnger * 1 5*2744. Cell Capitol Sewing Machine Credit ' Dept 9 00 e..m. to 9 00 p.m. If loll cell collect 729*4410 S YEAR PARTS AND LABOR 1*1514. 2448 Patrick | nee in carpets cleaned Lustre. Rent electric 8. Ten | freezer combination. Electric ttove, 2 auto, combination wethtri and dryari. Ml»c, 521-1721. . f>T6 i b a r i fla irr—itova, iTl 6", Coldipot rafrigerator, 840, Ilka,new Kanmora 900 wathar and dryer, 8350. Mafcury \ 3.9 hp outboard motor. 885/ color Polaroid camera, 1 _ 830. 551*2368. equipment. 626-1047. _ _ WAREHOUSE sale o"p*n Id public, entire Inventory of naw Zanlth, 1 RCA and Motordla. TVe, color TVs, and elerao* must ba (old. Every: Itam discounted, no raas. offer ralusad, torms. Sato Sunday 126. Hll, Appliance Co., 24122 W. 101 Milo naar Talagraah. Floor Modsls 1 Frlaldalre dortabto dishwasher Antiques 6S*A Near Oakland University i Sat., oct 3 and 4, 10 ‘ -- i E- Walton. _________ •' < POLAROID CAMkRA ZM) Like New M carry- stainless steel, 145 each. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland___________,E_____ CHANNEL (2j CRYSTALS) walkla-tAlktosl Never used. Cost 3125. sell S95; 3 "...................Out cos? csreler, *50.50, ull *45. CelclMtor In* uused vary . llttla,, good n, S6S. Call efter 5:30, aS3* in- i\i.ooo BTU elr conditio: 1 15 cubic lut chut frei Crump Electric ,or 3465 Auburn Rd^ . |C 0 J I C I A L DISHWASHER, WINTER CLOTHES, coe wadalno dress, sizes 7 - good condition. 1241 Wolyerlnj^Vllleat. WEDDING DRESS AND RETURNED From my mein »rj DTxlV HwyT k for Tom._ ' L0WREY ORGANS NEW FOR 1970 Prleod el $495 Bank terms—immediate delivery SHQP US BEFORE YOU BUY QALLAGHER'S 1710 TELEGRAPH . PE 46564 V&MMl B m, p‘n SCREENED BLACK dlrf Si peal dollverad. 853*5462. SPECIAL - LIME alone,T(FA tlonj 77 TWIN MVERB. toms, pA tyilt Rlvorle, 2 treynor columns, 232- Smith! REFRIGERATOR FOR »ALi.~*eTl FPRlGHT PIANO, *40. H. R defrost. 335*4937. _ Moving Co„ 10 S. JOIllt. wtfijrMF"* vslfB7*Ss „ —--rr4i* * 4-»-j:.*n.r----Choou from Hommoods on wall-known brands. Prtoes leveled. 420-3750 eft. 4 P.l SANO. GRAVEL,•AND: Lelh: 052-1' PlInt. Mlchlgan. corner of Torroy Rd. to M M Expressway m A. Schindler. Smelser. I.S. 231 S B AUCTION ■VERY FRIDAY ....7:00 I 'llY SATURDAY 7:00 I IKY SUNDAY ‘ ' APACHE If YOU Bvtr Wonfod qualify Camper, Full Equipped "NOW IS THE TIME" Only 3 meisa 1 SAVE HUNDREDS . TRADF. D AND GRAVE, xlucli, nil sand I llmselona, A-1 YISY lAtljRDAV 50»Ad' ... SELLING PR IVATE COLLlctlON ________62S-I721 I WEDNESDAY OCTSBER I, 10 *.m. Wykes Lake Hem# Sold i 12310 Channel ct., 2 miles N. el Fenton Fine furnishings Incl. Color TV Sporting goods and outdoor Items Parkins * >H: Swerl Plant i-TrBBS-Shrubs 11-A BLUE SPRUCE, BARGAIN SALE si EVAN'S EQUIPMENT n*M7 Dtolt Hwy. Saturday ‘ , from 9 a.m.6 p.l APACHE CAMP. Trailer ~ Ray, Tour* pickup cat Iht finest 3-3391 .TnT8&,jag;baf,dtyKLs.2t4i WiG4*C! with chlldron, 5 yr. old, rag. yaarllngs and waanllngt, iF* (uvor. d, wpuld mdka axcdltotif watch btock°lmd iJh'o Hi-Fi, TV BBd Radios 66/ 2 23 CHANNEL. CB Radios, supar map and whip. 422-1164, 3i" yslb~« "*/, .<»•»* SIS E. Walton, corner of Joslvn Walton tV, FE 2-WI7 Ou" 96 ____ _______________________ !A-1 COLOR TV SlRVICE fp'YCLOPlDIA, 1941, it VOlUfftoi Johnson's TV PE 1*4549 highly rated, never used 45 C. Wilton neer Be F6 2*5541 ELECTRIC light fixtures for all rooms, 3969 designs: Tiffany's Wrought Iron, stars. Bedroom 61.19, porches, 11.55, Irregulars, simples, Prlci* only factory ci Michigan Fluor*.cerd, 393 n glvl. Orchard reasonable. 543-1 avaryon*. 1507 Ooklty Pork Rd.. Walled Lake. Prl..Sdf. royXl-Wp i w r! t¥1 rTJ" “ car* rlags: Pramlar movto tutor; 4'3" , Maplt aklis; Ladlu Mflbandad, Sandy MacDonald golf clubs (4) and baa; Pr. drapas, Gold. fi'7xt0'' (MW); i iTf'xia" (new); pr. drapos, balqt, U It qf. Cook rile idker; dining mm table voHnx; HU ;fflBjM GRINNELL'S “ 2 Ait |1A6lI PollLWlCir DOWNTOWN STORE.. 7V2 * I W, 6H6229, . S._ SatjnaisL_[l ™ f KR/WLJ Almont Western Stars 1 complete lino of horu cart products, Western ctofblng, bools, longhorn saddle*, feck and equipment. 141 S. Main *t._A Almonl, Mich. Gredo, 3tl*M43. P aTBSIan to diCbtHd. ROB. to vRIdro. Altar 4, ' WO GS ..________ hDrsES AND top brands of aqulp. Naw-usad. up to 20 par uni off. Guaranteed- Double D Reneh, 49M CllnionvTila Rd.. PeniTac. 473-7517. Moving coil*, •pp. stallions. Holstein hellers, odd* snd ends. 451-I007* Roohutor. KiOlitiWlD" QUARTER HORSE,1 U“........... t years old, rust e * children or aauii*. i-31. Apacha factory noma town doctor, opan Sundays. 664-2522. CLOSE-OUT STARCRAFT 1969 TRAVEL TRAILERS 1969 CAMPERS SEE THE ALL NEW 1970 ALJO'S AND STARCRAFTS CRUISE OUT, INC. 3 E. Walton PR 3*4401 Dally 9-4; Sgt! 9*5) Closad Sun. CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TBAILEBS QUALITY AT ANYBU OGBT STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC." htand IM-19) 4§2-944f LEMAN CAMBERS ivrw nova arrlvtd. lava on Ivan, . I alupara, QMS and racalvar a ' si-A Cotoman Catalytic haater with purebasa, SUN & SKI MARINA SMI CaiwEllzabHh^lld^Ponflae, on Chtck our Rial on -w v! SWISS COLONY ^ LUXURY TRAILER* FROLIC’, TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS* SKAMPER SlSlnL............................. ■Ij^TKYinnrti M"JC0k_'Ara6l«n, ATt-1 ~ fM(. anyttmo. __________________I Put A Press Want Ad to Work - Profitably. Iv Jacobson TralUr Solti "mw" TROTWOOO WAG-N-MASTERS slton it Joalyn * Pi 4-NI3 For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 Dial Y -V? m Tk THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, I960 D—T EXPLORER STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 13310 Holly, Holly MB *4331 HOMBMADd l1"JICKOp^cempif. and lack, for tUO. 425-31*1. “hAVII'VSffIKbn YMtS^Iw m OMEGA Motorhom© Only at Holly Travel Coach, Inc. into Hally Rd., Holly—ME 44771 Open Dally and Sundays fifi-ANDER MOTOR HOME-Indian j jjffe SLEEPER ttaal frama pickup covara topi. Cab to campar boot. . SPORTCRAFT MFG. CO. 4MMN38 "LITTLE- HaSKaryJ #SyfamU*734«73:~ McClellan Travel Trailers 4130 Highland Road IAA-9P) PHONE 474-3143 Close Out on, '69 Models ika^uil otia iTox HOLLY MOBILE HOMBS. not only altars a wlda rungs and ulactlon of Mobil* homes, such as: Richardson, Now Moon, Broad Lana. Ragant, Champion and others, but algo emirs the lovilast choice of altoo to p' your now Mobil* Homo ... In beautiful peaceful OAK HI ESTATES locatad In a sacluded i for your privacy and convenience WHY NOT MA'Kg THAT ONB STOP 69 Model Clearance ^ JP- SALE lava Hundi 17' and If, 4 and 4 trollara priced to mo Taka M-10 Vk Mile Woat of Oxbow : SAVE $50 to $300 ■VERY TRAILER ON THE LOT Marked Down SALE 435-3317 SALES-SERVICE-BENTALS STORAGE OP ALL TRAVEL TRAILERS $5 Monthly Holly Travsl Coach 310 Holly Rd. Holly ME 44771 Truck Caps WEIR'S-OOODEL WoLVfeRINB TRUCK comport slaaoort. Factory outlet, rapolr and Sack*, "ini— — eumpars, apart tiro carrier*. •nocka. coo to comoor-Booti. LOWRY CAMPER SALES WINNEBAGO Motor Homos—Trailers Campar Coaches Raaaa and Draw-Tit*. Hitches sot f. E.'hOWLAND SERVICE YOUR DEALER POR - ~ SPORT TRAILBR. OBM AND CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILERS Corsair and Oam pickup campers. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy. 435-4404 AIRSTREAM SALES |0M W. Huron 682-993 Mobile Homti >9 1 AND ALL WAVE MODERN DECOR Early American • AAadHarranaat CAMBRIDGE LIBERTY MONARCH REMBRANDT DBLTA Colonial Mobile Homes Pi 3-1457 .. 474-4444 %sss%ss» -■nae 1 New From Holly Park Balcony, kitchen and dining re Yaur Authorised dealer for H Park, Oxford, Porkwood, and Danish King, Proa Delivery within SDBJMIIiIkWIII trad* tor. ITK anything of value. Open M P.M. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 1157 Dlxto Hwy.______ 111-0771 3 TIMES 13 squall 34 x SO ft. Huge I Doublawlda now on display* Coun- 10M Oakland 394* Rio ONE BEDROOM in park, early possession, calt-aftor 4 p.m„ PB *4340. I'Vm- MarLerre'YRailbr, Mas for. hUPtort. MOO coin. Partly furnished. In pood condition. iTfVa Florence. Near Cass and Oakland-l*w iMo CHAMploh Mobil# condition- must sail Immediately, leaving stale. 13, 434-3344. ■ 1 lo X 40 ftia M6¥lLl“iioma, if,793. Countryalda Living. 334-13W. IP x 44' MOBILi . HOMe, OpOb shape, lit 11450. 49M Dixie Hwy, Drayton Delivery arranged even to Northern property. If X » ACAPiMY. B RAWS' reduced to only, W.flji JiTl Countryalda Living. 134-1500, WxlV MARLITTB, S BBbROOW, turnlsh-d, carper'1 14 C St, dll-1433. j— SjfcBft JiTO 4. weekend*. “tToifw MTHAMPt'aN, turnlahad, air con-",,rmr CLARKSfON l*M CLOSE-OUT • Rd. AY BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS . Open Dally HI I p.m. Saturday and Sunday .'til l fwiLL RyiYVoCn---- ANNUAL CLEARANCE Rank says "Move 'ami" a# Reductions up to 11,0001 loos 0*^*rrA ^”4.,..., FLEET^T5at'u‘ "“A L!' au“a‘J»- gSftg-i Boots-Accessories R0YAL-0R-REGAL ACTIVE' 15‘xlV IMng°?oom 30-Gal. gas hoi water haatar Nylon carpaling over rubber pai TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 tolly ‘111 I Sot. A Sun. 'Ill 4 »4» RITZCRAFT TRAILER, w sacrifice tor 4H0Q. 335-1445. WHY? IP ALUMINUM PRAM with oar a. ~ wl,h 1 ti" NT. SAlli6At, RiPPllR class, with lisa I ft. Hydra, feat, 435, Mt-iaw. ■ 14'~SOAtT Itfh.p. Sea King motor and traitor tl»0, 33*0741 attar a. :• fibIrguTs Iki .kmi n Mercury motor, complete with Uiittlfir. tow, wistT 15‘ ALUMINUM, IB (ienepewer, CIS ila Dude traitor, spaed prop, skits and extras, S400, Call attar S, *>4 3543._ IS' FL6AT AIR~>nntagn WTwWTl h.p. Jahnien mator, 0450, 442-9809. 25' CABIN SLOOP .wood plank^ ‘iTnlaaa atoaf rigging, cabin B •lor naads little work. 4IT-4334. toftad mail iell. sss WRlH.tP.m. OAK HILL ESTATES HOMB OP HOLLY MOBILE HOMES . DIXIE HWY. AT OAK HH^RO 1047 gas, 1*W living firm. LI 3*444. WILL BUY USED TRAILERS Tlrsi-Auto-Truck......... 91 REPAIR, MOUNT, and balance mag •nd-UfM irkat Tire Co. 343S 1 Lake Rd. Kaaa* USED TIRES, 1:45.X 15 and 14, lew at 14. 452-1395. Auto Ssrvlcs — Repair 93 MOST POWIROLIDE transmission -------’ aSAi parti and labor, i and aajjmatai, shop aarvlca sa lar Dept. 431 Oakland. 94 Ma tthuws Hargraavat Matorcyclii “HONDA 150 CC Draam, jjr 832«1497. axcallant con* loo ml., tx* I04B HOtiDA 37 350. Oddd~COn Cash or taka ovar pay manta of 131 KAwAsAKI 175, turn a, both for 1550. fljm ISUW .1, new cm , PE M704. >335. call MI-3703 after 5:30. start, mult Mil. 5475. 453-4030 683-5455. I04i‘ TRIUMPH 500k 354 mll4l, mint condition, tt» or bast oftor. 447- 1004 attor Spin. ___ fm fRIUMPH 450 TR4C, 4705, KAW Cycifl, UllCi, 73t-12f0. ___ 1969 23* CC, KAWASAKI P4, good condition. 4495. 434-4137. _ 19*9 BRIDGESTONE 100 troll, tr, fork bride, knobby lira, helmal, lugnag* rack >275. 636-4935. 1969 HONDA CL 350, 400 mil**, $375. 674 9963. 191% YAMAHA S'trdv9KlOBILB. ~3 now modal* . on dl a p lay I Snowmobile clothing. ’ Taka M-59 to W. Highland, right to TfUkOty Rldga Rd. to Damod* Rd., A-1 Motorcycle Ineuronce FARMERS INSURANCE Agency dt Honda. HiL: PMM 334-4517. .Jl-SOOC? 5QI-750CC Andaraon'a Bodily In- Anderson's Best Buys Ntwl 90cc Honda — Newl CB 350 Honda . .$695 Newl Honda 50 ... .$239 Newl Honda Mini .... $268 Ntwl 650cc BSA .$1095 Newl BSA Enduro ... .$850 Nbw 650cc Triumph $1095 Newl 750 cc Norton $1195 Newl 250cc Ducattl . $495 MANY MANY MORE! 300 CYCLES IN STOCK ■ (AH prlcg* Piu* t ANDERSON SALES & FALL SPECIAL ALL SUZUKIS SUCH Aft , 500 CC Titan, ragular IVfl Sale IW 330 ec k|baL nj^uiar ITff 150 cc rajular I72» 250 cc ftavMtr rapul^r Mti 130 d* TraflVah regular 14 . II manlna or )2,oh mil* warranty, MG SUZUKr SALES 1 Dixie Hwy. . 4) Drayton Plain* CLAYT'S CYCLE CENTER On M-31 I mllSM^at of. Lapaar If Muatsng2W angina . Grand prix front and ....t to 427 dual quad eompieto . > n OR 3-4300 473-9344 % ear New and Meed fruclte 103 1953 FORD PICKUP, run* but needs eom* work Ml. 443-4994._________ W»' CHiVY Yi Y6(4 Pickup, goad condltlon._»l50. 794-3641.__________ '59.FORD 1 and W Tan Truck, good condition. 343-5311. 19*0 CHEVY, 4TtoN, pickup,' 673*111. _____________ 1941 DMC ONE-TON pickup, Excollont condition. Tiro* hovi mile* loft In them. Vary km milaaaa on thte privately owned vehicle. Call attar 7 311-7943. toTHiDDdr'Mfen' plckupOl 7nfrm 474-4441.________ _________________ 1941 CHEVY, 'UTILITY, 4 'apaad. beet offer ovar BIOS. PB 5-OI49._____ to how*. Jlnv'Trtopard, 75 h.p. yisSilMr An> A Few Boots Left for Cloie-Outl 14W thall Lake with 95 H.P. Marc, pdwar trim, tandem trailer, full canva* and mooring covar, 01995. 14' Larson with 4o H.P. eylnrutfa, full canva* and traitor. 1991. ATTEX-------- Tht Go-Anywhare Pun Vahlclt “utdoor Sport* .. . tor Whiter too ... amphibious rlontlnlowalaf. with asst. 1951 OMC and wind PB3-i779, OUTBOARD MOTORI CUFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15218 Holly Rd.. Hally MB REASONABLE 373-5307 BOAT HOIST, 14' ajumlnum Feafharcratl. 25 h.p. Johnson. 412- CLEARANCE 1969 Boats, Motors, Trailers COHO SPECIALS wastband .TrLHuiL-M"^ IP Glaslron Johnson, traitor WINTER, STORAGE Cruise OutfInc aOSE-OUT 1969 CHRYSLER A JOHNSON MOTORI YOUNG'S MARINA Open dally 9 'III 4 Sunday 10>to 4 4030 Dlxl* Hwy. on Loon Lika Drayton Plaint ___ OR 4- INSIDB WINTER SfiSSAGE Karto Boats A motors _4*3-1400 Marine Storage PINTER'S Make your rtMrvatlona now. I boat, motor, pontoon storage. "AA" MOTOR RIPAIR RATING 1170 Opdyka, 1714M _______(1-75 at Unlv. Exit! _ RESERVE YOUR BOAT and motor winter storage apace NOWI angina storage with all tuna- * ""BIRMINGHAM BOAT larvlca CantorMIT-013 SUN 8. SKI MARINA lavo on 1949 Canturya, Itourvt Johnson boats and motors. Wlnfai atorag* boat* and motors, mwi and outside. 3911 Caaa-Blliabath Rd., Pontiac, On Ca» Lake laaspar, Sloury, I , Oruman and Dolphin SUMMER CLEARANCE! BOATS-MOTORI TRAILERS . mS-SAVE-MU Harrington Boat Works 1199 s. Telegraph______332-SO TERRIFIC DICOUNTS _ On all boats, pontoons and cans** AT TONY'S MARINE Jehnaon motor* — 31 years rape experience. 3ft1 Orchard Lk, Rd. lylvan Lake YEAR-END CLEARANCE' pn All BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER I at Adams Wanted Cors-Truckt EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Chtvtlles, Csmaros, Corvattos, CTO'S, FIrsWrds and "Check tha teat, than gat th* hw Averill's PE 39171 2020 Dlxl* *E 44194 Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs, Pontine, Okta and idt. Tdd MANSFIELD AUTO SALES PE 5-1900 ______” PB |t rik .r /OR clIan iARl or Irycka. economy Cars, 3311 Dlxl*. :xt. Economy care, 3i» phi “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN” USED CARS IMITIZZY angina and t d other parti. IkRvSg ii MjrXTlTrYaf CHIVY I buy i nick condition. 0350. __ __I HU pick-up* speed, good condition. 8350. FE 2- MILOSCH " CHRYSLER^PtYMOUTH Foreign Care NE BUGGY nglne, cemph PORD BCONOLINB Van. Oddd 1735- Tli-OIMt_. 1944 CHEVYTTCKUP, CUSTOM chroma. Ilka naw tlraa, »-t w PICKUP/ atondardr > chevY Vi tonTHSu. Carroll Laka Rd., EM 3-0374. m 1 TON CHEVY »ruck7 custom, aqulppad to pull Iri SHOO, *21-4034. —1941 FORD P-100 plcjt-upo, ^ campar 41371, th* other without campar 11350. Coll to sa* 852-r" I960 F0Sd~Bump, TSOO, full air, automatic transmtsalon, 31,000 milts, 07, “ 425-5401 I960 CHEVROLET CAMPER M toil, 2-ton* with 2M00 auto., custom cab, power steering, sfap-bumpar, axe. condition. 4M-9tB. CU1TOM CAMPER, Chevy pickup. Power brakes, >2,295. 425-2674.1 GMC TRUCK CENTER 1:00 to 5:00 Man.-Prl. 0:00 to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue ____ 335-9731 J¥EP, HAS 4 wheil drive, rial good rubber, priced to sail al >495. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Uqlon YMENTir . 4734110. Auto Insurance-Marine 104 SPECIALISTS IN AUTO INSURANCE Htmommotv Inotiranc* Law Mill'*— Terms - Insuring Pentlac tinea 1913 ANDERSON «> ASSOCIATES 1044 Jeslyn __________PE 4-3535 105 Ntdp Cers 1959 MERCEDEI, r Call 551-1734. 1941 but!! BUOOY 402-1174. , 1961 MGA , On* of a kind .. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 1962 TRIUMPH TR4 buddy bodvfiSSS? FeTKoiIP 1964 vw, condition good. 1400 after 4 p.m. 451,47137 1951 VW, as It ....» 14 1945 OMg Hdrdtop....»in 1966 VW |4dan .5 99 1947 VW But .>149 Fln>nclng Immadlataly Avelltbls Your aufhqrliad dealer BILL GOLLING VW 15 Mil* Rd. (Maple Rd.) Across from Bart Airport Batwaan Croaks and CnnlUp* Rd. 1965 SPITFIRE. BEST offar. 1711. after * p.m. 1964 VW, LOW tnltoag*,' goad dltlen, 1950. 4«2-7370-_________ 1944 VW, IN GOOD condition, class, M&klltllfr lascla) only - Mil full prfe*, 4401 below book value. P.S. We've Moved! Vt Milt N. of Miracle Mil*. 1443 t. Telegraph Rd._PB I 1947 VW, OOOD CONDITION. 11150, COll attor 4 p.m., 331-4541._ f947 oRiOXBSTTiTRallv, condition 5195 or bast offar. 5370..._______. ton ai-ui VW, radio and ni 1961 SIATA SPRINO ROADS Bright yillow with black mb Wlr* wheels, whiltwell radial ply tlraa, Low mllaaga, Sharp, Naw car trad* In. Call 4414209. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1110 W. Moplt Rd. iofiToPlL, 1 bdoRaporftTou hp., 4 spots Wllh consol*, awawallf. Bill carpeting. car. >1595. 4934011 ■ 1969 Simca ^04 . Pfigw inferior * $1295 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLERcPLYMOUTH AtpM Rd. Troy 642-7000 :OMPliTi DUNB BUGGY Kit 4W4T43. . I, ' / I..1 Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action TUST CALL 3344981 By Kate Onaim|Ngw end Cow 106 1141 CHBVROLBT IMPALA, robullt tlsslon, naw brakat, naw r, radial tlraa,' axcallanf eon- • mi Is MA Re W> toa M BA 4 "Let’s not read the fairy talea tonight—they may be O.K. for you but they give me nightmarest’’ Naw and deed Can bUNE bOggiEs - 30 Pet. off on ^R^TOrs TfS°R^RAJfV“ WmhE.ofLapaarofAA-2UOpan ftundaya. <844m. 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Mapl* Road (11 Mllal Batwaan Csolido* and Cqpoks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT AudattB Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Gotling VW Mika Savoie Chevrolet 106 19M BUICK 2 door hardtop: Wu* pitorlsr. Pull power. 24,000 milt*. Call 44B4W. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1110 W. M«H* Rd.______________Tre^ 1968 BUICK ELECTRA 225 Coup*. Golden brown ' beige Interior and vinyl lap •t. Full pries >2*95. FISCHER BUICK 515 ft. 1 Ry iM Umi Owi lO* 744 CHIVY a IMPALA, Vft, Next to Qur New Cars Turnerized Used Cars Are Best 11 1965 Mustang Economy angina. Radio, haatar, whlta wall tlraa. Prlcad to tall at $585 1966 Country Squire 10 Paaotfigor Motion wagon. FOWBR, automatic transmission, roof rack. Our tow lew price $988 1966 Bonneville Hardtop. Air condition, power aqulppad, automatic wuMattors radio and haatar. TURNRR prlcad $885 1966 Ambossbdor Wagon Air, power aqulppad, automatic transmission. Prlcad af only NewiwrUmHiit---------106 OF THE DEPBNDABLB USED CARS" Waterford Standard Auto fdt Ellabath Lk. Rd. 4H-0004 143 BUICK 2-DOOR H a/dt o p LaSabr* with maroon finish, whito top, ana owner. M95, It down, 12 par cant Inltratl, only 111 month — 34 months. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick >35 5. Rechattof Rd. 451-51 1944 iuiCK SPECIAL, v a r economical, VI, radio, h a a t a amatlc, axcallant condition, 1599 price. NORTHWEST AUTO SALES MS Dlxl* Hwy. 1944 BUICk WILDtAY, " -4#BOS( FE 1-2120 powtr, air, 4doer hardtop, winter tire*, 1944. Cell WW*- __________ . buick Skylark convertible, axe. condition. Lei* than 47,000 ml 335-1952, tnuaf tat to appreciate 1965 Buick LeSobre 400 $988 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 1945 BUICK RIVIERA, full power, tilt whMl> Ilk* now tires, must Mil, SI250, 33AQ743 after 4. ABRE euatem, power, radio, very tow mileage. 11125. door hardtop, clean, on* owi 343-5124, 1965 BUICK CONVERTIBLE 400 Mrlei, to top. " 3T*‘‘ automatic. 1967 Buick Wildcat Convertible Power tleerlng, brake*, mad whaalt. Rlu« with whlta log. Pun orlca. $1988 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 owner, extra nlet..K*tp Amarlci beautiful — but this on*. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 155 8. Rocheetor Rd._451-4500 1967 BUICK SKYLARK 2 hardtop. Burgundy wllh bled 21,000 miles. Call 44N209. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1110 W. Maple Rtl- Trey 1960 SKYLARK 3DOOR herdTop. 1 wHtMMtehnii vimrl Inr-1— » mllea. Call 443-3219. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1110 W. Mapl* Rd. 1940 BUICK thylark cuttom.. deluxe cenWrlwto,. rad, atick Him, condition, 425-2451 eftor 5 p.m betor* 9 pjrn. 473-3714 attor 5._ fM3~lUrcK le "IXiWi i hardtop, furgandy. 15.000 i ^'SonTE PONTIAC Hio W. Maple Rd.________Troy 1968 ELECTRA 22S-LIMITED 4 door hardtoiK Full power, (aclory air condilton, AM . FM atotao. SHARP! A cautious buyer dallpht Pull prlco SM95. JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 1943 BUICK Riviere wllh beautiful matador rad with whit* cordovan top, full power, 1,000 actual milt*. P.S. We've Moved! W Mil* N. of Mired* Mil* l>45 s. Tsleoraph Rd. PX5-4101 1968 Torino Fastback GT $1995 (tobmlnq, 0M94. 