ONE ttlac Pr*t«, ^•dn«»day, July 30, 1969 WEDNESDAY R — Rerun C — Color WEDNESDAY MORNING Regular programming may be - preempted for news of President Nixon’s trip abroad^ 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm. Scene 6 : 0 0 ( 2 ) C — Black Heritage—What it meant to be black during the Depression 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman ( 4 ) Classroom — ‘ ‘ Education: Today and Tomorrow — Between Home and School” 6:45 (7) C — Batfink 7:00 (4) C-Today (7) c — Morning Show 7 : 3 0 ( 2 ) C — News. Weather. Sports 8:00 (2) R - Captain Kangaroo 8:is (9) Warrn-Up 8:25 (9) C — Morgan ’ s Merry-Go-Round 8:30 (7) R C — Movie: “The Redhead From Wyoming’* (1953) ^ Maureen O’Hara. Alex Nicol (9) C-^Bozo 9:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) R C — Here Come the Stars — Lou Holtz and Matt Monro join in a salute to guest of honor Mr. and Mrs. Steve Allen. 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (9) Friendly Giant 9:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:00 (2) R C — Andy Griffith (4) C — Personality (9) Mr. Dressup 10:25 (9) Pick of the Week 10:30 (2) C — Merv Griffin iA) C-Hollywood Squares (7) C — Galloping Gourmet 10:55 (9) C — News 11:00 (4) G—It Takes Two (7) R —Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date I (50) C—Jack LaLanne 11:25 (4) C— Carol ^vair^ 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) R C — That Girl (9) Take Thirty (50)G^—Kimba WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather. Sports (4) C—Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) Luncheon Date II (50) C — Underdog 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — As the World Turns - (4) C — News. Weather, Sports (7) c — Let’s Make a Deal (9) R—Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “Johnny Frenchman" (British. 1945) Francolse Rosay. Tom Walls 1:00 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C—Newlywed Game (9) R - Movie: “The Bandit of Sherwood Forest" (1946) Cornel Wilde, Anita Louise i :30 (2) C—Xlulding Light (4) C —Doctors (7) Dating Game 2:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C*-Another World (7) C—General Hospital 2:30 (2) C—Edge of Night I (4) C—You Don’t Say f (7) C—One Life to Live (90) R — Make Room for^ Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show — Psychologist Dr. Joyce Brothers guests. (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R — Topper 3:25 (4) C — News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow Mario ThomoM as i4iitn ilfarie and Ted Aeseell as her bo:^iend Don HolUnger are faced with a problem ^ when Ann Marie*$ father .is convinced he has rabicM on *^hat Girl** Thuraday at 8 p,m* bn Cltaitnel 7. (4) C — You^re Putting Me On (7) C—Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C—Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C— Love of Life: ^14) R C — Steve Allen — Guests include Shelley J3erman, Joan Bae2 and fitness expert Anne Marie Bennstrom. (7) R —"Movie: "A Night at the Opera" (1935) Marx Brothers (9) C —Bozo 4:25 (2) CNews 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (50) R-r-Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C“George Pierrot — “West Indies Adventure*' (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R C — F Troop (50) R — Superman (56) Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver WEDNESDAY NHIHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (0) R C - I Spy - Self-centered c omedian heading USO troupe ~ becomes an enemy target. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New - The Th« Pontiac Prott, ^Wodnotdoy, July DI COLOR 13 a way to stop the new baby from crying. (56) C — Spectrum — ‘‘The Alcoholic American" examines the plight of American problem drinkers. (62) C — Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C - Good Guys — Bert has to tell Rufus-his poker club doesn’t want him to play with them any more because he won’t follow the rules. (4) R C — Virginian — An escaped convict is in flight from a bounty hunter. Victor Jory. Jean Inness (Mrs. Jory) and Troy Donahue guest. (7) R C — Here Come the Brides — Candy^’s grandfather arrives in Seattle to prospect for gold. (50) R — Hazel (56) C — Book Beat — Harvard psychiatrist Robert Cole discusses his book on poverty in the United States, "Still Hungry in America." process of shrimping and netting shrimp is covered. (62) R — Sea Hunt 6;30 (2) ,C * — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley i. (7) C ^ News — Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale's f^avy (56) Cancion de la Razn— ^anii|h Soap opera (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) R C - TYuth or Consequences (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports* (9)R C - Movie: “Flower Drum Song'' (1962) (Chinese girl and her father arrive in San ’ Francisco to proceed y/\ih a marriage a r r a n g e d through correspiDndence. Nancy Kwan, James Shigeta (50) R — I Love Lucy — Neither the Ricardos nor the Mertzes can fii?ure out -(Special) Detroit at Min- Patrice 8:00 (2) C Baseball; nesota (50) Pay Cards Munsel guests. (56) Your boliar’s Worth ~ "Auto Repairs: Points and Plugs" reports on the high cost of car repairs. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (7) R C - KJng Family (50) C — Password (62) R — Movie; "Cattle Queen” (1951) Young woman cattle rancher battles for women’s rights. Marie Haft, Drake Smith 9:00 (4) C -r Music Hall — Barbara Feldon and Norman Wisdom guest. (7) R C — Movie: "Bang, B a n g" fBrttts^i, 1966) Comic spy thriller. Tony Randall. Terry-Thomas (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R — Fact of the Matter 9:30 (9) R — Secret Agent — Drake is assigned to a case of worldwide murder. (56) R — Sounds of Summer — Steve Allen hosts a repertoire of opera’s famed arias, taped July 13 at the J^outhern Vermont Arts Festival. 9:55 (62) Greatest Headlines 10:00 (4) R C - Outsider -Ross infiltrates a hijacking ring. (9) (50) C -wNews Weather, Sports. (62) R -- Movie: "Timber Fury” (1950) A young girl and her father” fight |T timber gang. Laura Lee, -David Bruce 10:30 (2) R C—HawaiiFive-O (joined in progress) C - What’s My Line? ^ "(50) R - Alfred Hitchcock j 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News. Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: "Trio" (Brjtish, 1951) Trilogy of Somerset Maugham’s greatest stories involving a church verger, an obnoxious ship passenger and a sanatorium romance. Jean Simmons, Nigel Patrick (50) R — One Step Beybnd 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Orson Bean and Cor- ) '"J: S bett Monica guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop — _ Substitute Jiost EaUPauk sen welcomes Kansas Gov. Robert Docking Jr. and Tom Smothers. (50) R — Movie: "Gold Diggers in Paris” (1938) Rudy^-^llee, Rosemary Lane: 11:35 (2) R Movie: "The Scarlet Claw” ( 1 9 44 ) Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson trap a diabolical monster in the Canadian marshes. Basil Rathbone 12:24 (9) .Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ « (7) R — Texan 1:30 (2) R — Naked City 2:00 (4) (7) C - News, Weather 2:30 ( 2 ) C ^ News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel MU$T MOVE CARPET FOR INVENTORY 35,000 Yards of Carpet in Stock 501 NYLON 6“?3: Avocado, Gold Twood, Bluo/Groon Twood, Bolgo, Royal Bluo OVER 300 REMNANTS at 60%-10% Off J wmm ROOM SIZE RUG CARPET I79sq. 2 COLORS ONLY-NO PAD NEEDED Yd. AVON-mOY CARNT 1650 Auburn Rd., (M>6S), Roehusttr B«tw««n John R and Daquindra Roadt, Rhona 152-2444 of Mich. IflO,, • Stop Building looks • Stop Swim Pool Looks Anyvrtwfiie ... even VmtBr OMtafr! • Stop Bdsomont Looks • No Costly Digging! No Leak too Largo No Leak too Small fE 44131 Tex-Tite of Mich*, Inc., 18685 Wyoming Frao Esfimatot S'rem ■ _ • _VV> ' ' J'rSr ■ -'-A'll! .i Edition A O ‘0‘PHT‘QQ .......................... ,>aJViiw,-i-'iiifo,,*#* ; -Ji. . •. NTliiC, MtCHIGAy, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, lfl«9 FBI Aid Asked in Coed Killings -^64 PAGES Davids Heads Slayer Hunt LANSING (AP) - State Police Director Col. Fredrick Davids , today was placed in charge of the manhunt for the Wjler or killers of seven young women slain in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area in the past two years. Gov. William Milliken and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley made the announcement in an unusual joint press conference. Milliken said secondly that^he and Kelley have requested the U.S. attorney general to cooperate with the full involvement of the FBI. “Atty. Gen. John Mitchell assured us degree of cooperation,” the governor said. “But it is essential that we move beyond coc^ration to assure that there is effective coordination. These actions Relafed Sfory^ Page A-14 ler traordinary circumstances require extraordinary measures. The governor and Kelley said they were requesting FBI help because^- R*rl at a place she called “There is cause to believe that each of beach." murders, Washtenaw County Sheriff Douglas Harvey and' Ann Arbor Poliee Chief Walter Krasny made an apparently fruitless trip today to Hazard, Ky., to question a youth whom a girl companion identified as the killer of a young woman near Ann Arbor. " . However, Hazard Police Chief Sam Luttrell said today the girl has changed her story. Luttrell said the girl told her parents that the youth only intended to kill a Detroit •of the federal government’s desire to * these victims was unlawfully seized and cooperate in the fullest extent possible and said the specific request for FBI involvement wquld get a very early response,” Milliken said. “These actions do not indicate any dissatisfaction with the over-all conduct of the investigation to date or with the carried away and he,ld for a period in excess of 24 hours, thereby creating a pfesum'ption that these persons had been transported in interstate commerce in violation of the kidnap law.” As law authorities probed desperately for a break in the series of baffling Hazard police said the youth, Michael Allen Moore, 19, of Monroe, Mich., wm taken into custody along with two tei?h- / ‘PAIIITY, NOT CHARITY’-Sen. Everett Dirksen (right), R-Ill,, tmpts in a age girls Monday and was charged with' hallway at the Capitol today .with a delegation of farmers who arrived by tractor reckless driving and carrying a con- from Illinois to seek parity prices for farm products. The confrontation outside the cealed weapon. A large knife was found. Senate chamber, which was broken, up by Senate police, started when Dirksen The girls, according to police, had run offered to purcha.se one oLthe five bags of wheat Kcenter) for $20. The farmers away from theit homes in Dundee, Mich, responded by shouting.“parity, not charity” at Dirksen. (Story, .page A-2) CYCUST HUNTED - The Washtenaw County-.Sheriff’8 Department has released fills composite drawing of the mo-t succeed fired Administrator Harold B. Euler. But the question remains whether he will take the job follow^g the controversy surrounding the dismissal of Euler. Board chairman Aleck Capsalis said yesterday a field of 50 candidates has been narrowed down to five. “We’re talking to our first choice now,” he commented. “We’ll go right down the list.” and candidates are still being added to the select list. Trustee members of the selection committee are Capsalis, board vice chairman Harold Goldb^g, secretary Mrs. B. B. Roush, treasurer Dr. Lynn Allen, John F. Munro, Victor Woods and, Elwood G. West. ' Others include Dr. Rockwood Bullard Jr., chief of the medical staff. Dr. Charlek„R. Sempere, medical director; Dr. Robert ’Tapper, medical education director; Dr. Murray Levin, vice cpief of ^staff; and Dr. hWward Elder Jr., past chief of staff. PRESIDENT IN VIETNAM-Presldent Nixon is surround- ap wirtphoi* ed by combat infantrymen of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division at U.S. military men said the base is relatively safe during the' their headquarters at Di An, 12 miles north of Saigon today, day but can properly be termed a combat field operation post. Accord Reached 'No More concessions' in Waterford N/xon Flies to S. Vietnam TTie 45 Waterford Township employes who walked off their jobs last Wednesday today returned to work after a tentative agreement was reached last night. - Terms of Hie agreement are,being withheld subject to ratification by bath parties, according to state labor mediator Leonard Bennett who was in charge of negotiations during the. past five months. SAIGON (AP) - President Nixon flew to Saigon today and declared the United States and ^uth Vietnam could make no further peace concessions. Later he told U.S. soldiers at a nearby base that the war “may have been our finest hour.” Nixon flew first into the heart of Saigon becoming the first U.S. president to visit South Vietnam’s capital. He was accompanied by his wife who made her own bit of history by touring a field hospital and a home for war orphans. No other First Lady has visited South Vietnam. The employes- include all township workers except firemen and policemen. J^egotiations began six months ago. . in Vietnam, much of it in conferences with President Nguyen Van Thieu and other government leaders. ftEtURNS TO THAILAND He returned to Bangkok, Thailand, late today. While meeting Thieu earlier at Saigon’s Independence Palace, Nixon issued a statement reciting conciliatory moves and proposals made by Washington and Saigon in an effort to get the Paris peace talks off dead center. TTie strikers were members of AFSCME Council 23, AFL-aO. Nixon also became the first president to visit>a combat base in South Vietnam. He spoke to the American tooops at Di An, headquarters of toe U S. 1st Infantry Division 12 miles .north of Saigon. Nixon spent five hours and 25 minutes “We have gone as far as we can or should go in opening the doors to negotiations which will bring peace,” he said. “It Is now time for the other side to sit down with us and talk seriously about ways to stop the killing ...” NOT IDENTIFIED A new administrator could be nameiL in a week or so, some hospital sources think. Identity of toe leading candidate wasn’t disclosed. One member of . the 12-man search committee, said “there has been considerable discussion” between job can- ' didates and interviewers on the hospital controversy. Turmoil started brewing at the hospital when Euler fired his assistant, Donald Carros. ’Then Euler was fired last month by the trustees after 11 years in the top post. ^ The only explanation the trustees would offer for firing Euler '— and this came after several weeks of criticism — was that Euler had a ‘ communication problem with the board. ‘FAR ABOVE’ The committee's choice for ad-, ministrator is said to be “far above” the other candidates, an experienced^ hospital adnninistrator, and from Michigan. The selection committee, formed early this month, is made up mostly of trustees. They reportedly have put their top choice completely through, the screening process, including an interview with one person on the committee and then with most of the committee. As the committee starts to make its selection, applications are still coming in 2 City Hospitals Up Room Rates Room rates are going up at two of the city’s three hospitals. Pontiac General and St. Joseph Mercy hospitals will hike the cost of roonis starting Friday. Room rates will climb by $4 to $5 a day, depending on the type of rooni. The hew daily rates (and ojid rates): General St. Joseph Ward $46 ($42) .$48 ($42) Semiprivate $50 ($46) $52 ($47) Private $54 ($50) $56 ($52) Both hospitals attribute the hike to rising costs and salary increas^ and indicate raises in other patient services will come later. , Meantime a spokesman said Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital had no plans to increase rates, but, now may have to fol-,^ow suit. Current Osteopathic rates are: $49, semiprivate room; $45, ward; $50, special cases; and $43 pediatrics. Pontiac General’s board of trustees approved the new room, rates; at a special meeting .July 21, it was learned yesterday. No announcement of the meeting was made to the public. The rate hike at private St. Joseph’s was approved yesterday morning by toe (Continued on Page A-2, Gol. 2) TV Airs Moon, Mars Close-Ups In Today's Press Eagle binds Again-in Color Red Planet Is 'Posing' Again GOODLOE H. ROGERS Outlook Thursday: HnoFun-io tbf5un SPACE CENTER, Houston (ill — For seven minutes television viewers rode the lunar module Eagle to a landing on the moon. They watched movies yesterday of the moon ship as it descended to toe pocked surface July 20, veered away from a hazardous, gaping crater and touched down amid outflung lunar dust. . .And.4hey saw Neil A. Armstrong go cautiously down a ladder, pause, and then-plant man’s first footprint on toe moon. PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) — Mariner 6 began taking a second series of television pictures early today as it hurtled toward a “near encounter” with Mars to find out whether life can exist" on the Red Planet. The first batch of .33 pictures of Mars, broadcast live on honrie television screens last night, showed a small egg-shaped orb with the white .south polar cap standing out clearly, .. ^ _ Mariner 6 began snapping the seconff series orplctures at"2723"aTm. EST today. ~ Reltapd PifJures, Page, A-5 Pontiac area residents may Took forward to fun in and out of the water tomorrow'. The weatherman promises a fair night tonight with a low of 57 to 61 and blue skies tomorrow, the high reaching 82 to 85. There’s a chance of showers Friday with temperatures a Utile cooler. Probabilities df precipitation are near zero today, 5 per cent tonight and 20 per cent tomorrow. ^ 3ixty-four ywas the low, temperature before 8 a.m.. in downtown Pontiac. The 2 p.m. reading was 84. ■ ^ ’ This was Hie first dl'the ApioUo 11 movie footage in color, and it captured much of the drama of the landing by Armstrong aiM(,Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. \ AIRED SIMULTANEOUSLY The color films were shown to newsmen at the Manned Spacecraft Center, and transmitted simultaneously by network television to viewers across the country. Part of toe'adventure was televised, live July 20, but that was in black and while. The first still-photographs, plso in color, were sprinkled with footprints and eerie silhouettes of the spaceship, and showed the American flag perched on ,th® beach-like surface. ^ A second set of stills, released last night, caught Armstrong^inside the lunar , module, showed toe landing site from above and rocks on the lunar..s.oil. This set also Included a picture of parth with Europe, Africa and Asia Visible.' ' The film closed with li view qf the American flag, wired for a waving effect and surrounded by footprints. They will be beamed back to eartl/ starting at 8 p.m. Mariner 6 will fly past Mars at a dista)ice of 2,000 miles tomorrow at 12:03 hm. after a voyage of million miles through sphee. ENTIRE SURFACE > Mariner 7, the 850-pound space twin of Mariner 6, will make its flvby five days later Between them, they vtill photograph the entire surface of Mars twice. ' Mariner 6 will have 25 minutes to perform its scientific experiments and take two dozen television pictures of a region near the Martian eouator-Which should show areas as small as 9100 feet across. ■ "t„ In.struments will make-aHchemicai analysi.s and map the surface by measuring' thermal radiation. / - . . Dr. Robert B. Leighton of the California Institute of Technology said last night’s pictures show/ed details never before seen by man, such as ragged edges of toe south polar cap. t 7 Pontiac Township — ^tate pressures firm over air pollutionPAGE A-4. " Sex in Mails ' Government regulation faces ’ Supreme Court test — PAGE -JL10.________ .. _ Sterilization Utah is toe last holdout — Area 'iNews ....A-4 Astroloty ............. D-7 Bridge^.................D-7 Crossword Pazde .......p-lS Comics . ... ..D-7 Editorials .............A-8 Food Section ... C-14--C-18 Markets .........,.. :.,..D4.. Obituaries .._^...,v.........A-U Sports ......C-1-C41 Theaters . D-5 TV and Radio Programs , IKli Wilsoil. Earl . D-5 Woments Pagea . . . .■, B-1--E4 . 1'i- 4 ' A—2 \"v ^ THJB PONT4AC PKESS. WEDNESDAY. JULY 80. 1269 fill Weakening Gun Act Gets Q Boost in Senate - WASHINOTON (AP) - A parMamen-; tary g^btt, J'lizon administration support and cru^ shifts in the Senate ha^ -Jdven ait add^ pusihi to attempts to rip , ^ some key provisions out of. last year’s Gun Control Act. Surcharge Gets r Long-Distance [Plug by Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon has reached from halfway around r the world in an attempt at pressuring ^ the Senate into extending the income .surtax, in danger of dying at midnight tomorrow. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said last night he had- been in communication witii Nixon in Ihalland. The President “is deeply concerned by the inability of the Senate to act and the injury this threatens to every citizen,” Agnew said. - ^ Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, R-Utah, announced he had administration badcing as he/reintroduced a bill ye^rday to rtoove restHctions covering 90 per cent of the ammunition sold ih this country. ' ★ * ★ Bennett’s bill was bolstered by eight cosponsors whose positions represent a change from last year, when they or their prbdecessers voted with the 41-M majority in be^jpg back an attempt to exempt shotgun, rifle and 32-cidlber rbnfire ammunition from the act. The law prohibits a person from bu3dng, either in person or throu^ the mails, any guns or ammunition outside the state in which he lives. CUTBACK ON REQUIREMENTS In addition tm exempting the ammunition from the law, Bennett’s bill would also specify—and in effect cut back—the information required of gun . and amipunition buyers. ‘ ‘“niis redrafting was accomplished '* with the full cooperation and support d the Treasury,” said Bennett. * * ★ The administration position represents a departure from the policy of former , President Lyndon B. Johnson, who complained oh sigi^g the law fhat it wasn’t, strong enough! , ' ' Johnkon’s Justio^ Department also supported inclusion of shotgun, rifle ana I ” SiiSon ';'' ~ 79 S laama"''*“ 76 55 51 In 1965, Chicago 72 67 Washington 84 71 One Yaar Ago Highest temperature Lowest temperature Muskegon Oscoda PellSfoh Weather: Mostly s : LAKE CONDITIONS: SL Clair - Mostiy northwesterly winds, 7 to 12 knots, today. Variable, S to 12 knots, tonight. Fair. Huron — Winds northwest to west, 8 to 15 knots, today, becoming west to southwest, 5 to 12 knots, tonight. Fair. Erie — Variable ^ds, 19 to 15 knots, today, diminishing to 8 to 12 knots tonight. IWdely acattered showem today, clearing tonight. FORECAST |U|t^ Shdw tow Tamperoturas ExpactcdJ itil Thutsdoy Morning Pracipilatidn Not Indicafed—Consult Local .Fetifcasf- . j ) A^ wiraphata NATIONAL WEA^R - Rain Is predicted tonightW the Gulf apd East coasts •vtpaidfaig from Louisiana through Maine. Rain also is forecast for the northern ITahia at^tea and for tiie southern Rocky. Mountain region. By DON BRAUNAGEL If you’ve ever wondered how the Broadway musical evolved from '“Oklahoma” to “Hair,” see “Your Own Thing” at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit. The opening drumbeat keynotes a score that — al-I though mostly forgettable and fie-I quently sounding ' like Top 40 love ballads of the late ’50s — was musically Innovative for Broad-. J way and grew into the “Hair” style of advanced rock. -BRAUNAGEL But the Score is secondary. Mildly irreverent and cheerfully Irrelevant, ‘‘YourOwn Thing” is mainly bright, bouncy fun. TTie music, by Hal Hester and Danny Apolinar, just adds to the lively pace. , -A A A Director-aqthor Donald Driver has wisely staged the short (about 1% hours) ' play with no ptermissiiin, so there's no . break in the merry mood. The--story is -loosely based .o n Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night,” the comedy in which a girl (Viola) masquerades as her twin brother, who she believes is dead. Then he shows up to confiue mat- ^ ters. Most of the laug^ in “Your Own Thing” come from tfaiS' unisex theme. For instance; the teotherTi nurse, who thinks her .patient is a girl, asks him, “Since when are we wearing our armpits, -Italian style?” ' ' And Viola’s employlir, Orson, finding himself having strange feeUngs about her (him),' fearfully :consults his psychology books about latent homosexuality. < The nine-member cast—small for a musical---isI litfle-known,- except for Sheree North, who lately has been seen mostly in TV roles. Miss North’s contributions to the play were njore Visual than auditory. ' / As Oi^n, Allan Hunt was properly perplexed, although (possibly beamse of ‘Of. the power of suggestion of his role) his voice sounded greatly like Orscm Bean, ' Priscilla Lopez and Gerry Glasier (as the twins) and Alan Martin, Gerry Burkhardt and Gregg Smith (as Fire. Pestilence and Death In the /q>ocaIypse rock gtoup) danced and sang capably, although some of the srags would sound better with less volume. In lesser roles,. Stellar Bennett sparkled as the nurse, and Bruce Jacobs lent a Pat Paulsen quality to the stage manager, an Establisiunrat figure. Hearing the /^alypse mentira ESP, he tells them they’d better not bring any of that stuff into the theater. ■■ '--e=-wA k~~'k The play’s one setting is a sort of neo-Elizabethan ^rior, upon which is projected such' lighting effects as psychedelic patterns 'and v a r i o u S vignettes—an assprtmrat inchidtaig John Wayne, Pope Paul, Everett Dirksen apd Humphrey Bogart—as their “voices” comment humomusly pn the goings-on. A- - A A_‘ - With its unpretentious potpourri of rock and Shakespeare, “Your Own Thing” — at the Fisher until Sept. 8-is good viewing from both sides of the gen^ation gap. . - • BIRMINGHAM «- The aty Commission recently authorized a request by the Baldwin Public Ubrary to hold an art auction Sept. 20 on a portion of Shain Park. the library will auction pictures from ifs collection of reproductions which are rented by local residents. » Press Out 3 Hours Everything Soldv.. from our Press Want Ad. Twenty calls, everything sold.” Mrs. G. W. DimN^ ROOM TABLi, 6 UphoMlTUd Chair*, PRESS WANT ADfl ' do all the work for you. Ip addition they are people-pteasem — the sellers, the buyers. ATiicc fast way to dp business. Dial: 334-4981 or 332-8181 WhtnYouTftsf RidftthftBig MACH III HA^ Thii It th« tottatf whMted tl^k nie-' iMcycl*. Mg tiwMi' qrllndar datigii wHh SiM> ce*«tlicrt out-pArfMmrf - Atoll AO I wMitfteptfMMi 124 MPH. Malta IhiedihilwWniiU at an unboatabla 12.4’«acondt, and all iMt it tteck, GOT ITT GET IT at KmiauU ROBBINS SPORT 6YCU 2217 AulMm Noad most MOOILS THt; PONTIAC PRESS WEDNEiSDAY, JULY 80, 1969 Beefed-Up EgVpt, Air Power 'No GKallenge to Isroef' By FRED g. HOnrMAN AF Military Writer WASHlNGTOri -i. The rar biulit Egyptian air force’a first attempt to challfnge la^i air superiority since the East war two years ago failed, y.S. analysts say. As a result, analysts say they believe the United Arab Republ- strtkes with shallow penetration of Israeli air space. This Is seen as the aig esnee of i^bout two w«e|ia' of hatvy ^r .fighting in /t)ie Suez Canal '^area—fighting accompanied by new threats by Egyp tian President Gamal Abdel Nasser. ic lacks the air power necessary to support a major ground attack across the Suez Canal into the Sinai. Instead,.military experts forecast the U A.R. will concentrate In the months ahead on intensified local attacks on Israeli positions along the Suez Canal and on low-level, hit-and-run air STILL FALL SHORT In substance, tt^ UJS. experts fed the Rnssiana hava succeeded In reequipping the shattered Egyptian air force and training substantial numbers of new pilots who, however, still fall short of ifiafching the Israeli air force in combat. According to the latest Intelligence information, the Arab countries outnumber the Israelis in military aircraft by'1,000 to about 3SD, Jto tanks pbout 2,500 to 1,000, and in men under arms aboiit ^,000 to some 80,000. Howey^ lifaeLcpn mobilize its reservists in 72 hours and raise its wees to about 275,000. The Russians have spent an estimated $2 billion since the summer of 1967 to refit the Arab armies and air fwces, particularly the U.A.R. and S^an military establishments,' and to retrain troops and officer corps. new, bat Syrian pilots are considered decidedly Second-rate. The Israeli air force numbers some 285 fighters, light bbmb- eil^s.,. and fighter boml^. foost of them of French, manufacture. France refuses to ship replace- planes planes to Israel. Ibe Russians have provided le U.A.R. air forco vdth more 8U7 ground attack planes than they had before the six-day war, and this is considered important in battlefield support of infantry and armor. WELL-GUARDED The bulk of the Egyptian fighter force of some 330 planes include the well - regarded MIG21 and SU7. On the other side of Israel, the Syrian air force has some 150 to 200 Jet fighters, most of' them Tuesday Events in State Capitol ------ Mv*r«l bill! Into law, Includine on# that raquirai Michigan inatarcycirsli --------craah halmata on lhair haadi at 1 whan lhay ara rldlnf---------‘■”- THe sacaatASY op sTAra Inuad a bIHar eom^alnt about lack of until for tha Stata Sataty Commlnlon. THa STATa APPaALS COUaT , furor'i Court M praludico a cat VO man conviciad on chargai lih gambling law violations. Tifa LaeiSLATuaa Had racauad until Ocl. A. But Israel Is in the process'of receiving 100 U.S. A4 Sky Hawk fighter bombers, and late this y^ar the United States will start ^filing thy ^irst ol) ^ F4. Phap-mm jets, similar to the best fighters in the U.S. Air Force ■ Navy. '■ MISSILE DEFENSE The Egyptians repositioned some 30 surface-to-air missile sites, mainly to defend Cairo and the Nile Delta, bilt also to screen approaches along -the Suez Canal. Backing up these missile sites are some 30 improved radar installations, Sources said the Egyptians counted on these defenses, plus better fighters, to keep out air attackers, but the Israelis got through in the recent fighting. Neither American nor Israpli sources feel there is much danger of any serious Egyptian bombing raids agaipSt Lsraeli cities. The Egyptians have some 80 elderly RuSsian-huilt 'bombers. Egyptian fighters have too shwt a rangy to permit escorting the bon^bers oyer Israeli cjtiesi; offi-cialS/Sa'id. v // ADDITIONAL ARMS The Israelis are concerned about additional arms they-say the Russians, have agreed to send Nasser as a result of the Egyptian president’s visit to Moscow last fall. The Israelis speak about possibly 100 to 200 more planes for the U.A.R., 500 more artillery pieces and 600 more tanks. The Egyptians have done one thing which should save them from the total knockout that marked the beginning of the lightning war in June 1967; They built shelters for most of their planes nn many airfields constructed in the last two years. The Egyptians have rewgan-ized their army and increased thair ground forces from seven tb-1? ^visions. , ^ The Russians have t^n su]^ plying the Egyptians with new medium tanks, T54 and 755 models, to replace the old. World War II vintage T34 tanks. LOSSES REPLACED The Israelis have about 20,009 more men under arms'now than at the outset of the six-day wv and-their affioers here say they have replaced tank losses, but refused to say where the addi-tiondMsraeli armor is coming from. and Jordan bad respected ^ forces on another Israeli ^ank. Space is on the side of the' Israelis this time. In 1967, the Egyptians moved thousands of troops across the Sinai Desert, which they then held, to Israel’s border. Syria then dominated the heights overlooking Israel, Now, hofweve^i the Israelia hold the Golon Heights which they took from tile Syrians, they occupy the west bank of the Jordan, and their lines are strong along the Suez Canal cm the ' edge of Egypt proper. Israel has built a fortified defense line along the canal and, although its officials VSk not discuss details, it%]o|0^ there are mobile strttGTg forcc|S on reserve in the'Sinai. % PRESCRIPTIONS AT MY COST . plus'A MAX. 1.50 PROFESSIONAL FEE DELL'S PRESCRIPTION CENTER OPEN THURS. 9 a.m. to 9ii.m.-FRI. 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.-^SAT. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. BIGGEST MONEY - SAVING SALE of the Year .. .at SIMMS—The F riendly One, now we're celebrating our 35th Birthday the best wciy we know how BARGAINS, this is our way of showing you how much we appreciate your post patronage., limit quantities. Come cfnd save more during the final 3-doys of this event. Rights reterved to. Simms will pay for 1 hour of parking in "the Downtown Moll. Just hove tidket stamped at time of purchase (except toboccQ cincr beverage purchases), FREE PARKING You can charge your purchases on our 30-day same qs cash plan dr use your AAASTERCHARGE card. Ask us about the plan for your budget. LIKE m CHARGE IT ROUX FANCIFUL RINSE $1.7^ value — 16 ouncet of (.eody to use temporary hair coloring. • Limit 2 per per- COSMETICS-Main Floor SUNTAN LOTIONS & OILS 4«z. size. Your choico of Coppertone, Tonfostic. Sea and Ski or Bronzeton. Lets you ton without burning. Drug*—Main Floor SACCHARIN TABS-^1000 'Ril Sweet' effervescent saccharin tablets are ’ faster dissolving, non-fattehing. No calories. Drugs—Main Floor PERSONNA INJEaOR BLADES . 79c.„,value, pkg. of 5 Super stainless steel injector blades made in En^dhiS. More" shaves per blade. Drugs—MUin Floor SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS LOMA FUSTIC CLOTHES HAMPER Still a Good 5 to 12 Size Selection Ladies’ Summer Dresses Values to $g9B -Your Choice That right, just imagine —first quality ladies' summer dresses in, a good selection of prints, stripes and solid colors. Sleeveless and short sleeve styles, shirtwaist styles, shifts, A-lines, etc.; Cottons; jersey blends, etc. A style for every taste and occasion. Mostly sizes .5 jo 12.' ' Ladiea'Wear—AAain Floor Regular $3.44—the woven look .for beauty and strength. Solid rim around top and boHom for durability. 25V4" toll. White, blue or yelipw. Housoworoe—2nd Floor 268 PACKAGED NUTS AND BOLTS Regular 29c to 39c tellers. Indudes ah assortment of, screws, nufs, bolts ond colter pins. For hi;>usehold repair jobs. Hordworo—2nd Floor 8< SALE OF BONGO DRUMS - SET w 1-4 Inch 1-3 Inch Reg. $1.41 14 Inch 14 Inch Reg. $241 F Sundries - Main Floor IMMERSION WATER HEATER Regular 49c. Immersion water ,heater, boils liquid in 2 .minutes. Safe and quick. Ideal for instant'coHee. Sundriot —Main Floor w SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS HAIR SPRAY MEN'S BERMUDA SHORTS VolOet to $3.98. Comfortable Bermuda shorts fn eosy care permanent press-fdbrics, in colorful plaids or stripes. First ^uol'ty. Sizes 28 to 36. — Batomonf 135 16-oz. size Sudden Beauty hair spray choice of -regular, hard to hold or un-Kented. BRECK SHAMPOO OF CREME RINSE $ 1.89 value, 16'-oY lizf Greek skompoa or crefnc« rinse for noraol or oily con- 97' CHILDREN'S PLAYCLOTHES A group of knit pullover shirts with button shoulders, striped seersucker bloutqs and shorts. Sizps 2 to 6. —Main Floor 2:F LADIES'TTALIAN SANDALS Genuine leother sandals impprted from Italy, with padded innersole and back strop. Sizes 5 to 10, choice of 2 styles. . — Rosomont [00 RAY-aVAC BATTERIES Regular 19c sellers. Standard D-siza Ray-o-voc batteries for flashlights, toys, ate. Fresh stock. —2nd Floor 14‘ MELMR OSCHLUTHK SPRINKLER Regular $3.49, Model 525 swinging spray lawn sprinkler covert areas 6x9-ft. to 34x65-ft. Instant fingertip control.' 2pd Floor BERNZ-O-MATIC FIRE EXnNGIHSHER Coast Guard approved fire extinguisher, has dry chemical for auto, boot or home fires. Oiiick disengaging mounting bracket. 2nd Floor 535 Solid Body Singla Pick Up Electric Guitar Birthday Price iniui Single pick up elecirie guitar with solid* body, tremolo bor, beautiful rosewood finish. With cord, pick a»d instruction book included. Sundriot —Main Floor UNBURN AEROSOL SPRAY SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS ISIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS $1.98 value, 4-oz. Stops burn pain, especially sunburn pain. Anesthetic and antiseptic. Drugs—Main Floor 119 Costs Only Pinnies a Year to Operate Novelty Nite Lite 6r12 INSEa SPRAY ■ $1.19 val clothing ■ flies, etc. , 8W-0Z. size sproy on person, surface. Repells mosquitoes, Drugs — Main Floor 7? CHILDREN’S DISPOSABU TIDY BIBS ‘Pack of 30, 69c value, pkq. of JQO disposable bib's with liquid proof plastic lining. Use .for a day. then throw away. ' • / ^ Drugsv^Main Floor 35’ TELEPHONE ADDRESS BOOK 29« Regular 59c. Attractive floral design on the cover o( a 4'/2x6-inch telephone and address book. Sundries —Main Floor 2-PC. tSSSSr VALET SET Regular 98c. Clothes brush and shoe hOrn set with horse head handle. Hongs on the wall Sundries —Main Floor oVmated VACUUM BRUSH Royal family, bottery»operated hand vacuum" -brush ior^enr, home or office. Regular $1,95 BnHeriPs are extra, / , -Sundries-Main Floor 99’ Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac •A' Prandon Tiachei^ and Board i Accord on 1 -Year Pact THE POmiAC PRESS By NED ADAMSON with a bachelor’s degree wU^be $7,250. I BRANDO!)! 'TOWNSHIP — the Bran- / The maxi™m‘ in that dassificaUon is tkm School Bharr a bachelor’s degree tetiva agreement on a new one-yiac holder with 30 hours of additionaUcourse Contract. . ^XB'Ork is $7,550 with a maximum of The contract agreement la now subject 112.300. to ratification by both th« school board and the union, Mhe teachers association is planning to imr^ ratification vote either this Saturday or Aug. 0. Board of education toembera mil vote on the contract adoption, Aug. U. Beginning teaching personnel holding a master’s degree would start at $7,750 with a maximum oflUATtL New atlditiOns to the contract package this year include a paid $5,000 life insurance policy, for all teachers and. a long-term disability policy for teachers The convincing approval Monday of with at least six months of employment toe district’s 14.8-mlll package rr- that in the Brandon system. Included a 6.8-mill Increase — coupled with the tentative teacher contract set-tiement has put the Brandon School district back on firm financial footing and “ a healthier state of affairs," administration officials'believe. ■ MINIMUM SALARY Under the tentative- agreement, the minimum salary for a beginning teacher ‘MAJOR CONCESSIONS’ Schools Supt. Clyde Fisher said majw concessions in the negotiations, which began March 26, included a decision by the teachers to drop the agency-shop clause and the mofe by b o'a r d negotiators to drop plana, to press for a three-year contract. Fisher said the. board and teachers association representatives had reached tentative agreement »ast T^nirsday but ytere waiting for the outcome (rf the millaM election before* finalizing the Itact. ' ★ it Fisher also revealed that the board la now definitely planning to place a $3,675,000 bond issue proposal back on the ballot in December. vided funds for a new high school building and additions and rennovations to several elementary buildings, was defeated on a tie voto at the June 0 election. WINS EASILY The millage questiop passed Monday by a large margin (673-283). Most of the funds from that levy will go for salaries and instructionaLmaterials. Lopsided approval of the combination millage renewal of 8 mills and Increase of 6.8 mills marked a sharp turnabout by Brandon voters. They have vetoed the measure 444 to 422 on June 9. .iSightly litoder SO per cent of the elea^ torate vpted Monday, compared to OM persons or 43 per cent June 9. ^ Brandon’s millage 'approval also marks one of the few millage increase requests that have been^ approved in Oakland County schopl districts tols year. Fisher comm*«|e4 JM-Rw Thtarei^^ _ . . support gRted the miBage package reasserts the willingness of Brandon residents to conttoue the operation of their schools. ■ ' ★ it * A second defeat of the millage proposal wouU have left the district with no operating funds with, the possibility of annexation to adjoining districts, Fisher said. ★ ★. ★ Duration of the millage package’s extensions was changed from five years t£ three years for the second election. Administration officials said this was done because of the possibilities of tax i reform within the next few years. WEDXilSDAY, JULY 80, 1960 4-4 Firm Is Pressured on Air Pollution By NED. ADAMSON PONTUC TOWNSHIP - The Michigan State Health Department is the air pollution control «quh»nent would be ready shortly,” Jage^ said. The Health Department is not saU|fied with the term ‘‘shortly,’^ Jager said. The company has bdbn instructed to name a date within four weeks wben the will be ready. V t CAN TAKE legal ACTION "If Christopher seta no date with the Air Pollution Control Commission, legal action can be taken,’’ Jager said. Legal actioh, Jager Said, could take the fonn of an injunction enjoining the Milford Dump SJfe Works, Only After Sorry Experience Milford Site Suffers Costly Fire Landfill Replacing 'Monstrosity' (EDITOR’S NOTE:Thia i$ the last article in a three-part teries.) By LOIS FRIEDLAND The Milford landfill site — recently a festering open dump — is now being turned into a sapltary operation for removal of wastes. The site was once a "typical example of the monstrosities" so common before state Public Act 87 was pass^ to fight (pen dumps through regulation and licensing. ★ ★ ★ ■ — ■*-The dump so described by an Oakland County Health Department spokesman four months ago, today is being turned into a sanitary landfill site by new operators, the Oakland County Road Commission. In the interim, however, there has been a costly effort to extinguish a nearly three-month fire which resulted in a stench that permeated houses two miles away. ______________ ‘‘Act 87 seeks to prevent the types of conditions which have been the source of grave concern to village and township officials as well as nearby residents. Had the department of health’s prior, requests been heeded, the conditions in Milford would not have existed,” noted Robert T. Coleman, directcM’ of environmental health. DATES’TO EARLY 195(te ~ V The history of the Milford site goes back to the early 1950s when the arqa first became an open dump. As early as 1957, a group of residents headed by Herbert Hoffman, 1155 Gardenia, protest^ conditions at the dump. They delivered a petition signed by 37 homeowners requesting improvements. The township did little, so the homeowners contacted the health department^' After a site inspection, Russell H. CoMson, then director of the sanitation, division for the County Health Department, wrote Hoffman; "It’s a typical open pit edly reasonable, I don’t feel it a refuse dump. Although your objections are undoubt-• leallb.’’ 'f ites a menace to public healin \ Thq following year a bull^zer was brought' in to dover some of the open garbage piles in a limited attempt to make the area more sanitary. Hoffman termed the.bulldozer episode a."ploy" to appease people temporarily. He insisted that conditions were, just as bad a few months later as before the bulldozing. V ^ CONDITIONS GROW WORSE , The conditi(»is grew worse witfr30-to-4(t;foot:piles~of garbage lying everywhere- -and harrela of liquid industrial wastes strewn in between. Tito rats were bigger than tata;-aecording.toj!0.me residents, and fires were commonblajto- i v The passing of Act. 87 in I965 gaYe:lhe Oakland County jflealth/Department thd means to ttogin inspecting the site and demanding changes. A. letter was sent to township operator Charles Evans, who apparently disappeared soon after. ★ ! : ■‘I - J • Several site inspections by health department personnel'durii\g 1966 and 1967 ■bowed little or no improvement. The cease-buAiing edict was being ignored and the garbage piles were not compacted and buried by dirt daily as called for in the new act. A meeting with William Mainland, then township supervisor, brought initiat cooperation. PLAN PREPARED , An engineering plan was prepared with designs to cover the dump and turn operations into a sanitary landfill. Mainland brought t||e plan to the health department, the plan was discussed but nothing else ever hapi^ned, according to Coleman. ‘"rhere was no next move by the township’’ he explained. Coleman suggested that since the township and city did nqt have enough money they did nothing.. ——On Alay 7-of this year, fire, by spontaneous combustion, started in the garbage piles at the northern end of the ravine used for most of the dumping. The fire, which burned for nearly three months apparently .fed itself on the gases which collect in the air pockets around thO heaped-up garbage. Compaction — as now required by law — eliminates these pockets. Coleman warns other areas harboring open dumps that the fire: is making "Milford pay the long dollar for the error of its ways." COSTLY EFFORT It has taken more than a million gallons of water, some 428 man-hours by firemen, DPW w(Jrkers and volunteers, and money for equipment and air chemicals to finally stop the fire. 'nie illwill caused by toe IncrediMe stench from burning garbage was also con® -siderable. Milford Village Manager Joseph S. Brophy — who has taken his voluntary turn at a bulldozer on toe site—- indicated that cans of chemicals had to be sprayed Into the air to ease the odor for residents. ■I'l ' , •'A*' /★" ' I Currentl^j the fii-e appears to be out. The garbage piles have been cleared out up to 20 or 30 feet below toe surface and all has been flooded, compacted and iiioV*-ered with dirt to act as a fire wall.' , , Meanwhile, the township and village have succeeded in reaching an agreement whereby the road commission has assumed operation of the landfill site. LICE^E SIGNED ...^ wjiilp Milford men have beeii vrorking on toe fire at the northern end of the site, Toad^mmission workers havie -beerr compacting^e accumulated garbage at the southern end. ’The area is now begiraiing to work as a sanitary landfill, / [A license, as required, Undbr Act 87, was signed late last month. V ./★ :■ * . . 6)Ieman explained that toe Milford situation —- multiplied all over the state — is what forced introduc^on pf A^t “tt dumps had been properly bandied, this ' would neyer have happened," heiaid. His statemmts should make municipalities which are holding ouLmi^prbpef p()licing~bnEeir dumj^ b^ to thhiK. ^ pressing Christopher Industries Inc, to take swift action to correct its*violation of toe Michigan Air PMlution Control Act. . . An official ot the Health Department’s Division of Occupational Health in Lansing has warned the Detroit-based fim that it faces a hearing before the . Michigan Air Pollution Control Commission and subsequent legal action if it do^ not submit plans for air pollution. operating.' control equipment at its Collieir Road * * * - facility. . \ ^ * ★ The engineer noted that "it appears to ^ . , , , . . the public that little is being . done Christopher maintains a > a r-r e 1 - ,gg„ding the matter of curbing air pro^rty ad^ pollution when acUiallyr behind thi . joining the Pontiac-AtMi A DOWNTOWN AND f fBMBMAU d WAYTON PLAINS EAGLE’S FANTASTIC VIEW-The NaUonal Aeronautics and Space Agency yesterday released this crisp look at the moon’s surface, photographed by the Apollo 11 crewmen who walked there. The shadow of the lunar module Is at '' lower left, with a large crater at right. The horizon blends' into the dark backdrop of outer space. ; Close-Up Of Moon's Surface Taken From Inside Lunar Module Here's How Earth Looks From 112,000 Milei Away ■v * THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Hurim Street Pontied, MIchifian 480M WEEOIESDAY, Jpl^Y 81. 1988 Roeu A. yimilMia \ * CiiatniM M Hm SomA I. Row*M H. nnM»«i», II Riewn M. Fitfamtu Traaiurtr Md rinaBc OHImt AUO IIOCVUY' JdNH A. Ritrr a. JMIMI LoMl Adnrtldnc I It 11. etmnttt KKK Doctrine Aired Our recent series on the workings of the PontUc unit of the Ku Klux Klan has {Irovoked a number of comments frdm the community: ★ ★ ' ★ • Something that needed doing for yean. • Perhaps white people believe it now. • Great series exposing local bigotry. On the other hand: • Why give them that much publicity, they’re just koob. «You’re endangering their neighbon by giving addresses of the Klansmen. • This could touch off violence, or raise tensions. ★ ★ ★ We published the series because we felt it important that people of this area know that such an outfit does exist here. It’s vital that good people undentand there are extremists in our society; on both sides, and what these extremists believe. The withering light of publicity can seriously cui^tail the growth of such groups, which feed on hatred, bigotry, and secrecy. ' Such information about the Klan can also spur uncommitted citizens to become more active*in groups . which are dedicated to solving problems, instead of creating them. Some of our black readers may have winced at seeing in print for the first time what they have known for ^ears about the Klan. But our white readers who did not know the Klan dogma against Negroes, Jews and Catitolics can’t claim ignorance any longei. Voice of the People; ^Exhibit forEm^hoiM WouldShedMoonLighV I would like to see thb npiOon rocks and other samples that were brought back to earth. After the scientific tests are completed, Wouldn’t they be put on Exhibition? / * i * ' " c We can’t dll go tp the? moon, Wut wo couM see what it is made If a small fee were charged, how many millions could be raised for our space program? * RALPH HILL 7381 COOLEY LAKE ROAD • mON LAKE Even Greater Chollenges Lie Ahead! David Lawrence Says: Patriot Inspired by George M. Coban Hie other night I saw a movie honoring Geot^e M. Coban. He did more for our country than all the protesters could undo In ten years. With all this talk and demonstratfaw against our men and country, the war that most people cell a waste of lives, we should stop and think of what this man did. His song, *‘Over There," should inqilre the petals ft today like those of ^yesteryear. Aa they miuxdied off to war. they sang this song aa an inqiiration, not as a protest. I am proud to to an American dtlzen. 1 wish eyerybody would and coidd feel the same way. . , DOUGLAS WARD IM SOUTH MERRIMAC Readers Comment on KKK Stories In youf articles about the Ponttoc area KKK, the American Independent .Party is mentioned, often. If these two groups are not connected, why do th^ hold their meetings in the same building? And also why do so many Klansmen hold local and state offices of the AIP? U. S., Jap Leaders Confer Budget Surplus Is Real Surprise 1 N. J. COLEMAN 178 S. JOHNSON Negotiations are under way this week in Tokyo that could have important effect on Japanese-American relations. Led by Secretary of State William Rogers, a U.S. delegation is engaged with its Japanese Counterparts in seeking solutions to developing economic and sovereignty issues that have grown increasingly sticky. .