375 h FE3A993 >nd473-1415. 1945 CORVAIR MONZA, 5450. 412- I CHIVY IMPACT Wegon. VI utomeflc, power. 0495 full prlco. 175 W. HuretA 403-30*1. Pooler. JOHN McAUUFFE FORD . dovtn tap, vX, automatic, eontola, P.S. We've Moved! ^cTO,LAt"’ ~~ Mi CHEVCLLd, OMpitonf eandliian, 4 apaad. mmt._____________ 1945 CHIVY IMPALA Coups, M50. Walar 373-1400 1*"a8SIt'TE PONTIAC Moplt RE-________ Tray 4-2735 I960 CHEVROLiT klnet dafreator, ______ Indahleld III, VI tnelna, blod vinyl Interior, axcallant condition WOO- 44445*4. _______ '44 CHEVY (I NOVA. Automatic, naw tlraa. Amber branra. “ miles. Call 44M3I9. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1150 W. Mapl* Rd.----- 29*000 r ft cyl, 1968 Ford Fairlane Hardtop. Vft automatic* j aqulppad* radio* haatar. Our avaryday TURNER PRICE. 1969 RIVIERA GS Dark Mu* wlhh black Interior, Bench Mat, full powar, factory air, tilt wlwal. One owner. SHARP CAR I Pull prlc* 34095. FISCHER BUICK . t 515 I. Woodward Birmingham 447-5400 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1944 CADILLAC Coup*. DaVllla with full powar, and factory air conditioning, runs Ilk* a top, took* HKe a mltiton, McAuIttto special at only 3fM full price. —P.S. We've Movedl to Mil* N. ef Miracle Mil* MS S. Telegraph Rd. PE 5-4101 bran I CADILLAC Coup* Dovllle, conditioning, powi stMring-Mata-wIndi bar. Priced to RAMBLER-JEEP, EM 3-. 1940 ELDORADO, .*1 vinyl top, double warmers, CrulM-o-matlc. Warranty good, axe. condition, good tlraa low mllaaga, priced right. 4744)731. 1949 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE 33,000. CADILLAC COUPE DeVllla, icutlva, low mllnego, air, belgt h dark vinyl top, $5,100. 335- 9.___________________ LATE MODEL CADILLACS' > AT ALL TIMES JEROME CADILLAC CO. 475 I. Saglttew St._PE 3-7031 1935 CHEVY, LIKE NBW Chrom body prathr good shape, PE 5-241 1953 CHE"vyT'fr6aA CalKornle, . dnnr Mdan with 327 chevy angina, 5100. 6*2-60*2. 1956 CHEVY 317 345 hp, M75. 41 CORVETTEenglna 1957 CORVETTE, 339. minor repair. BENN BANKRUPT? Need a car? Want to reestablish your 100'$ to chooM from. Call (dealer) 402-2M1- hardtop, 3135.1 cyl- 5742333. 1941 CORVBTTE - BOTH TOPS OR 3-1340 1941 CORVAIR 2 ft Black wllh gray Interior, excellent condition. C|ll 442-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC IMP W, Maple Rd. Trot 1941' CHIVY 2 DOOR, 4 cylinder. ....—la,|Ci gxcallant transportation, ■uy Hera-Pay Hera, Marvel «, 251 Oakland, PB 1-4079. 1941 Ford, good 942 CHlVYan. PE S4249. 1944 CORVETTE — eetwtrtl blue. 300 hsp. 13400. EM 3-0300. 1947 £HEVY CAPRICE, 4-door double power. HR wheel, cellenl. $1950. Call 431-4409._ 1968 Imperial Crown 2 door hardtop. Canary yqllew with Mack vinyl reef and matching roof. Pull power Including factory air. puli price $3295 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Mopie Rd. Trey* Mich. 642-7000 1969€hrysl©f“- 2 door hardtop, automatic, with doubt* power, vinyl top with sandla leather interior, a real atoll it only $2885 Oakland CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH- DEMO! 1969 CHEVY Caprice Sport Sedan SAVE OVER - $900 $585 1968 Buick ilSabre I Hardtop. Vinyl roof, I ulpped. Like now. TURNER Icod at only $2065 1968 Chevelle Malibu Wagon Hon* power equip* transmission, r a d I 1963 CHEVY IS Hardtop with VI, on* owner, tow m cordovan brown finish. Llk* t 1944 CHEVY convertible, good dltlon, 1530. eftor 3, 4744013.. 1944 CR new car warranty. TURNER priced at only $2065 1966 Buick Riviera _ Hardtop. Power, automatic, radio, heater. Needs * lltti* loving. Priced to sell at $1285 Foctory Official Cars F •icwi—Torino! 0«l«xil»-LTD's-T Birds Station Wagons Sedans A Hardtop! $ave lalft MK Parks* cradlt managar lor paymant achadula at MI 4-7500 New location el TURNER FORD' 8800 Maplt (IS 1 AAila East of New and Used Car* 106 New ami Used Can 106 iit^rin{eriw?%oV*V ilraring SKlTrAr »#"ca^ Fun grm ISSN. FISCHER BUICK t 111 I. Woodward DEMONSTRATORS -Official Cars-Big SelectionBig Savings , -TODAY'S SPECIAL7 \ 1968 OLDS -'98" HARDTOP whit* with black Interior* vinyl top.Yipted glass, factory air cond.* full power, many more extras. List price, $5,198.90. SAME AS NEW-NEVER TITLED! See us before you buy any car. You may be paying hundreds to much! $2999' ' GET A "STAN” THE MAN $A•; HANOUTE On M24 in Lake Orion 693-8344 194* CORVEIri £OUPI, 350 he, 4 led, posltractlpn, powar brakas, w potyglas tlraa, plus extras, 1-4977 attar 5i3S weak days. 149 CHRYSLER TOWN end cpUntlY wagon, fo pesaangar. dual air, potHractton, disc brake*, car toe carrier, lew mileage, like new, MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $100 UNDER DEALER COSTI 1969 CHRYSLERS 1969 PLYMOUTHS ALL NEW1 15 to < 577 M-24, Lake Orlen. 4W4341 NEVr PINANCR PLAN woridngt Mil' cart W* errand* tor cradrt. '75 cen “ **^-^*-FE 4-1004 ajrftj KESSLER'S 1968 IMPALA $1995------ 1967 C0RVETT itback, turbo hydro, li $3495 VAN CAMP CHBVROLBT 1969 CHBVROLBT IMPALA illaaga. 12195, •taarlng. Good 1966 Dodgo Polora 2 door hardtop. VI standard ahHt. Radio and heater. Copper color wllh matching interior. $895 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Maple Rd. r Trey, Mich. 642-7000 1043 CHEVY, GOOD condition, new tranamlaalon, call after 5, FE 5- heraepewer. 4 speed, or 4-3537, 2 DOOR herdh custom. Yellow .with Mack vln tap. IMHO miles. Cell 442-32*9. AUDETTE PONTIAC ia«n w. Maple Rd. ____________Tr 1041 CAPRICR COUPB, IqMfd w acceaseriet, air, attar 5 473-1901. FOR SALE 1940 Corvette convartlb Call 335-1722 before 1 p.n 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Mepl* Road (15 Mlto) Between CeelWge and Cram ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Bont Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet New and Used Can 106Nsw aad Used Can 106 550 Oakland Av*. Fi 2-8101 Many Fine Trade-Ins on 1970 MERCURYS 1966 MERCURY Monterey 2-door Hardtop ir steering, radio, heeler, 1966 PLYMOUTH Belvedere II Sedan Canary yellow In color wllh melehlng Interior. "311" V-t, eutematle, power. >toerlng qnd _hreke*. 1968 COUGAR Two Door Hardtop Silver bigg In color with matchlng lntylor. V-J. automatic, power etaarlng and hraka*. baltod wide oval whltawalla, radio, noalor. Balance *9 five year or 10,CCS mil* warranty. / 1968 PONTIAC Tempest Station Wagon Custom modtl. Automotlc# radio# J»oqt9f» wnlto* ----wall*. A rool ocooomlcat mlloogo e«r.- 1966 MERCURY Monterey Breereway • leeclsl el only MERCURY Monterey Marauder i deeV hardtop. "390(’ V-*, eutomeii $ 995 $1095 $2295 $1895 $ 995 $ 995 $209$ 1965 Mercury Mbnterey Marauder - Hardtop. Pewit help* in aolor wllh matching vinyl Inlariw^bjech to^,Y^ eutomeilc. power/etoerlng, | ggj SALES OFFICE NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY ' LARRY SHEEHAN'S > HILLSIDE Llncolii-Mqrcury 333-7861 New oo4 IMCn DICK Motor City Dodge , oakiwdaw, »■ 1967 DODGE Monoco terrnM,. t dear wtth Nwi aod IM Cw 106 ran SALE) MM Mutton*. 4 i tor Information call 4SHMI. OTSITMllffl Mr hard tom lower titering and cetiehT coMMon. 4H-7741 afar I. Bargains Showing N9W and Ihed Cm* 106. W«w and Iliad Cora MUSTANO MITSACK. MM. Dark'1*40 OLDS, CAlX 4*11*4*. bafor* * . too*. I wwi. Ato.fM. 24»is*. I p.m, ■ its* mOsTAM jiMlNt” ylnyl ' fif-j*T " ""’V' T1"'**" - HIE PONTIAC PRESS> MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1080 106! M A RM A DUKE By Anderson and Learning lor Wont Adi Dlol 384*4981 ttoorlnf. whitewall lira*. V-l, gold wot) black vinyl top. 4-track stereo I with dual speakers. IIJ0S, *73-Wltoi H JOHN... baautllSr a IcAUUFFE FORD Oalaxla J00 conuartlbla, Arctic Whit* with black ,W 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY- TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER T-BIRD 1437. BLACK porthala top. Arliena oar. no ru»l, nt w upholstery. Mr**. completely raPullt - —L I-W-4I0J or i 1969 PLYMOUTH Fury III i Bully Miuippod and tolly warranted. Special otter only- $2488 $2295 3^v®£rSsi MOTOR /MALL P.S. Wt'VG Movtdl * Map* Road Want to rooitohllsh your credit? 100*8 to chooie from. Coll Mr. Al (dealer) 812-2081. 1987 FORD GALAX 11 500. 2 door, exceltant condition. tldOO. OR 3- 1997 FORD* m 4 linkage, ft chroma i 2 door hardtop, % 0300. COH Whml Ini falcon, am 1968 ROAD RUNNER ---— 1 Canary yellow end#• iharple. priced' Hunt,•* BW ..... j. SiClj ' $2195 iB*.! 1967 CHRYSLER JOHN McAULIFFE FORD FORD Oalaxla soo Hardtop, ...y -----------. -ntiK. 1966 Olds Toronodo dove top, V-4. radio, power staarlng, brakes, factory olr conditioning. Claaranco Special only P.S. We'vt Moved! SAVE $2095 TOT.____________________________| toil 't-biROj""*> ■WHStor 'vs.I I960 PLYMOUTH to^toto. Wldo ovals. MOO FB i-jpurVi 4 aoor, , ^ B)t# (imUy elr Ini F$kD wAa6N, douMo powor.[°"'y rinnr cloanThfik nrai.UJO or bool ottor.!------------------------- To.i OALAXIE. engine. recently' 1968 FORD ___ •£_*■1 Torino OT. I door, boauty. hardtop. ORD OALAXIE, pood con- vs. automatic, and tor anly. oft Mum > $1895 1,000 USED CARS AT - TROY MOTOR MALL; Maple Road 03 MW) Between Coolidg* and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audtttt Pontioc Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Morcury Bill Golling VW Mika Savoie Chevrolet ftoJ FORD, jim RoekhavanTuc Suburban Olds N,w #Bd UMd Cm m $. woodward ^ ^ biacS111*cordova ®top. (L c?T Birmingham Ml 7-5111 airtamattef rirtto, htBftfi rlteraiica .ft,... . J , t... ,rr- - - - -i "' •paciai al onto stoi toil tuic.' | JOHN McAULIFFE FORD P.S. We've Moved! mo olds "o*"„ls * door hardtop, Vk MW N. of Mlroclo MM* I -™L*Jlc,^r|,'i!ldy "i" . 1143 S. Tolaoraph Rd. FB J-41011 S!i iSdliionlno^Thto JOHN McAULIFFE FORD we* «;• ™*» 1969 0,d* 98 '*• ?.d00r.- *lthl tost dr*v* lhU beauty!' liicAultfto Hardtop I Vi* automatic. radio* heater,' teoclal *»nlv II Bit Pull nrlee _ .• beautiful forest green with color special ----- jfuH wwtr* , foetorv co-ordinated Interior. McAullffa Wd V6 MOVdd! ditionlnO, vinyl top* 2 Special 0nly~414M* full prica. 'T Mila N. of Mlraclo Mila | P.S. Wd'vd Moved! n miqi1 Mi Mila N. of Mirada Mile I 1A/. A. . I I IMS S. Talegraph Rd. _Ff 5-41011 1967 Olds j JOHN McAULIFFE FSRD Visto Cruisor ' , , 1043 FORD Folrlano 300 Hardtop.| * passonpor Station Wagon. Powor ^11 hi ]f HCYT"! I J nR with beautiful matalllc bronw with slaerlng and brakes. Radio, hooter, KJWLJLA1 a black Interior, v-i, radio, htator, whitewall tiros. Buroandy finish. gxn c I automatic, powar slaarlno,1 Full prica- OOU i. WOOdWartl clearance apaclal at only 31133 lull .k. map* I*’ tP.S. We've Moved! i kPlOyO . tk Mila N. of MlrtC'- —- 1 1043 3, Tatograpb igir n.n( to'M MUSTANO Gf. I I "65 OLDS duction. 433, ran air rnicaVji.Myte- Wl,h Xr“"l 860 S. Woodword J"5 ’TAC^ ST Birminghom Ml 7*5111 hydramatlc transmission. Call OR I 4-1 Sip. ______ 106 How WMl Used Cart 104* CATALINA 4^ door hardtop. IMS. W. MOPlO R«L ____Jfop OVER 50 SHARP CARS ~ LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY DICK CANAANS /Motor, City Dodge N«w and Used Can 1061 New Bad UiBd Ctn !B6 AO0ETTEPONTIAC test W. Maeto Rd. Troy ltsi TEMFEIT CUSTOM. April |gold. 31,000 milts. OiffMwp. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1010 W. Mapla Rd. Troy wmmM' Whitt: with black ' milts. Call 441410. AUDETTE PONTIAC ION W. Mapla Rd. ' l-OOOR Interior. *40~ BONNIVILLI 0 pasa wsgon, air, powar brakoo. *l< I can 44*.i AUDETTE PONTIAC AUDETTE PONTIAC __, 4 eyl. Auto; Moiiy •««.. T*4*^ LaMAN3 a JjiTriWpr Graan wllhblack top. Call 443-MI*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1130 W. Maola Rd. Troy • RUSS JOHNSON pontiac Tempest On M-34 Lake Orion MY 3*6266 TKk ORANb pfflijrI doarTiardfop. Rad with black vinyl rMl. Factory afr. Comaony cor. Call 44N« AUDETTE PONTIAC TroyifOSOJW. Mapla Rd. __TW -mop. [Ttoo CATALINA 4^66or 'hardiop. While with black Vl«i top. Air. | blw^blua ylnyl lop. J'actSLy ... New nr... caii- 443-: AUDETTE PONTIAC AUDETTE l»0NTIAC i i|ip yy, Maple Rd. Troy IMP W. Mspl# Rd. Troy AUDETTE PONTIAC black Interior. Troy- 106 I New and Used Car«_ 106 m ' MILOSCH ^ Shelton Pontiac-Buick 433 3. Rochester Rd._______431-3300 104* TEMFESt Custom convertible,, power, outomatlc, V-I, whlto with blue tap. Keep America beautiful, ThelTON Pontiac-Buick 1 155 S. Roc hast er Rd. 151-5900 Call i 11941 CATALINA COURR. > with black roof. Air. Call M2-; CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ; AUDETTE PONTIAC Runnar* 2-door* hardtop, IMP W. Mapla Rd. 2 to AUDETTE PONTIAC 30 W. Mapla Rd. - Trpy M LaMANS 2 door hardtop. Mast color with aoTd vinyl roof. Factory alrf"20.000 miles. Coll 44MN*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1130 W. Mopto Rd._________Troy 1*44 CAtALINA 2 Door hardtop, vardaro groan with Mack vinyl Interior. 13,000 mites. Call 44M20*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1030 W. Mapla Rd. Troy 1*41 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-door malic and lufltol. one Fowar steoring and brakes. im fONT1AC L4 ]M0n«, ! t di hardtop, V0, automatic, facto warranty. «3*/. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 133 0. Rochester Rd. 1969 FIREBIRD 350 HO, liras, Rally II 1966 BUICK 2 door, hardiop, $1695 1967 DODGE tr ”* $1595 $3795 1040 EXECUTIVE 4 DOOR. Vordora jjraen. 13,000 milu. Air. CaU A42i "*AUDETTE PONTIAC liras, 3130, terms. 343-toti, dir. 11050 W. Mapla Rd._ _Troy _____________ 1042 PONTIAC. 2 door hardtop, 3100,' 1*41 PONTIAC, VENTURA, 2 door double MS-344*. ____________ ' “ “ ' m2 PONTIAC 2 DOOR hardtop. V-0 423-04*0, 1*40 BONNEVILLE COUPE. GoldM*4* BONNEVILLE. tea. Factory alr.l control, Cordova tap, powar haartl 02,243. , _ , I _________ . .. , -SHEllW Pontiac-Buick 'affis sirMoV'i.JSi1*** CATALINA, TURQUOISE and 133 3. Rochester Rd. orton; , 1 riThor'isr' ifi JK^0.%ridll*4. EXECUTIVE 4 DOOR. Vordontl Coll 442-320*. | brakos, powor 1------AUDETTE PONTIAC_______________________________________1 fb 3*033 or 402-**44, 11*3. 333-4*04. ......... ih«°P,rl compiny car. C*l( 443-3m. hMUft SSmVz AUDETTE PONTIAC 1*» GRAND FRIX. »liia with blua|l«30 W. Mkpto Rd. \____Jrpy vinyl top. Full power. Air and IM* CATALINA, 3 door hardtop, air, stereo. Factory official car. Call powar, vinyl fop, 334-434* after 3 | brakos. radio, heater, whitewall i gold root, 33,000 miles. Air. Call 443-330*. JMn. I 4jgL gSJgUfig- mi ___________________1 AUDETTE PONTIAC *•- *»opte Rd-__ Tf«y 11*43 Gnnd'p'rlx'Hardtop - -**s *41 PONTIAC itellon-wagon, good,j4l*3. 333-4704. *42 TEMpftST WAGON, dean. cruise Birminghom Ml 7-5111 1*4* LOADED TORONAOO. low mllssgt, consider clean trade, itJ ! P7lvifg p#rtf 3355125. rSuburban automatic* 612-9223. AUDETTE PONTIAC-------- ISO W. MtTpla Rd. Troy tfif CAtALINA* S T1 E R I N G , brakos. 4 door hardtop* 11195. 673- 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA. 1963 PONTIAC. dlttoned* i 1965 PONTIAC I Grand Prlx. toll powar and i 1 ----- * Sauty. hurry, onl- $1095 1964 T-BIRD Ft 3-3371 FORO 1*44 WAGON Galaxle 500. powor tittering, auto.. 1 owner, axe. condition, Ml *-*3il. _■_ lM4 FORD GALAXIE, 133-03* oftor 4yPJb, __________ 1964 FORD CONVBRTIGLB, L automatic, powor brakoo and steering, ON. GRIMALDI CAR CO. PE 34421, bSBuii i brake.. , .444303*. 1*43 MUSTANG 4 stick. No~mi LUCKY AUTO $795 1965 FORD wa^on* economy i $695 $495 1962 IMPERIAL YOUR ..VW CENTER- 70 to Choose From —All Models— -All Colors— —All Reconditioned— Autobahn MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH l Toronado. rad with Mack vinyl tinted glaas, factory air, power dows, powor ooate, c h r o mo •is. nils, 4*7 M-24, Lake Orion. 12*3 W. Huron. 403-3041 31.300. 43344*4. 1968 Olds 98 Luxury’. Sedan power, factory a ng, vinyl top, cruise $2995 Suburban Olds $295 "GIVI US A TRY 8CFORI Oakland Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer ^ North of Mirada Mila real luxury i?as S. Talegraph FE 64531 h4..g?°rm^'I 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 Radloand radio, 42,4*3. 4*430*4 after 5j 1*4 COMET CALIENTE, Powar atearln and Used Cars 106 New and Used Can BRAND NEW 1969 OLDS CLEARANCE 1969 OLDS 88 2-Door Hardtop...$3174 wNR automatic, powar steering, brakaa, radio, hti 1969 OLDS 88 Hardtop, 4-Door “J er staring. $3302 1969 OLDS Royalo $3593 MERRY OLDS 528 N. MAIN ST. ring, braki heater, 43*3. *24-1313. : 1*44 COMET 4 eyllnd. good condition, 43*3, Buy Horo-Payi — Marvel Motors, 231 Oakland. 40*0. 1*44 MERCURY MONTEREY1 Convertible, full power, white oldewain, 473-4*1? after 3, i 1969 Colony Pork Marquis Station Wagon 1 2 to choose from. WITH AIR I Buy ”"$AVE j Bob Borst j. Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1*30 W. MAPI* Rd., Troy Ml 4-2200 1M0 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL. This car is ilka newl No money down. LUCKY AUTO I960 W. Wldo Track FB 4-1006 f or- FE 1-7854 1703 OLDS P-15* nice, |245, Sava Auto ___________FE 5-3275 1966 Olds 98 I Luxury Sedan j Puli BAMMr, factory air condition* 61 vinyl top. Full prlc# ! i 1970 OLDS Della 4-Door Sedan, with automatic, steering, brakes, whitewalls, chrome moldings, only $3293 MERRY OLDS 333 N. Main St. OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge 1,000. USED CARS AT TROY MOTORMALL Maple Road <15 Milt) Between Coolidge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet _ Audette Pontioc 1*44 PLYMOUTH 2~ORTniardtop; .... ' 24 Nawb rORTS I 3B3Z> P*9* 1*7 P»m. ‘ 196* ROAD RUNNER 440* 4~on7lobr ; 552-1570 af tor 6. _ imiyAisiANTr buno'unoy' 5ip2y* Graat buy. — powar i968 ROADRUNNER. : radio* on tho floc“ mi payments. i 1968 Plymouth Fury 4 door sadanl Rad with black' i interior. V-* automatic, powar. steering, radio and haater, factory ' air cbndltton. Full prica $1895 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Mapla Rd, Troy# Mich. 642-7000 or* clean* good Walton. Ft I- ■033.—____ ________ -...... 1963 CAtALINA 4 ooor hardtop* *500 Dealer 373-5600 1964 PONTIAC CAtALINA* ft door* hardtop* real nice. 651-2204. 930 GRAND PR IX* good ITS-aOII. 1965 TEMPEST—LaMANS* powar steering and brakaa* new tires, excellent condlton* 5975. 6IM294. 1965 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, exceptionally nice________________________ •"HjffKffiL-. ... .. 11*44 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE .....GRIMALDI -CAR -GO; ........f y-rfiwa, egg Oakland A»a, fb M421 d**d-.J!l BEEN BANKRUPT? Need a car?l — Wan* to raaetaMIsh your credit? !**) loo's to chooea from. Call Mr. (daater)M3-3041. ___ ikes. aulo. 423-22*2. 17■ , , , -____________ i*» FIREBIRD 400 HARDTOP. Air. CATALINA 4 door. Dark Mu* | Power. Rally whaels. 1.000 milts. 000 mites. Call^42-320?^ . Call 442-331?._ AUDETTE PONTIAC AUDETTE PONTIAC W. Maplt Rd. _______Trey laM w. Maple Rd. _ Trey CATALINA * DOOR Itardlop.; fM*~BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, ilte. Factary pir. 22.000 miles. Cordova brown with black vinyl II 442-320*. fop. 4 way aaat. Call 443-320*. AUDETTE PONTIAC | AUDETTE PONTIAC W. Mapla Rd. ■ Tmy I mo w. Mapla Rd.___________Tray OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC DICK CANAANS I Air* 4 dr. 1965 Chevy Blscayne ii. Call 643-3219. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1150 W. Mapla Rd. 5595 *5095 *795 ... ...................... *495 1963 Mercury 2 dr. .......... S195 I960 Mercury Convertible .....$191 KEEG0 1P0NTIAC SALES KEIOO HARiOR 403-3400 1*4* " PONTIAC GRAND AUDETTEPONTIAC W. Mapla Rd._____Trey extres. 13350. Motor City r. Dod^e BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR hereto*, •rk brown with white vinyl In-rlor. Factory air, power win-ws. Cell 442-230*. - AUDETTE PONTIAC W. Mapla Rd. -......Tray 1*4* PLYMOUTH ROAD runnar, "303", auto., power steering, wood grain etearlng wheel, AM-FM stereo tape, tinted glass, headers, posltracflon, excellent condition. OR 3-2331 after 4 p.m, $1595 New and Ustd Can 106N«w and Ustd Can A-l SPECIALS 1967 GMC Camper Special cr steering, extra sharp, DO actual mites. $3195 . 1968 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop $2295 1964 FORD Fair lane GT Torino stback with V-I. autemallc. •ar steering, brakes, buckets, note. $2395 1965 COMET CalanitB Hardtop mf $1095 1963, CHEW Impala Hardtop r with powar slaarlno. at, windows, va, aula-e, only— . $795 1967 Chevy Imppla Hardtop l door with V-I, automatic, $1495 1967 FORD 9 Passenger Wagon Fair Inn# Squirt* with V-6, automatic, radio, haafar* only— $1795 -----1968 FORD^------ XL Convertible with V-I, automatic* powtr brakas, graan with a black top! $2395 1965 FORD 4 door with V5, automatic* powar itearino, blua with blua In- """to 1969 FORD foirlane 500 Ranchero with V-o,. •utemltlc, power •tearing, brakaa* burgundy with matching ^Inferior* bal- $2695 FLANNERY FORD On US10 (Dixie Hwy.) —WATERFORD— .3, 623-0900 8 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY $1995 OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC | DICK CANAANS Motor City I Dodge i 551 Oakland Ava. 235-4525 1965 BONNEVILLE. Powar * brakas. MWtr staarlng, txctlient condition* 391-0657. - 1965 PONTIAC TEMPEST 2 door." V5 automatic* radio* haafar* vinyl top* H|||MMi|||HBH||g|pici. 3275 TIAC CAtALIN A', 'oorffe-mr' 1,00,1 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 door $550* 652-1344. _ BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR hardtop, rlth black top; black Intarlor. iwiRgxnr ..........T AUDETTE PONTIAC I 50 W. Maplt Rd._____Troy | 66 1 PONTlAt Vanfura I door hardtop, VI, automatic, power tteerlna, brakes, vinyl top. Full price 412*3. 24 month warranty. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick J 5 S. Rochostar Rd, 651-5500 23,000 rflllas. Call 642-3209. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1050 W. Mapla Rd. 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY 1969 CATALINA graan. Factory air. Call 642-3209. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1850 Mapla Rd.___________Troy BEEN BANKRUPT? Natd a car? Want to raostabllsh your cradit? I 100's to chooso from. Call Mr^ Al 1969 PONTIAC GRAND Prlx, full 330-4520 powar, 370 hp. 10,000 Ml.* txc. BSoTO»w> -condltlW,' M*?!(*- -_____________________________ 1*4* PONTIAC FACTORY official mileage. Several models to chaos* from. Priced right. Many with AIR CONDITIONING. Call 442-321*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1050 W. Mapla Rd. Troy M*Pl*CMHdiia,ind C*rooks'W**n If MoWlfpWmc”' ’ Special Only HIM. Full Price. P.S. We've Moved! - to Mila N.,of Miracle Mila 1143 3. Telegraph Rd. FB 5-4101 I Crookt ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audetti Pontiac' Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet_ Pontiac Press Wcfnt Ads For Action (dtalar) 602-2061 1969 CATALINA 9 PASSENGER i • tat Ion wagon. Rad. Ractory air. f 1969 GRAND PRIX, loss than 5 Call 642-3259. mllai, 53150. 673-5537 attar 6. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD Graan with. Wagon, takfno ll ______________ Special. Only 1777 full prica. P.S. We've Moved! iso W. Maple Rd. _______ Troy to Mil* N. of Miracle Mile 1969 Bonneville Brougham --------- McAullff* Factory air, " dlo, eru car. .Like AM FM radio, crulso 1*41 JAVELIN, 4 CYLINDER shift, only 7.000 ml., o dacaaitd In doughter. Excellent cond 111 on , 41400. Call otter 4 pjn. 4*e.wafc 5R39Q5 "HOME OF THE DfFfNftABllI kpOvJcJvJ USED CARO" I PONTIAC RETAIL < Pontiac iStandard Auto I III - ^ *42 Oeklond Avo. FE 04001 'orw! HAUPT PONTIAC DEMOS . NOW AVAILABLE 1969 P0NTIACS 1969 BUICKS FANTASTIC lAVINGI Save—Sava—Save , 3-3300 less 0. Rochester Rd. New and Used Cars 106 Ntw and Used Care 106 New and Used Core 2 1969 Valiants i Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward BlrniihBhqny Ml 7,5fl y /nfOD y At T I CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEM0I 1 Ufl IVl/iLLiJIOO Mapla Rd. . Troy, Mich, 642-7000 only 017*3, Birmingham 1969 CHEVY Impala Custom Spor? Coupe, with V-3, automatic, powtr steering, radio, hooter, whitewalls, vinyl roof, factory warranty, garnet rad finish. SAVE OVER — $1000 ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audetti Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth 1*4* ROAD RUNNER, 412-3031. Now Eitd Used Cars 1*44 CATALINA 2 DOOR hardtop. Dark graan. Air. 30*000 mllas. Call 642-3259. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1»» W, Maple Rd.________Trey i*44>ONfTAC La Mani,'ttlck shift, vinyl lop, amarald graan bottom., good condition. 333-3400. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD- 1*44 PONTIAC Convtrtibia, Catalina, with beautiful matador red with black- tap, and Interior, toll power, mini condition, tall ttaaan special only till! toll price. P.S. We've Moved I to Mite N. of Miracle Mila 1143 I. 106New and Used Care New and Used Care Bob Borst < Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet 106 New am) Uiod Cars lfl ,1969 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham Hai) avary pleat of ctqulpm§nt inferwd by CB^TlIBc. PXlrngHo fiFiltb* black vinyl fop. 11*500 milts. Factory warranty. 1969 Cadillac Eldorado Vlayl rool. loalhor lnHrlDr,_AM FM tteree. cllmalt conlrol. gow*r door locks and In axcallant can-rtlilnn Ihreugheuf. Haw car war- 1968 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham On* Birmingham owner. Lets of equipment Including air conditioning. Premium fires. Still In factory warranty. 1968 Cadillac Eldorado Whit* finish, block vinyl reef. •POWER (avaryfhjng and factory and very sharp throughout, 196,7 Cadillac \ Eldorado y Metallic turquoise* with matching trim.' Full pom*', cruls* control, fHt wheal. AM iterao and climate control. Vary, vary clean 1 \) 1967 Cadillac Coupe DeVille Cage Ivory, black reef, FM tte-rab, 4 wav i*it, pfr conditioned and only ium) miles. Still under factory warranty, CADILLAC of Birmingham 1350 North Woodward Ml 4-1930 ' .1966 Ambassador 4 door sedan. V-3. automatic, power slaarlno and brakes. Radio, $895- 1969 AXM 3*0 V-0, Go-Pack-4 tpaad transmission. Radio, wide avals. Rood -$2995 1968 T-BIRD \ Fewer steering, brakes, wlfv paws. Radio, factory air can- ""$2995 1967 MUSTANG .Conkertlbte. v-o. adfamaflc, trs/nlfcft' r* 1965 BUIClCSkylark ....$W5 ix 19M DODGB Charger , !. .$139^ suuraaun 1968 CAMAR0 Sport .............. Coup*: with 22*.a*3 HP,7 V-0, cteea rette .radw, law mltoao*, rad finish, black In? 1967 OLDS Cutlass ; Holiday coupe, with v-o, V*”’ ............... 1965 PONTIAC Starchlef" 4-do»r with V-0, oowar air conditioning, radio, $2250 .$1695 .$1295 On US10 at M15, Clarkstori MA 5-5071 FW “ rnf® TH* PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER «, 10B0 ' r... , T-^ V D—0 «£r°^ni°0r!)•" (comb, farm) IS Copyist 13 Pindaric composition 14 Pardon pool 15 “Tobias tha HByltMU -(Latin) -18 Epoch 18 Poverty 81 Spoil 23 Deputy fob.) 24 Approaching S£,<|U" lEothnotor agtaaU u$&s!r SSSS.^ 27Sland«part neither 80 Small violin (music) 31 Purchase 33 Inaactivorouo »£££ 41 Finishaa 43 Classify y 48 Compact 48 That U (Swords) 47 Advises (diAL) 48 Tha shank 48 Sains S7Hshsauca 88 Military strong placa \ r- r- r- r- r- i r“ IS TT (2 13 U IS If" nr 14 r 21 - ' | 29 46 sr Mill w JT tt 49 If" U sr 8 Mi8iiaiiwiwsiiiMwitmiaitm»»iMiMi»wiftwiwiWi'a«p People in the News [ By The Aisociated Press Vice President Tung Pi-wu of Communist China was described as the nation’s acting president in a dispatch yesterday by the official Hsinhua news agency, monitored in Tokyo. The post had been vacant sines Liu Shao-chi was purged by Mao Tse-tung, the party chairman. • A ★ < A Tung, 83, and Madame Soong Ching-ling, elder sister of Madame Chang Kai-shek, are the two vice chairmen of the party. CommittM Out to Spring Hoffa on Bail . Formation of a committee seeking the release on ball *m imprisoned Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa was announced yesterday by a onion attorney in Los.Angeles. Robert Morgan, western states chairman of the organization, said It was operating in .38 cities to raise money for bail and legal representation. , 'it A dr Hoffa, M, is serving two concurrent sentences at the Lewisburg, Pa., federal penitentiary — eight years for Jury tampering and five years for defrauding a union pension fund. He Is appealing the Jury-tampering con-• victim, and Morgan said: “We feel die appeal will be successful. But in the meantime we believe he has the vested right to bail.” State Woman Driver to Face No Charges SARNIA, Ont. (AP) *- No charges will be filed against a Port Huron, Mich., woman who was accused of driving a car through a crowd of student demonstrators at the Blue Water 'Bridge last Thursday, Canadian ; officials say. ' . ; ' A A A ; More than 500 Canadian students took part in the demonstration protesting the United states' nuclear test explosion In ;the Aleutian Islands. ! . ★ ★ ★ | One student was hospitalized and another suffered minor injuries after, police said, they were hit by a car driven by a Port Huron woman whose identity was withheld by officials. Sarala police announced Satur* day films of the incident show-led no grounds for legal action agfctoM the woman. Impact-Softening Steering Column 'Big Safety Gain' ANN ARBOR, Mich. UFI -Energy-absorbing steering columns are “probably the biggest advance in auto safety since the lap seat belt," a University of Michigan researcher has reported. Anatomist Donald Huelke said a study of more than MO fatal and nonfatal accidents over eight years has shown Hut the energy-absorbing column makes deaths from steering column impact rare, He noted that this type of injury formerly was the leading cause of death and serious Injury to drivers. Mike’s research also concluded that laminated windshield glass, installed in all post-1866 American-built cars, is a tremendous safety factor in reducing the seriousness of facial Injuries.’’ I -Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column ore subject to change without notlcel A Look at TV v' 'Saga Isa Soap Chonnelsi 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV. 30-WKBD-TV. 36-WTV8-TV, 62-WXON-TV R —Rerun C — Color MONDAY NIGHT 6:60 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) RC — Fllntstones (56) Bridge With Jean Cox (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:36(2) C -Cronklte (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R - Dick Van Dyke (50) R — Ministers (56) C — The River That Came Back — Efforts to restore and preserve the Au Sable River are examined. (62) C — Robin Seymour — Teresa Graves of “Laugh-In" guests. 7:06 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (I) C — News, Weather, Sports (7). C W News — Reynolds, Smith (0) R C — Movie: “Incident at Phantom Hill" —(1806)—Dan—D u r y s a, Jocelyn Lane. (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New - While searching for bur led treasure, tom and Hufck run into Injun Joe and his — new accomplice. 7:30'ty) C — Gunsmoke — Matt helps a teeh-age girl defend her brother who is charged with homicide. Nina Foch and Ruth Roman guest-etar. (4) G— My World and Welcome to It — Dogs, everyone else’s best friend, get John into trouble with his wife, daughter, editor and the police. (7) C — Music Scene — Scheduled guests are the Dells, John Mayall, Roger Miller, the Rascals, Bobby Sherman, Dusty Spring-field and Smokey Robinson and the Miracles. (50) C - Beat the Clock — This week’s guest is Jack Cassidy. (56) French Chef — Cooking with chestnuts (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — The modern cities and wild animals of South Africa are viewed. 8:06 (4) C - Laugh-In -The Monkees guest-star. (50) R — Hazel (56) World Press 6:15 (7) C - New People -In a race with Stanley, Bob Lee’s dune buggy strikes and injures Wen-dy. 8:36 (2) C — Here’s Lucy — A Navajo Indian chief - claims Lucy as his wife, (9) C — Tommy Hunter (50) C — To Tell the Truth (02) R — The Nelsons 9:06 (2L G -—Mayberry RlF.D. — Howard .has been chosen to write a poem for the state literary magazine, but he can’t get past the title. (4) C - Movie: “Counterpoint" (1868) The fate of an Internationally renowned conductor and his 76-plece orchestra lies in the hands of a music-loving German general. Charlton Heston, Maximilian Schell (?) C — Survivors — Learning that he has only a short time to live, Baylor decides to bring, his son into the bank. (9) C - Front Page Challenge (50) R— Perry Mason (58) NET Journal — “Speak Out on Drugs" examines young people’s experiences with drugs. Radio Programs- WJM780) WXYZfl 270) CKLWfSW) WWJ(flO)W6AM1136) W80N(1460) WJSK(1600) WHSI-SM(94.7) m WMff WJS, MW jVj, Today In RtvM WPON, Chon* Opinion ■Will SUolnoo*' Til mHFi£fe."fei WJS, Lowoll Thomoo. Ai nnW wCM, now* WWJ, Ntwi. WJS, World ;i_. Ti ll—WHS I. Lt§ WJR, Swlnm . 7iM WXT*., Ojvo awKnori r ' (conomle Club Addroti liH-WJS. •tSS—WJR. Showcoio, Clooo-liOMpja, Ihowcoooi Minor- lOrftwja! Vocui Brtcoro lllOO-WJK, Nowi "wjj. ImomRo™ . lliM-WJR. Mutlc Till Down ii;M&,CThUn wcar, Woyno Phiuip, WXVZ, NOWI, JIM Dovli WHPf, Iro J. COW WPON, NOWI, Oory Puroco whpi, Oon loo lllW-WJR, NOWI, KoIOMIO TUISDAV APT IN NOON ■ Arthur Godfrey ti4S—WJR. Sunny tide 1100—WPON. News, Dan WXV^MIkt Sherman WJR, News, Dimension — CKLW» id Mltchall 11ll-WJA. Music Hall 1100-WCAR, News, Mon StWJMP «WJ, Niwitimi III*—WPON, Hock Honor! GUNSMOKE, 7:30 p.m. (2) - mr MUSIC SCENE, 7:30 p:m. (7) NET JOURNAL, 0 p.m, (50) MAN ALIVE, 0:30 p.m. (9) PEOPLE IN JAZZ, 10 p.m. (50) (62) R - Movie: “Sun Sets at Dawn" (1961) Sally Parr, Philip Shawn Philip Shawn 6:30 (2) C - Doris Day -— Doris poses as her boss’ ..wife to convince a husband • hunting female that he’s out, of circulation. (9) (New Time) Man ____Alive - “The Pursuit of Pleasure and All That Bogus" examines the personalities of Malcolm Muggeridge and Nathan CoheA. 10:00 (2) C — Carol Burnett — Steve Lawrence and ballet dancer Edward Vil* lella guest. (7) C — Love, American Style — Arte Johnson, Larry Storch, E. J. Peaker, Margaret O’Brien, Alice Ghostley, and Marilyn Mason star. (9) (50) C - News, Weather, Sports (56) People in Jazz — Joe Williams, longtime vocalist with the Count Basie band, is featured. 10:30 (9) C — What’s My Line? — Panelists for the week are Henry Morgan, Anita Gillette, Bert Convy and Ariene .Francis. (50) R — Ben Casey (56) Folk Guitar - Final program in series _ (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R - Movie: “The End of the Affair" (British, 1955) Deborah Kerr, Van Johnson (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:15 (4) C — News, Weather, Sports 11:30 (7) C — Joey Bishop — Nancy Wilson, Ross Martin, Don Cherry and Pig-meat Markham guest. ' (50) C - Merv Griffin-Eli Waliach, Ann Jackson, Alien Furit, Joe McGinniss (“The Selling of toe President 1968"), Kaye Hart, Wes Harrison and Robert King guest. (02) R C — Movie: “My Wife’s Family” (British, 1956) Ronald Shiner, Ted Ray 11:25(2) R - Movie: "Blondie For Victory” (1043) Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake 11:45 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Anthropologist Ashley Montagu and Rich Little, Don Herbert and Gloria Loring guest. 12:24 (0) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — VThe Nudist Camp" 1:08 (7) R—Texan (SO) R — Peter Gunn 1:15 (4) Beat the Champ 1:30 (2) R — Naked City (7) C-News, Weather 1:46 (7) C - Rive Minutes to Live By 1:45 (4) C — News, Weather 2:30(2) C - News, Weather 2:25 (2) TV Chapei TUESDAY MORNING 5:36 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C-On tha Farm Scene 6:66 (?) C — \ Sunrise Semester 6:25 (7) C - Five Minutes to Live By ,6:36 (2) C-Woodrow the Woodsman ir f4) C — Classroom (7) C - TV College 7:06 (4) C - Today (7) C — Morning Sfibw Dr. Donald Wallace, plastic surgeon, guests. 7:26 (») Warm-Up 7:30 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (0) Friendly Giant 7:45 (9) Chez Helene 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (6) C-Bozo 8:36 (7) R - Movie: “The Wd From Left Field” —(1053) Dan Dailey, Anne Bancroft 8:46 (56) R-Human Relations 1:00 (2) R-Mr. Ed --—(4) C—Dennis Wholey— (9) Ontario Schools 6:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 0:30 (2) RC - Beverly Hillbillies (56) Singing, XJsfenlng, Doing 10:00 (2) R C - Lucy Show (4) C - Sale of the Cen-tury (56) R — Thanks, a Million ' r.) 10:20 (2) C - Della Reese -Santo Vaughn, Spiral Starecase and Pete Barbutti guest. (4) C—Hollywood Squares (7) C—Galloping Gourmet (50) C — Jack LaLanne (56) Once Upon a Day 10:45 (9) C - News 11:00 (4) C—It Takes Two (7) R—Bewitched (9) R-Take 30 (50) C — Strange Paradise (56) R — Listen and Say 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:25 (4) C - Carol Duvall 11:36 (2) C-Love of Life - (4) C-Concentratlon (7) RC - That Girl (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C-Kimba 11:55 (9) Wizard of Oz TUESDAY AFTERNOON if a fourth game is necessary in either of the baseball playoff seriea, It will be colorcast on Channel 4 as Mows: Atlanta at New York, noon Baltimore at Minnesota, 3 p.m. 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (4) C—Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) R—Real McCoys (50) C-Upderdog. 12:25 (2) C-Fashions 12:30 (2) C—Ha Said, She Said (4) C — News, eWather, Sports / (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal .—(9) C—Tempo 9__________ (50) C—Alvin 12:35 (56) Friendly Giant 12:55 (50) R - Singing, Listening, Doing 1:00 (2) C-Search for Tomorrow , 14) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C—Newlywed Game ' (9) R - MovieX “Dill-—lnger-" (164B) Lawrence Tierney, Anne Jeffreys (50) R — Movie: “Con-fidential Agent" (1645) Charles Boyer, Lauren Bacall 1:15 (56) Listen and Say 1:36 (2) C—As toe World Turns (4) C—Doctors (7) C—Dating Game (56) Science Is Searching ■ 2:06 (2) Where the Heart Is (4) C—Another World . (7) C—General Hospital (56) R — Advocates 2:25 (2) C - News 2:30 (2) C—Guiding Light (4) C — Bright Promises (7) C—One Life to Live 3:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In— (7) R - Bachelor Father (9) R—Candid Camera (56) Modern Supervision — First in a series that presents the role of the supervisor. (02) R - Movie: "Twenty-One Days Together” (British, 1940) Vivian Leigh, Laurence Olivier 3:30 (2)—Edge of Night (4) C—You’re Putting Me On (7) C—Anniversary Game (9) C—Magic Shoppe (50) C—Captain Detroit (50) Sesame Street — Preview of prograiq, designed for preschoolers. 4:00 (2) R C-Gomer Pyle (4) C - Steve Allen -The Youngbloods, Henny Youngman, Paul WincheU and Bob Carroll guest. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo (56) Pocketful of Fun 4:30 (2) C -i Mike Douglas (7) RC - Movie: “A nine to Love, a Time to Die" (1958) John Gavin, LQo Pulver (Part 1) (50) R — Little Rascals (56) R — Once Upon a Day (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C-George Pierrot (9) R C - Flipper (50) R C—Lost in Space (56) R — Misterogers 5:30 (6) R C —Voyage to the Bottom of toe Sea (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Chimney Corner By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - American viewers had their first look on Sunday night at an English television series which, when broadcast on the BBC Network, took the nation by storm and was called a cult and “national It was to premiere episode of “The forsyte Saga," a series of 26 houriong programs based on John Galsworthy’s novels about a rich, fertile bourgois English family. And, once the American viewers get the various Forsytes, friends and lovers sorted aut, lt may provide ah interesting excursion into Victorian upper-middle-class life * ★ ★ However, no matter how well-produced, how well acted, or how revered are both BBC and the National Education Network, which is broadcasting it on a hookup of some 165 stations (including Channel 56 locally), “The Forsyte Saga” is quite simply and purely a soap opera. ....... — The serial opened amid a welter of Forsytes, circa 1879, but soon concentrated on two brothers and their cousin. BATHER HORSEY PHIL Winifred, the cousin, is a rather horsey grl who became engaged and was married in the first episode to a pleasant young man named Monty. British soap opera moves a lot faster than the domestic variety, which would have taken about a year for this. Soames Forsyte Is a lawyer — stuffy, utterly humorless, a complete snob and dedicated bachelor. Jolyon Forsyte, called Jo, is an earnest idealist caught in a loveiless marriage and In love with his daughter's Austrian nanny. As to# < ended, he had established tys love in a little house Ini Chelsea and she had just confided that she was going to have his child. jr j ft 6 Cheer up, fans of “As too World Turns,"' there will be more than “The Survivors" to amuse after dark. “Mission: Impossible’’ is back on CBS for another season of saving civilization fro.m deepdyed evil. Sunday night to# team simulated the start of World War III—nuclear explosions and all-to frighten an aging exiled dictator 1 n to revealing toe number of his Swiss bank account. This, In turn, was designed to abort his plan to get his country back by force. As usual, it seems to be an extremely complicated meant to a simple end. They used disguises, electronic gimmicks and theatrical devices. VERY HANDSOME ______________ Leonard Nimoy, with his eara back in human ahapa after “Star Trek," plays tha new member oftoelinposalbla Missions force. He did not hava much to do but talk tough in too episode. May Britt, away from acting for several years, looked very handsome in the unsympathetic role of the deposed strongman’s wife, significantly called Eva. It is an amusing show, painstakingly produced and acted by a cast as If It were serious drama. Bid It 1 a seriously flawed by an inflexible format that gives the episodes a basic sameness with just a change of scene or method of operation. Soapy Is Told 5,000 at MSU Oppose Him EAST LANSING (UPI) - It must come as quite a shock to G. Mennen (Soapy) Williams, after all these years in politics to findtmt that some 5,000 people don’t want you, Democrat Williams, six times governor of Michigan, was an assistant secretary of under President John F. Kennedy and an embassador under President Lyndon B. Jonhson. i ★ w ' Lately, his name has bean mentioned as a possible candidate for president of Michigan State University,, President John A. Hannah to the Nixon administration last spring. Saturday, four students wrote Williams an “open letter," telling him flatly he isn’t wanted at MSU. They said they spoke for 5,000 students who had signed petitions to that effect. There is . 