★ ★ ★ Perhaps the most important of them is the governmental statna of Okinawa, the Padfic island over which the United States has exercised stewardship since the conclusion of World War n. With its military bases, . it is a strategic outpost in support of bur commitment to protect Formosa (Nationalist China) against attack by Red China and a deterrent to renewal of the Korean war. The Japanese government, represented by Foreign Minister Kncm Aichi, seeks return of Gkinawa to Japanese |rule by 1972 and toe light of sanction over use of its military installation there, should the United States become embroiled in Far Eastern hostilities. Although the Anglican occupation and developmbht Of the island has provided the 900,000 Japanese^ speaking inhabitants with an un-prepedbutedly floiuislung economic climate, they have nonetheless chafed under what they consider foreign domination, with growing sentiment for reversion to tobir pre-war status under toe Japanese flag. Inevitably, control of QkmaWa has fueled chauvinistic attitudes by strong . Nipponese political elements. It is unthinkable, however, that American diplomacy wUl risk 1 m p a i r i n g the essential friendship between governments of the mightiest democracies of the West and the East over the relatively minor issue of Okinawa’s autonomy. WASHINGTON It Isn't often that th» aaffinatcs for the receipts* and espemytores of an apnual budget of the g b v e rm -ment are nUs; calculated on the better side. Usually the d e f i c it s are higher ftabla by November 1870, issues other than those on the economic side will taka precedence in the cort-gressfonal elections. But at present there is considerable w;«Ty over what the outcome of the current controversy on taxes will be. Chairman Wilbur Mills of the House Ways and Means Cimunittee has proposed a formula whereby a tax-reform biU could to put through the House and sent to the Senate Italy Leads in Walkouts Americans perturbed with the increase of strikes of public workers and suspension of services don’t have nearly toe problem Italians have been facing for years. Such walkouts are as way of life ‘In sunny Italy. Unable to solve the strike problem^ Itahans have come up with a practical solution. They now have "Dial-A-Strike.” One phone cal) fills a citizen in on wtoit services are or are not operating toat day-—trains, garbage disposal, or the post ‘ office. - * '' This should work until the telephone workers walk put. GOP May NeedLbls of Luck in 1970 lies on his politi- ■M W By BRtrCE BIOSSAT NEA Washlngtim Copseotondent WASHINGTON - Prerident Nixon has begun putting the new gross of p^ted management techniques on his political opwations. Butmuch valuable time has been lost and he may need immense good fortune to come out well in the 1970 No (me can visit Republi- BIOSSAT can National Committee bead-quarters today ' without encountering a host of eager new faces, freshly minted organimtional charts, a flush , of energy and hi^ morale. \ ★ ♦ ★ Already weli-establirtted in the White House itself, of course, is former South Carolina estate Chakmah ’Ha^ Dent, with his panded offfee in the East Wing symbolizing a belated bow to the political realities of the presidency, jygt -the nearly euphoric state cannot obscure the damage done in the first several memths after Nixon was dected. All aside from the endless Irritation caused in many states by the President’s unorthodox and erratic jobfilling procedures, the patronage operation was lau-gely wasted as a lever for provlcUng potential early advantage to 1970 candidates for Congress and some key states offices. Use of some a v a i 1 a b 1 e feddal jobs to give candidates showcase identify can often avoid later bruising primary battles, since they* may gain a commanding lead for nomination if they are otherwise suitable choices. ★ ★ ★' More than a few well-placed - Republicans are fuming over what they consider the Nixon a d m inistratum’s senseless throw-away of fhi8\opportunity. The President himself evidently did not wake up ^ fully to this matteMmtil |»-became a n g e r e d at the special-election loss. *t h Is . spring 'of a vacated Republican fJ-.S. House seat in Montana. MORE UNLIKELY Coming on top of the earlier loss of Defense Secretary Melvin Laird’s Wisconsin^ seat, this outcome made stilt more distant the prospect that the GOP can capture the 218 seats in 1970 needed f(»* a controlling majority. Theto total afto Montana was 190, down two from tiie frail net gain of four they managed in the 1968 election. ★ ★ , ★ The party may not find it easy, either, to hold onto the Massachusetts seat vacated by the death of Rep. William Bates and due to be filled this fall; Worse still is the Outlook that many other holes may to opened up in the GOP house lineup as sitting cimgressmen In several states perhaps decide to try for U.S. Senate iseats next year. ' k Soma of these things are judged inescapable difficulties. But some of Nixo^ good political friends « fhidting Jiim for blowing tne patronage bit, for waltiiig too long to install new National Chairman Rogers Morton and get party reorganization under way, for being so Intent bn qulc^ adopting a high-flown, sfatesmanlike posture that he grossly neglected the grubby, routinized, political necessities, itf his new office. “ ,k • -■ ■' - predictoL it often doesn’t turn oub to to as large as expected. But now. as the budget figures for fiscal year 1969,^ which ended These reditotions were in a number of agencies of th« government, hicluiting 8130 million less spent for foreign econoniic aid, 8480 million curtailed in the Department of Housing ’and Urban Development, 83^, million in the Department of Transp<»iatibn', and 827 3 million by the Cohimodity Credit Corporation. Spending, however, exceeded estimates in some agencies. : The Budget Bureau has a L hard time antlclpatjn|-iair trend of revenue am expenditures, and it is easily possible for an error of a billion dollars in estimates to bemade. MOST SURPRISING Bfoat is most suriwislng is that the income-tax col-lecticms were so large. The effects are befog felt in Congress, where some members view the new figures as msanfoKihat it is not necessary to extend the income-tax surcharge. k k k If the economic situation is I think that Larry Adcbck, who is doing a series of articles about the Ku Klux Klan, would to in k lot of trouble if the Klansmen could read. tty Aug. 7, and be enacted into R. F. ^ law before tiie congressional ------ recess of Aug. IS, This in- B’* • good thing to have men like Larry Adooede around volves retaining the tax h> expose bigotry, and it’s good to bave.a paper like' The surcharge blit making certain Pontiac Htyss that will print it. More power to you. reductions fo taxes for DOUG SPEA8 particular classes. 6 GREEN STREET ★ ★ ------------------------------------------------------- ■ I don’t expect you to print this as you probably would like to keep it suppressed.^ Your Mr. Adcock seems to deem the KKK as a clownish outfit and himself a hero for infUtratfog it and he also seems to bring the AIP pprty fo with the KKK types. k k k Instead of making light of tiie only Party dedicated to np-holdlng what’s left of American fmditton, morals, dignity ^ Christianity, let him stop playiag ton and realty to one by The significant fact is that the federal government has a surplus for liscM year 1969. PubUc. confidence can to sustained when fiscM stability is asshred. ^ Bob Considine Says: auauM«MH^ WCU UUgOTlPW WMl QUOI^ OTHUimiMHI , dedicatedtto tiie destmetion of America. For his gntdanee, 1 submit SDS, Black Panthers, 8MPQ, BITCH, Ram, Pieros-sive Labor Party, Young Socialist Alliaaco kad tho Coi» Presidewf/sSereitoded "il* fMi worfliwhile. Incidentally, as a Klansman. Adcodr forgot to by ufi (Jkl r ttwilioT Tufi€ ^WITH PRESIDENT NDKJN ¥- The President was greeted at Manila International Airport with a tune that hadn’t i A 1 been played in his honor since 1962. The big brassy Filipino band gave him stirring rendition of ‘‘California Here I Come.' Again, that is. “If you’re CONSIDINE looking around for k quick difference, between Nixon and his two predecessors, here’s o«ie,’^ said an old hand from the U.S. Information Service who is making the trip. ★ ★ ★ ‘‘JFK and LBS alwajn came down the steps from Air Force One by themselves,” he said. ‘‘Jacqueline and Lady Bird always followed, a few discreet steph behind them. Dick walks down with his wife,’’ The U.S. and^the Philippines have many things in common, including TV coirt-mercials. The Philippines is the third largest English-speaking nation fo the world* A thousand more ties bind ur than separate us. But some of the differences make one wince. ‘‘We are one of the few countries fo the'World which overcame a Communist rebellion without the aid of any foreign troops,’’vPresident Ferdinand Marcos said at a reci^tion at Mklacanang T»ark. ' ,, , ★ k- - “Aren’t you wolfed about the current resurgence of Huk (Communist) activity in central Luzon?’’ a reporter ask-'Cd. . ■' , ' ' i, ' "Ho, * the handtome president replied; “We havft beenv able to isolate th e intellectuals from the ahned^ elements..As lonK as iwucanl^ keep on doing that, we have., nothing to wiwry about.’’ ‘ISOLATED’ “Will you (explain furthpr?” the reporter asked. “The Politburo which was organized way back in the 1950s is supposed to be the unit of intellectuals that run of'UnioniaikmWst birtliday.—tito'~Bnned''~elenieHts,' ffodT' Manila. We have been able to isolate or prevent the organization of another polit-buro.’’ • ★ ★ ★ “When you said Isolate, you mean you have arrested them?’’ “We have sent them to jail and they are still there’’ “How long have they been fojaU?’’ “Ten years, ' spme for 20 years,” Marcos said with a shrug. Nixon, who seldom bobbles, missed one the other day in Manila. , • “Come back, sir,” a frioidly Filipino called out to him as he moved toward his plane at the end of his short stay. ★ k ' k‘ “I’ll be back,” the President assured him, cheerfully. In view of the geography concerned,., and his keen interest in the Filipinos, he should have pulled himself into a ramrod position, removed his- comcoh pipe, saluted and pledged, “I shall return.” ‘ GERALD BORGgUIST ,1247 01 Quiegtion and Angwer . How do I write to the space center? I want to find out more about the moon trip. . ROBBIE L. REPLY The address is National Aeronautics and Space Administraiion, Manned Spacecraft Center, Hour ston, Texas 77058. Howevdr, requests for pub-lished information should be ^ent to the Educational Office, NASA Lewis R^earch Center, 21000 Brookpark Rd., Cleveland, Ohio 44135. Quegtioty and Anawer 9ouId yon please give me tito addren to write to find out abort gettiffi a driver’s license fo Alabama? M. S. REPLY License Bureau, State of Alabama, Capitol Building,, Montgome^, Ala. (Editor’s Note: Thanks to the help of readers, we’ve located tiie nnlqne Meier’s dock etiier “aaswerfog services” faUed to tarn np. (May we gloat a IttUe?) The eriginal owner’s 8on.foiw UvM in Grasse Poirte and has tiie clock at his tosL ness (ffiiee. However, we’re sorry to say, becanse of the tiwm and effort involved fo keeping it nmniag for dfoplay, Mr. Meier no longer draws it publicly.) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Verbal Orchios of Rochester; 87th birthday. Mrs. Fannie Spees ' of 532 Orchard Lake Ave.; 83rd birthday. Mrs. Eloise 6oe of Union Lake; 89th birthday. Mrs. Jeanle Bidelman of 168 Beach; 81st birthday. Noise Level Mihoaukee Journal Rufoh Nader, the“peopfo’s” lawyer, has zeroed in on amplified rock and roll music. He has told a senate subcommittee that hearings should to held on the need for noise level restrictions and ear protection for musicians and band hall workers. “Hard rock” noise levels, he says, have been measured totWi^ 100 and 116 decibels in Some Washington nightclubs and as high as 135 fo discotheques in other parts of the. country. The American Medical association thinks that levels over 85 decibels are hazardous to hearing. Any parent of a teen-ager who: owns a record player—and they all seem to-^n understand Npder’s worry that amplified rock and roll mjty products " a ~ “ iff ' Americans with hearing impairments. ★ ★ ;★ ■ A cynic mi^ observe tiiat it might not mattar— the kids don’t seem to Ifoten anyway. r -fixed Costs Rock Island (III.) Argus Even ff an automobile is never moved from a driveway, fixed costs, including depreciation for the first three years, insurance, and registration f^, cost the owner 82.88 a d«y for the average standard-:^ sedan,. m(rtestly equijpped, according to the American Automobile association. Operating costs are figured at 3.95 cents a mile; * tI a# ★ It’s a'high price to pay-for ciHivenience,. brt the American public semna hooked . o“_ih« i.4« »1 Jho„9*t- tionai,ecoiramy Voi^dlbike a nosedive if all passenger can suddenly conked out. Actual costs, i n cd u d i n g ownerriiip and operation, run to about 14.5 cents wh«i mileage totals 10,(KM a year, or 8.2 certs per mile if the totalis at20,000. ' . ★ ★ k ■ Public . hy air, rails, or buses costs less, but the family car is ready to go whenever the owner is. Besides, with all the money he pays for highways and streets, ithe auto driver figures he is - befog short changed unless he uses them. CmHM e I# «a«.oo > vMo .h*. •hm k aicklljM nii aS Mhw »|MM In Mw Sa«.M’« yMT. All mall paylili in ^ vaniw. AMWa* Kch bm paM ■» «hn ./ THE PfflTIAC l»RESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 80, 1960 Palace Fif #o Anne Longs for British Chip WNDON IB •- BucUngham Pil«c« siasled Into d^fenao of (ha ttme^ipnored British chip Tuesday and administered a foMIe rabuke to Princess'Anne. Queen EUcabefh' tl, tasted • chip on a Rapid Npvy ship The delicacy in dispute was the P*rench fired potato, which combines With cod to make up a British dish known as fish and chi|M. Men's A Boys', SALE Men’s reg. 3.9*^ short sleeve knit shirts 3-DAY SALE ThuK., F^ri. & Sgt. only sate Boys’1.99-2.49 Icnit shirts, how 1.24 Clearance of sturdy 100% cotton knit shirts In mock turtle, crew neck and col* lor styles, mony with packets; Solid and stripes. Sizes 8 IS in group. f m (Sit. fsjo^f) Dreyten open Sunday Neen to 4 p.ni. etout Tum- w*4. m S / 4 ie AJN. TO a S.M. (Set. r:30.f) ■aon. SMMd.v tIaM fe S a.m. M eloits Tuesi, W«d. at P pjn.J OBtN 10 A.M. TO 9 P M. (Set. 9:30-9) Oseyten epen Sunday Neen te 6 p.m. fDeuiittown closet Tuet„ Wei. at 6 p.m.J DOWNTOWN AND DRAYtON PLAINS (ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, JULY 80. I9fl9 Euromart Attancfing to Its Own Problems LONDON - If they did not realize it before, it is now being brought home to leaders of BriUah opinion that the Cotomon Markdt (Euromart) is giving far /gn^ter priority to aettiiig Its own house in order t^ap to' admitting new pembers. including Britain. ^ ), - For this reason, talks in Brussels where first steps are being taken towards big decisions on the Euromart’s future are being followed with keen interest in London. The 12-years transition period provided when the European Economic Community (EEC) was inaugurated in 1958 is now endling, and the entry applications from Britain, Ir«r land, Denmark and Norway just happen to coincide vrtth a big debate among the six nations themselves about the permanent shape to m given to the community. BIG CHANGES Interest is therefore sHiftihg from t^e terms for neVr appUcants to speculation on the future shape of the |JBC, the bloc the newcbmers will be attempting to join. Some big changes in the present mthp must be expected, it is considered, before the iSix become Seven or Ten. At present the EEC is only the shell of the conoepUon Its founders had In mind. Hiey hoped that economic cooperation, would lead to a political «inion which would rival the United States of America and enjoy the same boiefits irf strong and peaceful unity with massive industriaRapital and the niarket potential of a big population with advanced living standards. Such Is the Spirit which animates the Action Cwnmittee for a United States of Europe, founded and still directed by the 71-year-old high priest of European unity, Jean Monnet. Monnet, whose ideas oL a European superstate brought him into conflict with Charles de Gaulle, b«ieves the time has come .for a move towards the EEC’s original objectives. WIDE INFLUENCE \ j#is committee, though unofficial,r has membership and Influence among the ministers whose views will count when the decisions are taken. approved by the EEC’s Council of b Ground niu.st be prepared for a grand "summit” meeting of the political heads of the six nations, which has been proposed by France and been favorably received by the DECI,ARAT10N OF INTENT In advance, Netherlands Foreign Minister Josef Luna has beerf’ sounding the other countries on tiie prospect of making a Declaration of Intent favoring Britain’s admission in principle. France, however, insists that beforel negotiations are opened the six should agree on the fpiar shape of the chm- Every branch of the jCommon Market organiaztion hai worked full blast In an attempt to get the Issues at least under consideration before the annuar shutdown for the summer vacation, which will suspend activity from Friday until mid-September. -Junior Editors Quizj PRETZELS QUESTION ; Who made the first pretzels? ANSWER: 'fhe kindly, hospitable people called Pennsylvania Dutch - whose ancestors were not Dutchmen but Germans—brought many quaint land attractive customs from- the old world when they moved to P^nsylvania in the 1600s and 1700s. V _ have always been fmous cooks, and one of the delirious and unusual “food items they brought to America was the pretzel, a kind of glazed biscuit, with a salty , intriguing taste .and a queer, twisted shape. As our picture tdls us, pretzel comes from the Latin pretiola. But what does this pretty wofd pretioa mean? It means a small reward, and this again gives ns the origin of - the pretzel.. : In southern Europe were many monestaries where monks taught religion to the neighboring people-including the children. It seems that pretzels Vere first madefy these monks. The monks like to. give one of these tasty tinbits to a child who had learned to pray - it was a small reward for the child’s piety. ’Die special shape evolved because children prayed with crossed arms. In ancient pictures, angels, too, are often shown with crossed arms, so the child could think of praying and angels as he ate his, pretzel. (You can win $10 cash plus APS handsome World Yearbook if^otir-question, mailed xm a postcard„to Junior Editore in care of this newspaper, is selected f6r a prise.) TheCrbwds Are StOI Coming to .POgWC’S GREATEST SALE! Soloeiions Still Compilde! QUNJTYMOOEIMSOFA ISMNOWCO’REnUGERAm lARGE WALNUT CHE$T Motforh' stylw with na -mar plastic lop, s|^cious VtI IS '.drawort: Rog, 59.95 . W W Includos sofa loungers that sleep at nite plus plastic top corner table. Seats 6 people. SOLID CEDAR WARDROBE Double Doora AS" high, (Olid qedar. Reg. 49.95 KROEHLER modern TWEED SOFA He^ IwMd cover, ex-Reg-a79.95.... ^93 Vinelle covered day-'n-nltw sofa and 2 matching choirs, for den or family room. dresser with plastic fop, foirror, oiuatheeL chest and headboard and frame. 2 Easy credit terms. Fine quality bread- loom rugs slashed! Werw 59.95 to 99.95 Now...29J»to49Jn CLOSEOUT! COLONIAL are reversible tor double the wear. 59*99.. 38JW 9’x12'..4495..28J» 8’xlO’.. 34.50.. 24JIS Shi0’..29.95..17k8 14-INCH, 4-BLADE PORTABLE WINDOW FAN Reg. 19.95 COLONIAL SnU ROCKER im^ECK Feom-fillsd back, heavy tdpatlty «oyer.Ro8.69.W... I.PIECE FAMILY SIZE DINETTE Plottie top table ond ^48 EASY MOWTHIY PAYMENTS! FREE DELIVERY! FREE PARKING! ENTIRE ISTOCK INCLUDED AT DNCE-IN-A-LIFETIIVIE SAVINGS! BETTER HURRY! BIG ADMIRAL AIR CONDITIONER m OOBXU.Reg.11< DELUXE ITALIAN PROVINCIAL SOFA Elegant deluxe sofa with the Italian flair, quilted damask cover, foam rubber cush> ions. Reg. $279.95. ^37 4-PC. ‘BASSEn’ CONTEMPORTARY Deluxe modern masterpiece triple dresser, mirror, chest, headboard and frame. Reg. 349.95 4-PIECE MEDITERRANEAN BEDROOM GROUP Old world finish, giant size triple dresser, mirrorn chest, headboard and frame. Reg. $399VoluelNow... $333 ‘DETROIT JEWEL' 4-BURNER GAS RANGE —' Choice of wliite or copper, fine quality 4> ( burner deluxe wide oven 30-inch gds range. | Reg. 139.95. TRADITIONAL LDUNOf DELUXE SPANISH INSPIRED SOFA Quilted damask coyer, pecan finish, exposed wood $1OC frame. Reg. $249.................................. lOD CONTEMPORARY TUXEDO ARM SOFA Beautiful quality plush velvet cover. Terrific value. $040 Reg. 299.95.................................... CisC DELUXE KINGSIZE MODERN LOUNGE CHAIR Colorful heavy tweed pover, reversible foam cush- SilT ion. Reg. 79.95.................................... HI ‘BERKUNE’GIANT ffiCUNER CHAIR Supersize recliner and so comfortable. Covered In $■!“f soft vinyl fabrics. Reg. $99.................. I f FAMOUS ‘STRATOLOUNGER’ RECUNER CHAIR Italian Provincial styling, soTtvinyl cover. SOO Reg. 129.95.............................OO FAMOUS ‘BASSEir 4-PIECE SPANISH BEDROOM Beautiful carvpd frpnts, ddrk pecan finish, triple dress-$OfiO er, mimor,rchest, heodboard and frome. Reg. $449.. iHID yahMs to 690’’! CLEAR-OUT! SEALYiand other famous brand MAMESSES & BOX SPRINGS mis-mafcheol Jif-floor samples. Full, Twin *1K LUXURY ITAUAN PROVINCIAL CHAIR Beautiful/Occasionfal chair in rich fruitwood finish. Reg. 79.95....................................... 000 LOUNGE CHAIRS Values to 99.95 AimiEimC STYLED SPANISH LOUNGE CHAIR Rich plush velvet cover, old world wood finish. S0C Reg. 99.95:...............v--............ ... DO IWOEHLER’ TRADITIONAL HIGH-BACK CHAIR Superb lounge chair covered In quality quilted cover. $”||| Reg. 129.95................................ fSl 33 covmn, nylon frioxu covon. SAVE $67 EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS! NEVER AGAIN SUCH AMAZING BARGAINS! IHURRY! SELECTIONS STILL COMPLETE! OPEN EVERY EVENING TILL 9 P.M. Giant Size WALNUT BOOKCASE '27 5-PC. FRENCH PROVINCIAL DINiNG ROOM S-PIECESPANSmiK DINING ROOM ATERRIFIC BARGAIN! ODD DINING PIECES and 4 side chairs. \,Reg. $249.95......... Plastic top extension tableend' 4 sturdy oak chairs. Reg. $189.................... *155 Odd Chinas, buffets, tables and chairs, assorted styles all priced for quick clearance ..... 50% OFF ALL SUMMER PATIO FURNITURE SLASHED! 6IM.r.,Ch.lUl, Chain, Sun embrellas, etc. All qt unbedtable savings. ELECTRIC WALL CLOCK COD OININQ ROOM FIECES ^ LIVINR ROOM TABLES FOLLOW THBUROWDS TO 5-T-l PIECE w DINETTE SaLOUT \ “ Choose frem ever 50 different Up to %% OFF ASSORTED LAMPS ODD PLASTIC HEADBOARDS ASSORTED WALL PICTURES , Kitchen i>r living room',.... $177 Tqblas, Buffats/Chinas, Chairs ’ Up To 40% OFF andItalionSlylM. Up to 40% OFF I«m21hl“i3rnaiampi. 25%to50%0FF ^ be early for best telection, out they go! 20% to 50% OFF! PONTIAC ~'-|NioiidjiiiH 9 to 9 ’nnilM.,'nit., sait 4.^-. «oNiB'M|n.Y pee viRnr MCK - .-,4 -. ONE COLOR W. Germdn Parties Mount Ad Drives FRANKFURT, Get...„.., West Germany’s top !s/are Wmbatting the sumf poUUcal doldrums with massive advertising; campaigns designed to woo voters in the Sept. 28 parllaro^tary elec- SebasUan Haffner of Stern magazine, say the ads resemble tl claims of ^val brands of soap. Chancellor, Kiirt Georg Kiesin-ger’s Christian Democrats, senior partners in the government coalition are claiming credit for ^11 progress West Germany • s the end of W d proclaiming; ' curely Into the ’70s with the *^DU.” The junior coaliUon-tpartner, the Social Democrats headed by Foreign Minister Willy Brandt,' bills itself as the party df the fu-and Insists "we have the PUSHING iMaGB The Free Democratic party is trying to portray an image of a small but valiapj;, opposition fighting a giant, lethargic coall-■ on bankrupt of ideas. The ri|ht-wing National Dem- speechej! and party rallies. ’Hie state^iwned t e 1 e v i s I o n will make time available for political speeches. Signs will go Up 11 over the country. The* three top. parties have hired batteries of advertising advertising agencies this year. The Socialists vthose orange for the dominant color of their brochures and signs because market research showed it suggested youth, action and progress. The party has also pio- clergymen and retired generals tell why they like Brandt’s party. The ad with the biggest Impact had teicvisioft’s best-known quizmaster, Hans-Joachlm Ku-lenkampff, saying he wants “a like Brandt’’ for chancel- *379” 13*" Easy credit terms. While they lasti « , , , , ^ . Rich walnut furniture cabinet, 3- Snlle. 4 year picture tube warranty. large blades. Use it anywhere. delivery man. More than likely represents the second family “car." "These days more than 14 er cent of suburban families wn a truck,” noted Philip Caldwell commenting on the boom in truck sales at Ford Motor Co. Caldwell, vice president and general manager of truck operations at Ford reported a 14 per increase in sales of light trucks during the first half of the year. "The current boom in truck sales is based In the main on the Increasing 4isage of light trucks for regfeational and personal use," Caldwell said. “We estimate that 65 per cent of the light trucks are used primarily for personal or recreatlonalj)ur- 33% OFF More Trucks Owned by Families Now, ^ Sales Reports Say lOlT (AP) - That truck, during the Orst half of this year driveway at your aver-|compared to 280,588 in 1968. The firm’s 22.4 gain in medium and heavy trucks came ori sales of 55,892 this year compared to 45,596 a year earlier. At Chevrolet the gains in light truck sales are even more Im-pressive. For the first half of this year. Chevy sold 307,718 light trucks compared to 260,8B4 18 per cent " category, Chevrolet sold 60,599 , trucks which was p loss of a few units from a year earlier. Caldwell figured about 20 per cent of the light trucks are used for business whil*^ maining trucks are u _ combination business and plea- gains In sales of , medium and heavy trucks for the'first half of 1969 compared to a year ago—up 22,4 per cent. But the high sales volume of light trucks in the industry makes 14 per cent more Impressive than First Half Industry Sales 1909 1968 change Light trucks ' 744,376 660,510 up 12:7 Other Totals ales of light trucks were up 8.3 fer cent. Total GM gains in ght truck sales werp 52,069 nits or 16.7 per cent. Chrysler Ccrp., which recently reported a 51 per cent dip In third quarter profits, fias not kept pace with Ford and GM in light truck sales and in fact reported an 8.4 per cent drop in light truck sales during the first half. Conversely Dodge, Chrys- * ler’s only truck-producing, division, reported a 21,5 per cent gain in sales of medium and heavy trucks which can cost $20,000 and more depending on ’The manufacturers asually supply only the cab, engine and fram for this medium ,, and hekvy trucks. 'There are numer-firms in the Detroit area and elsewhere which specialize in outfitting the bare chassis With custom bodies Truck sales are expected to continue climbing in the months and years ahead, industry lead-agreed, as more and more young families reach the income FOR THAT BIG THIRST LOOK FOR OLD RED AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE THE SEVEN-UP BOTTUNG CO. OF DETROIT A^IO \ * T""' I y-f' —Tl'iJ> / * Y^R --V^^j< /(T'l r ’* I'V ■ . ;-H‘‘ 'V'V'-"" THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 80, 1H» Sex in Mail Fates Court T0st I WASHINGTON (AP) - Hie battle over sex through the maOs has moved into the Su^ preme Court with the firjst test ol the government's power to , guafd, mailboxes against "pan*/ dering.’' advertisements. ' A gmp'-of fludlera who traffic 'In “aduit” books, magasines, , films and sex paraphernalia leveled a series of constitutional objections at the 1967 law that gave citizens the right to control junction he may iempt of court. The law. took {effect April 15, the advertiser ^lisobeys an In-be held in con- 1968. Since then, has Issued ab^t mailers to knwl off the^ mailihg to far, in New the gqyemmeni court to try to en ..their .mail., The mailem’ appeal Is Important for several reasons;'(1) It could lead to a ruling killing the 1967 law; (2) It could dampen Congress’ willingness to enibt even stronger iegislaUan proposed in May 1^ the Nixon ad-miniatration; (3) It poses the first Important test of the Burger (hurt’s view of obscenity. The' 1967 law provides that any person who receives an advertisement he believes to be “erotically arousing’’ or “sexually provocative” may ask hlS local postmaster to direct the advertiser tat stop soiding mail m. t Voodoo Eros,' „ - . tied. • tojMn the work^ Winton M. Blount,, the post- ** ^ j ------. . ------ eratun. ‘‘Spina Idiots master general, told Congress earlier this month advertise-bvarywherai*’ S|pai^ the Post Office 10,000 orders to certain people Ists. Only once fork City, has draw up a master list of complaining dtizena and mailers would be obliged not to send them “erotic, aex-oriented ad; vertisements." , 'IDIOTS' force the law. That case, dir^ted at ads for mansion of privacy to an Indl-' vidual, otherwise halgleeB in bis home, to ‘turn off* pandering advartisementi which may ba erotically amusing or sexually provoca^ve to him and his (aim ily,!* the lower copirt saM, The SuiMreme Coiiirt in the Iasi American OvU Uberties Union, y®*” contends the 1967 law “makes a censor of each and every dUzen in the country.’’ ^ individual has the right ;to Lawrence Speieer^ director d( the Washington office d the o( Wrabl(iig ..tha Rt^to-lB-yaif sMaMa'iitin (ly wpito Pkntb-er^paito Abi SlncMIr m his convicHoB (^baixhng fnarljuana cigarettes |o two undercover detectives. Sinclair was sentenced Mon- ments for hard-core pornography are growing rapidly. ‘MORE RpTRiCnVE’ Blouht complained that at the same time “the judicial definition of obscenity has grown in-creasingly restrictive.’’ He urged Congress to^ enact the administration's "lefi^slation to toughen the 1967 law.. This would be done in two main ways. I time er censorship groups have hian- or magazines ha would like to read and what fllms be would says. BloiM tabea amappoalte VHIw. ‘‘It is oby^ to me,*’ha ai^ “that tiMoa iHto dou jsot. i^ such tt4u Aooid hapo right to batoaao(it**.« The appeal Olad In * Iba Supreme Ooqit;MgiB as aa nir tempe in qalifbmta to bldA egi-eratlon of th|,;l|67 lair. ^ spS- ihwwtt the court. 18 bHittf ‘It-^was tha^maximum^iia* J p^htt under one ^ clal t^ji^ hyja , to him. MAY SEEK IN JUNCTION | If the advertiser refuses to ^ strike the name from his mailing list, the local U.S. attorney; may mdveior an injunction. If; First, a citizen could ask the Post Office to move against, an i ‘LITTUE BURDEN* advertiser even before the citl-j “Jo require a'commercial'api- zen receives aiiy objectionable terpriaa to st^ a name (rom'lpi^ of the buildup of ita intrf- ; mailing Ust'ieemmlittia burden Second, the Post Office would to impose to gnjffnt^ thit tU- by Detroit -Recorder’s Judge Hpbert Colombo after being court. 18 |o|n| tpnportant peL__ oMmges. Warren E. Burger has taken over fee, Earl W*mr is chMijusUce. Xad by OctobW a inccessor for Abe Fortas will itove been aiitaed. The quesUod now is wl II court's viAw of ol 3 Get Promofioists case to ,Lm Aniides ana vnieu u > ... last Amp 30 th^ is oMUtltiK if^ST LANS|N6 (AI*) -State tional,*^l ' FofiOe hSve announced the'pro- motions of Troopers Jbck Na-ber, Hmmas Nasser and Ricfeh ard Nelson to" detective rank as iigeace division organfaed otinM Longer-Term for Sinclair: Being Studied Citizens' RMew Boatcl Ash 2T DMiTKOIT (AP) *** Tbjl Wavna County toesecutor’i di Poatlac City Crmunlssion flee Is'lookiS into tba legaUfy ■#•*»» to«t night was urged Jo .. . . .. I T. loatUmiA closer diecks on .c^ |n cUimection with i-, Iiqied iMnitallty in blade t»m-intoiities. 1118 Cultural Center, told the «Mh-^sslon a full-time citizens’ review boarb should replaue the Board. itoim tton of tiM BMftiuana laws. But James Garber, chief of ke prosecutor’s crininal division, said ha was rissaarching the Michigan law uiider which ^ Sinclair was aonvicted and sentenced. % noted jUiotiMr gectioa ef mi ' • . law allpwi a! pe^ ifftil twh phor bMivjtetiaiM to be sen-' tedo^. to front » to 40 years awk giv%a to<(IQ|i ffw. Stnclair has pleaded guilty to marijuana charges twica pre* viously. ' Defense attorney Justin C. Ravitz said he has filed for an appeal of the convictipn. Colom- Ing the appeal 'Closer Ch^ks bn Police Urged aommunities, and K should ap-a review board to try to from .jltop- int these thtogs .. ig,’’ he added. es. ’Tha BUggestton^: ^ i ' , by a fohner dty^police The Police Trial Board Monday night held its first hearing on alleged brutality July 10 at . ferinW pdlca cadet, idaimed that the trial board. idUch la an appointed advisory panel to the commission, simply camiot handle all the problems he.says arise in blacii.iielghborhoodS, I frtol board'can ^ nrfM to fMClflo I : I In lb| black !^miMuniW>’* Munsoo told cominissloiiera. ‘METHOD NEEDED’ “Some method should be devised whereby problems can ^ averted before they occur. “Hie City Commission should. bo dented Sinclair'baU psod^fird of ., all, taka tba what hlppios In the Mack “I don’t mead to say tiiat all tiia critidsnia that ve levaled ^at the police are justifiSd,’’ Milnsonsaid. In that inddeat, two. Mack R. walker, 27, of 97 S. Jessie, Shorter, 28, of MS were arrested fiW creating a dlsh^bance resistinji arrest, j CRITICAL OF ATTITUDE. Munson also was drlticil M tile qvar-all attitude of the poOpa department towasd feesi pyppn6. and aald that attituda • ■ ‘ investigated by «>• and a. raviaw A police spokesman today denied charges that city patrolmen'are prejudiced or unnecessarily brutal in the black neighborhoods. Munson, oddly,^ once worked redponslbility of finding out tor tim yoers as a police cadet. He has been an outapoken critic of the department aliice h4 left In 1967. But enough of justified to warrant a much more thorough check than has wier been'l made before,’* ha Hd said many oomMihito over inre beard 1^ citl»ti‘iB4 ra net announced by local new8 Media. f to return next week with a written recommendation and said they would placa tiie item on their agenda. Hearing Is Slated l^tNSING (AP) I- The State Highway Depaijtment / has scheduled a hearing Aug. 28 in Ludington oh the proposed ex-tenaioii>.of U.S. 31 northward Morn Maaonl and Oceana odunty line to U.S, 10. \ .. AUeSUST FUMTU Colonial Charm in Solid Dark Pine Anthentically styled in the fInesVEarly American tradition. ''Wood-grain mar-resistant plastic tops. Dresser, mirror, chest, bed. Priced Separately: $151 Chest...129.88 $229 Dresser, Mirror 209.88119.95 Bed 99.88 64.95 Night Stand (also Available).S4.88 Regular 499.9S ■117 3 Piecea Richly Designed Mediterranean Suite Regular 449.95 358 3 Piecea A centnriea old design . worthy enough for ai Spanish noblemanl Of choicest pecan veneers and solid oak ... hand rubbed to smoothness. Dresser, mirror, chest, bed. Priced Separately: $240 Dresser with Mirror............. 209.88 $130 Chest... 114.88; 79.95 Bed... 69.88 69.95 Night Stand (also available) «>». 59.88 dtk About Sears Convenient Credit Plans To Suit Young Modems ;. y Walnut Veneer "Warm walnut veneers are worked in an attractive, unclut-., tftCsd:deaign--Ittpa-aiw-statH-atfd^ar-nesirtant~to"phiiB8e"gv , . fV'-. 'V' ’". i'iJ A-ll recogmze the mm maker hmd that mss mE bed Iabru SECONDS • • .permanent pr^ns dress shirts SALE! Fantastic selection from the maker of our own Cranbrook brand! Short-sleeved for cool and comfort; polyester-cotton for no-iron. easy-car|e Choice of collar styles and popular colors^ 14 Vz to 17. broken sizesl Buy two for next to nothing! SECONDS fE# SALE! Stock up savings for men and boys! You’ll immediately recognize the red label famous maker quality . luxurious premium cotton comfort now at our low bargain price! T-shirt has no-sag reinforced neck; controlled length sfirinkage;. |tien’s S.M.L.XL. Briefs with double panel seat. Boys! sizes 10 to 20; men’s sizes 30 to 42. 'for 1 65 57'eaci Jloff’s underwear SECONDS... men^Sf boy^s canvas footwear SALE! Smashing assortment of csfsual shoes! ChoQ.se tie or slip-on styles in boat shoes, breezy nylon mesh, or rough weave; side buckle slip-on or low basketball shoe. Flexible cushion fomfort in assorted colors; broken sizes 3to 6. 6V^ to 13. w 2pr.’4 seconds: socHg SALE! Men's crew socks of high bulk orlon-stretch nylon; -rib top; light y SECONDS! hose SALE! Men's over-the-ealf dark colors. stretch nylon- black, charcoal. bro4n. navy! 10 tof^ 11'/i|. 12 to 14.' - 9 # Men^s underwear ■ i 'M ■ , "V ■' 'v- V i. / Hudson’s Budget Store ^hop till 9:00. Thursdpy, Friday, Saturday at f^ontiae Mall.. Elizabeth Lahe Road and Telegraph A—12 THE PONTIi^C PRESS. ' ■ -V ■ "". ''\!''. • "'1,/ WEDNESDAY. JULY 80. 1962 ‘ NOTICC It HEREBY OlVEN, tint pur-•uam to ttw proKUloni of Chaplor W of Act. No. to of fho RiiMIc Actt of IfH, m omanM. a patitlon wat fIM with tha. County Prain Commlulonar of Oaktand County. MIcMoan. patitloning tor tha con-•trw^on of IntrO'County rtllof dralna to ba locatod whatantlally aa foMowa: Main drain Baginnind at a point In taction 11, T.1N., R.lfE., Ayon Townahip, Oakiaml Counto/ Michigan, aald point baing In / Outlot ;'B," ’‘RLEM OAROENt lUB- ' DiyiSION," aa facorddd In LIbar 47, ' Raga.SA ot tna Oakland County Ragla-I »• / w Jt point belito Waalariy tl,TmRto or laaa W Northirly I---------,00^ irpm tha Nc aid tubdivla ' Thanca Eaalarly 210 toal^fi^f oi to tha Waal rlght^if-wairllila of ttraal; Thanca EOalarly 10 foot, or< lau. to tha cantor of Wlllat S______________ In toaf? mwi*“ K? wnar" DiVltIC-------------------... ______ ... Pago It of tha Oakland County Ragla-tar of Daadai Thane* Eaalarly„2J taat, mora or laaa, to tha Eaatarly rlghlHd-way lino of Wlllat Straat. aald lln* alao balim tha Waat lot Hn* of tot 77, aald luMIvlaloiu Thanca, Eaatorly 2S0 toot, mora or laaa, along a lln* pa—*-and no faat, mora or la**. Nort South lot lln* of Lot 77, aald , alon, to a point on tha Eaat loC — .. aald lot, aald point baino Northarly 20 tool, mora or toai from tha Soothr—• corner of said lot; Thanca Eaatarly • 21, “KLEM GARDENS SUBDIVISION' Thanca Northerly 120 faat, more 't. last; Thane* Easterly 1,2*0 faat, more or laaa, to a point, aald point being In tha Intaraactlon of J a f f a r y and Bathurst Straals 20 toat, mora or laar South and 20 faat, mora or lau Eaa of tha Soythaaat corner of Lot 43 "GOOLIDGR HIGHWAY SUBDIVI SION," a* racordad in Lthar 41, Page 12, of tha Oakland County Ragistar of Daads/ Thane* Northarly 71* toot, mora or laaa, along a lln* putollal to and 20 faat, mora or lau. M of tha Waaf rlght.or.way lln* of Bathurst Straat to a point 10 toat North and 10 Mat East of tha Nor^at cornar of Lot M MM Subdivltlon'i Thanca Easterly 327 toat, more or Mujp the upnar tarmlnus of aaM dralnTsaW poInt iSmf On the East rlghtHihway lln* of RocMiavan Straat east earner of Lot SO of tha 'Xi , lOCE HIGHWAY SUBDIVISION." Branch No. I Baginning at a point In Section 31, T.IN., R.11E., Avon TownahlR, Oakland County, Michigan, aald point being Northarly 340 feat, mora or Ins, and Easterly 10 fast, mor* or Ins, from tha NorthMst cornar of Lot 21, "KLEM. , GARDENS SUBDIVISION," as re-eordad In* LIbar 47, Pag* S4 of tb* Oak- pofnlr mM point bains Wutorly 25 toat, mor* *r lau, and Soulharly —'--------r Mu, from tiS North th* Northual Thane* Wast- CLOSING IN ON MARS - Mariner 6 beamed, back to earth these four pictures, and 29 ojjhers, as-ijj dosed' in on Mars iast night. The view at upper left is from 771,509 miles out; upper right, 691,950 miles; lower left, 632,300 miles; lower right, 572,650 miles. They Span a two-hour period, with the planet rotating to the rigjit. TTie light portion at |the bottom is the south polar ice cap. Victor Doll .... ..-L-lfynt, It.WfW VI SU09, • w of Soctlon 5. . i 1 •* . • .» -r . - — *' i ***• Orlando^; Michael Frasure, all at home, i Church of Pontiac. Northrrly^74j m Wmtorly ,390 fMt, m the Souir- ■ Thanca h leas to a point, ti arly MS ft ' arly S55 ft rl nninl hf Inp I V ICtOC_______ Hied yesterday. His body is at Hfintoon Funeral HorAe; Mrs. Abe Lewis r section 30; ul point alu being th* Point of Bagir nbig of Branch No. 2 of Coolldg* E> Ml Thanca Waal* ' laaa. to a poinf ... I Lot *2 "AUBURN Branch,. No. 1 , Badlnnlng at a jioint In Branch 1, Mid poTnt baing Northerly 80S mor* ar lau, and Weslerly SSS tut, mor# or lau, from th* Southeast c»-ner of sartlon 30, T.3N., R.1IE., Avon > Oakland County, Michigan; MnpthAMtotMMlu «aj «uu* w Waitorly 230 toat, mor* or lus, from th* South-somar *f Section 30. NOTICE IS PURTHER OlVEN, that Rw Drali^ turd tor uM prolacf has ulMlitoiyf 1b* Mid patitlon and has mads • tenfetlvs dttarrnliMtlon thit Mid pttl tjon !• wffldaAt ^ that tha mM gtoja/’ROBERT*J. EVAN?*r"e l"? ^ DRAIN* DRAINAGE DISTRICT" as tf-nam of th* dratnag* district therato and has msda.* tantallva detarminaU ••"“wl'to Publl* corporatto.. **iouW l» aoaaaaad tor th* colt of Mid County of Oakland—on account of . drainage to coi Townahip of-Avon — ’’iF **7’. .notice is FURTHER GIVEN, that “oat* will meet on the Kth day of Auguat, 1949, at I0;00 o'clock A.M., Eaatom Standard Tima, at th# oftllto of the Oakland County Drain Com-mlsslonar, SSO South -rate^aph Read, Ponf ae, Michigan, for the purpou ol ^aellona-to-aald, prolact, to th* patitlon tharafor, and to tb# matter of asamalng the coat tharaof to/tha public eorporatlona abov* named. At/Mld hssi>- ^ any'^ taxpayar’lfijj to M hurd. Thia notle* la given Mid Dralnag* Board l wrt Evan* RtIM Drains. dan rry nedy, 14, of 240 S. Lynn, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Homo with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Donald, a student at Crgry Junior High School, died from injuries received in an automobile accident yesterday. Surviving are his fdther, Harold A. Kennedy of Pontiac; his mother, Mrs. Ronald J. Frasure of Waterford Township; several sisters and brothers, Susan Sme^ of Pontiac Township, Diana K. I^een and Linda Lee Filhart, all of Pontiac; and Matthew L. Ken- TOWNSHIP ^ AVON ,, COUNTY OF OAKLAND .HAMIUON relief DRAINS NOTICE OF HEARING ETITION FOR THE INTRA-CauNTY RE: '»....... NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,, that pursuant to the provislo"- -* — of Act No. 40 of the Pi County, • Michigan, patitlonir ----—.rf-j,jp,<:ounty I it Chapter 30 f Oakland chigsn;. Thanca a point, aald poini oai ' N, 49f feat, from 1 Township, Oakland Co Michigan, N 27" 12' a point, said p ' ■ it being —------S5, 'AVON HEIGHTS SUBDIVISION,' ^fng s part-ot-Section 14. T3N. RliB fYOn Township, Oakland County. Michigan 4s recorded In LIbar 01, Peg* 32 Oakland County Register of D— Thence N 21° 51' 25” W, 135 Thence N 59* 04' 46" W, 119 feel point, said point being N 41' 19 W, 19 faet from the Northeast eorr™. .. laid point S 75* 12' *9" W, 25 fast wnar fit Lot 44 ofj^________ HVIalon, uid Subdivision line alw being the Wut lot line of Lot 34 of Mid Subdivision; Thence continuing N '"'J Thence N 33® lb- w u, ,-o,5ffeet; Therite ......... 04" E, 340 feet; Thence . .. „ h V4i“;i;^’e*"N“,r'- % 2'< 3^5 tabtj Whence’N 2° 07' 24" w, 347,80 _.le*t; Thence N 422_JL'_54" e, U4-4eef/ Thanee N 29® «' 34" .E, 223 feet fo * . point, said point being $^84" 82' 54" W, i1 feat from the Northwut corner of Lot 52 of "ROCHDALE SUBDIViSiON, " . SoMWIliOn' at patt iof Section 14, T3N, RUE, Avon Township, Oakland County, MIdilgan u racordad In Llben ^ &aSriiin?r4-‘='5r<^*»r 4?5 toat to a Mint, MM point being n 8t° I I i Service for Mrs. Abe (Minnie Donald A. Kennedy E.) Lewis, 78, of 202 W. Wilson c„... i I rw_ u A tr I win H a.m. Friday in New Service for Donald A. Ken- B^t^el Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Ifome. mmber of "ROCHESTER KNOLLS SUB. and Janet Ann, Joseph, Idled Monday. He was a mem- imothy, Tbomas, Samuel «n(j!bgr . the , Firs.t Methodist Surviving are hia wife, Tracy, and One daughter, Mrs. Lucille Collins of Battle Creek. Mrs. Garnet Waltz COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Game (Eleanor L.) Waltz, 63, of 8310 Arils will be 11 aju. tomorrow at Elton Black Fuii«al Home, Union Lake, with burial in Conunerce Cemetery. ws. Waltz died yesterday. She was a member of Cedar Crest Lutheran Church. Surviving are her husband; two daughters, Harriett Waltz and Mrs. Russell Sadler, both of Union Lake; one brother Russell Moll of Union Lake; and four grandchildren. ■ KNOLL! Westerly ,---- _eing on said lot line t.. and 10 foot East of tha West Ri Mrs. Lewis, New Bethel Church, died Monday. Surviving are hud>and; seven children, Mrs. Annie Everins of Lake Providence, La.; Zack Powell of Holly, Mrs. Dozzie Lewis, of Gary, Ind., and Mrs. Hattie Thorns, Abe Jr. Hossie and Thomas J., all of Pontiac; three sisterk? In-other; 19 grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren. John B. Woolcott Service for former PonUac resident John B. Woolcott, 93, of Battle Creek was yesterday at Farley Funeral Home In Battle Creek with graveside service in Sunset Hills Cemetery, Flint. A retired master mechanic DIVISION,' .. __________ ... _____ .,, Page 1, Oakland County Register of Deeds, Oakland County, Michigr--Thenco S 2* 51' 14" E, 176 feat to point on the lot lln* extended, aald li . „ cu ins;i.iiaiiiA: luB-fibr Woolcott DIVISION"; Thence ...ended l^hfOL _______________ —Ing on the lot line of Lots 59 end 40 of laid Subdivision, < tended, end also being 10 feet East tha Northeast corner of LOt 59; Then Westerly along said lot line I9E feet a point. Mid point being 11 SOUTHWEST CORNER OF Lot 40 tild Subdlvlahmt Thence N o r f h e r 1 , along the West Una of Lot 40 of said Subdivision) 127 faet to ' ' point being the Northeast 74 of said Subdivision. ...... Southwesterly along the lot find of Lots 74 and 75, 240 fMt to e poln* being on said lot line extei—________ feat East of the Wgat RlghtKH-Way line of Wittipole Dtiva of. said Subdivision: Thence Northerly 84 feet t- - said point being on the lot I.... ____ ,» .—,-j being 10 along the West line of Lot 90 of said subdivision to a point, said point being the Sbutheeit corner of Lot 105 of said ' ‘■-"••'-Ion; Thence Westerly albng the of Lola 105 end 106 of ■— ...ion 244 feet to a point, _____ being tne Southwest corner o 105 of aald Subdivision; thanca. tinuing along mM lot lln* axta parallel to end 27 feet Weat of .... centariln* of Old Parch Road. 1t1 toat; Thence Southwesterly 47 Mat to Outlot "A" of "STRATFORD KNOLLS NO. S SUBDIVISION", too point of ending. Also beginning at ■ point. Mid pol... being 11 feet Weal of the Northwest corner of Lot 54 of "ROCHDALE SUB, DIVISION" a Subdivision qf —‘ Section 16, T3N, RllE, Avon 1 Oakland County, Michigan as____________ In Liber 47, Page |7, Oakland County Register of Deeds; Thence Easter'" along the lot line between Lot 54 and of said Subdivision 277 feet to or ending, said point being Iff ..., . of the East RIghLOf-Way line Orchardele Drive, NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN, It... te Drainage Bosot^tor mM prelect - considered the said petit’— —■---- ■ - ■ ifiatli s* 85est made i tenative di petition la auffictont...... ..... -srojact la practical; Ras given to n "HAMLTON RHilBP ORA I drainage DISTRICT" a* flw naiiH to* drtiinag* diilrljd toaraiari and .... tolMm p!^*conSant^^ aneasad for to* eeit of Mid prelact, to ------- .. further IgiVEN, thi the said Drainage Board win meet 0 25th day of August, I960, at 10; -Y ® *' Eastern Standard T'— ■ the Oakland Counh -------- 550 South Telegrapl Pontiac; Michigan, for f*" ' .............Sections to je?itlod therefor, isipg the cost tner* sralions above name iny public eerperatlei nVetoxpeyer thereof, TTils_ notice ii eiven by said Dralnag* Board for Relief Qrelnt. . DANIEL Chairmen Mil to l3f ostessod ntMI^ ontitloi “5ra%.A.«; Extortion Trial Starts Friday The extortion trial of j alleged Mafia member is scheduled to begin Friday before Oakland Counly Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem. Joseph M. Barbara Jr., 32, of FVaser is accused of extorting $4,000 and jewelry from, Mrs. Delores Lazarps of Troy, wife of underworld informer Peter Lazaros. * * t Barbara also is charged with raping Mrs. Lazaros. That case, however, is still pending In district court in Farmington. The same day that Barbara’s trial begins, a grand jury investigation gets under way in the county into allegations made by Lazaros of 2410 Dalesford that pubUc officials have, accepted bribes from Mafia figures. Soviets Ask British Aid LONDON (UPI) - The Soviet Smbassy ‘broke a 4 8 - h o U r silence today and said it bad asked the British Foreign office and Scotland Yard to help find Russian novelist Anatoly V. Kuznetsov, 40, who vanished from his London hotel Monday night. Kuznetsov’s novels on the Imperfections of U^e in Russia won the acclaip of the public and the condemnation of the Communist establishment. He had been In .London since Thursday working on the London portion of a book ordered up tha Knunlln on the life ef iV.;. Lenta.. - Leukemia Kills 20-Year Troy Teacher Mrs. Elvin (M, Arlene) Isen-barger, for more than 20 years, a Troy High School teacher, died yesterday of leukemia. She waij.52. Service will be 2 p.m. Friday t St. Paul’s Lutherlpi Church, Royal Oak, with burial' in Roseland Park Cemetery Berkley. ★ if ★ Memorial service will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Price Funeral Home,' Troy, by the auxiliary of American Legion Post 167 of Clawson.' Mrs. Isenbarger of 4 225 Livernois, Troy, was a member of the American Legion auxiliary in Clawson and the 18th District American Legion Auxiliary. She was a f(wmer secretary of the Troy Education Association ahd a member of both the Michigan and National Education Assodatiohs. She taught typing and business classes at Troy High School and for the past five years had served as senior class sponsor. WMU GRADUATE Mrs. Isenbarger ,graduated from Western Michigan University in 1938 and had taught school in East Detroit before joining the TYoy School system, l^e was affiliated with Alpha Beta El>sU(m at WMU. five, daui^ters, Mrs. John Nelson of Cwnstodt PaA and Dorathy, Mildred, Denise and Margaret, all at home; one son, Donali, at hiome; one sister; And two grandchildren. , . if ★ - # ■nie family hai 'suggested memorial tributes be sent to the donor’s favorite charity. Gartrude Helag Barkay, nb# Tfc .Ji'"lCliT Service in^eopdrdy Job Unit'Om in Cold’ ^ByJIMLONG Hie work of a state agency offering personalized s^lce to the hard-core uneinployisd in the Pontiac area .may be sirloin , impaired dnle^ It can ftad new reht-free quarters The new facilities are being sought by the s 1X• me mb er “ffibhfle unit" df lKe Mtchigah Employment S e c u r i t y Commission (MESC). ■a ★ . ★ staff mkmben deal with the disadvgntaged on a “onertortxie basis,” working m six months or longer. Cfrtificotas in amounts of $5,0iD0 or inora ora ^ issuod and' outomofic-olly ronowod. The currant rate paid on thoso longer term savings certificates is 5’/4f/.. \cjiprms4mGSA ^lOAN ASSOCUmOH IINOOHWORATID is/se • lANeiNe. MIOHieAN I 75 W. Hurori Pontiat 338-7127 enneut ^yXLWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ OUR SUMMER WHITE GOODS EVENT IS HERE! IAST3DAYS REDUCED THRU I . " ■ Fashion Manor blankets, and all our Fashion Manor sheets! » PENN-PREST WHITE PERCALE 50% polyestor, 50% combed cotton twin 72"x104" flat or Elasto-flt bottom REG. 2.99, NOW 2.47 full 81 "x104" flat or Elatta-fil bottom rra-3.99,.......................NOW 1.47 pillewcoMt 42"x36" r«o. 2 for 1.99.........NOW 2 fof 1.77 LUSH VELLUX BLANKET FOR LIGHTWEIGHT WARMTH Twin, Full 66"x90" Double, 80" X 90", r«g. $12... NOW 9.88' TM. U Hw M.tl MihaU* Uanlnt mri Al penW-prest percale FASHION COLORS 50% polyostor, 50% combod cotton twin 72"x104" flat or Elotlo-flt bottom roo.4.19,NOW 3.67 full 81" X 104" flat or Elatto-fit bottom ■" foo-S.19........................NOW 4.87 plHowcosos 42"x36» rag. 2 for 3.19 ...NOW 2 fOr 2.77 PENN-PREST 'COMPANIONEHE' . PRINT OR STRIPE PERCALE 50% polyester, 50% combed cotton twin 72"x104" flat REG. 4.99, NOW 4,57 full 81"x104" flat rpg. 5.99....................NOW 8.57 pillowcosM 42"]t36" rag. 2 for 3.59 ..'...NOW 2 for 1.27 PENN-PREST WHITE MUSLIN 50% polyostor, 50% cotton twin72"xl04"flot REG. 2.59, NOW 1A7 full 81 "x104" flat or Elotto-flt bottom rog.3.59......... ................NOW 2.67 ptllewcosos 42"x36" rog. 2 for 1,69..........NOW 2 for 1.37 / NATION-WIDE^. / WHITE COTTON MUS>IN 133 count bleocited endfinished full 81 "x108" flat or Elosto-fit^nferimd * bottom REG. 2.29^ NOW - Tt65 pillewcosos 42"x36" log. 2 for 1.09......NOW 2 fOr 83c PENCALE * WHITE COMBEI!) CbTTO^N PERCAI^E 186 count bloochod and finishod twin 72"x108" flat or Elaita-fit Sonforizad" bottom REG. 2.39, NOW 1.77 full 81 "x108" flat or Eloito-fit Sonferiztd " bottom rag. 2.69........................NOW 2.07 pjllewcotoi 42Vx36" . » rog.2for1.39............NOW 2 fdr f.07 ^ SHOP TILL 9 P.M. MONt THRU SAT. . . . A—14 ■ ■ ' • . - \ . THE PONTIAC PRgSS, WEDNESDAY, JULY $Q, What AAcinher of Man -Is Killer? Psychiatrists Piffer DEitROIT (irPI) ~ A Mlf-annoitefen in the past tWo year^. , -P /1 Thpir battered, slashed ahd in idl but one case aexuiilly ^ abused bodies have been found in ihe^ university areas of Ann AHmt and Ypsiianti. ★ ★, w . ^ “In many cases, the victim and tins perpetrate coopenRT^ In aoma manner,” said one of the psychiatristay!<4)r. Em>i memjal Tanay. “In this case, it may teVue, too. There is GOP 'Exploitatbn' of Burger Hit by Dem some degree of disregard or denial of danger on the part of the victim.’