'UmBrella' Putin Vein Stops Clot Flow SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A Florida physician says he has used successfully in 50 cases a tiny steel and plastic “umbrella" that pops open in a vein to filter out potentially lethal blood ots. Dr. Kazl Mobin-Uddln of the University of Miami School of Medicine explained the device Sunday at the annual clinical congress of toe American College of Surgeons. 6 ★ He said he has used it In 50 patients who had a history of clotting and none have developed clots in their lungs. The-operation, which can be done under local anesthetic in 15 to 20 minutes, is designed to take the place of high-risk ma- the blood flow through but stop large dots. R is inserted into a neck vein and pushed by a cath-eter to a point in the vena cava near the kidneys, At the right spot, a capsule at Jor surgery to tie off the vena toe end of toe wtheter is; pulled cava, an inch-wide vein through which large blood clots can reach toe lungs and cause death. STOPS CLOTS-The “umbrella,” made of watch-spring steel covered with plastic, has tiny holes which let back and the “umbrella" pops open, lodging in the walls of the vein, The device remains in the veto permanently but la eventually bypassed by the growth of other veins—all too small to allow the passage of dangerous clots, Dr. Mobin-Uddln said. Glendell G. Rawlins, Outside His New Station Marathon Opens New Station in Waterford Twp. Glendell G. Rawlins recently opened a new contemporary-style Marathon gas station at 1504 Airport at M50 in Waterford Township. Rawlins is a graduate of Marathon Oil Co.’s Dealer Development Training Center. Ha has 30 years experience as an automotive body technician, including 15 jrears at Fisher Body Plant. * * ’ * His station has^nine gasoline ' pumps grouped on four islands to addition to a fuel oil pumping ■site. / 1 __He Has tires and accessories and will "perforin minor auto-' mobile repairs, engine tune-up and both brake and whael servicing. the fact that If the presidential selection is made on the baaia of political pressure ... the academic atmosphere of the' university will be destroyed," wrote Harry Chancey, a senior from Grasse Potato, WflUams’ hometown. There have been recurrent reports that the five Democrats' on toe eight-man MSU Board of Trustees are under heavy; pressure from party and labor leaders to give toe job to the 56-year-oid Williams. * it it A special student-faculty-; alumni committee screened? candidates for the post and submitted four names to the; trustees. The trustees asked for more names — but William*' was not on either list. We hope that you will; pect not only the evident feelings of the university com-, munity, but also the established; es of tola academic institution," the letter said. . ’DEMONSTRATES DEPTH’ x.' “That over 5,000 people signed this petition in less than 10 hours demonstrates the dOpth of this foaling.” The students did not suggest; what they wished Williams to do, but others have urged that' toe former governor publicly; announce he does not want the job and would not take ii. A large group of faculty members recently also Issued a' strong statement against a; Williams’ candidacy. Other students signing the open letter were Gina Schach, Miami, Fla., senior; Michael Shore, St. Joseph, sophomore;; and Sue Steeves, Bloomfield Township, junior. j&jap1 SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S 770 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. RCA and ZENITH TERRIFIC BUYS ON RECONDITIONED AND GUARANTEED USED COLOR TVi from $95.00 CONDON'S! TV Seles add Service 7S0W. Huron PI 4-9716 ; ■; . * .. - — SB 1 THE PONTIAC PllKSS. MONDAY. OCTOBER «, 1W» ' ^ A* ' VC Captain Defects to South; Company Follows Him TAM KY, Vietnam IP - It’s rare when a Vietcong captain twitches loyalty to the South Vietnamese government and lt’$ .much rarer when he gets most o[ his company to join him. “I was tired of being disillusioned,” says a man who did just that. Known only as Quyen, the leathery combat veteran had led his Vietcong company in battles against both U.S. Ma rines and government troops. Now, he is leading two-thirds of his company in a new campaign to gain control of his home district from the Viet-cong he once served. Quyen was a captain and commander of the Vletcong’s C9 company one week ago when he decided to call it quits. TOO MANY PROMISES The Communist command had made too many promises he told surprised militiamen when he walked into the district headquarters of Thang Binh, about 30 miles south of Da Nang and surrendered. The skeptical militiamen were convinced of Quyen’s good intentions when he took them out along the coastal flats north of Tam Ky and disarmed 26 guer-rllla-planted mines and booby traps. Maddox Says Woman OK hr President He also delivered letters that he had written personally to relatives of men who had served in his company. The next day, several men he had commanded arrived in Thang Binh with their rifles and joined Quyen. They said that after Quyen defected, two political officers assigned to C9 company had-disbanded the unit and ordered the men to turn in their weapons “There was no propaganda,”!district and pacify it their fami-, Quyen agreed and he and his,trict chief to a campaign to Tho said; “T just ^old them that lies would be happy and pros-men went, back to Thang Blnhlwipe out the remaining Viet-if they would go back to thelrlperous.” / (district, assigned under the dia-|cong. v 1 CONSTIPATED? in a few days, 27 of the 40 men hi Quyen’s company surrendered, bringing with them six rifles and a machine gun. -%—at—r*-— The Quang Tin Province chief, Col. Hong Dinh Tho, asked Quyen to bring 10 of his best men to Tam, Ky. Quyen was given 6170 and he and his squad had a tour of the city. “They had been told that Tam Ky had been destroyed,” Tho said, “They were very surprised to see the buildings, the cars the electricity.” FOOD, CLOTHING During the shopping trip, Tho bought Hie 11 ex-guerrillas some clothes and promised to send food to their families still back in the district? Quyen and the 10 men were given M16 automatic jAad from those wonderful folks who gave you Swiss dieese ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Gov Lester Maddox, who often hints that his wife, Virginia, may run for governor to succeed him in 1970, says that if a woman can clean up the1 problems facing this country, then he’s all for a “I believe that a woman who is used to living on a budget might be able to help get out national finances straightened out and reduce our shameful national debt,” the governor told the Georgia Federation of Business and Professional Worn Clubs Saturday. And any woman can take control of the Health, Education and Welfare Department, said Maddox, who has often criticized HEW for its school desegregation efforts in Georgia, “and make improvements there.” There Is no reason for women not to become more involved in politics, the governor said. “You ladies already have gained control of more than 50 per cent of the property, 80 per cent of the money—and about 99 per cent of the men.’’ » Largs “Jiaal NwriHT SiflM i free Rico M Tkwwsl llw 1 C. R. HASKILL STUDIO FE 4-0553 come some wonderful ideas in keeping track of the time. S.wiss are at it again, this time with a slightly different twist to personal punctuality—decorator timepieces. Clockwise: a key chain parking meter timer that lets you know when the legal limit's up at $5. An hourglass timer that gives you the date while the sands while-away time; In gold at $18. A railroad lantern time-and-date clock in black-and-gold at $20. A wheelbarrow time-and-date clock id black-and-gold at $20. Our Pontiac Mall Store Open Daily to 9 P.M.-Telepraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. i-\ . '...V A . A ----------- '■ ^ J& Of Diet Sweeteners The Weather U. 9. Weather Bureau Forecast P§ (Dttaiii Nn t) FDA Steps Probe WASHINGTON (AP) - The Food and Drug Administration, nearly a year after government scientists reported a possible health hazard, is showing signs of concern about cyclamate, an artificial sweetener used by an estimated 178 million Americans. 1 , The sweetener, known as cyclamate, hap been linked most recently to severe birth defects In chickens. ■ THIftKE OVER PAGES PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 0, 19(19 VOL. 127 — NO. 207 ★ ★ ★ ★ 40 PAGES 10c Cyclamate is found in a wide range of products from bacon to children’s vitamins to diet soft drinks and diet foods. FDA scientists reported in late October 1968 that a cyclamate breakdown product formed by one of every five humans who use the sweetener causes a shattering of genetic material when given to rats. Comparable genetic breaks in humans are associated with birth deformatles and cancer. HURRY-UP EVALUATION Following network television accounts of the deformed chicks, FDA commissioner Herber L. Ley Jr. called late last week for a 39-day, hurry-up evaluation of cyclamates by the nongovernmental National Academy of Science. On its delivery, said Ley, "1 will decide the best methods of restricting the use of cyclamates.” Legislators Get Leftovers, Then School-Reform Plan Consumer spokesmen on Capitol Hill, led by Senator Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., have complained the FDA has reacted too slowly to cyclamate danger signs. Hie agency failed to alert a National Academy of Science panel to the FDA chromosome study, the critics say. The NAS panel Issued a generally favorable report on cyclamates in December. LABELING RESTtUCTIONS And, the critics point to the fact that Ley waited four months after the report before proposing what they say are mild labeling restrictions on cyclamate use. Products would have to show cyclamate content, and adults and children ' would be advised to limit their Intake of the substance. The proposed regulations have not yet been put into effect. LANSING UR - The 75th Michigan Legislature ends a two-month recreation and research recess tonight at 8 when it reconvenes for a fall session to be devoted largely to Gov. William Milliken’s education reform legislation. Milliken — who acknowledges it could be Christmas before much of his plan is adopted — is to address a joint session Thursday to detail proposals outlined earlier by his educaatlon reform commission. But tonight leftovers will be the order of business. Among debris of the summer”s final 18-hour session July 17 are 21 bills. DIFFERENT FORMS Passed by both chambers, but in dif- ferent form, they were left among other bills that were scuttled or voted into legislative “deep-freeze” until January. Bills are not the only matters being shuffled. Renovation of third- and fourth-floor offices has forced some GOP representatives to find temporary quarters in a nearby school. The State Supreme Court and State Law Library also have been moved out. Only Chief Justice Thomas E. Brennan, smarting from what he considered a somewhat peremptory evacuation notice, is holding onto one office.in the Capitol’s third floor. The logggerhead issues the two chambers are to work on until Milliken’’s bills are introduced and studied by committees represent months of frustration and deadlock. One measure proposes to elect Detroit councilmen from single-member districts instead of at general, citywide elections. The upper chamber’s version would require district apportionment to be handled by the Wayne County supervisors. The House version called for that to be done by a committee of the Detroit city clerk, recorder and treasurer. The Senate refused to eliminate the lone juror system. It also voted to give the jury a six-months’ life with a six-months extension. The House specified three months in each case. Establishment of a youth services bureau in the Social Services Department, approved by the upper chamber, ran into trouble in the House. A controversial proposal to substitute Michigan’s one-man grand jury with a citizen panel operating under streamlined rules also is pending. The bill would allow a judge to grant immunity to a witness testifying in a hearing and set specific perjury and contempt of court penalties. The Senate version called for a nine-member policy commission and a three-man parole and review board. The bill did not specify salaries or Civil Service status. The House voted for a seven-member policy and parole commission, appointed by the governor. Each member would receive $26,000, although Civil Service status was not specified. Rumor-Spreading Charged Ira Polley Quits Housing Code Foes Fuel Fire as School Chief By ED BLUNDEN Opposition to Pontiac’s proposed new housing code is being fanned into flame in some sections of the city. A word-of-mouth-campaign — some of it termed rumor-spreading ^ and pamphleteering has been conducted in the city for the last three weeks. A revised version of the code will be up for public hearing and possible adoption by the City Commission at tomorrow’s regular meeting, 8 p.m. at City Hall, East Wide Track and East Pike. The first hearing was held three weeks ago,wand about 40 persons attending voiced considerable opposition to all or part of the code. OPPOSITION MUSHROOMED contain more teeth for enforcement and more stringent standards, say city officials. It is concerned particularly with substandard (slum) housing. But city officials have pointed out the most important reason for the new proposed ordinance: the city must have one to comply with requirements of the Office of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). At the first hearing on the ordinance, commissioners ordered some revisions in the original proposal. Concern was expressed at how severely the new provisions would be enforced and one speaker pointed out that most homes in the city would not totally comply. Housing officials have been meeting with-interested groups in the last three weeks discusring some of the regula- Many city projects concerning, loans and grants for new housing and rehabilitating old housing are pending with HUD. Hife city must have an ordinance and it must be a good one or the residents can forget about federal help for housing, city officials contend. The proposed ordinance was written under orders of the City Commission by Ralph T Florio, director Of housing-code enforcement, with the help of planners and legal counsel. Commissioners attended several briefing sessions prior to its initial presentation. LANSING (AP) - Ira Polley quit as Michigan’s superintendent of public instruction today, charging that the State Board of Education had not done the job it was created for. Polley, whose ouster had been sought by several members of the board, which hired him in 1966, accused some of circulating “falsehoods and half-truths” and of making “wild accusations” about public figures. He did not name the members. Polley said there had been pressure for him to buck Gov. William Milliken’s educational reform proposals'and to declare that an elective board Is a good way to administer state education. Pvntlic Prtit PHolo by RM Unt#rn«hr«r Kickoff Ceremonies Held At The Pontiac Mall Saturday Pair of Torch-Lightings Start 21st PAUF Drive Since then, opposition Jia? apparently mushroomed, and door-to-door callers have been urging residents to appear at tomorrow’s meeting to protest. Some opposition to the code approaches hystleria. One pamphlet statqs: “This JHousing Code, in its scope and intent, violates the basic premise upon which our American civilization has been built.” MIG Lands at Base; Cuban Pilot Given Asylum “This I cannot, In good conscience do,” Polley declared. Milliken would replace the board with one man, an appointee. Polley said any accomplishments made by the board in its four and one-half years “have largely been through the cooperation of a dedicated state civil service and a deeply commlttted educational community at. the local and intermediate level.” Representatives of several Pontiac Area United Fund agencies attended dual torch-lighting ceremonies Saturday for this year’s general campaign. Hie events mark the start of the area’s 21st United Campaign, which this year seeks a goal of $1.24 million for 55 health, welfare, education and recreation agencies ren H. Eierman, president of Community National Bank, lit the huge torch lit the Mall and expressed hope for a successful campaign,'pointing out that this year’s goal is the highest in the history of the Pontiac Area United Fund (PAUF). ‘REACH OUT, CARE’ The pamphlet implies houses over 10^, years old with minor violations of wiring specifications or living-room size will be condemned. The pamphlet concludes, “Your home will he searched — your property can be condemned — and you may be jailed If you do not conform.” It is signed “Homeowners Protecting Their Private Property." The new ordinance does not void the freedoms of the Constitution, but does HOMESTEAD AFB, Fla. (UPI) — A MIG17 jet fighter with a hammer and sickle stamped on its gunsight and a Cuban flag emblazoned on its tail was under heavy guard today while authorities questioned the man who flew it from Cuba. The Soviet-built jet landed at this sprawling home of long-range SAC Related Story, Page A-2 The first torch-lighting, at the Mall, was preceeded by an airplane which dropped UFOs (Unitea Fund Objects) to dozens of anxious children In the field behind the Mall. They contained numbers redeemable for gifts donated by the Pontiac Mall. As general campaign chairman, War- “I sincerely hope that area residents show they can ‘reach out and care,’ ” he said. “Our area cannot survive without concern and care for one another, and by heeding this year’s slogan, ‘Reach Out and Care,’ we can prove that we are concerned for the welfare of others less fortunate than ourselves.” Clouds Threaten Rain by Tonight bombers and sleek fighters yesterday after it loomed on a radar scope 90 miles east of Key West. The President, who had spent the weekend vacationing at his Key Bis-cayne retreat about 40 miles away, was informed of the incident yesterday afternoon. But he did not let it interfere with a boating excursion with his old friend, C. B. (Bebe) Rebozo. Hie pilot was quickly hustled away by military authorities for questioning. Almost five hqurs after the jet landed at 12:25 p.m. with a cannon and two machine guns slung under its belly, the Air Force issued a statement. Flash Judge William R. Beasley 'ruled this morning that no court action will be taken in the salary dispute between the Clarkston Board of Education and Clark-ston Education Association (CEA) unless negotiations completely break down. Negotiations were scheduled to resume at 3 p.m. today following a weekend lull. (Earlier story on page A-3.) In Today's Press Golfing Great Dies Walter Hagen dead after i lengthy illness — PAGE C-l. Job Program Support of smell businesses | needed, says leader — PAGE 1 B-7. Green Berets Assassination not part of war 1 assignment, says colonel - 1 PAGE A-4. Area News ............... A-3 1 Astrology .............. C-9 I Bridge ................. C-9 I Crossword Puzzle .........D-9 I Comics ...................C-9 I- Editorials ...............A-6 g Markets ..................C-S ft Obituaries B-6 g Smoking Series ...........B-8 1 Sports .............. C-l—0-7 I Theaters .................B-9 9 TV and Radio Programs .. D-9 I Vietnam War News ........ A-S I Wilson, Earl .............A-9 g Women’s Pages ........B-t—B-3 I Members of the Boy Scouts and Camp Fire Girls participated in ceremonies at the Mall, then joined the “care-a-van” to downtown Pontiac for the second torch-lighting at City Hall, 450 E. Wide Track. Mrs. Vincent Bronsing, community division chairman, lit the*torch from the bucket of a lift provided by Consumers Power Co. The drive will run through Nov. 7. Cloudy skies hold the threat of rain by this evening, according to the weatherman’s predictions. Temperatures are expected to remain mild until tomorrow afternoon or evening when they will take a dip. Rain clouds are due to hover over the Oakland County area through Wednesday bringing sporadic showers. By Wednesday, the mercury Is expected to fall into the top-coat category. Precipitation possibilities in per cent are today 20, tonight 60 and tomorrow 50. The pilot, an unidentified Cuban, promptly asked for asylum and got it. .‘‘Any plane that comes in with his wheels down is allowed to land,” said one Air Force veteran on the Homestead runway. “If he comes in with his landing gear (ip, he will be shot down.” Area Woman Winner SweepsTake Is $24,000 NEAR NIXON’S PLANE The M1G17, of the type which dealt trouble to U.S. fighters during the Korean war, touched down near President Nixon’s plane — Air Force One •— which was waiting to carry the chief executive back to Washington. Peace Breakthrough Near? WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon’s chief spokesman In the Senate, Republican leader Hugh Scott, has indicated a breakthrough,many be in the offing In the search M peace in Vietnam. Although he provided no details,] Scott answered “yes, it is possible" when asked yesterday if the both sides might tie proaching a de facto ceasefire. by the Nixon administration on the Viet-' nam situation. Agnew said the United States has made many unsuccessful efforts to bring about peace. war,” said Fulbright. "The Senate should give thorough study to all policy alternatives for achieving that objective." By DIANNE DUROCHER The ladies at Bea’s beauty shop in Waterford Township had a lot to talk about Saturday afternoon! Mrs. Adlph Mushro, a grandmother who “bets on anything that comes along,” was waiting to have her hair set at the Chateau Beaute Boutique, 4232 Dixie, when she learned she had won $24,000 in the Irish Sweepstakes. “Really. You’re not kidding me?” she asked calmly of Mrs. George (Bea) Beamobey, the shop’s owner, who relayed the news. A widow, Mrs. Mushro lives with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Councilor at 2270 Highflelfl, Waterford Township. She also plays. bingo every week. “About two weeks ago, 1 hit a winning streak and won about $50 at bingo, then the following week, 1 won the jackpot of $118,” she said. Mrs. Mushro said she doesn't know for sure what she’s going to do-with her share of the $24,000. But as she sat in the beauty operator’s chair, someone in the, shop piped up: “Hey, Betty, how about a poker game tonight?” “Okay,” Mrs. Mushro replied confidently. The Pennsylvanian gave the same answer when asked if Nixon “might be on the verge of something right now.” “I cannot tell you where there will be solid news, but there are aome things I.” Scott said. “I can't point to anything specific,” Agnew said. “1 can only say the President Is moving in all ways possible.” Agnew's and Scott’a comments came as Congress appeared to be preparing for Increased debate on Vietnam policy. HEARIN GS SCHEDULED Chief protagonist for stepping up the KNOWS NOTHING But In a separate interview, Vice President Spiro T.1 Agnew said he knew of nothing that was about to be revealed -Lm MW 7 public debate is Sen, J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., whose Foreign Relations Committee hai scheduled five days of hearings on a bill to get all U.S. troops out of Vietnam by Dec. 1,1970. “The President has stated an intention to extricate, the United States from the Scott has called for a moratorium On criticism about administration Vietnam policy. ' 1/ ’ , ’ p If war opponents “could be quiet for about 60 days, the President may well haVe some things to show the American people,” Scott said. A nationwide student strike scheduled Oct, 15 to protest continuance of the war has threatened to envelop Congress with the announcement by a number of antiwar senators and representatives that they will boycott the Capitol that day. Pulbright’s hearings—possibly televised as were simitar ones with far-reaching consequences three years ngo—are scheduled (0 begin Oct. 27. m / THIRD-PLACE HORSE She quickly explained that her winning ticket bn the third horse, Kamundu, was held, by herself, her duughter and her lson,i Larry Anthony, of Hollywood, Calif. ! “That should make things a Utile easier with Uncle Sam,” added Mrs. Mushro, who is barely over five feet tall and staunchly declares her age to be 39, “just like Jack Benny.’:’ Mrs. Mushro, a secretary at Dodge Truck in Warren, said that three times a year for the past 15 years she has jointly purchased three tickets on the Irish Sweepstakes. Her share of the winning ticket cost her $2.60. for the past 17 years she has bought two tickets a month on church raffles, “blit never won anything.” inE... MRS. BETTY MUSHRO A—2 THE PONTMC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, lPf" But Thieu Sees Long Involvement SAIGON — President Nguyen Van Thieu said today the Vietnamese people "are determined to replace the bulk of the U.S. fighting units in 1970." But he added that all American troops cannot be withdrawn as long as North Vietnamese forces remain in South Vietnam. In a major policy speech to a joint session of South Vietnam’s National Assembly and Senate, Thieu also said he thought that allied forces should remain in Vietnam as long as aggression threatens Southeast Asia. new Communist aggression is still threatening this part of the world, I think that under whatever form, the Free World forces should remain on this land." The U.S. now has 484,000 troops in Vietnam. Thieu emphasized that he remains willing to. negotiate an “acceptable” peace while determined to avoid a coalition government or surrender to the Communists. “The most important thing is that the Free World and, first of all, the U.S. ally, should not let Vietnam fall into the Communists’ hands. And as long as the Communist aggressors from the North still remain on the territory of the Republic of Vietnam, the allied forces cannot withdraw from the, Vietnamese territory. “As long as peace with guarantees has not yet been restored in Vietnam and a He asked for increased American military and financial assistance to enable his government to shoulder more of the burdens of the war. Thieu drew applause from the largely conservative legislators several times, notably when he said: “We are determined to continue to fight to safeguard freedom and democracy,*' . . .. ...... Although he referred several times to American public opinion and aligned mm-self with President Nixon’s policy of troop withdrawal, he made clear that he thinks complete U.S. withdrawal is a long way off. ■ » Sagging Morale Taking Its Toll in U.S. Military ' AP Wirwphoto Newsmen Examine Cuban MIG17 Which Landed At Florida Air Force Base Yesterday WASHINGTON (AP) - An Army of-fleer headed for a second tour as a battalion commander in Vietnam asked bitterly, “Why should I send men out to be killed?” “If we were trying to win, it would be different,” he said. “But we’re just hanging on.’’ This infantryman’s frustrations and doubts were echoed by other military professionals, all in private conversations. None would be quoted by name. An admiral whose job gives him a wide-angle view of the military establishment said morale has overtaken money as the No. 1 problem in retaining younger officers. MANY FACTORS AP Wlrtphoto A WALK IN THE SNOW — Three youngsters play follow the leader and leave their tracks in snow which blanketed Hie Denver area Friday and Saturday. The wintery accumulation measured from 8 inches to almost a foot in depth. A bright sun yesterday turned the area into an early Christmas card scene. Skyjack Pact Sought in U.N. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Eleven countries are requesting the U.N. General Assembly to ask all nations to outlaw aerial hijacking. In a letter today to Secretary-General U Thant, the countries asked that “piracy in the air” be added to the agenda of the assembly’s current session. They sought a study of /egal measures that governments might adopt against a “growing menace to commercial aircraft." They proposed a resolution calling for effective laws against seizure of aircraft in flight, punishment of hijackers, a new international convention against air piracy and compliance With the 1963 Tokyo convention “relating to the prompt release of passengers, crews and aircraft.” Countries sponsoring the resolution* are the Netherlands, Belgium Luxembourg, Canada, New Zealand, Lesotho, the Malagasy Republic, the Philippines, Argentina, the Dominican Republic and Ecuador. Interested diplomats said the assembly probably will agree this week to take up the question although there may be some abstentions. Meanwhile, black African diplomats planned to step up their attack against white governments in Africa and against South Africa's failure to release South West Africa to U.N. control. President Ahmadou Ahidjo of Cameroon was to present the General Assembly this afternoon a declaration against colonialism and racism that the African nations adopted Sept. 10 at their summit conference in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The erosion of morale seems to be a compound of factors — a war that is essentially a holding action, repeated separations from families and resulting martial turbulence, the surge of the antimilitary sentiment in Congress and the country. Air Force resignations were up nearly 50 per cent in fiscal 1989 over fiscal 1968. In the Army, officer resignations jumped about 14 per cent. The climb was smaller in the Marine Corps and Navy figures showed level, but the Navy is losing aviators and submarineers. Prison Escapee Caught in Area Chase Waterford Township police last night captured a state prison escapee following a high-speed chase in which one police car was damaged. A stray bullet shattered a light in the township fire station. Lodged in the county jail this morning was John T. Early, 29, who police say escaped from a Jackson State Prison work gang at least two months ago while serving a three to 10 year term for shooting his ex-wife. Arrested with Early, a former Farm- The Weather lngton township man, was a girl companion, Geneva L. Lieblong, 34, of 85 E. Ypsilanti, Pontiac. Police said the five-mile chase started at Early’s ex-wife’s home and ended near the police station. Pursuing township policemen tried to shoot out a tire of the car Early was driving when the chase reached the police and fire stations and township hall at M59 and Crescent Lake Road, a police spokesman said. mMMwmmmmmmmim Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and mild today and tonight, showers likely tonight. High today 72 to 78, low tonight 55 to 61. Tuesday cloudy with chance Df showers, turning cooler by afternoon or evening, high 1% to 73. Wednesday outlook: Much cooler with chance of showers. Winds south 10 to 20 miles per hour today, 5 to 10 m.p.h. tonight and 10 to 20 m.p.h. tomorrow shifting to northwest at 10 to 20 m.p.h- late tomorrow. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent today, 20, tonieht 60 and tomorrow 50. BULLET DOUSES LIGHT A bullet ricocheted into the fire station garage and knocked out a light, according to the officer. Three township police cars surrounded Early’s car at the intersection. One of the police cars was rammed in the rear by Early’s car and was disabled. Early was unarmed, police said. This Dal* In W Ytari Direction; South Sun sots Monday at 6:07 p.r G. Rapids 72 54 70 55 Duluth 70 47 Jacksonville 80 71 Houghton Lk. 66 49 Kaniat City 76 50 74 SI Lit Vegas 72 45 54 Lot Angelet 04 59 59" Miami Beach 04 75 Milwaukee 64 60 New Orleans 17 75 68 42 Omaha Weather: Cloudy a.m., rain .3 Inch i 67 51 Phoenix S. Ste. Marla 64 si Pittsburgh (at recorded downtown) Traverse C. 59 56 Raleigh 65 35 St. Loult Albuquerque 63 39 I. Lake City 75 56 San Antonio Lowest temperature an temperature 5$ 50 Seattle Partly sunny Sal. and Sun. 66 Washington 67 47 The chase began when Early’s ex-wife Mrs. Shirley Eaton, of 6222 Tangent, told police Early was driving back and forth in front of her home. Early was sentenced in November 1968 on a charge of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder after shooting his ex-wife as she left work in Farmington Township in August 1967. FLED IN LANSING Police said Early escaped by walking Birmingham No New School Talks Set The problem is growing, too, so far as attracting junior officers is concerned, with a general forecast that the antimilitary climate will affect college ROTC noticeably this. year. He recalled how, on a recent tour of ROTC units, one cadet told him: “General, you don’t know how rough it is to wear a unlfdrm on campus." BIRMINGHAM — A spokesman for the Birmingham Education Association (BEA) could give no indication this morning when contract negotiations between the BEA and the board of . education would resume. It was previously expected that negotiations would resume this week following a formation of a new BEA negotiation team. ★ ★ k * The BEA elected not to ratify a tentative contract two weeks ago because of weak middle steps in the salary scale. . Teachers, however, have stayed on the job since classes began Sept. 4. Mrs. Carol S. Thompson of 4423 W. Maple has been named public, relations coordinator for Junior Achievement of Southeastern Michigan. Cong Is Sticking to Ho's War Aims PARIS (UPI) — The head of the Viet-cong’s provisional revolutionary government vowed today to follow the will of the late President Ho Chi Minh and fight on to victory in the Vietnam War. Nguyen Huu Tho told the French Communist party newspaper L’Humanite his followers will remain “faithful to the teachings and the historic testament” of Ho. The Hanoi government a few days after Ho’s death was announced Sept. 3, disclosed his will implored the North Vietnamese people to continue the fight against the United States to victory. Allied diplomats said no progress could be expected at the talks at least until Hanoi works out leadership and other problems caused by Ho’s death. U. S. Border Checks 'Choking Drug Supply' away from a work gang at the treasury building in Lansing. Early was chased last night around his ex-wife’s subdivision and then north on Airport Road to M59 and toward Crescent Lake Road, according to police. Police said Early was driving his companion’s car. She was a passenger and was arrested for aiding and abetting a fugitive. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Operation Intercept has cut the flow of narcotics from Mexico enough to make marijuana and heroin twice as expensive as before in some United States cities and unavailable in some others, a spokesman at operation headquarters says. “Generally the price Is almost doubled,” the spokesman said yesterday, two weeks after the intensive federal border-check system began. "But more important is that much of it is unavailable or extremely scarce. High Court Begins Busy Term NATIONAL WEATHER - Rain is expected tonight over a belt extending from the Great Lakes to southern Louisiana, in the northern Rocky Mountains and in parte of northern Minnesota and North Dakota. It will be wanner in the Northeast and-acroas much of the West i and colder from the Midwest to southern Texas. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court opens a busy term today with a new chief justice while a fight roars in the Senate over the than picked to fill the vacant chair to his extreme left. The new chief, Warren E. Btirger, and seven holdover justices face decisions on such controversial matters as churches’ tax exemptions* use of the death penalty, the priority drafting of war protesters and the rights of Negroes and the underprivileged. / RIGID OPPOSITION But fallowing tradition, the opening session is brief and really with little substance. Panel Will Hear Lakeside Gripes Mrs. Thompson will work with 26 junior achievement centers and all high schools throughout the metropolitan Detroit area to promote the organization’s action program among teenagers. The residents of Pontiac’s only federal housing project, Lakeside Homes will get a chance to air 'their grievances to a panel of city officials tonight. The residents will talk to City commissioners and housing and planning officials at 7:30 p.m. at City Hall, East University and East Wide Track. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — “How to Buy an Original Work of Art,” will be the topic of a slide-illustrated lecture by Ray Fleming at the Bloomfield Township Public Library at 8 p.m. Thursday. Fleming is head of the art department at Kingswood School Cranbrook. A question-and-answer period will follow the lecture, which is open to the public. Delegations from the 400-home project on the southwest side, adjacent to Crystal Lake, have complained of insufficient police and fire protection and lack of other services. Taxis and ambulances refuse to go there, residents complain.- The area has been the scene in the past of disturbances and rock-throwing incidents involving police and firemen. On Saturday morning, the Ethnic Club for children ages 6 and up will hold its first meeting from 10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Winifred Crossley, coordinator for childrens’ work at the Michigan State Libraty, will tell two stories and lead a game from Africa. Different parts of the world will be featured on alternate Saturdays. Joseph Clark, photographer and poet, will speak before the Bloomfield Camera Club at 8 p.m. next Monday in the Cranbrook Institute of Science. . Victor Kuffler also will discuss photographic and sound equipment. The meeting was sought by the Lakeside Tenants Council, which is-leading an effort to beautify the project as well as restore order. Members are urged to bring their best slides and prints in both color and black, and whjje for discussion and criticism Meanwhile,' /President Nixon’s nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth is in serous trouble. Haynsworth, picked by Nixon and At-ty. Gen. John N. Mitchell In August to succeed Abe Fortas, has run into rigid Opposition from labor, liberal and civil rights groups. ' Some of them have accused the federal appeals court judge of unethical judicial behavior, an allegation that takes on deeper1 meaning since it-was an ethics flap tfiat brought about Fortes’ resignation last May. / At Harvey, you get Professional Decorator service of no charge. Or you may take a chance and use your oWn good judgment. HARVEY FURNITURE 4405 Highland Rd. (MS9) Corner Pontiac Lake Road Open 9i30 till 9; Tuesday ond Saturday till 6 Opon Sunday 1 to 5 P.M. /, ft jlMj yt LanSMtABUtBh&Sl for Over $6 Mil TROY — Jolfit acquisition /of 180 acres of property adjacent to 1* *75 on 14 Mile Road (Oakland Mall area) was announced during the weekend by Campbell Development Go. of Detroit and New England Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Boston, Mass. ★ * w Purchase price for two separate tracts of land — 80- and 100-acre sites — was in excess of 56 million, the two firms stated. j * * * “Some, ef/the-land uses under consideration are light industrial, ‘office and those services necessary for the support of the primary development," said Michael G. Damone, executive vice president of Campbell Development. }. * W W Damone said the ultimate plans would include development of sites f o r purchase by individual companies as well as construction of buildings for lease. ‘ANOTHER EXAMPLE’ Abram T. Collier, president of New England Life, said his company’s participation in the development “is. another example of our real estate In* vestment philsophy in which we desire to participate as an active partner rather than as simply a lender. w w ★ “In addition, we are very pleased fp become involved in a project which encourages the ‘continued economic growth of the Detroit metropolitan area.” * ★ * The Troy development will be the second cooperative undertaking by Campbell and New England Life. In 1968, the two,firms b^gan the creation of the Ashland Industrial Center, a 120-million industrial park in Chicago. In addition,' the two firms cooperatively own several Industrial parks in the Detroit area, including the Madison Heights Industrial Center, which touches the southewast corner of the newly acquired Troy property and additional centers in Westland and Taylor in Wayne County. ‘GROWTH CORRIDOR’ . The two companies pointed out that the Troy acquisition was located in the prime “growth corridor’’ linking Detroit and Flint along 1-75, the major north-south interstate highway through Michigan. w * w The two tracts of land were purchased frorfi the estate of the late James M, Robbins, Detroit industrialist and auto racer who died in a 1966 plane crash. Historical Museum Seeking Volunteers TROY — An organizational tea for the Museum Volunteer Group of the Troy Historical Museum will be tomorrow at 1 p.m. at the museum, 60 W. Wattles. Anyone interested in being a volunteer is welcome. Richard Drue and Mrs. W. D. Bollinger are cochairmen. More Than a Conversation Piece Old Cider Unit Is Pressed Into Service PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - The magic of a grandfather’s treasures are more than just memories for Mrs. Franklin Williams of 2148 Snellbrook. Mrs. Williams and her husband were looking through her grandfather’s farm In Mainstee one day and discovered an old-fashioned apple cider press. “When I first saw it, I didn’t know what it was,’’ she said. ★ * * Mrs. Williams said the press must be at least 75 years old, “My mother remembers It always being at the farm and k> does my 78-year-old aunt," she said. WWW The press has proved to be more than just a conversation piece around the Williams home. Classes of schoolchildren, Boy Scouts and the Golden-Agers Club from Gloria Del Lutheran Church have visited the Williams home to press their own apple cider. * * * After griding the apples, the mash Is caught in a muslin-lined bucket and then pressed into a juice, i. w w w ' There has been only one accident with the press, Mrs. Williams said: “One time the muslin broke while we were pressing, and the mash sprayed the entire side of the garage. Unfortunately, one of our close friends was standing on that aide,’’ ; ■ response. Some 35 per cent felt that schools have a responsibility to teach sex education, 33 per cent indicated mixed feelings and 27 per cent indicated strong negative feelings in personal comments attached to the survey. Clarkston Strike Is in 2nd Week CLARKSTON » The strike by the Clarkston Education Association (CEA) against the board of education entered its second week today with still no definite word as to when classes would resume.. It Is expected that the outcome of an injunction suit hearing In Oakland County \Circu)t Court today w 111 determine the future course of negotiations and provide more definite indication regarding the resumption of classes. * * * The injunction suit was filed Friday afternoon by Pontiac attorney Wallace McClay on the behalf of James F. Peters of 3723 Maiden Lbne, Waterford Township, a Clarkston School District resident. ' i The Injunction was filed as a class action suit against both ther i'KA and the schqol board with Peters representing other parents In the school district. W W W The suit asks the court to order the Clarkston Board of Education and the CEA to meet and bargain In good faith until differences are settled. By NED ADAMSON SHELBY TOWNSHIP - A carpet on the floor without a title on the door may appear on the surface to be something of an extraneous expense. Particularly If that carpeting is in a public school building supported by taxpayers dollars. w * * But at the gleaming new Davis Junior High building on Plumbrook in Shelby Township, the Utica Community School District brass think differently. At Davis, there is carpeting everywhere — in the principal’s office, the laboratories, all of the classrooms, even in the cafeteria. MAINTENANCE SAVING The Utica administration believes carpeting on the floor will bo vogue in many schools in the near future. The reason — savings on maintenance expenses. * * * ' “At the outset, wall-to-wall carpeting throughout most of the building is ex-pchsive, but over the years maintenance and janitorial costs will be greatly reduced." a school district spokesman said. * '*' * “Since carpeting does not require dally cleaning and polishing as do bare floors we can reduce the janitorial staff right away,’’ he said. And this savings multiplied over the years will more than pay for Itself. And, It gives the school building a fine appearance." ★ * * Carpeting also reduces noise problems In the building, according' to another jjj Cider Tim* Pol* Williamses And Son, Tim school official. “And I can’t help but think that a carpet on the floor rather boosts everyone’s morale a bit," he said. Weekend Toll Is 21 on State Highways By United Press International A young wife riding on the back of a motorcycle driven by her husband died when a car swerved In front of them on a road west of New Baltimore this weekend, bringihg the Michigan traffic fatality count to 21. Police were holding the driver of the liar pending an investigation by the Macomb County Prosecutor’s office into the death of Sharon Francisco,' 16, of New Baltimore. Her husband, Richard, 18, was in fair condition today in a Mount Clemens hospital. WWW Two double-fatality crashes — one in Jackson County and the other in Genesee County — also were recorded over the weekend. Larence Grizzel, 21, and Perry Deane, 22, both of Grand Blanc, died late Saturday in Moundy Township o f Genesee County when their car apparently went out of control, left the road and struck a tree. The car was traveling at a high rate of speed, police said. CHICAGO COUPLE A Chicago couple, Mr. and Mrs. David Holcomb, died in a head-on collision on 1-94 near Jackson yesterday afternoon. Other weekend traffic deaths in Michigan included: , Robert White, 63, Trenton, struck by a car yesterday as he was attempting to cross a road in Woodhaven. Mary Jane Merrill, 19, Midland, passenger in a car that ran off the road and struck a tree in Deerfield Township of Isabella County yesterday. Albert Morrison, 58, of Wayne struck by a car in Livonia Saturday. HIT AND RUN VICTIM Philip Paul Hardison, 66, Detroit, victim of a hit-and-run driver at a Detroit intersection early Saturday morning. Christopher E. Fisher, 9, of St. Charles, struck by a car yesterday in the small Saginaw County community. Arthur Cole, 57, of Grant whose car collided with another yesterday at an intersection in Ashland Township of Newaygo County. Glenn C. Willnow, 61, Adrian, whose car was in a two-car smashup in Romeo Township of benawee County Saturday night. MAN FROM TROY Jay Jaeger, 31, of 21353 Lovington, Troy, whose car was struck by a truck at a Detroit intersection early Saturday. Dominec Cavello, 18, Vanderbilt, who lost control of his car early Saturday on U.S. 27 in Wilmot Township of Cheboygan County and struck a tree. Nora Augusta Loucks, 39, of Clio, whose car was struck broadside Saturday morning at an intersection in Theford Township of Genesee County. Donald W. Cronkight, 25, of Flint,’ who lost control of his car early Saturday in Roscommon Township of Roscommon County and ran off the road into a pond. rHE AreaNews PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBKH «, 10(19 Mixed on Schools Parent Poll Tallied WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A surprisingly high percentage of parents in the school district have mixed feelings about the basic academic program, a recently collated community survey shows. The report says 31 per cent of those surveyed have mixed feelings and only 40 per cent indicate confidence. * * * The four-page survey was sent to some 1,700 homes selected in a random samplling of the district’s four precincts last spring. Some 360 replies — or 21.5 per cent of the total — were received. Die sampling covers an estimated 7 per cent of the families in the district. SPECIFIC COMMENTS Comments on the curriculum were quite specjfic. Some 70 respondents called for more emphasis on reading, mathematics and basic study skills. Several also suggested more emphasis on basic skills in each learniing area before launching additional programs or innovative practices. w * w Improvements in the scope and quality of the vocational curriculum were next on the list of requests. ' Better jobtraining programs and more relevance in the content of technical courses were asked. Art, music and library programs did not appear to be of much concern to most answering the survey. Some 65 per cent of the returns, however, Indicated that an elementary foreign language program was of moderate to great importance. SEX EDUCATION Sex education, which Is listed under health curriculum, received a mixed Beauty of County's Fall Colors Painted in Leaves of Brochure Most of Oakland County is recommended by the Southeast Michigan Tourist Association (SEMTA) in its annual fall color season tour guide, “Autumn in Southeast Michigan." The SEMTA brochure lists 10 areas in the eight counties served by the travel Information center. Free copies of the brochure may be obtained by writing SEMTA, 1404 Broderick Tower, Detroit, 48226. WWW “All the suggested tours promise exciting fall color sightseeing," said Sidney L. Baker of 833 Ludlow, Rochester, SEMTA executive vice president. “Whether for just a leisurely drive or a weekend trip, travelers can see some of the finest color areas in the midwest/.’ Tour areas include the Monroe area, the Irish Hills, Metropolitan Detroit and Wayne County (including fall activities at Dearborn’s Greenfield Village and Henry Ford Museum), the Pinckney Recreation area in Washtenaw County, the St. Clair River area, drives adjacent to the Lake Huron shoreline and two Oakland County tours. But Savings Explained School Called on Carpet the Pontiac press, Monday, October », iim It Seems to Me... Soviets Run to form: Without the Slightest doubt, the Russians stand as the all-time international liars of recorded history. Treaties mean what they say as long as they suit the infamous Reds. When that ceases, the conniving Russians are done with their promises. They disavow the truth. They “lie by the clock.” Currently, our good neighbors to the north are the victims. The Moscow scoundrels are repudiating a three-year wheat agreement that they signd with the Canadians. When the Kremlin found itself running short of this precious commodity, officials agreed to take 336 million bushels of Canadian wheat over a three year period. They signed an agreement. ★ ★ ★ Canada thus had an “assured” market for one §ixth of a stepped-up production. The government encouraged farmers to “go all out” and produce all the wheat of which they were capable.- The farmers" complied. Canadian records were broken. During this period, the Russians went to work on their own farms and stepped up production perceptibly with the adoption of modern methods. Further, Old Dame Nature smiled benevolently on the Russian crops and as a result they quite outdid themselves. ★ ★ ★ Then the Asiatic stinkers found themselves hard pressed for cash, so they told the Canadians to forget the rest of the wheat They didn’t want it. The contract expired the first of August and the thieving Reds have only taken 58 per cent of their guarantee. ★ ★ ★ Canada’s repeated efforts to schedule meetings for a “discussion of the situation” have resulted in absolutely nothing. The Russians duck, dodge and simply evade by shrugging their shoulders and looking complacently out a nearby window^ Theysimply won’t face it. ★ ★ ★ A few definite meetings have been scheduled but as the dates approach, the contemptible Russians announce another postponement. “The song is ended. “But the melody lingers on.” Traffic Stopped . . . Our Federal Government discovered huge quantities of marijuana crossing the borders between this country and Mexico. Crews were dispatched to terminate the crookedness. And what happened? It sounds impossible. ★ ★ ★ Certain Mexican cities have registered loud and strident protests with the United States, declaring that we are seriously affecting Mexican retail trade in border com- , munities. They want this illegal procedure to continue. Definite areas in Mexico discover that the cessation of this traffic raises havoc financially. The bums that handle the stuff are gone and concomitant activities have slowed down to a walk. Here is one of the few times on record that the termination of illegal smuggling has caused a hue and outcry against positive action. This places International Goodwill on a pretty low level. ★ ★ ★ But you can rest assured. The termination stands. And in Conclusion . . Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of diets from Earl Warren’s Supreme Court. The your peripatetic reporter: nation will watch with interest. Our President has begged the U.N. to give ★ ★ ★ high priority to an agreement by which all na- I was in New York the day the Mets tions would deal harshly with every airplane hi- cinched the division title and the big city jacker apprehended..........., Overheard: »“* *"«* “J «■£** h' complete way to cover gray... to soften or tone lightened hair. Our stylist shapes your curls jipiuriiru nuts, vus - — - - . and swirled coif, and before it’s set banci-t till has done it’s wonder-work; Color instantly, then shampoos out easily when you wish. No peroxide, no after rinse. Vibrant new colors are awaiting you with FancUFull and a styled coiffeur creation adds the crowning touch Cut, Set, and Roux Fanci-Full Rinse .. Our Delne PERMANENT WAVE , m include, set, flil| Mid Koux Fanci-Full Rinif • only O HOLLYWOOB BEAUTY Open Mominaa at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Baxley Mkt. 338-7660 (Jimlily Clranbin Shirr 1929 The couple was feted at reception in the Waterford CIA building following the rites. The daughter of Mr. and Jose Villarreal of Gage Street chose a gown of satin with lace and crystal accents. Velma Mejia and Frank Rivera attended the couple as maid of honor and best man The son Severn G, Howard Street and his bride are honeymooning in Mexico. of Mr. and Mrs. Mejia 'French Youth Alcoholism Rate Is ' Mrs. Stewart Peck of Birmingham for further information. MEDICAL ASS’TS The annual membersip dinner of Oakland County Medical, Assistants Society is to be held Wednesday at Northwood Inn. Nettie O'Brien, fashion coordinator for the J. L-------- Company, will be the guest speaker. New officers for the season are: Mrs. Robert Lenz, president; Mrs. Clarence Heth, president-elect; Mrs. R. Donald Hendrickson and Elizabeth Fabeck, secretaries; and Mrs. Clyde Ging, Dertinger-Klomp A reception in the bride’s parents home followed the wedding ceremony ot Kathleen Klomp and Daniel G. Dertinger. They were married, Friday evening in St. Williams Catholic Church, Walled Lakt. r. and Mrs. Alvin W. Klomp of East Highland Road, White Lake Township received' guests following their daughter’s marriage. PARIS (AP) — A doctor says one of France’s moat self-satisfied notions—that the natlon’i young people don't really care for alcohol—Is just another illu-West sion. Dr. Paul le'Go, a physician for the French National Railways, told a medical conference here Friday that the situation remains serious. len Tyler and the bridegroom’s brother, Thomas, assisted the couple as maid of honor and beat nun. The bride chose a street length crepe dress and carried a colonial bouquet. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Raymond Dertingor of Wolverine Lake and the late Mr. Dertinger. Nome Officers Clean Winter FUN and LEISURE Elected to office in the Nursing Alumni of Oakland Community College recently were Martha Collins, president Sheron Chisholm and Jeannt White, vice president!; Karen Messner, secretary and Irene, Spears, treasurer. Carments now! Cold, w«i rain and mow I* Ju«t around tho oornar and now’* ihr lime to frenhen and waterproof winter wardrobe*; Fox Profeuional Drycleunin* add* like-new brightne** Le Go said that of 740 job candidates under 28, he refused blre 42 on the basis that they «re alcoholics. He blariied the situation on the low price and availability of wine in France and the acceptance of heavy drinking. The physician said 13 to 18 per cent of the male population was alcoholic. An investigation In one large firm, he added, showed that 95 per cent of the work force drank more than a quart of wine per day. John Duff, student Michigan State University, will be guest speaker at the Thursday meeting in the Claire Drive, West Bloomfield Township home of Mrs. Jack Killian. He will tell of Ida experiences in Honduras under the International Farm Youth Exchange program (IFYE), one of the major WNFGA projects. Le Go's report came while other physicians were discussing what they described as a massive increase of venereal disease In France. In Paris, it was stated, the number of cases has gone up 400 per cent in the past 15 yeari^ Women Suffer WITH BLADDER IRRITATION Common XMamr or Blrfdar Inlta-tionaiSaot ————— — Beet tops are high in nutritive alue and very tasty when cooked. Wash well and cook tho same as you do spinach and other greens. Drain when tender and serve with a sour cream sauce seasoned witti a bit of horseradish, salt, and pepper. 5 719, ’^TK WIvST lll ltON \ IK 1-15*6 ALL PERMANENTS gBS Includes All Thist 1 - New Luotrei Shampoo 8-Flalterlnc Hair Cut 3- Lanolin Neutralising 4- Smart Stylo Setting NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY HOLLYWOOB BEAUTY Opan Morning* at 8 AM. 78 N. Saginaw Ovar Baaloy Mkt. 338-7660 Membership is open to any woman working as a medical assistant in a doctor’s office. Interested persons may contact Mrs. Leonard MacAbee, Orchid Street. WNFGA Mrs. Edwin Koepke has been elected president of Pine Lake Estates branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, for the 1989-70 season. She will be assisted by Mrs. David Bradbury, vice president; Mrs. Kenneth LaForest Mrs. Eugene Lochner, secretaries and Mrs. George Prain, treasurer. Lose 10 lbs. in 10 days on Grapefruit Diet HOLLYWOOD. CALIF. (Special) — This Is the revolutionary grapefruit diet that everyone is suddenly talking about. Thousands of copies have been pessed from hand to hand In factories, plants and offices throughout the U.S. Because this diet really works. We have testimonials reporting on its success. If you follow it sxactly, you should lose 10 pounds In 10 days. No weight loss In the first four days but you will suddenly drop 5 pounds on the 5th day. Thereafter lose one pound a day unt I the 10th day. then you will lose 1 Vi pounds every two day* until you get down to your proper weight. Best of ell, there will be no hunger pangs. Revised and enlarged, thle dial lets you stuff yourself with formerly forbid' don" foods, such as steak* fried chicken, graves, mayonnaise, lobster swimming in butter, bacon fats, sausages and' scrambled eggs and still lot* weight. The secret behind this quick weight loss" diet Is simple. Fat does not form fat. And the grapefruit juice In this diet acts at e catalyst (the trigger"), to start the fat burning process. You stuff yourself on the permitted food listed in the diet plan, and still lose unsightly fat and excess body fluids. A copy of this startling successful diet can be obtained by sending $2 to Citrus Dist Plan 5211 W. Jefferson L. A, Ctlif. 90016 Money-back guarantee, after trying the diet you have not lost 7 pounds In the first seven days, anothsr 6 pounds In the next 7 days.- and I Vs pounds every two days thereafter, (Imply return the diet plan and your $2 will be refunded promptly and without argument. Tear out thle message *s a reminder. Decide now to regain the trim attractive figure of your youth. dress up your home for F*all! Our skilled workmen let us REUPHOLSTER your worn furniture at our factotyto-you prices and , SAVE , 30% to 40%! WILLIAM WRIGHT EASY BUDGET faralWN Mtk.ri unit (f>hol«i»r»r, ^!|700ra^ Resting on the ring pillow are the veil and cord that Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Macatangay used to mark their traditional Philippine wedding Saturday. ENROLL NOW!! Clast Limited To 20 Students, So HVrry. Quality Training by ley** PABLO’S SCHOOL of BEAUTY BONDED KNITS (LININGS ARE ACETATE TRICOT) party season coming up hero are tome fettive antwert bonded metallic knitt acetate & metallic bonded “tea moth" avitco acetate & nylon bonded acrylic knitt Values to $2.98 Yd. 58"/64" widths I4 ” V1.-/! >’ % /f/p J *--4i t:> V'L , fcMi THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER «, 1969 / ■ ' IMt /: Adrian 42, Geneva College V Amherrt 27, American Int'l If Bates College 26, Trinity College 21 / Bethany, W.Va. 14, AHagheny 7 Boston Cenege 28. Tulane 24 , ieein Unlv ft, Harvard 10 Bridgeport 21, Central Conn St 7 Brockport State 47, Nichols College 20 Bucknell 24, Gettyaburg Col 21 Clarion ColWM 21, Lock Haven 7 C. W. Post 20, Alfred 10 Dartmouth SB, Holy Cross 4 Delaware S3, Massachusetts 21 Delaware Vel 10, Xycomlng Col 0 Dickinson Col SO.