* To Tanay, an associate profess^ of psychiatry at ^ayne State University, who recently published a psychological study of 64 homicides, the killer probably Is not a highly bizpure person but a f^ly no^al appearing individual.” GIRLS ARE TRUSTING ' “That’s why it’s so difficult to apprehend him,” Tanay told yPI in a telephone interview. ^ “It’s ailso why it’s so difficult to {wevent a recurrence. These girls trust that person. I’ve foimd it rathe^ surprising how frequently women will go with some strange fellow.” Three of the girls, including the latest victim, Karen Sue Beinemen, 18, Grand Rapids, whose body was found Saturn day, have been connected by polios with motorists whom they apparently didn’t know. The killer Is quite intelligent, probably oonoes from a striqt faplly i|dilch was “restrictive in terms of sexual behavior” ai^somethUg Of iuloner, Tanay said. i Police/and pagehiatrists Have speculated the killer may-dresa as a woman or a priest or ^ policeman to lull hiS/ vlctinosintoasenseofsiicurity. / ‘CAMPUS BUhr , , / [ ; But Dr. Ames Roby, who wttrked extensively with Albert DeSalvo, thought by many to have been the Boston Strantftor, said the killer could be a "campus bum with a domineering mother.” . “These campus bums are frequently quite ill,’* said Roby, who now works at Ypidlantl State Ho^tal. “They have a minimal Job and work as litUe as possiUe, They could be quite psychotic and not eVen be noticed. A person like this could be quite bizzare, but he could walk .graph in a political context is a eludes President Nioxn gikli^®'’^ dudes msidenv moxn ai^ Republican National Mrs. Holton. It appears in inisv, tax u • au-week’s issue of “Monday,” «has in this case act-weekly, four-page publication which goes to some 14,000 Republican party leaders. “The chief justice should be —and is—above partisanship, and for the Republicans to use him in such a blatant poiltlcai manner is unfair to Mr: Bprger to the height of bad taste,” caption omits Holton’s nadt. Huron Sf. BACK'TO'^HOOl. SALE B03TS ANID 6MLS Strap and btfelda shoM far baps and far girls Four stylsa: fashion loaders; budget savers. All made to take rough going Jirith manpmade uppers and soles. A. Girl's Sflbot or S. hig^-fiont dipon in rich, coffee brown, to 3, Sale 6.97. C. Boy’s wing<4ip monk’s strap or George hoot in chestnut brown.' 8V8-3. Sale 7.97. Children’s Shoe Dept. Sale 6.97-7.97 Boys* oordiirey easnals of polyoster/cotton with‘Dura-knee’ iorextrakmgwear.Bdt-loop style; no cuffs. Permanent press! «.«^ie.iOiSala S.47ibii^Sala 6.S7 Bpsrid loii^ sblrtn long sleeves, in odlar or tuxfle s^le. Great looking colors to choose from. .. ^good savings. i-w sale2.97 Beys* Bare leBtesn Jeans in sleek fastback styling. Rugged polyester^cetton canvas cloth with perm, press. Take your pick, leading colors. Sale 4.97 BeysF pelyesler/eetlett q^ert slblrts in assorted peunanent press styles. long siseves; new paiieias.o61ors.*’**iale 3.27. Piidna’sftgdibpailmeiil Flared leg mid-wale cerdu-reys of polyester/cotton. Blue, loden or brown. 4-7. Sale 3.87. Cardigan cahledisdt sweater. V-fcoid.rilibsd Goffis and bottom. Mimy ooloKa. 4^. Sale 3.97« Sawe an peleaa tnrfhtneekq ^aip ooUaxa. aolids. atxipeB and pattams. Sisea 4-7. Sale 3.17. Tvurtleiieek eetten wel^nrif < 4-7; Sale 3.27 Juvenile Boys. Isss stretch mylon. In wldle, zed. navy, green’, brown. 4-6; 6-8; 8-10; 12^14. Sato 3 pr. 4.97. Cirls* alreteh cable knee bi*s: Orion* acryUc/nylon. White, red, navy, hunter-green, brown in XS (6-7); S (7J4-8Vi);M (SVi-S^a); L / (10^11). Bale 3 pr. Come in or shop by phone... Beys* pajamas: middy style. Warm cotton flannel. Multicolor prints. Sanforized. Sato «.» 3.37 Satoi4.is3.87 ftsatsiitaislifaiilniitsaein. Wish'adiy. Asst. ooiors. Stay np. stay neat. Sale 3/2.07. Hudson’s Boys* Dspaitnifiit Bonded knit dresses Soft, warm and wrinkle resistant ... and what’s more, can be washed without worry because they’re Orion* eorylic with an acetate backing. We show just one Style here . . save on ethers too. Girls* Dresses Daparlinllnt. Sato 4^|6.97 Sato 7-14 6.97 SPORTSWEAR FOR GHUiS! SBXBTSs Huge asBortmsnts of wsshaUb acrylics. Sizes.^, SatoS.ST^^ 714 Sale 4.97 JUMPERS: New fashions in plaids, solids, tweeds. Sizes 4-$X Sate 4.^ , 7.i4$ale S.97 ginnipg. ' ' The goal of Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin was to prove that man'indeed can land on the moon, walk-its surface and return home. This they did; Conrad, Richard F. Gordon end package to be left on the moon. Alan L. Bean set out on an Armstrong and Aldrin left tFO pecl^tion to a flatland on the'experiments behind, a tAoon-oiher <^i'de of the m.oon’ sjquake detector powered by earth-facing hemisphere, on the!solar cells and a laser reflectiw-Oceap of ^^ms. - Conrad and Bean will deploy a plorers will carry an advanced Like man’s early probing|S of geophysical e x p e r | m e n t earth orbital space, he must ■" ’ advance gradually in his exploration and exploitation of the moon, taking one step at a time.' ,The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has the next nine moon steps already mapped out. They take, advantage of man’s increasing confidence of operating in the< lunar environment, and i n| , niodest extensions of the, capabilities of his equipment. CRUDEST EQUIPMENT [ For bis first steps, man isi using the crudest equipment to solve the biggest mysteries. Forj later missions, he will havei betto' tools and jipacecraft ofi greater durability to findj answers to more detailed questions. “It’s a paradox really, but it’sj always true in exploration," | said Dr. Ted. R. Foss, chief i geologist at the Manned Spacecraft Center. The availability of better Mjuipment is not too far in the future. By 1971, NASA hopes to be able to have the four-lagged lunar module modified to stay as long as fliree 4laya on the moon — compared to the 22 hours spent by Apollo 11 — and to equip its crewmen for walks lasting a total of 18 hours per man. Armstrong and Aldrin could venture no farther than *100 yards from their spacecraft, , and they didn’t even go that far. Crews in two years should have a moon scooter to carry them and their gear on three-mile traverses across the hinar surface. The four-wheeled, 400-pound vehicle Is now under development at the Marshall ' Space Flight Center at Huntsville, Ala. MORE SOPHISTICATED Later moon explorers may have more sc^isticated lunar rovers for more distant surface exp^itlons, and they may even have little flying machines to take them onf short hops) to areas of interest. Besidesithe obvious benefits to be g^ed in international leadership and scientific, knowledge, NASA considers continued exploration of the moon important to examhie its , potential for exploitation of its natural resources and as a base for future scientific and space operations. ★ ★ * And more important to man’s future exploration of the solar | system, the moon will serve asi a training ground for voyages 4o' the planets. “It is difficult to look far ahead,” said Dr. George E. Mueller, associate NASA administrator. “We can only speculate today about the toasibility of the moon as a base for an observatory or a permanent science station. Man’s first basic step toward „ such an objective was takra last week when Armstrong, Aldrin and Micahel Collins established and i n h a b i^,e d Tranquillity Base for 21 hours' and 36 minutes. • * The next step will come ini November or December When Apollo 12 astronauts Charles! advanced seismometer powered for day-night operation by a nuclear generator and leave behind thr|f new ex-the Apollo 12 ex-pertinents — a maghetometw, a device to monitor gah particles streaming from the-sun and an ission,.^chedule begin Nov. 14, will be similar to Apollo ll’k with one big exception Instrument to measure charged particles around-the moon. MOUNTAIN DEBRIS If Apollo 12 is as successful as Apollo 11, v^as, Apollo 13 may be dispatched to a sheet pf mwn-taiii debris known as theVra Mauro-Formation in the lunar highlands, on the edge of the Sea of Rains. Apollo 14 may be the flrst to attempt a landing in the cratored highlands, on the flank of the crater Cmuorinus 100 miles southeast of the Apollo 11 landing aite and. on .the northwestkn edge of the Pyrenees Mountains. ★ ♦ ^ I- The Apollo IS and 14 missions, under present, planning, would be the first to' explore the rugged highland areas that cover much of the moon, and their results shoiCild tell scientiato if the nuon’s mountal^ dWer from the seas in compwtieo as Well as tqpography. “Then after those kind pf landings," Fpss/ sdHB In ;,aii^ interview, “we < start tOll^ about thlngs'we like to.do ^t are much more grandolm *- in areas where there are. spedfio things that have happened tq the moon that have hiin fha' subject of interpretation by various people.” - un intfliY oiJ t AUTO PARTS Wb'PtNow Buying Skirap COPPEtl-^IRASS-ALUIIMW^^ (W« Also Pick Up Junk Cars) FE 2-0200 131 ■Miidi PICKYOURTIRE-THEPRICEISRIGHTI Summer Show Changed at'M' ANN ARBOR - The Gilbert; and Sullivan Society of the University of Michigan announced a change in its summer production. “The Music Man,” which was to be the final show of the society’s 1968-69 SMton, Tas"T)eeTr. “Paint Your Wagon.” It will be sthged in the Trueblood Auditontob, Frieze Building, Aug. 64) and Sept. 3-6. Season subscribers holding tickets to “Mu$ic Man" may use the same tickets for “Paint Your Wagon.” Individual tickets, priced at $2.50 each, are on sale at the Trueblood Auditorium box office. Written by Lerner and Loewe, “Paint Your Wagon”; depicts the mcbland times of; . 2 the California gold rush. i ' Further information niay be| obtained; by the Gilbert andl Sullivan Society, Students Ac-' , tivltiw BuUding, U-M. 1 BRAKE OVERHAIR Compact Cart ■ eSwidw * ^ Standard Cars 0«d|ti, fordi, Chcvys. A Plym«wthi Ckryiltr TnitcU Ha,in| t Wlitil Cylindtn, •DfMly kifhr.,^ UST PRICI OR NO-TRAOI - ■ Guaranlae gooc STANDARD OIJ DUTY Qll STATION WU^PAO FISK CAR WM WHEEUfl^ SO.OUNCES V law 42 X 72 X ■ J’ ,. . dilrahlo Clean*, shinc.s.^atid shield* fuslomize your car .wM|r v'iriylaiverine.mildexx protif. against the wealhei'. laby Moon Wheel Covenc shock absorbers 2'•>" 6IL' 27-3061 16 OUNCES ' Complete super . kilwiihapplicalor. 1 tt|p 3J.I23J GLENWOOD PLAZA* CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD Skip Lunches to Pay Sitter, Advice Given By EIJZABEiWl. POST bf the Emily Post Institute Hes Dying Without Sh^ Worries Over Future Dear Post: ^*am a divorce^ and rwently I have bben asked for ^rf date with a very pice man in my offfce/ My probiem is what to/'do with my two, boys. The budget is worked so clpse thk If I hire a baby sitter it means I wili have to go without iunch for a few days to iflhke up the money. Am I expected to pay for a baby sitter In such a case, or is it proper for my date to pay if he realizes what the problem Is? I have already tried to get him to have supper with us, to get out of the problem, but that didn’t work.—Greta By ABIGAIL VAJN BUREN DEAR ABBrii!: My sister’s husband has an incurabie disease aiid accordih‘g*to the doctor he cfui’t last rpor# than six moiith?. Believe it or not he is a layiryeV,« and my sister doesn’t know if he has a DEAR BATON:' From the way you sister “hints around” I doubt if anyone win have to tell her husband anything. Perhaps he knows, add his affairs are sufficiently^ “in ordv’^ to Suit him. / / do you. know who’s responsil^le for it? Hifl WIPE! A Jealous; nagging, belittling wife will drive, a man,to other women quicker than abythlhg' I knbw. / p«in»« er laiiurfimi “wp ntillinnir nff hafnra Ih. PARIS W’) — Pierre Balmain believes in comfortable, youthful clothes and shows no interest in abstract playing around. Thus, his clothes I this year are feminine, chic and simple — and lavish when the mood is a gala one. Hemlines are around the kneecaps and the silhouettes slender for the day and trapeze for the evenln|i., Balmain exploits the poncho. He does it in plaid organiza and trjliiis Itv!ii4.th« clipped idycerined ostrich for evehl^ and shows it in black velvetj bound in black wool, in khaki colored wool for travel, and in a mock fireman’s outfit in red vinyl. Double breasted buttoning is found in poncho frcmts. jersey scarves, some with balaclava overtones, other just soft hoods. For after dark, jumpsuits are in black velvet, their pagoda sleeves trimmed in feathers. Balmain tried out a new technique, playing with a circle'folding it back onto itself to form a shaped skirt or cape. Several stylized, wearable and beautiful eventog gowns, fit for all his royal customers, 1iave restrained or lavish jeweled embroidery mostly at the ;'hedt or the entire top. i Utah Refuses to Kill Sterilization Ban Beautifully tailored little reefers appear in plaid blanket woolen, in organza, and in chicken feathers for different hours of the day. she laughed, “we still’ipair off before the evening’s over.” i Besides her new family and friends, Susanne expects to miss eating peanut butter and marshmallows, which she says are not available in her homeland. Balmain has quantities of good coat and dress ensembles. Many coats are belted at the hipline while others have only a front belt.. A camel hair coat, slim and simple, goes over a gray wool dress tabbed and belted in a camel hair band. Metal trimm^ buttoned tabs at the belt line do double duty as loops and decor. Small nutria collars and cuffs trim many coats and some suits. Certain suit jackets are cropped at the hiplines. Their skirts have,a wide flared godet box pleat. Most heads are tightly wrapped in (EDITOR’S NOTE: Arguments over birth control take a special slant in Utah. The predominantly Mormon state is the nation’s last to prohibit voluntary sterilimtion for nonmedical reasons. " Here's^ a report on the dispute. SALT LAKE CITY Utah (AP) He l^as 42, the father of two children. He did not trust conventional contraceptives, and said “I had enough kids. I didn’t want any more.’l A friend kept him company one night on a 200-mile drive from Salt Lake City to a doctor’s office in neighboring Idaho. There, the operation was legal. Thirty minutes, $75. Sterilized at hi$ own request, he then borderdiopped back to Utah, the nation’s longest holdout against liberalized laws on sterilization. PEN SOUVENIRS The President’s wife shook their hands, patted the young men lying in roikrs of hospital beds in blue pajamai She wished them “good luck” and “God bless you” and the press secretary handed out ball point pens with Mrs. Nixon’s autograph on them as souvenirs. Mrs. Nixon toured toe ’Thu Due Orphanage near Saigon, where toere are 744 war mphans, and visited with them for 45 minutes. Between her, stops at the orphanage and’toe 24th Evacuation Hospital, Mrs. Nixon spent tVi hours having tea with Mrs. Nguyen Van; Thieu, wife of the Vietnamese president, and Mrs. Nguyen’ Cao Ky, the vice president’s wife, and toe wives of other government officials. Asked if she was afraid of coming to the war zone, Mrs. Nixon replied: “No,. I’m protected.’! HE|R THIKD VISIT 'This wasihe third visit to Vietnam for Mrs. Nixon, who came twice before during Far East trips in 1953 and 1956 when her huslwd was vice president. I Going along on the Salgrni tour with Mrs.- Nixon was Carol Laisel U.S: am-, bassador to Nepal, an ^xpert on Asian' affairs. She teas summon^ to Bangkok from her Clfina border post along with her husband, Ellsworth Bunker, who is U.S. ambassador to Saigon. Both were in on plane conferences with Nixon en route here from Bangkok. A career dip^at, blue-eyed gray-blonde, attractive^ Carol was one of former' *'President Jdhitson’s top women ap-/ pointees. He/, named her ambassador to Nepal and Nixon lias retained her and her hnsbaadrln toMr posts. - In the view of the National Association of Voluntary Sterilization, that leaves Utah “isolated as the only state in the union which limits voiuntary sterilization to reason&tof ‘medical necessity.’." 'Winds of change gusted in Utah as recently as this year, but were stilled by a reluctant le^slature and Mormon Church opposition. A FELONY So the state retains a tough law that decrees a felony When anyone “performs, encourages, assists in or otherwise promotes” an operation for “destroying the power to procreate.” There are a few exceptions. The head of a prison, mental hospital, reformatwy or institution for the retarded can move to have a patient or inmate sterilized. For most people, state law limits sterilization operations to those which “shall be a medical necessity.” A liberalization bill was offered to toe 1969 Legislature, backed by the Utah Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology. It was killed after the Mormon Church said it was “opposed to any modification, expansion or liberalization of laws” on the subject. Word of church leaders carries a big Oakland Hills Shows New School Fashions Spanning its own generation gap with fashions from kindergarten through college, all provided by Saks of Troy, is toe back to school show of styles at Oakland Hills Country Club next Wednesday. » Cocktails and luncheon at 11:.?0 a.m. precede the advance fashion news. Cochairman for the event are Mrs. Charles O’Neil, Mrs. John L. Denman, ; Mrs, .lames-P. Tomlinson and Mrs. Paul W. Trimmer. The models will be daughters of club members. Circumnavigators Plcjn Sunday Event \\ PwtiM Prtti Phot# / Shhdes of William l^elU Archer, Tammie target. The teen txio, all from Bloomfield FJtHs, Trimmer appears Calm, it’s Mary Jane Shannon (in are spoofing the Apple Polishing JTime" Xhtme front of tree) looks Die leak bit worried, ben- ofian Aug. 6 backrto-sohool fashion show by Saks - nielle DeValut hgji role of supplying the of Troy at Oakland Hills Country Club. A salute to Argentina will b e highlighted at the J3th annual Summer .Safari for members and wives of the Michigan Circumnavigators Club: F'ederal Judge Ralph Freeman’# family farm just north of Springfield is the setting for Sunday’s party. Working on arrangements are Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Carr' the (Jeorge Gotschalls, the Donald Rothangs, the J. D. Richardsons and Mrs. and Mrs. Rip Zwickey. So tell “Bothered” to be glad her hua-band “looks,” and If he ever quits looking he’s over the hill, and she might as well bury him. MRS. N."IN PHOENIX DEAR ABBY: What factor do you consider the most essential if a woman is to have a lasting marriage? -....— 'ELLEN DEAR ELLENf A lasting husband. Everybody has. a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9. Pontiac, Mich,-46056 and enclose a stamped, self-wl-dressed, envelope. The Balmain poncho takes on an American look in this great Koret of California wool blanket plaid. Matching trousers complete the fall and winter 1969-70 ensemble. dout with legislators, most of - thein Mormons. Some of the sponsoring physicians were Mormons. One, Dr. Robert Hall, president of toe obstetrics society, com-dqn’t s' plains: “We ^n’t see why any religious . faith should dominate the legal actions of others. “What we were ■'trying to do,” Hall - “ lalfo str--------------------- ---------" says, “was make sterilization primarily, a medical decision.” h ' The action by the Mormon leadership stemmed from opposition to birth control “on general grdunds,” says Hugh B. Brown, first counselor in the ruling First Presidency of the church. As Brown explains Mormon policy, more conventional means o f contraception — say, the pill — are frowm-ed on, but their lise is left pretty much up to individual conscience. Question: why then would the church urge retention of a tough criminal penalty for another form of birth control? “The difference Is that sterjlization is a more permanent interference with afiy possible reproduction in the future,” Brown says. The Michigan Circumnavigators ' ‘ .off........................... chapter, one .of the largest in the world, includes 350 membm. Ah WIrophoto Gloria Green, Detroit teacher,..^ has been named Miss Black Michigan. A graduate of Western Michigan University, the Muskegon-born girl icill compete Aug. 22 in the Miss Black America Pageant ih New York City. r A THK PQMTIAC PRESS. WEPyKSbAY, JULY gO^ MW \ Case No. J-563 GiHs-'Look for Maturity By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE J-563: UUl^ D., «g«d "But what makes a Iwy/ use 30, ts a college coed. /•*!>. she confesM, liquor like that? Appvently it d^’t taste dood ai^ R must have hlSfstomadiMdly?’* Very eihbarrassdig sHuar tion occurred 1 have been dating a hometown boy named ' Terry for several months: He has beeni gallant and very B ul have^qpset SOCIAL PRESSUlffi Fear, uncertainty and a feeling of inferiority often make people stampede like sheep as they ti^? to follow the patterns of sophisticated society which before them. brother was DR. CRANE coming home fr«n college and Terry thought we might double date at|i big dance. “Teity asked me if I could find a for his brother, so I called up a coed who also lives in the same town with me. Suzanne Harris, left, a 22-year^ld American student, is ushered out of St. Peter’s Square, Rome, by a Vatican guard after singing a protest song about biHh control. Miss Harris, who calls both Vancouver, Can. and Seattle, Wash., hom€, was protesting the ban on contraceptioh decreed by Pope Paul VI a year ago. ‘‘I told her about Terry’s idea and while I had never met Terry’s brother, I assumed, my girl frioid fiiat Terry was a perfect gentleman so I assumed his brother would be likewise. "Well, we all went to the dance, but Terry’s brother excused himself to go outside on several occasions. lis breath smelled of alcohol when he would* return. And as we| drove up to my girl friend’s house, Tenr’s brother suddenly leaned out of the window and vomited all over the side of the car. Turkey Fights Back, Snags Cook JUNCTION CITY, Kan, « -Mrs. Cathie Kramer was staiH-ing « turit^, preparing to pot It in the oven, whin she cauidd . her finger on a {dece of wire attadied to the fowL An bulance took Mrs. Kramer „ the bird to Oem^ Coaununity h^ital where the woman the tuihey were separated. "Well, I was humiliated to think I would expose my giri friend to such a Juvenile date and I’ve tried to explain to her that I never .would have done ao if I had known the college boy THE NEW WIDE, WIDE WALE corduro;y Fashion's latost Fad Fall weirdo fads, like bloody mill polish, ghastly wigs, g^Uh eye ^madow, mascara and miniskirtai The boys try fo race tttefr cars beyond the speed limits, swill dbwn hard liquor, smoke dgarets aifo boast of their ’ squests sexual conquests or "trips” via Teen-agers a r e ' eqieclally irone to want to "keq> op with Herbert J. Brinks has been appointed fuU-time director of the Historic cal Society of Michigan which has its headquarters in the Tuomy House in Ann Arbor. Brinks received his AB degree from Calvin College, Grand Rapids in 1957 and his doctorate in history from University of Michigan in 1965. The author of many articles on Michigan history, Brinks is, currently writing a biography of Peter White. ' so the girls a bloody M of these actions indicate a fearful personality viio is unsure of himself or herself. They are a form of social "bluff” by which victims of Inferiority complexes try t o camouflage their inner fears. Self-reliant teen-agers don’t need to "whistle in the dark” in this fashimi, for they aren’t afraid. Terry’s brother was obviously 10 young and inexperienced with liquor to be classified i chronic alcoh(dic. But he probably felt he had to maintain what he considered to be the standard idctqre stereotype of the sophisticated college boy, home athong the “yokels” of* his small home So he Imbibed his drinks and mixed them unwisely till he puked all oyer the side of the car, right in front of his new girl friend’d house, thus leaving a nauseating“i;alllng card.” In medicine, we doctors talk about "puking babies” who sidt up their milk, and the same goes for. college "babies,” even though the latter may be old enough to vote. So you girls should pidk your escorts wisely, whidt means, don’t link up with an inferiority Men that urge you to drink and who have "Roman hands," are juvenile for they are trying to inflate their own weak ego with sexual affairs. Cotton was used in Zuni and Ho|d Indian ctfemonies in 500 B.a THERE ARE ATTRACTIVE BARGAINS AWAITING YOU AmwiJ Cjmmm • COATS • SUITS |, • DRESSES f • FOUNDATIONS . SPORTSWEAR • HATS • CHILDREN'S''! '12 Serenity reigns, as it should, in thiSi^attractive bedroomrsitting room designed by Shirley Regen-dahl. Traditional furniture is accented with an Early American tea Wagon, all by HefywoodrWakefield, The headboard, handsome armoire and cabinet n^histand are from the elegant Academy Hill collection, noted for its fine dentil molding and hand-rubbed gray hrown Amhmrst finish. The velvet chair, floral bedspread and silk canopy provide texture and coloit interest. With Built-Ins lacking Space Armoires Rise in Imporrance One would think that the more spacioUs -closris and dressing rOoma with built-in drawers and shelves that architects are putting in new hmnes and apartments would solve the clothing storage problem. Not sot Manufactuners are mnidng more major storage ) than ever, says tiie National Asiodation lod Furniture Manufacturers. ’ Among these are armoires, highboys, the chest-on-chest and wardrobes. ’The armoire, a French word meaidng cloSet,. has always been so necessary tq Eurc^ans with their very limited closet space. A decade ago, this majestic piece df furniture was found oniy in very hlgji^le lines hi this country — and qery infrequentlyj there. ^ In the last four or five years. added to groups and collections by ]xpducers of medium and M^-medium indeed furniture. SOLD IN PAIRS Hie height and bulk M ^e armoire make it second <^y to the big breakfronts in grandeur and importance. In this couiRry they were formerly purchased only for men^ but women find their orderly arrangements and tremendous storage capacity irrestibie. Many of the producers of high style armoires sell them in pairs (his and hers) with a bridge between for use as a dressing table w a 'This modem version of an' old-time armoire may be a man’s answer to the need for mori storage space. Inspired by sturdy old cupbQords from Spain; the armoire stacks cupboard spaca on top of drawers. Made of pecan in a slightly distressed brown tone. Triple doors open to reveal sliding trays and compartments. By Globe,, Furniture. Manufacturers p r o d u c 1 n g medium or high-medium braciret furniture have added armoires that are priced in line with average family budgets. Baumrittor makes one hi antiqued pine for under $500 in its Ethan Allen collection; Fancier has armoires in French, Italian, and i^anish styling with a price range of $600 to $700; Pennsjivania House has three new ones in traditional irtyling in mkple and cherry selling for under $500. Meg and Tony May Build Caribbean Vacation Retreat LONDON (UPI) - Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon are thinking of building vacation retreat in the Caribbean to get a break from the They already own the land -a plot on Mustique, a tiiqr island in the Windwi^ chain, vriiich h was ^ven to the inincess by an ti old Mold and former escort s * ^ a wedding gift niiM years ago,( --— Appealing to Alii Last month, M ar g ar e t FOBMJSR ESCORT 'inspe^ the land and listened Tennant, son and heir of documentary about animals udien his royal wife flew out to be tile houseguest of his uncle, f(»mer sti^ designer 0(iyer Messel, 68; vdio always entertains with winter parties at his adopted home in Barbados. Fran Barbados, P r i n e p s a Margaret sailed over to Mus-tique with the island’s owners. Lady Anne and the Hon. Colin Tmnant. Some fnhT^6 are witoo^ age to local.advice on building \ 'len wealthy landowner- Lord Oleii- conner, was a leading member of the famous Margaret set in London before their respective niandages.— or sex in their appeal. Cham-brays, for instance, will not only be indispensable in men’s wear, but' women’s, juniors’, and b^s’ and girls’ fashions have found it to their liking. she took a Caribbean holiday c while her husband and children o remained in chilly London. Lord Snowdon was busy a television One* you soo those wonderful separates yooll want eivery matching piece! Wear them into fall. Each is 7 Miperbly cineL simply designed An wide-wide _ wale all-cotton corduroyi The eoloi'? A ipfendW dipddr ef iiunler gmen* The ^ing? The latest scrfoil look. SfaDet 5 tp 13;* Tennant married the daughter of the Earl of Leicester. The a Ms gift to land on Mustique w the princess on four years later. So far nothing has been dona about the rite but Princess Margaret feels She would like a place of her own for winter vacations. ★ Their two obOdnm, Viscouiit Lt^, 7, and Lady Sarah. A both ana at, achpol now, giving to get aw*y. them m^ time h Fur Scarves Back Go throu^ that trunk | attic at grandma’s house, i find a ririnny for scai preferably a dozen feet Ic pull it out for wearing i _ pn« being brought back fasMon. acoenta fay paeeaat- Dsiaitaltei is •hiemleal-diwMDiLplaatlaaMs. f. THE ?ONTlAC PRESS, WEDN^SljAY. JULY ^o„ 1969 - V,\v ... B-a Vladimir Ashkenazy, . * Russ^n pianist^ toUl ^- present four concerts > this week at Meadow * Brook Festival Thursday and Friday; he ijoill play the Schumann C(^erto in A minor with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Thif is his third appearance on the Festival this season. Concert time is 8:30 p.m., except Sunday when it is 6:30 p.m. Mrs. Housewife Gan Beef to -With Cash Washington (AP) — a top expect to see $1 round steak Mixon administratkHi farm ^onomist predicts consumer! soon may be paying less for beef, but some industry spokes7 men say the day pf |1 per pound round steak is gone forevpr. Y ■* , '* ■* / ■ t/' Dr., Don Paarlberg, chief econoinist fojr the Department at Agriculture! said Ue hope for a cooling of retail prices as the result of cattle prices dropping some from their early June peak which was an 18-year record. ★ **The price has come down at the farm level—and sometimes these , things don’t work promptly as they should-but my anticipation would be that we’d see, anid have seen, some reatition on the ref^ maricet,* Paarlberg said hi an interview. A ★ ★ Contrary forecasts came from an industry spokesman, declining to be Identified, who said retailers udll not drop prices significantly because of what he sees as small or short-term declines in live cattle prices. “fteally, I don’t think anybody in this country can ever again Polly's Pointers i ‘ Odds, Ends for Job DEAR POLLY - f want to "-Wll Joyce T. how she can make 3ttle Pencil poodles oat of .tlhJdon net. The materials needed »«re 1% yards of 70-lnch wide net, U pipe cleaners, three but-.>lons for the eyes and nose, a "three-inch foam ball for the bady^ a lH*inch foam ball for Hie head, a one-inch foam tube for the neck and toothpicks. Make 32.strips of net tlvee by iwhes. Roll baUs into lemon |hape. press small ball with the fingertips to form , a snout. Assemble body with toothpicks, for the legs, fold pipe cleaners ^ halt ' Gather strip of net W-lnch pleats throng the cenh Sin the middle with o rtiand and slip, over the pipe r. Use fiVe strips for each , and insert the open endf I the body. 'J'l For the tail, use one cleaner doubled and two net strips, done as before. Attach one ruffle to each and insert one between the ears, me on each <^ec^ and a final one on the chest. Gliie or wire buttons m for eyes and nose. Add colorful bows wherever you would like them. - MRS. J. A; . DEAR POLLYt— After you have washed your plastic bags, put paper toweling inside and they will dry without sticking together. A large-sized juice decanter is excellent to hold knitting or crochet needles and yam. Just thread the yarn through the pour spout. — NIKKI DEAR POU.Y - We remov- ed the wallpaper from our living room walls .a few weeks ago. Trying to gm all the paste off was frustrating until I tried using nylon net puffs. These worked like «-toharm. — MRS. p. M. again, and certainly not less than about |1.N) for sirloin,’" " industry man said. December paid an average of d________ for choice sirloin steak. In June, after monfos of risfaig cattle prices, the saihe meat cost Mrs. Average Housewife $1.40. SKY-ROCKETED Retail beef prices made their biggest jump daring June whm there was a 4.5 per cent gain in the cost of meats, poultry and fish. The government statistics showed a gain of six-tenths of me per cent in the cost of living during the month., Why the big boost in beef prices? Ecmomists cite Inflatim and toe riling demand among beef-hungry consumers who ate an average of 110-pmnds per person last year, compared with 85 pounds in 1060. „ discounts What some observers believe is toe heart of the beef-price situation —the failure of cattlemen to turn out as much beef as needed. SAME AMOUNT A soon-to-be-published report is expected to show beef production for the first half of 1969 at or near the level of last year despite a larger population and demand. 'This has been a factor,” Paarlberg said, “but it has not been a nuOor factor. I think the major factor is the high purchasing power, toe exhimerance of the economy, and the fact that a lot Of people in the lower income brackets who haven’t in the past been really part of toe affluent society have Experienced a considerable increase 111 .. and they’re now in toe market to buy beef, which toey formerly were not." An industry spokesman said retailers had tried,to hold the price line prior to toe June hike but c^Id not absorb higher -»its any Idhgef-,; “AH of a sudden the pressure got too great and they had fo say ‘Well, let’s just And mt how End of Season Clearance 1 Table ^ds and Ends of Wemmi'i ShoM and Chfldion's P.F.,Qxfonls ZOO Rack of Women's Shoes 4.00 Table.of Women's Disconfinued SummeteHes 3.90 MW.NUSIM Opon 9:30 - 5:30 — Friday to 9 many people-Vfant to pay $1.79 for a sirloin steak’—and they sold it. So now they've got a whole new plateau.” government economists say production of fed /cattle—toose which produce the most popular cuts—will be greater thd remainder of 1969 and probably will offset the lag In output of the ficBt Six mmths. tot experts, also have .{^edicied less pprk than a year ago, and should this occur the cattlemen can expect their prices to remain high, at least higher than they were in the latter pirt of 19tp. ^ _n4fa 168Q S. Telegraph Rd., S. of Orchard ^ke Rd. <• Free Parking Front and Side of Store BUDGET TERMS: 90 Days Some os Cosjh FE2*8^ V \\ THE PONTIAC PRKSS> WEDNESDAY, JULY 80, 1960 dkmond splendor... to cherish forever OMEGA die hent oC aqr wofooi. A mldt ID pmdeim • nan's etwnal dandoB... D woman’s good fixtnna. Tiie atariOa shinunat of each flawless atone is nutdied ody I7 d» jewded perfeo* don of the high^cision Omega t movement snthin. REDMOJWS Jewelry 81 IS. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Fr*(t Parking In Raar of Slora By BEtTY CANARY NEAWHter There must be an explanation as to why one thing leads to another, why one Job automatically spawns t|iree more. Unfortunately, tiiei^ is g dearth of sci^tiflf data on llie subject. Women seem to be more afflicted by this phenomenon than men, so perhaps it can be ab tributed to glanda or sbmething. All I imow Is, Dome of us siiffer MRS. D. f. SNYDER MRS. R. J. KINSEY MRS. P. W. CASTLE Brides Are Wed in Lace BUY! SELL! TRADE! . . . USE PONT!AC PRESS WANT ADS! Gowned in Chantilly lacei Catherine Ann Burk was wed to Dale .Thomas Snyder In a Saturday evening ceremony. Following the rites in Commerce . United Methodist Church,. Commerce Township the couple was feted reception in the American Legion Hall Milford. WWW Mr. and Mrs. Gary Baum were honor attendants for the son of Mr. and MTs. Ford Snyder of Martell Street Avon Township and his bride. ★ ★ * The daui^ter of Mr. and Mrs. George C^is Burk of Gittins Street Commerce Township carried a bouquet of carnations and lillies of the valley. MIDSUMMER SALE SAVINGS ON Ethan Allen FINE FURNITURE AND DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES Choose from formal and Informal furniture styles in Heirloom Nutmeg Maple, OldTavern Antiqued Pine, Classic Mapor Fruitwood, and Sheffield Solid Cherry. Save on lamps, clocks, pictures, wall decor, carpeting, bedding! CONVENIENT TERMS, OF CdURSEI Michigan's Largest Ethah ^llen Defkjer therlearthside Wc Cut About Your Home . Almost A$ Much Aj You Do IS700 AIIDDLEBELr RO,\I), North of Five Mile Road in Llvnnia -.MI(.lll(;.\\ TlA,>KAHi> • PIIO.NK 422-8770 /• SKtilBITV CIIARCK Open Monday through Friday'10;Q0 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Saturday to 5;3^ P.M. Duo Role Rack A Cake rack covered with a thick turkish towel makes an ideal drying rack for baby sweaters or other small woolen garments that must lie flat to keep their shape. The legs on the rack allow for air circulation and hasten drying. Patricia ^ Urs of Glasgow, Mont., and James A. Gulacsik will marry Aug. 30. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Urs, also of Glasgow, is a graduate of The newlyweds are honeymooning at Niagara Falls. Kinsey-Brining Willoughby, Ohio was the setting for the recent wedding of Dawn R. Brining of Chesterland Ohio and Robert J. Kinsey. ★ ★ A ■ Following their m o.r n i n g ceremony in W'illbaghby Sevmth Day Adventist Church, the couple were feted at a reception in Kirtlahd Grange Hall also in Willoughby. Gowned in satin with lace appliques and piSrl accents, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Bining of Chesterland qarried a bouquet of rosea and carnations. Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Kinsey stood as honor at-tendantd for his brotha-’s wading. They are tlie |ons of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon C.' Kinsey of Grass Lake Road White Lake Casfle-Hah Newly weds, the Peter William, Castles, (Janet Elaine Hales) are honeymooning in Florida following their marriage Saturday evening in Milford Presbyterian Church. • For the double-ring ceremqny, the bride selected a floor-leng^ < gown of silk organza. She carried a cascade of roses. Parents of the rouple are Mr. nd Mrs. Calvin L. Hales M Milford and the Cyril Castles of Pine crest Street White Lake Township. ★ w * Marcia Kay Hales a n it Anthony Castle were honor attendants for their siqter and brother respectively. Adrian >^mpbelj and William McCracken ushered. A reception was held in. the Fellowship Hagrof the church. Patricia Urs to Wed J. Al Gulacski Stephens College, Columbia, Mo. The prospective bridegroom is the 8(m of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Gularoik Jr. of Mohaaic Street. He attended Flint Community CMlege. Why Women's Work Is Never Done For examine, if my husband says, “This car needs lubricf-tion,” he delivero Ms car to the mechanic and what does he get? A lube job. If I deliver my car to the garage for the same, the mechanic reports dolefully, "I’m afraid it’s the transmission, ma’am,” and I acquire not only a neyr lion system but also b air tire and twb brakedrums. (A lube Job Is what the car needs, plus a windshield wiper, when I go in to have a taillight fixedi) EXPECTS rr I must point out that this kind of occurrence nd longer surprises, me, although in the past I would have experienced ' 4lli^emotions of anger and I disHlief. Through the years events have led nto not only to acMpt but to expect. *As ji young bride I discovered the natural law that governs left over from the groc^es. It will be needed tomorrow to pay an unexpected A woman enters the bathroom, wipes up the floor, empties the wastebasket, cleans toothpaste off the door, retrieves odd socks fcr the clothes hamper and rounds up caramel wrappers rubber bath toys that have collected in the ashtray and magaxine racjc. Then, aftff putting up fresh towels an around, she quickly cleans out the medicine chest and Is ready to bathe. ★ ★ ★ From then on a woman accepts the Inevitable. She knows that taking the broom outside for a quick sidewalk cleanup wUl mean the porch really needs to bo hos^ down and weeds — which have Tilers was a time when I might pounce upim a mistake in my checkbook and exclaim, “Hurrah! Here’s f20! I can get a new dress and it will be Just like a gift!” Now, of course. I merely say to myself, “Hmmm, ~'ll bet somebody will step on a nail tomorrow.” (Stealing on a nail, including the visit to the doctor, a penicillin shot aniT one tetanus booster, costs exactly $19.50.) After this lesson,' the next Is a snap. One figures out why a woman spends up to three times as long in the bathroom as a man does. A man showers and shaves In a mere 15 minutes and is then free to make caustic remarks about how the U.S. Occupation Forces didn’t stay in Japan as long as his wife does in the bathroom. miraculously grown since she came in 10 minutes ago with the grocdrUs must be pallid from betweeh the flagstones. I can’t type an mors oii the subject. Hie sMft key on my , tyiparritor is sticking. As a niatter of fact, this ribboh sqiil'-^ dehly iieois to have worn out ' It was ineyiUible. Yestordiqr, wheii I font to the d^ cleaner’s, I found a $10 MU In the pocket of my wintor car coat ' When you need an extra hol‘ pad, wrap a small magazine in heavy-du^ aluminum foil. When tap^ securely, these hot' pads will last as long as the* ones you buy., , ^ Inventory CLEARANCE Sheet DATE: startinie right now! VALUESt hiige silYings up to ^ off as we clear our summer stocks to get ready for a ffesh, new seagont . J 7 item PRICE DESCRIPTION No-iron SEPARATES 2” to Formerly $6 to $17. Skirls, pants, bermudos, all sons of tops from famous Kbrat and Robbia Brooks Famous Maker Swimsuits 7” to 1199 ■ . ■ ■ a Formerly $16 to $32. The best buys of the season J on one-and tw6-pc swim styles vvhile they lasti ,, c Slimmer tops & bottoms 2** and 399 Formerly $5 to $10. Pants, bermudos, pontskirts, skirls and tops a)l at clearance prices to hurry for. Smart straw handbags 3^ ■V'“ Formerly to $12. Many foshion shopes and styles in lightweight casual straws. Snap up yours, now. Summer DRESSES 7*® and 1Q99 ^ i Formerly $16 to. $30. Styles for juniors and missM ■ in favorite summer colors and fabrics. Hove first ' choice. __ _'' ' ' ' '' • ' .1 Shifts and pahtdresses 4** and 699 Formerly $10 to $16. Priced to go fasti See tiblidv -- novelties and plaids in this good selection. Famous maker ensembles 29»and 39” Formerly much higher priced. Save on 3-pc suits, coot-plus-dress tostumes. All Dacron polyester. Rain or shine COATS ‘ ' i ^^ Ijp” Formerly to $26. See solids and prints in the fashion styles you love. Many colors; broken sizes. Save now Mfith a Hadley MulH-Chargs.Poirtiga Mill (Wt’rt -NOilalaroinsidaEMiabith Lake lot.) Shop Man., tlHirs.yJFrl,, Sal. tel. ■ The flower-faced rvQi^ 19 inches in diameter^ is of yam poms pons ip three colors secured id a felt backing. For thosi\ who like exquisite crobheti this ta-biecloih is me answer. Free instmeikm f&r both are availMe by sending a se\f-adr dressed, stainped^n-velope to the . wor^^ Editor, Deph E-600, The Pon^tiac^ Press, P.O. Sox 9, Ton-tiacrMck. 49056. Rug in Leaflet PH3316; tablecloth, PC2201. ' Make some mothproofing tape hat will help keep the nwilia Rou|€/t/ THE BEE KILLER mon milkweed flower .Umslement causes their deaUu The bees and beeliko flye almost exclusively feitilisea tlil« flower, yet they don’t reaBxo -it-will-aooiMr wr later canes t theirdeath. Theea planu are milky and often poieononss And aMto i ahonid avoid pulling and'. chewing on them unconselotte-ly. Weed family idants 4ira > Butterfly Weed, nenrisy Root Purple Milkweedi and tho Swamp M^weed. Come hy and observe'^iir larze selection of floral giftti and arrangements. Wfo will help yon select the obe thut best fits your/needt. .. 559 -V- THE PONTIAC P^IESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY PCAC Offers New Program ’The Pontiac Creative ArU Owiter joa Williams. Street is offering a summer worhslwp to be held one day each week tbrjoughout August. . Sessions meeting from 10 «.m. until ^ p.«i. in the l^AC fwtiding will include {xwtrait drawing, the history ^ painting and clay and print work. . ♦ . ♦ w ' 'There will be demonstrations, lectures and student participation. Both adults and youths are invited to attend. .. -k -k k The flrst workshop date is Monday and a second meeting will be Aug. 12. Dates for. later sessions are still tentative. A $2 fee provides art materials and a sack lunch is recomnunded.' F u r t h e r in-fomatlon may J>e obtained friim personnel at the PCAC binding. Female Pilot Cracks the Sex Barrier DETROIT W) - One of America’s best4cnovm women racing and stunt pilots has cracked .the sex barrier in airplane racing.^ Betty Skelton Frankman has wop the right f<^ women pij^ts 0 enter an air race Aug,>lQ at St. Louis against the pale the role of the N a 11 o,n a 1 Aeronautics Association for sanctioning races which barred women apd the Federal Avia* tion Agency for issuing waivers on these events. . A-.' 'The document/ noted that women were excluded whdn Racing Pilots Association. The ll^member asseeiation controls almost all majo^'air tracing In the United States. members of the Professional! large purse monips were in- volved. It questioned whether the federal government could allow use of airports subsidised by federal funds discriminatory activities. fot permission to make it still loMer. Alice Edna Rohrman Bhss Boedecker, 54, wants to become known legally a s Georgtanno Alice Edna Rohr-mpn Blass Boedecker. *'I can’t for the life of me figure out why these gentlemen, who have had an extensive amount of air racing experience and are flying the best air racing equipment in the world have been so ridiculously afraid of a little , feminine completition,” she daid. Mrs. Frankman, now 43 and a vice president of a major advertising agency, filed an official protest with the association two months ago. LEGALITY QUES-HONED The protest, eight pages and coed racing. The document , questioned the legality of the association barring qualified women pilots from air racing with men. I Her protest also questioned BETTY S. FRANKMAN Hame Goes On tPHOENIX, Arlz. - A woman with a long name ha»i*^* proiest, eignt pages wa pdtitloned Superior Court here ® ™ 1®"8> demanded r I. iWAsI raeeinef HTIia slAsvtsmjmf Mrs. Frankman, who soloed t age 12 and established several altitude records, said she battled with the pilots association “for thq many competent women pilots in the United States *who should have right to compete qutditied inmviduals. r EQUAL CHANCE ‘Why shouldn’t they have an equal chanoe?” she said. Robert Downey of Whittier, Calif, president of the pilots association, said, “We felt that if this came 0 court we just couldn’t fight it. k . k k “A lot of'Aen just didp’t want to race with women,’’ he’Sfhd. “and I was one of them.’’ Downey said the 116-man racing |UiotS' association voted by a margin of about 3 to 1 to allow the femmes to compete in the St. Louis race. SAME PHYSICAL “They will have to pass the same physical tes0 we do," Downey said. “They won't be allowed to race with hangovers and they, will have to meet qualifying standards.’’ Qualifying races begin Aug. 7 for the St. Louis benefit air race. Men and women have agreed on a standard pilot weight of 160 pounds. Tire en will carry ballastif they it. to drive a'n Indianapolis-type race car, was the first women test drive in the auto IndUSh^ and haa piloted unlimited-class powerboats. k k k She is now vice president and director pf the women’s advertising department of Cpmpb^ll Ewald Go. in Detroit.^ and her husband, Donald, also an ad agency vice president and a commercial pilot, reside on a ranch-airport near WUlis.Mich. A True Picture Accent your make-up light when planning bathroom decor. A translucent window shade will filter glare but give you actual daylight so you have a true picture of what you will look like out of doors. B—« fonllac Prni Photo Girard Koeh, a sculptor jrom Paris, and John Koller, Fulton Street take time to chat. Roller teaches graphic arts at Interlochen, tl{e National Music Camp, Get More Room If you’re lucky enough 0 have an etppty corner fer* sev^ ing supplies, here’s how you ci^ make more use of the spact^ Drape lengths ,of fabric ovf|' extension rods, braced agaln^ either wall. Fabrics In colorfl|i cotton prints can be used tp Curtain off comer shelves, ■'h' ——f ' ' I Whitney’s '^gn" Is Aort fo| ‘engine.” ^ ' | PRECISION WATCH REPAIR 6H/.. i. THE NEW WATEREORD BRANCH OF GRESHAM CLEANERS We take pride In the perfection of our drycleaning. Our long experience and modern drycleaning methods keep your clothes looldng their best. DRIVE-m(H£MIKCEI^ 3950W.WALTDIIBLVD. PHONE OR 3-6336 REMEMBER ... It's The Little Things That Count At GRESHAM'S Downey credited Mrs. Frankman with “Idnd of breaking this thing opeit'” Mrs.- Frankman, a licensed pilot for the past 27 years, performed aerobatics at air shows across the country in the 1940s and 1950s. ALTITUDE RECORD She mt a world’s light plane altitude record of 29,050 feet in a^iper Cub in 1951 at Tampa, |Fla. She was the first woman to undergo the physical and psychologicl tests given the na-/tlon’s first seven astronauts. The trim, Woot-S M r Frankman was the first woman A short piece of transparent tape placed on the needle plate of, your sewing machine, the diistance of a normal seam width from the needle, will serve as a marker to keep seams straight. g. COLOR PORTRAITS ★ LIVING COLOR PORv I ANGEL OF A DEAL « FOR THE UTTLE ANGELSl m 0 j 0 0 0 z > mm J .jc. 0) t GENUINE FULL NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS! Not The otd-style tinted or painted black & white photos. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED_____________ QC your money refunded. Days DATE STUDIO 12t00 NOON TO 8:00 P.M. HOURS SUN. 12 NOON TO 6:00 P.M. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. This very special offel* Is presented as an expression of our thanks for your, patronage. THURS., PRL, SAT. A ^INL JULY 31, THRU AUGUST 3, SAIVNXNOd MO~IOO ^ __ CHARGE IT! ^6fOd NO~|Op ONIAn DIXIE HIGHWAY AT TUECRAPH RD. f Br8"xl(l LIVIN6 COLOR PORTRAIT wow ONLY FOR ALL AGES! Babies, children, adults. Groups photographed at an additional 99^ J3er subject, LIMITED OFFER! ■“Ohe"periuBieet,--t«wrper family* SPARTAN ATLANTIC $ THA PONTIAC PREg8. WEDNESDAY. JVht ftO. 1M9 Giris'Slocb Are Np-lron Aed Carefree Rugged cotton/nylon pants with side tabs and side zipper. Royal blue, red, lime, melon. 4-6X. Nyloii Bikini Panties In Lovely Colors Women’s J^ce-kvished "ptntitfrin^pindi^^ cherry, other colors. 5-8. Girls'Bikinis, 7-14...2Bd 4 Days—Reg. 3.661 Main Design Hold-lt-AII Sewing Chest Durable plastic chest has two trays, one with movable dividers. ■ -In your choice of color-ific shades. 2S6 4 Days Only—Our Reg.j660 Yard 45" Transitionol Fobrics Beautiful wide fabrics for fall sportswear, dresses^ Suits. 2-to-lO-yd. pieces. Sew your own and save! 44< Long Sleeves, Permanent PressI Sport Shirts in Solids ond Patterns Our Regular 3.33 Eadh 4 Days Only Men's button-down or reg, collar shirts in cotton blends, Colors,patterns. S-M-L-XL. Boys' Rag. 2.22 Long Sioovo Shirts/G-IB, 1.66 For A Rugged, Handsome Look! Westorn-Style Jeons For Men Our Regular 3,99 4 Days Only Permanent press jeans in bold colors are made to take lots of wearl Sizes 2R-36. Boys'Rig. 2Jriiinl,1-irSlii^ Fall Sweated In Washabll OrloirKnit! Men's mock turtle br V-neck slipovers of Orion* acrylic. Deef), rich colors. S-M-L-XI.. •Du Pont Corporation T.M. , Men's Stretdi Odo^Airyl& Crew Socks 759S Orlon*/2596 strctfh nylon in white, bkidk and colors. T5t 10-l|r Boys'591 Crtw Socks 3Bd •Du Pont Corporation 4 Days—Reg. 1.97 Pr. Leather-Like Vinyl Flirtations Dress Flats Women’s comfortable, stylish dress flats in swinging new styles are quality^consttucted. Sizes 5-10. 4 Days—Reg. 2.97 Pr. Men's, Boys', YoufSs* Low Cut Basketball Sboes^ Save |1T White or black canvas basketball shoes with deck-gripping soles. 11-2, 2^-6, 6M-11. 4 Days—Reg. 999 Skein. Virgin Wool 4-Oz! Knitting Worsted 4 Days^Reg. 4.971 Pitcher and Bowl Early American Pottery 4 Days—Reg. 979-1.371 Convenient Sale-Priced Plasticware Knit sweaters, dresses, coats, more with colof-ri<± yarn. This sale only! 1.27,4.0Z.* Sayolio* Acrylic.. .m •Du Pont Corporation T.M. *net wt. 74, The quaint beauty of Early American decor at an unusually low pricel Ceramic pottery, 12^4” x 11”. 3S7 Choice of 22-qL waste basket, dish pan, 2H-bu.kundry basket, 13-qc. pail Of Vegetable bin. In colors. 2a 4 Days—Reg. 7.88 Eg. In 2" Frames^ 24x48* Framed Pictures; Selection indudes kndscxipes and seascapes, in wide wooden fiaines. to decorate home or office. Safari Blouses Mali Girls’ Reg! $1.97^ $*167 Cotton Safari' for small girls, sizes 3-6X. Blouse White, 4 Daysr-rReg. 18.881 Decorator Colors B'A' X n’/>'Joom Size Rug 4 Days—Choice of 300 Reg. 599 Handy Tools For All Jobs 4. Days—Reg. 1.971 20-Gallon Sfze ; Galvanized Garbage Can I With thick, cushiony rayon pile. Gold, avocado, blue/green, vermilion, turquoise. For any room. 14“ Including 6-pc, screwdriver set, interchangeable saw set, slip-joint pliers, hammer, power auger bit set. 48 Sturdy 20-gallon steel trash can has tight-fitting cover. Save now! R«g-6B^/ 12-Pb. Can Linors,.:. .56^ IV Delicious ChUiburger on a Fresh Bun dind a Glass of Ice Cold Coke, both for... 50e • PGMTIACMALL BIMW.-UT.MIIOMI IHkltlol I aiggjsa | agaa | assgsygi | “sagg^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 80, 1969 4 Day» Only\ Our Refi!* 1*27 S0-FT.X^6” 4f|n WIIYL PIASTIC GARDEN^HO^E ___ _ OurHrt^99rtt\x^ ^ ^ lUYOij ItMttaFMHr Bold stripot. Lotox back, hugo sole<;tion . to chooso from. Buy now dndtavo. OurReg.7.8S AFeiUN KITS Reg. 88c Comploto kit to mako an ' afghan. !99 "FRISBEE” FLYING DISC Play cdtch from TO to] i200 foot in -your bock' yard or at tho boach. SiniBIAM ELECTRIC mu CLOCK SAVE Wgd.,Thurs.pFri., Sat. Our Re^: 8.88, MEITU. COVERED FOOT LOCKEK ^TOREJUJ. OREST Shoot stool ovor sturdy vonoorfromo. Stool odgot. Romovabie polystyrono plqjtic traV. Lodthor hpndlos. 15%a12V4x3p^'. :33 ^Reinforcod fiber board chest with wood groin finish, handles. 24“x 14"xl2". FRESHKAKED SLICED TO ORD^R POLE HAMS AVAILABLE PONTIAC MALL ONNIIOII.'SAT.tilOtol3M ■ib ^«|||.4a.toB,^^,.' (■..I Jmj DOWNTOWN PONTIAC O^EN M0N.« PHI. BOS to 9 TUEl.. WED., TlMRS.'t>lf lO/i:3| . SAT. S4; SIHL ll>S TEL-HURON CENTER DRAYTON PLAINS OPEN MON. - SAT. BiN >'B SUN. 12*. I ROCHESTER PUZA OPEN MON. • SAT. BlIB - 9 SU^.sJ2 .,8........ BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILr" OPEN MON. - SAT. 9:30 • 9 SUN. It'S / 1^, B-—# THE POXTIAC PRESS. WBDKBSI^AY. JULY 80. 1969 Hdiday Feasts Are Memorable, Though ' Activities Limited in Eskimo Town r4^ land «u M . city ^«alU ,«» bi^ I lns,«o( inward to by now «Mt got ftom Kotzebu^. brelght siiffetW .wWi' gioaviioei a«d i,whit^. ^ Ibb!*lUyorVUagoa. -gnttarr ■ (EDITOR'S NOTE: froUowtnoj In November jyte land la th# lost of a atrlea of /Our much covered — -atortea about her new life bi the throu|^out thia Arctte by Bernlee Scbmidt / The mowl^ Umially oovert, .# v* ^ Sheldon, wlfo grew up near entrnces to tbe btimiM, but not ji ' MMen City in the: Thumb o/!this^ear. There waa ao little I Michigan. Married to Charliejsnow that traveling was difficult for , the wholy ^r Sheldon, an Eskimo, she now makes her home in the native town of Shungnak, 50 miles , north of the Arctic Circle in the interior of Alaska.) By BERNICE S. SHELDON SHUNGNAK, Alaska - There are but limited community activities in Shungnak. The school has a movie each Friday: the Mothers Club meets ev-ery Thursday; the Dog Mush-ers Association has nightly btn-. go games; and the t wo'churches have activities every day shELDON of the week. M BELOW .ZERO t Last fall the rl^er was low Winter brought temperatures and tugs and barges got caught as low as 60 below zero, , ly freete-up while still on the There wiere several one-to-two river, week ^riods when the tem- * perature stayed below a minus A barge loaded with a tractor 50 degrees. and the jade that Charlie took '' from his claims last summer J After a epW spell, when « “**?** “7“^' I M K . I« » frozen m front of our house. ■ warmed up to 20 below leveryone enjoyed being out-^^^ the trip: to Kotzebue 1 doors again. returning loaded with When me temperatures got up freight. Ilto zero, all the city children ' I!played outdoors wiUioul parkas ** *lahd some wear tennis shoes. "'■•'y men, summer will t * ‘ bring employment at Kenhe- ^LONy NiGirr . gott Copper mines nearby. The long night here at For eyerypne, boating is as Ishungnak lasts for the month of important leisure Movies are well attended and December. ^ work. ' ^ everyone manag^ to have or| Since we are inside the Arctic , * * earn money Wr the show. , Circle there are about two women spend the hummer The Mothers Club is a nightjWeeks when the sun does "ot «ining and drying fish, 'j, out for the mothers and has rise above the horizon.! Lajj summer the citymbd a , projects through which it earns However, these were not daysl ggrijen project. The soil here is money; The club acts as a bank | of darkness. The Eskimo calls itj excellent and a man in the liebt by loaning moriey to anyone ln;“kobock,” a distinct type of | town has a good garden eaA the community. | lighting, while the sun stays year. (MORE) ^ Ibelow the horizon ■^^^IplaNTING A GARDEN * * were as light as a cloudy day in [)og Mushers Associa-Michigan. I I vrill see what I ' remember from my days on ||ie , , ^ . farm near Minden City The short days were spec-1 pjgnt a garden this t S tacies of ever-changii^t color. Lettuce, cabbage. While the sun only rose for a potatoes, cauliflower, b few minutes, the periods of peas, and beans grow " sunrise and sunset lasted for well. since “^g dope” doesn’t repel them. /« new beap}^ of A>lor and s^d'and actiiWm that. life in the Arctjib V '% FMl Is Tieity^eklhg fishing time, The tpndra has cranberries, blueberries (different than Michigan blueberries), salmon berries, and blackberries. Cranberries' are most plmtiful and are used all winter for jelUes,.cpoked fruit, and frozen fruit eaten fresh nifi Dog Mushers Association’s bingo games are well at-tendediAnd drew large numbers of pei^e ’ from neighboring villages i^n 'the jackpot was close to In the spring,;, the association. sponsors contests In foot racing, ' ^ 11m chopping, sriiitoaih^^ ^ dog-teaming and givfeS the ||rize money earned from bingo.' ’ PLANS FOR YOUNG, OLD The, churches have clubs and Jtudy groups for young and old. The “Friends”' Church has services in E>ldmo, while dW. _ With the diortest day' of the year over, it seemed to me like spring had arrived. Each day i$, six , «r 'ieven mbndeaj^longei^ th|$i ■ •6rViCt!o in |>9,Minilt WUUIJ j - V_, ^ . Baptist Church has a minister **"^®*2 *® * **11™*^ . Tha. ERkimM antioinaln .0 Who speaks only English. ★ * * One church objects to gambling and wants the city councii to close down the pool table the city operates, and to ban bingo. ‘ Only ^Eskimo dances are held and thme are held in private homes. MG FEAST Hiaiiksgiving and Christmas are times of a big feast “potlgtph.” , , Everyone comes to the church where they sit benches around the wall. * ★ In the middle on the'floor is !> I am continuing a life ^ coouw^ HUMIfifirr Salmon, whitefish, and sheefish spawn in the fall and are caught then. The fish freeze inunediately and keep a 11 winter. My life here Is really a ^ deal like it would be if I w/re still livi^ near Minden City: LOVE eONl%4^ I leameii to j^e the out-of-' doors and nature as I wgs a child md here thia love continues. We have a Michigan bam^cat “Snoopy,” that my nieces in Olivet gave us as we left for I am.^?(e4 to. The tsWmo morals’«nd atmoijMbi 1} take a iMg .'me Iw I understami. v *■ Here. I face the challenge of Nising my background to live the I moist valuable life possible and ^ Still allow Charlie to renjain a part of the Eskimo community . Don't sj>y "YES** tin you have a . [gate AFC(>vYaar^Arout^ ‘Mrio>n4l«^,ofiip|^ :ing—Cooling-J-AIr FHtralfoh-—^^umldl^y ■ Oontrol available in a single comfort system and at cost, ' AFCO---Comfortmahir ^ ZILKA HEATlko Pontiac, MIcliigfk. 682-1210 Ymir AuthoiiNd SINGia/AKO DmIm < BUY! SEU! USE poNtiac press want AOiSI tveral. hours. 1 tiw prepet^ day:’ ' IS-HOUR DAY ’ In . April the day has already : Our cat has given us Joy and the children come just to pliw with her. We have a home free I, of niice,, fU^ and spiders . :cause of;l‘Snobpy.“ - :ially| ijere I have accepted responsibilities, and in doing the we^e, ioochstamp work land The^Eskimos anticipate summer with much enthusiasm. Spring really comes in May with the breakup of the river. ' ★ * . ★ For Charlie, breakup means removing everything from the house to the cache, in egse of flooding^ and camping out in a tent on the city side of the river. AWAY FROM HOME Parents look forward to the return of their teen-age children chairs"and "*"* months away from home at School. ... The Eskinml’ th,^ :1$W best is meat and fish. , The caretaker at the Kenne-jeott mine is supplied with food by the company and he has been giving ipe.lda. frozen vegetables vriifebT reilly enjoy.' ASSESSMENT WORK This summer Charlie will be doing the aSi^ment work that ;^£{9I|^CYLBR, Neb. (AP) must be dene yearly to keep Ms the food that everyone has con-'- For the children, s p r 1 n g MUST LEARN means the end of their school, year and long days of play. mining claims active. He. will remove jade spend the . summer slicing boulders with a diamond saw in the mine. For me iummer will bring many new ^merlences. WMle I livid within sight of Lake lhiron ,;«s a cMId, I was always afraid of the water and did not like swimming. This summfer I must learn to Bee Sting Is a Pain-Cattle Lost in Corn 'Oolfak County Shmiffs officers Are .|rying tp figure how to get 34 head of 1,300-pound cattle out of Tbm Krivohlavck’s corn. It all began when a bee stung a TeXan named Arthur Carland Bryan, so, who was driving Ms s e m i -t r all er tro^^ryan ston>ed the truck tS^at the bee. But the ground was not level where he stopped. The i trailer tipped over and the cattle got away. Krivohlavck* Irrigates his operate a l^t in order to cross which has grown so Mgh it tributed - caribou stew, okutukl " ..." " ' ,, to the city ^ M the river. hW«» the cattle. Officials would L«mo ice cream, esnned ^t I am anxidfis to camp out and look for the catUe but the to swim in the cold river. Sum-segthg jajg.^fations. ground’s too wefc mer brings back an unschedul-! goundsiiffke a hard summer ^ officials are hoping the dated life and days w|th^no nlghtibacpi,^ clajing are up a tie will come out, But ^at’s ndt Temperatures soar W fOdriver whe^ all stg^plies must be likely with 110 acres of fresh degrees. packed for three miles, Ifeed. fruit, frozen wild berries, rice, boiled'dried fruit, frozen fish; and commerriafi cookies and crackers. I made 20 gallons of Kool Aid and we drank all of it Men divide the food, and everyone is servtM; a_ protion of each FROM SAME BOWL All food is eaten from the same bowl, which each person bringli;^r himself. At Thanksgiving, I didn’t know, about this custom, and brou^t plates. But at Christmas, I had my bowl. When there is not enough of something for everyone, food goes to the adults or oldest i people, .* * At Oiristmas, the Eskimo Women all^sew new mokiuks (boots) for^ everyone in their family. I’he childrens’ gifts are new clothes which they wear for the Christmas programs fit school and church. PLANE DIDN’T COME | Many children this winter hadj tears in their eyes the night of -their Christmas ..p r o g r a m because the mail plane had not come and thyy-did not have the new clothes , they were waiting ; for. We received our first gifts; -on the mail plane, that on Dec. 24. __Xsaw a Christmas tree in only on® home besides 'ours. We had a lovely tree mounted on oiy grandfather’s ajntique stove. I made a wreath for our front door. Bells I received from my ’ aister-iri-law, Carol Schmidt at i Minden City, rhng each time' someone entered. i Children c^me to see ouri ' decorations and eat qur peanuts in the shell (the Eskimos call the shells “bones"). EXAGGERATION.^ Winter is long, but the “long Bight” hpi been' grossly ex;[ aggerated. "I* -/t—tS Win^ began in September f with “slush ke” funning on the river. ■ 1 DOWNTOWN KRESGE’S 3 Days Only - Thursday, Friday and Saturday, July 31, Aug. 1,2 FABULOUS MAN-MADE DIAMOND SALE If set in genuine diamonids these rjnps may cost $100 to $200. Come in, compare with your genuine djdmonds. See if you con tell the difference. You'll be. surprised, dhlighfed and amazed. Many of the wfolthy people keep their real tKpmondsIn the ' vault and wearlhese and their friends don't know tfre differenost. Lddiett rings in sterling or gold. Men's and boys' geld only. Some of these l^1r« told as high ' pI",* a kidy.«a sterling Silver on Will be $8.99 without this ad. None sold before or after this sale* (L{mit2psrail.);. \jr:: ' Miiii«ji’2.ef............ Ladieg»1-Ct................ ....$5.99 ....$4.99 Men’s Rlngg.,, $8.99 and up S^A PAK EItOliN RAW isr^gided $c«llops...................... SEAPAKFifKaBH Flovuder iPilletf Fisll Stoaks RRS. PAULS PROERH Fried Fish Ftlleffs ■ “CW ' . %'.': &t':tS''* i:.y* ■'■" S'" ■';:: ,■ THE PONTIAC rRKSS.\WEDyESDAY, JULY, 80, 1969 \ MW , rs •p * V ling our Beef has come a lonsr way since 1883 when the first Kroger store was opened. Today, Kroger offers Big anniversary specials op the one modem beef that’s guaranteed fresh and tendey every time — Kroger Tenderay Brand Beef. Tenderay Beef is another Kroger exclusive in the combine^ tion of advantages you get only at Kroger: Even^day Low Prices.l.Weekly Sale-Price Specials ... Sunrise-Fresh Produce .... PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS NO NECKS OR GIBLETS y Split or Quartered Broilers a Vi/flfJPfCCJ ' ' iSKLOIN,T-BONE, RIB OR! ■ PORTERHOUSE STIAiC^. ^ TOP VALUE C A VALUE STAMPS 9%0 STAMPS ■ w ./mnr ers^9. *.1 : 5 ECKftICH SLICED LUNtHEON MEATS - ^Thmm0 " "" WITH THIS COWON Ow S2 PURCHASE OR MW, j FRESH FRUltSJ; ■ OR VEOETABLtS’^. | Va/ldThre A«e, 3. 1H9 ^ 19 AiiCrewtt eiet.'MhK Orange Juice.......'tiSt^59* FRESH CRISP / ^ U.S.Np.1 / r Green Beans........u25* Yellow Onions 3 u«49* THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 80. im Escaped Bull ] V0f^ Mistaken for Deserter, Asks $50^000 Uniform Injures Four' _______iDbesh'f Suif , »y Homit _ . ---- .. -----, _ JSB s=ai“Sr.:r:n: u.N,’Gu«es . $50,000 damago. through the atreets, gotiiig oTj^ knocking dow^ four pwaohs and * panlekiiig hundreds of others. ^ * * Chiles H. ; Tite animal also knocked over- °*y fruit stalls before a policeman ^ot him twice in the head and shipped Mm' back .to the farm h for slaughter. deserter. , tite Ijkn * On the day; iir ^ , gml^'a maOien Ifelen^idMCl^J^ J yeoi^attd a letter hroqa w Araiy iWeir fliMier hero in VI “ jrswajicome, family, They think he was a toerlhig/gtliirv Wayhe L. Smith, gave tMs account: Smith was sMpped to. Vietnam n^from Mdaijd on Sept. 4, IMI, Serving as a mecUc, he was twice. Hie second None of the Injured persons wound cost him his left eye» was in serious condition. 1 After treatment at Walter ArWi! :PeraQanll .9aa|er.^,lii: siytBi ‘Hur reiwrd* fodhmtein , your son ... was scheduled to . 5^ ' . report to tMs station for moife-' . I sued i m«t ovemm o 'deglamorizing" . _ w^ld have to shape the tunics to their figures to offset that.j "Some of us have had to shorten the skirt," said iohalla Oagntt, IS (AP) — an attractive lswa||ui^.' ■ lyed' a It reptacesf^ 8W dress with whinr tooVthe young, foul ** y;multilingiMd guides “"jl$ months, ThaJ^ Isaid the girls. ' More thtii 11 mlUion peo^l Mules bn Highway Lead in One Death GHEENVILLB, n.c. (AP) -Gus Roebuck, % of Farmville ied Tuesday when his car ‘ ie on U.S. $64 west of . lie. ■ a' • ♦ t . w At ,di| time of the accident^ was en route .Jo a hoe*::; |!;^i^e ha was ^king two ” •gt (NWS who had been in-when Sir dar hit a mule I few miles aiay on the same higl^ay. I The teen^igers suffered only, imlnor injury in both accidents. Wateh your "BUCKS” grow al HUDSON ASSORTED Facial Titsua “'-I THotc /{t Towtls 4W«1 Tditt Tbtii KioiToiutK.ruyoii Avandole Cat^F HBAYYDUTY Liqwid Wiiik ♦a4s :■ JUNIOR VARIETIES Heinz Baby Food »?jS* Ijji STREAK DOe A . Cot Food •••••••••a miTENS YOUR WASH Stor-Dsst BloachiiJoitKcOa* y-LB Of CAN O BANQUET FROZEN-^SIX VARIETIES Cookin’ Bags .-07 ggt wTPKc _______., ■. CHUN KING SE^F OR CHICKEN Divider fock .-L. yys 12-OZ CAN M m ^ealt^ & "Sef04 • •• OZBTL tHE DANDRUFF SHANPOO Hoad ft Shouldors Cot Boots.............. KROGER HALVES Bortlott Poars........3 jUiOBff Ifilief 4^aB^BbftlfOfMC BLAC CHICKEN NOODLE. CHICKEN RICE. CREAN OF\' CHICKEN mwSHROON I^B $1 J3-OZ CANS ^ I •1 Krogai- Sou|iu.4 KROea UAND Applosaoco. .6 7-f.B if CAW “1 SPECIAL LABEL Aiax Cleaiiser 14-OZ VT CAN GOLDEN GRAIN tASTY Mdcdrdiii ^ ChftGSG 18^ STAR^KIST frozen TwmiCiissftroU M* wVpjCC FROZEN HONE STYLE Roanos Hoodlos..A/ft; 39* Krogor Breakfast^ toroal EHiAT PUFFS 1 mCE PUFFS NTFKG ---- films $m OvtAUr FRESH BAKED 18 Varialiff, *' KROGER SANDWICH OR ' WioBor Boas.........'<::^11^ KROGER 3 VARIETIES Angnl Fo«|d Cnki PLAIN, LEUON CUSTkRD OR ORANGE MIST 3 ',^1 BAKED f B&Ai CAP BRAND l^fiiad. SPECIAL LABEL BATHROoi 5 COUPON ,ANY TWO Vi GALS KROGER LABIL i KE MILK B jCE CREAM NOVELTIES ........ ..... ................. wHJfhm Sim.. Auf. 3, 1969 ^ V«M Thru Sid., Auf. 3. 1M9. mJ VefW Thru Sun„ Aug. 3, 1969 Vaf/d Thru Stm., Ai^%^9HI^ nKftV'Dd. A BmN Muh. hB Af Krojer 0*». t-Cnh Mleh. 'K6Z' Af Kngtr Dm, It Caat, Mich, -gaf At ffreyer D»t. A Cad, Mich. I m ■ ■ ■ 01 asm ■ IB • ■ n uiIBm ao ai ■ m ■ ■ hi ss as SI ■ ■ saKlMi.aMB alia ■ as ■ mm ■ m Si milRasi ■ ai ■ asm as ■ ■ Si m aim ail _______ \ ^ - ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEE>NF/SDAy. JULY 8d, . B^ll Japanese^ boce Dilerhmq OVer L^nd Reclaimed From Sed AirYOUV(Wt . Hi-C briaks... TdiozCAN 29* BREAKFATT OP CHANPIONS Wkaatfas..........Jfi%36* CINDY BRAND Galloa llsock .;..... JM 3a* spRpyi^^BEL^msrAHT Start Driak...4l)il]Sli69* KROGER FROZEN Lsaoaada...,....... otr&H 9* AUUUNUNFOIL Rayiolds Wrap....VS!!r<|M Cat Food ...........i^Ml9* Crisco ShortORiing............3 ^ 73* greatlakes Charcoal Brlquots.;......20 •‘a99* ASSORTED FLAVORS Mg K Cgnn*d P*|r..........;..'@.S* )l DSf RT TOPPING Spoon & Serve QUAKI PINT CAR-ON CARTON W PINT CAR-ON JUNBQSIZE Wrap....... ASSORTED FLAVORS fautait Saga...... mTENS YOUR WASH PACKER LABEL FROZEN ,^OLL 44* Chopped Oaions..i^K«19* FRESH BRAND 4i%59* Potato Ciiips„.....'<^i JONMIiMMNO Siowy lhMch...a.^47* Tooato Jako...i.kifLNl SPECIAL I ABEL Charaia TiMao..4fSi432* KROGER FRESH _________ Potato Salad — 3 cVns •! “ w \ i KROGER FRESH ^ Coloslaw.;...... 3 - Av6nDALE BRAND ___ Phas......*4'«m’1 >Jh=IL- • SERVING TEA — Teacher aide Galvin Smith shares an imagfnary tea break with a group of four-year-olds. Galvin is one of two city Neighborhood Youth Corps members _THB_|‘0NTIAC press, WaiDNESDAY. JTTI.V an. im« ' : , ,1 working with preschoolers while their mothers attend classes at Oakland Community College. CAMP HILL, Pa. (UPI) -ShopSftef-s get the headlines, but store employes account for M per cent of retail merehaiv dise losses, according to the head of Pennsylvania, Retailers Association. J. llioipas Weyant, the stssociajiioiu executive director, told the Greater Harrisburg Crime Clinic that dishmest employes, in most cases,'“arei created not hired." I 'Dishonest Employes Are Made'—Retailer He said one-fourth of any group of employes la basically honest, another fourth 1 a basically dishonest and the rest are "Just as dishonest as you (the store manager or super-vikor) alloW them to be.”, ^ Wejrimt^ahoered'a film WiHtled , ‘Mission: Loss -Prevention" to show examples ol merchanc loss from within a cmnpany I that could have been prevented by a conscientious clerk suporvi*?f f ceduTM to the letter. ★ ★ ★ Some causes were non crimlnM, suoh ap;a Oupervisor’s failure to cfaeick in c o rr «c t pricisa, while othen atemmed &ohi dishonest practices like "exchange" of price reductions ^tween two store managers in of a special saler The film also showed merchandise, thefts by customers, employes and aoh-store personnel such as delivery men-^ made possible by an unsecured key, a careless count of items, or an employe’s failure to be watchful. Soihe 3.7 million Negroes migrated to the northern parts of ^he U.S.' between 1940 and 1968. ACCUTR(»f drBdm) gobf and Poo* rent, sell, trade--- USB PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS 1 ★ ★ # YMEEE DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES Everyday Discounts - PLUS ~ All Manufacturers Price-Offs Mean - Impossible Prices ! HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Sde Starts Wed., July SO. 1900. ends Son. Aug. S, 1900 DEPT# Op«ii 10 a.m. fOilO p.ni. Dally •, • 10 a.m. #o 7 p.ni^ Sunday Boys Find a Winner in Job That's ’Loser By YOLANDA BENAVIDES What lotdced like ia loser of a Job might Just make it as a nu»t unusual and challenging venture for two 15-year-old city youths. To date. Jumping from algebra lessons to building blocks in Just one month seems to be soma Uod of record. ... * At ★ It all started around June when Bruce Dowdl of 292 Raeburn and Galvin Smith of 277 Orchard Lake began scouting the dty for summer work. Tbeir attention was drawn to the bulletin board at Pontiac Central Higk School where they found a placement ad by the local Neij^borhood Youth Corps (NYC) Centa: at 7 W. Lawrence. YOUTHS COUNSELED Under the NYC, an offspring of the Office of Economic Opportunily, disadvantaged youths are given counseling and placed for on-the-job training according to their ability. In essence, the NYC loans out applicants while paying their wages with the provision that the employe provide supervision. W ★ ★ During the last few days of school, the boys received notice of a Job which they Jumped at—only to find that by accepting it they would be back In the classroom by the last week in June.. However, this time they’d be the teacher aides at Bethune Elementary School. ■ae new project, under the direction of Natniniel Gay, has some 50 preschoders enrolled while their mothers attend classes at Oakland Community College. ' 'The daily sessions fun from 9-11 a.m. From the onset, the thought of playing nursemaid to a room of. restless, rambling youngiters starting at age 2 did "hot sit well with the tiVo teens who had previously worked as caddies during. summers. However, as the weeks progressed, the boys witnessed positive results in the youngsters brought about throu^ play exercises, ae two youAs liow evidence a sense of pride in their efforts. “I really didn’t want to work here when they told me what I’d be 'doing," Galvin said. "But now I see that there’s a need for this summer program, I really enjoy doing whatever I can for these Wds. EAGER TO LEARN "aey’re eager to learn and they csST learn. It’s Just a matter of someone teaching them and that might as well be me." Another first for the boys is their role In influencing the children to identify with their black culture. ★ ★ ★' “Whites can’t really teach blacks anything about themselves," says Bruce, “We are going to have to teach each other." However, both agreed that a total black or white environment hinders rather than aids a child’s deve^lopment and adjustment to society. NO COMMUNICATION GAP While, they are still somewhat reserved in assessing their teacher-aide roles, both boys apparently have had no tl-ouble in communicating with the small fry. More like big brothers than teachers, the two are inunediately sought out for attention as-well as advice. One child in particular, who is naturally shy as well as one of the youngest and littlest in the group, refusea4o-talk to anyone with the exception of Galvin. Of course, the experiment has not been without its trials and tribulations. Take the outing to the zoo, for example, when Bruce looked down to find a youngster clinging to his arm—by the teeth. “I did all right compared to the priest who was with us that day,” recalled Bruce “That kid got him three times.” . nC mOIHEB Brace Dowell teaches boys fo give left and right-turn signals during a typical 1 ......... Bethune Elementary School. Hie summer session, which began in June, ends this week. , FABERGE STRAW HAT I UmMtInwoflir. ■ •uimiMr. tPLOB. amrUI. COTY CLAIROL "MUGUET" "KINDNESS" REFRESHER OFF LABEL Aaatoona A A $H1A Uaaashairalllcr | | jR llawHtipmaa dWonsdryMr. ■ afUlyar ThsVaNay*. tPLOaM. ■WMi’liNBHaM MAYBEUINE DEMI4ASH TMaic,iMlini ^ ' bokkia. nasal ROYAL SHOWER CAPS ASSOmiDCASTU BOX STATIONEinr PLAYTEX SWIM CAP SraSad^^ lOplabialiMta and20 snvalepaa.^^H FaahioiMiilaaolara.m9 KBU mad.,and largo. ■■ 10PAK NESTEA ICE TEA 10-1.7 W.NrtWII.Ph«. POLAROID loa COLOR FILM I Oraat|iiMs lnJust«OMST ARNOLD • KOTEX RUBBING NAPKINS ALCOHOL QO( FdrWbWng, 1 A baMng. and >. ■ ' i^L % pmaetioNl ^ M —IH... lnP 10Ti.O».PIwtie ha. JOHNSON & JOHNSON I BABY OIL EXCEDRIN TABLETS TDNI UKTRO SET Just spray, your hair dryar lOOCtPlastto Botlia. B,4Fi.. Prerision wired chassis. Tdescopic ship antenna, ear- METAL FRAME FOLD CHAIRS Our Reg. 4.66 ' 4Day$Only Tubular steel folding chairs for card table sets, summer cottages. wherever extra chairs arc needed. Has additional brace between rear legs for greater safety and stability, noti-mar _fCCt. In Bnign, g^n, Uu*, ( HANDY DRAWER ORGANIZERS ' 488t In 3 sizes: 2x3x9”; 2x3x15*’. Enables you to armh|» i^wer space for greater efficiency apd convemence. suiwlo tor , use in kitchen drawers or in dresser drawers. Sandalwood-Charge It. Stretch Your Family Pay Cheeky Sa^^ing Every Day The Kmart Way GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS. wfePNESBAY. JULY 80>\ 1969 i. Lack of State Funds for Safety Panel Decried by Hare LANSING (AP)-Secretary of State James Hare issued a bitter complaint yesterday about lack of funds for the State Safety Commission, sayiqg tiw citizens M SGc|ugan will ^ the losers. “The losers are the S million drivers’and other citizens of -Michigan, for we all pay our horrible toll on the roads and flarer ^aitlr ★ * ★ The secretary of state also doubles. as safety commission chairman, a post he has held for more than 15 years. ' Lucy Apes , the Behavior of'Parents' NORMAN, Oklal (AP) - Wiggling and making faces, Uie }■ year-old fiddled with a key and| the doorknob lock at the front of | the house. ; “Come on, stupid, and open the dhor,” urged the exasperat-'ed professor who wanted Lucy to demonstrate her dexterity. ' It wasn't that the 2V^-foot chimpanzee couldn’t unlock the door—she just didn’t want to end the attention she was getting. * ★ ★ Lucy is a bright-eyed and affectionate primate who is certain she is a human being. She; has lived in the house with Dr. and MSs. R.K. Timerlin and their teen-age son, Steve, since she was a day old. She has never seen another chimp; CLOSEST ANIMAL TO MAN Mrs. Timerlin is the wife of a psychology professor and the sbcieia^ of Dr. William Lemmon, a University of Oklahoma psy<^logist who has observed primates for years trying to learn more about man’s behavior. He says chimps are the closest animal to man. Studies with hunoan diiidren have shown the value of understanding the environmeht from birth up to three years, he said. ★ *' * With chimpanzees, Lemmon can have constant observatim and contrtiled myiro fopdifiong. Ito has other chin^ living with human families and haa -a rural clinic, home for some 20 prinutes. ■ ★ ■* ★ Lucy’s caito is the, ahse of a small bedroom. It blends laid the architecbire of th» Timerlin home. When the family is present she Jives In the house and eats at the table. FASTER LEARNER Mrs. Hmerlin and Lemmon are convinced that Lucy is a faster learner than a child her own age in certain areas. Chimps, Lemmon said, * mature about one-third more, rapidly up to the point where the human child begins to talk. ★ * ★. A numbo' of Lemmon’s chimpanzees were removed from their mothers at various ages, and with affection and care, quickly adapted to human «ivl-ronment. • “The natural mother is not nearly as good as the human mother,’’ he said. “The chimp grows faster, is healthier and happiAT in the companionship of people. ’They have no neurotic signs and when they are reared with chUdren we can fairly weU generalize that they are less aggressive and are more socialized.” GREETED WITH HUG A revisit with Lucy supported the doctor’s contention. After greeting the guest at the Timerlin home with a hug and § buss, Lucy was a constant bundle of furry movement. She ' peered into h leather case but backed off with a kind but firm admonition from - her human mother. A couple of show-off somersaults followed. ★ ...★ , . ★..., “You’ve got to provide dominance if you are going to control an animal,” Lemmon observed. But chimps are diabolically clever and can obey and disobey St the same time. jmk, ORlEiNTED Cbimpanzees in captivity, Lenundn has observed, are well oriented with humans. All chimps speedily acquire some human toaits, Lemmon Kdd, and on at least one occa-aron a little boy reversed the process. He was about the same age as a chimp his family had adopted apd observed ttiat the animal got along fine > without being able to talk. ★ ★ :★ The lad, himself, quit talking. Lemmon said toe youngster, however, would soon catch up wittvfais peers In speedi. The commission was given no operating budget and only two positions by the spring tive session. The safety4ommld-s|on and th|» office/of highway safety planning have been placed under State Police through government reorganiza-i their safety ctOnmissions. the bon- Michigaq commission is being ’’At a time when other Industrial states, many of which have a much lower acoidmt rate thAn Michigan, are si^nding /large and increasing sums of money to provide adequate staffs for reduced to a state of total inef-fecttveness,” ,Hare said Hare noted Michigan’s current acoideitt rate is running well ahead of last year and that toe cost of highway accidents now 1 averages more than |1 millitm a day. “In the last thrM years, Hare said, *^the fouk torgest ii surance companies in JfflWgaa [tave increased r^tos an Ave^ of more than M per cent-Z^d the principal cause Is the creasing total of highway accidents. “Unless toe trend is reversedt w| must prepare for,,an alarming increase," HatW wanted. “Aid this means snother round of insurance increaises." Hare blamed the. executive of- fice and the Legislature for neglecting toe safety commission in the budget. He said he would contlnuo to serve as chairman. I cannot and .will not, how« ever, accept the respcnstotolY for downgrading, our traffic safety program,” Hare added. \ (ASvwtiwnMnt) NowMMyWMr FALSETEETH WHhMmCMifMrt TO hWP MU«** eiMMBfOrt wtaw Rent, sell, tri^e - - - use PONTIAC PMDS^ wyr APS! COLOR .$2.99 $14.88 .$549 .$6.7T . $1.19 11 HOUR UnGUNS! AIR CORD. • REFRIGERATORS ' GENERAL ELECTRIC 6-trans. pocket radio. With eyrpKone. 1 to person WESTINGHOUSE 20" portable fan. 2 speeds. Powerful. Carry handle . SUNBEAM ladies' shaver. Exclusive two-sided head. Dainty styling . . PROCTOR 2-slice toaster. Chrome and black. Color control. 1 yr. guar. SUNBEAM eltectric alarrn clock. Sweep second hand. Easy read dial... PANASONIC personal portable TV. Travels everywhere. Handle, antenna. $74 ZENITH giant 18" portables. Built-in handle, antenna. Prev. yrs. models . . $113 $199.95 RCA 20" Console TV's: Cont. wood cabinet. Prev. yr. models . . $149 SHARP 19" port. TV! UHF/VHF, handle, antenna. Deluxe features... $109 WHIRLPOOL 5,000 BTU.'s air conditioners. 115 volt plug-in. Insta-mount, $89 EMERSON 8,000 BTU'sairconditiahers. Insta-mount. 2jp. 115-volt.. ....$169 WHIRLPOOL 6,000 BTU's for slide or casement windows. 115 volt plugrin. $169 PHILCQ11,400 BTU's ojlr conditionors. 2 sp. 11 $ volt. Insto-mount. Thermo. $239 $29^.95 ZENITH color portoble. Handle, doubfe ontenina. Prev. yrs. model $259 $499.95 ADMIRALS 20" coldr. portable. Auto, fine tuning switch. With cart $399 $529.95 RCA 23" color TV. Wood lowboy cabinet. Very deluxe. Clearance $499 $449.95 SYLVANIA 20" eobr TV. Early American wood bwboy. UHF/VHF $399 ALL APHJAHGES • SHAU EUOTRIO HGISGWAKS $579.95 PHILCO 23" color. Wood lowboy with color tuning oye. SAVEf '. $499 $569.95 ADMIRAL color comb, with stereo hi-fi, AM-FM radio. Wolnut wood $477 NATIONALLY SOLD 10 eu. ft. refrigerator. Freezor chest across top. Deluxe $138 ADMIRAL 12% cu. ft. 2-door refrigerator. Freezer chest ocrass top. Deluxe $119 PHILCO 17 cu. ft. side-by-side comptetety frost free both tides . . .$318 HOTPOUNT 21 cu. ft. side-by-side. Completely frost free both sides i $399 WHIilrPOOL 2-oven eye-level gas rango. Solpr-speed 9D. Thfra-red~dviiSiiWf™ DETROIT JEWEL 30" gas range. Banquet size oven. Not all stores , $|4 HOTPOINT 30" electric ronge. El. models, jnot oil stores. Cleorance priced $129 ADMIRAL .15 cu. ft. chest type freezer stores over 500 lbs. Deluxe . $I78 WHIRLPOOL 16 cu. ft. upright frepzer. Stores 533 lbs. Fast freezer system $199 G.E. Stmteo hi-fi console, Solid state. Corriemporary wood lowboy. S^o . $59 RCA 3t«mM hi-fi comb- with AM-FM, FM-stereo radio. 6 speakers. A.F.C. . $319 dbmb. with AM-FM, FM-stergo radio. fPrey. yrs. models $179 $199.95 SYLVANIA port, itereo hr-fi, Goiraird chonger. Swing-out speak. $119 HOTPOINT fully outomotic washer. Dial cycle to lood.noeds. Freo instol. $157 WHIRLPOOL dishwasher. Port, ond enitomoticr'Top toed. Prey. yrs. medei«$fJ3 INSTMIT CMEOtT • IMY IHmt PONTIAC MALL SNPPPIMe CENTiR TELEfiRAPH RD., COR. ELIZABETH LAKE RO. DAILY 19 ft 9 • PHONE 6I2-23N IN TROY 1-75 at 14 MILE RO. OPEN DAILY 15 to 9 PHONE 518-5743 ;j^';.v'^'.’' ^r. ' ji,,i.;u:^»,;/^;.v^‘,.t^.;^h?jcLy_ad laec ■ ''*■• ■■'- ■■ ■'■^- ■' ■ .A ^'^''TVTTv ■*ti.5^i".-v' ■;;5’• :■ '"’'\ -'' /.si'-y '■^V;.#'tS V summer liraRTfiOtTt Amtlltmift ftrsolld^ wp«ne«, tyipt» chacki. Shaped ^ ^ „JH wwr C0IT& -^aole. Hart Sehiffhar & Mane Stanlay Blackee Oalion, HT Fraaman. Hanunonton Park coata in mmyHhaMidc8.,..;...„......4UHUI -------BILACKS, Summar alacka lit bdngalna waavaa. Piath-front and wMiam KSudadSiSflroup^^^ WWtt misa, MMT nm TradWonat *’•« j***;?"** i” oha^ plaida* •olidi, Alao Dacfon-woolai, ii» bait-loop or NationiUy.Ignown ^ tailora'a find Oacran<'iM)ol-inoha!r suiivnar alack ________________..Da* crdn/cotton paimanont-praaa abort alaavo draaa ahirta; vagular collar jalyl% in atripaa and aolid ahadaa.......;.....'7.....3/IUI imONBOWN SHOV SLEEVE OIESS SHIRTS. Parnianaitt»praaaOacn)n/cottondraaaahirta: oxfordoloth ^uttondown collar modals, Stri^and solidahadaa.... .........l/ILHi FUMIt NNEI UHQ ftEEVE MBt SHIRTS. Fanwua mikar Dacron/cotton draaa ihirts;, lagular and tab collar vatsiona with con- vardbla ouHajkiRd ahadaa.............4JI iJOiniHDSHINOrflEEVEDRESSaiiiniAstortad draaa shirts in.aevaral stylas: choose Irom yig(^.^id(i. <»ecka.. paatala and daapj IIMRIS MSEEim WniTn^^^ mant of famous makar dmas aMtts In many pattama and atylaa..«........^....>„.MI AlaitmonoiimainofpanqananHaaaa'dress. ahirti: buttondown collarslyla.in solids and sttipac......^.............441 KRHRHElir-niEIS WMXIHORIS. A nios serec-ton of pa^nanan^pMts walkshorts in tradi-fionalt^-loopvaisiona: Plaids, solids a^ rHMIlt HfllEi niT «IRR.«ouda waav* and stnng knib: most with aolid body and contrasting trim, soma atripaa. Ortons and oottons. many shades.................US HIT stmts HI M/Uir Snifl A large assort-mant of knit shirts induding Ban-Ljons and soma-imports. Saysral aMaa 1» choose from.................................&n PEMMimWS SmnMm Buttondown and regular oollaratylat;aamafamous mak- an. good aaiecdon.......)....Ul to IXM Jliona UBRIVIKHT iUCIl A good ^ sortnnont of lightweight outsr Jackets in nyionr and poplins..........«.tR ta 2UI SHOm SUERKMT SHHOL Choosnfrom cottons and aoatitss; short slaava turtla-na^...A.........../.....*...XM to 7JI WNfiTD XHIT SHIRT& Kn’it shirts imporlad from Italy: choose from cottons and scatatas pi^ from.....................UltolUl R URQE ISIORTIIENf OF NECKWERR. Choose from a large group, induding Dacrons and all-silks: specially priced from..1Ji to Ml A URGE RSSORTMEHT OF HEK HOSE: Dacron/ cottdns. ovar-tha-calf nylons and , anklet b nylons priced from —TVs to 1.30 ;; WnWJ>TO WDERWEMt T-ahlrts at OOTT SHORT SIEEIE SPORT SHIRTt A large ae- l/4flt.undaiahirtB at 1/111, and boxer aborts aortmsnt of boys* and atudanta' sport shirts; •t....................... ....|^4J| sizes 8-20 priced fiom.lJI to M; mudant MSORIEB mORT SLEEVE PAIMIM. A nioa at- sizes at............................IM WW P0IHMIE|IT«ISSlll5nL Chooaa from *«ma: sizes a-it priced ftom AURflEMSORTMDirOFROIElOaoron/cotton ___ l*toti ahava coats irt assorted colors at Ul: tarry _.... _____.. ______ dothshavaooataat................^ WO STIBEHTT IIRIMHEHT-PRE» SIASB; A1KBUL SROUP OF JUI SH0E& Choose from iL-^ toes.In black or brown, fineleathats.r»IS. lOYrilllDSnillEHTrWALKSHOlinLPannanant- , WMGHr AKH PRESERVERS. Out^antiia stock of Wrights-iaduoad: choose Vfom grained 8-12,sizai(,28-30. pnoadfrom.WrlNtoUl and smooth laathaia. many siyia^ black w SHORT SIfEVE UlUOH aURU fthodaa fian-Pf®''''"....................H15to.wr Lon shirts In aSsortsd atylsa and colors; tmmwmimmmxmmmmEL sizes 8-20j,....v.....................z» UVIHOtOHHTUHIJIlCKEaSntpandzfpBar slip-ona and laca-one. black or brown M j,cksts in sizes 6-20, prioacTat , to Zyde War-szawy said in ah editorial don't know what hia intentions / and aims are, but we do know that by focusing U.S. pubUc attention on the Asia and Romaniatrip. President Nixom ris trying to divert attention from the gravest issue in his foreign policy,” the Vietnam war. Some papers said Nixon is making his world tour at a good time because the Apollo moon landing has boosted America’s prestige. But Sheung Pao, a Communist publication in Hong Kong, called the tour “purely a propaganda exploitation of the Apollo 11 moon landing in an attempt to improve America’s rot-■ m ^age on Swedish papers had difibring Yiews on how Moscow will react to the talks in Budiarest. Svens- The Soviet press avoided commenting directly mi the Nixon trip. But without mentioning Romania, chief, editor Mikhail Mikhailov wrote in Nedelya, the weekly supplement to government newspaper bvestia: “In our time, which demands a sober understanding of the real balance of power in the world, attempts to play for effect on the political scene can Births The following is a list of recMit Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Frink a. Riuth, Firmington Ronild 6. Adann. SloomTlild Toku Jimm E. HmsiIIV' Farmington -Jama»,H.rMar»h Jr., SouthtiaM Stanlay J. Wtsdom, Farmington Robart A. Rainhardt, Wallad Laka David E. Lukkarl, SoutMlald ^oul> A.^Carwn.. Sauthflald A«rav W. LIpka, UtlcR Jack b. Patton, Utica CIIHord D. Black, Rochaitar Gary W Martin, Clarkslon William E. Wlllatt, 3067 Auburn Gary A. Elinar, TroV Robart a. Lae, Clorkr— Loran F. Bag-- Robart ..... Tbomaa, Utica i Travli L. Tuckar, 1372 Jaffwood Malvin D. Bowars. Highland William F. Call, Laka Orion Gary A.'liRWlhart, 1137 Dgww Bruca G, KraJnar, iiOt Auburn Road CIIHord J.- Noall, 4362, Lotui Edward R. Pool, Highland David G. Scherman, Mlllord Gary W. Sharlaw, 31 AAohawk .. Jack M. Dudloy, Royal Oak Carl w. Andagr, Royal Oak wiiiiatn o. sramrr Yray Ralph A. Llndgran Jr„ Farmington Duano A. Carr, I^mI Oak Roland G .PazoM, Royal Oak Thaodora R. Back, Rochastar Robart J. Borgon, Royal Oak Donald J. Romine, Southllald Michael P. DaPodagta, J Stan E. Wenclay Jr., Troy Roger W. KIddar, Troy xnlir c: mcpwisiw; «iootvmatd Httia Walter H. Noonan, Farmlhgton Howard S. Fierro, Royal Oak Arthur R. Galgar *-David M. Shupe, John D. Starkel, lyron C. Dennis; Royal Oak thoinat P. Fraydl, Bkn Oaarga W. Slagglm, Robart A. CondiM, Fi N. Dy, Mfi ka Dagbladet, a Stockholm daily, pointed out that Ceausescu openly disagreed with the Rus-. at the recent intsma-tiohal Communist conference in Moscow, and nked: “How mti<^ cold Rmuiidn Moscow^ stai^” But (Skfle Dagblad, publishpd in Gavle, said thd Soviets will not mind Nixon’s visit as long| United States In a Communist as Bucharest adheres to a firm orthodox course In domestic affairs. RELAXATION OF ^SIONS? “Indead,'!' the^ pap«r addled, mkjr evan 9ov^t vnjim I look ut>on tha Rixoti visit if usi presenc ful. If nothing else, the. of the diief executive of the European, capital will signify h relaxation of tensiens in psychological terms.” On mother topic, British and West German newspapers predicted a bleak pb^al future and no pre|identliti!; fetuire, for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., because of Ms Involve- ment in an auto accident In which a girl conopanion was The weekly Die Zeit said it is of the darlteat hours” of ^toriS political life, ud seems right now tbaji political f|itura ia Kennedy’s j 'the People, a London weekly, said "the world needs leaders who can rise above’ordinary human frailties.” But "Edward Kennedy la not one of them,” it isald. “He^doSs not match up tO; the demands ob'the nu»t powe^ ful job in the world. That jh his tragedy.” First Federql has it! PASSBOOK SAVINOS AOOOONTS 4Vk% intorost is coni' poundod and paid quarterly on regular $2gS00 SAVINOS CERTIFICATES Earn 4%% fntarast whfn Kald. for a peridd of 6 months. Earn 5% -Infarott whan hold for a poriod of 9 months. 5'i $10,000 SAVINOS CERTIFICATES Earn 51^% intorast whan hald for a pariod of 12 months No Advance Notice Required on Withdrawals — laka Orion —WaiMfpid - 761 W.HURQNST. Dawfitawn FenHae— Drayliwt Mains - Rochosler - Cloikelon - Mi Union LakoNorihoaet PortHac ISIMMONS OOth ANNIVERSARY MATTRESS A SFEGIALLY PRICED MATTRESS WnH SPECIAL UIXURr FEA1URES! $49 ' AAolching twin or full tin box spring... ...........*49“ • Designed for maximum comfort and long weorl • Luxurious, deeply auihed soleen coverl > Sani'Seoi® treated against bacteria & odor! • Sturdy border brocM for non-wag edged • Adiusto-Roit® coils for firm suoportl . • Heavy Comfortnx cushioning for extra support! THESE SUPER SIZES ALSO AVAItA$LE EXTRA LONQ RUEEN SIZE TwinorMISizb Olvgky6b20% bjo emcK-oW ipacg to niax and iiralch $100.00 Sft IlSSJOset KINO SUE Ohii yBu SO% axtra room to torowl wiriiout collliion $188.00 RRt .L,i,.,;r^ EXTRA FIRM innerspring unit for "signict qihHetLioy&riWltrotw. 100% M upholstery. Twin or -full size mottren or boT^ring ... 'V CONVB«ll»ITCRH>rr ■; i ; ................ ^ PONTIAC SefS.SAG/Al4IV’r£^-7S0f I J DRAYTON 4945 D/X/f/rWY .9/74.0327 ^ y OreNMOjVDAy.THPISSpAY, FRIDAY Ti 9 OPEN k(oNDAY, THURSDAY^ FRIDAY TIL 9 , 1 . 'U,' '• ■■ ■ ■', ■' . /■ '■' '' /J Runs Out on Bengdls Mouncl.Ptinch BLASTING OUT — Michael Kukes of Franklin Hills stirs ^ the sand as he ekplodes from a bunker guarding the Itth elation of Michigan tournament at Pldm Hoiiow in Southfield, green during yestdPday’s opening round pf the 51st Golf Asso- Kukes carded a 79. "* Green, CameronTie for Lead in XjAM state amateur champion Peter Green and stock broke^^ Dave Cameron diare the first round lead in the Slst aniiiiai Gdf Association of Michigan championship at Plum Hollow. Cameron and Green each carded four under par 68’s yesterday. ★ ★ ★ Gene Eyier of Oakland Hills is one stroke bkk at 69, while defending champion John Grace came in with a 70. HOT PUTTER Putting was the key to Green’s success as the 28-year-dd sharpshootw from Orchard Lake one-putted five greens on his way to an equal number of birdies. ' "The greens were super, and I putted exceptionally well," he said. Mixed Doubles Final Slated in Net Tourney A dad and daughter reached the finals last night' in the mixed doubles division of the rain-delayed Oakland County tennis tournament. Birmingham attorney Jim Tobin and daughter, Melanie, 18, breezed , past 51^ year-old Fred Cowin and wife, Phyllis, also of Birmingham, in a semifinal match, 6-3, 6-2, and they’ll go after-the-championship Saturday morning. — it it ___________^ Facing the Tobins in the finale, scheduled for Kingswood Courts at Cranbrook, will be the Birmingham twosome of C. Reid Rundeir and Betty Trost. The match is set for 10:30 a.m. Heavy rain over the weekend forced a revamping of schedules in all six events. Today, Lynn Katz and Mike Kaufman of Southfield take on Kirk Beattie and John Gordon of Clarkston for the junior doubles championship at 0 a k 1 a h d University. ★ ★ Also ickdd up two birdies and an eagle and never went over par in tying Green. His deuce came on the par 4, 349-yard 11th when he chipped in a sand iron shot from 80 yards out. Cameron explained that he thought be had bogies the first hole, until a recheck of his score card revealed that the 474-yard hole was a par five and not a par four as he had assumed. "I thought it wak playing like an awfully long par four,’’ he said smilingly. EARLY LEADER Eyier, who was the round leader until the early afternoon, collected five birdies in posting his 69. Defending champion Grace also managed to hole five birds. Play resumes today to determine the makeup of the championship flight. The 16 lowest scores after 36 holes, plus ties* a will compose the championship flight. A^ first and second flight «rf 16 members each will gsp be selected on the basis of the 36-hole score. •k it it Any golfer within 10 strokoi of the leader will be eligible to join the championship flight. But should he elect to do so, he forfeits whatever position he may have held in the consolation flights. The GAM switched from match to medal play this year. BETTER GAME DAVID CAMERON "1 UkeTfieTdea OF medal playp’^ard Green. "It makes for a better game, and -Fthink its the trend in golf today,’’ he added. PETER GREEN Injuries Mount Puring Double to Twins MINNEAPOUS-ST. PAUL (AP) - lAlich and Denny McLain, a^***tea^ against the Minnesota Twins. The two.Detrolt'Tiger aces had not lost to the Twins 'since 1967. McLain, shooting for his 16th victory of the year, last lost to the Twins in September 1967. Lolich, gunning for No. 15, fell to the Twins 111 June 1967. Die Twins piled up a 54) lead on LollcR and held on for a 5-2 victory in the first game • of a doubieheader. The second game never was clbse. The Twins battened McLain for 11 of their 17 hits and nine of their 11 runs in an 11-5 rout. A crowd of 38,441 saw the Twins* beat "tie Tiger aces. 'ITie sweep increased Minnesota’s West Division lead in the American League to 3V4 games over second place Oakland while 1968 world champion Detroit fell Into a second place tie with Boston in the East Division. Detroit Manager Mayo Smith, obviously distres^d at the doubleheader lo.ss, mumbled'he didn’t recall Lolich and McLain losing consecutive game.s “but I don’t recall having them pitch back-to-back before. Hn sure they’ve lost in the same series sometime before now.” After the twinbill it was disclosed that McLain had been suffering from a touch of pneumonia and bad been sent home to Detroit. McLain was^examlited by one of the Twins’ team doctors. Dr. Len Michienzi, who prescribed rest. *rhe doctor said that McLain was suffering from a high fever. "I haven’t felt very good for three, four days and knew something was wrong,” McLain' said. But this isn’t an alibi for'losing. 1 had pretty good stuff but every ball they hit was a shot!” (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 3), mm oimt DITaOIT «) MINNHOTA »J) •brhW ibrhM Stinity >i 4 0 10 Tovar cf 4 2 2 0 Northrup ct 2 0 10 Caraw 2b 4 112 Tracawskl at j ® J J ’ ® ® Caah 1b 4 0 0 0 Oliva* rf*"^ 3 0 12 W. Horton- If 4 11 0 Alilion If 3 0 0 1 Ma1chl«l4-2b 44 4-0 . Ph 9 9 00 Prica c 4 0 3 1 Cardanat u 3 0 0 0 Wert 3b 4 0 0 0 mittafwald « 2 O O O Lolich p 2 0 0 0 Ranlck 3b 3 0 0 0 I. Brown ph 1 0 0 0 J. Parry p 2 110 Patlarion p 0 0 0 0 Worthlnoton p 0 0 0 0 0. Brown ph tool Total ........32 2 0 2 , Tata) . 2*111 nalralf ...... ................ 0*0 0*0 0*2-2 Mlnnnota .. ....................ool m OOx—I B-Caraw. DP;^0»trolt-2r tO».^i<)*1rolt^«b Mlnn*-•ota 5, 2B—Northrup, Oliva. HR—Caraw (7). ' IP H R IR BB SO Lolich (L, 1*-3) .....'T 5 S S 4 3 Paltaraon .............1 0 0 0 2 0 J. Parry (W, 124) ... | -2 0 0 0 cardanat to 4 132 Hlllar p OOOO B.MIIIarp 4 0 0 0 1. Brown ph t 1 OS>0-Parranoikl p 0 0 0 0 P. Dobaon p 0 0 0 0 Campbell ph- 10 10 Total ........ 301121 Total ...... 40111211 Datroll .......... ...........001 0*1’ 030—S' Mlnnaaata .............. .... 200 171 Mx—11 -G. Brown 2, W. Horlon. DP-MInnoaola 1. LOB —Detroit 7, MInnaiot* 0. 2B—Klllabraw, Matchick, Rinaboro, Raata. 3B—Uhlaandar. HR-Ollva (14), Klllabraw (30), Caih (14), Wart (a). IR H II BR BB SO McLain (L, 154) .......*% 11 9 9 2 3 Hlllar ...............144 1 2 2 0 , 2 P. Dobson t. . .1..... 2 1 0 0 1 1 B. Millar (W, 34) ....7% 11 5 5 1 1 Parranoikl .......... IVa 1 0 0 0 1 Sava-Parranoikl. WP-B. Millar. T-2;25. A- AP wiraphata PAINFUL COLLISION — San Francisco’s Willie Mays slams Into Chicago Cubs catcher Randy Hundley to sedre after a sacrifice fly by Willie McCovey during the seventh inning of their game in Chicago yesterday. Mays suffered two bruised knees and had to leave the game. Chicago won, 4-2. THE PONTIAC PRESS spom WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1969 Orioles' Speecl, Power Make Shambles of Race leqgls Publinx Tournamenf Change of Mind Yields Golf “Reward By the Associated Press Frank Robinson got it started with some daring base running, but in the end it was the Baltimore Orioles’ trademark, of 1969 — power — that carried them to a 4-1 victory over Kansas City Tues-dt^'night. ' Robinson, who is as hot the plate as the Orioles are in making a shambles of the American League East race, tripled leading off the fourth inning and raced home when Jerry Adair of the Ijoyala took his time relaying the ball to the infield. The play proved something Manager Earl Weaver has been saying: “This club is capable of running a lot ifiore than we have.” r Robinson slid home easily as Adair’s throw sailed past catcher E111 e Rodriguez and the Orioles had broken the ice a^ihsC former teammate Wally Bunker, now 5-8. FIFTH STRAIGHT .. John "Boog” Powdl then unloaded his 28th home run for a 2-0 bulge for Mike Cuellar, and he needed no more in hurl- Orion Goffer Wins Trans-Miss Opener MIDLAND, Texas (AP) — Susan Barle - of Lake Orion w(ai.her_first round match yesterday in the Women’s T' r a n i -Mississippi golf tournament. She (Tefeated Mrs. Ray Bray of Midlaind, Tex., 2 and 1. The thirty-two survivors continue play today. ★ ' w ★ Janice Elias of Grand Rapids outlasted Karen Shapiro of Aiken, S.C., 1-up, in 20 holes! It was the longest match of the ,. day. But Michigan’s other entrant, Mary i Biy^; wfis eliminated. ' / Die East Lansing golfei’ lost ^o Kathy Hutson of Lubbock, Tex., 8 and 7. Die general trend for, the action has been < steady, winning golf by the . favorites. Only one major upset was posted. By FLETCHER SPEARS SAGINAW -- A fellow who came just to observe changed his mind and wound up with the first-round lead in the Michigan Public Links qualifying yesterday at Green Acres near here. "I was Just driving by,” explained Frank Peplinski, 30, of Bay aty, who carved out a two-under-par 70 to set the pace for the field of 238 in this two-for-one Public Links tournament. HELPING FRIEND “I had some men working in this area,” continued Peplinski, manager of -..-the-Bay. Clty_branch of a national health and accident insurance firm, "and I wanted to give a friend of mine (Jerry ..jSnable) ajdide.-- . . "I walked around wihh him (Snable) for awhile, about three or four holes I guess, and I thought to myself, ‘I outta get in this.’ Cuellar yield^ • run in the fourth when the Royals bunched three of their eight hits to score on Adair’s single, but . otherwise he permitted only one runner to reach third in boosting his record to 12-9. Elsewhere In the American League, Oakland nipped the New York Yankees 6-5, Baltimore downed Kansas City 4-t, California topped Boston 4-3, Washington trimmed Seattle 4-2 and Cleveland won a pair from the Chicago White Sox, 4-3 in 11 innings and 9-5. Pinch hitter Ramon Webster’s two-mn triple and Bob Johnson’s pinch single In the eighth gave the Athletics a 64 lead before relievers Paul Undblad and Ed Sprague snuffed out a ninth Inning New York rally, stranding the tying run on third. Reggie Jackron slammed his 40th homer for the A’s arid the Yankees' Joe Pepitohe . drove in three runs with a single and Ms 20th homer. LEADOFF HOMER Jay Johnstone cracked a leadoff honoer in the bottom of the ninth, sliding the Angels past Boston and out of the West over Lawrence Hampton, 32, of Saginaw and Rod Sumpter , 22, of ^and Blanc. A second round of qualifying is ,on tap today and the leader after 36 holes will be crowned Publinx Medal champion and pick up the Roy Iceberg Sr. trophy, an award named in Iceberg’s honor for his long service to the Michigan Public Links Association. match PUY NEXT The low 128 scorers then move to match play starting tomorrow and continuing through Sunday. The winner will play seven matches, one tomorrow and two each Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Gary Balliet, 19, of Pontiac is defend- ing champion In the event and he tuned for the upcoming battles with a 75 yesterday., Gary, a sophomore a t University of MiCihlgan, had trouble on the friint nine with a 39 but he came back with a 36 on the back side. STEADY ROUND Hampton, who wa.i runner-up when the tournament was played here in 1966, played a steady round with two birdiss and a bogey. Last year at Tyrone Hills when the field played only 18 holes of qualifying, he shared the low round with a Flint player but lost medalist honors in a playoff. (Continued on Page C-3, Col.l) ing the Orioles to their fifth straight win. ,r - , Just to make certain, howeveM Don /ellar for the first time smee May 9. Buford and Paul Blair lashed/ con- „ The Senators snapped a 2-2 tie at secutive doubles In the fifth for atoher1^^»‘tle run, then Buford walked, stole and scored on Blair’s single seventh. In Trans-Superior J!ace Honors for Lolich /WAY CLEARED " “I ran back tci the clubhouse t<) see it I could enter. Tox (Ellison, tournament director) said sure so I grabbed the clubs and . started out. * * ■ * ' “Fve played this course pretty well befiire, t h o u g h,” added Peplinski. "&able and I won the best-ball here last year.” NEW YORK (AP) - Don Kesslnger of , ONE^SHOTLEAD the Chicago €ui^ and Mickey Lolich of the Detroit TigCrs were the winners of the'Van Hepseh........ But while Snable, 17, was carding his 76, Peplinski was p 1 c k 1 n g' up. five award for June. birdies and three Ixigeys ovi____ «d cowse that gave him a oAe^hot lead Rochester Yacht Home First H, Minn. tfi-The'Tigress, secoipd jpl ’ Georg Lyon of Roch- straight DULUTH,! owned by (xeorg i^yor e^er crossed the finish lino at 1' a.m. this morning, becoming the first , boat to complete the first Trans-Supi^rior yacht I’ace. -Whether the 46-fopt sloop would -be declared winner of the race wasn’t immediately available as yachting events are decided on several factors, one of which is speed. ■ ★ * ★ The Tigress, with a crew of five and its skipper, had maintained < ilace over much of the 390-sho^ event |that began Saturday at 1 p.m. at ISault Ste. Marie, Mich. ' it it * Very light winds and some areas 'of dead calm Tuesday slowed much of the race' down. The Flying, Jenny III was expected to become the second boat’to finish. The Trans-Superior is the longest freshwater sailboat race in the world and is-sanctioned by the American Yacht . Racing Associa-. tion. '^"llomers by Ken McMullen and Bemie Allen, enabling right-hander Joe Coleman to square his season mark at 8-8., .-Duke Sims (trilled a game-winning homer in the 11th inning of the Cleveland-Chicago opener and the In-\dians exploded for six runs In the seventh ihning of the nightcap, Eddie L^n capping the burst with a three-riin homer.. Pontiac Press Pholo^ ON LINE — Frank Peplinski of Bay City works on his chipping game after carding a two-untfer-par 70 yesterday-.at Green Acres near Saginaw to lead the friSt round of qualifying In the Michigan Public Links tournament. Local Broi Joins Tourney Lineup HARRISON, N,y..-. Jimmy Picard of ChcfiarJX'aYe’BrM’a'ffdroo te"' spot in the rich Westchester Classic which is slated to open tomorrow. Picard, former assistant to Warren Orlick at Tam O’Shanter, was three-under-par as he led a field of 180 hopefuls who were bidding for the remaining 22 spots ih the ^50,000 West-chejster' event, richest stop onl the PGA tour. Rain interrupted the qualifying rpund for 1V6 hours but Picard and 15 <^ers managed to wade in the winning scores. The other eight places were to be filled today in a playoff. - . While the qualifying was under way at nearby Darien, Conn., officials at Westchester Country Club declared the 6,677-yard, part72 layout unplayable because of the heavy downpur, the 12th straight day of rain In the New Yrok ■'area., , ' / . . c—« Tli sf-Birci Blooms ^ l■()^'HAC l-ltKSS, WKUNESDAY. JUL^^ 80, 1M> qs PassCatcher •'receiver hu li^ey BlazitE ^our t toe V Versaftile pass i^areund toe Midwest Football ^League that he is one of the '^toestintoefea^. > Blazitz came to the Pontiac Firebirds ii|, 1967 after he was >cut by Mt. Clemens. He had >only two pass receptions to ^ahow for hU efforts with Pon-' ;*'tiac. "Hell fot as good a pair of hands as I’ve seal around this said Firebirds' coach Tom Tracy. "In fact, he is many I recall during my NFL days." Blazits, a strong 6-2 and 220-pounder, is one of the fastest the team and his downfield moves a re ex- \ Last season he was catching ^passes in all positiims downfield ^and he became the top receiver >with the Firebirds, hauling in 58 , s passes for 540 yards and nine touchdowns. ^ 'f- 111 awT JiTOU IlDiin J'KIIOW V 1 fl By John Calmer ^ I Hera's a football oddity * V I thot shows how fortunes I ^ " can change for a team... | ^ I The once-pdwerful Uni- | C I versity of Pittsburgh Pan- ■ V I thers in the final 10 years * ^. of Coach Jock Suthor- % f land's rogimo (1929 | '• I through 1938) lost only ■ oa'aneneAW ttssO Saa oIoa eoe. . But in the most ■ recent 10 years (1959-V g 1968) Pitt has jost 59 v | from pro footboll that | ^ I many fans aren't qwaas ■ of . The Buffalo Bills of ■ ” the American Football I C I League wOn just one game | last season — and what | v | team do you think that one g 5 m victoiv was Over . Buf- ' <; ! fglo beat, of all teams, I 'L ■ the champion H«w Yoik | I JetsI . . . jn tho other 13 | ^ I games during the season, g ^ I the Bills were unable to ! V f win . But, oddly, the * ^ * one game they won was t _..j game they------------ 11 against the veiy best | V I team in tho loaguel V 1^ Strange, isn't it? !■ ★ ★ ★ I jj Did yoi' lu*9W that the ra- I y I verse barb on the end of | i I a fish-hook was originat- e I ed NOT to keep the bait Z ■ ■ i hook as some be- ■ ^ g on the hook as some be- ' > ! lieve — but rather to pfe- I •' ■ vent a caught fish from | Iv 1 slipping off. -:| dr ★,! I ^ I 1 bet you didn't know " ^ g that summer is a great " $ time for ralaxalion, lioli- I •i I day fun pnd highway | I danger. Wo drive farther, e I faster, and on hotter high _ I- m ways than at any other f ; time of the yen r. Check-inditioi I in^ tho condition of your | caution. See one of our ! CSRTER TIRE CO. Soiling Safety 46 Years >/'0 S. Saginaw FE 5-6136 PONTIAC Ir^cally; Blazits Is' the starting flanker ahead of a player who held the job previously with toe old Pontiac Arrows and at Mt. Gemens, Jim Johnson. TRYING FOR BERTH Johnson, who was Pontiac’s top pass receiver when toe Arrows had their franchise here, inade his appearance in ^e Firebirds’ camp last week ^ he is trying for a spot on the team since the ArTowa’ franchise folded. CtoMMiS ... Sts SSI til SI-4 citvra!M''4. u»!!!cMnerT?(^^ It. HR-Sradtard (I), HcaklM (7), tlms FINGER TIP CATCH ~ Mickey Blazitz, toe leading pass receiver of the Pontiac Fhr^Ullfo, is often parallel to thb ground in making his catches. He led Pontiac with 56 passes caught last season and he will be starting at flanker when toe Firebirds meet toe Grand,, Rapids Chiefs Saturday night at Wbiier stadium in the regular season <^ing of toe Midwest Football League. Saturday night, Blazitz will get a strong test from the Grand Ra|dds Chiefs, Ivho Visit Wlsner Stadium in the season opener of the MFL regular' season schedule. Twins Pound McLain, Lolich Braves Not So Fortunate The Firebirds go through their final workouts today and tomorrow at Wlsner with Intentions of stopping the Chiefs "suprise" weapon, Buster Mathis, the heavyweight boxer who has been running at fullback at 245 pounds. "s running mate in the backfield is highly touted Jerry OTlell, vtoo Just a couple years *i set many of the rushing marks at Central Michigan University. LARGE LINE Pneumonia Sidelines Denny; Northup HurtI Early Shower Avoided (Continued from Page lit a twl-night douMo-header with the Pittsburg Pi- fore tak^ the nightcap 6-5. The Giants are two games bo-id the Braves while toe Dodgers are a game back. St. LouhT Masted San Diego KM ilfd toe Houston at New Ymk twi-nighter was rained WASHiDrAWAY The Braves lost p chance to gpin ground when they exModed for seven runs in the second inning and wer* laidlng IMI after three Innings over the Phillies in Fjilladdpiiia vriien the rains came. After a wait of 52 minutes, the umpires postponed the twl-night twin biU and the Braver avalanche of base hits was washed out. Hwnlltan ^ CUM) .. ruSm^-eTlr tRHT'aRseso I l i Vi Umi' CMtilwi), W Mlm lil? Hopkim n sin Hirrtl$on rf I) ) 0 28SJ?? 12?! AAcCraw If 1*11 Siktr ah • 0 • • »ch*. 11U SSSS?p'‘ 2222i?S5 ---ph I 0 0 0 Mf--- . - . - WWllpmt Knoop ph K.. toot 1 B 0 0 lw2Smip tSoS I 2 1 P KMlbMW M 4 P • • ' ....___ t • I 1 apdrai Ih 4«1 1 Uni ef 112 1 ■Wlllamf « 4 0 P • AAp^ll M I P P P tpnto Jb 4 P 1 < AAcCovty IP 1 n 2 Banki 1b 4 0 10 OMz c 4 P P f Hidcmm rt 4 I I 1 <> HwMMrm If tPl i Hundln « iiPP ---— - 4PiPY«inacf IPIO t P P P P Ropovicb ph 1 P p ■ asB,T:T;!!iT;r?'-i B-T.lTorfbn, Uoh. ,OP-C ■ ’ C.r tt ^wal the first game by a Red starter since July 8. And only the 13th plete game by the Cincinnati staff. Merritt owns five of them as he upped his record to KM. The Expos tagged Merritt for toree ot their Mts in tiie fourth iiihing with Jose Herrara’s dou-Me getting in both Montreal runs.. The Reds had taken a M lead on Chico Ruiz’ two-run single in the single. Hie Braves had Phil Niekro lose vtoat appeared to be an easy victory, which would have given him 16; Hank Aaron miss out on two douMbs; Orlando Cepeda lose three RBI and two singles; Tony Gonzalez saw his two RBI and sini(de go down toe drain; and Philadelphia fpns saw Richie Allen, in his first ap- Tom Hutton cracked a two-run single, Mghlighting a iour-nm sixth inning rally, helping the Dodgers to todr second game victory over the Pirates after Willie Stargell’s two-run lOth-inning homer had given Pittsburgh the first game. With reserve catcher Dave Ricketts, making his fourth start In three yekrs, knocking in three runs, including the tiebreaker in a seven-run seventh inning, toe (huds got to within bine games of toe Cbbs in the East Bivision with thoir victory over the Padres. GAM Scoreboard] 'The streaking Cards^ winning for too fifth time in six outings, and for the 17to time in 22 games, were 1514 gamiTKf&Ilid CSdcago on July 4. Bw|«Ir“R£.CR|- -------- Tam O'MiMtar Torn RM, Plum Hollaw .......... Jim Goodrich, Pino Rluor ... 6. Potor Smllii, Ookland Hill*________ ■ fi eilifrom, Doarbom ....a»PP-74 «n Goodo, Atia* Vollay, ..37-37-74 Lauar, Edgawood ...........3P3t—74 -... Parguion, Oroaaa lla ■“*' — R. Humor AAcDonaM Oak. Chtrlaa T. Blackatt, Arbor______________ Rkk Brannaman. Pino RIvar ..374W—75 Jim Funafon, Plum Hollew ....38.37—75 Don Gundry, Spring Maadowa ..37.31—75 ...... .37.3P-75 37.5-75 AAlka~JackaMf'’Rad ____, Polar a jackaon. Oak. RIchardt, Barton Hllla ... ai Stopbanion, BIrmlnAam Albrighf; Oaf. GOIf Club . n Fortona, Birmingham I T^Oaigto. Indlanvraod ... 3M7U75 WaUiMnaw'....4pJM6 Jaff Raauma. WaUitanaw ....404P-IP riv“i Frank..Hllla ..41.37-50 —■-yigJn": 5^a2;“".;;U3S:So a!r^Stfrp..rHiw£^ P. Bonaboonip Loctimoor — - — Drapar. Rad ........... AAichala Voaa, Oak. Hllla ........... Richard Erb, Daarbgra >.......41.3^77 K i»l!!lS;r,'’'Srrm%^^ HanricKion, Altai J^llay 37-40-77 Blair Kamln, Tam O’lhantor Or. WalMr Pronrwck, Ucftm« Stovani, Waatom, -----all Aharn, Rad Run ... Ed C. Dayton, Groiia lit ... —" Draqar; Jr„ Black RIvi „... Havlnt, Dal. Golf Club Anihony. LopuckI, WaaMtnpW Gary C. Kirwan, Turin Batch J, V. AAurphy, PUnt ... 1^0%------ --------- Uchmoor 3037-77 ,yglManPW 4135-77 T’..373tw ...37-41-70 ^3737-71 .3737-71 Mntiac division Lloyd Rfhkepf, Manager 76 WilliomB StreeV 138-9171 WHAT A BEAUTIFUL DIFFERENCE Brighten Up Your Car With A NEW VINYL ROOF EXACT ORIGINAL EQUn*MENT Regnlar $125.00 Speeial Introductory Offer $jg95 Moat carp — OnB-Day Seivico — All watfc done by BxpBit Cfaftp* men uaing fiiwpt qualHy mof-^---------- * “ SovBl - INSTAirr CREDIT. BiU KeUej’g SEAT GQYER Avto, cor. Kinney SBtoeksWgttefMgirteahB Dr. 0. R. Sdiwarix, C. HuffhM, Dat. Golf Club C. HuroUcy, II, Pina RIvar 4130-51 IT AAjad, Plum Hollow ... 4041-pi ndv AA^, Twin Baach ... .3732-31 ' *--------[Ian, Edgawaod . .3734-Pl Briwyd U Faltor, edgawood ' ,4334=37 Carl Randa, Burning Trta . ..4731-31 ------------r.jurmin^m 4731-pp peerance before toe home crowd after a 263lay suspension. LOUDLY BOOED Allien, the ItoUs first baseman, was Itoowered with g chorus of booe and he resffcnded by blowing kisses toward the stands. -¥ftUie Mays tripled home toe tie-breaking run in toe seventh and Willie McCovey, who earlier eracked his 22nd homer, scored Mays with a sacrifice fly in leading toe Giants over toe Cfobs. Jim Hickman had a solo homer for Chicago. WA5HINOTON ^ 5BATTLB VeVpMSPe 2B2S !»c“n?2ffluSp ] I Coltmtn p 4 0 0 0"$oufon p ^ 0 P w£»lU ’‘*.’*/p™*i'ip ...... 11 • 7*• OoSnoghua . . . ■-•iton IBP—by Br I. a-14,270. fa.x, F.Robi^n pi F.Howtrd -Wav Patrocalll' Bin Cattr Oak H 77 M 51 115 '.»1 78 355 P2 la -.1" 73 370 57 124 .3 W .4a U 132 .3 79 -353 a 107 J lot 374 n 117 .3 77 333 a 101 .3 77 »3 47 117 .3 77 142 a 117 .3 Baltimore, it. :r?4 , Mr , 74; R.Jackson, Oak G & M, ELLIS, me, GENERAL^ REMODELING CONTRACTORS RESIDENCE AND COMMERCIAL FE 2-1211 115 N. Soginow St. FE 2-2671 Pontidc V 2b 4 0 3 2 SRWiC«r lb 4 . . Ill If 4 0 0 0 RalGlitrilt If 4 0 0 3 10 0 ARodrpOi M 1 1 2 OOOOMi^y-p 200 0 0 0 0 Wright p 10 0 1 Rama b Total ........a«* 15’!" 0 0 0 0 Pinson rf a l o ------ 0 0 0 0 Torra lb 4 1 2 2 BaMschn p POPP Rlckafto c 4123 eiston ph 1 0 p P piwnnon a 4iio RPanp as 5 P 11 Javlar » 4 112 --------- 4 P f P AAaxvIll St . 3 1 3 0 SiSHSma" Iborg ......... 4 4 3.2 2 5 no IU3-7) ..... rmiy : ^ 1 (W,1-5) >-by Mui ly. T-2:a. . ..Jly a 4 P 1 P Gram p Murralj cf j1|7 .0 2Pao, rhbl 0 1 0 2010 ________ ir* iSp» ^“"•MaTphlSo SL;%j;pb?:ss »^.r\.i*?'ipiVi . fm.sr'*HR^isr'cSir s= TIP H RERBBiq .. .... » ;•;( '^p|%landrl'cki B. "T-3!lS. A—13,4a. FHoward, HAIian Y rt 111’ Jli? I rt POOP H^ay rf if?? ^^'£^S£ry.isLk ^ i I i 11 iIIH p p S p I tay*-3prapup. wp-Bahnsan- T—1:47. Bryant p Staphhsn a Liniy p 0 PIP PPP-P Tfilssj 9 V5‘1”. 2 P P P 1 13 1 2 2 - ......IhIilli -__________________ 5 P 1 0 5 P 1 1 COvtor lb 4 1 p p 2 P 2 p itorpill If 5 12 1 _____liiiaSs.ii j ?ar.“iisi;as,'» i:i: Sutton p 3 0 0 p RDavit a poop -----oOPPOlbbonp 1P00 POOP POPP 51 Total 174114 PmMnjl ".. . POP POP pax-4 . e-HaSiar, PwigullUn. Patok. DP-3.oa lu «*TrLoa (sau,risa.'i, Russtll. S—Toiterg 2. - (I 4 12 2 LO,ARB.*S?'"»mBU. 3«*0AAAIoocf 50 0 Ms/rf I5*2“i iU Rumfl rf 2 0 0 0 Hanar a 5 11 Hajto. c 5 2 2 0 AOllvar m * ■» v Sudais 3b 4 12 0 Patok at miton 1b ,3 0 2 2 Mtrflnac Slzamort a 4 0 1 1 Ellis p sitiS' 1 0 Citmonto rf roS8 5 145 Tatol' a 5 7 4 Fostor .......... ... 414 5 2 3 2 • J*"* 11 i IJ 24 1 1 l-l 0 •.•.•..’,’■**1 V I ‘ ■ Fos^ |A.Otl\ar). & 5a^‘iriiiw! T-2l»! A-liioi.'" ’ Jaefe' Niclklaug " ' ”^BBD WlfGLE OF TBE'DOWNHlLLi «)DE-Hia AND UPHILL VARIGiy CUN OFTEN BE ATTRIBUTED TO n LACK OF PLANNING. INSTEAD OF TO BAD LUCK OR A BAD SWING. VDU CAN AVOID THESE AWKWARD SECOND. SHOTS IF you SURVEY THE HOLE PROPERLY^ BEFORE YOU DRIVE^ THEN AIM FOR AN AREA OF LGVEL TERRAIN. EVEN IT means USING LESS CLUB AND SACRIFICING A little DISTANCE. A FIRM ETMCe. ON THE NEXT SHOT WILL MORE THAN COMPENSATE, r'''' .... ,1 . -V. „y^. fciy City Man iiedal Leader THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNKSDAY, .in.V 30.. l£)«o Publinx Tournament Scores | Peplinski Sets Pace in Publinx Golf Prank Papllnikl, Bay CNv I u..^0f,n, Saolnnw Grand Blar (Continued From Page C-t) !?!? Sumpter, No. 1 man on Witi- Po»«| verslty of Michigan team this * " season, was in with a 33-38-71, closing with birdies on the relatively short 17 and 18, both par-Ss. r ' 5a iw M • '-wyn«, p»M iMonigomtry« naroM 8iA"“2 Lat, 5acH Prltsf, Ja£K U - Oaba Naby, Oanrifa Carlay, M a MjaZ” -S r-l-'fvJMrieklar, John TonWalno, ^,^ Cutt;^ Oa; li ?•» ' TREEglONDER Only nine players were at par or better as most had trouble maneuvering through the tree-lined fairways. Scores of seven, eight and nine were common on the front side. Among those in at par*72 were Bill Chirtis of . Farmington, George Catto of Wixom, David g™ JJPrST' Rasley of Grand Rapids, Lee Wllllam Graoory# Trav^ta city Gohs of Bedford Township and — Detroiters John Kurach and , SuMWtii;, R-ivaT'dak Mjke F e*d e w a , l»-year-old igp""*" Hodoaa, W Portland slugger who was run- LaaI"oitri, ner-up in the recent Michigan |c!Tii!l* l?rilSl!l!ici?*|S'lroif Amateur, was among a crowekF?!!?' Bariira ** at 74, and included in that bunch was Larry Sabat of Birmingham. Terr^ Laise of troy was at 75 along wihh ■ Stevd Vengitf 'of Utica, while the crowd at’ 78 in^ eluded Tom Balllet of Rochester, Tom Morris of Troy Fran Bertram of Clarkstmi and Ray Kafarski of Birmingham. 3i»afc—711 knur®k* Walt May« Km Jernoir Btughiir, Pdtar Khlly. Lm PMn IVibart C itK Mita Macitg. Dav* $ ____ .^an Salbart, Tim Murray. Garry Balllat, Roehtitar Stava/Vanglar, Utica ... Tom Lock. Plymouth ... Guy Hayaa. M^iaon Halgms ..jf-ar—#o Dan Dardibiakl, Hamiramck . 40-3a—7a, garnMn#,, Jl ---- SnaUa, Bay City 37-3»-74|«^> J*" *'*• S^Jttei'a ^ Jankowrfy. Frai Prank Howaori ts - 41-34—77 34-34-77 34-34-77 41-34-n .41-37-71 Prlnck^to Krya, Chi I) 113 - N 4^35-77 41-34-77 .34-34-77 I. Ray KafarakI, Birmingham ■’ Wllllam Gragory. Travaraa Cll f ®»orga Wllllama. La Salla ... Jim Cook, Tranton f Kn Ba^'ioSi ......Iliad, Yoallanll ............... — Charlaa Kordua, Eaat Oatrolt . 4434-71 ------ - Wouni Clamana .34-34—71 Cardan City . . 43-33-71 -------- touth Lyon . 34-34—71 Cholmakljan, Drbm Hto. 34W-7I Bolllet, Rociwattr .........40-31-71 Tom AAorrIa, Troy ........34-34—71 King, Oolrolt ........;. .37-0-74 Jack CogsdIII, Oolrolt .... .41-34-74 MIko Hogg, Oatrolt .. ......40-34—74 *■—— ■■---------- ..41-30-74 Unheralded Player Records Big Upset n B^rdt, Ovtrolf . . ChunouMttt*, Troy . !Sv*^a't ..........30-41-74 ■kloy ....3441-74 I Pta Wdt 31-41-W Royal Oak 4437-74 JSmit ;:;;r3l:^ Olmodc' Gaorga I KALAMAZ(X), Mich. (AP) UnhersJded Doug Sullivan of Hinsdale, HI. registered the first upset of the National Junior ^nd Boys’ 18 Tennis Chahi-pirhiships Tuesday in the second found of boys’ singles. > Sullivan stunned 13th - rank-* ed Randall Schneider of Hollywood, Calif., 64, 3-6, 84 to reach the third round, where he Is scheduled to play Mark Meyers of New Orleans Wednesday. Freddy DeJesus, second-seeded in the 16-and-under division, advanced to the third round ^ with a 64, 84 victory., over Gene Mayer of Woodmere, N,Y. DeJesus will play Dwight Edwards bf El Paso, Tex., in his next match. UNITED TIRE SERVICE JOIN the RUPP RIDERS IN THE WINNERS’ CIRCLE Pictured' here are tome of the Trophies won in the 1968-69 Season by Henry Manuel, John Manuel and (not shewn) Howard Lovett. Aiiguit 18 Hersapowar RUPP fipttid >695 Othera at aimilar priota ' M G SALES and SERVICE 4CCT Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains CT3-C488 OPSN M0N.-SAT. 1-8 'v C—6 17 - Ren Carlton, ailf Ceurmw, Oil WelMr, Elmer Jannnn, Datoreit Wilton, Joe Sctmwiur, Free Miller, CherIM Me-Oenild, Frank Bucchere, Don Selbry, Ciiarlaa Ba^ Irwin Marten/ Roy laa-Mrg Jr., Clyde Batai, John Hudek, Jini- HARDWARt ITORIS Lawiit tdf - E m CALIFORNIA BEAUTY TONE •OARANfRI QUALITY PAINTS EHERIOR LATEX INTERIOR LATEX or fTi r.. ALUMINUM HOUSE PAINT EMBOSSER WOOD ORUR »26» Square EASY-TO-INSTALL CEIUHG A WALL UGHT FIXTURES P5600 m R»8- L59 PS73S Tpkg advantage of thia Reg. 2.49 fixtur* tala to brighten - up the lighting aitudlion in your home. P3752 Reg. 1.89 P3346 Reg. 2.19 $149 Wi -j|:-8a«h-— HEAVY-GAUGE WIRE CHAIN LINK 48"^ high fence includes all line post, top rail & fencing. Beautifies at it protects! End post, gate, and fittings extra. Price based on 100-ft. PER FT. All Stores Open 7 Days^A Week "HOME BUILDERS DISCOUNT DEPT. STORE’ LUMBER COMPANY 4520 HIGHI:AND RD. 674-3157 or 674-3158 Madison HHiglits 27036 John R I el ll-Elile Eesd BHrkUy W Unian Laka I 1716 Coolidgo l7940 C90ley U.Rdl at n-Ellla Eeid M3EIb. L ef lWii lk.M.1 Open Monday through Friday 9-T, Saturday 8-6, Sunday 9-4 yX^A(5 THE PONTIAC PftESS. WEDNteSDAY, JULY 9(y, i960 AJOR LEAGUE **'BwA5r'_— . ■«« OIvMm Nmn^r. /....¥T % It ^VltlM : . S TuaiMv't awMt >-11, Detroit 1-5 4-t, Chicago 3-5, lit g< MInntiotl tMkIond Soanio oRftorali ............tc rMiiotar t-71, night ’ Bolton (Sla^rt t-l) tiatlinil lmoh JS . S I*'* V (Butler i Solrolt ,()Wt tl, nlgllt 10-41, nlgllt Chicago (Horlan ■—^11 11-*), night lart a-l) at Calltornla (Mat-i night I (Moore I-Sl at laatlla (ta- i |McNal^y 14-0) at KaniaJi ■onVt) at MInnaiola (Kaal i TuaaOay'i Raaullf Houilon at Naw York % rain a'lanta at PhlladaMla, 1, r* n PranclKo 4, Chicago I Atlantd IPapoai 4-« and Stona t-‘“-"-lalBlila (Jackion 10-10 and C 1-5), }, twI-nMt ‘ ^ai (OikMin 1M) at PltlaOurgh n at Calltornla, night -----jingion at Seattle, night Baltimore at Kania* City, nig -------AA.,^ I, night Horse Race^ Resulfs^ Northville Entries WBDNESDAY't ENTRIES KO; 1 mh»; :iev#r Sherry ^ Ellia Me* Andy Aton Krlihna Home Run Paces Win in City Loop Gary Acker slammed a hu...c run and a sijngler driving in four runs to J. A. Fredman <20-3) to a 10-3 victory over Oxford > Mattress (5-15) last night in ^ OaiBS A- city siowpitch softbaH. Fredman, second in the *A’ American’League behind Conn’s MSnPriS'? Clothes, scored four timp in --- 1-5, Mil Angeiei M, HI! the third inning With Acxer’s “"'"VSityt •Him ' homer bringing in tffel-markers. Tom Davis a Is homered for Fredinan, whiL Jtny Stanton, Greg Glynn and Mike Thomberry picked up two hits apiece for Oxford. GOOD PRODUCERS 4-jj nW----- ■ " ” another ‘A’ game, Don T^rdayi Bamaa ^ Glowaz drovo in three runs and Jwry Hesse and Pap Atkina chased home two each as Pontiac Press No, 1 (IM) downed Designers Cabipet (3-19), 15^. Charlie Cox, and Bob Nordquist each rapped out fouriiits to add to, the l^ess’ attack. Jim Baird had two HHs and drove in two ntiH-t^^ runs for Designers. Local 596 (13-7) gained a forfeit win over Miracle Lounge (7-14). Abbreviated One-Hilter in City Baseball League Walter MBler fashioned a Miller’s sharp pitchlnk, and CoUiaionT a KM) triumph,over Highland Lakes in city Class A n Ai^'ti ( III *-f), nlW . , , , San FranclKli fPirry 11-7) at Chicago I Mlnnaiala (Kaal (Salma 10-4) ~ . San Olago (Nlikra 44). at St. Laulii San FranclKo at Chicago Montraal at Cincinnati, night Iowa Thrill Min Ellon Su May Scot Cotlemwiod Clavar Joal T. Saint Ollhv Marla RamarkaMo B, J. I. Trail I MEai / jor rvawn Frivoloul BOy Lucky Sam Sir Galahad Jaan Oalloy . Smokay Laa Miu Laiila Colby Bill G. Mli-«l4tt Uni. Paea; I MBai Millie Tima Quaanta Cadat Cdgawood Rax Mlu Trtola E. Bourbon Way Initant Plaaiura ara;S|!a,E. Paea, 1 Mlta. Bright Muncy SllanI Rhythm Wing Flaih Duda Adlak Evaran Rockat. Rhythm Cottonwood Blitz O. K.'t Lady Ttb-dSMO Cand. Paea; 1 Mila: Marria Scotchman Color Guard Knox Ravlaw Oalinar Quick Prom . Oaizilum Joa'i Don Juan IHl mil COnd. Parai 1 Mila, Tha Voyaguar Judga P PacTuo H. E. h Sanator ii.n Rusty C. Chlaf Red C. C.'i Highllma Chapal Don ' g Pace, 1 Mila: Cashman Tratoll Kathy ng Paco, 1 Mllai Herb Roman Empira Miss Julia Ray Pat's Viltaga Boy Eddia NorthviHe Results TUESDAY'S RESULTS . ji^ala RaiSnit Pie M Claiming Paco, Fay Dlract My Adlos llaliv I---- ------------ 4,» 7.11 7.40 ll Claiming Tral; 1 S/14 rrinca nAanual ' BlbyH^Robmla MU—MM Cand.. Paco, 1 I Carol Chlaf Instant FIra Right Saason. . Sih-dMI Cond. Paea,' 1 I Bold Caballaro Billy Farong 14.40 5.00 3.40 4.00 l.M 7.40 Rusty 6ai Trooleal 1 ....____B Cond. Paea, 1 4 Mistar Margay Eddie's Jot .40 1.40 3.70 . Saroira Boy Dinar Brady Adlos 1MII-417N cond. Trot, 1 Special G. Pearl's Chip Phantom Colby 30.40 13.00 5.00 DRC Entries THURSDAY'S ENTRIES _____J5S0 Claiming, 4 Forlangsi Red Darp Saluta RIe . All American Boy Tally Mr. Kish This Trick Pantuitv Judd Arnatt Jacolaena Ha's My Falla Irian Stewart Miss MIche ........ Claiming, 4 Forlongii — Edanal , BWa Echo Highland MMI ....... Mr. Particular Hindu Widow Astraeus |!usa llghland M v>rand Me.. ' Ardking Nltal^lfa Charlla . 4 Piiilants; lurry A Lot lobla Turf tission Possibla 4 PurlanBst _ark;s Folly Banker's Delight Delight To Behold Serenade Star ng, 4 Furlongs: . ....... Bucket O'Sudt . Wditformeboys a-PatrIck J. Kura Count I lam A. Michigan Miss b-Johnnv'i Jury B-Plplng Court ....a-R. R-. Flynn antry.. ..... b-M. H. Van Berg entry Mh^SOO Claiming, 4 Furlongst Attention Judga Polar Park Amber Song" ' ' Bta'^'iakay'^ ♦th-aSM Claiming, 1 Vila 70 Yardat ^y L. Kay Coll Golden Timor Soma SIngtr Magic Circle Holly DRC Rfsults TUESDAY’S RESULTS. 17.40 11.00 0.M 74.40 r - S) Paid sii4.m ‘ a: (4-3) PaM $4.ia , 4 Farlaiifs: ’ 7.00 3-40 ' In Class B action, Ponti Police (12-7) shaded Bob Ken’s (941), 6-5, and PonU Press No. 2 (6-11) fell to Eagles (9-9), 5-4. CLOUT HOMERS John Bri(igewater, Wal Patton and Tom Cirkndall slugged home runs to spark police to the win over Bob Kens. Jow McMillan, Bo Shepherd and.Steve Sxal pideed up two safeties each f [ifTlie’iosei^— S!m -a-w * * ★ Ray Jonei$ doubled and scored the winning run on an mor the last of the seventh as ^ Eagles nipped the Press. Lo picked up twQ. of the win-70 Voojners’ five hits, while five dif-■“ laJiferent batters hit safely for the ;to 5.4o!Press. 5.M 4.401 addition to leading the 7.40 4.40 3.70 American League in victories “ IS! 1968, Denny McLain led the loop d $054,110 sacrifice bunts with 16. Twbl: (M) Paid $3LM ClalmiRg, 4 Purlang*: nat 14.H )).40 (3-1) Paid « I IIAUi latal ACME SELLS MORE a a . BECAUSE IT OFFERS MORE a a a Lewmt Men • lest SeleeHen • Name Brands GOLF CLEARANCE! SAVE UP TOM AND WIORE ON 1968 AND 1969 MODELS ^ arg OM# gf our RyMy day low pricot. Evoiytiilns in atock. No flimmieka, no bait advoitiaing. juft Wiotf to gUdHoot voluoa ^only Acm# can giv* you. Our S4th Year laniSRead OHUIK .atMtahadw. ^27“ JnEsei i^aaa.arnhi JiasL aWMds-f Imm •99“ 80LF SA8S U94 SWaadt-.BbpM •99“w TnuST aoLF eaut NEW ItM STOCK •11SL MaTOaCOSET aWMd.-Slram •24“ •88“ ,*89" TomaqrAnam OoManteott 3 Waadi-f li«w •88“ rjn Wm lo $3* 05 EXECUTIVES aWmda-TImm $7.94 te $29.94 Shooting Spraa Beattar a-Davtna-Carl m^sog Aiioi WWdWht Et AAarlara 0-Spnd Lina Knockemstlff Basnttalar L0UI$VILLE 2W<^a •5“ IBfiu **SEl ij» $48*« ASSORTED PUTTERS $2«4 WILSON K28s SWaadt-BbaM' nss” Pre Quality w COVENS ^39« Let Oiir Pro Salesmen Correctly Ejt You 2924 N. WOODWARD AVENUE CORNER BAMLET AVE BETWEEN 1 ? ■. AND 13 MILE DOES YOUR House HAVI TMI BLAHSl. Don’tlMdipe IMPROVE!, WE ARE WORKINO NOW CALL TODAT a Free Estimates • Frsa Plsnniag, • Frsa Daaerster Sanriea FinancingAvaildble . .. NIQHTS .. . AND SUNDAYS CALL EE OUR AO IN THE YELLOW FADES 1932 Wfst Huron 2 BLOCkST^WEST OF TELEGRAPH. dW___-----BP...,- die^ CAU NOW, OAT Ok night QtmSirtinMIm 881-2M0 Clierdon • FAMILY ROOM 12x14 • DEN 16x11 •".«MdAfoui»clo«oB, brtefc or aluminum old-btg. hlRor gMbtd roof, auHott. insulation, BMdbaBoi il.:.., ..t_. .1 .. . :B I ' Miller fanned 11 over the five-inning route and he atruck out the sMe in the firit and third frames. The game ended under the 10-run rule. . •k It . * Shortstop Mike Burk low knocked in three runs with a sacrifice fly and single to back threft Inore with a base»-loaded triple in the bottom of the fifth that ended the game. k k Jwrj Harkey itollected three singles and Dave McDonald added a pair to aid the M. ti. (16-4) cause. Pete Evans singled in the Qfth for Highland Lakes (6-15) only safety. In another Class A game, Jim Homer tossed a- three-and fanned nine as the AB a HUR RBI Pol. 104 14 31 0 34 .m ^.■.EESsgii ii McAutlHu .... 371 4f 71 II 33 .143 Fr»*h*ir ..... 310 3t 7* 11 M ,MI Htxion^;..... Ill W 71 14 SI .351 MoNJilcK ..... i3|3 35 I It .744 SUnlo, .......... 311 50 00 7 10 .333 Kil"* ;;:::'raS«! « ffl tracawikl ....' 40 II 0 0. 1 .l|0 Cwngb.ll .... 27 i I 0 0 .037 jpTgtalo... 1177 430 70$ III 107 .Ml laifv^l PIM^ iM KH^lgmy ■ , l’ 0 3^'* l.« Tiinmormwi . 0 1 . 17.1 lio I ^ 1:1$ \ i i il ‘ M Mib Now Took ryl^l Realty Squad Captures Crown Hallmark Realty knocked oft Irwin Realty last night, 18-10, to capture the Waterford Township siowpitch chaihptonship. , In other alowpitch games, (foca Cola whipped Oakland Wholesale, 7-6, and Lakeland h a r m a c y turned back tagecoach Lounge, 13-8. Clippers (14-7) downed CIO No. m (9-12), 6-6. Gary Fischer and Santos Sanches set the pace at the plate with two hits and two RBIs apiece. AAM. COLL. (Wl 4 Okrlib ..... !i! 1 0 0 0 MocOon. If . . . 1 0 0 0 Burklow ii 10 1. 1 0 00 Bart'lik 1b 1 OBO 1 000 Lov.ll rf 1 IT 0 10 1-0 Burt lb 1110 1 0 0 0* Hill lb 100 0 Mollwum a 10 0 0 Kind e 1 1 0 * “------■ - . - - ~ -ijto. j, I m*...Mio loi I OH- 0 1 0 I itx-io II I M.O. CMNOmi . Hurlers Spark Junior 9s T-Ball division’s pptlmlst Braves slamming the Pirates 17 to 1. PONTIAC J(|WiOR SAIBSALL Behind the hurling of Tbm Morris and Jim Gowing, Pontiac Optlmiat No. 6 a n d Eridkson Tigers, respectively, crippled their Class E op-’ ponents in last night’s Pontiac junior baseball league games. Y.iboif Coniiruction'i," . . Pontioc Ogtimlil «$ 11,, fontiap OpUmist defehH Auburn Heights, 1^2, while - Erickson' downed FOP Yankees 18-7. ★ k k Another impressive victory came in four Innings, with the ^flmlAtf 1,------ Jot$ 4, M.I. Club Va, Alwldin vine-------- Cwr S.lor'4 OptImTit «1 Mc*F. 0, f ontlH IS, Boilon Rod igcki s T-Ball Baltimora OrlolM 7, Datrolf Tlgaro I Optimlit Bravai 17, PIratm .1 Cougari 15, Kanus City Royali I Optimlit Mata 10, Lm Angola! 4 Summer Clearance! RANDOLPH ^ marutnoiii 908 W. Huron at Tdeitraph IWllMIA-RIBMUj QOODPYCAR New treads iutneHs on Soomf Tiro Bodm oKUNriwE fMEiowim oNEuiwnn FOR COMPACTS MEDIUM CARS> BIO CARS 111213 •’“■ |S31tSui •““ SoJ iSS UM, 7^13 7J35kl4 LARfiER * Ploa 22G te 4SG per «F, EsttaimBd Fed E)l Tm iWRFsiy tdeimndlim on sIm) and a To« get tlM suae road-grippiag type tread design that comes em an saw ear Cushion" polyester cord tire a Pick Tear Sixe Now - Go GoOdywm ' USE OUR EASY PAY PLAN • FREE MOUNTINa OFFER ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT Everyday low prices "'MARATHON"' 4-PLY NYLON PORD TIRE . f Wrap-around Tread TBNUN iia •igsXUOMiaifcss; inmwiBL \ 6.00x13 $14.88 $1738 $1.59 1 735x14 $19.45 $2235 $2.07 1 7.75x14 $2035 $2155 $230 1 835x14 ’ . ' $2SJ5 .. . $2845 $236 1 ^ 7 .75x15 ''j':, $2035 ■: ■ $19.58 $231 1 83^x15 "' $2835 ' $2.46 1 GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 1370 .Wide Track Derive — 335-6167 525 Elizabeth Lake Road w. 338-0378 "Ask Your Geodyaor Daalar for Hit Campalltiva Pric»—Goddyaar Rafail Pricei Shown Abpva" GREENFIELD TIRE & BRAKE SERVICE of ROCHESTE^ 226 Main, Roehester—651-4007 . — ■ ■ C'l'—^------------—^'rl ^—- \ !—‘ ^—I— -Ui— r 1' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TODXESDAY, JULY 80. I06g ' - -r. '/I?? ^ ^ ^ 'v\ "X ' ::'1v tke Qsd4m 7Mil MARQUETTE (fl - A woman living «on* In a Iioum trailer north of hero’^^s literally driven out of ner home the other night by a black bear that actually broke Into the trailer. ^TCanip Highligbf of Vacation For hundreds of boys from across Oakland and Wa^ counties, the hlghjlght of sununer months Is their two-week stay at Camp Malin-Go-Tah-See in Iosco Couiity. Under the attentive eyes of Camp Director Donald W. Burman and his staff of collefe age counselors, the young out-doorsmen participate in ^ variety o f recreational activities. STRAIGHT SHOOTERS — Two youngsters at the.YMCA’s Camp Mahn-Go-Toh-See rifle range wwk to develop their skilU as marksmen under the watchful eyes of trained instructors. Taking aim are . fom Trivison, iC, of 4726 Kiiicwood; Blrminghkm (left) and fiarry Douglas, 11, of 1011 Green-tree, Bjootofield Hills. U.Pv Bear Problem Increases ment of Natural Resources received a.record numbw of complaints about bear activities. TOO MANY Dorias'J. Curry of Marquette, A sterm elied while try ing to get into a house ip Houghton Coiin- situation. He said he is com ,/est And in Stambaugh, state and city officials wore 'forced to shoot an adult bear that had; wandered into the center of town. It looks aS though bears are goipg to make as big a nuisance Of themselves in the Upper Peninsula this summer as they did last year when the Depart- yard of her home in rural Chippewa County. vinced the problem /esults from atf'over-population of bears, and favors action to reduce their number. Curry fears the Upper Peninsula may be the scene of another tragedy like t h e PMnranky case, if somethbig isn’t done to stem the bear population. In July 1948,, little Carol Ann • Pomranlqr was dragged off and killed by a beat while she was playing in the 'This could happen again tomorrow in any one of a score of places in the Upper Peninsula," Curry said. He^ believes a larg^ part of the problem a/^s fro^ what he calls Ixamp be^s that have lost their feah of humans. y Ho deplores the practice of operators of some supper clubs, restaurants and bars on the outskirts of towns who put out food to attract bears — and in turn to attract customers. EVENING ACTORS "In some places they even have floodlight^ at night so that customers may better watch the bears," Curry says. He puts bears that frequent ■garbage dumps in the same cfdegary with other tranq> bears that seek out meals from humans. Tt is conceivable that thefe are many biears in the UigMr Penlh^ula that never rlj^a y e learned to / find fo<^d for. themselves,’* Curry states, “These would be bears that started gong to places of human habitation to feed wift their mothers when they were cubs." The state often Uvetrape nuisance bears, ami transports them many milra before releasing them in remote areas. But Curiy doesn’4 believe this 1* the solution to the problem. . Fishing, sailing, canoeing and swimming are some of thk water sporU enjoyed i» and around Loon Lake near Hale. While back on terra firma, the campo’s learn everything from basket weaving to archery. Maintained by the YMCA, the 246-acre camp accommodates approabnately 100 campers per session in rustic surroundings. THREE DIVISIONS Boys are grouped according to their age into vners Receive Warning Fun Trial Scheduled The G e r m a n Shorthaired LANSING IP — aiorelinel The case was reffrred to owners on Michigan waters who Judge Richard Robinson by the plan to increase their -frontage State Supreme Court for a find^ by constructing channels must ling of facto. «». , prove ’^reasonable use” or the Another cbi^tderation Involved the danger of an increase of septic tank pollutants into the water. permit will not be granted, advises Atty. Gen. Prank Kelley. Kelley cited a recent test case decided in Barry County Circuit Court in which a | ebannd development on«Gun Lako waa I da el arid Robinson based his judgment on several emsiderations. They included a study which showed an increase in boating aqtivlj^ caused by the proposed would "cause ■ a deterioration in quality^ of boatliif.’*'' Pointer Oub of Michigan haa sdieduled a fon field tyial and training session Sunday at 9 a.m. on tho silo course in the Highland recreation area. 'Hie State Supreme Court previously had ruled tha riparian righto could not be created in lots which had no actual contact with the water, ■nd that land abutting an artificial water eoursa haa no riparian t^ta. Houston, knockM oitf v TuosOvy-t Fights Tk. .-.-ttatoil Pr™ j^Oawo^^^ Zygl^lej, VACATION TIRE SALE! ..................................... Drive in TODAY! Charge it...buy on convenient terms! Fast.expert service! Young, I2l, Moumtsvlllo, W. Va., ... ---- "lAMS, AAass.-AI Romkno loa, Itt-rour- ■—‘ '—------- Vacation Car Service OFFER 0hi‘ ixpirt mBcbanlgs do III this work 1. Align front •nd 2. Balance front wheals 3. Adjust brakes (Drum Type) 4. Repack outer front wheel bearings «fl95 Moot American Cera ra with, el TifAvtone TRANSPORT 6-ply, heavy duty nylon cord tires for PICK-UPS, VANS, CAMPERS 6.70-1S Bleckvrall Phie 02.40 per tire Fed. Ex. tax, ealoe tax pnd 2 ' off your vehicie. Super King Size eARGOOL GUSHIOII Big 32''x21^ia» Additional 01.98 eaoh •Teperod for aoak belt uao • Vinyl-oDatad fabrie • Maximum ventilatfam lofeolon OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY >111; NfNE '■V f/iffA Performance Tire Center 146 W. Huron St., Pontiac, 333-7917 J lillr , tfuoygh Satunlaj^Au§. 2nrf hi Wbyiw, OakImHi, Macomb aiM Waahtonaw CooMIom Maple Syivp...,. '•^‘79* 4* Off LAin^BIMNm Chili Sooce...... '^ 29 ColorKIts....... ^ 29‘ 1Ci« OFF LABIL—NIAGARA m Spray Starch ..... ^ 49 COOLRISI Robin Hood Flour •« 49 14.B. I 10.OZ. CTN. Iodized Salt..... coouusi Robin Hood Flour £rmoi«'s Potted Moat... 2 ARMOU«*S Chopped Ham.,... lOaOFFLABlt Bold Detergent ... GIANT SIZI ivory Snow . RRIMIUM IN PKO. . 2^ AW. DuzDetorgent... ’liS^ 87* FRIMIUM IN PK& A i|Pc Bonus Detergent . . iOX 8# Gain Detergent... »> 83 FUD6SICLES 12 .Ilk 49* S-LB. 1-OZ. BOX 1-LB. ISVi-OZ. BOX JANE PARKER BUrSlt, Cake Ptgifor Cuilwd flawond CHECK Old COMPARE 1-LB. 1-OZ. JANl PARKER PINEAPPLE OR Dutch Apple Die . • • JANE PARKER WHITE, THIN-SLICED ^ Sandwich Bread . .4 JANE PARKER Iced Jelly Denuls... JANE PARKER BRBMCPAST TR^T ^ Caramel Decdn Bells sez. SIZE 1-LB. 4-OZ. LOAVES PKG. OF 6 14-OZ. PK& TOST by 1>N THE MOON! IhD(5hdowN8 . RICH W CHIN 'KRCblarCooMM . . . UO oFp labil-oolor bliach I Rinse Detergent. . . PROZCN btoufkr;b < Spinach Snuffle. • . '( PROZCN StOUPPSR’S j i Petntoes Au Grntin , » 49‘ ML 73* sizb a 1. »?4t' .'’'5ss‘49^ '*£49* Neodlos Romanoff...........'*£49* ill FROZEN STOUPPER'S ■ M I King Crab Mewburg 0 ... '^1** ii PROZEN STOUPPER'S f- ■ ON Shrimp Newburg • 0 .^^//. . 1^ m SONSNINI COOKIES ' MAS ^lORMBCoolon....................’»r49* JORO’t Plzn............... I PREI SBRViNBS-Bim OROOKIR Petalo Buds o o . . a o o MBHTLV SALTED OUANIVRS ■ land 0’Lakes Butter. Vo FROZEN STOUPPER'S ij. Broccoli Au Grotin. . ^ FROZEN STOUPPER'S .: mOOm" SoOPPUBEb-tilHIESIZE « 9iS: 49* SoOoSotoapPads. .... . w 27* . w27* 2i!S^79* . 79 A Morton Cream Pies «>. .. , ' k69* Cmm Cheese Cake • . . . ■ PURR ■ . -A'/ ;.:i Cat Food. . . . . . • . A 4NPP>LABEU-S0FT ' ediE . taKayMargarin..,.. . 39* S^sdOnwlBB^ */'* ** %£ 49* OsrOmlCiOTwiME.. Too Bogs A .•••••.. WITH PIOKU REUSH Heinz Ket^p.............. WITH ONIONS Heinz Ketchup. • . • . • I 4. OPP LAiSU-AkSORTSD | Kleenex Tissues.... • SAIfOAOSS Band-Aid Sheer Strips. ^. BANDABES.-UREE SIBE BonR-Mdl ShM Strips. . FloiMhaNma’s Morgarin. . «S 22* 2»a69* .. tS65* MARVcl VAIHlu WsRes _ ■ "::V' Turkey Roll BONEUSS RUMP ROAST A&P fcinato Juice 4 ^ 99* Kuboom H ..... % 35* A&P Apple Sauce .. 29* Vlusic Relish .... 29* A&P Fruit Drinks 3 ^85* 7io»-oz,^00 __I WEAVER'S (CHICKEN ROLU Slicad Cliickan Breast ! Beef Brisket .»., ‘89* NIW YORK RUKILMt V Strip Staak. 1.2** ppiin Smalt.......... ‘59* pRin oelAM piicM or Cod Fillals ‘69* PRIIOPIIUTS lake Parch........ ‘89* G«c /n an HYGRADI'S GREA-r AMERICAN PICNIC KIT SWEEPSTAKES 39 ASP PACK WHITI ^ ^ um LAHU-UWHAt ^ IlHKora TVIM . . 3 i& P Appien Way Pina "«i2* 32' 55* ■ATW MZI ' W A KSUOtAK OK oeir Bid Soap..... 2 »» 43* ChoMSSanbrniiCoHN 72 WUT VIRGINIA _ SlicedBacon..... I WSST VIROINIA WHOLI Ailk« Semi'Bonaless Hams WIST yiRGINA - CannadHams.....% 4 HYORAM'S Ball Pork Franks.. ^ 77 Mellow Eight O'clock ^OJIU uuLuai) :; \ -THE POIWUC I>Bie®i,»OpifE9DAY, JULy'do. l»6t --;'v> ■ v mu buuaa ^ OOD ' PFjPltS A 00^ tmu MMiiiiniiibHiir' 1 ^ PtaPfJS A OODTOWh PEOFtES r c FOOOTOWN ★ PEOPLES n FOOOTOWN * PEOPLES * FOOnrOWNj Mt. IVORY EMH VANCiWS PORK and BEANS I 1 lb. Can w PUFFS FACIAL TISSUE 200 COUNT 2-PlY •x;5S, i- tssrmiusErs f us OMCE MHE1£SS tmuniBF 4. #ood TOWN PEOPLES FROZEN MKAOOWOALK n^. LENONRDE.......... «« 7 CORNED OEEF.......f. 49** NORTH AMERICAN ' 4 STEAK SAUCE....... bh.«. DETEROENT . . . n .. ^ • Quart £9 mcko ' ' I „ KUMTMinER...... ik.-OO*' KtSSffig!**^ RAe PRESERVES........... OS ^SHDHLSm,.... ««59** 1»ICE.,..,,,,.,.„. «:« 39* LYSM. BEWORBIlia J CLEANSER ........ 49” MINMRIN AAlt' ORANGES............ ti-«.S9* DEL MOKTE FRUITCOCNTAIL..... 30* KUEtIBIDDEOFT AA* HARRARiNE......... Z9” Mtoimo «A. JELL0«B.iiii........ *:«■ 10” RUMP ROAST 99» ROUND STEAK 99: US CHOICE BONELESS FI^H HEELdROUNO 99tiP0RK CUTLETS 99: BEEF C0BE9STEAKS BEEF BUM eUT CHOOKSTEAKSTOEfN' SWISS U.S. GHOIGE 3ll».olRaNParkFranht if S«Ai-BMi«lM9 HaH Ham 2 lbs. of RaO Park Sologna )f llkafWMtVirgiflia Bacon 3 k. WNt VirgMa CannoA Ham ^ WESTVIROINIA " mA,..lb.R9' WESTVIROINIA ' __ SLICED BACON... ib. 8^ '»‘hah,..5.^6” eraks..‘.......7S* BALLPARK MUMIA TSP CHOCK STEAK 00 C^5i STEAK PINE CONE tmmrn TOMATBES ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I ■ ■ I 14.B.TIN CAKE IQI MIXES 19 WHITE, TELL0W.0H000UTE FROZEM BANQUET DINNER PASCAL Adduce CELERY BTBUimmT UEBIUR FIGHIC «T | SWZEFSIiKESBNmiliNr ' I A drawing will be held in stori; for a prize picnic basket filled ! with Hygrade products. The picnic basket will contain (1) li W. Va.. I I Brand Semi Boneless Ham (2) a Mb. package of W. Va.;Sliced I I Bacon (3) a 3-lb. W. Va. Brand Canned Ham (4) J-lbs. of Ball Park | I Franks and (5) Mbs. of Ball Park Brand Bologna. Fill outThis entry g blank and deposit it in coupon box. A drawing will be haM at a later !■ data^ You need not be present to win. ■ To get your i^cnic OFF THE GROUND, use 0 picnic table and cover the top with all kinds of delectable goodies from the BIG ELEVEN FOOD . TOWN and PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS. U.S. #1 30 SIZE 0 4 X INSTikllT MAXWELLTIUUSE KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP SALAD DRESSING lb. ■C/ Meadowdale SUADARESSINfil Rightsto Limit ^one Sold to Dealers Sax. with *10.001 /,' ■ ' .js» THE PONTIAC PR»:sj: WADN'ESDAY, JULY BO, I960 ' t'A''%yut' ■' MEL-O-CRUST HAMBURGD^ - H . KRAFT M Doglliins2'fi^48^ Miracle Whip.Ri. PATIQ PJtOZCM KALKAH Tortillas......... .>•■• 19^ ^ Qiuxik Boel Dog Food 24t CONTROLLED SUDS tOOfCT. »TL. Dash Detergexit*‘lH.Ur$2.19 Exeedrin................99t NATIONALLY FAMOUS ^ mmik VAN CAMF CkTlA Crisco.........TiBFisli...^“3.2? GENTLE DETERGENT Swan KAL CAN DOG FOOD 36#77 The “FlrCflghter 4" is government surplus, and Muskegon fire chief Donald E. Caswell . said a fireboat of comparable Ize would have cost the city at least $60,000 if converted, and $7S,000-$100,000 if new. / But Muskegon’s fire ^part» ment did the conversion work itself. Assistant Chief Ben Tripi; designed, the fireboat and s vised inkaOation of tl^ pumps below c The vessel cpnViab its .85 tons along at lip ip tO knpts and can carry up to 80 persons for rescue work. ONI-Y FIREBOAT Caswell said it is the only fireboat on the western shore of Lake Michigan and is available “in pse frt^hfers are afire/ on their way down the lake near our shoreline.” gallons of water per minute to help control such fires, The chief noted there are several idrge industtilal plants ^^along the lakeshore anting it.” And that’ji the task for which ‘‘Flrefigh^r 4”, was designe^^ ^ / ■■ 5 Convwnitnt Locations PONTIAC—5046 Highland Rood PONTIAC—46 E. Telegraph of Huron SYLVAN LAKE—2375 Orehord Loke Rood UNION LAKE—8040 Cooley Uke Rood ROCHESTER—1495 North Main If it weren’t for our Freshables, we'd be just another canned goods store... SPECIAL CUT SHUR TENDER HEATH EAT SOUTHERN In a iaMwicIi Steak f 9 (o il chops cot from Pork Uia EARS ONLY JUMBO 150 COUNT ROLL If SPECIAL LABEL i ^ Ad Mf CRBINCRYSTALS Ozydol Detergent......i'l‘LU.^834! BLEACH. BORAX A BRIGHTEHERS - . , , Extra HuHy "All”.........!tlE:M.7W GREEN GIANT SPANISH a 12.„. AA nn HEAVY DUTY , , Drive Detergent.......... CRBAMYIIILD Ivory Liquid Detergent«7 CAL-BEST darnied Tomatoes......^ Lix..........................Uriat CAMPBELLS. IQl^ Mb Beans......................aflr AUPUVORS i t|nn FIJIO Hurt Pop............ FRESH SWEET Blueberries CALIF. SWgET HOME CROWN GREEN OR Bartlett Pears...... ib.294^ Yellow Squash.. 2>-bs-294> SUGAR SWEET HAWAIIAN FRESH SOUTHERN Pineapple.. .........EA.59t Salad Tomatoes...pi . 11 M, ',. i » , j V, '*• ' I ■■ /n'-r' V, ■' -,4'\^%'V.-J.\ w THE PONTIAC PEESsTtoDNESDAY, JULY »0, mg_ ' - - ________: , ;XJ*1S rUJWXi,AC; r WJaiJf» 90* PMMxai Sii* IvoiT ARF ASSORTED PLAVORB Kool AM Mixos JIA WHITENSA»iDBRIGHTENS mP Fab Dotorgont 70Z.SIZI. 10^ B«I AfariCpMCiips TOMNPNIM lO^ 12” jUaminuni Foil rSY* .13X130NEPLY * OoloLvncliooiiNaiikliitrS^' 11x8^ i60CT.omop 29^ Norlliora JvmbfTowoIs"'^^22^ HOME OF BUSHEL N CASE i DISCOUNT PRICES! rpNTtAC MAU SHOPPINfi CENTIR • GLtNWQOO mIaZA SHOPPING tINTER • Ml(AIRA€il MILI IHO^MNO^iNTIR • DIXIE HWY. AT Wit \ LAKE ROAD NO|(tH l^V AT ARLSN .:.4^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY gp, 196P ^ .^ ^ ^f '-^. stop; Slipp AND SAVE WITH FRESH HM>Dt ROM FARMR fACKI FOR A DELICIOUS MEAL ^SPECIAL UBEL, YOUNG Tender Torkeys liTO 20 LB, SIZES PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY. AUGUST 2,1969 Peally Fresh O Hamburg *'■ J *|89 Check These Discount Prices! H Discount Prices on Everything ! H Get Discount Prices Every Day FARMER JACK'S Corn«d B««f WILSON SAVORY Luiidh«pii Loaf BRBAST-0«HICHEN Chvnk Styl« Tuna DELICIOUS RED D«mhies Salmon - CAN 1 OPBNPIT Barbucuu Saucu ^ FARMER JACKSTUFFED Monzanilla Olivus orcatfOrsm,^ \n. j 120Z.J BTU* HYQRADESklNLERI Ball Park Franks DELICIOUS B Mt M Bakud Bunns DELICIOUS FARMER JACK Buuf Stuw EASYTOFIX Mlnyfu Rku Kraft Muyonalf# JAI RiOH TOMATO FLAVOR ' g Star CrusfTomatoSavcuc NORTH AMERICA Mwshruom Saucu BEEF. VEAL OR SALISBURY . . 2 Uaf C Fruusur Ouuun Stunk I plk®d. ” ^FYYROZEN BREADED VualStuaks HYQRADE THICK SLICED Sportfiiian Buluvna mAVERB SLICED Chlckun Bruast Bull MR. PITTS GRADE 1 Skinluf 1 Franks BKOZ.e WT. 1 CAN I MR. PITTS REGULAR OR JUMBO Pullth Sausafpu MR,PITni PLAIN OR GARLIC Rlnu Buluuna WITH CORN OIL Kuyku Marfparlnu FARMERJACK BONUSJAR PrincuS|ia«huHI Saucu ^SrSO' MEAL IN A MINUTE Kraft Macarunl Dlnnur i%. 18^ Mrs. GRASS Frunch Gnlun Suup pkg. 1 RICH TOMATO FLAVOR mozll Campbull TumaluSuup S5i DELICIOUS SNACK HEAT ft BAT BREADED FRIED Ocumn Chlckun OCOMA DELICIOUS FROZEN MoolPlas PATIO FROZEN Muxlcan Dlnnur CLEARFIELD Dlut Chuucu SIkus NATURAL SLICED Kraft Swiss Chuusu KRAFT NATURAL BRICK OR sliced Frankunmuth Chuusu 12' NEWII FROZEN . i Tuasta Sausags^Plsxa , DELICIOUS EASY TO FIX Flavur K 1st Grahams liS:Z9^ ALL PURPOSE LIGHT 2 LB. ^ Uad> Spry Shurtunlng mn*09^ pureoraViulateo g whitu Satin Sugar & SSr WHITE OR PINK FROZEN POTATO, MACARONI, COLE SLAW Hamtuwn Salads VANILLA, CHOCOLATE, TAPIOCA Quakur MaM Puddingy I FRENCH STYLE ALL FLAVORS Drn Gaymunt Yuguurt cm FARM MAID 0X 00^ Par# WhMphe Crnam ^29^ FARM MAID 10.. 5 HOME OF BUSHEL N CASE ' DISCOUNT PRICES! MNTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTik • ^ OLtNWQOO PLAZ/A SHOPPING CENTER •' MIRACLE MILE SHIPPING CENTER f DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD NORTH PERRY AT ARLEN ■■H\ iVv'/iV; 'A' C—14 a THE POIi^TIAC PRESrS, WEpyrESBAY, JUDY 80, 19^0 io, V > For Banqna Pops Chcxolate Coating Fruif Is Tinfod as It Marinates Mounds of, cTMiny Ice cream, topped with a lovely Hawaiian Fruit Sauce, «... , . , , quick and delicious out-of-doon' Balboa is a family Oceanside, smooth. Dip frosen bananas desserts. To prepare defrost r^rt in Southern California [into chocolate. Sprdad evenly one 6 ounce can of frmn fruit For Some reason, Fudgyand scrape off excess coat% ' ' iHaiuma Pope are the rage of'widi snu)(ll ^tula. (ff^ mixture Balboa. They are sold frojtn lit becomeji thick, plaee pan iii tie stands which line the stiWtS larger pah of hot wato^.) leading to the beach.«MenUon Spread with nuts, coconut or Balboa to a youngster who’s small candles If desired. Place been there on vacation, and he’s on lightly greased shallow pan. bound to yearn fqr those Return to freezer immediately. juicy red Hawaiian Punch con* t^ate.' ' / ' I Marinate one cup W chopped peaches and (dneanile in it far. several hours. Spoon the preW tily tinted firuit aiid concentrate' over scoops of your favorite' flavor ice cream. Qrowft with d “chocolate covered frozenoo not allow l^nanas to soften.'dollop of Whipped cream and' bananas on a sUck.’* Serve iftwen. Makes 8. Jserve. i FUDGY POPS - Fudgy Banana Pops are shown on the kitchen counter, overlooking the beach .dty of Balboa ,ln southern California. They're Wonderful treats for the youngsters. _ , Charcoal Fumes Can Kill You Inside House You don’t have ..to go te Balbpa to enjoy that city’s : popular snack. Make. these h-ozcn bananas and keep them handy Ih the freezer. You’ll find the frozen banana tastes' creamier than ice cream. ; Bananas give us vitamins A, C and several B vitamins, along .with lots of essential minerals, report tbe home economists at the Cabana banana kitchens. > Oh a diet?'You too can have frozen bananas on a Stick. Just v skip the chocolate coating. Peel bananas and dip in lemon juice, Insert skewer and freeze. Wrap .te plastic wrap or fdl. You’ll be"' surprjj^ at the rich creamy 'taste frozen bananas have for around 80 aclories. If ywir market does not reg-juiarly carry wooden skewers ' or popsicle sticks, you can And them in a hobby or dime slore in the crafts sMtion. If bananas are extemely &ge, you’ll want to cut them in half before in- BUYl SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSl NEW YORK (WMNS) - The should be placed in an outward . u * . 1 , t aerting wooden handle. They in a bit of rain a ong With life- ^ Slaving air or shift your cooking to the kitchen stove. manage. FUDGY BANANA POPS 8 bananas -Lemon juice 8 small wooden skewers Vi cup butter or niargarine charcoal fire that w h e t s draft near an open window or everyone’s appetite at a, door. If you build a charcoal barbecue can convert a room I fire in a ^replace, you teould into a death trap. keep the damper wide open to Bunting diartoal gives o«,encoi^e A f r ee-f 1 owing: £Qf(JlnQ Treat carbon mono:pde, which is col-; upward'draft. l , orless, odorless and potentially! . ♦ * * Drain the olive oil from a can . V* cup light com syrup lethal, warns Mrs. Marjorie B.j particularly of cook-'®* Norway sardines; mash' 2 tablespoons of water May of the Grater New York disrupted by s u m m e r'®*’’’**"®® combine with 2 1 (about 8 oz.) package semi-Safety Council. . irainstorms The n a t gr a 1 ,:**W*®P®®®* ™*y®™®*®*-.*^‘8*** sweet chocolate pieces * * * dangerous reaction is tojly butter oblong strips of toast 1 (about 6 oz.) sweet chocolate The only safe way to burn reconvene the barbecue inside and spread sardine mirture pieces | briquettes indoors is to make ^ in a room whose windows are'-over each. Sprinkle with: Chopped nuts, cocohut, multi* / Now you tan have ymr Sto1«»iy tanned V \ foods and a dollar,! And foods. 1 1 Del teiotis. Because $bkely pjcks Iruita aira vegeUbles like you nick fruits vesfetahles/.. when the color is right. ^ That’s why Stokely products mal^any Bummer meal so sj^ial. ( To: Stokefr Summer Dollar Offer P.O. Atx 4694, Ginton, Iowa 52732 sure the room is well-ventUated. shut against tte rain. But there ^ Worcestershire sauce A hibachi or barbecue stove'are only two safe courses — let garnish wjth spring of parsley. colored candies i Peel bananas; dip in lemon juice; insert wooden skewer in , end of each banana; freeze. . Combine butter, com syrup . and water in saucepan. Bring to | boil; remove from heat, chocolate pieces; stir u Stokd^ picks likeymdo^^ I’m attachiim my 10 Stokely Color Guide labels to this con- - ril. Pleato send me one dollar. (Complet ■ accompanied by this coupon. Limit, bi , _______iim Please send meoi accompanied by th refund to an envelope, pli form will nof be honored. e dollar. (Complete labels [except 8 oz.] must . . - 8 coupon. Limit, oHe refund to a faihily-ona refund to an envelope, please.) Labeb submitted without this ofler Made from juice oranges befliebest^jNHiNwta^^l .tefeRB CoilPON on one can ol TO THE DEALER: Ben Hill Griffin, Inc. will pay you 6^ plus 2i for handling this coupon when used by your customer to buy one can Orange Nip. Any other use constitutes fraud. For redemption mail coupons to Ben Hill Griffin, Inc., Box 127, Frostproof, Florida 33843. Invoices showing purchases of sufficient Orange Nip to cover coupdns redeemed must be shown on request. Subject to aN state and local regulations, and void in any state or iocatity prohibiting, licensing or regulating these coupons. Cesh value 1/20 of 10. Offer expires October 15,1969. - . . - . STORK COUPON ROUND STEAK HOFFMAN'S DOES IT ASAIN GUTS YOUR FOOD BILL IN HALF! CENTER CUT SMOKED PORK CHOPS DEUmOUS M Of Our Beef Is Cut From USDA Choice or Cbod Mature Grain-Fed Steer Boot MHIELESS MUD RNIP or MTIO ROM! S'fOS WhOLE or RIB HiLF PORK LOIN, Cut Srk 70$ ?REf IS' LEM and TENDER (Picnic) PORK ROAST 39 t h. HOME FREEZER SPECIALS - Custom Cut Freezer Wrapped-Frozen and Delivofod FREE smES|i«( beef OMYniillSIAOhoioe or Good Mahno Oraie*Fod Stour loef We Are Also. Footuring A Cash & Cany 50 Lb. Moat Spocial. Plata Your Ordar Day Bofoie Pick Up. Ask For Bonus No. 1 ID Lbs. BUTCHER BOY STEAKS ID Lbs. CHUCK ROAST ID Lbs. ALL BEEF HAMBURGER ID Lbs. FRYIHO CHICKENS IS Lbs. PORK CHOPS MUn. *34»8 Cut A Framr GROCIUY SPKIALS ROMDIflLK, DaL cm..^....89-bread, 5 Loavies (1>lb. 4^a.) GO* DILL PICKLES, Qt. Jar ..Sg* NOOROER TOO SMALL OR TOOIARRE Hoffman Oakteid Packing Co. fe 2*iiw SMIf.pamYs'i^ pomtiac ^ opEN9t.s SERVING TteGREATlKbiuaAWP-PQIfriACAftEA FOR OypR so YEAQS S.I. ; THK iP()NTlAC*» Hlp.SS. IWJ^DNESnAY, JULY S^.mo -1. V'' , s I j' m ,- , 'S : C—15 -1 ■V A Cahiping pots. You can even keep IttUo foil pans you get with fo^ you buy throughout th« rest of the vear, use them for camp cooking ar * ‘ ■ Ing and toss them. Gather top of foil together i flakes and stir with a fork, and seal pouch tight^. Remove ★ ★ * from bowl. Place on grill over When meat is done, spoon hot coals. Heat for about ^ peas and carrots into the center minutes, > ot^fthe meat crust. Spread .r^pa By JANET ODBUL . Food Editor, The Pontiac ProM With more and mwe families going camping, the need for good recipes that are Casy to prepat-f grows. - - j, Funny, isn’t it, thdt ^with ^all We solved the problem of Their open foil/and fluff/rlce the tup. Dot with butter. Cover our pus^utton bpBM«nc«i at keeping our breakfast coffee hot a„d return to heat until home, We drive >me» to a *>y alwhys inchldihg .a larg^ f^anfcfurtws or hamburgers, vegetables/and potatoes ai^ hot, . campsite wherd we have to vacuum Mtle in our/camping about 2% dups/ or 4 about to 20 minutes, 4 to « 4 « carry water, cook on an ip-'gear. Make the coffee and pour gervings. servings. ,slides. Cut each slice ilito • to 8 convenient stove and work with It in the thermos Immediately, - a-o Bifii I *i«p niM STiiFFFn frank a limited equipment? |'n>is not only keeps it at the DIN-STUFg-ED ON| (^nibine pineapple I! proper temperature, but frees nUl fr)anks with mustard spread bunf.MWces 4 servings. MARSHMAUJOW-PINBAPPLB TWIGKABOB8 1 small ripe pineapple 2 cups Tahitian dressing ' 2 dozen marshmallows Peel pineapple and Visnmve' If you’re the person who fa! proper temperature, responsible for the meals, make sio^e for other cooking, the work as simple as possible. ^ This is the tinvs to take advantage of canned foods, mixes n and shortcuts. You’re saving so 01 FRANKS STICKS 1 pound (8) frankfurters 1 jar (8 oz.)' sharj> cheese spread 1 tablespoon India relish 8 slices bacon CAMPSITE RICE ^ Camprite Rice is n recipe that’s easy enough for the most junior member of the Cub Scout troop to make. Cheddar cheese, catsup, and minced onion fav to have a can or two if you get stuck in a campsite thgt’s remote from a store. And refnember, that stores near camp sites aren’t the supermarkets you’re accustomed to. They don’t offer much choice. KEEP IT UGHT season packaged eiFiched pre-cooked rice P** hshtweight plastic confer a rousing acompaniment t(f hot dogs or J*!"