^warlhmore 31 Drexel Tech 14, Southern Conn 7 E Stroudsburg 23, Kutltown 17 Grove City 27, Adalbert 4 Hamilton Col 38, Rensselaer 22 Howard Unlv 20, St Paul's Col I Indiana U. Pa. 27, Edlnboro State 0 llhece 34, Cortland State 20 Jersey City 15, Maine Maritime 3 Johns Hopkins 33, Franklin A Mar 20 Kpnt State 17, Buffalo 8 Kings Point 23. Union College 3 Lafayette 4i, Hofstra Unlv 2S Lebanon Valley 8, Urslnus 3 Mains 35,............... Mansfield '___ . , Montclair 20, Curry Collage 4 H Haverford Col 0 COast Guard 0 10, CarnMle-Mellon 8 Pennsylvania 23, Brown 2 Princeton 21, Columbia 7 Rochester 21, Williams Col 0 Rutgers 21, Cornell 7 St Lawrence 27, Hobart College 10 SHMery Bosk 34, Stilpponsburg 31 Springfield 24, MbrMM 8 Susquehanna 31, Juniata Collage 14 Temple Si Wayne St, Mich o Texas ASM 20. Army 13 Thiel College 21, washingtn & Jet 0 Tufts 40. Colby College 13 ■ Vermont 30, Nermeastem 31 Villanova 57, Santa Clara I Wagner 10, Uetala College o Waynesboro 20. Calif State, Pa. 0 Wesleyan 21, Bowdoln to West Chester 40, Mlllersvllle St 12 Wilkes College 4, Moravian Col 0 Worcester 15, Yale 4& Colgate Alabama 33, Mlaalsslppl 32 Alabama ASM 23, Morris Brown 17 St 26, Eton College 20 late 20, Tennessee Tech 2: Kentucky 3 ....man 21, Furman Unlv 21 Catawba Col 4J, Enrwry A Henry H Central St. Ohio 0, Kentucky State 7 Centre College 14, Weiahlngtn 8, Lee . Chattanoogo 7, Middle Tenn St 3 Citadel lyuggdMabU South Caroline Idaho 31, J.C. Smith 18, NO Carolina AST 14 Lane Collage 24 .Morehouse Col 12 Louisiana State 43, Baylor 8 Louisville 24, Ceylon 17 Maryland 10, Wake Forest 14 Maryville Col |‘ Fla 23, Ne Carolina St 13 No Caroline Col 34, Morgan State 7 , Northern littAu 18, Marsheil Unlv 17 Pittsburgh 14,/Duke 12 . Quantico arlnb 44, Pensacolfi Navy 4 Randolph-Mecon 31, Towson State 22 Richmond 17, Virginia Tech 10 SW Memphis 14, Washington, Mo .7 Tennessee SS, Memphis State 14 Virginia 88, William A Mary IS West Virginia 32, Virginia Military 0 West Carolina 14, Jacksonville St 7 West Maryland 17, PJA.C. Colleges 4 Wolford 42, Preebytarlon Col I Akron 40, Ball State o Albion 22, Waboeh 17 Arkansas St Col 34, Missouri South IS Auguslona, III. 2A Wheaton College C Austin College 35, Nebraska Waslay 3 ----- ---- . ~Irt|n. college 2 Muskingum Col 1 Tabor 0 Bowling Groan 21, West Michigan 10 Capital Unlv 42, Hiram Carroll. Wlec. 14, Nortr Carthage Col 41, North Cant Michigan 21, Illinois St I Cent Missouri St 41, Eastern Illinois Chedron Slate 34, Wayne St, Neb 20 Cincinnati l7 ,Xavier 14 Coe College 54, Carleton ollege 27 Col 24, SI Thomas Col 4 T, III. 41, Lakt'Forest 40 a College 0 College 13 Doane College 40. Midland 14 ■ I Unlv 27, North Toxpt St 23 Hemllno Unlv 30, Guslev Adolphus 13 ..............East Michigan 13 St Cloud Sttto 0 j Unlv 17, Illinois Wesley 13' i College 25, Northwest Wise 10 jri 40, Michigan 17 iiri, Roll* 42. Brtdloy 14 Missouri Volloy 20, Huron Collage 7 Monmouth Col 30, Rl^on Cohere 0 Mornlngslde 14, Auguslona, S.D. 4 Nebraska 42, Minnesota 14 No Dakota St 24, South Dakota i Awesome Offensive Displays By the Associated Press Records are made to be broken and apparently/ there’s not much college football defenses can do about it. Bear Bryant pretty well summed it up after bis Alabama team outlasted Mississippi S3-32 Saturday night: ' * ^ dr n # “11 was Mississippi doing so well offensively rather than us doing poorly on defense,” he said. With Archie Manning of the 20th-fankea Ole Miss completing 33 of 52 for 436 yards aha/ 15th-ranked Alabama’s Scott Hunter connecting on 22 of 29 for 300, the two Southeastern Conference antagonists set 20 offensive records—one national, 36-0 as lyllckey Cureton scored seven SEC, nine Mississippi and three Alabania marks. The national record was 55 Records Fall at Waterford Hills Track records fell a t Waterford Hills’ Fall Classics as Garrett Van Camp of Farmington, Bill Petree of Riverview and Bob Clements of Utica posted three victories apiece in sports car races over weekend. The F-production title was annexed by Bill Larson, Utica. Paul Prill, Westland, finished second, and Ray Brooks, Livonia, third. Larson piloted a Lotus Seven, Prill, a Sunbeam, the I and Brooks, an MG-A. Dave Rossman of Dearborn Ottawa U, Kora. 12, Emporia St Col 10 Penn Stilt 17, KonHo St Unlv 14 Prlncipia Col 17, Ron Polytechnic 0 Purdue 34, Stanford 35 igtburg 13 liuao Wesley S St Olal Collage 55, Grinned Col 21 SE Missouri 31, Evansville 24 Sou State, S.D, If, So Dakota Tech 4 Southwest, Kans. 21, Bethany. Kans. 10 Syracuse 43, Wisconsin j Jawsl 58, Colorado Collage 24 im Penn 34, Dubuqua 13 _____ Eau Claire 21, wise, Slovens PI wise. Lacrosse 17, St Norbort 13 Wise, Oshkosh 48, Wise, Rlv Falls 22 Wise, PliHtvIll* 44. Stout State f Van Camp dashed to his vie- ran away with the Sedan-3 class lories in Formula Vee, twice in his Mini Cooper. Don Burry, cracking the course record, Hazel Park, was second in a setting a standard of 62.4 miles Mini and Roy P a s s e r e 11 i, per hour. Petree established his Drayton Plains, picked up third mark in Sedan-4 class of 62 mph in a Cortina, in a Carmaro and Clemens * * * posted a 60.5 mph record in G- Dave Johnson, Grosse Ille, won I production with a Triumph H-production honors in a Sprite, Spitfire. with Andy Fulton, Dearborn * * * [Heights, second, and Larry Van Camp also holds the paimer> Detroit, third, track mark in E-production R0n Reeves, Detroit, won in with a Porsche; Clemens is the U.production tn A Corvette and Formula C champion; and Tim Sweeney, Grosse Pointe Petree had p r e v i o u s 1 y woods, captured second in a established the mark in B-pro- camaro. Denny Waszkiewicz, duction in a Corvette. |st. Clair Shores, won B-pro- Chuck Bartlebaugh, the 22- duction in a Corvette, and year-old speedster from Carman Alcinl, Detroit, was Rochester, also won three races second, also in a Corvette, over the weekend as he went warren Tope, Pontiac, a unchallenged through two 15" j novice driver at the beginning mile events and then won the o{ tj,e season, was the Sedan-3 final 22.5-mile feature with ease winner ln the feature 22.5-mile in his McLaren Ford. ■ ★ ★ ★ I Jeff Lance, Drayton Plains^ walked off with the Formula feature race in his Lotus 51, with Bill Hallendal of Flint, second, and Dave Shook, Rochester, i third. race. He was followed by Dave Rossman, Dearborn, and Dick Fife, Ann Arbor, second and third, respectively. TIRE} TROUBLE John Greenwood, Pontiac, took A-productlon honors in the 15-lap feature despite tire trouble. Bob Najmowicz, Detroit, took second, and Ron Reeves, Detroit, third, as Corvettes slammed the event. Heather Londergan, Detroit,; was the only woman to score a victory. She piloted her Formula Vee to a win in a 10-lap event, with Craig Hostettler, Defiance, O., second, and Bill Groth, Detroit, third. WWW Larry Clingman, Waterford’s over-all point leader, virtually nailed down the season's completions, erasing the standard of 53 set by Texas-El Paso and New Mexico in 1967 and UTEP and Brigham Young ln 1966. ANOTHER SHOW Eighth-ranked Purdue and 17th-rated Stanford put on another record-smashing show, with Purdue taking a 36-35 squeaker on five scoring passes and a game-winning two-point conversion toss by Mike Phipps. Top-ranked Ohio State rolled over Washington 41-14 with Jim Otis scoring three times and Rex Kern twice. Sophomore Ly-dell Mitchell ran for 123 yards, including a 58-yard TD, as No. 2 Penn Soate held off Kansas State 17-14. W W W -Arkansas’ Bill Montgomery and Chuck Dicus teamed up for two scores as the third-ranked Razorbacks turned back Texas Christian 24-6 and No. 4 Texas toyed with Navy 56-17, using its first-stringer? less than half the game. Clarence Davis rambled for 181 yards and Jimmy Jone on gallops of 61 and 75 yards. SUPER SOPH John Reaves, Florida’s super soph, threw his ninth and 10th scoring passes, both to Carlos Alvarez, as the 12th-ranked Gators defeated Florida State 21-6 and I6th-ranked Louisiana State crushed Baylor 63-8 in a game so one-sided that Andy Hamilton, a second-string back, scored four touchdowns. West Virginia, No. 18, and Wyoming, No. 19r rolled to easy victories. The Mountaineers whipped hapless VMI 32-0, the Keydeis suffering their third consecutive shutout, and the Cowboys pummeled Colorado State U: 39-3. w ' w w Other offensive displays were provided by Houston, which mauled Mississippi State 74-0 as Gary Mullins threw three touchdown passes to Elmo Wright and Robert Newhouse gained 245 yards on the ground; Ida- ho’s Steve Olson, who passed for 303 and five TDs in,a 31-21 upspt of Southern Mississippi; Album’s Pat Sullivan, four scoring passes in a 44-3 rout of Kentucky; Cornell’s Ed Marianro, 245 yards rushing despite a 2147 loss to Rutgers; Steve Ramsey of North Texas State, who hurled his tesm lost to Drske 27-23, and Dennis Shaw of San Diego State, five TD passes in a 55-21 romp over San Joae. Orton vi lie Driver Wins Drag Event Floyd Williams of Ortonville piloted Jerry Sidock's stock Mustang, War Pony, to the class B championship and overall crown at Sunday’s drag races at Lapeer International Dragway. Williams won the. class and overall championship with nine runs of nine seconds and jinder, championship with a victory in threw three touchdown passes his MG-B in E-production. Vic Skirmants, Warren, was second and DoUg Miller, Plyrhouth, third, both driving Porsches. Chris Gahman, Royal Oak, as, fifth-rated Southern California walloped Oregon State 31-7. Oklahoma, ranked sixth, was! idle but Georgia, No. 7, crushed South Carolina 41-16, breaking! SAVE MONEY ON USED . won D-production in his Lotus open a 14-10 contest with 27 Super Seven. Tom Varner, points in the final quarter. Rochester, in a TR-4, was sec- Tennessee, No. 10, dnibbed-ond; and Dan Gibboney, Fraser, Memphis State 55-16 and UCLA,, was third in a Stinger. I No. 11. blanked Northwestern: Wo'roNow Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (Wb Also Pick Up Junk Cars) FE 2-0200 Pontiac Serap 13S Branch Lathrup Tops Farmington It Arkonut 24. Ttxit * Davidson Col 17, Trl Henderson St 21, Arl---- Houston Unlv 74. Mississippi SI 0 Howard Payne IS, Texas Lutherar Lamar Toch f. New Mexico SI 7 for I-L Crown Steplwn F Austin 21. Torloton Slot* 17 Texas 34, Navy 17 _ _ ------ East Taxaa St 28. Texas Col All 17, Angalo St_7 ° It 34, Sam Housto Texas, El Paso 4 Albion State's Lone Unbeaten Hillsdale, Wayne 11s Suffer 1 st Lasses fir Fall for people who are tired of high prices St ts, Whitworth Col 3 Southfield Lathrup charged 1S away from Farmington in the jeasi.^n Oregon 20, southarno. “""7 •.-•••"••o-”-- -■-_ (East Wash Si 14, West Washington 7 second half . Saturday to move Hawaii univ so, pygot sound 20 back into contention for the ISJRS ft unfv 4LPoSwh4 7 r*‘ Inter-Lakes League footbaU j&m m7 title. vf- Lathrup led only 8-6 at the half, but exploded for three touchdowns in the third period and went on to a 34-14 win. Farmington and Lathrup both M,CH H#HTN Associate press have 1-1 marks. Lathrup’s title hopes hinge on how well it does against Waterford (0-2) this week and favorite Livonia Stevenson (2-0) the following week., John Lang sparked Lathrup’s victory with 103 yards in 10 carries. He also scored a touchdown two-point conversion. STATISTICS By the Associated Press Albion reigns today as Mich igan’s only undefeated college football team following a weekend which saw four other schools taste defeat for * the first time this year. I Albion recorded its Seventh straight victory, including three this year, with a 22-17 triumph over Wabash of Indiana Satur day. SCHOOL.FB.SCORBiOARD * * * Hillsdale College has the same ^Smi.^*ReivCo?MR^t| number of victories this year t'°Dttro>it BATTERY DISCOUNT „ Replace your old battery with an Atlas "HD" (heavy duty) Battery now, and youH got a $5.00 discount. SOLVENT Buy a pair of Atlas Winter Windshield Wiper Blades and you’ll get a can of Atlas Windshield Washer Solvent free. n\ w r. You don't even need cash. Yob can use your Standard Oil Cradl) Card. huiyy. These \ specials end November 30. v Available at ad participating Standard 08 Damn displaying this alga Autoconomy is the Standard —____ -___ _ Oil Dealer’s Plan that continually offers motorists highest quality tires, batteries and accessories—-and sayes you money. And that’* only the beginning. When it’s time to have your new car warranty service performed, be aura to telk to your Standard Oil Dealer. Why is he so anxloua to save you money? 80 youll discover he has the perfect "store" for all your car noadt. And so you’ll have enough money left to buy his great gasoline. C—-8 im "• Is THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 10/h to 34 on 7,000 further U.S. troop withdrawals shares; and Atlantic Richfield, from South Vietnam might go ahead with a stockholders’ up % to 100%. prove a beneficial factor for the — vote on its acquisition of British The market closed Friday on j market as such' developments wo Petroleum’si U.S. subsidiary, BP a losing note with the Dow have in the past. Standard Oil . of Ohio was actively traded and rose % to 97% after the company said it would Seen Waning in 17. S. By JOHN CUNNIFF jcanst—all locales, all walks of i The present drop, in cbnfl- AP Business Analyst [life, male and female—apd dence, he has found, “is the NEW YORK—From his office! queried them on their plans. I first such radical drop among near Philadelphia, Albert Sind- ,GENERALLY CONFIDENT ^ nr 17 all groups since 1957.” And' If linger listens by telephone to .^”‘7 ipast patterns, hold, this drop sound of Amer-...._ Throughout the s xties, Amer- foretc|| a sharp turndown of --------- ‘‘cans generally felt they wou dtbe cc p be earnine more monev six: Pe0ple worried about jobs be. For most of the 1960s the sound was of learners, spend- be earning more money six! months in the future, that their | ■ spending. Th d , jobs would be secure, that busi-,b , cars' and t“h swy,tch {Q ness in their areas would be, >a *r cuts o( ^eat Th good and that heir financial «it-|ad p a rece8Sio{1 psycho|og y uat on was sabsfac ory. ;the posite of an ,nPation Sindlinger often listens to the | ch0|0gy CUNNIFF Beans, Kantucky Wander, bu. . Beans, Roman, |*el ' Beets, dr. bch. beets, Topped, I Cabbage, Curly, bu............... Cabbage, Red, bu................. Cabbage, Sprouts, bu............. Cabbage, Standard Vorloty, bu. . Carrots, dz. ben. .. ......... Carrots, Collo Pok, 2 dz.......... *.....t, Topped, bu............... The New York Stock Exchange Cauliflower, dz. . Celery, Poscol, d Colory, Poocgl, 2---------- JMPHH Celery Hearts, Collo Pok, dz. bags Cucumbers, Pickle Size, U bu. . Eggplant, Long Typo, pk. t Gourds, pk. bskt............ Horseradish, pk. bskt....... Kohlrabi, dz. bch. ......... Looks, dz. bch. .. Okro. pk. .. Onions, Gres Onions, Dry, ..... . Onions, Pickling, lb. bog r, Curly, dz. bch. WVfV. Rflj|- — Parsnips. >, “ mips, i______ . i, Blackeye, - Green, bu. i, Cayenne, pk. bskt. Pofeti it 30-lb. bag . Potatoes, 20-lb. bag Pumpkins, bu....... Pumpkins, ton . Radishes, Block, V> bu. Radishes. Red, dz. bch. Squash, selected morning prices: Soles (hds.) High Low Lost ( —A— 2.40 ... 10 45% 45'/- .20 2 12% 12% .... 1.40 21 70% 79 79% -H GulfStaUt .06 f 1.0 2 12% 12% 12% - i 79% 79 79% -* I 17% 17% 17 • / 42 41% 41% *t 21 17% 17% 17% ldt.) High Low Lilt Chg. 44 33% 33% 33% — Vh Schorlng .80 3 20% 20% 20% - '/• $CM Cp .60b jf c 21% + % I Scott Paper 1 SbCLInd 2.20 SearIGD 1.30 >.) High Low Loti Chg. 7254% 54 54 —H— a 6% 6B% 68% + 13 27% 27% 27% - * 2 1 AllledCh 1.20 AlllodStr 1.0 Alio Chaim Alcoa 1.80 AMBAC .50 i .07a 23 37% Brandt 2 AmBdcst 1.60 ACrySug 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 AmEIPw 1.58 E Homo 1.40 Am Hotp .22 AMatClx 1 9 43% 43% 43% 5 21% 21% 21% 19 25% 25% 25% 8 32% 32 32% 5 22% 22% 22% II 69% 69'/4 69% I 13 16% 16% 16% -f % 23 37% 37% 37% * “ 37 32 31% 31% 6 34% 34% 34% 9 52% 52% 52% 1 25 25 25 45 29% 29% 29% 23 29% 29 29 13 61% 61% 61% 1 40 39% ao 10 20% 20 G Buttercup, bu. ........ tr Butternut, bu.............. 1, Delicious, bu.............. oquatn, Hubbard, bu. . ............ Squash, Italian, %-bu............... Squash, Summtr, %-bu................ Tomatoes, 14-lb. bskt. ............ Tomatoes, % bu. ............ Turnips, dz. bch.................... Turnips, Toppeo, bu. .............. LETTUCE AND ORIINS AMK Cp .30 Atlas Chem Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1. 29% 30% u iu 9% 10 9 33% 33% 33% 10 103/4 10% 10% 58 27% 27% 27% 5 36% 36 36% 180 50% 50% -50% - % 3 2 ^ii *“-------hM 88 50 - 27». .. .. H -47% 47% 47% - 51% 51% 51% 23 27% 27% 27% 32 31% 31% M% 25 100% 100% 100% 50 27% 27% 27% — 1 1 47% 47% 47% — ' 3 51% 51% 51% ' 23 27% 27% 27% + ' 32 31% 31% 31% — ‘1 100% 100% 100% + 1 4 27% 27% 27% + 08 5 4% 4% — ' 13 24% 24% 24% .. 7 12% 12% 12% 42 153% 152% 152% —1 lard, Bu. . 2 50 BabckW 1.36 2.75 BaltGE 1.70 2.25 Baat Fds 1 .. 3.25 Backman .50 .. 2.25 BaachAir .75 Lattuca, Bibb, pk. bskt. . Lattuca, Leaf, bu. _______ Lettuce, Head, bu......... Lattuca, Haad,' dz. ______ Lattuca, Romalna, bu. . BenefFin 1.60 jet Stl 1.80 .....g 1.20 BolsCas 25b Sorrel, bu...... Spinach, bu, . Swiss thard, bi irlstMy 1.20 jrunswk .07a lucyEr 1.20 Itidd Co Butova W .60 51 36 Poultry and Eggs . DETROIT nm -— DETROIT (AP) - DRTROIT POULTRY —. ..OIT (AP) - (USDA)—Prices pold Tuesday per pound far No. t live poultry, eevv typo hens 20-22; heavy type —— rs 25-27; *>”■"— 2LJ1V 5-27, broilers and fryers, whites DETROIT (API - (USDA)—Egg prices Paid per dozen Thursdoy by first receiver* (Including U.S.): Grade A lumbo SO-51 Vii oKtro Targe 46V*-4«j largo 43'/ it. medium 39-42'/,; small 24-25, CHICAGO RUTTER AND BOOS CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA)-Thursday butter: wholesale telllnji prices 4* lower; 93 score AA 72; 92 A 72; 90 B unquoted. Eggs: prices paid delivered to Chicago CaroPLt 1.42 *22 29'/* 29 V* 29Vk ..... - 16 38LVO Corp 'LykYng .150 3 10% 1 I 23Va 23% 23% . 2 23% 23% 23% 4 1 2 7 58% 57% 57% 4 % 5 35% 35% 35% ^ 23 13 13 13 58 37% 37% 37' 6 39% iH H 23 48% 13 — % J7r | ■ 39% 39? 48% 48? 32% 33 10 77% 77% 77% 4 % 5 35 35 35 12 26 25% 25% I 32% 32% 32% it Oil f -50 25 28% 28% 28% 4 2 278 178 278 4 2 44% 44% 44% . 7 33% 33% 33% . - *“•'1 22% ‘lf,aA -L 3 1 6 32'/4 32»/4 32% 4 ) 16'/4 16% DeltaAir .0 DenRGr 1.10 DelEdls 10 DetSleal .30p 5 13 12% 12% - 3 18% 18% 18% - —D— 11 47% 47 47 4 18 25% 25% 25% - 7 36% 36% 36% 4 10 32% 31% 32% 4 5 18 18 18 - 17 20% 20% 9 92 91% 92 Dresslnd 10 2 29% 29% 29% 10 24% 24% 8 12 11% —E— 11% — 1 EltraCp 1.20 fi ler Elec 1 _..dJohn .12p Ethyl pC.72 33 17 16%t 16% - \ 61 72% 72% 72% -- . 9 39% 39% 39% 4 ' 2 36% 36% 36% - 15 18% 18% 18% — 1 9 25'/4 25% 25»/4 — 26 54% 54 25 y 23% 23% 23% 43 23 —F— 47 80 7 15% f'5% 15% FsIChrt 1681 FlaPwLI 1.88 FMC CP .85 ^.kC CP 1» GAF Corp ( Gam 5ko il .3 Gen Elec 7.60 GenMot r3.40a GPubUt 1.60 4 14% 141 19 26% 26'» *»-x6 36% 36% St I 32% 32% 321 16 51% 50% 503 0 44 "% 64 70 27', 23% 23' . 21% 21* 17 3% 43» “ 261. -23% 23J —G— 121 53% 53% 53% 4 58 16% 16% 16%. 4 | 2 23% 23% 23% 4 121 24%, 23% 24 II 73%/173% 22 16% 86% 12 73% 73% x3 31% y% 30 23' 63% 66 HRI 23'/4 23% 16 21% 21% 21% 17 3% 43% 43% 7 76% 26»4 111 23% 23% --------- 40% 40% 40% b 86% \. aii'I. I 1.40 Global Marin Goodyear .88 GracoCo 1 50 QrontMC lit Qt A*P 130 ii “ir Ry 1 otl, Pint QroenGnt .9 ( Greyhound 1 GrummnCp I 15 734b 73', .... 7t'/b 71bb ........23 « My, ii; 8 174b 174h |H. - .. I 28% 284b 2844 - J* 16 45 U 46 + Vb I 3444 3444 Mi ... 16 87 88W JW r 1 4244 4244 4244 + 13 14b §4% 1 33V. 23 MW + 35 2844 28'/. 38'/» - 17 28 274b 874b - 8 1|44 1344 1 344 f 3 3 38 28 t l) 43 42H 424b 4 14 25'4 MVb 28Vb - t 54b 454b 454b + b 28'* tt4ti + 21 394b 394b 39'/, . 2444 244b - Vb SlgnalCo 1.20 ‘IngorCo 2.40 .mTth KF 2 SCarEG 1.19 SouCalE 1.40 ObtLP 1.12 3 38'/. 38'/. 38V. mm m 70 343% 343'/4 343»/4 -1' »t TAT .95 26 36'. 1 29' 2 27 70 343' 36 26' 12 12? 7 36'. 27 38' 46 55 26 26V» - ' ....... Vo" St Brand 1.50 Std Kollsman StOCal 2.80b StOillnd 2.30 StOilNJ 2.70a StdOilOh 2.70 St Packaging StauffCh 1 8o SterlDrug M I 52% 52'/a 52% - -K— KlmbClk 2.20 ‘toppars l.6o v^raftco 1.70 KresgaSS .40 22 52% 52 52 arSleg .50 11 17% 17% 17% + Ling TV 1.33 5 35% 35' 4 35% + 28 46% 45% 45% + 5 22% 22% 22% + 30 29% 29% 29% + 1 23% 23% 23% + 56 23 22% 23 i 29% 29% - Macke Co .30 MacyRM 1 Mad Fd 3.56g —M 15 17V 10 35' 3 27' 17 17% Macor Inc 1 MayDStr 1.60 McDonnD .40 Mead Corp 1 . Merck 1.80a MGM .60p Mlcrodot .30a MldSoUtll .88 MlnnMM 1.60 MlnnPLt * 35% 35% 35% -_ 27% 27% 27% . 10 39% 39% 39% H 16 46% 46% 46% - 20 35% 35% 35% - 14 19% 19% 19% - 12 27V4 27% 28 25 2% 24% 18 9 i 24% MobllOll 2.20 Mohasco 1.10 Monian 1.80 MontDUt 1.68 Mont Pw 1.68 Mor-Nor .80 Motorola 1 Ml St TT 1.24 28 30% 38% 38% 5 28% 28% 28% it Alrllr -N— 5 31% 31 3 49 49 5 74 74 8 142% 142% 142% ■ 21 17% 54 23% 9 21% 3 23% It Stef 2.50 21 42 > 29% 29% 61 29% I 5 37% 37% 37'.. 