*™ «<»f everything you can. hamburgers. IMi pounds ground beef 1 envelope (1-oc.) onion gravy Here’s a collection of simple! ^ main dishes that may spur you, "Vf***** ^ «1IU IHIUIU.W. xuu ns BBVUHJ Bulon to further experiments of ^^P®®'®*"' * mudh on meals-you don’t eat iniyour own. Have a happy camp- «^“«spoon « u ' pionapaa restaurants that you can even'lng trip. ! ®“P» hed potato flakes Prepared mustard afford to buy some items you! And if you come up with any ^ carrots, , jIo butter Perh.p,jroud«,’tu«»ll,buy Srl!^^ S v,,, , ™ canned meat and gravy. But me. . * ® niediumi-size skillet, split with cheese mixture. * - combine ground beef and con- Wrap frank in bacon and tents of gravy mix envelope, fasten securely with toothpicks. and salad dressing in a plastic bag. Let in the refrigerator at least 1 hour to marinate. Thread 2 or 3 pineapple wedges and'2 or 3 marshmallows on each twig. l^package (8) frankfurter buns Grill, over hot coals until ' marshmallows are toasted. Work Change CAMPSITE RICE heavy 32-inch length aluminum foil 1% cups water 2 tablespoons minced onion M teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper V* cup catsup^ ’’ 1 teaspoon prepared mustard cup grated Cheddar cheese 1% cups packaged enriched pre-cooked rice Fold foil in half. Press into a 4arge bowl t^ form a pouch. " Place all ingredients in the Aluminum foil is one of your l pouch, except the rice. Mix well best helpers. It will save you to blend seasonings. Stir in rice hours of scouring blackened I and mix just to moisten all rice. duty Pat the mqat along bottom and sides of the skillet. Cook over low beat until pieat is done. Drain off excess fat. Meanwhile, make mashed Place in' plastic bags refrigerate. Spread buns with mustard. Wrap in food wrap size plastic bag. Toast stuffed franks on twigs potatoes by combining water, over glowing coals until bacon milk, and salt. Add potato is crisp^ and brown. Not only does this save on weight, but they’re waterproof and usually spillproof. HAMBURGER SKILLET DINNER - Ground beef, seasoned with an envelope of onion gravy mix, is patted into the skillet like a pie shell and cooked for several minutes. Spoon canned peas and carrots into the center and top with fluffy country style mashed potatoes prepared quickly and easily without cooking. Cover and heat through. From Normans The famiUar words “beef,” 'veal" and “pork" reflect the growth of the English language. After the Nomfllh conquest of England, the language of the court was Norman-French. The common people who tended the Serve livestock of the conqueror continued to speak their native Middle English dialects. What the herders called kine, calves, swine and sheep became “boeuf" (beef), “vielle” (veal), “pore” (pork) and “moutoh” (mutton)^ when it graced the rulers’ tables. Gradually the nationalities merged, and we acquired two useful sets of words to describe the live animals and their meat. TWIG COOKERY-This is one of the oldest and simplest forms of outdoor cooking. The ojte important implement is a long, firm, green stick that will not burn. Try Stuffed Franks and Pineapple-Marshmallow Nabobs. Be sure to cook them over coals, not flames. I'-'' ■ ^ SOV SADCf EASY SUMMER STEW - Melt V* cup margarine in 2-quart saucepan or Dutch oven. Stir in 14 teaspoon basil and V* teaspoon sugar. Slice 2 medium carrots and 2 medium mdcais diagonally into 14-inch alices. Add to fat with 2 medium tomatoes cut into wedges. Saute about 10 minutes or 1 tender. Add 2 cans (12 oz. each) roast beef and grivy. and a 1-pound can sliced potatoes, drained. Cook until bubbly. Serve on toasted sandwich buns. Makes 8 servings. Quick Trifle Has Citrus Touches Buy One Pound of Beef to Serve in Three Meals Place 3 cups pound cake cut! dnto 1-inch cubes in s h a 110 w Quicfc^Des^rt iserving dish. Combine 14 cup ., iorange juice and Vt cup sherry; I pour over cake and soak for V4 . a hour. Spread with % cup straw-top with 1 cup Apple-sohitely delicious pudding dessert combinini favorite flavors that grown-iorange sections (reserving some jups’ll love. Blend 1 can (16Ifor garnish). There ard over 10 million men, 1 cup tomato juice ounces) chilled butterscotch and wonmn in the United States I 1 small onion, peeled and P®***’"* 2 tablespoons Pour 1 can (16V4-ozs.) chilled today past 60. “A Cookboidc fori sliced tha)Lelsure Years” by Phyllis! ^and floiir into meat. MacDonald is for them. For one person, three meals from a pound of round steak — yes, it’s true. The cookbook directs you to divide in tiiirds — use one, freeze the others. For example, Swiss steak; beef stew with noodles and individual beef and vegetable pie with fluffy rice border, all for one person; SWISS STEAK 44 pound ruimd steak cut 1-inch thick 2 teaspoons flour > V« teaspoon salt Dash pepper ^ 2 teaspoons vegetable oil ot shortening , Heat oil in skillet. Brow peanut butter thoroughly; stir in 44 cup raisins. Garnish each serving with apple wedge Makes 4 servings. meat on both sides. Turn heat low and add tomato juice and onidn. Cover and sunmer loF l hour, adding a little water'from' time to time. BEEF STEW wrra NOODLES 44 pound round stedk 2 teaspoons flour ¥4 teaspoon salt lemon pudding ovdr all. Garnish with oranges, whipped cream, atid toasted slivered almonds. Makes 6 to 8 servings. Speedy Specials Easy to Prepare 2 teaspoons yeietaUie, oil 1 bay leaf 1 teaspoon instant minced onion 144 cu^ water 1 cup packaged noodles Cut beef Into 1-hjch cubes. Combine flour, salt and p^per. Coat beef with flour mixtore. Heat oil in a heai^ saucepan. Brown beef. Add bay leaf, onion iand water. Cover and simmer until meat is tender. [ Slirimp Treats; I from the Gulf: I ’The versatility of today’s Sprinkle in noodles, adding convenience foods gives Mrs. pater to^ keep liquid boUing Homemaker a chance to show “'em. Covei* md ewk her creativity in the kitchen'*®^ ^ every day. Fancy sandwiches ^ ^ ^ » like Cor^ Beef Mexicana are| ^ ^ quick and easy to prepare. ^ ^ OemedBeefMexteana • an dndridual J>eef _a.nd 2 packages corned beef, finely tyagatable pie. cut ■ !/' : I 1 can kidn^ beans | 8 oz. tomato sauce or catsup J ; 1 table^eon chili powder ' * 5 or 8 Iwt dog buds, split in • half ^Cheese Strips ■ Surf Sld« tandwieli j I IdM for summir sandwiches - ! chopped shrimp, chopped ■ y, Worcesf"~‘‘..... Went moM Mtast for mora sum- 8 merSm tni^ write: | SECIKS. Otert. GK-S, Bos $7. ■ Hantr; u. TMsy | Mix first four ingredients together and heat. Place split buns on « flat pan or cookie sheet and toast under broiler. Cover with the meat mixture and top Fith cheese strips., -y Toast u^er broiler until chpese) ' melts. Serve at oncf. ! Summertime Is'sandwich time. And if you want a delicious newtaste this summer, niake sandwiches with Rite Diet Bread. Its premium ingredients and the nut-like flavor of the sesarfre seeds on top make Rite Diet an uriusually good-tasting bread. And it's unusuajly nourishing, too. With a protein nutritive-value 2V4 times that of regular bread. ' . Rite Diet Bread, Ibasted or plail^i, makes unusually delicious summer sandwijphes. < Your choice of LIGHT or WHEAT. 7 . . JU. l-t'" THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESpAY, JULY 80, XQgQ OLD COUNTRY STYLE - Home-style eating at itn best is Old Country Pot Roast. Tendet beef roast features a Superlative gravy and golden, light cornmeal dumplings. flavorful Pot Roast Always Good Eating Old Country Pot Roast may be the best pot roast you’ve ever served. No gimmicks, either. Just simple everyday ingredients carefully and lovingly prepared. Salt and pepper 1 carrot, finely chopped 1 small onion, finely chopped 1 stalk celery, finely chopped V« Teaspoon ground cloves '«teaspoon nutmeg The secret of Old Country Pot 1 package (SV4 ounces) com-Roast is the sauce. Unlike most bread mix. pot roast recipes which direct Vi cup water you to toss in whole vegetable?, 1 tablespoon corpiStarch this one aSks you to chop the In Dutch oven or large heavy carrot, onion and celery as fine skillet slowly brown roast on all as you can. SprinUe in some nutmeg and cloves — not much. Just enough to add a piquant flavor to the meat You probably won’t be able to Identify the apices in the finished dish (the flavors am that subtle), but the meat and gnvy taste will iwobably be flie best you’ve ever sampled. - Simmer the meat very slowly . Don’t noh the cookhig. y^^^^ sacrifice tenderness and flavor^ When meat is^teodor, remove If you do. to deep platter and keep warm. ■ ' * * * Combine cornstarch and water; About 15 to 20 minutes before stir into drippings. Boil 1 serving remove the roast to a minute then reduce heat to lieated serving platter and keep simmer. sides. Sprinkle with salt and pei^r. Combine tomato sauce with cheese, carrot, celery, cloves and nufmeg; pom-over meat. Simmer, ti^tly covered, 3 to 3Vk hours or until meat is very tender. Meanwhile, prepare cwnbread mix accwdlng to package directimu; refrigerMn } >oar. warm; this standing period helps the meat to “firm up” and become easier to carve. Meantime, thicken the drippings and drip in spoonfuls of cornmeal dumpling batter combread mix makes dumpling preparation foolproof. OLD COUNTRY POT ROAST S- to 6 pound beef roast (round, rump, sirloin tip or boneless chuck) 2 canx (S^ounces eachj-tomato sauce with Cheese Drop spoonfuls of combread patter into sinnmering gravy; cook, tightly covered, 15 minutes. Arrange dumplings around meat. Sppon some d! gravy over meat and dumplings; pour rest into sauceboat to pass at table. Makes 6 to 8 servings. Lose 10 Lbs. In 10 On New Grapefruit Diet' Liver Baked in Dish With Vegetables, that avaryona ii t^danly, talking IhoNti Ulvrally thoinan^ upon thoutanda of copiap have baan paaaad from h—* *- in factoriaa, planN ____ ________ Hiroughauf Hia U.S. and! Canada. Word of its. auccan bat tpraad lika wildfira bacputo thia ia tho diat that really aeamt to work meat overweight people. A . 11 I known Toronto celumniat re- The Uste for Uver often is an cently praiaed it to the akiea. He acquired one. ^en served^ couple of times a month In a variety of ways, liver becomes a food that youhgsters get used to and leam to enjoy. U.S. Department of Agriculture nutritionists say that liver is almost a perfect food. Aside from calcium and vitamin C, this meat has all the minerals and vitamins needed for good health.. ★ 1 Th^re are four kinds of red meat liver — calf, beef,-lamb and pork. Pork is normally the least expensive variety, while ealves liver generally costs a little more. Meat markets carry one or two types, depending the demand i n-1 he neighborhood. Since liver is a very tender, fine-grained meat, it should be handled carefully. Before cooking, wipe with a damp cloth. Tbe skin, connective tissue and vein should be removed. Looifen with a very sharp knife and pull off carefully. In addition to frying, braising, stewing, baking or cooking in casserole are especially recommended. raportad losing 20 pounds quickly and oasily long aftar ha da-spairad of ovar galting. dsMm to-his wartima waight of 185 pounds, boar or rya. If it followed anacriy the avaraga ovi wdight parson should lose pounds in 10 days. Thera will ha no waight loss in tho first four days. But you will suddenly drop 5 pounds on tha 5th day. Thera-aftar you-will lose one pound p* day. until tha 10th day. Than you will losa IVk I lavisad and qnlargad, this dief. plan lets you stuff yourself with foods that were formerly forbidden'. Such as big steaks trimmed with fat. Southern fried chicken, rich gravies, mayonnaise, lobsters swimming in butter, bacon, fats, sausages and scrambled eggs. You can eat until yot you cannot possi-nora^ And still you should lose 10 pounds in tha first ten days, plus 1 Vi pounds every two days thereafter until your waight is down to normal. The secret behind this new '.'Quick weight loss" is not generally kndwn. Pat, is has been-theorised, does not form fat. Perhgps fat fights fat. And the grapefruit juice in this new. diet might act as a catalyst (the "trigger") to start the fat burning processi You stuff yourself on the permitted fobds listed in the diet plan, and still losa unsightly fat and escess body fluid*- When tha fat and bloat are gone- yoii will cease to .lose weight and your weight will remain controlled. A" copy of this new and startlingly tained by sanding $2 to Tha KANE ASSOCIATES P.O.Box846 \ Grahd Island* Ndbr. 68801 Casserole of Liver Cut i pound beef liver into pieces and brown in V* cup hot fat. Remove liver; brown 6 small onions, 1 cup cubed carrots and 1 cup cubed potatoes. Place liver and vegetables in greased casserole. Season with 1 tehspooil, salt and dash\ of pepper. - Top with - -1 - oup canned tomatoes and % cup cold water. Cqver and bake at 35Q (degrees'uodonditional money - back guar-p. fori hour. antes. If after trying the diat -------------- plan you have not lost 7 pounds . . • I n I I in the first 7 days, another f Avoid Biandness t7 J*y». •"« tVi poudds every two days there- Creamed fish takes' on new rum... by iddtar a .13 .“ijT dash of chill powder or a little Tear out this message af a reminder. Decide,, now to regain the trim attractive , tigure of your youth, ^hl)e tt|ll .^joying hearty breakfasts, lunches and dinners. Order #ow befote ethers snap up the limited aupi^y. prepared mustard to the creamed sauce you serve over It, This peps up the taste am^ lends new Interest to our old favorite. ER MARKET 1249 BUDWM 4VE. MUST ONE BLOCK OFF eOUMBW AVE ^ciiiiCK ROAST Ik 59^ ROAST : IntUslHB?? lb. T9' ^ROUMD STEAK s99' RINS BOLOBNA lb. 49 f Taoilar and Tatty STEAK jSO ^RIB STEAK a. Cut and Wrapped — OF REEF 67' COFFEE MATE---------- 99' COLDWATER ALL . . ... 59' BREAST O’ CHICKEM TUHA '^ 29' LYKE’S POHED MEAT . . . . 29' OUMCAH HINESCAKEMIX nZn ^ 29' SKIOER’S CATSUP .. . ... ..’M5'^ MAKE SEFA’S YOUR OANNING SUPPLY HEADQUARTERS A ^ Che BLUE BONIIET SOFT IUR6UIIIIE....... SOOTT FWILY TOILET TISSUE.............. 29* 60LBEM QUUJTT 60EWE0Y BUTIEO............ a. 69* PLUII6E LIQUID OOJUO CLEMEB............... 6U* SCHAEFFER’S BIG C BREAD............... 5 99' yVe reserve the right to limit quantities Soft Drink Mix Pre-Sweetened Giticle A ShioII Dor. €tn. W NOW AT SEFAS COLD BEER and WINE r TONTBIlC press. WEDNESPAY: Jpli.Y 80. 1969 :T^>- . i''^.- •- ■ • ;•; 1*-.- .Ij .. «,=.-. V: _ A ■ - ■ . ' r ONE COLOR ->'S ' *' w >’ / *• . • " , * y /' ’ ,.„ , .. '> "//.Hi II > TMUIISDJIY - FRIPAY - SATURDAY BILL PETRUSHA & SOHS BECKWITH-EYANS CAMERA MART CHILBREN’S SHOP GUHHIHGHAM BRUG STORE GOLOEH THIMBLE GRISWOLO SPORTIHG GtfOOS JAYSOH JEWELERS S.S.KRESGE OSMUH’S TOWH & COUHTRY RB SHOP SALLY BREHT CLEAHERS SAHOERS SHOEBOX WIHKELMAH’S WRIGLEY’S YELECRAPH AT HURON STREET BARGAINS IN FRONT OF EVERY STORE I ^2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 80, 1260 A;.- r'' Search for New^tate Revenue Near : LANSING (UPl) Pluif to • brtaf maro doUioo into the ) etoto ooffera without raising tax ; ratea will have their first I feasIbUily test early next month ^ when legislators and state of-f lidOb t^n work in the/odn-! : trov^hiarea. j Senate taxation Committee i : chaimum Harry A. DeMaao, R- eliminatlng some tax breaks If the ij|Bte needs more revalue. H BDXION EXEMPT Demaso cbims nearly $1 billion b now exempt from state levies — more th^ enough to hklt any inove to raise taxes ^nextyear. it a rebthrely low one b thei alaee moiiajr Bram the political realUy that the levy goiaral fund fa used Ip *9* only needs a vote of the plement the sdiooMd fund, the Le^bturp to be raised. Some state would still benefit from an otha- taxes are constituttonally Increase because more ..money limited and need a vote of the'would go directly to thp people to be changed. j achcitoi.*' A For evpry one per cent the! Problems , cpafronttag an hh ' ' to would be'croBie in thb levy aro that tt Hih. said. 1U« ooiiU maki bwmaken hesitate to tadi more onto them. Avte Victim Dies ; Battle Creek, and self-appointed • leader of the move to reex- * amine all exemptions, said be ' will meet wiUi leadox of more : fhiwi 10 hUcUg*» organizations - and offidah of state govern-■ molt on Aug. 13. ; **nib first meeting won’t be public,” he exdnhied. “It be a preliminary effort to see how we cin aM>roach the whole question of exenrptions.” It also will be a planning session for , a statewide public hearing on tax exemptions. At the later session, private ; citizens will be able to express ■ their ideas on the necessity of . 'Flour Power' : by Computer? iSrSJrJ". »i«i. ti» --I* ™id •oto bardy approved a record-breal^ $l.S3-billlon budget yrhldi will leave a mere |S million in to state treasury. Senate ^tproprlatians Oom-qiittee chairman Chaiiea 0. ZoliaTt A-Benton Bariwr, has been promlneBt among legislators ito darkly forecast about |1W million, Lock said, the same hike in the corporate to would realise aoout |H If a to b raised which would be to moat foasihb. ★ ♦ * Although Qie state sales to pulto in to most revenue, the p-esent 4 per cent rate b fn in to State Constitution, as earmarking provisions that divot Sve-d|^tha of sales to revenues to schoob and local govomnento. Voter - approved mVndjnenti would . be necessary to change those pro- en If to four paX cent sabs to were increased, t state constitutionally can only deposit tfaroe-eiglito of it to to treasury, Lock sahL This amonntai to |MK mill year of to total ma million ‘Hie stots schooLaid I tons onehali of to total, one» eighth goes to ddes, towniriilps and villages, and to date retains threMi|d*to,” Lock said. The biggest source of revenue for the State’s general fund b to state income tax on individuals, coporations and finandal institutions. : FAIR LAWN. N. J. (UPI) - ' Baldng companies are reported • IllCOME TAX REVENUE - to be increasing their “flour j state Revenue commissioner ‘ power” with the aid of mod^ Clarence Lock said to -cor-computero. ! porate and puraonal iitit»me ‘"nie computer is helping us to solve one of the batog Indus t r y ’ s trickiest problems: predict exactly how a given shfoment of flour will perform Hnring baking,” said Dr. N. W. Desrosler, director ef Natiraal Bbeutt Co.’s research center hero. taxes combined brought in ISOS million bat y«ar. The biffieat portkm of thb 1380 million b from to 3.6 per cent personal levy. "What has made this difficult !. Is that flour performance b af-; fected by so many different ; factors, including the weather. • while the wheat was growing, . the soil in which it grew, how tt ' xvas milled, how long it was . shipped, and many others,” Desrosler said. With to computer, bakers can make quicker and more accurate analysea of these variables, he s^. ‘Ibb b n comptrattvdy bw rate,” Lock said. ’Most at have a fraduated rate that ranges bom one to 14 per cent." The'\)ther.half of to income tax levy — to 5.6 per Cent dn corporations — is' one -of the higher ones in to country now, Lock said, “Of to 40 stotes tot have a dtrporate tax, only a few are above Michigan’s. Most run from three to ei^t per LEGISLATIVE VOTE Combined with to (act that Michigan’s persoud incona tax ' .4’' ■ ■■ TELmmoN SIDEWALK SALE thursday, friday and Saturday Take advantage of extraordinary values in every department: • DRESSES. •SPORTSWEAR • COATS •LINGERIE •ACCES^RIES lut TBtMRON CENTER PONTIAC MALL Rl^ f the Budget Bureau. Its president, John W. Macy Jr., ito a forma- chairman of the Civil Service Conuntosion and was President Johnson’s chief talent scout. In additiiHi. the cor- CUARANCE i^OFF |50 LeROI TIGHTS Rag. 3.00, Now SizRs 4 to 14 GIRLS’ PANTIES Rog. 59c Now 39! GIRLS’ WINTER JACKETS 10»* Rog. 13.99 Now SI*OE7tol4 2 Style$ to Choo»e From m-HURON FE 5-9955^ SIDEWALK DAYS SPECIAIS AAEN'S DRESS SHOES ValuDt to 20.00 990 WOAAEN^S SANDALS ValuDs to 10.00 , 1 388 WIIMEN’S CANVAS SPECIAL GROIN* 1 4S Pair Only MEN’S SPECIAL GROUP HUSH PUPPIES LOAFERS Values to $|C90 One Style Only \ ' aitcontinu«d-Styl* P0nny Loafftr NATURALIZERS SPECIAL GROUP WOlffiN’SAB’s SampleShocs 4.99 200 Pair Only T AMERICAN GIRLS- is; 4®® SPECIAL GROUP SNO-BOOT WOMEN'S SUAAAAER CANVAS 088 Red Ball Summerette ’■** AAISSES DRESS SHOES Sizes 088 12Vato4 0 SPECIAL GROUP WOMEH'S PUTS 3” SPECIAL GROUP WOMEN'S 4 B’S Sample Shoes 1 QQ 45 Pair Only 1*00 HONOR security charge MICHIGAN BANKARD I ^IDWESTBANK STORE HOURS: AAon., Thurs., Fri. Sat. 9 to 9 Tu«t. and Wed. 9 to 6 poration has a professional staff of about 12. CONSIDERABLE FORCE James Day, who assumes the presidency of NET this summer after, serving as general of KQED^TV San Frkncisco, said, ‘T see public television gettidg^ dut of its financial difficulties and becoming a force of considerable .idgnfflcahce ill country. I hope that it wiM come about throu^ a combination of private funding, support from foundations and federal support insulated from government control.” Another difficulty that has beset public broadcasting has been a lack of direction, fac-, tionaltom and the often bitter competition for the relatively small amount of money available. ★ * Sr Public broadcasting has never been particularly stroitg at-tile national level. The stations are independent entities controlled by community boards and while such diversity is healthy they have demonstrated casionally that Independence at the expense of national goals. Public television stations are controlled by nonprofit community corporations,' state or local school boards and universities. The main function ojt most is to present in-sthictibnal televiition and many are finandally Unab|e ^ Yor simply reluctant — to air relevant national and community ' sues. The stations receive financial assistance from the corporation and programming from NET, but otherwise owe no allegiance to them. V* ★ ‘Tt’s- not so much liberal versus conservative,” said John F. White, former prestoent of NET. ‘Tt’a a problem of big cities and littje cities. There are I of Eastern liberal establishment and the b<^8 in the boondocks. This is a pr^lem of North-South. “There are problems which exist in this part of the country of an extreme liberal group of film makers and producers who think that we oug^t to, to quote them, tell it like it is and bum, baby, bum. T think the course we have to followJs one where both sides are mad at us.” Old A§e May End War but What of Peace Talks? WEST By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (DPD - 'Hiere are growing Indkatiomi tiud the war in Vietnam will become the first major conflict in modern history toj die of old age. Such a possi-l billty has been I suggested re-| cently by number of mlli-| tary and diplomatic experts, the latest being former Secretary of State Dean Rusk. ★ ★ ik Rusk said this week there is now about an even chance the diar would end by “withering away” rather than by negotiated settlement. Granted that Husk has not been bless^ with 100 per . cent preiscience liTp r e^toirmt-terances on Vietnam. Neverflieless, the inrospect that the war will succumb to senility is interesting to contemplate. NOTHING UNCOMMON In times past, of course, it was nothing uncommon for a 'war to drag on until everybody Ipst interest in jt and it ^ir^ of natural causes. LS’s assume, for purposes of conjecture, that sthing of that sort will happen in Vietnam. Le^s assume that by 1983 all but 10 American troops have been withdrawn from South Vietnam and only 14 North Vietnamese soldiers remain below-the DMZ. Meanwhile, the South Vietnamese on both sides have long since returned to rice farming. ★ ★ ★ For all practical purposes, the war will be over. Then the only questimi will be: how to atop the peace conference. I have a feeling that ending the pieace conference may prove even more difficult than ending the war. It wouldn’t surprise me if the peace talks outlived the war by 10 years or longer. IN WAY OF PEACE Indeed, a situation could arise where the peace talks would bh the only thing standing in the way of peace. • Long after the fighting has iased, U.S. negotiators in Paris will still be demanding that the Comniunists agree to take certain actions to show their good faith as a necessary first step in the bargaining. A ★ ★ And the North Vietnamese, for their part, will still be deny- ing they have made any concessions that would permit a let-upiu hostilities. A stalemate in negotiations to end a war that already has been over for a couple of years undoubtedly would generate pressure for another International conference to settle the peace conference. In fact, it sounds like just the! sort of thing that should be turned over to the United Nations. Sale STMt^PUJS GOLF BALLS... 2** Rm. $8.95 I^US CONVERSE HODGEMAN FABRIC AIR MATTRESSES g9» ZEBCO 404 SnNCAST REELS «s4 Compl«l*wlth100ydt.oMUb.llm.......9.. V BOyTgRAY SWEAT SHIRTS... 99° 399 BERKLEY BAIT CASTING LEVEL WIND REELS.............. 2“ BASEBALL WARM-OP JACKETS Navy blue, map buttont, chlldran'* ilzas.. RM.$5b.OO FAMOUS WING HUNTER BOWS 9Q99 CloMowt 1968 AAodol.............. I. $50.00 Imous CleMowt1968AAodal.. PONTIAC STORE ONLY PONTIAC TEL-HURON CENTER iflTitoil^ph-OMallwra^MWlO FI ----~ ^ Burroughs Gets Postal Contract •DETROIT (AP) — Burroughs Corp. announced it hps received a $4.9-miUion ccmtrac^ for delivery and installation of 39 letter sorters for the Post Office Department by* 1970. The company said it is their seventh Post Office letter-sorting machine contract, bringing total value of the contracts received to date to over $34 million. TTie company stated that its six- eight- and 12-console models sort from 17,300 to 34,600 pieces of mail an hour. It said thatl 256 Burroughs letter sorters would be in operation in 133 citi^ across the. nation by 1970.1 CAMERA MUtrS AmUAL KODAK mUCKLOAD SALE at LOWqOIYPRICES Free Balloons!‘Free Tip Booklets! Free Snapshot Holders! Free Refreshments! KODAK’S NEWEST INSTAMATIC CAMERA only .. Special Kodak Instamatic Casas $1T5 SPECIAL KODAK ELECTRIC EYE INSTAMATIC CAMERA......... $<1263 SUPER SPECIAL Kodak Garautoi PNiwIor Thinsday, Friday, Sabirday 48* are.' ALL CAMERAS AND PROJECTORS AT SPECIAL SAVINGS THE CARiKHA MART TeUHuronShoppingCenter 55 S. Telegraph ^ EE 4^9567 THE yONTlAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 80, 1960 Farm - Labor Panel Vows d Productive EAST ILANSING (AP). - TThe state’s new Commission on Agricultural I^abor will dig deep into rural Michigan in coming months, probing problems /pnd lowing for way?/help/farm wu-kers. ' ‘This is,going to be a productive comniission,'*. vows Chairman Daiiiel W. Sturt, director of* Miphigafir^ate -Umversity’s rural manpower centdr. , If *' , ★ Sturt says the seven - man^ commission is aiming at “real accomplishments’’ in terms of legislative recommendations a specific suggestions for action by existing organizations and agencies of state government. Hie commission will not be' “flying around making a lot of accusations,’’ he adds^ “There’s not going to be fanfare. I don’t believe anything really comes out of that.” TO $ET PukORITIES The commission will pneet Aug. 19 to set priorities. “There are so many things of so much concern,” Sturt says, citing such problems as those involving migrant working conditions, unionization activity in [Michigan’s farm areas, rural housing conditions and the availability of sudb items as health services. 'Alulty of access’ to services,' Sturt says. * If- it 'Most rural people don’t have any access io employment Servr ices, fof ^ampl^’l he says. “We hope io sensitize org^-zations and agencies about the Response Heavy SEATTLE (AP) t- ’The University of Washington says It took six telephone operators to handle the traffic after the university issued a call for women 20 per cent overweight to volunteer fbr a' sbc-wsek wei^t-loss project; The program is based on controlled eating rather than crash dieting. “Yet they need the Jobs and training, a ccmprehsnslve training program hi rural areas.” DROnwO AROUND . Some rural people who move away troni farm arejsi' ate “generally "drifting arqdi^ In citim looking for work,” Sturt says. ”Why leL them drift Into Detroit, then set up training when they’ve been completely frustrated and victindzed by the society into which they’ve drifted?” That analysis, the governor said, should include: The extent and impact of automation. * ■ * , .-A/ • The numbers of nirai ihdl-vidiials and families/Whidb af« entering the labor market eacli yfear because of the disappearance of the family farm. it it /'it • The extent and composithm of nianpower needs by the increasing numbers id large rural agricultural employers. The cdmmission, created by the Legislatuire, was charged last week by Gov. Milliken to undertake programs for people in rural ar^ of MlchlganL Saginaw, a fonner migranft woricer; Tom Tuiner of Detroit, president of the Wayne County AFL-ClO; Duane Baldwin ^ Stockbridjfe, Michigan Agricultu ence and a board membt^ ti the Michigan farm bureau; Herbert M. Turner of Saginaw^ an executive at a picklenpimhim iqg company; Ijlouis Smith Carlton, a truck faring vegt^le grower; and Perrii training and retraining programs to fulfill these needs! ★ * ♦ Be^jdes Sturt, the cimmSbaion includes: Frank M. Orhelaa y^- ____________ _ .-rti The capabilities of present Pierlion of Dw8giac,^^oiwatoi{ of a fruit and vegetable farm. - Some 2,000 advertisers wUf |9.1 billion on television EVIDENCE IS PLANTED - Lt. Walter Scott of the Detroit Police Department inspects seven-foot stalks of marijuana found growing along the driveway of a Detroit home. Owners, of the home are away on vacation, but police have cut down the weeds and have left a note in the mailbox calling on the owner to contact them “about the flowers in your backyard." THE NEW DOWNTOWN KRESGES Pet Puma One Big Cat Neighbors Want to Scat SELDEN, N.Y. (AP) - Owning a pet puma in a basement apartment of a metropolitan area can present numerous problems—including an eviction notice. Mrs.^ Uori Polizzano, 18, a pe?. tite 112-pound' housewife, owns such an animal, , a feline that grows to be 6 feet long and weighs around iSO pounds. “Everything was okay until Ihe landlord asked us to move,” Lori said, recalling the Brooklyn basement apartment to which she first brought the auburn-colored cat. “Puss Puss" was sunbathing on a window sill, she explained, when the gardeners spotted the cat. ^ “They ran off screaming, •There’s a lion in that house,’ ’’ she said. When Lori arrived home that day she was met by a crowd of spectators and an irate landlord who ordered her to move. It wasi then the Polizzanos learned about the wild-animal law prohibiting suQh animals as pets in New York City. ★ ★ * Rather than give up the 8-month-old caf they moved to another basement in the home df a friend in Selden far outside the city limits on Long Island. Police already have called on Lori in answer to complaints by neighbors, but Lori is adamant —the cat stays. Now the house where the Polizzanos are staying is up for sale and Lori reluctantly has advertised the puma for sale for (700. Since her ad appeared in a New York newspaper, Lori has received offers to use Puss Puss in commercial advertisements. She now hopes it may be possible Uveam enough money with [ the cat to put a down payment' on a house for her, husband peter, and Puss Puss. THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY TEL-HURON SABRIC<^ SHOrtmG CEHTER ! lEMNlNIS Reduced to .1/2 PRICE of Regular Remnant Price Final Clearance Women’s Summer Sportswear • Up To Vi OH BEACH THONGS Fbr The Entire Family R*g.44cNow 24' Infants^ Terry Cloth TRAINING PANTS R*«. 83c New Men’s A Boys’ Lo-Cut BASKETBALL SHOES 1 Reg. 2.97 Now* |99 • ■ . . . MEN’S WALKING SHORTS R.9 2.97 , New ■ 1’^ LADIES’ SHIFT DRESSES R«g. f,76 Now 99* C ■ v: THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY JULY 8g,,l»69 -hi' ' J India's Pljcfure Brightening.buf Old Problems Remain By. Alt AiMctatod (recognizes only 14 o{ the hun-l F^erched just above the equa- Anclent India, nurturing one dreds of native tongues. English tor In the Indian Ocean, India’s of the wefid’s youngest denioc- remains .prominent, a heritagejl.2 million (square miles are racies and the world’s largest,jof the‘British rule that ended 20 swept by monsoons during the progress and maintain deep cli-visions among the population is a land where the constitution years ago. Edrl's 'Frank Female' Prize Goes to Star of'Plaza Suite' Prime Minister Indira GandM is currently involved in political dlfflcuities with her ruling Congress party. Nixon’s visit is not .sticky during the rest of the who speak India’s 1,652 mother nudge Mrs. GandM, year. - tonguci, ! from her policies of neutralisrii Troubles still .seethe with Paio>| and nonaligrimeht, but it shouli istan over Kashmir and 'with give a lift tO'U.S.-Indian relg^ summer and remain hot ind Unrest and bitter rivalries also coptinue among the'peoples ^eopfeffhdia ranks second pnly ciommunist China ov^er to China in population ^hd is a frontier in the mountains, cla.ssic .example of an underde- AT SCENE veloped country struggling to' _ . ‘ ^ ‘ . bring itself into the mainstream! President Nixon arrives at a of the world’s economy. I ‘Sf I"** ir it I the United States are both be- In recent years, thanks large doses of Ameriacn and I**® Viet aid. the picture has begun!"®"*: • * * * to brighten. Last year steady i _ ,, prices and a good grain harvest^ President Dw ght D Eisen-iled to progreL fqc India’s crUvhqwer . '^isitf 'dal land-based indu.stries. i„. ago. Since then, Soviet,leaders FILMI dustrial output rose 5.5 per pent.l^ave made numerous . appearances. The Nixon visit could TRADITIONAl., PROBLEMS help counteract- the inlUience of TSt«Nx«u^P.K*aui.sT«cnw. Biit traditional problems re*! these Soviet visits, main. than half a blllioh h long iipns. J/ r<:CTiKEEGO By EARL WII-SON In these days, a h-ank female is much prized NEW YORK , or should b». -Where do you find one ... unless you run an ad? Well; we found one right on Broadway. Maureen Stapleton, the star of "Plaza SiHlft,’’ famous not only for her acting, but for her reducing. Like maybe reducing 100 pounds. That’s k ROBERT a RADNrrZ Been going out so much 'with George Abbott, the famous tall handsome octogenarian director of stage shows, that folks have rumored they’re marrying. She’s 44, he’s 83. “Getting married tb'^'Geo(;ge Abbott?’’ we asked. ^ “IIJQ!: Why he’d®be crazy,’’said she. “He’d be out of his mind. I’d be glad to. He’s fantastic. He’s a hiking, swimming, dancipg,' jumping genius. But I’m too old for him. What does he need that for?" oik^Side ~A FRESH AND STIMULATING WILSON Wide-scale poverty and illiteracy combined with oid traditions and religious beliefs’ cripple efforts to check the expanding population, hinder economic OEO “MONSTROSITY’ - This is one of two boats owned by a fishing school at Bimini for which the Office of Economic On>ortunity has spent • 120,000. ’The school has two Bahamian instructors and one stu- . I,ots of stories around about Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' 40th birthdaY^'present but we heard Big Daddy 0 gave her 40 dent, an American. The island commissioner car^s of diamonds in .a ring ... a carat for each year, a birth-says the Scorpion, shown at the goveriiment ' day bauble worth $40,000 to $120,000 . . . just something lo scuff around the yacht in. dock on Bimiqi today, is a “monstrosity" in danger of sinking and he may have it removed. Bimini Fishing School OEO to Probe Fund Misuse THE MIDNIGHT EARl Conductor-composer And^e Previn, who’s flying back to London, said Mia Farrow may join him there In August".. Her sister ’lisa was screendested by Marty Poll for “The Secret Garden of Stanley Sweetheart’’ . .^The vocalists . tor’s ‘"niink Summer" record, billed only as “Ed & Marilyn," WASHINGTON (AP) — ThejFla„ address, was actually con-j The OEO statement said: are Ed Ames and Marilyn Maye. Office of Economic Opportunity ducting iU business on the ‘‘The use oHaciM^^^ Slappy White, the integrated duo at the hasibegun an investigation into crown island some 50 miles east ^ Box, will costar in “Odd Couple’’ in stock . . . Jerry Or- whelher $20,000 In antipoverty of Florida. : ^roposaf submitted by CAMP to>«ch (of ------------ Reminds us of the old story of the chorus girl who got rose« from her beau wiBi a $1,000 bill around each rose for each year. She snorted: “Blankety blank. When I told hlnTmy age, I cheated myself out of $5,000!” U.S. Interests remain strong in seeing that democracy succeeds in^ India, which dominates and influences aTvast strateigic area. ^ ■ the RUMBLE that ROCKED Las Vegas! For a wild, wu F wi'ekeiKl and deadlinst ever datwi' funds were improperly used finance a fishing school on the British island of Bimini. The OEO disclosed the investigation after the Associated Preso reported that the fishing school, financed by OEO Pompano Beach, “Promises, Promises”) will selected readings Tlie school, one of 23 projects started by the Community Action Migrant Program (CAM?) of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., currently has two Bahamian instructors who are tutoring one student, an American. OEO, Washington. It was not approved by OEO. If improper expenditures have been made under the grant, OEO will refuse to allow such payments.’’ 12 SIGN UP CAMP’S 23 programs are rocks from earth!" very selected — from “Portnoy’s Complaint" on Station WPAT . . . ’The 4S-building “village” created in Dingle, Ireland, for “Ryan’s Daughter" may be left standing as a tourist attraction. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: People wonder if there’s intelligent life on the "moon. “Of course it’s intelligent," says Art Paul, -yoii don’t see them spending $36,000,000,000 to gather a few 1st Run j A Hi i \-''' 3^»VBn6MiMiQK. CuBStoptei} 4| JONES (I PMttiat DRIVMN THIATfR FC 5-4500 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY (U S 10) 1 BLOCK N TELEGRAPH RD aimed at helping migrant farm workers train for such jobs as auto mechanic, boat maker, baker and fisherman. Twelve men-only five of whom worked on farms before going to Bimini—have signed up for the pro-it began in January. Seven dropped out, four completed the course and one remains, • according to OEO figures. 12 North Saginayir af2:MpM - 8M*44n - PROOF IS REQUiRgb ~1Sr7HRnSnn illltur FMIHItfl SCHOOL FOR LOVE" MDiM "Julie It Me Angel" William H. Johnson, director of the CAMP program,, said in a telephone interview the school was based in Bimini because “you put -a' base in the United States and dockage fees are too high.” Students receive $33 per week plus $6 per week for each dependent up to five and transportation from Florida to Bimini. The two instructors receive salaries of $100 and $75 per week respectively. SCHOOL IS FLOUNDERING A May report to OEO said the fishing sehqel ”d^arr4o be flounderinjg.” Bimini senior commissioner Edward G Taylor said one of the school’s two boats is on the verge of sinking. Bimini is perhaps best known as the favorite retreat of Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, I)-N. Y. Marriage licenses Richard J. Marlon Jr., Allan P * "ewBll, Troy Jkidllh A. Parkan Farm —Id 8. Thomaif ---------- Nancy.L. Coon, Farmington Jamis P. Nolan, 3365 Watkina L..._ . .. Carena E. Danna, 2427 Ellzabath Lakr Robert W. Bass, Buehring, Clarkston STJIRIS TONKHT -10 racK M lUZEL PUK 4 mm ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDXESPAY, JULY 80, 1W9 llie foOowlhg are top prices covering sales of-ocally grown produce bv groweru and soid by them in wlwlesale package tots. Quotations are fumi^ed by tbe Detroit Bureau pf Markets at ol SUesday. Produc* eauiTt MM. Ml. bu. ilMHbtrrlM. 12-M. a BlvMMfrlM. I»|M. cti ,CbtrrlM, Sc... .. ........ CiMHTiM. SuMtl. I qt. ctn.. Curranit. RM. t ql- Cfi.... iKfflT'iJiUC-.r,;.. crt.': RiiMMrrIat. RmHi pf. ctn. VSMTABLRI ONni. erqqn Round, bu. ;... BmA*. Ktnludcy Wondor, bu. . Batt>, dzTEh. .................... Jlroccoll. dz. bch................. Cobbago, Curly, bu............... Cabbaga, Rad. bu. ................ Cabbaga, Siirouli, bu. ........... Cabbaga, Standard Varlaty, bu. . Carrota. di: bch. . .......... . Carroti, Taggad, bu............... Caullflowar. ai. ................. Calory, Paical, dt. italka........ Caiani', PMcai. l td s«z. ctn. Calary Haarts, Callo Pak, dz. ba NEW YORK (1U») - An important psychological level was pii;rced today as the stock market declined shafply, carrying the Dow Jones industrial average through the 800 nurk Trading early this afternoon, was fairly active. Declines led advances by nearly 700 issues. * ★ R At noon, the cioseiy-watched DJI was off 0,11 at 798.85. Hie last time the Indicator closed was Jan. 4, 1967, when Cucumban. PIcKla SIzo, Vb bi Dill, dz. bch............... Kohlrabi, dz. bch............ Onions, Oraan, dz. bch....... Parilay, Curly, di. bch...... Parslay, Root, dz. bch....... Paas, craan, bu.............. Potatoaa, SMb. bag .......... Tonriatoaa, 14-lb. bskt....... Turnipa, dz. bch................. Turnipa, Toppad, bu............. JLRI fuCR AND aRRRNS Cabbaga, bu. ...... ............ Calary, Cabbaga, dz. ........... Eacarola, bu., Cacarola, Sladchad. i.attuca. Bibb, pk. t XWfoea, taaf, 'bu ■ Ltituea, Haad, bu. .LtHuca, Haad; dz. Laltuca, Rotnalna, t Mustard, bu......... lorral, bu......... {Binach. bu. . farlss Chard, bu. .. Turnips, bu......... —A— .10 14 45>/z 45 .. ------- .40 44 414b WVk 404b...... JSgwM iSlZiS AlrRadn .Ota 154 W/t 10H 1S4b — 4b ------- lift 214 24Vk 24 S41b - H .10a 51 14 1344 14 - 4b lA 32 4244 40M 404b—11b 1J0 32 21 204b 304b +. A 234b lb Atlas Carp 222 44k 44b 444 cp 7.20 133 244b 2344 2344 — 44 Inc .40 110 12 — nan .50 40 44 434k 44 — 3 410100 Iba. 31_______ 300; Mates 0001019 Iba. slaughlar 1.5030.90; mbitd good and choioa .rvsafin 100; high chales and prima BO-41; cholcs 3530; good 3135; standard 1731. n.Haauy fm Mni 30U; heavy typs mstsrs 2020; brollars and fryars, whltas , ' CHICAEO LIVESTOCK ... CHICAGO (AP) — (USOA)—Tuasday's zdaslng llvsataz flHs 44M0; bar ratliar tin*; I 25.5024.00; 03 105-250 Ibt 25.25-25.75; 240270 Ibt 34.75-25.25; 3-4 270200 24.25-24.75; saws 25 to 50 k-----------— ... —..... . . — "lo lb. '21.25-22.00: 23 -1.5010.50. I slaughlar ars halters ly active; 1-3 30040 400450 Ibt 22.5023. 22.00-22.50: 03 50055. _________ 000400 tbs 30.25-21.25; bears 10.5010. Cbttia 7,000; trading classes active, slaught.. ...... .—... steady, load mnstly prime, slaughter steers 1,325 lbs 3-4 31.50: several leadt 30 25-30.50; matlly 20.SO30J0; mixed gnod and part leads cheicn 0501,300 lbs 04 and chalet 20.SO20J0; fa* part leads in lot standard and good 25.ta-27.S0; load And part load slaughter heifers htoh choice few prime 1,0001,025 lbs 3-4 20.»; few loads and lets choica 025350 lbs 23 38.5020.00; mixed good and choica 27.50 38.25; utility and oommardal cows 20JO t^’aSy :: commtrelal bulls 35.0027,00; few haad 27.50. Sbatp 100; spring slaughter i£:ifcof«sis?.r'c.&«.i«i imd opura^stj^ la SO highor; --- American Stocks NEW YORK (AP) Exchange talt^e^no (^) HHHi Law LHI Cl£ Aarolef .50a 10 15>b 15 IS’b ^ H -■ • .....k '13Vk 134k - 4k .... /^ POfr .4o3 AO Indust .Ark BMt .2ta ArkLGat 1.A Asamera oil Atlasl^p wt Barnet Eng BrascanU la 17>b 17'b—21b WH 2S^ ■ 6V4 5% W 21H 21% 21^ 28V4I 27H 2S 20% 19 , m 2%- , 2% 2^ 18'/4 18’;. 18’/- - -- 13% 13% 13% - H Creolt 2.80a . Data Cont Dlxll^^Corp EqultS*^05Q Fad RfsrcM Frontier Air ' Gen Plywood Giant Yal .40 GoldfMd Gt Basn Pet HoemarW .12 Husky on .30 Hycan Mfg Hydrometl Imperoil .jSO IT I Carp Kaiser In .40f McCrary wt Mleh Sug .10 MidwFInf -.M Mohwk Data Molybdan -Neisner Bros Newldrla Mn NewPark Mn Ormand Ind Saxon Indus! , Scurry Rbln Statham Irfst Syntax Cp .40 Tachniea .40b Cerpyflghlad'^by 41 124k 12V, J14 lOV" - 10 33 4 74- . . , 204 2344 22'b 22'b- I Otk ?4fc —4k 35 5% 5% - % 5% + •% - „ IM^.16 44 14V8 14 14’/^“*% 8 7 8% 8 10’/4 10 * 88 18 18 3 6% 6% 6% - t»l 17% 17’y% 17’;% 3 8Va 8’/» -m 8 8 8 6 . 5 - O'/a 8’/a 8»/a - % 70 73% 73 73’/k + 24 28% 25 V4 28% + 2 n% 11% 11% - 141 4% 4 4 72 8’/4 8% m + 3 5% SV4 5% - . 8%-’ ?r_i i 25% 25’/4 -h * a Associated Press H Treasury, Position/ WASHINOIPN (AP) ;-7 The nth po S?*W'y (.n’iofii.vr Balancd : 0,31»,?I5,702.89 ®^'^'**12,^7ji?ri2M2^l’l,421,514,334.30 * WlthdrawaHofUg^o^r F-restna lta Mart Below Dow Jones 800 falling steadily since reaching its 1969 closing hii^ of 968.85 on litay 14. "The breakthrough of the 800, like other hundred levels on the DJI, does have an important psychological significance for some investors,” an analyst said. “When you penetrate such a level it has a bearish tigpifi-capee for some and you get some selling.” Another analyst said the DJDs action "niiderscores the bearish it closed at 791.14. It has been tone of the market," adding that "the market might try to rally again,, but the key question Is will it foUow-threugh.” The market made a technical advance early Tuesday, b«|t fad-ed in later trad|in| and the sea-" Sion closed with a loss. R ★ ★ The Associated Press 60-stock average at noon was off 2.!| at 282.3, industrials off S.8, rails oft .7, and utUiUes oft .1. Westates , Petroleum, most-active on the American^ Stock Exchange. was up 44 at 20. The New York Stork Exchange G TtlEI Gun TIr* Olun AMun > 5444 5 I 5344 - ... „.j 13'A — '/» tt l«b 10 !»Vb - 4b .54...4Sb.Jilk 44'b — SI5 SOVb 5744 5744 r-4. 07 2744 244b 3714 — 44 33 24 2544 254b — Vb 140 544b 54 54Vk - 14 407 101b 1744 -30 304b 30 43 174b 174b 117 44 43V4 185 10 OVk 44 m »b I 22'A 22 22- -. " , ,.J 12'b 12. 12 x205 351b, 35Vk 354b -I 207 32'/4 31 554b — ' 42'A 43Vk — ' 43 444k 44 444b -I- i -™- 35Vb 25>A -I- ' 4214 4244 -1 &......- ConlAIH. .50 Cant Cart 2.20 cent Cp 1.00 CantMaF .ito Oil 1.50 40 25 2544 lS4b 33 1714 1514 157/b — 34 43V4 43 43 122 4344 42'A 42'A — „ 170 2014 3014 3044 - 44 so 374b 3"' * - 02 27Vb J 45 34 3 104 1244 1 Cart 2.20 43 ta14 I am — 1b 1214 -b 1A 15 2144 21'A 214k + 22 22'b 22 73'/ii 72'b 73'/> -b 4b 134“45'A 42"A 45'A + 'A 03 55 554b 554b — 4b 37 2514 24'b 2514 -bl'A 15 34 32Vh 321b —11b 06 1254k 12414 125'A-b 14 20 Mik 25'A 25Vb — V 51 12% 1114 12 — 1 ——D—— ____ 104 15% 15'A 15'A - V 200 72% 71V4 72'A . .. x33 34% 34 34 — V 350 5»4h, 55% 57VA —1 M OPb 20'A-201b -b 4k lUb lOVk 111b —4b 15% 15% 184b + % 25% 29% 25'b-4b - 45'b 464b — Vb 30% 31 .... 31'b 31% — 4b -■ 244b -b H rS'A |SiV_V ' rm^^ivb I 111^ FadOStr .05 00 22% 22'A 22Vb- ■ x-350,773AO,M0VW 252,075,275,513.34 •**10^7,000,713.75 10,344,019,730.39 X-lnelude* 535(413,544.71 dabt n-‘ -‘■ laet to ototutoiy limit dow-jomes AVERAeas 40 ionds t 73.41+0.01 iiSS:®' • 10 induatrlllo ....... , 70J4-H1.48I reepSul i.50 ruthCp 1.70 45 38'b -37% 37% — , 21 24 23'A 23'A -b ^'.•aP^Vr II,* ^ "pSlSpSPr 'l FortMot IM 200 S’* + EobMcK.75„ ,S 327/k 32V4 32'b — % iF—. GA^ ^Orp' .* 47 10 S% tlvk t 5 ss;%r2.i *t5 ^ ■ t MO 71% 70A ^ Ss-i- 23 15'b- 14% I 111 77% 77% ; 32 39'b 39'b : 42 2“' ‘ PhelnD 1.00 Phl'iPp Mi)r'r“ ^ 2l% 25% 25% - PhlllPM 1.30 225 26 25 2J% + «*i2“ 5^ irig%in«i PPG Pita 1 40 25 34 33% 33% - % ‘r^lta 2 50 241 10 05% IMk-2% . 1.05 ? 25* '-y ?s&ssg.'>vt “ JJJ|pri.«” a B- 27% 13 10% 27% 27% -b % 1 31 32% -bl'A i 13 131* ■ 5% 5% 27 27% - % 'Surplus'Not There to Spend U.Jjgp'^ash Outlay Still Runnmfl in_Rjid^ By JOflN CUNNOPT / AP BmImmm AMlytt NEW YORK - Pttbapi tt If never luqipBnad^ to you, but In your dreeme «t taut you can imagliio bow It feeb-to be told by WASHINGTON (AP) -• De-' spite its first budget surplus In c^t years, the fMeral government doesn’t have |S.l bUlion left over for spending. Its general Amd-^own the federal funds-Js in the red once again, but running far clos> er to balance than last year. R R R Hie Budget Bureau said Tuesday federal fUBtar all the figures are toifwill show something less than the |8-6 billion deficit predicted in April. On the other side, the trust funds account, money set aside for such things as Social Security payments, will show a surplus in the neighborhood of |9;5 billion, or slightly more. REOOIUD DEFICIT Last year the federal funds deficit was $28.4 billion and the trust fund surplus $3.2 billion, for a record net deficit of $25,2 _______ _ The two fundbi must be kept 150 3i ■ 35% 37% - % separate because trust funds, by 105 g% ”% - '* cannot be used for general 31 3r* 37% 37%-b % 9 m% 22 22W + W 371 43H AWe 43’^ — 14 14%—^ 70 27% 27% 27V4 — 1A 37 25% 35% 35Vk t % 53 37% 37% 37% + % 2W ^ j 10 53% j spending. But two years ago all government accounts wei lumped into a “unified budget, which simpURed bookkeeping and made it a bit easier to tell what sort of impact government spending was having cm die The federal budget is unlike a family’s household budget In two major ways, former Budget Bureau' director Charles L.|] Sidiultae said. R R R, Ftost, he said, in the “crudest sort of terms” the federal budg-et-keep»s just add up all the cash they get in and subtract from that all the cash they spend. The difference is the surplus or deficit. .^Spending—known —even consist of buying productive assets such as mortgages or stock or making loans. Bi a bouselHdd those wouldn't be considered simple expenditures. t/o S./ Britain tJiffcover Bonuses in Treasuries 1964. And It provokes intoreaUng errors were made on tjie other aide of the ledger also, ★ ★ , ^R ' That is, while tbe ^vemmeet DEVALUATION BASTYT Did BriUdn act top haatlly In _ reducing the stated value of ttie _ pound sterling from - $1.80 to £ $2.40? One of the reasons for ao ^ the sort been the B>od| fortune pf bodi| the UUited States and Britain thta month. And in both Inatancea the discoveries came when the atmosphere woo bleak indeed. ' R R R Nothing concerned the Nixon administration more than achieving its widely publidxed goal of producing a budget surplus. It appeal nip and thc^ for the apparent surplus was less than $1 billion, a paltry sum. Now the Treasury has discovered that, unexpp(*tedlyi it has collected $2.8 billion minre in personal income taxes than w8s foreseen as recently as last April, pushing the budget s plus to well over $3 billion, respectable figure. UNDERESTIMATES EXPORTS Britain found its good fortune in underestimating its exports, one of the critical areas of its economy. And compoun(|ing the good fortune was Ihe fact diat the same error has been made ewiy year sincp 1984. -%» maiiy Americans and alt Britiriiers realize, that nation’s and small exports. It is unlikely that tbe emwa would have meant thh difference between a itroog ppund and a weak pound. But in some moniMy reports the errors (fould have meant the difference between a poor export mouth Equally interesting is the speculation on the U S. Treasury’s error. If nearly $8 lan was expe^ waa taken out of the hands d Ameri-isumers, why in the world didn’t this have more of an impact? In other words, why wasn’t the decreased spendiiig power M Americans more obvl^ In reduced sales of, let us say, automobiles-and mutual fiiniis and clothing, and in tower expemtt-tures for travel and vacattona? INCOMES HIGHEai The explauationa are perhaps as common as mors. One reals safe to say, is that incomes also were a hi than forecast, and hl|^er" incomes sometimes mean hi^er taxes. Another is that savings were dipped into. R R R , But an entirely unprofessional explanation of why taxpayers can part with their cash and still continue to spend, is Oiat economy has been in the doldrums, one of the reasons—or effects-being that exports have not been strong qnoui^ to produce an inftaw of cash. R ★ R The Board of Trade mhde a mighty contribution to rectir tying that poor situation earlier this month when'it announced that it had been underestimating these exports by between 2 and 3 per cent. R Ctortainly this isn’t going to correct the imbalances in the British economy, but It does mean that the country was better Mf by between XM million .and $38 mUliou. a year since WASHINGTON (AP) - ’The chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission said be would li$:e to become president of six mutual funds if ids boss— apparentiy President Nixon-approved, .Senate sources say. The minutes, as quoted by the committee source, identify Gtoorge E. MacKinnon, vice president and general counsel of the funds, as approaching Budge about the job. Mac-~A source dwe to the Senitoi Ktonon was confirmed May 1 Banking and Cuiimi^ Ctojpmt- and sewn In JUne it n a )t^e ' Mutual Stock Quotations 215 2 iPlyCh .54 i Smelt II; , 13 22% 21% 22% -04 38% 37% 30 extra or extrai. R^Annual itock dividend, c—LIquIdotlita ___ d—Declarod or paid In 1050 olu> dividend. e-Pald lait yeir. »-My-In Itock during 1050, otthnatad ca0 ____ on ex-dIvIdend or ox-dlstrlbutlon ;Xr. v?niaj?2d "Sr dividend or kpllt ub. k-^Declored or paid ............ "Sirte X dividend. v-Ex full. x-dle-Ex distt v|—In bankruptcy or receivership .. being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such c(— penles.. fn—Foreign Issue subltct to Stocki of Loedt Merest OVER-THE-COUNTEK BTOCKI Quotations from the I^ASO ora i mtetivo intordoolor priiMo. Intorz.- ■ o"'’*rSri»?5.n’M£ amt Corp............V............4J s.D Assoclatod Truck- .............. 11.2 11.5 Dlamo^ Crystal ..................29J Kelly SorvleaO ... .......i......37.1_____ Artohawk RuHber Co. ... .......tlJ 24J Sifran Printing .................14.0 15.0 Scrlpto . . . , 5.5 7.0 Wyandotte Chemleol,,, . . .. ; . 21.8 “' lOM low 1051 high 10'* .-1% I058.IOW 'il 'i^i ssi 437.1 153.5 141.0' 104.1 455.5 1U.3 147.5 313.3 472.2 104.7 140.7 332.1 513.3 2W.7 150.1 340.9 422.3 14IJ 135.0 284.1 531.1 217.4 150.4 350.8 4355 155;5 135.1 200.1 compmSSISs NEW YORK (API -The MMowIng quotations, supplied by the Natlenar Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., are -the prices at which ' these securities could have been sold (bid) or bought (asked) Tuesday. Advisrs 2.25 2 5.83 3™ 7.53 8.25 Afutre 0.22 0.33 Alpha Pd 10.0411.05 AiliCap 5 JO 5.32. Am Bus 3.15 3.42 Am Dvin 0.0310.74 EEx spl 0.37 ... Am Grth ^5.44 7.Q0 Am inv *7J7 7.» Am Mut 0.10 0.05 AmN Glh 2J0 3.14 ^"e'e^rt 0.02 Grwth 11.7412.83 Inv L52 0.34 aSciS"'' fi'l'40 As^ i;” 5.M ' Axe Houghton; Fund A 5.56 7.13 Fund B 8J7 0.21 Stock 6.45 7.05 Scl Cp 5.24 5.70 Sabson 0.17 0.17 Blair Fd 0.14 0.00 Incom uneven Vent 7.73 1.45 Investing zyy FstF Vs uneven Fst InGtn 0.44 0.25 Fst InSIk 8.001 5.16 Fst Multi 0.03 0.17 Fst Nat 7.00 7.75 Fst Siera 30.20 42.00 I Fief Cep 7.33..,. Flat Fnd 5J0 Fla Gth 4.45 5.00 Fnd Gth 4.00 5.45 Foundrs 7.00 0.53 0.02 Grth lita '--------- Orypn Bond - 5.4) 5.01 Grwth 5.44 0.44 ritk NEL Gth 5.85 0.52 Neuwth 32.73 22.73 New Eng 9.4710,24 New Hor 24.90 24.00 New WId 12.72)3.00 NY Vent 14.7515.14 Newton 13.5314.00 Noraasi 14.1515.15 ““ ■ 13,8115.09 d^i 100 F( 101 Fc S^Nel* Ki - ls.S .........1 7.44 Sq 7.75 7.75 i, 14.7314.7 14.74 If ‘ ...... Ouardn 24.34 34.34 Gttt Hanovr HBrbot "pr-" Pine St Bulloc Stf CapR CenW 1 14.45 15 1.57 0 17.3410 ' ! ______ 'ujlil.77 W l;S 1-.S Incom 7.55 5.37 Spaci 3.50 2.84 base Group: Fund 10.5011,57 Frnt 05.08 10.50 Shrhd 10.0012.00 hemcl 15.0815.55 Fund Vonf Grwth Comme ........ Corns Bd 4.52 : Invostlng 11*1 CommonwTth Pds: Cop Fd ------- 4.23 4.52 ’l:S’i;?2 0.23^10.00 0. er-0.00 1. '« I'.'S 4.55 5.00 8.15 8.02 1.31 1J2 8.51 0.40 Hedb Gor 8.50 0.50 Hedge .11.5512.73 Hei^e 2.00 3.17 Uu.jS'r ’7M ’I;S ISI 6th 4.05 5.43 ISI Inc 4.40 4.81 Imp COP 0.5810.41 Imp Gth 7.14 7;75 Ine Fund 11.4212.20 Inc FdB 7.23 7.02 IndeprSr 0.5210.40 Ind Tmd 12.3013.54 indstry 5.47 5.00 is; iV^iiifo Investing u Y . Inves Bos 11.4313.40 Invdsloss Groupt • IDS ndl 4.55 4.05 Mut 0.0410.81 prog 4.09 4.45 Stodt T3.54 20.27 30.05 21.51 13.47 14.72 8.47 1.47 Z 7.52 8.17 10.8810.88 " ds: ____j Cus B4 0.61 10.40 Cus K1 8.15 8,00 W.1515.52 IJO 0.20 5.05 7J1 10.4510.45 -------- 12.40.13 JS- Plan Inv 11.4312.40 Prict TR 22.55 22.55 Pro Fund 0.50 0.40 "—- '7 5.10 nO.TO Puritan Putnam Grm® Incom yista VoyOg ,Rop Tach —_________ Ravare 12.5513.72 Invostlnd yyx Rosonth 7.87 0.51 Schustr 14.2215.55 Scuddar Punda; Int Inv ' unavall SpcI 34.30 34.30 I. Bal 14.2114.31 s.^"^.v*' I’JSi?;?: Sac Equit 3.40 3.72 Sec Inv 7.45 5.14 Selec Am 0J2 0.01 Sal specs v“’'“ Sh Dean.. 2 I.. 20.8t20JI 0.4310.31 -7010.40 U 12.31 ■' ,*:3*f Sw Invc____ _____ _____ Sqvar Inv 13.5314.07 State St 44.00 47.00 -----n Gt 4.00 4.01 •f^s«*T'ifll‘.M1175' .' Cnty cap 12.1013.00 Crown W 5.50 7.20 Doeit Ine iTsT 12.75 Delawrw 12J314.02 Delta TV 7.52 0Jl OlvM Shr 3J7 am .DowT In 4.20 5.87 .Downt' P 5:i5 5.74 Drexef 14.5014J0 Oreyfui 12.1113.27 Eaton&Howard: Hxlxn 10.3211.21 ili* 1^- 12.1314.02 13.51 13.40 7.31 7.00 Grwth eM^ iSTr'g' SC I.Tr% Essex . 14.34 . . Everst. in I4J415.21 Explor 21.54 23.02 Felrtd 10.10 11.04 Farm BU io.40io.4i "fS 8aT lig’iiS FM TrlSd niM'ujI Financial PnH: Am Ind 10.2011.15 -se?en ‘in 5.17 Stain Roe Fds: Bal 10.1810.11 Cap Op 148014.00 Stock 13.0413.04 Sup mot 4J5 407 Suplnst I.S0 0.41 Syncr Gt 10.3511.31 ■TMB Ap 18.2310.02 ” » VS’lS . Tochvot 7.70 . Tochnot 7.45 1.13 1.2 1-2 ' ieveralgl tSS?". Unit Mut 10.09 11.14 “ unitdi 0.12 0*77 - Aecm 400 0.54 UF«n 'k'iig visruno^^d..*'" Jn"cU'" i'1^^2 - V;?.'sS, 7*i?7*.^ visssT* r4> (- ’lUl V h Mu 12; li? ■?if’7%’r • titogov_________ nMktojr from tai-payen It waa leakiiig and apQ-liimg an awful lot of It back into the economy; in the form of u^ Note that on the tame day aa tha government announced tbe bud^ surplus, tbe Pentagon conceded that it will have pidd out hundreds of thousands of doUan more than was anticipated for the C5A air transport , R R R;, ■ , That’s the kind—altiiough not the size—of error ordinary citizens are used to hearing about, both from their government and from their bank. % Rocord fbfo M| IM t ’J » ^R.. 'U . Nut changt un -I-.4 +. Noon Wtd. 51.1 51.0 A. . Il :'i > 4S.S ................. I 54.3 17.0 70.3 41.1 01.5 77.3 .... I 45.3 01.0 11.4 00.2 . 43.1 85.0 71.3 U.0 1.5 70.2 00J 744 B S Hi tf 7.0 70.3 00.0 29.4 ■' “• 74.4 S3 '’''''X'srj'Ky- ihTtial'*"" ■"'* ;s W 0-12 10-10 r 4 stock spilt. Mta 4pc . ns 0-25 pAtom 2.W 04 10-0 ---;^SBL EUnpllclly Pattqrn 20 REGULAR iTSInW IkV''. Ion'S Inc RasratBC ■ % fc'l “•i SEC Chief Faces Quiz Into 'Conflict of Interest' to explore a “possible conflict of toe quoted the report Tdeeday !8 taken when directori of the sty funds managed by Investors Diversified Sorvlces Inc. met in Mynneapolis June 12 to elect SEC Chairman Hamer H. Budge their new presidenLu., R r' i Budge and representatives of the futids and IDS were called before the subcommittee today News in Brief Scribner of s$g University told city police sc one stole a power mower valued at $65 from the rear of her home early yesterday. Mom’s Rummage, Thnrs., 9 to 12. Indianwood & Baldwin Rds. -Adv. on the U.S. Circuit Court of peals for tbe District of Coluns-Wt; _ Nixon waa a director of finir of the mutual binds from late 1964 until May 1968. He and MacKinnon saved in the House together during the mid-1940a. Budge, a Republican, was appointed to the commission by President Johnson. He was named SEC chairman in February and-given a full five-year term on May 28. His negotiations with tha ID&. controlled funds came at a time when the' SEC had been naked by the Banking and Ctotrency ConunitteR to investigate tbe "face amount certificate” btud-ness., IDS, the largest mutual fund concern in the nation, has 95 per cent of the fUce amdont business. It provides half the company’s net annual profit. By ROGER SPEAR Q-J recently Invested Ilf enr savings in Rarity Ml ad Reichold Chemicals. My wife doesn’t know abont it yet. How good are ttiese stocks and how much worrying will 1 have to do before she finds out?-A.D, A-rBecause of the state of the market you may have a good bit of worrying to do, even though you have shares of two potentially profitable issues. Husky, because of its position fi the North Slope, was approached as-a takeover by an AmericBn oil company The offer wasT turned down as too low. Largely overlooked by Investors, the company has some ‘ iteresting prapoty in glamor areas, audi as o Lake, the “lOgh and theiKandik Basin,i maWng the issue an attractive It^ ptay situation. Rei(diold’s plastics operations have experienced rapid sales gro)^. During 1968, gains of 19 per cent to K per cent were recorded in sales of polyester resins, (nrganic peroxides, eposy rpsins and polyurethene foam resins. These products are u^ by furniture, a/u t d m o t i v e, building and boat manufacturers. To keqp pace with the growing demandj Reichold is expanding several W its present facilities and building an additional plant, Fii^uarter earnings rose 23 per cent oi a 8 per cent gain in sales. ■ R R R- ■ ■ (F-Shiiie months ago I bought shares of Villager Indnstries at 42. It hat dropped to 18. fihenld I take my loss or bay more?—H.D. A-You have ridden this Investment., down to a four-year tow; I see no advantage in selling, at this level. Nor do I recommend additional buying to average down since recovery will no doubt be protracted. Production difficulties and to-qroaaed, costs plus fexpwiRd-4Q angola, Ihd. (AP) ii lretta Dobbim, 79^ of Coldwater, ^ Miqh., died Tuesday of head in-llJurles suffered in a one accident Monday ni^ ... _ In match point duplicate, he you win need that pIua-120 foriS**®^ * "****“ .........................two no^rump to beat any pair - * * that defeats a two-apade con* p„iin. mm h.r tract one trick in the event the m spade finesse wins. ...---------—------------- igmashed into a stone wall. By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY TodiO^s hand Is taken from a match point quiz in Jeff Rubens’ new book. We have filled in the East and West hands so that you can see that the spade flnesse is going to work, liierefore, it is easy to ,see thdt it win’pay declarer to take it at his one no-trump Contract in a match point game. ;' The play starts with West ;opening^ tbe^ueen of diamonds. East takes, his ace-and returns ; the suit. South wins the trick, leashes four hearts and then must start on the spades. He can be sure of one no-trump by simply tal^g the acO and king. makes an overtrick with a successful finesse and goes down if the finesse fails. There is no problem in rubber bridge. He takes his contract. must go after the overtrlck. has responded one no-trump to his partner’s heart bitf and knows that lUany other placers will have raised to two hearts. Playing at two hearts, either North or South will make eight tricks'^ without trying the spade flnissiff.~ ftriwedr ^that-eifditii -trick at no4rump to transfer a poor score of plus-90 to a good score pf plus-MO. There is another reason to take the spade finesse at tids one no-trump contract. It is posadble, but not probable, that fiome East-West pairs will get into the bidding. They do have eight spades and almost half the high cards in. their hands, two spades will make if West holds the queen and go down one If East has it. ’Thus, one no-trump, down one, won’t be a bottom score if the spade finess loses, whilb 13-Nov. 21): I ____ld«» wrth “ help chlldrei avdri. Obvieuai,, ... • i for change, travel, t ’’'SAGITTARIUS (Nov. «-Oec 21): ] Improve homr ' enmelhing ol v ‘‘capricorn tow. M-Jem W): Strew Initiative. Ba original In thought, ael^. Means don't follow the crowd. Creala your own style, proeaduraa. Accwl on message, short trip. Be civil with In- Travel May Be Tax Deductible CHICAGO uei - Summertime travel ;,could be a form of education that is a tax deductible expense and should not be overlooked, say s ' Commerce Clearing House, a tax law. authority. There are no, p a r t i c u 1 a r limitations on the -eytent of the travel or the amount of money, the educational, expense might incur. A high school mathematics teacher,' of example, who travels, from Milwaukee to a university in California during the summer to take special courses, in mathematics, could daim an income tax deduction, -;=,-.wlthQUgh he played golf or participated in other personal ac-tfSties. ' Travel expenses, as well as the cost of meals and lodging,] would be deductible as ordinary 'and necesdbry business .ex? Couple Killed FLINT (AP) - AP) A Fostoria couple, Clifford J.| . ' Allen, 45, and his wife, Jo Anne,i 44, were killed Tuesday when! thetf pickup truck went out of , control after being sideswiped' by, a passenger'car. Their truck was then hit broadside by jt gravel, truck near Otisville bn ] Dodge Road «id MIS. I’HE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JULY BO,' la For Wont Adi Dioi 33449f1 :0 Objjectiv^ to Be Aiiod Tonight A a|MSc hteflring'is planned discuss problems and pragratn #sires and objectives NOTICa os PUBLIC AUCTION Tlw Mlowln* Is a list ’of iBipoutKlad, Aw Wan slwHararf aban^ ^ ibllc aitfon, pursuant Is Sac-.w —. dl Acii^m M Public Acts oi MJC. L.. Sac. ISr.iSl) by Iba Ponllac wkSb DapL al Sam Allan A Sens ' JIO Cslllar Tlqali, Pnnilab Mlcbloan. il vabitlas idll ba Mid on Satu ' laM. S, ms at t:M am. 1*SS OMsmebllb-iSISM 3< IS t 1*n Oldamobl|a-4U M01 413 r, 1W Ramblar-^ff4 1 ISIS Pontiac SSPP3S41 ' CMC TrUCk-SOOl N3T 7i Causa No. 2M71 Patitlon having boon Iliad In alleging that said child comas pro^lons ol Chapter 713 A ol U has vlolatad a law of the Stale, and. d shfuld b in oflThls I of Michigan, you era I the hearing on sald 'p a Court ■ House. ( Service Center,-In the City of Pontiac ... saw County, on the Ttir day of August A.O. l«6V, al 3:30 o'clock in the after- II ^baln^^^prartlcal li II be serv^ by publl Of the Oakland .County Coin-mission on Econoihic Op-portunify. The hearing 9111 be held at 7:90: in the fourth-'floor |audltdrium at 1 Lafayette^ “The purpose of the hearing is to ask for ideas and augs gestions on what OCCEO ,can do, needs to^mphasize. become involved / with^ programs that are needed and' prior if iei8 needing attention / or assistance,” according to executive director Edward f. Revis, Shoofing-Charge Examination Set A Pontiac man accused of attempted murder in Waterford Twon^ip was freed on $S,0P0 personal bond yesterday until his preliminary examination set for Sept. 16. ' Rot^rt D. Dutton, 21. of 221 W. YpsilantI stood mute at his arraignment before District Judge Kenneth Hempstead. Dutton is charged with shooting two men during an argument outside a township bar Saturday- ' , rnCc*^P I a copy ig In The d County, this 39th day "nORMAN R. BARNARD, copy Judge of Probata MARJORIE SMITH, Dtputy Probata Raglatar. Juvanlla Divlalon - > Jjlly 30, 19*9 OPPICIAL NOTICE OF SALE ! *1,110,000.00 MULLEN DRAINAGE DISTRICT COUNTY OF OAKLAND STATS OF MICHIGAN DRAIN BONDS Saaltd bid! foT tha purchaw ol Drain Eondi to ba Isauad by Iba Multan Draln-aga District in Oakland Cpun*y, Michigan, of tha bar valua of *1,110,000.00 will be racalvad by the undersigned at his office, rth Telegraph — Michigan. -Slarh Slam.......... —.. ...s 14th day ol Augu: ; Which time and place said 0 bubllcly opened and read, ' Said ^ds will ba dated Ai ■^•1 be oupen Bonds an in me............. 1 pf *5,000 tach, will ba numbered ------ - - direct order of - ' . --------- —_. _________J, In the City of ; Pontiac, Michigan, until )0:00 o'clock ■ M., Eastern Standard ■"— “ Inlarasf .from thair dati rates not in excess of . payabit on Novemlwr I, t annual Infarast rale or rates u Mas of 1/llh or 1/30 of Infarast on any ona bon____________________ rofa only and shall be reprasanled by one coupon for each coupon period. All date of delive |iald by the pi I mature sarlafly on the : 1970-»30,000 19*0--»30,000 199O-SS0JI00 1971- 30.000 19*1 - 30,000 1991- 30.000 : J973- 304)00 19*3— 30,000 1993— SOJMO 1973 - 20,000 19(3- 35.000 1993- 50,000 1974- 30.000 1904- 35,000 1994— 504100 1975- 254)00 1905- 40,000 1995- 504)00 197*- 2S;000 1980- 40,000 199*- 5Ap>, 1977- 25,000 1907- 454)00 1997- SMOO " 197*^ 254)00 1900-45,0110 199*— 1979- 304)00 1909- 504100 1999- 50 *—■* malurlngian and iflii' Mai III ba Mibl^ to radamptlon by _ ----------- ji publication cli In the City of -Now York, which casrias as a part of Its r service, notices of the ' dale iption shall not bear Interest altar the ■ Id for reder" hand with ______________'lotrXrpfranS Interest will be payable at such ban!- -trust company which gualffles as a Tng. agent under Federal or Michigan and which shall ba designated by original purchaser of the bonds, who i HS I of the gent. The ddslgnal jont and co-paying agen: _________ t to tha approval of tha Drain-----id. The said bonds ar* to be Issued Ibe provisions of Chapter 20 of A< 40 of the Public Acts of 195*, as a.„^.,„-ad. In anticipation of the collection otl special assessmr------ . . . i Death. Notices yUAlkt, BUeANOR Ia.; JUtyJ», iMft; ttlO ArUi| Comimre# Townahip; age 63; beloved wife of Garnet Waite; dear mother of Mra. , R u a a a U TPatriclaT SadTw and Harfletf Waite; dear alater of Ruasell Moll; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held,,. Thursday, ^Bly/31, at 11 a m. at the Elt^ Black Funeral Home. Union Lake, Interment in Commerce Cemetery. Mrs. Waltz will lie in stole at the funeral hwne. LMT; Black and whit* My Mrrii?, •bort Mll. 4ampM) vie. pf Hama SI. off Baldwin. Rtward. 331-9701, VoOlio iCAck------------------- To Buy, Rent, Salt or Troda Use Pbntide Press WANT ADS Office Hoursi 8 am. to-^ p.m. Cancellation Daodllnf 9. am. Day Following First Insertion Americans paid an estimated $5 billion in state gasoline taxes in 1967. Death Notices KENNEDY, DONALD A.; July 2§, 1««; 240 South Lynn, Waterford Township; age 14; beloved son of Mrs. Ronald J. Erasure and Harold A. Keiih nedy; dear brother of Diana Kay Deneen, Linda -Lea Filhart, Susan Marie Smeltz, Matthew L- Kennedy, Janet Ann, Joseph, Timothy Thomas, Samuel and Michael Frasure. Funeral aertiee Will be held Friday, August I, at 1:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Inter-menOr in Oakland H H fa Memorial Gardens. Donald will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 pjn. tonight. (Suggested visiting hoyrs 3 to S and 7 to 9.) LEWIS, MRS. MINNIE ELIZABETH; July 28, 1969; 202 West Wilson Street; age 78; beloved wife of Abe Lewis; dear mother of Mrs. Annie Bell Everins, Mrs. Hattie Thorns, Zack Powell, Mrs: Dbzzie Lewis, Abe ilr., Hossie and Thomas J. l^wls Sr.; dear- sister of Mrs. Mattie PoweH, Mrs. Fannie Perkins, Mrs. Mary Munney and Fed Marshall: also survived by 19 grandchUdren and eight great-^aodahlldren. Funeral swvice^^-he held Friday, August 1, at 11 a.m. at the New Bethel Baptist Churdi with Rev. Amos G. Johnson officiating, interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Lewis will lie in state at the Frank Camithers Funeral Home after 1 tonight OLSON, WILLIAM L.; July 28, 1969 ; 92 Moreland Avenue; age =$6; beloved husbahd of Laurol A; Olson; dear father of William R. Olson; dear brother Of Edward, Olaf and' Andrew Olson; also sunrived by nine grandchildren. Funeral service Will he held Thursday, July 31, at 11 a.ni. at the yoorhees-Siple Funeral C1.I ..................id Vg*-.-ns,- pub-' Home With PastoF Carles A; . Colberg officiating. Graveside merits are against the County of Oakland Pleasant CemMery, Drydcn. Srg?i?y“s"^'!,'d‘';ta?nsr!h?“'¥o’::^is^?p“'’i'; Mr. Olson wiinie in state af fhrc?im?’'i*'‘’6aki,'nd’"1'"T%"l,^^^^^^ the funeral home. (Suggest^ West Bloomfield bm a general obligation visitinff hOUrS 3 tO 9*811(1 7 tO ot said public ^jrporations and eacti ^ ® fl« Mwer'kl'*ev" ad hasj 9.) Oil the property within ii« limits amount sufficient to pay against If, with Interest, under which tha ______ provides that the full the said Drainage Dli r amount. The statute I of the principal ofi bonds. By resolution | motive vote ot two-! members-elect ot the Board - County o' “ ■ ■ Chapter of Supervisors of the County ot Oakland, and pursuant to said Chapter 30 of Act: No. 40 of the Public Acts of 1956, as emended, the lull faltn •■'U .h.i County ol Oakland sld^bo^s No b Ihe principal and t all of the bSnds e accepted.' For the purpose ot the interest cost ol eacr rate* specified therein. PRIEST, VINCENT E.; July 27, 1969 ; 7 Candlelight Lane; age 54; beloved son of Mrs. Mearl Ashley;, beloved grandson of Mrs. Jennie Beswetherick; dear father of Vickie Lee and Debra Jean Priest; dear brother of Mrs. Arta Foster, Funeral service will be held Thursday. July 31, at I p.m.! at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral^ Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Priest will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5and7lo9.j ■OR RiniES At 10 a.m. today tktra wart raplits dt Hit Pratt Offict ia tht ftHtwing htxtt:. C-15. C-ll, C-17, CsU, C-23, 027, 028, 036, ON, 038, 042, C43, 049, 0». h Mtmtrhim 2 -IN LOVING MEMORY OF SMnliy « -------------j ,0*^ d*y w( mis* tut tbw little know, th* sorrow Lin within our hoorts conctolod. Sodly missod by wita Ella, doughMrt, Linda Bannit and *on Dennis. _ , IN LOVING memory i It brofc* oiir boom to k Wo.-jf.tL.rw'rjiu, July"*? ■M^vara ^th^glh and eouraga. JILL Aldrich AND Dag PrimMu Lake Bdwily^ialM ****** '*'*'*" lTmiteo enrollment for igii ao enroll new. Airport Rd. Child Caro Center. Ago* 214-5. Ouatlfled dlroctor with Mosteri* In tarty education. *73-*ttl or *7441014. Fantml Dirteto^ COATS. FUNERAL HOME CRAYTON PLAINS I. OOOHARDT funeral HOME OONELSONiJOHNS Kuntoon , Sarvlna P 9 Oakland A 50 yean PE >dn SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME TheughHul Sarvica** VoorheesSiple Established Over 41 Ctmttory tots. ^ ^ 4-k 3 CEMETERY LOTS, WATERFORD Center CenFietery, **1-1510._ OIrISTIAN memorial ESTATES, 3 lots, *500 cash or *750 t*rm*. 315-907*. ALLEN RICHARDSON: EOlter Is sick. Coll 330-1401, Arrio. BILL PROBLEMSr-333 DEE OoBARR WILL BE back at Iba colony Houia Hair Fashion* August 11. cut *73-1133 ^Inning A tor appolntn HAPPY BIRTHDAY ANNIE ______ Lpva Tom and kid* HiLPING FOLKS With Real Estate problims for'3 generation* -.Wo can help youl Mortgage, loans, salas, new oon-struetlon — trade* and 2nd mortgagn. We simply get the lob EM 3-6703 ON AND AFTER THIS data, July 30, 19*9, I will not bo rosponsIMO'' for any debt* Oonlracted- by any. other than , myself. Lewrencd W. Moyer 1140 Scrippe Rd. Lakd Orion, Mloh. ____________________ - " dN AND AFTER flit* data, July 30, 19*9, I will net be rospendblo for any debt* contracted by r------ than myself. Herald 53*0 Latimer. Pontiac,) I by any-o»ar d Hardy JIl, c, Michigan. \ from September 1, 19*9 to their respective maturities and deductino therefrom any premium. Such bonds will be award-' cd to tha bidder whose bid on the aboye inROGERS, GOODlSE; July 25. .Ottawa Drive; age produces the k f trust company and' “ of tha Treasurer ol: . ayable Ip.......... tho Dralnsga Board must accompany eacn oio as a of good faith ton tha part of t fe M forfaited a* liquidated d •uch bid be accepted and the b to take up and pay for the I IdterHt iball fad allowed on ' falfh cheeks and checks of the , iui btddors will bo promptly r each btilder'* ropresonfative or tered fheil, Bids shall be conditioned upc. .qualified opinion of Dickinson, 77; beloved husband ot Ester. I. Rogers; dear father of Mrs. H. V. Hodges and Mrs, E. R. Kerr; dear brothejp of' Mrs. Oliver Delker; also sjaTived^ by^ eight grandchilfWen, Funeral, arrangements fate pending at the SparkSrGtlffin ______ _____ .. ...........Funeral Home. McKoan A CudllP,, attoTneys, Detroit, £ilSn"fwm^idWr IDA MAE; July 29. ?v\'!?e"&V'i!i:S/Mno'?:ili^*,ir.;2' ’969; -m Lafayette Street; ?M!!k,!t*ui Vtsw Y& Mow'Vrrt*'*''“*'*' ^ge 92; dear aunt of Mrs.; Tho'rigbf uT reservod to roioc|-any or iiJV^lthy Jones. Funeral *"En*Uohiw* confaining fho bids should Service Will be held Thursday,: Juiy 31 at 1:30; p.m. at the ci-rrmwif DroinJw'BMroI Huntoon Funeral, Home with lai soufh'Tap'lSh rSIsI officiating. Poidfac Michigan I Interment in Drydeu , • Michigan. Mrs. Sto'te will Ue Municipal Flnanc* Commlsslon^^ 30, i: too run out of Mils? iovo you found out you can'i wrrow yourtolf out of dobt? THEM LET; "DEBT AID INC.” HELP YOU WITH THESE PROBLEMS 10 WEST HURON LIcenstdi.A Bonded ___Serving O0l^nd_Counjy ______ WIG PARTies, wigs ay^ Ctiinin, FE 3-7093. __ ' WIG SHOP 'PARtrES, day* dr avonlngs, fraa wig, fraa wigidt. Wlgland, FE 5-2953 or «7*-4423- ::US|;;:.aMl^-ia«IN|- -r— - ----iTwagwxitp--------— 1VE YOU SEEN OUR D007 ' ..........-.....n- gray. In stole at the funeral home. months, i "TOBY." Sui* Raward far TORY'S RMyrn «r For Information Loading fd hit ' .raturn. PMata call (Rfiyal OdR), FOUND: '^ir pf glris gldi*»ir*fl Miracia Mila Mopping Mtitar.-Sflr .M’l-______________________.-_B~-5r FOUND": "oinSfiON lO, X Shon Hair FMiHtf. CaSfiWi *14 OatrOlLAyw. adHuldW Mand, LdM rwarw. aa«*y/QZ, , ^Labrador. \kUrJ. mr. 333-743$. , Hglp WantfI ' .6.x J. ~^^*llrPER WEEK ' / PART TIME I man 31-45 to waffc 3 hour* p«r avuntng, .47441530, S-7 FM tonlEhl only. ADVANCEMENT tO S T ORB mmagiri In our, fast grawkig In aur piano organ, radio, taNvItkin, M muilc Initrumant* Oopit. HIgMr aaming* for th| crtallv* gogtltor. many comoaiw banafit*. Coolact; - Mr. Brtniar w Grlnnalfy F^llac Mall.______ ' ATTENTION Looking toe Via agportuniiy to o4-vanco In ona of thS natlan's fatfotf groWIM food chains? Amy's Roail Bool It Mtoklng tar a young am-blilout rnan to till tha potlflon ot assidant managar. Rattauranl tx-porlehct halplur but not nacasury. coll Bob Gllek at *11-1175 batwtan Iba hours ol 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday. A uTb-M 0 T I Vk ' E N O I N g REBUILDBR, Robartion, Rabab-‘-Itlng Sarvica, 3437 Grand RIvor attention abSINESSNiglii hM'Ix your chanca to halp boys and still advartito call FE 3-4M7. ^ ATTENTION: young* ^**lif*5j)rk Srilw IhO coming scDmI yoar. Training will bagin tha firtf wa«k of Augud. Tho hours art; 11 a.m. to 1 p.m, 7 p.m. to 1 i.mj and II p,m. to 1 Am. Call Bob Olick, **UI75, belwom 9 a.m. and S p.m. MIMay —h Saturday. ^ AREA AAAI Sdas.' packaga. gfw^r44&"w Auto Mechanic “ss-'^acSKr.Who'iidVss'i working etnditlont. QAKLAND ra 5-943* NEW FACILITIES BENEFITS ASK FOR EMILE VAN CAMP CHEVROLET A((ILF0RD 414-1035 BORING MILL OPERATORS, latha oparatort, apply parsonnal oNIca, ' Sultar . Products Company, 407 Hadlay St., Holly. _ BRIDGEPORT operators: Excallont opportuhlty to loin a fad (caliant pay i ■I opportunity BRIDGEPpRr MILL HAND Exptrloncad or tralnaa, plonty ot •yortimw. 4*0. W*«jf and tringa r^duste Vd? Troy, botwaon 14 and if Mila Rd., off Coolidga Hwy. An Equal Opportunity gmployar BUS BOYS II iinW, paAt lima.' All < iy btntflli, paid vacation* manf at Frank'* Radaurant Kaago U>rh.r —I.. ^ CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL AAACHINS-AUTOMATION COOK MANAGER aftamoon *hltt, wag** open and olhar banafIN. <35- CARETAKER COUPLE - Sobar, reiponsible, married couple ' maintenance pf ground*, bulk COLLEGE STUDENTS SUMMER JOBS dolidr ....... ...J tima L-......... ing* tor dudantr lnteragtod In obtaining buslnati axperlanea. Soma ,A-LjiaV'S,.^R"Vft=E 30-15 HOUR WEEK SCHOLARSHIP AVAILABILITY COMPANY PAID TRAINING PROGRAM POSSIBLE POST-GRAD EMPLOYMENT IN AAANY FIELDS In ardor to quality you mud bt malura. 'make a neat apoaaranet, own 0 car, *ome alhlttlc ax-perlanc* I* halMul but not noco*iarv. Apply in por*on. Call Mr. Shay balwaan 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. 543-1*53 or 543-1852. COMBINATION TRUCK DRIVER-WAREHOUSE MAN. Must ba familiar - with Oakland, Macomb, Wayne and Gansaa County irias. please bo NOT APPLY UNLEM EXPERIENCED WO cod offor good ydor round podtlon wHh many frlnga bontflts to quaiitlod man. PE^17y^*-^^gliggl^gTM.NT COLLEGE STOOItifS^ Ni^j^bt^^lif.....— .REHOUSE ............ ....____I for snack food producli. unlaadlng trucks and maintaining datallM records. Compidmotor ax-- parlanca a muatr gdoa hourly eato and bontflts. Call for an Intorvltw appabitmoni, WA 1-3700. Datroll. ■ Priip-Lay, inc., Poniltc Lk. Rd. AnJMuol Opportunity Employor DRIU PRESS , Bxporlandsd or tralnaa, ploMy: of av^lmo, .dxc. wagoo and- fringe ianailt* Including fully —-— f/ Tray. Batwaan 14 •ft CaHidgg Hwy-Aa auGit apperh DRIVER -ESvw&F**" oTwralTisiesiis" DETAILE2S V N^s, TOOLMAKERS SPECIAL MACHINE BLDRS. Elac. Hydraul. Tachniciany HYDRAUL. PIPE, FITTERS ixpRRiiNCBO ohlV / ' ly pal^ri trll wonting c with Fent^lAoclilna TwI, Inc. MO Alloy Dr. DESIGNERS , SPECIAL MACHINE— ' AUTOMATION Opporlunlly lb baqomo prolaet loadar. Fringe bonota*,i avartlma,' staady year round work. ---‘-- opporlunlly <—■-- Dgsignors-Datailars * 333-7009 6l]jr-b¥srcTigir--1iir priigmssU 5X«.*m33* *'• i^ESilNCib ocalvlanriorchlim, hill or part timo, coll 3354141. BXEeriencEo,^ JANVtOR or am-btilous man (family man prilor-~md) tor part tUnk avaning -tob ' mar Pontiac Motari, aloo similar' lOb In Lake Orion. Sand nomt and n^bar to Box 313, Lake Orion. 1 icIaH; BEiiefNfiAL, Pdrlahcoil Itolpor. PE 4-9050. ELECTRICIANS work on Luca Model 41-B. LATHE and mill operator, bmflli_ Includt Ufa insurant. yuuv onvwr* lor noma aaiivary or M,'^Sic.r,‘in&r*cSiK; PTiTOn'ce ckkBEr^mlftei:' brartch office igandgar nepdad, rbpM-ad--vdneamant oppoi^ltlat and ax-CWlant amployea Iwnefita, must ba n laa*i • —- Phpm FURNACE INSTALLER”' HELPER pood opportunity for young man to learn heatino businass, ' AOTOMATIC^EATING COMPANY^r ^ ° LINOTYPE OP^RATOH.^^day or jjlghl. Top dltions'. A»iy'*Pontla?'^p'ross Box "■ “Tntloc, r'-" PULL AND PART tlnto drlvt and luba man nnalv In parson, wgrkari lit 14 Mila Rd, and GAS STATION atlanbaht, dx- SwcM, imdiwlimlly melbiad^ bklNOER HANDS. term tool grinding’, Steody St baur weak, all frlngaa.:334W < > -----j^men. S140 to SI95 par wooh Mechanic, S»0 to 1240 par weak. Shall Sarvica. Maple and GROOM, EXPERIENCED, ter Thoroughbrad Fai Union Lako. Lakewood F GENERAL SERVICEMAN Immadlat* oponings it Orchard Ridge campus of Oakland Com-munHy Collage. ExcallenI salary and fringe bamtit*. Contact Pertonnol Dapt. Oakland Com-munlly Collaga, 447-4300. .... .......,«o Shift*. Evening and Work. Exparinnead or Marla Dal. Agency, 3'* HARDINGE CHUCKER Exparlancad or tralnaa, plenty el ovartimt, axe. wago* and fringe hnnaflli Inriiiitinq fully paid tlUO off CoolMoo Hwy. HAND SCREW MACHINE SET UP OPERATOR Exparlancad or train*#, plenty of evaiilma, axe. wage* and frlnga banafit* Including lull paid - Big* Cm**. Days and aftamoan*. Apply al Banian Division AMBAC industrial, 1170 Industrial Rd., Troy, balwaen 14 and IS Mil* Rd., off Coolidga Hwy. An Equal Opportunity Employer. bm*f'itr'lncrixilng*^y *mld Blue St**8*Steli* -------------- HYDRAULIC ASSEMBLER ExpaHMcod Or trajw,^lent^ of ' paid Blue mousirm, 1170 "'indmlrlM ’ Rd^ Troy, bolwoon 14 and IS Mllb Rd. off coolldgo Hwy. An EdUil Opperlunity Employbr Handyman ovEr 4«. Miobiib homt' ■vallabit «t living quarter* staady work. Shady Liiid Moblld Homo* Estilu. 27(9- Capitol Warrtni'W ml. E. of Dmulndra, 14 ml. N. of HEATING SERVICE MAN Only top notch axparlonctd mei notd apply for this high paylni poslthnr with outstanding compan' paid fringe benafits; CITY Of THOY M nSda?*'^ roMlr man. Must ta* able to garterm qiliw. qialnlananc* «nd machinf repair functions In small mgiMaeiuring plant. Must ba aW* SiJiSii? •s* MEN Laarh to baeom* a driving Instructor forl^Hac ara*. Aho »afgJirs..°arRS Acada^o^Orl^Trainbig iAECHAHlid ' ' EXPlRliNtiti iN outboard wwlor*. call PE Mdst. MACHINIST on goar man p*7i*nc*’"roll Scbml Dlptoma rtnulrad. Pring* banafl^ oducallan piqn. Ca(l MP7in tor «A^ WAH-t^^mrtllm* or toll dulTts, Must havb drivar* llcania, Thonwt Jawsiry Company. FE 4- 1547, AAon. thru PrI.___' A^AN WANTED In. gravpl plaiill naar Brighton,' soma axparibneo dwlr^, yur around work aUurtd. Management in finance ‘k rapidly growing finbnelgl rganl»tlon I* iMIng tho** eager ----,---immt and who want fh* of davaloplng and *1- ' h'aTrdasla » You %"’«s!a -"t,j»>bpwiy a* your r teawisr* Numtrous Mploytt . b • n • f i t s . MACHINE^ operators: and troinaai for ' .LATHES • MILLS .GRINDERS :-4?ynd Gear Inc, Phone 651-4377 B61 South Straet Rochaster, Michigan ^^NTENANa MAtT ' Mn^lsfrotlva^^ M*%klMd ;&*rniij;c.^''ar'r;;?b^^ .Mrlonct on high prosauro, lUgh taitMratort heating syatama, c^JSSlun^rSJiVtJr: MAN OVERl Washer, and _____ Goad driving -record I nmat public. Apply bqtwaon 3 and 5 p.m. ______ Heu»*kboplng shop, s) w. Huron 51. MECHANIC city of troy *3,53 TO 13.73 . rtqulr*^ Good working conflllons. liliy to sorvlcd and rapair t heavy aquipmant. Apply .. -----onnal Oapt. 500 W. Big tovar Rdi, Troy, Michigan. 419- MAINTENANCE MAN Machine rapair pr millwright card or 5 ytor* oxparlthc# rogulrod, rtRaIr and mbchlna InstalWtlon work, complete frlnga program .....- Manuti - Strool! NO EXPERIENCE NECEiSSARY ....will train you *• axpons*. It aceaptod w* will guarani** you. $$ 750 $$ If you m*«t our ibRulromonts. Within W aays you wUl be glaecd in a position whtr* you can axeaad fhc minimum abarAntM. Tjlii «wn. M A NUPACTURERS RSFKEilN-TATIVE, AAA-1 Company Will hlrg s*i«* oapi. I b* bondaU*. Profit *b_____. 1 weak* vacation . ‘Jlo InSurar— C HEATIK. 332-9124 AUTOMATIC HEATING COMPANY INSTROMENT MAN le. for . . . Cross, vocation and holidays; W. cillnpl* """« - -qu«l Ol position.. I holl^y*. EquVr Opporfunlfy^E^ioyor. Jewelry Retail Vory hidh sblarladi pootllon opan rmiromwit ,pr^.m, Rm^cwtlry Co.T Pontiac f ' / •’n JANITOR,I 'tattoiy naeassary LOOKING FOR A PART TIME JOB IN THE MORNINGS' KovafeK, 729-4413, lnk*t*r, A Needed Immediately! Man to fill our salat staff to tail -aSSrSHS ’ E*r*now. o§n§fisi,j dmvm fifrnlGfMKl. liWpSx^iRsfm AT ONCE ’ , i , ' /2 • Collisiori Men ' ''rnrja^'-.si^at^nr.uTbSK;^ and bettor facimiot, will* all Hazelton "at* *•• **''• Matthews-, Hargreaves *31 Oakland Ava. rang* 53.2* — *3.34 par hA,^ Pull bantfit* indudmii paw v*caflons, , hOlMayt, sick tlitw and tiwranc*. • .................... THiSK »f* W«st Wtbstor. Roy '' OFFICE BOY -,?i'arj!twsgss9."«^ "NIGHnijOITOR^^ $Eni TaTTERN MAl(tRS ■ 4 Cdllt IWIIMS. BWiif.... 4EAL ESt Prater man ■----- -'••1 invcstmant*. All r contt^iaf. .Salary i p-a-rlriii.. %"rlrS {?.*.*•«.. 1010 WTHuren'SI.; W-tm. SERVICE station AtrEHOANT Wrockar and Mactianlcdl, *k-parlancad prstorrad, $135 par waak. wdrSagraSi. Stock-Shipping Foramon Local dlvlilon of large In-tamattonal corp. dailra* agmttlv* putarftad Inventory control pro-coduro*, rocolvlng and shipping procaduros. and possatt good suparvltory tblllly. Job oftors good salary liberal fringe banafllSk *nd txcalltht northwasi suburban loct-Hon. SubmH rcauont . of ekporlaneo and salary to: -PIbnt Manopor, ^^.rly Rd., Farming?^, AN aai/AL N 1 T Y %dV'to''p^la!^^^ STATfoM ATTEHOAHT, full fliiSr Apply as Oakland Avg. _315-7015 Salesmen ' w - . ACCEsS^IES Excdllant dbportunlly or high In-como In IMS busy dbpcrtinwnt. Montgomery Word- PONTJ^C mail i An oqubi opportunlly bmploytr EeiVI RETIRED imn with station wa^ or light truck tor wator Ibinnor Initoltallan work. WHI train. Apply In parion 1:30. to * o.m., 3.3 drthoid U. Rd.. 1 mllo W. ot Taitgroph Rd. Watof sofl- .’TRUCK pRIVtR , ......... ' m ' MEUisiQiNC TECHNIClATf RCA rM'T.SK.ionT’.i^niciU^ /. nStoical^^ufane^^^^''' foe gill High/^ Rd." Mon.4al. f-4 p.m. ..*^^^^pfc»Wnliy gfWptom Unskilled • MEN . ' / ,• needed ___ ^ O^LY PAY ' / Raport Roady tor imrk / . EMPLOYERS /; Tamporary Service, U\ek PBRNDALE **“ ■ Service, foe# :344?nr»lfr Me'- ,\jm9 Ml Emplapor Al loan MEN «*e\*ra*. Opportunity tor young manVlh at least /months ^ p*rl*ne\ or, will tfaln mM with axcolltnK scholottlc rtedrd. For salesman NSEDED~" doar to door sales, ^k evenings, high ^ommlsslon. C*lL^3-3<39 boforo 3 T'reE trimmers,\xporloneod, to do lint claarinct wdA In Oakland CoOTly. *3.90 to *4.83:'p*r hr„ paid holidays, paid Inturlmc*, paid sho^ tim*. Phona Haath fra* Division 737-34*5 tor A^. Rlch- r~^ USED CAf PORTERf Must -hovt drivor* IlLanit. So* Mr.. Hoskins. , _ OAKLAND ! Chryiler-Plymouth 7t4 Oakland Ava, PE 54434 WELDERS - ExvMltnl w*ott'and„ WANfili^paE GENiRitL. warahaus* work, 5S.M par hr. fp % start. High school aducatjon ra--, qulrad. Jail PE 3-0111, for In-• WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Gas Of dlEsel, Liberal pay, insuronce furnished, retire-ipent and full benefits. See Mr. Coe, B o.m. to 4^30 p.m. Monday thru Friday* GMC. ■■ Truck Center Oakland ot Cass * FE 5-9485 An equal epporlunllv amployar WELDING SHOP LAYOUT, FITTERS, WELDERS To build Jigs, FIxlyros, MocMno bosos, oxcsTlanl frlnga banoflts. Apply CorllfMd WoTdlng and WANTl677iiii4 45 fS Si yatn'ilii tor porter work. Oay and avanind shift*. Apply after 4 p.m. Big Boy Rbslouront. 3490 PIxto Hwy. * YOUNG MAH to work, 3-11 p.m.. In Bookslera, 13 N. Ssglnaw, Pont, __No . ixpoclMicb ntoiitpry,' II or 1 MOTEL MAIDS, strogg, matuVo woman, must hsyp own transpor-. , tollm. Apply In _ P4f«m to M44 ‘ Dixie' Hwy., OraWan Ptot 3 WAITRgssEt poA eAA,. 31 or dvor..no dXPPrj GMC GMC ’ TRUCK and COACH DIVISION ; FmIIk Mkhlsm Product Engineering Dept. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICAL ENGINEES DMlgning of circuits for truck ond. coach electrical systems and components, TRUCK BODY...ENGINEER ME . with experience in body design and de- TRUCK CHASSIS ENGINEER ME with experience in vehicle chassis, design and development. STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS ENGINEER Graduate ME for vibration and vehicle simulation studies, structural analysis, static and dynamic systems onolysis, frequency calculation and responses. - , TEST AND DEVELOPMENT ENGINEERS ixperimeiital test and development of I current and new products (trucks, coaches, engines). Drafting Design, Sr. layout, layout, and Jr. layout. Needed for chossfi, body, and engines. " Aiipty to P4ngh# py Mall ' ' ' Stollng full ^cgflon and axparpno^ salaried EMPLOYMENT Off ICE 660 Spoth BouJevard, East fontiac, Miebigon 48053 Or Call / (313) FI-Ext. 2883 ' Open M6n^ thrugh Friday . 7i30 A.(f. t6 4.15, P.M, -v.y. For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 Holy Ww^ Pwtte, ' piS^8^’iY*ia). 9'*’* •™< '«*IIV*rY — Trip lor oil domoi ^ H»»y F««wob\\ 7 I DESlf'ClEwS ; . A I »0 (ho oWomoon aliltt (ipin ril}' ar’twnafc ■ >««{),N»t«iAT0 TOYS PART-TIMi *T‘ '^*f“*'’*"'** ^ *” 4 MATOrrLAerFiiR BonVoTir. ... { IIW lo^rk with AMERICAN GIRL o'l^rto,'*"'^*'^ OMlpnmomo W1 NBEp EXPIRIENCBD: KiypuncH 0 n«l othtr offict PFLY: ^ ns S. ^ -Thejontiac press. WFPy ESP ay. jyLy ao, i969 ^ ??!! My Holy In oorion. Wtidron Holol. : PIKO S(^ ^Moc. DIEflCIA'N'" __;iS«on ADA/miMhorthiR roqiilro<|. ■ .Inspector NO EXPERIENCE NECEUARY TRANSPOR'rAifloJf NBCEMARY piol DqvIi ClQonoro ■. ' 047-3001 KEYPUNCI^WiiAli^" tomp. AulBnmpnli. oil ihifli Coll Jeon Jonnston REGISTERED Day Shift Day , -JV. Ev.., ofl. Mid vocollon, oxcoivonf woriilnit « •ilO to I. Coll JM-) BSTATI______________ ... .—. . hilwrp (or you. In tho .... . oMto (Md Ih#( will yioid v^r oornino unllmltOd. Wo will Coniidcr WCEPtionist, moiur,_ Ev^sia'ir^arpo^ Lh. Rd. .. W!rv icltlno 1 rrinytmi tisr's WARREN STOUT, Reoltor B&?P* Uilinj Spryteo Ail SolespooplelH - DINING ' -ROOM WAITRESSES roln you 01 o wollrou to ho Olondly ofhraiphoro of nom. Proo Btuo Crm roncty vocollon, hpl). ponilon bonollft, Ap- i p™- >J* ---10 442-305S Birminphom Incidantally, We Pay Hiay.t( R^?o?."°"*- A’‘'YOUNgn[S^^ P«r-iiihlor a cuitomor rolotlsnc with ono of Iho * rr.jTRt'rt'j.'rws cK ,‘S , ClQWion Shopplno Contir. TED'S BLOOMPIBLD HILLS ci^wo—TAisrrrf,—aljs osmetic Clork; « irt fimtr Rui»^t a »o eif k fTTisNQiii >1)R tuparvlaYon, bon#(l(», 1^ paid. Call Jorry Lap-i-- --------- ’’•."""P?' SECRETARlis'WHlRl" ' \ D~ 9 * ?Sr"'f*‘r®l'f'CE pmitlona, »2a«. 9**, Anglo Rook, 3 3 3 - * I 5 7, Awyiolo* Portonnol.__ RECEPTIONISTS $425 UP -"'v liSht haulino Wardon at M2-3V20 ACCOUNTING CLERK Advertising Agency . North Woodward aroa. LIpht 6ll tap baiApround doilrablo but. wll poMonnai* 4-IW AN EQUAL 6 P P 0 R T 0 N I T ' iaH»i7^;i,,TndTb”i;'£‘.S!l!: XL ond rapidly. Prlnpo coTXtw^ro, Ilf-PE^I."’™"*'’ JtoULT lady to USKi'ti ., Ilvo In, mori .^L!iT!ng@ f»Y*TTER;yrrk, vary RMd workini s, and. tdngo . bonoflli Printing aild ONIH Sup ---- —....... Terriile pay hospitalliatlon, monthly bon drew to gualll™ Cal"*'M??*^ cannom tor Intarvlew. 4H-M70. THi hXiron V/^LLBV s of bus drivers (or tt ^ ■ yoar. But naoattary; ti MEbK^AL StCifiTARY-roeoptlonlst, axporlonctd, lor p a r m a ' position. Birmingham M. 0 matur1~1a Mr .apply in PERSON PROM 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE rioll^ jr^” •wvanMimwnT, N'A*TlWA‘^L"’‘“iA'^&R*’'TF SOUTHFIELD, 35»4400, gxt. 40. *^MAiF;wpTiisr^^ imlr' -its *'•» P»rl MY*3-?70I. inn. Lk. Orion. iEAUTICIAN WANTED till TTria: Quaranteod wage. 40I4B51._ „ -Jr,, Lake Orion. porlinas thnl frial balanct. T. D. ShM Mfg. Cd. «00 Lapadr Rd. 330- Hudson's Pontiac Mall praltrred. 420<040. ms^svi • uMif.«a DvaumOnT MMI Bldo. Typing and knowledge of Insurance forms raqulrad. ( bSMra 6 p.m. 033-3271. ^ ixPiRidMcio'GRririESiOIffTr EXPERIENCED M0ST«SS7*NiAf CLERK TYPIST anlng Mr Clark I r 40 wpm, mu least 20 yra. have 1 year working axperionca. PERSONNEL DEPT. PHONE: 333-7371 EXT, 242 20, pVafarably axparlancod, good money Mr right parson, must have own transportation. Union Lake area. EM 3-4121. CASHIERS Esr CURB HOSTESSES ~ Md wages, bmpttallzatlon bar btnatlts. A0pW; ELIAS BROS -BIG BOY RESTAURANT Talagraph 0. ----- ^ COUNTER gW FLAIH cleaners 339 W. HURON £cX7K5, waitress, OISHWASHiR, factory WORKERS needed DAILY PAYt Report Ready (i 4 p.m. EMPLOYERS . Service, Inc. ISY .............. .. Hilton Rd. Grand RIvtr 45 S. Main ___•'!»* an .Bmploymant Agency ffAiik TfiIig-far-> GENERAL OFFICEl TypU fW'MiWirtr 1« bay addl. . nacastary, fringe It Interested .............. Chlldran of substitute Macher, lllamt Lake area. 473-7424. MEDICAL SICRTTARY Pull time potWOn aUallabla In X-ray dapi, q( local hau»llai. Must be, hl^ school brad. With f— skills. Oictdphona One ItrmlnalMy oxiMrianct Shorthand nql nacbSsptv Jililll it. Jesoph Mercy Woodward. Pontiac _ manages. ^ MANAGER TRAINEE Experience helpful but not necessary. We will train. Alt benellts Including profit sharing plan. Apply 1 a BIG BOY RESTAURANT phonaM*r'! WOlsis ATBiri Apply In parson. Pina Knob tfuri-Ing Homo. 3300 WOMon ~' Clarkston. ____ _ IEEDED IMIMEDIATELY, ti giTis M train for wig stylists —' — matic damonstrator training, 333-2033, 474-4423. NURSES, R.N. and L.P.N: S.EMig*"' .„ In A OPPORtUNITY INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION Sales "Manager and Direct Sales People Huron Valloy Admlnlstrativa of-fleas, 23»l> t. Milford Rtf., Mllterd. WANTED part TIME~min*"or JUNIOR AiCCOUNTANT: Local lirm -----------— ichoollng and tha accounting Pointing ond Decorating 23 EXPERT PAINTING and decoralhig. Call ,Orag Chambers, Si^lMg 0. Snelllng. MANAGEMENT tRAiNEE " It routine? Warn lulura? Many » STENOS-SECRETARIES BIRMINGHAM AREA $400-$650 ,________________________ Tvoino 50-55 worn. Khnrihanrf in ^ HIGH SCHOOL SHOP taa c l 100 w!p.m, Fw'^ld. I palnlloq. Roch®»ter. a INXeRNATIONAL PgRSONNEL •*»**'‘o*‘» Jf*P«r|«ncwd. IMO S^ Woodwards B'ham 6424260 J tYPISTS - $350 UP ■“ Light typing, North suburban i Shorn Living Quarterly 33 meni Wiln samOa ail UTIIITWS YUfn.* . need bed. Cell between 2:S«-4;3il _p m. near Madison School, x SINGlI wSSkING girt » I wish) with I )o 20-23, 4»2-iy04 after 4 p.m rNTERlOR ■ AND E XTTRTo"R decorating, raasonabla rales snd trap asNmalas. 333-037>. WITH SMALL warn* 10 share horn ~ girl. Call 481-2720. NEED A RAIsfr a?Gs,^“i:i;rwfex.,:rakJ2 n Werk Wanted Male 11 ir OR 3.2»54. A-1 carpenter work AT A fair PRlCEl Additions; family udoms, kitchsn , cablnatt, girogasi siding, roollno, comant, otc. Largo or amar tabs. DEW CONSTRUfION CO. FE I- " “ FE l-332f Open e - * Mike-Wolfe CUSTOM EXTERIOR I. INTERIOR PAINTING Free Estlmolas-Relarancei - 334-8143 TPaintino iTwJBe 6r oufT Wanted ^eal Eitote I TO 50 TS, PARCELS, . ,, PROPERTIES, tract; WARREN STOUT, Realtor I3A N. Opdykt • FB S414I Urganlly noad^for Immodlatf ^lal TYPISTS , STENOS KEY PUNCH Profitable temporary aaaignmania PATTERSON & SONS ig spaclaiuts - —....jnd rodllnr s, awnings, guitars a “--It Skirtings. WOMEN LT. ---------Grand River- WAITRESS WANTED to work lUI hours, S da. a wk., hourly r plus ff“ ............... —■ 2-3410. 21 m 1M promotidni advartlsing'Dapt. Wo at company ----------- Intarvlawing, Qualifications; I—High School Grid, izitsiiiir*^'"" 4-wil(lno td wdrk hard Starting Soldry at $110 tt • 11 M WAITRESS NIGHTS. PayMn Place. WWBl -----0 Prmui§"'3Mf dakIay"Pa^^ Rd.' ir^rT’' *• ‘ HOUSEWIVES! A-l OPPORTUNITY! ■ ona*'o7t& ' ~ "SANDRA PARTIES" LE, REfiRED, tor It'i opts, utilities tree. 380^2, recigatlon ramodellni iidUPLE WANTED FOR It position, 333-7904. COUPLE FOR FULL~ APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE Second floor Montgomery Ward unit apt. complex In Pontiac. Prefer age 45.to SO or older In good health. Courteous, honest, reliable with good references. Duties Include dpi. rental, light mainlananea, managerial. HOME REPAIR AND remodeling M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED Cornplela aavestrbughlng sar Frea^ST, 473-4844,.073-34< Electrical Services rtaoonabla. Free aitlmatas, guaranteed, 27 yra. exp. anytlroa. 402-3743.. .......... dUALltV WORiT'aSSORED; Paint- Lm^BiM|i^ V-A MERION BLUE SOoI pickup dal. 4443 Sherwood. mfOM. '■AAA SODDING SPEC,|ATs7iI?ubs, ____any time. 332-2313._______ plastering, n¥w WORK patching, t—' -——— trees. 4824)208 a? STfaW? jMEmON BLUE sod. layod an~d COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, raa'asNmatoS. son ups. Cutting, I spraying. 473-3992. CLARKSTON GREENS LANDSCAPING -*••'...‘-.•I!!® COMPLETE LANDSCAPING ng, satdilntj, shrubs. Nursery Man. 4S2.7030. SPRAYING, fartlllzars, . killtrs. Call (or tree astlmates. 425-4019. 474-4449. Ans. rec. C 0. H Spraying. LAWN-SERVieE, Yftei^tThSSMfTg - RELIABLE l>AINtlNG, . 2S-YEAR-OLD uhlvarslty student will paint. Top quality wortt at Inax-panslva price. 431-0101, —■ PAINTWo, ExE work Free astimatai COMMERCfAL AND Plastering Service L PLUMBING <• HEATING. I irqa Dp It. 473-0377. BOND PLUMBING. Repairs 4 Porta-Wmii PORTABLE wash; Pa... brick buildliwi Mia siding, mobile" ho'me's" ----- . equipment, aircraft. J & B Porta-Power-Wash, Inc. Fully Insured. 332,4919 ____________ 334-1428. Residential Designer 24 hrs, Hof tar, shingles, repairs We will not be undersold DUTTON * ___. ftE 8-1725 r Service. lAA ROOFS INSTALLED. Hot tar and ahlngtes. Call L. J. Price and 1 _ fha price Is right, 332-1034. lALEXAND^R ROOFING, spelcialfi- SRimylna Sjrvfft ~ AWSQblY6 cdhlfROU eb ttw bi or totf amalL CaU^Oor fra* nlis., anaworlnjp aarv., 074.4449. t^ysiOBNTIAL. Trininiinf Sorvicn ' y. ' A-1 TREE SERVICE Trimming and r--------- ------' 473-7140 ei Tree Triming ai._________ Fully Insurad-Fraa osttmatoa-424-4445, W-------- Al LIGHT HAULII ;iJ|G^TRASH h. REASONABt^^ RA’TEs.^aaliafe. Truck Rwitql Trucks to Rent *42 Bloomfield Hills 1404 tor Intarvlew. E X P E R I E N C"f 0 “ PONTIAC MALL Ah equal opportuBlty ampleyar PART TIME cook 'with pravleu's SaT friniia ■ ImS}^ ^ppiy*'*ln gjg r-'arajs.'a'r: 'iSkw-wiSaS "" ‘Mlnway, .Kgaba, Klmbalt and T. planes, in/ thia tgraa. or call FE 8-OkAPERY •ampsrson, gooo salary, Irving Kay Draparlas, 23 Woodward AWS Blrm., Mich. employiSeSt available - ply at Saminola Hllli Ni Home, 332 Orchard Lakp Avi FREE, ROOM AND ..board,, imall wage for tldarly couple to " - ' Troy-Wattle Rd. area. 334-31 Carpentry 1-1 INTERIOR^ AND EXTERIOR,^ Family rooms, rough or finished dormers, porches, recreation 1i rooms, kitchens, bathrooms. Stats Jiconsed. Reas. Call attar 3 p ~ I4-' 338-1975 24 hrs. , _____ I BROWN ROOFING. W# s'pecialite ,ln ' shingles. Free est. 334-3720._____ I I REROOF SPECIALIST, aTl tvoMiefc rootlng-gutter work. 3S years ex-i I - E 5-8703. '__________ | ~ . .......- ..r aluminum. 'HOOFING, put ^lyilldln^ and Hardware supplies. ' —•- TALBOTT LUMBER W-Ton Pickups . 'TVihTott Staki TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co, 823 S. WOODWARD J-0441 ,, FE 4-1441 - Open dally Including Sunday lA CA^ENTRY and robtlng, free .-eslJlTMltes. 334-2879. 474-39M.____________ Excavating TnTilu'des' rnaterials'.*Cal l'T'17< i-fl'«« tT8, H ROOFING COMPANY, tr esiimales. Specializing In shingli '—II. 42S-5474. Job Toe Small. 4 FRE'E CLASSES ...—m wanled. Earn w Baahot, Basamants. 474-2439. I BULLDOZING. BACKHOa WOM, tawmant, grading. 412-3042. fe 2- *J DIAf^ND MOVING AND STORAGE reas.. quality work. COMMERCIAL UPHOLSTERY _ 335-1700._________ UPHOLSTERING BY RICHARD 7 Quality Fabrics ai PART TI/ days', _________, ______________ , PART TIME -' ,3 d»y waaklyTaga Avar so. rhxll«nnlnM L; *9:* .to 1:30, 1 ca Orion area. '493 you learn. Wa havg 8 otfleas, 200 *"• '*""«■ MILLER BRDS. REALTY 333-71^6 INTERNATIDNAL CORPT” Now looking for bright man and women to work \ln Ift Pontiac of- tice qua to district -------- "irting salary..... CARPENTRY INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens panel--............... FE 2-1235. CLARKSTON EXCAVATING Com-pany apcclaltzlng In grading, land clearing stump removal, basement, | matiye woman, ti sales' background BarnabI FE SB322 I RECEPTIONfST fir dwTll"" rasponsibla, aftlctant womad assume racaptloiiltt dutl-l*!?.'.?.'? :*"?'* hygtanlsr, ^ ‘jntjW*aatad tit RESTAURJWT ---------drivers.... tow tehm I 0009 driving record and . . • ““'I' —■< good pay. FE 3-, pay pay and nijihti'fiad/'i'a'tory andlNIG'Rp.COOK, ......................... „ Irlnga banoritt, good f U t u r a, boKtfavs. Apply Iq pjaraon Ino ratargneas. Foffino's Sleek SKOND COOK, IsMst /chat I.. „„„„„ „„„ I 5Sa«-riSlL. 23B-«43, A«r, DqVafia. 1>-10 . Tins PONTIAC PP;ESS. WEDNiESPAY, JULY ftO, lOflO For Wont Ado Dial 334-4911 . NwliM 17[loat llolooi, MrrtiliH ..lf|Sidf IIo«m^ ApWAiSAis rtiiY^ »«5 ijssss: ±"^1 j-.« GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING W» tuararttM Ha ula M yt HMW In M aMvt. LAUiNGER- mow ____ «7»-n A GETTER CASH DEAL All CMh tar hamM, Honllte • Oriytan Plaint iraa. Catli In YORK Pl»-yiW , OK ♦^H 1 DAY CASH PAST FHieNOLV SBRVICE Aaron Mtg. & Invest. Co. anng. fnm U1.M - »S Ml r uHlItlaa ttirnlihad. W-liM, _ il ROOM F>URNISHB6' iS. (BRRONiV WPUJC. t Mi^ r —1 w- Siss par 1 U-i "* ferl Hoanlawil. l • bArnam. laraa Sylvan Laka arlvlltgt tlln; raatm, itparalt Orata plana, wi ar!vlltpaa. _LanP e Is rooms"FOR marrM *n«plari>oy I wfc. 131 B- Maaanl. . . 01 IPINB LAKB (rant l~l } kboMS AnO bath nj I palt. TSVb -------------------.rpek, ntoOMk AND BATH) 3 raam balft, Airnlahadf 4 nanm hjjnWja*. Inquiry at BM s beOroOais, all utiiHiaa. titfa. SScority MpaaH, rKS81Rs~6N~LAKi. Sib'iSfiK. 19i | Hoiswk IMmirisliod 4« .... ...^_____V anOi^aS^, igaap Invaaiitani far tllns. P-M. CALL RAY TODAY RAY; s''WI0A66Mii""WlfH, mI Moaii Vl*»ir' living raam' Ivy ban tTM Wi .v tail mS; wauW Ilka la bulM Hilt hair- ywf IW |far ^4,^ Call fb t'OTtiirssy-iia: afM aniv taw iMra wni giva ^ StCURlTY tar II WMra amart pay tap InMr ^ iWllitRY LIVING Mava right in, altar Hit mafliagi la .appiAadi mia naw t btaranm Mndiar hat lull .hMMwnl. hat, kllcMn Pith huM-bia,, la fully caratltd. anP hat ovar aiatP t ePr ' Ml oaraga,^^lari|a let., FHA HIITER MrMGp 'weftShop* nree • C«ll on Att OM. BBNTON - I bttiraamt anP aat haal, battmanl. nica llltSA lannt. ’ NBW S gBOROOM RANCHBRS - CASH FOR YOUR HOMB f' • PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE. BRIAN REALTY Wa SolP Yaur Nalghbar'i Hama .1 Mulllalt Lltllng tarvloa I Waakpaya 'III « tunpay UMl BIO DIxIa Hpy. *94701 Aooms And BAtrt, privtta anlranca far t aPulta. tSS par^waak. anp Pap., clr * ' "" S ROOAAS, FURNISHiO, all uHlttlaa HOUSE On lAkb LAKE' 5aTano forI'rentI WITH intent to PURCHASE. steady, secure employ* MENT necessary, “““• 'T PONTIAC PRESS Bok < PONTIAt i^ALL HO-------------- GarPanIna, ganarti «4S 7«S1. BlaamflalP prlvlltg^ quick t_________ ____ cantract. vary niaa wlHi many an traa. Oft SSWS. 3-B«drooin Economy Ranchar, an yaur Ini far nnlv tS0,tl1 E. J. Dunlop Custom BuildOr 3717 Sllvartlana. carntr Walton ...... 33*4407 ■ CLARKSfTON ARB YOU LOOKING, FO EXUPTIONALLY PINE k THEN LOOK AT T.HIS L^.— HOMEWITH 4 LARGE BEDROOMS, SPACIOUS LIVING RECRMTION ROOM, KITCHr" o!l|{V'?!2Sal*MrB*"c"' MALTOR, S70S Ellt. I SSffa^ia WM. "miller, REALTY SSSAM* mwwANfii far a batlar un*, Hamilton at O'Nall R will thaw you how a ha Pont by using aquity at a Pown t «7432» or 13443*5. I CASH lor mr I ROOM RANCH, < gaa hapl, FHA appr fatal paymant tW’m ONE PULL BATH AND ONE HALF BATH WITH SHOWER. 