5 35% 35% 35% 35 67% 67% 67% - 15 52% 52% 52% — 2 33% 33% 33% - 3 53% 53% 53% - 17 27 26% 27 + 22 74% 73% 74% + 12 37% 36% 37% + 18 24% 24% 24% + 14 32 31% 31% - 17 24% 2% 24% ... 33 40% 40% 40% ... 12 36% 36% 36% .. T 47% 47% 47 — 3 20% 20% 20% + 38 43% 43% 43% + 8 21 20% 20% + i 22 45% 44% 45 — % 11 11% 11% 11fJ 79 55% 55% 551 12 53 52% fi|| 93 69% 69 *55 98 93? 6 12% 12 27 34% 33? 26 0% 39' ..... 45% «• 42% 43 nsj 2.0 12 53 52% 52% 73 69% 69 69% 355 90 6 12V- — 27 34% 33% -3% Pontiac Div. Promotes 3 interviews, for they are con-; ducted in one room at his head-! _ , , „ ,, w , quarters in Norwood, Pa. He',,Dur,,,nf infla1t,°n'uP^P'f bt,y M . . could measure the optimism or'no? 1,1 ayo.dhigher prices in ers, eager buyers Now he de- the voice detect em0.| the future. As the recession psy- ects worry about jobs about ^ adjudge the nature of|chology develops they save now the stock market, about th®|fear8 8 because they might not have the large size of 'personal debts and ■ - ' money or a job tomorrow, the relatively small amounts in; * , * . ! Should the confidence index the bank. J His method, he claims has;contlmje |o decline for another * * * ^been uncannily accurate in de-!month^ Slndljnger believes, the Sindlinger, a former associate;tectmg: tbe^nations mood. One|naUon aImost inevltably wiU of George Gallup, is a profes- night n 1968, for example, his fjnd ^ |n g recess|on_ sional surveyor of the market-'interviews took a decided nega- place, especially noted for hisitive turn. Something obviously BUSINESSMEN WORRIED _______ r_______I had unnprvoH Americans. "For the first time in eii 'accurate forecasts of automo-'had unnerved Americans. “For the first time in eight Sales Execs Named bile sales. Corporations buy his| Lyndon Johnson, it seems, Years I find businessmen wor- ! stqdies, for they know that to- had just televised his State of Tied.” he says, to New Assignmentslday’s confidence foretells to-the Union Message. He had The turn in confidence began |morrow’s sales. looked old, sick and worried.'In early May. At that time the _ t> is ... | Every day for the past 13 Subsequent questions proved,;index showed signs of deterio- Two Pontiac area executives, Sindiinger's telephone in- Sindlinger claims, that this poor gating, but it plunged beginning- have been promoted by Ponti.ac terviewers have rung the appearance worried Americans about the Fourth of July week- today. end. After leveling off in August, it began declining again. Tenneco 1.28 2 53% 53% 53% 10 7 6% 6% 22 25% 25% 25% 11 23% 23% 23% —T— 6 20% 20% 20% — % 1 66% 66% 66% + jj 127 30% 37% 38% — 59 23% 23% 23% ' 221 30% 30% 30% 12 223iRtiifiiRiir 82 25V 11 127 V---- 2 17% 17% 17% Steven J. Kulcher, assistant manager of the Pontiac zone, I has been promoted to Buffalo zone manager. He will be succeeded by James P. Laclede, assistant zone manager ini Chicago. TlmesMIr .50 66% 66% 66% 38 % 37% 38% 59 23% 23% 23% + % 121 30% 30% 30% 12 22% 22% 22% + m 25% 25 25% - 127% 125% 126% + 17^ t’,w- 114 2' 42 11V 26 48V 43% — 18 28% 28'/4 28V [46 24% 24 24 21 % 6% 6* 25 31% 31% 31* 36% 36 36 20% 20', Arthur G. Meisl, Pontiac zone organfzation manager, has been promoted to assistant manager of the Milwaukee zone. All appointments are effective immediately. Kulcher, who has been with Pontiac since 1950, has served! Mosque-Fire Trial Under Way in Israel One of the big reasons for the drop was found to be that more households anticipated lower income in the coming six months. Further,..examination showed jthat it was stock owners mainly who anticipated a downturn in their fortunes. . ... i 53-. Sindlinger calls these the JERUSALEM (AP) - A po- Prophet Mohammed ascended Mp()s 6Qr managers-proprle-lice superintendent told a Jeru-j into heaven from there. tors-officials They are the big salem court today that a young' Rohan is a member of a stoclc owners> and they were ex-Australian mystic had confessed jChris ian sect which believes worst. It 'ame. Just setting fire to the A1 Aksah that the Messiah cannot come ^ w8eks later the market av. Mosque in Old Jerusalem to until Solomon s Temple is re- niuneed for two whole ' clear the site for the rebuilding' built on its original site. A sheep' P 8 t 31% 31% . as a service representative, | there ot Solomon’s Temple. j shearer by trade, the young service school instructor, Supt David 0fer gald Michael [man came to Israel In March. |BLUE-COLLAR FAMILIES UMC Ii .72 I 19 20V —u- 56 28? Jn Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOilCA. M UnPac Cp 2 UnlonPacif 2 Uniroyal .70 UnitAirc 1.80 Uni) MM 1.30 USGypt *" 26 18'/a 17% 17% mi 46% 45% 46 + « 74 50% 49% 50 - 3 7 44% 4% 44% + ' 28 19% 19% 19% — ' district manager and customer jDenlg Roharii m told the police relations manager; He was|in a statement after his arrest: named service and parts "About a week after I arrived Jerusalem I discovered a Scripture that said that one person will be called by God to t 43 43 n 47 US Ihduftt .45 US Steel 2.40 UnlvO Pd .8Q 28 - 4 28 5 70% OV'/J OY'3 —• 21 24% 2% 2% — 1 10 33% 33 33 — 39% . 39% 39% - ; 66 37 36% 36% + 12 22 21% 22 25 46% 4_ - m —V— 15 29% 29% 29% H 2 17»/a 17% 17% 55 22% 22% 22% - —W—3|—31—z— arLam 1.10 41 j I 21% i 66% 66% 17 26% 21 » 26% + i 45% 45% 21 38 31 48ald In 1»W Plui ‘ ' vaar. f-P«y estimated cosh ■ on ex-dividend < , g—Declared or paid so rai . h—Declared or peld after lend or split up. k—Declared ot ---- «•> gccymylellve Issue l-New Issui Ilvldend omitted, deterred A graduate of General Motors Institute, Kulcher lives with his wife and son at 4079 Water Wheel, Bloomfield Township. Meisl, who has been Pontiac Sitting in a bulletproof glass j The more recent decline in enclosure like the one that pro- consumer confidence, however, tected Nazi war criminal Adolf | seems to be coming mostly Eichmann, Rohan went on trial j fcom blue-collar families. Stock today on four charges of arson j owners remain depressed and and desecration of a holy place, j this hurts the confidence meas-His Israeli lawyer told the|ures. Now blue-collar workers three-judge court Rohan “does iare reinforcing the pattern, not confess to the charge and he The ' biggest economic fear does not confess to the facts” jthat a blue-collar worker has is _______ r_________| _____ | | outlined in the charges. (being layed off. He seldom wor- the mosque. If this was God’s Under Israeli law, a defend- (ries about changes In retail will, then he would allow me to ant does not plead guilty or notisa|es and grqss national prod-do it.” guilty. He can admit or deny ail | uct. But when he hears of pro- The A1 Aksah Mosque was or some of the alleged facts, or duction turndowns he fears for built on the site of Solomon’s he can refuse to reply at all. | hiS job. Temple, and the Walling Wall * * * I ★ ★ * nearby is the last remnant of If convicted on all the A man fearful of his future is the temple. The site is also Is- charges, Rohan could be sen- n0( a spender. And because he lam’s third holiest shrine be- tenced to 44 years in prison. doesn’t spend for an automobile, cause Moslems believe that the The police superintendent said the car makers must lower their — I Rohan in his confession gave production. Lower schedules this account of setting fire to the | mean ;ewer jobs—ad so the Klauic in Rriof mosque: I steam escapes from the eco- liCW3 III DIICI j After describing in detail the nomjc engjne. purchase of inflammables, he * * + Rummage Sale. First Pres- arrived at the mosque at 7 a.m. Sindlinger, who is not an econ- byterlan Church, Birmingham, on Aug. 21. He paid the lone . . ’wh believes j" "• SUh* " ,snlel1 llr" “ ~men,ror S%cl9 9-6, Fri„ Oct. 10, 9-4. -Adv. gain entrance. |ogy te„ him an awfu, ,ot a5out City police reported today that WOMEN LOOKED ON j the economy, says it is time for more than $500 worth of He put containers of kerosene j the Nixon administration to re- valuables were taken by thieves und benzine behind the mosque'examine its anti-inflation policy, who broke into the home of staircase while an elderly Arab! It might be time to ease up, Channie Johnson, 56, of 277 woman looked on. I he says. Osmun around noon yesterday. ^ * m ii m NortSIm 1.221 4 12 24Vj 24^ |4[< 123 2*’/« 294* 29»J ^32 /• )96B. estlmaled c, . or ex-dlstributlon 2* z—Sales in full, cId-Called, x-dend and Mies Ir „.us zone organization manager! Li8ht0n(r i„( ‘d7»lsince May 1, 1969, joined the I — division in 1951 as assistant car f *!*■’ Successful investing 5 iividend. v-ex divi-1 distributor in Buffalo. American Stocks NEW YORK (AP) - American & 4* H * OklaGE 1.08 OklaNGt 1.12 OlinCorp B8 Omark Ind If )tk Elev 2 Jutbd Mar 1 OwensCa 1.0 ^ -mn 1.35 x3 20% 20 20% 24 23 22% 22% 3 trlbuted. ! detlvery. belt's* PflcGEI 1.50 3 79% 79 11 69% 69 —P— 16 31% 31 2 26% 76 PacPwL 128 PacTSiT 1.20 PanhEp 1.60 23 19% 4 16% .. 76 1% ■ 50 29% 29'a 29% 9 33 | -when"iMued’. 'nd-Next day! While there he became a n-|cfn"ram'aMn 31B 244* 23'. Suspect Held;j. Little Hope for “j* ^a | until beinK appointed or8an*za-|g,xn^ecf" -- # I I tion manager. Meisl, a graduate|Equ*cprno5e 2 Kldnoped i°f iMlp college, lives W|| Philo Mi PhiII Pei MV PitneyBw .68 Polaroid .37 >PO Ind 1.40 ProclGa 2.60 PubSCol 1.06 psvce 15 50% 30% „ 56 15 14% 12 87 86% 23 47 46% 38 24% 24% Publklnd \.45f 12 27% 27% 27% Queitor .50 P .60 nc .92 lh .60 RCVI ** Reading Co RelchCh .59 RePubStl 2 50 Reyn Met .90 ReynTob 2.20 RoanSel .35h Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCOla .54 RoyaLDut 2d Ryderlya .50 54 42% 3% 44 * 4% 4% 2 30% 30% 7 18% 18 129 43% 43% fra ,’i SILSanC 2. ilReglsP I Sandtrt .20 SaFelnd l. SanFalnt . Schenlry I. I 45 —s— 1? 251* 2! 5 344* 3< 23 2«4* 2144 2544 + ; WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) — A (Township, federal prosecutor said he had! little hope for the lives of nj [ Maryland woman and her 2-' year-old daughter as authorities jeontinued today to question an Jijsoaped convict accused of kidnaping them. I The convict, Stanley B. Hoss I Jr., was captured here Saturday neflr j an automobile owned by the missing Woman, Mrs. Linda Mae Peugeot, 21. A.slate war-raqt issued in Maryland charges HokV with kidnaping her and her daughter, Lori Mae, in Cumberland Sept. 21. Asked if he thought the two were still alive, Evan Hultman, (j.S. attorney for northern Iowa, said, "Based on the various factors put together there would be no indication that would point to this." Hij declined to elaborate. his wife and daughter at 5571 j£ Wing Lake, Bloom f i e I d g Copyrighted by Th STEVEN J. KULCHER 2.1 UlV? 204. «»'. - »* Tha Associated ProuAwj Treasury Position iT H I H By ROGER E. SPEAR : Demand for uranium is ex* a." s,ock Q. i would like to average | pected to grow rapidly after 1971 Lett ch(|! down the cost of my shares of (when several nudear-fueled !?*i t'I Pioneer Natural Gas, Shares.power generators go on 3??4 t'.Jare almost 10 points below my (stream. Earnings recover; 2n»’ + ! J cost after a drop ta earnings i should be more apparent in J‘, ’'resulting from unfavorable! 1970, when benefits from rate 3>» T '* weather conditions. Would my increases and several new in-| plan be prudent? — J-H. dust rial customers will be fully '♦'] I j*. a. Aside from natural-gas I realized. Averaging down in thin To; > T 'd sales which contributed 88 per (issue Is warranted. J9'.’+'*! cent of 1968’s revenues, Pioneer | * * * ’S'l" has branched out into a number j Q- I am interested in a j;* i '* 0f other potentially profitable mutual fund for Imcomc and »)t ;-(areas. Two subsidiaries,!safety. looking over Cfpn- J ; I '.'i Amarillo Oil and P i o n e e r|parutlvc data it seems to me ' '‘(production, are active in ex- that Puritan Fund fits my ob-tvlploration. drilling and pro-1 Jcctives. Do you have any if’ | ii duction of oil and gas. ’ comments? - M. B. 53 These subsidiaries sue- A. In addition to meeting; your V. ! :.‘!eessfully brought in it oil wells stated goal*. Fu.d hM .'‘land 10 gas wells during the firstIperformadI well In the HveXears | ' ” six months or 1969. The com-M"^1 ,t''!’VI'^nfhaleil0n.l0, T3N, R9B, M ..id* Township, Oakland County, Michigan; AND Lott 4t through .44 Inclusive and Lots SO and SI. pMW,MilnMsSub-dlvlslon. Section lfc WE lWt.$M*rford “ ihTp. Oakland County. Michigan, westing to change lona doslgnotlc c-i. Local BmIiwm District 1 C-l. General Business District. ARTHUR J. SALLEY, Clark Charter Townihlp ol Wolorlord Oakland County. Michigan Oct. 4, 20, 1949 TOZER, CLARA L.; October 3. 1969; 5785 Drake Road, West Bloomfield Township; (formerly of Detroit); age 78; dear mother of Mrs. Richard (Corinne. F.) Cotter, George E. Tozer; dear sister of Mrs. Amada Llenau, and Mrs. Alma Dratt; also survived by 6 grandchildren. Funeral service will be today, at 2 p.m., at the Cross of Christ Lutheran Church. Interment in Glenn Eden , Cemetery, Livonia. WELCH, ROBERT WILLIAM; , October. 4, 1969 ; 65350 Romeo Plank Road, Romeo; age 13; beloved son of Calvin and Nyla Welch; beloved grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Welch, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fox; dear brother of Darlene, Judy, Carol, Danny, and Brian Welch. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 7, at 1 p.m., at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo. Interment in Christian Hills Cemetery, Rochester. Robert will lie in state i at the funeral home. Death Notices ALLEN, HENRY FRED October 6, 1969; 681 Norttiway; age 51; beloved son of Bessie Allep; dear father of Darlene, Linda Tony, Frankie, John, Jim', David, Dennis, and Danny Allen; dear brother of Mrs, Juanita Wallace, Mrs. Pearl Vermette, Mrs. Irene Wanke Mrs. Violet Leonard, Mrs Bonnie Souheaver, Mrs. Helen Kenny, and Mrs. Barbara Gelow; also survived by six grandchildren. Funeral rangements are pending at Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Mr Allen will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 tonight. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) LEGAL NOTICE Nolle* ii hwFwbv givfn st Mb'0 Pfenning - 'iMnfi'S'Nd.r'th. toAS SnX; srlord Townihlp Zoning Ordlnonc# 'Srt ofTa to of **c,,on 2J, JiNj R9E, Wotorford Township. 6 * k I * " d »n 2,M?iCV.«'.OTt oguJ Highlands Si/bdlvUlofL and dlicrlbtd •» ^Commencing of the, SE editor MCtlOn 22) fi*"'* ^007 04' to sold Section 22, N M* B, IW7WI* to7 tho 'ofrrt nogAf tnoneoo'onfl Wttr m.O'i thone* W 231.00 loot to fho elntorll Leke Rood) thone* oloiij EICHER, MRS. JOHN (ESTHER); October 4, 1969 625 Homestead Drive; age 72; dear sister of Herbert Oltmann. Funeral service will be held today, October 6, at p.m. at S p arks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mrs. Eicher will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested v i s 111 n hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9. Contributions may be made to the Lutheran Hour. Tuesday, the body will be taken tc Hampton, Illinois for burial Wednesday. GRAVITT, LEONARD; October 5, 1969; 35 Gerdon; age 82 Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 7, at 1 p.m. at Sparks-Griffin Funer Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Gravltt frill lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested v i s 111 n j hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9. ) ULA MARY KIM; October 6, 1969; 2755, Ayrshire Drive Hloorftfield Township; age 13; beloved daughter of Dr. ant Mrs. Robert L, Segula; . jioved granddaughter o I Mrs. Robert J. Segula, Mrs. John N. Tucker, and Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Humphries; dear sister of Mrs. James (Lynne) Shaeffer, Mrs, Jerom< (Lindsay) Brdwnstein Elizabeth, Robert W., John and David Segiila. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, October o, at 1:30 p.m., at Alii Saints Episcopal BOX REPLIES At 10 «un. today than wire replies at Tha Press Office in the following bexesi C-18, C-25, C-27, C-29, C-34, C-36, C-38, C-39, C-40, C-44, C-45, C-50, C-55. hTMamorinir IN MEMORY OP MY fattier, Goorg* Wilson, who possod awoy Oct. 5, 1942. Prom Clyde and Norma and COATS PUNBRAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 474-0441 C. J. OOQHARDT FUNERAL HOME Huntoon FUNERAL HOME sfflr1" ”i7i*a>iM SPARKS-GRIFFIN PUNBRAL HOME Thoughtful Service" PE Mill VoorheesSiple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Established Ovor 4S Yeero Cemetery Lets 4 LOTS, WHITE CHAPEL, Personals BILL PROBLEMS! -CALL______ DEBT CONSULTANTS 338-0333 CATERING SERVICE for pertits fhd weddings. Reosonobl* 473-1919__________ PE 5-2953, l OWNERS: HUD wont* a n»w code In Pontiac. Noxt 1 your city commission i this now Houolng Code—II you'r* homo will ho f for violations. I'm against IF w. nuron# rwim personal financial will coat you nothli they can oo. FE 2-0181 Mr. ond Mrs. Homeowner \Do yog ntod tlnonclol advice repairs, Tax**, grouplng^llls, Etc? i do. Can Mr. Voss at 334- i-3 Oafly except Sat. _____ wjo parties. wies By caktoron. it yog do, co^Mr.Vos* at 334-3247 ,9-3 Qaliy except Sat. BLUE SHETLAND Cottle, tamalo, oiler reword cash «r 1 puppy, PE 3-1009. 41MMf. LOST A SLACK coin fiyrsa with,2 Lbit: smaU WHITI' YiaVprleo* LOST: ItL^lk Telegraph, Squ END TABLE STEP TABLE mu THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER o, m«ff VC Captain Defects to South; Company Follows Him TAM KY, Vietnam UR rare when a Vietcong captain Switches loyalty to the South Vietnamese government and It's much rarer When he gets most o{ his company to Join him. “I was tired of being disillusioned," says a man who did just that. ★ * <* Known only as Quyen, the leathery combat veteran had led his Vietcong company in battles against both U.S. Marines and government troops. * ★ * Now, he is leading two-thirds of his company In a new campaign to gain control of his home district from the Vietcong he once served. Quyen was / a captain and wnmander of the Vletcong's C9|,company one week ago when he decided to cal} It quits. TOO MANY PROMISES The Communist command had made too many promises, he told surprised militiamen when he walked into the district headquarters of Thang Blnh, about 30 miles south of Da Nang and surrendered. The skeptical militiamen were convinced of Quyen’a good Intentions when he took them out along the coastal flats north of Tam Ky and disarmed 26 guer-“ | ‘ ‘ mines and booby Maddox Says Women Okay as President traps. He also delivered letters that he had written personally to relatives of men who had served in his company. The next day, several men he had commanded arrived Thang Blnh with their rifles and joined * They said thgt after Quyen defected, two political officers assigned to'CO cofnpany had disbanded the unit and ordered the men to turn In their weapons. ★ Si •k In a few days, 27 of the 40 ..ion in Quyen’s company had surrendered, bringing with them b!x rifles and a machine gun. ★ a ★ The Quang Tin Province chief, Col. Hong Dinh Tho, asked Quyen to bring 10 of his best men to Tam K& Quyen was given $170 and he and his squad had a tour of the city. "They had been told that Tam Ky had been destroyed,” Tho said. “They were very surprised to see the buildings, the cars, the electricity." POOD, CLOTHING During the shopping trip, Tho bought the 11 ex-guerrillas some clothes and promised to send food to their families still back in the district. Quyen and the 10 men were given M16 automatic rifles. There was no propaganda,"!district and pacify it their faml-i. Quyen agr/jed and he and hisltrict chief to a campaign to Tho said, "I just told them thatlliep would be happy and pros-men went back to Thang Binh wipe out the remaining Viet-It they would go back to theirlperous.”' , '(district, assigned under the dla-lcong.) / CONSTIPATED? 'Mil TO LACK OP POOO I ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) — Gov. Lester Maddox, who often hints that his wife, Virginia, may run for governor to succeed him In 1970, says that if a woman can clean up the problems facing this country, then he’s all for female president, too. "I believe that a woman who is used to living on a budget might be able to help get out national finances straightened out and reduce our shameful national debt," the governor told tin Georgia Federation of Busines and Professional Women’ Clubs Saturday. ★ ★ ★ And any woman can take control of the Health, Education and Welfare Department, said Maddox, who has often criticized HEW for its school desegregation efforts in Georgia, "and make improvements there.’ There is no reason for women not to become more involved in politics, the governor * * ★ "You ladies already have gained control of more than 50 per cent of the property, 80 per cent of the money—and about 991 per cent of the men." 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