3 LJVInS -- _____J. ,C. HIITER, IBALTOR, 37W Ellt. Lak* Rp. iltwss. altqr a pym. PE l-mt. HALLMARK BLOOMFIELD'ORCHARDS It Hit tatting for this baautiful s-' haProam all brick anP alumln — _________ YOU THE CERAMIC TIL rHp~njcT'Mv *- ■ntf rHffWffin GMC wtak, with tlW '3 B^Pwlr *— ______________IB4. ’________ i rOomS. ChIKI wtlcomt, Balilwin OTHER OUALI THIS HOME GARAGE U LL, ACRE OP LAND “ GOLOPI"*" Rwif R0HI»_,__. ROOM FOR I^N, SIS wtakly, 71 ' PRlVAtE imSSTSFI Norton. FE 34174. St900. tIfOO down piyinont, 4f3^ on. nr PB &JOM - AT THE El ■ • ' E Air AT^t !NCh,la^e.andj1 not laava tha tniublaiama worrlttiPURNISHEb TW5~roomi anP b at what to pa wltti your homo to’ Including utllltlas, pvt. antran Ut7 Wa hava an antrgtilc talaii *734347 patw, 5:30 anP S:3S p.m. fare* to tall your homo and Hia,LARGE 3 room lowar." I ablllly to work out Ih* financial | RoblnwooP. No chllprtn or p< ___ hava yaur ----- caap *0 p. II ALLEN street >wn ifarft your t gat haal, b*----------- T--;- ------wrignt Raat Etlala, SB Oakland, 3 3 btPi, prlval||^lranct. PE' PE 34141. ^AN ROOMS for mTnY W piir: acti wtak, Pontiac araa. OR 34S3y or turn EM 3.35**. OP OOLbPIN assured PRIVACY., I mortgaiSe. . lw¥l!u^'Lakrfi:P. ' Pantlac TTSfBfoart Saari" 3M-W7. rprivalal 0 payi. no glmmlckv Wa LAKE FRONT it BEDROOM duplax. LAblES PLEASANT ilappino roar illvar - call now for your 3 oarehat and 1 car garaga. 444-1 watt tida location. PE S44SS alt. ---41 appalntmtnt. I a^C-EfpiOENCY. J-««^v.y,bl.. P Times Realty L-x^a^W-i.7 ICE ROOM Fdi downtown. FE 3- _ OPPICE^OPEN SUNDAY 1-S 6ELINQUENT P A Y 1 Broi^ up to data ti lavad. Can work c.. . —-----------*|i4By4, _____ _ PoUarr MARK REAL ESTATE COMPANY 17M S. Takwragh ---- chjldrtn or palt. 431-ltW, attar 1 lAC .LA Clarktlan-araa. Pavad itra SISM. HPva model to thaw. Monday through . Friday S-S Sat. IS Ip $ P.m., sun. 1-4 .. . 435-3*74 John Voorhali BullPart, AfWiiiiEiitE. UfteoMwd 3t 1 ANO'3 BEDROOMS, carpptlng. air conditioning, Chnvanltntly Ipcatad, 1. Arrow Hagd Mall. *li-i/*3. *' IS CADILLAC, modani '3 raomt, adults, 3SS4SB or WO 24^_______ BLObMFIELD MANOR WEST Nawly complalPd luxury apartmanti, Hptpolnt-alactric aapllancat fbalurtd. Carptflng and^Pcapaa^. In^utlM.j M^ span Pally 10 g IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY ROOMS FOR RENT In larw oMar home near Downtown Rochattar, S*S to S7S. Call Jan SSI-711), axt. . 31*7. Avail. Aug. IS._______________ Room with home priviiagt*, mm " 7r ovar. privalq hama, 33S4«13. TME_.! $13,990 talajjiheiw^ S *Waoth**rp”** iLEEPING ROOMTlTlri "or" largo utlllly room. On your YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER Bl 5^ I Ruttall Younj*. Bldg. ' VSS**"’ 334-3S30-43Vy W Huron St. •iSli.SM FHA OR VA fUr ttila S ----- ihadroBm %. Can TKy*"T0PiS>,* *7? $1,000,060.60 ranch on acra tito naar Osvltburg. Walk out baaomanl, gat halt, all nawly dacoratad. tU.M* oq land contract. TODAY AND TOMORROW TODAY'S PROTECTION. TOMORROW'S SECURITY - for your family In Hilt comforfqblt *. btproom bungalow on Clly North tidt In nalghborhood of wall kapt homai, hill batamonl, all haat, garaga. l1t,»0S. FHA or Gl tarmi. HAOSTROM, REALTOR POO W. Huron OR 44UI MLS Attar t p.m. FE 4-7SM Clarkttoii Schoql Araa BOI Thandara Blvd. LoctfaP 5 Mockt N. of Cltrktfon-grion Rpt., 4 blatkt Watt of N. iatbh RP., tntar frwn Alganqulir, Wallar't Lakt prlvlltots, ntw at- TMm^l fully carpafac parcal — Immpdiata o< . A now IM> modal Ida Lgit of pfant or Iptt fa *—:tlon to build In tnit fu raa."-Opan Dally. SYLVAN , ----- S-car attachaP garaga, 1 r44ta^) II I ^H^hi^ RP. fj HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL btProom, Lang Lake privll S*SM, SUMO Pown. , N POTTER'S LAKE, 1 btdfwim. yaar around homo. Ov---- garaga could ba mapa Into faga. Lqt *4'x»0', fancoP Only tt*,*S0y taso* down, conlraef. MILLS Par all yqur Raal Ettafa OffICPt In Laka Orion 5O0BRN 3 EEDROOM homa, Batt gaa haat, naqr tcheeli. Pi 1- m6vi right into~ praam brIOt ranchar, wllh IW caramic bai oom. off kItcHan ,anq t maiPcurad tancad yardi no ppoalbla. Mtka offar ar coin to witting of M4I0. PHA VlfMitton 7hfpi^ RqalW W-W3. ^ wJk-a«R. cafpatap; drapM, lanPtcapPP, tod, iprlnkl*r lyrtaih, SaftiSY«*:r KtCr -Model open DAILY 2 to 8 Bric* fjjnf trI-lavpL 1^1 hi Colonial hrick' front, 3 am bapraomt from Sli,m an your DIRECTIQNS.- Commaroa RP —^ Rp., la sundaw, Canum ART DANIELS REALTr MHforp Rp. 4U-1S47 RHODES BLOOMPIELP, area. , La^y,J srss.'ttwssa.’S akctlitnf nalghborhoaP. Only LAKB ORibw Laka front ho™. * giiiaiL^s^'dUnrarist T^j. RHODES, Rioltor IfNTTifXflWfr^l-WrodRl. batamanf, att h—‘ ■“* afSn,S«ai Taro room* fuir "BUD" CONSTANT INCOME PRODUCER ■ , 'dwalimg. CAII for.turtlfar patj^llt. 'NICHOLIE-HUDSON / AfSOciotEi, Inc. 1141 W. Huron Sf.,/ , 68M7% ofter A ll w- Ef 2-33T0- SOLD yIjuR own HOMt? AFKO your cathT Halp It at cfeit t EM 3-6703 SUBURlAN BEAUTYl Formtl pining tntt. FIraplact living rf^. Pull btitmtnt and attichtP'^ >car gtraga. Ltka privlltw. Pottttalon within 30 Payt. A raal buy at 134.703 Tarmt to tulf. LOVE NEST Sidroom brick and atbailot ranch. Antique wblnafi In . handy kllchan, community watar and w n t a r loftanar, planly 0* cloiaN, gaa 1^, car port, llaxibla tarma. DON'T DELAY-CALL tOOAYl On ihit homa. Wall to wall carpatmg. In living 3 baProomt, full bath piut hall both pM matlar bodroam. CpvaraP icraan pallo. PanetP. SIATSO. Can ba purchatoP on Gl or PHA ORTONVILLE Charming olPar 3-tlqry ham axcallant condition. Nlca 5 1 aparhnant up hatpa tha payr 3VU car garaga, wall landtci your, tall to "llva ■ A MMPlaball Road j and 1IW Mila. fwlN- Bibs. RrIvAte antr^ and parking, air canplllonad. l4o| I 1 I Buy-Your House nywimra, any candltlan, n paints, no oammlulen. CASH NOW MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Realty Smlr!''~otJS?',^'pS»"'lW iS ratal of I par onnl, corpn ^ paying to par cant, yc. __, CiCr.'ni’bSyrng'^Ml?.? WALTON PARK MANOR. Monthly — ment frniin S107 Inel. main-inca, util, oxcapt aloe. 1. 2 or 3' —room avail. CALL NOW 335-*17) SEE MODEL CHERRYLAWN AND HOPKINS, PONTIAC. * ROOM. CARPETED, prtfar aPul t«c. P«p., mt., tSlROU_ AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS •.jRMHM wM MM 43 Ah it{ ■ ■- -- .... „ 1 p.jj "CLEAN PRIVATE ROOM naar Tal- CALL RAY TODAY Privpta. banlipantlal, consultatlgni. Calf Hackolt Raalty, atklor Frank « BUI. EM 3-6703 k REAL NEAT, and clian 2 alary xingalow fully carpeted' up and .— .. („groam,jdlnlngi room mant, lull prlco SIT.SIM, *744111 Huron, lhawar bath, good Southern czxddng. FE 14331. ALUMINUM RANCH, 3 badrooms, gas heat/' nawly, dfdorated, big kIteban, largo carte* lot, Cyctened tenca, . Total price S1«.500. S4S80 NICE, CLEAN ROOMS and Kama-coaktd mealt. 33S-U77. |RtM Offlet Sj^G 47 down, taka nver mortgage paymant of till mo. *414310. DRAYTON PLAINS. Ltnd cantract. 1 badrOom, lull bawininl, IVk-car garaga, laka privllagat. SlS.fW. SPECIAL. 3-badroom ranch, woodad lot with laka prluitaga* on Cast Lk, 110,700 With 10 down, PHA Or Gl. ' . : MARK REAL ESTATE COMPANY '01 S. ToNgraph 3334124 DRAYfON PUINS\ HAROLD R. FRANKS, Rm^ SMALL FAMILY HOME 1 badroomt, largo kiteban wl dining mca, largo utlllly, anclotao porch, fat^ yard on good claan canal to Xoolay Laka. Pricad ter quick itia at *1730, IISOO down On land contracl. Everett Cummings, Realtor __ 3SI3 UNION LAKE ROAD EM ^320*_____3*1-7111 HOME WITH ELEGANCE cirpwjto Marooms tnoi 24 xM family room with flroplaca. ThI comtertabla homo has a 5 zona, ho watar hooting lyttam, 3M baths battmanl and garaga. Plut many other extrai, luch at Intercom throughout. $47,SOD. C. PANGUS INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A'WEEK throughout, includai 2 badroomt, front and roar yard eyelon' tencad. Laka privllagat. Yo miy purchau thii noma l( I14,7M on FHA ttrmt. J. A. Toyloi^Agency, Inc. ., ^ __ 7733 Hjghltnd Rd. (M-S7) ' Pally OR *4»* Evat. 3*343*1 MARGARET McCULLOUOH, R**ltof 1143 Cati-Elltabtlh Rd*d 682-3211 _________ ■ tun. 24 ROYER OXFORD OFFICE MACEDAY LAKE LAKEFRONT r Ortonvllla. Cute, coi n b*it dnicrlb4| condition. May ba bought oi contract. Hurryl ROYER REALTY. INC. GOODRICH 636-2211 OPEN TRfteVEL MOOEL’l OPEN 2-7 BACKUS (calltnt .EAi TV .REALTY 332-1323 fUCKER~RfALTr7 REALTOR M3 Pantlac Slate Bank Bldg. __________________________ . fR^i-LiVEL, SI4.700 01 Largo cl inrougnouT, -luit both Iliad# axrra •tall thowar downttalrt. Plattortd walls, lapartta dining araa. Living room and all 4 bMfraom* ctr^ted. Only SIO.TM. Atk ter SSS- temlly roam, 1W bathi, m. Trl-lavtl, only SH.m (M-S7) HATCHERY RO. I want S bodroam ... jio baioment, tbit II ..... axcalltnt.conditloa Intida and out,' ----- --------- icapad yanS. —1 ,|Kil“ ■- wtthva M ' 2S3KS.- dHTonart. I* axliilni (lifing n t1|,»0 fu ! ^Mb’do » S.P. SUITABLE ter any kind of offica or any ofhar usa, gSod park-* Ing. 3*3-31*0._______*_______I AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OF GMC DON E. MCDONALD LICENSEO BUILDER OR 3-2837 (j6tS — WANTED lN“1»ONtlAi iWY CLIENT IS J colonial VILLAGE Now ranting 1 badrbom aptt. OPEN; 1 ‘til dark DAILY Claaod Frldayi On SoolLL-okt Road, I mite ATTENTION INVESTORS ml Proparty. 1 Room Bungalow an Prica »,M0 Cath. I- Good Inv Btdraon nlca lot. avallabit. Call Ralph h POSSESSING INTEGRITY nacetaary quallticallon of < oatate firm you daal . with whw tailing your homo. O'MH Realty n£ifnMoo*ter^lnlegr!lv'*ln alT'lft raat aatnM frnniacflgni during tha many yaart It hai lervud homo I buyari and ttllart alike. '' ' art mady -t» aaU yaur. I O'Nall Rdilfy. OR *-3222. FOR. YOU7r°EGUrrY, VA, FH*, OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HA6ST““" REALTOR. OR 4-0351 or NINGS FE 4-7W5_____________ tRANSFERie Loafl'HI f hoMM In Itit'Pon^sc irM* YORK YORK » J-irow FI S-717* * ^ SISLOCK 8. KENT, INC. ' 1307 Pantlac Slate Bank Bldg. H4274 ____________IM-73M INDIAN VILLAGE Otdar homo In' axcallant condition. 3 largo badrooms, IVs bathi, full -*'“'-ig room plus braakfast nook, basamant.. All carpatad, huge g room. IW car garaga. This must saa, t1300 down tr mad buyer. FHA I DRAYTON WOODS I BeaufiteT *-rdam d0ia-law»l Tvllf I attachad garaga, huge living roan with natural flrtplaca, full dinini 2^ctr oarw> DIRECTIONS; Highland ‘I Craacant Laka Rai Ilia to modal. Isa rMKhas and colonials as li I $14,7M plus lot. GlROuYREALTsTAfr S33S HIGHLAND ROAD 473-7S37_____473-m ■ OPEN^ 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M-. 3374 WILLIAMS LAKE RO. OIr: Drive west on M-37, tu north on Williams Lk. Rd. bedroom rpnch,iarsa family root full basamant, ivCTfO. BEAUTY CRAFT HOMES. *74-4331 PONTtAC!, BEAUTIFUL ' d«n, r baths, 1017 basam UNDER $5006 STARTER HOME , CIUPR LOT P;^^J. MaSon Canatructlon t; STM HIGHLAND RP. 47W VILLAGE OF MILFORD . This hbm* pays for Hsalf. * roo only 113,SN with land contract terms. It's vuerth a taw minute* of your tlnte to Impact ttils lovaly noma. Aik rot 3H^. FHA .TERMS Brand now carptting throughout. This 2 badyaom homa Incfudlng family roam. 2Vb«ar garaga. ■—"icapad corner lol. Only *1*00 h lei's trade; 333-B. t h *2I-25*I Esssi-mLER [.! VELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES" I.‘3 badroom brick ranch with full I basamant In axcallant condlllon, carpeted 2S ft. living room, 17 ft. master badroom, built-in range and . oven plus birch cupboards galara in , I kitchen, 2 car attachad garage with VAdANt EaNCH -T lull boir-' - GMC BMOtlful larracad jSreot Oaks Apartments and 3 btdroom apartmont* ai fS?nffftad.*HS»aife ipmtomSnT^ eluding dishwasher, swimming pe and club house. Located at Walti Blvd. and Groat Oaks Blvd., Now Leasing !' fSTsTni. ?»n'?r..“7.MI and air candltlonad. ideal for at-! flroplaca, full basamant, 2 baths, basamant and 3 car garaga, fornays. Insurance companlas or 1 car garaga. BaauHtuI loeatlon.shaded sfrmf for *38,008 t doctors.. Bxcallant downtown loca- 030,000. |CALL Non. Far furlhar Into, contact Kay i Cehl, Waldron Hotel, 3* E. Plka'ONLY ,I33.50«,..1 haUropm brick St„ Pantlac 334-8707. | country homa, full' BiSament, ’ "^!*'aTuV°o1r'3?4'*^ ?a*:Ti»uPteVar*JniV,...''’"' Refl»B«hie«rtr.pertv “47-«j YiLToS«lR«..itor. W. University_______4SI4M1 A SALE IS ONLY heusd and laasa tt back M you. Agent, **14374._____________ WANT^t ro**FE''l4S^' ' WANTip LISTINGS; BRAND NEW LAUREL VALLEY TOWNHOUSES 1 AND 3 BEDROOM APTS. ON PRIVATE LAKE MILTON WEAVER INC. 138'x58' BUILDING, for Star*, ' parking W, Huron. FE 3-77M. ®0?^ AS GOOo"A!r'yOUR*'FTN’ANCINO. ™*Murants,.sold or sailing your home? Lot ul '**'’"* handle your morigaga. FHA------ Low points. RAY EXCELLENT INVESTMENT I Badroom homa on lovaly lot. 154 location f distributor. parking, 3*3-31*0. CLARKSfON AREA On M-ll modorn building avallil now, ample parking. 423-M2S, *: YORK diiialllng hamat. I appralia your pro.------- thinking at sailing, call u INDIVIDUALLY CONTROLLED CENTRAL HEAT AND _ - - AIR CONDITIONING T/^^TT'NTC^/^'KT Luxurious wall to wall carpeting, __ J UriiNbUiN t xno\’’i;v‘r.Tditrr.'3 tTMl-Talagraph ^ FE 3-3,33; Su™nS?r^0,!^: Apartments, Furnislleil 37| Master ’tv i?n?mna* «fstam,’'pav«i | ----;-------------- „ private parking. 1 BEDROOM EFFICIENCY In Pan-! MODELS OPEN I fiSSr, minted 5;Sli'^iy,“S FOR yOUR INSPECTION i rMfciFiyiir-mTTrrrs^ RENTALS FROM $155 COMMERCIAL BUILDING 1M8 tq. “ located on Northwastorn Hwy. V. MIddlaball and Orchard Lk. Multiple Listing Service (days 'til 7. Sunday 104 [•O' c5mnli7cl.l Silkiin-i.-. --------------- Oakwood h- wet bar,*' laka^'^privii^at.' iaoIsM) S1S,000 down, balance on ' —' Contract. 332-71S*,. _ BY OWNER, Lake dakWnd SharOs Sub., lake prlvilegas, 4 baC'— colonial, IVi baths; family .. . lavatorlas, tireptaca, carpeting, custom drapes -----^r alavator. . rental includes carpeting, gas h*at. 1 BEDROOM, AdUlts ........... ptua aacurlty dapesit. *4 Spekane. | t ROOMS AND BATH, single parson': i ROOM BAdHiLOR Apt. In Pan- 673-8686 Custom Crsftad Appliances HOTPOINT FIRST WITH FEATURES WOMEN WANT MOST Attar 4.p.m.;caU **3-7227 Annett inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St, 338-0466 FOR RENT or itaM, zanad minutaeturing, SOOo squar* foot building, loading dock and offIca spaca. St7-323* ar FE S4t41~ NEW COMMERCIAL b ............children (JAKLAND VALLEY APARTMENTS. Augusta after 5 p.m, | immadlaja occupancy, i and 3 - ■ I bedrooms, $177. Soclel center end pool. 357-4300. 'H' private badrUoiTT’ Rl’dgembnt ... ... 2 blocks from Pqnllac antranca. FB 4427*.____________^ 2 AND 3 ROOMS, private bath a entrance, utilities furnished. 300 s, stie PI MS. BATH and d hot water turn. VALLEY PLACE APTS. In the Cantor at Rachester 3 bedrooms. 3 baths, till __________________ OPEN EVERY DAY ' 2 ROOMS AND BATH, married I rA||. AC1 AOntS eoupta, no children. FE S-1705. ' LALL: 031-G/UU Apartments, Dnfdrnished 38Apartments, Unfurnished 38 RIDGEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS 1 • One, Two and Three Btdroomi^ • Roper Gos Ranges • Hotpoint Refrigerators • Carpet and Drapes • Swiming Pool’ and Pool House • Ail Utilities Except Electric Pram *'1^.00 With ana yaar lease. No Pat* Allowed. Cklldron , , ' Walcamti' . , , Between^ East Blvd. 8i Modison — 2 blks. from Mdln Gate df Pontioc Motors. (. :y,^57 NVPewv^t. ^. Phone'332-3322 : I 0i»dtiO*w‘wAAA.''r^;M2lxe*pl Wtditesdty ' ' \ 3S.708. *11-0370. GMC > Doaroom, tun dining i baths, full basamant, contract or FHA terms. BY OWNER. R#a»te"-. •?« " badroom, - furnlinad, axe. ra $7(00 cash or $3*50 down land tract. *52i5*37. No agents. • Ay OWNER. 3-badroom brick ri an 1 acra baautiful-woodad li techad^gara^', telTbiteament!' Immediate postaslion, 7 .par cant mortgage avail. Term*. Williams Laka prlvilegas. *74*33* *H. * built-lns, 3 possibl* 4 b*dn family room, full baaamant, carpeting ■ 73x210 Mneod Batter hurry as owntr Is ad lot, caepited tl KING-PHIPPS BRICK FRONT TRI-LEVEL, bedrooms, and family room, coi plate with carpeting and furnitui-. Quick posststlon. Atsuma prasanl * par cant morigaga, ORION TOWNSHIP - neat claan 2 badroom homa, full basamant, IW car garaga, tancad yard and i ' sottener. Only *15,500 FHA. PONTIAC-FISHER BODY, sharp 3 badroom ranch, fully carpatad — haat. Only SIS^SIIO FHA. Like to Build ClMosa a quality "KINGSBERRY" honte IfUm 138 plan* at our offica. Stop or call today 1 ANDERSON l> ASSOCIATES 1844 Joslyn FE 4-: Evanlngs **24837 nr P6 2-G53 LAKE FRONT sparkling 3 avallaMa.,. Frank Marotta A assoc 3173 uiiten Lk. Rd. 3*3-700t._______ ROCHESTSr'"LRBA~- <£auntry at-—phara with this 4 badroom h. 2 baths. Family kitchen, k pot(s*slan._^S15,M0. Trada. RSALTOR, S52.5375--------------------- RETIREE SPECIAL \ 2. tfisisad-ln (0 prlvllssas on m top. Bsaotlfu WMiNliWli «ALtV _ ,;Sd'”ba'« “Srck"^ SMJHS* martgaga terms. „ iftLLER REAL ESTATE ^ W7 ^ or *7I4>73 S A FOUR BEDROOM HOME, don't want to mova out of city? Hara'k a clean, aldar la lust five minutes walk p downtown Largo lot _____ DEW Conttn *-3171 or Ft 8-3S37; WILLIS M. BREWER . REAL ESTATE 734 Rlkar Bldg._ _ WHAT IS yWpROBLEM? Planning? 'Building? Money? Call I basamant, garage. HALL beautiful lot with si N VALU«~ ■ illding _ .. -- — candltlonad, ___________ __________ OWNER CLARKITON bflck *471743 tefor. i^or oiSf; ^nch,. 3 Uedrooms, Vh bath, *47-1743 balora * or MS-3417 after flroplaca, ~ fqmly room, 2 car ______:__________,_________L aaraoa. *3S-£I3*. 3. 3 AND 4 BEDROOMS nawly decorated, *40 down, ART DANIELS REALTY. **5-15*7 2 MODELS Open Doily 5-7 except Fri. Sot. and Sun. 2-6 Choos* from Ranch, 1 BY OWNER. QUAD ■--Iroom, large lot, 3-car garage, . baths, firaplatq^ *34,000. 3?l- BR'ANa NEW enrpat In thin •“'—dam homa; with I3x28- kllchan, basement, t'/i car garage, and n axcallant condition, 114,700. RENTING WE ARE NOW pahalid family A even, d|ihw« garoga. A good auy ar sza,you, wimi warden! Y '^ODAY RAY HOMES WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS p\o'p l"^^w*i T H C R E D I HAVE YOUR OWN LOT? CftooM from sfvoRol homo dotlQn priejM from $17*100. ! Excellent financing available ' HAYDEN REALTY 04 ' 10753 Highland Rd. /a mile Wa»t at Oxbow Li ,, BY dwNER. Immediate ponsaalon, _ '4 badrooms, flroplaca, rac. room. I garage. -17?7 Mansa, aft Watkins ■ I Laka Rd. ■ ■ d BY ownIr,’ beautiful' ol bedroom bl-lavel, ' possible assume 5M morigaga, *37,500. 33S-1*74. BY OWNEir wl?h^ti™iai^ unflnithad^ room with aiding glas* ovarlaoklng laiw. *13.500. MU moving Mi pf Hat*. weakdpd art «tt. * p.m.v BY^OWNER, 3 badroortnfc acre wim 38 traa* In fri Beautiful, nalghberlKMd, . dacpraratqd throughout. lUst tall, 42S-SJ04 or opener 481-047* REAL VALUE REALTY For Imediote Action Call FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 FARRELL ORION TWP. Sharp aluminum and briefc 34m IrchMt ggrisg*/"! fuH™b*lh*f Coni-ptetely eirpatad. Baabttful flnlshad basarhann with bar. Saa this Una tedpyl' \ Near Northern High 3 badroom fvlth 1.5U baths. porch, tool si 3 lakes. 311,1 • g caste.. NICE-N-CLEAN . 3-badroom, sun room, nlca gai_ gas haat, garaga, lot IN'xISO'. Terms. 317,700. FLATTERY REALTY iq Coitmarce__ __“?:*?•}• dreams, L^SCr' _GMC_ ReNrement HavenTi Remodelad 3 badrm. qitth beamed callings, tiroplaoa, farm kitchen, garaga, lots of garden spaca among tha trots. North Tray loca- ONLY $19,900 $5,000 DOWN ___Ladd'* at Pantlac-37l -3308 ROUND LAKE ROAD c***mlc"'llte *bath‘ 3' bS!k*"l!» parochial and township schools, family kitchen, oak floors, ga* haat, largo ^ “—* 118,700 farms. 4314 N. Woodward, Royal Oak , WebsteFCurtis Oxford-OrioiY Extra Large 3 bedroom, brie horna, largo kUchtn win bridk .308, .p's:?? I. Don't wait ryKX breaza-way, . _____ flr*placts,, ite baths, garage, I Ml vary scar *37,588. INVESTOR* TAKE NOTICE (-fonllae East side, ^badroom honw with, basamant and 88 ft. lot. Qtfarad at 87780. Call ter mate details. • ock toinie Kin, WILL BUILD __----- —..-.dwood floors. Thermo windows YEAR AROUND all aloctrlc htette ovarlaoklng White Lake, 17 mllasi Information. W Of Pontiac, Highland, Mich. 31 , . .tx voxna, badrooms, bar, 3*' living tecraa-1 .'usi -o-. tion room* boit. wtll* 1^*000 M7- REALTY REALTORS SiaO. WVrUW. H7 $25-411$ HOLLY Haro It. * dallghttui hen Molly school district. garage. Including carpeting and located an a spacloM lot M7' by Only *31,700 lank contract term." WIXOM AREA Clean 1-Mdroom year round homa, With full basamant, panel *d iROYffi 3*3413*, badroUms, _______________ _________ -----j the Quick* I I, Tappan ran attachad 3 c Hdlly dffica ANTIQUE LOVERS ATTENTION: "aSr., rKramion room and 2 landscape ' with patio, city o viences, walking distance to 1 Huron. CLARK REAL ESTATE • pan a 14 .. „.... bulIMn b.. 'Igarator, 2 car garage, ord, and laka privileges, tssession. Only t«.70o to WANT TO MAKE A DEAL? THE BEST WAY IS WITH COSWAYI. COSWAY REALTOR 681-0760 ♦our ipacWt badreoms, IS rfurniturt, I dining room 1). Largo living I THREE bedroom housai proximataly fltty-alght a c r a i avallabi*. Also 3 %rga barns located 'A mtiK south of Halo Mich. Phant 7384311 ar Write h PHONE 634-8204 ATSalakoasar' ~ "IT'S TRADING TIME'! FHA TERMS WITH LAKE PRIVILEGES go with this three bedroom home with attichid o oversized lot. Immaculately claan With country j?ss;3’?at.*''p"MTu.f''i'2s?ar'’' '-**• • •- COOL, SHADY COMFORT *re the keynof are evident • —1 sophlstlcttiun and ch« e fine taste ttv "n’l- ' -‘V --«>» n •l'^£L*''V,5»l*r"l"«,^~!phborhoiid. }=Mii LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING LIKE TO COOK OUT? I You'll love thU 3. badroom ranch an . Iir of canal front. La living roam witti flraptaca, b«tM, ,racra*tlan roam In walk-basamant. call ter details an this onU,\ dreaming? ‘ Of that homtV place In ... ; Huntoan Shorts has 3 badrooms, and m ' .. — ha stove, 'washer and drytr and oarbaiw d SYLVAN SHORES Is tha location of Hits sharp and CleUn two b *'!!? PflvI'W*. Features largo car .... brick fireplace, termal' dining' r 34 fK raeraatlon room ~ also ivy car garaoe It's Ulnmte !i?il CUntfirt 3 i 7rl-lav*l In baoulltul boras has 3 badrooms, family room' wlHi flrtplaca, both ? ^.“ivirx TZ ^ris;«..te iliwr you, new Oaty It Is to own. Rantembtr wa tradf. CLASSIFIED ADS ARE FAMOUS FOR ' , .'/'ACTION"' t :arport. city water and sowar. i ,yvi Valking distance to Grade School.: This 3 .story 4 ba lunter High and H4h Schaal. FHA, 7^;^, so flroplaca and paneled waHL h and a 3 car attached garagr $ acre* at tend, truit trdes,.an -..jtter ter hersa. S3S400. *73-1147. BUNGALOW 4-B~EDROOM, remixtel-•d kltch*n, b*i*ment *nd dncler"* .front perch, 3-car. garaga. >F ^iraira» bl *1f,14S. Zorn ttoi GMG East Sid* Locotion Sharp 4 room*, tllasied-ln front. perch. Naw gas turoaca. S500 dr g|us closing costs M quail CROWDED? DON'T BE! This 2 It... _________ _ LOCATED ON NORTH FRANCIS homo Is H drlv*. pavad drive, flrtplaca, formal dining'room, ' Interest mqrtgag* can ba ittumad. Pricp FINEST RESIDENTIAL SECTION AIR CONDITIONINGII! WE HAVE MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILABLE TO NELP OUR BUYERS FINANCE . SOMEBODY WANTS, YOUR HOME AND hires fl tollowin. _________ . ... i er-dryar, calcinator, doer aptnar. 1“ ' FRUSHOUR REALTY REALTORS -- MLS S73^ Williams La^« Rd. WE HAVE WHAT IJ TAKES TO FIND THAT SOMEBODY Our Sales Force has a waiting Itet at qualified buyers _ Fata Groanandal or Laa Bogart. * • 071 W, Huron St. MLS ' 681-1000! far Wont Ad> pioi 3S44981 ''GIROUX' aARpxON IMMEDIATE OCCUPANa OR Will DUPLICATE ’ ......................... BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITE m aerA ^ Kaad .(ndtpan-4a^ T«w>«H», Land Contract. GIROUX REAL ESTATE Swafl?^!!!?* awin-oitl^ SCHRAM JUST REDUCED 'This largo I room housa Iih raducad for a quick tala. Paa ineludat g kadroomt, caiptlaa Ing rom and dining room and 1b PHA tormt. Lift With SCHRAM and Coll thi Von tarving fontlachraa lor aa yaaiY^ "BUD' WHITTEMORE ST. a-Famlly, 4 rooms ^—, t rooms and 1 down, I fumithoi Largo la n FHA Is NORTH END . Mile «. fpan 1 hsdroom homo. . Pull batamanl, gtt hsat, fanci' . hack yard.'114,fAeatiL NICHOLIE-HUDSON Astociotos, Inc. ■ 1141 w. Huran St. 68M770 offtr 6 p.m, FE 2-3370 ........ h laka prlvllagas. Fries" ,SOO FHA TornTs. 4SM144.................. .SI LEACH HURONOALB SUB under slructlon, 3 bsdraomt, V/t baths, family room, firsplacs, S3S,»S0. OXFORD TOVyNSHIF 3 bsdroomt, full basamtnl, Immsdlato r»—— g34M0 down, FHA, 330,fOO. SYLVAN SHORE SUB. 3-badreom, ^ ear garago, fi«i*i..4lory and naw gat furnaca. Pa^ants last than rant. WEST SIDE Two-story, trams with fi btdroomt, dan. family room, rar'diS!±KV;«. Wonderful family homo In a fir araa. By appointmant. Evas, call Mr. Casmil FE.3-7373 NicholiE-Hargor Co. FE 5-8183 Solo Nootot $109 MONTHLY* Includes utilities, gardening, except electricity 1 - 2 - 3 bedroom Townhouses WALTON PARK MANOR Co-operative FURNISHED MODEL AT CHERRYLAWN 8. HOPKINS Call ... 335-6171 40 MORTOAOe COSTS OR PRRFAIDS (•) and up TED'S TRADING McCullough Realty, Inc. Valu-Vision Show of Homes AHENTIQNI Two starv, 3 badroom oldar homo with a formal dinjng mont, dorago. Closa to PONTIAC CENTRAL. tl4,tM. MODELS OPEN DAILY 2 TO 6 TWIN LAKES: Got out this Sunday < room all brick lake front homo foaturl_________ altaehW garago, walkout basamant, ladgoroek potto, pwnd sprinkling systam. Mva In and M|oy lha bai—----------- Tiems; Wast on M-St to laft on Sunnybo^ to toff at Dtadond, follow around lake to Door Run, WATCH' FOR SIONS. 1 full batot, a flraplacos. THINKING OF BUILDING? Than think of McCullough Realty -h ■ ">. siding, from S17,m k both^ SHARP, 4 BEDROOM RANCH $25,500 I. 0. WIOEMAN, REALl/oR iiaW^HuranSt. . top 1^. ttolly ..... l.irkltSfw’iTiraLffi isSiS? K.Tpl“'s I, nMstor boaraom. porch. ______ Only tI3,PS0, ELIZABETH LAKE PRIVILEGES * ----- Bungolow built I has 0 sptandld Kor girago wim ovorheod door. This prlct In-eludes corpotlng (both stairways ------------ ----------- oroctlcslly WEST SIDB COLONIAL "vlng rom with n aplaco, dsn, dinli now rafrlgorator, alsctric atovsl BBS Inclnarotor, washsr and dryer, gas turnsco forced olr, good aloe-trie pump, eutsMo metal toe' storoeo house, pontoon boat wit now i h.p. motor Incl. Beautiful lo i;iSs';«bs*'"’ °*''‘"ANW?T?BLr"'°* Has mo low price. Call C. Nolle for appt. A wonderful buyl C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT 313435-|3»I OR 434-313 Evanlngs Colls Wolcomo car garagt. Convonlont I aniT gornaral hospital. WILL TRADE Rsaltors 28 E. Huron St. Offict Open EvOnlngi I, Sunday 1-4 338-0466 CHAMBERLAIN Rochester ROCHESTER "area largs lot. Gold carpeting “-noWd ootino “- aw cor Borage. I... FHA terms avallsblt. Pries S30,-SOO. TROY AREA Quad with 4 largo airy. A lovely fully olr condllt with new carpeting, drapes Intercom, avk baths. Largs room and huge family 1 Country sla kitaion with brti PricitM""*’ WARREN AREA Booutllul Rntoliod* NIcaly IT flowors L dropoa. -T.... ___ .... .... loving care. Priced SS3l,f00. CHAMBERUIN 710 WEST UNIVERSITY DRIVE ROCHESTER SPENCE STREET side location. Full basemont. Gas turnsco. walk to Northern High and Pontiac Motor. FHA op- WATERFORD TOWNSHIP DOLL HOUSE a^^btofoems, gsrage,__patlo^ 1*7 930 ***** ^ UNION LAKF AREA a bodrapm bungalow, oti epfflonf drive. U-60T^2-C-THISI KjKtoirt.iSi.'ioiL’ lullou^h Realty, Inc. ■ 674-2236 5460 HIGHLAND ROAD (M-59) PONTIAC A w WALLED UKE 624-WOO / 1350 WEST MAPLE ROAD . rliLL jleoltoi custom foaturss. This lovsiy or# looking for a h price range don't ( one. Pricod In the m GUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN 8. SONS 313 West Huron - Since 1^5 FE 1-3444 after S p.m. 435-4045 lib Hwsee_^. _ "STRUBLE MODEL 1200 WHiniER open daily 2-6 M59 Across From Airport FAMILY HOME A rail nice brick homo. Hot fW. more badrooms. A torga llvlit-room with flraploco btid i tofitu dining room. All tola oanvinlant I WATERFORD ^ T^E^ PONTIAC PKjElpS. WEDNESDA^^, JULY W. 196Q .Yi. landacapad lot, ctoso to grado Khools and eonvaniant to thoAring, his a counln kitchen.\pavad driva and has a 14'x3r rac. room araa. A rral good buy ^ Wily f13,700 ANNETT OFFERS IMMEDIATE POSSESSION GILES EAST SIDE m 3 hodroom homo, v TbSS,!... ‘ of 115,300, < Val-U-Way DUCK UKE ARU ■■ W9\. Ftituring 3 country ilzt VACANT Move in for $300 uutifui % room homo. Foolti , ^vlng Toont, dl I. Hurry on tola one. bath, larga aa, baaultful Val-U-Way Reolty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY ... ”*VE FOR SALE 45 Oakland Ava. Open 3 t. . l'*rt ‘"J‘"'Ss!V%lh*li^sr'a landacaping. All toa latest Imr tions to make your homo I otasont. Such as: hoatad wil Item pool .-air conditioning LBEOROQM Colonial od lo* - ------ ■,",^0 A&G OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 ..ado nov hanto star fall. Ifyi fflb HoiisiW , i I'- |4t GAfeRD OFFERS : JUST EAST OF UPEER _n=H4. ' tri-lovol colonial Monlal ANDERSON 8. GILFORD Building & Realty n Highland Rd.(M-53) a2-3000 OPEL — 4BP Gordon Rd. M1-13M ,.SW UKE ESTATES irick colonial, wH room and bistman I and plastirad wall r quality In tots wall bul (coTlont beach prjvlligai i "My" I a-room ranch with Claude McCruder Realtor 413-1730 Opan,3-f KINZLER CURKSTON ARU Laka fr with 4 dallghHui lad 2 rar garage, lada. FHA, Gl or ________________financing. Priced to sfll or will dupllcat% LAKE FRONT HOME price brick ai > of Ooklind County's largsst ' bast lakts. Slpi dsllghtful IS plus 33' racraatlon — firepiscs wall. Now WILL BUILD 3 BEDROOM ALUM, sidad ranch with hardwood floors, sspsrats dining araa, sUdlng glass doors, soalsd glass windows, with Bcrasns, ralrlgsrator, sslf-cltsn- yoor lot or lots, for only ACCEPTED. 317,330. TRADES AVON TWP. NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCH, large family room With I flraploco ctrtmlc bath, oil side door, bulIMn ra and stove, siparato dining full basimonl, many otoi. ... tras, on largo lot, ready to movi In., Convonlontly tocalod on Arizona St. TRADES ACCEPTED. lake'^oakund 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL. Paahirlng; brick and alum.. living room a bedrooms ana on room, ivk bath, firaptoco, bul oven, full basamint and 3 garage with paved drive all targa wall landtcapad lot. price $30,300, land contract ta avallaMa. Trades accsplad. CROSS REALTY 674-3105 LAKEFRONT horns, on Dixit Lake - ‘^'-'."*1" schools, walkout 2 badrooms, $34,000 — 115,00 d Ws hsvs ( 2-bodroom and a 3-no In Clarkston school h with largo let and WHY NOT INVEST In 10 acroa ....Il homss Incl. 043,500 wi nt down. FARM WITH BUILDINGS ACRES - I at $575 per acr of Pontiac. 133 ACRE farm with htW IfT* born and substantial lirga form home. 314)00 per acre — irtorp land avail. HOLLY — 30 or 30 acre tracts. >31,000 par aero. UNDERWOOD 425-2415, If no ons. 425-2343 TIMES LIKE TO GOLF aluminum EE mplol TO- of ■Iso I --- -------- J t 111 t V 10'x50'. Only $33,500, land GAYLORD INC. 0000 04) Like Prion lAzenby IMMEDIATE POSSESSION $450 DOWN badrooms. Largs living roo eparats dining room. Extra nl ■ good oroo. Close to. schoolo, and shopping. Pricod to saU. quick — only 015,350 on FHA tormsl MODEL:- 3465 MANILA CT. OPEN DAILY 5-8 Off Wsllon, 1 bll M glass wind: rmlca csMntl IVi^lhs ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor Opsn Dally 3-3 4436 W. Walton — OR 44B01 VON 3 FAMILY INCOME Two S-Foom and both opts, up 5 rooms and bath fowsr v_____ flraploco; basemsnt, garago. Exc. condition. $3,000 down. Land — tract. PONTIAC NORTHERN NO CAR POOL HERE I Ws'vt found ths horns for . . family who nsads to bs close In. This a room Capo Cod consists of 3 bedrooms aqd bath up and a living room, kltchan and format dining room down. Full'bsssmsnf, 30x24 garagt. Paved atrast. City and sswsr, $17,350, FHA tsrnr HERRINGTON HIILS Loving cars Is rsflectad throughout *"■- * '----Tick ranch. Family basamant. Extra Salt HduMi M AVON 1 AVC CDAIJT UASSe Do you own a multiplt sit6? Having trouble with mortgagat? Do you need "Front" or Equity Money"? Call B. N. Hacfcatt tar a coniultatlon. EM 3-6703 ftgh'^ ScSaST^'RaSSoMMol fflilWijy"- •“>'*«• LAIkc tKONT HOME ^cant year around homo. 2 b^«mi, living room extra large KAMpSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" kit(^, oak floors torougheut, gas heat, IVi car garage, Gl tormt, .zero down or land contract. Immediate POBBMlIOnt " FUTURE HOMBITIS . CURKSTON AREA DEER LAKE - 4 wooded lott,,evar aoo5*t"«i?3£!!: '*- HADLEY AND OAKHiLU RO.L 7-1 with m "y,! l*ERRV LAKE RD. - w acni lof on jiiii with baoutiful Slaw. cosh., ' TWIN LAKES White Laka Township. Waln- cWtoT^rraM {Sa-TISS K your back yard, pawiy decorated, 3 ^r®!*?’*' .'“•wm drapn, carpatad, prMatlonslly landscape^ tkl, raiorr and riding shprt distant, golf course, lacross the lake, JutrS37,350. ' ' INCOME III :i?i**_*»*"Wea*o» with slIJNO d^ pn a landcon-tract. 'Vou eantt beat this buy call ter an a^p^ntmant (odayl 1071 W. Huron Straat MLS aiMOOOO EXCLUSIVE SALES OF WEINBERGER HOMES 1530 CROOKS RO. OL 141222 RESTAURANT Buy the butinatt and tquipmant that m$da a living tor 20 ybara lit a, high traffic ares and only $3,500 ,0f buy a. bulldino, rastourani / equipment and a second Nrap and 1 apartment all for $10,500 on la|rmt. OFFICES Deal ol tea weak la 4200 so. ft. of office space on Oakland Blvd. for otey^^320,000 on E-Z land contract PLEASANT LAKE AREA * P^.2I^^.-Lakr1^2odi" MILLER , ASRGSyol BAUGHEY 'i ■OWNER S' BEDROOM RANCH In axcalltnl repair. Carpalad living room, sharp bright kitepen with automatic dishwathar, larga carpeted family room with firaplaca. Matter btdroom it carpatad with sliding glatt doors. Air condttlonlng, now hot water hast, 2Vi car garage. 150x116 lot plus much more. Just 023,300 FHA terms or land contract, 1 INDIAN VILLAGE HOMB featuring large living room with firaplaca, tormal dlWng room, family room, terda kitchin, 3 bedrooms, m baths. Full basamant, gas hast,' 2 cer PCI. down. BOB WHITE REAL ESTATE. , 3054 3. Main, Clarkston 425-502T FACTORIES Deal or toa wtak It a new 2400 sq. ft. shop on Crascant Laka Rd. for only $44,000 with $11,000 down. EASTHAM COAAMERCIAL DEPT. 5020 Highland Rd. (MS3) MLS 674-3126 335-7900 UNION LAKE BRANCH 8181 COMMERCE RD. 363-8303 GOT A PROBLEM? Sr*o":drH.fe""cr?hr ^ EM 3-6703 ”lttoa'’troo**1°o*o, privait LOT ON THE Tlttol»watteo Rfvor,, to trade for building ■ 2 ear oarage. 425-3411 attar 5 p.m. LARGE CORNER LOT, Po"ntl»'e Twp. Nice Sub. Call altar 5:10 or weekends. 852-1503. ||aragt, beautiful condition In e love- NORTHERN HIGH It lust down the street from this 3 bedroom Home In . A-1 repair. A sharp 14x14 living Toom, 10x24 kitchen, I'A baths, larga covarod patio. Beautiful largs lot. HsMlTfi- LOVELAND CANAL LOT elta on canal lot. 400 yardi lrom-4>aautifv4 Sylvan Lake. NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL araa 1 and sharp aa they .coma. Batwean 1 Joslyn and Arlans Stfaat. Carpeted living room, sharp kitchen, tiled bath. ; Large fenced yard. Gas heat. Lots of trees and shrubs. $11,500. FHA 2 FAMILY An Investor's special with prasant rental of S154 par month. Oftorad at 310,300 with land contract available. 84JI00. Leona Loveland, Realtor 2100 Cast Lake Rd. „ 482-1255 332-0262 aia W, HURON OPEN f TO f terms. Locatad on commarclal proptrly with larga storage barn at^rear. Call us today for further Tllia Dnlfa U CmiSU Fa xE'SSSrre ??i'c*,“tiS^“i!: CALL RAY TODAY 474.^101 EASTHAM LAKE ORION AREA waiting tc 8,000. ,o_- W02 ■ ■.nnu].ii^ 5 BEDROOMS VON REALTY 3401 W 003.5000 STOUTS BEST BUYS TODAY SNOW WHITE RANCH- So naw IPs not quita finished tolA 34 X 34 ranch horns with full bssemant Is located Ideally tuit west of Orlr--floors . -- v)o_... advarllsamant. Wa have Ing room, dlnlnq Vito bulltlns, V/i It with ra^ This home } BEDROOM QUALITY ATTRACTIVE 7 y._ home on Pontiac Lk. ‘3 t possible 3, larga living roc tomlly room, carpeting. FHA Cantor of Pontiac, I btdroom, panalad large living room, family kltchan, utility room, lull bass-msnt, $IO,3M. Call today EASTHAM REALTORS 1 Rd. (M-53) MLS 335-7900 UNION lake branch , , 3 1131 COMMERCE, RD. HI HIghlani ^4-3126 HURON GAROENS- Natural stono bungaloM Includss 3 badrooms I basemsnt. Excellent lac close to Tel-Huren. carpatlng included. ROCHESTER INCOME- ocatad In City of der 3 family ui with oil hast. Garage. Larga 340 foot lot. City water and sawar. Excallan) arts. WARREN"ST0UT,'REAtTOR 1450 N. Opdyka Rd. Dally til a FE 5= WHY NOT TRADE? I, PROMISES. PROMISES, IT®”''/ Just promise., do aomathlng wondtrful tor the gal In -- Bring her to look at center hall ranch brick f prime location lau from Watkins Eiti 'park". She'Tl surely' >145 Thbn y„ bordering beautifully __________ _______ 1345 and has, 3 bedrooms, kitchen buitts-lns, % full ceramic baths, family room with aplltroch fireplace, hot Water hast, full basement with walnut paneled racraatlon room, attached " — jta^ga.^toryi^wall **^*<=*| Mools. Oftonto at" only $4i,006. Call today tor an appointmant. WANT HORSES? 1 SVk No. 35 tatting k-nw WE WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME ELIZABETH UKE ESTATES wlth^lta beautiful laka-privllaged park. It for this lovaW S year old olumlnum.rancher. 3 large tasotoont, BIG family kltchan and ovor-sliid cor CALL'TODAY I , ^ PRICELESS LOOKI No. 49 YET^ PRICED TO SELLI Custom-built ranchor In a oarfact tatting for bringing up your family. Stop-saving modira kitchen, 3 large Mrooms, family room firapitca, walk-out basamant and ottochod 2W car garago. Just a "Hop, Skip and a Jump" to too lake. LAKE FRONT No.;61 H«„,n htSPlH®' .J®* ftoplng d garago: and "a isroe' ilsy-wlndoy ^ _ at a fItxlWs pries of $»,350. CALL NOW! CLARKSTON AREA No. FOR THE NEEDYI If you netd 3 badrooms, o' large kltchon, a „ —---------laundry, ond ■ 2 eor attachad garagt lu need to CALL NOWl A SPOTLESS HOME No. 95 co^s N(> MORIII You can hovt all the footoraa of medtm living to tola brick 3 badroom rancher. Stepqoylng kltchon, family room flrwlKo, finlahod bOMmont, carpeting, oitid % car ottoclMd gorogo. Just 2 yoart old. Quick postotsTon. »7,350. CALL TODAYI ROCHESTER AREA' ' , ~ " No. 9|6 ' No. 48 forma of $24.350,•iC UNION UKE ARU ~ “ five NEW” MODELS , OPENIAT.,$.gUN.M F.M. or by appointment , *“J Ml'’®" voorhait Rd; ^ Hiller Rd. at Ktylon Or.' AVON,RANCHER: Avon Road lust east of Crooks Rood. PO^JTIAC CURKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LAKE 338-7161 625-2441 651-8518" 363-417V . Oxtonl. Footoraa bedrooms, IW botes, nrapneo, custom kltchan with built-in* desk, full psrtitlonsd batamtnf and st-tochsd 3W car garage. This thorp homo It Isas than ■ year old and Is otfared at only $33,350. Coll us right away for more partlculers. HUGE QUAD-LEVEL On over 2 oeret In the Clarkston school. district. Almost new, this ------. contemporary has 3 large “ 2V3 baths, family room, with bullt-Ins, n with beamed fireplace wall, I attached 3 car bedrooms, 2’ rarpatsd kl fl'xfS' llvini garagt. This Is a listing and wo kno.. ... ... to tts It. So coll today. WHEN YOU SEEK OXlR SERVICE , YOU ‘ "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty s$30 DIXIE Highway 4234)400 REALTOR Open 3T Dally Off lea Open Sunday 1-5 I IRWIN "YES WE TRADE!" NORTH END master bedroom ........ private bath; another l'/4 ............... *—'ly. Thre's a 20' IHtlrtornWg te separata fun Toom''for the' children* IC. SCHUET — ----- chance to Now Is can m trade. re^aatlon room. Can bt I cash to axlstlno land oontri tasy FHA farms. EAST SIDE Now . . . Here Is ci“' horns snyons would ba _____________ can be purchased o FHA or Gl with vary llttte dowi $13,300 Is toe full price. So ca Todeyl A LONG WAY, BABY! You'll go a long way Baby, balora you find such a nice family home at this ons. About 12 yrs. of ago. It has that mellow comfortable, llyed-ln feeling. Inviting living room, formal dining room, m'”'— kitchen with adlolning laundn IWa* t"i?^; DID, YOU KNOW THAT WE BUILD? Y.es we do, end “>• >>■"• bedroom aluminum modal wI'* *‘ * sealed gl| nstructic O'NEIL don B. Smith, Realtor 244 s. Telegraph 333-7848 _J;T lots on 112,500 down paymehl — Orion Twp. WRIGHT REALTY 352 Oakland Ava. FB 3-0141 INDIAN LAKE _ Lot 40' X ifsH ffis.'W.W' •" Indian Lake — Lot 45 x 270 ne stale land, $3,300. GREEN ACRES'^" 1443 S, Lapaor R ' --- recrtstlonsi park. 34000 up. All custom homes. Sand tor brochure and prices. UDD'S OF PONTIAC >77 S. LAPEER _____________3314300 130', $X500. 473-5303. EXCELLENT LakodFront Development Beautiful 300 acre leka, sandy beaches, and scenic surroundings. Southwest of. Lapoer. Lorgo lots, """ *-----ovalhblo. HAVE —_______ A. J. RHODES, Realtor FB 0-2304 350 W. Walton FE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LAKB^-FRONT 3 t block randh on 50' at Pontiac Laka. /■ larga anclosad •'—'—a, 2Vi ci I BBssassli.... iji^ton 0 LAKE shinagogue utlful lake front lot to on Lake ShlnogiMuo. h of Goodrich off M-!ht homo araa. Call r 4 p.te. LOTUS UKE FRONT Ytar around 3 badroom, ns stons firspiscs in living r sCrsansd porch, basement, di car garage, good, ’ sandy. basamer ■ ear EM 3-7188 II help I room for TIME TO TRADE Need 3 btdroom and fourth? We lust listed H bungalow ranch across the stra ' Watkins Lake, featuring ------d recreation room, fireplaces, large tOO'xSOO' lot. Possession almost. Immediate. Priced at $25,300. r"' — YOU'LL NEVER KNOW What you are missing If ya look at this miintonanca frai Three bedrooms, saparata dining rom, ceramic bath, bullt-ln oi— * ~nM, ample supply of « The full boaomont has tornado shaltor or can be used r round fruit cellar. Brick i n. siding. Oversiztd attached i garage siluatad on a 100'x150' -...It o,n Pine Knob rood ... »t lust $35,300. New House 1 . No. 10-42 sh h h hi i quietii Wo wouldn't want it to got jo'vo only got one - too prettiest Ihreo bedroom brick ranch you have >ver sate. L®ceted In the Oakland Beach Subdivision area. It's surrounded by other lovely homes. It LAKE FRONT, LAKE PRIVILEGED lots. Commerce Cedar Island, Middle Straits, Big Lakes. Fowler, 343-0322, 485-1404, 3453445. MODERN 2 bedr Lake — Clarks.... .... --- 75. Pantlad bsstmenl, gat heat, lOO'xaSO' paved SL $'lTjioor53a5t37.' RIFLE RIVER OR UKE HURON Large wooded lots tor moblls hornts or cottages. I^rem $1,335 to $2.395., For further Informotlon plaast call Pangus collact. t. PANGUS, INC. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 M-1S ' Ortonvilla CALL COLLECT 427-2115 TAKE OVER PAYMENTS, MUST sail, lake living alto on hill overlooking sand bottom spring fad runS? ST. MICHAELS NEIO^ORHOOD C OLD FARM HOUSE Ten-room five-bedroom farm house on acres of land, about three miles East of Ortonvilla. Old, barn premises okay for horses, etc. J toe home tor the handy men. Oi $10,500. No. 4-13. WATERFORD RANCHER Be first to sea this brand new listing featuring 3 nice badrooms, Uving room, kitchen, larga utility area, gas furnace, plus 2’/k ' ' garage. All this on a huge 70') tot, cyclone fenced. Only $17,500 mtg. can be assumed with app $4700 to handle^ paynwnts qf ' \NEW ftllODELSl Lake Angaius Lake' “ west onJAfaltort ,tp ' To Lake AngeTH$ Ri TRAVERSE CITY, LAKE fro_______ over 1700 feat, with ampio ocraago near mo|or ski areas. Ideal prlvato estate, or overnight e ground development, mutt Phone 1-414^47.3432. whit¥lakb frontagh Wa1«rford (Behind Our Lady Fox Bey hsiaias— Ellr. Lake Road 5 Williams Lake RAY O'NEIL REALTY. 3520 Pontiac Lake koad 474-2222 MLS ' , 343-0531 9V OWNER Income, Inquiro.'W' IT, 2 tieepi ent, axcells N. Cast) Pc LAKE FRONT HOMES Naw and Used -. Dally Cb. EM 3-7114 I. Call t Inqluda, groc I home and, 2 —.....— — , apts., Be am wine llcenst) live bait, be docking facilities. Terms. Ask I Mel Haugh, 44441700. RISDON realtors ^oporty : S1>A CABINS FURNISHED ON 20 acres of prime hunting or---■ Stream 'A mile, state land 3 $7,350. Near Mid. EM 341242. AND 10 ACRiSTUso 24' C r country irrou“"“ ■' 5643' Wood 0 ACRES and modern cabin. Atlanta, Lewiston area. Sell trade for Income or other proper Oakland County area. FE 5-2424 Uti~AcreB3B t acre WOOOp subdlvltlom \CRE ON CASS Lk. Rd. north of ’ M-59. 1 ACR 30. eVe $1,000 an acre, with ! na y«iO ft. road frontage. FUHLEY REALTY COMMERCE RD. _____343-4381 L RAT TODAT 47 RAY I ACRE lot —, wsedadr ■ RHODES The-Earth Is PLEASANT' 'IRIS WOODED. ) ACRES — A nice cour slightly rdlllng an possibfiltlei, 311,000. 10 ACRES - 10 mllat n ford, high land, loma fn 0 ACRES — Wide road ...a....... tochoote'ttxHn”'*”" Htwio ACRES - Norihoast of Ortonvlllou W wall on proporty. *4,4335 2W ACRES - C. PANGUS INC, RULTOR OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 15 Ortanvhte CALL COLLECT 427-r“ TAKE* OYEf FAYMBim', site, close In torVaor a -Krj^lon, must a*“ WATKINS LAKE AREA, 2 building sites, lake prlvllegaa. OR a-131S. WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEOES -Lot lOO'xISO'. Only one loft, ox-ceilant ostabllshad braa of nico homes. Price S4,000. 4-H Real Estoto. 423-1400 or OR 34I45S or OR 3-2331.__________________ WOODLAND AND OPEN* gauntry, 5 ■era parcels, horsat ollowod. 3000 -■eras to rido through. Prloo S7500 Terms. AL PAULY 73-3800____________EVES. 4753272 56 ACRES, 3 bodroem Kouto, bprn, garago, blacktop, neat 1-75, Holly, 327,300, tormt. ShtMan, 425-5SS7. 80 TO 800 ACRES have It at Daon't' Form R^l^--.- Htadquartort,' Ava., c-"' -* 273-3748. .Michigan , Ph.t 517- ’ Anwrican ______ ...jloea, 1)ullf- Ceraltttc baths, carpeting, 3 car garage, 10 box itbll, many teaturos, 428G337, Oxtord. HOWARD T. KEATING 2040 W. 13 Mlia Birmingham 44-1234 541-7350 THREE "MOONUNDERS" Lotus Lake. Also on Nolsay Rd. $1,750'oar acre with $50,000 down, balance: a par cant. Land Contract. FLINT, METAMORA, NORTH BRANCH ARU 81.33 acres will ba atfactod by the building ol naw.21 from Flint ---------------- -...-tion, producing good crops. SOIL BANK. Fine for running young r-—-House now ranted at iTn dTpiSK :-10 ACRE RIVER AND streami acreage, wooded and rolling. •Fowler Really, 343-8322, 485-1404, on 7 par cant land contract. lELSEY, ULES AGENT METAMOlU ' Restored faim-hama. 2 badrooms on 17 acres with bam. On blacktop road. $33,3001 SNYEER, -KINNEY & BENNETT V^ln Rochesfer fwia ) iwliitL 0^^j|^l^^■i^t^< \ 59. Stik lkm§$kM I Jntl nufu. MADtIY AMX, M acm oi MnHy rolima IWMI. Partially woo^ tTiA ,pir aera. Plwna Mrtrtirivtningi tar0m. MARl^CTTB n dairy aatup, ( imaclilnarv Inctudad •MO, fyl|nlng> 7»HOM. LAPEER, a badroom Kama ' ■■■ ■ ■ , ftncw I45I- NORTH OF Lapeer, s caiK. Raal aatala avaltabla al raatonabla pric*. y ^ WARDEN REALTY I yw W. Huron. Pontiac M3I.JW0 TO BUY, SELL,''A business J Nallwat BMalngaa - PE 3-7«41 WANT TO SELL y6UR~SuSINESS» rwi-i...y, R„|tor I'nrlrldga l» IKa ske. ion Huron, Ponlloc^ , ilia ibppl Ki small (I to IS P"' * PIECi"~FRtNCH pAoViNiil/U: KSa,a»ft'»»i!S •at, wltb canopy. Alton Harpar 1 placa badroom Ml; bwl maftra wiih hoK iprlnga, I cblidran Coppartona _p 0 r I a b I ------Mr, portabla TV.-lM-atSS. and/or |3-RcSb(iA ~ (Brafid^ lacnira MIt. Cash. Tan rsiji - JEgJ^^JPQNTIAC, PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 80, 196£_ iSrCARNIVAt ' For Wont Adi Dial 8344981 mul?lpla Jindla drilling, lamlnS *'g9f'-riM|,'^jS^"gir«|i 1461 B^ldwjn, FE lAGlNAW BAY AREA. I bodroom coHagn with accau to Sag' Bay. Could-bo yaar around K 3 loll and cottaga only M SbIb BbsIhbib Property 57 COMMERCIAL PROPERDf^ 4300 iq- till— I4l laval. 4Ml^f^'lt. — 2nd laval, plaaiing archiiaclura, loll ol parking,' lultma lor com- d naming ______________ „mpita. prints avallablto*o __ Inlarasted.. Raply Pontiac Prast Bo« C-ia. ____ Sola Land Control ' 1 TO 50; -- LAND contracts Urgontlv naadad. Sao i • you daal. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyka R * Oban Evas. CASH"F0R L ; PIECE WALNUT BEDROOM Sfe Automatic SE ranga. Edison cri alt In die, condition. 631-S1S0. 6 YEAR BABY CRIB with rnaldildg ■‘•—sar, plus 1 imall whita m, also automatic washar. AND CONTRACTS n. V. Van Welt I- 4SM DIxia llwy./ — OR 3:1351 Take front home sold in VaM lor S,U,p00. Balanco tIO.OM al 6"> par cent Inlerest. Equitable discount otlered. Ask for Joe Tersignl Realtor, Times Realty. 423-0600. 7 WECE DININd i^oorn sutfa. ' ^ ______6M-1053.______ 9^ Linoleum Rugs $4-9S Solid Vinyl Tile ...... 7c aa. FE 5-1165 YInyl Asbastos tils .. 7c ea. • p.rn. - -^InlaW Tlla. 0x0 ........ 7e ea. -—.—rr Pioor Shop-2255 Elliabath Lake "Across From the Mall" O^WEStrNGHbUSE ei^ 67f7330, or 6«2-7MI. ‘ ___ 1969 USED SINGER If THIS CONTRACT I7,«50 w...... RETAIL SHOWROOMS Excellent location to town on main highway, northam part it Oakland County. PrOMntly usad for ^sy GM car datopiihlp. Witt sett right or with altracllva 10 leaseback. Excallenij for ust investor. Used carj'lot oot. main corner, can be boujim separal|IV. AUBURN AVE.-P0NTlk CORNER. 147 X 130 plus 30 allev. near naw aoartmenls. sh , >r Coney Island, "iss.*"^ o^ginally s 5 per moi" . Ottter 1 GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW inonograms. Comer with coi..______ lull price 5147.33 or ti.60 mo. Call Midwest Appliance, 0-0 dally, 134- C PANGUS INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-15 Ortodvilto CALL COLLECT 627-2«15 WELL SECURED land contract tor 1969 SINGER iwln^ machini , slightly ..................skss but- mnoias,'overcasts, fancy stitchss. d sitachmsnts naadad. 5 year arts and Mrvice gusrantaa. TOTAL PRICt $63.80 iooS take-out, otilcas or a ot commerIcaC.-t------- BATEMAN INVESTMENT & COMMERCIAL CO. 077 S. Talograph Rd. . . 338-9641 After 5 p.m. and Sunday-- CAII 621- Wonted Contracts-Mtg. 6Q-A ■ 1 to so i LAND CONTRACTS '-------------- Urgently needed. See us bi FURNITURE NEW, UNCLAIMED Modern sofa with Ptorat Mr. at-Mrs Chairs, aippa^ i ravarsibla cushion. Regular 1275, unclaimed, maKhIng chair, tto^ad n cushions, loosa pTUow b French Provincial sofa ______________ mahching chair, ilpparod ravorsIMe cushions. Regular U65 v ‘ ' unclaimed balance 1173. Mapla Bunkbad Mt, cemplats loiRRr, -gdfrdratt,r and^ mattn Regular 6135 value, uncle drasMr with ' framed mirror, 5 drawer' chest end full size bed. Regular 6245 value, unclalmsd balance 6164. Modern sofa and matching chair, ilpparad ravarilMa ■ cushions. bffinco6n5** '^*"**' Modorn MIdo-A-Bod, full size 4“ , Poly mattress, zipnorsd rsvtrsiblo cushions. Rogulsr 6215 vtluo, unclaimed belenee 6152. •Colonial soft and matching chair, seltmecked, zippertd reversible cushions. Rtguliir 631a valuo, unclolmod bolonct 6237. Poymenis os low oi 610 per m 3USEH0LD APPLI iliz. Lk. Rd. INoar Tologrtph MO a.m. to 5 p.m. d HEARD THE GOOD NEWS? Notqhborhood folks By Dick Tarntrii- For Sola NUMaUnMow .35-361 RussuTwir^ LOWREY OROANI SALE IPaCIAk PMRCHASa ORDER SAVE 6HOP AT GALLAGHER'S '• "•s«rStor.H-!^* Open M()^ and’fif,' . NEW RUBY REb hotim ' Mlad •loclrlc gultor. 6M4765. H^Rf~^¥R^RAr~»ovo~rlwratie^ GERMAN SHiPHRRO N MIci^Hoi^lnstrummf Wototo"en^lOi*Uros;*5!lSvto ZlwSin .W^KS---- MIXED mSlc'T} *'^'”'541' ‘ off Atoyboo Rd. J Smlloy Brat., Music ,. I. Saginaw FE 4-4731 d Vl^t^j^jlXCELLdNt iDondlflan. Call PUPPIES: — Ba^iP—liw» —t'<»iw6'---- PA I ft'OF AKC roglitarad I ■ rawlrad. Cenfa, Fl t‘^D-SATIN“R^fsT WARWitift •■■“Ply. 167t Orchard Lake. — atototottoAbstjiitosgAtoi^ 7-. . You iMan you bought instead of leasbig?’’ Inatall^___ _______-1400, 651-1305 iUMP POMP'bE Swtor'i»:^viBra 625.55 marrtd, tarrlUc buys, i!k!;'’^lE’6lt6?.^*' *” fTALL SHOWERS COMPUnfi'"idtfi “link,' taucata and curtalni 665.50 ......- -------- WEST GUITAR AMPS. New, M^c Ubboiw 714 ACCORDION GUITAR, LES Salas-sarvica. Alio piano t PulqnocKI, OR 3-5556. Stora Eqviiiiiwiit ^ ROUND BOOTH AND bar, V 334i76l2. ..; >060Li bii66««iar- PeSdla pupplot and 'ahid aar FEor_FB 2-5635. REGISTERED , REGISTERED 1 VINO Ky 634-1551. Warren Soul, Realtor j 1 N. Opdyka Rd. FE 5 6165' Open Evas, ■fll 6 p.m. I LARGE OR SMALL land confraeft. 1969 USED SINGER I TOutH AND SEW controls tor buttonholo's, ilg-zog. fancy dosigns etr. Smooth, sloady state feoJurei. for each touch button oporotlons. { glosa toMo Davltburg, ATL“lTANlW“iHd''bSwh, tor^^loyor piano rolls. Best ^ 6S»A For Sato IWIicaHaiwBin 67 CY^^S PRIVACY FENCE, sj^ns, 5 and 6' hslghf, 37.W i DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 32x160 ft. building formerly manufacturing, frolght alovolar. i: MILLION 196?ZieZA6 SEWING MACHINEa must b*^(< -built-in conlrols-to make button halos, ovarcsst and blind stitches. COMPLETE PRICE. $43.20 crates. E-Z terms. 567 E. Walton . ot Joilyn, 335-5724. HONESTLY. YOU CAN ?.7,r "T*«r; "tor-Vss "it Hi-Fi, TV and Radios Doran's New WarehousR ^ 367 Walton of Joalyn, 335-5^4 xrNG SIZE Soiia 'ihiliriit,~nowlK^, 21" CONSOLE SYLVAN IA Color TV, jalvto^baao, axe. condition. Eyas. I, 5 and 6' height, t7;50 ric built In rang# ml'oTT'lumber IMS Oakland ________FE 6^555 lARN VVdbD, Railroad tlai,... sizat. Free dallvary. 335-51M. ______ S14.5S. Tollett, _______ Michigan. Fiuorascant, 353 Orchard Lk. Ft 6B462-37. ___________^ SORRY SAl. la now a marry gdl. She uiad Blue Luatra rug and upholatary claanar. Rant atoclric 41 el'^tpn'' *^''^**’"'* |fr STtEL YARD'Oataa. 5 It.'' Wo. 5 wire Naw. t-Ooubla I Single. Macninitt toola and Furniture. FE fUR^LUS bmCEnStAIRS AND miic. iiisES. vybRK )rchard Lake IRKBENCHESrafcI KirLMINAtOII RfirerGI Cheap. Good — gw ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER O' BALDWIN AVE. Exeotlml 10x10 ... ITOxtpO^ft. P''j^''*Y P ________• building. r Commercial Buildings . Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 Off lea Open Ettonings A Sunday 1-4 'T^arrell^^ ZONED COMMERCItl MOxItS' with 30x120 ft. building. Close to propeaod Ostoopofhlc homos, lots or ocraaga o Wo svlll glvo you cstii tc equity. Our ipprilsor Is s your coll at: 674-2236 McCullough realty ^HMIond'Rd; (NT.45I |ll Cspiloi your '■Itinq Mtt interost Irto, poymints of For froo homo demo., call C_. Credit Mgr. til 5 p.m. IP toll, collect. 7294610 _ 1969 TOUCH-A-MATIC Now sewing mechines, does fa — mskes buttonholes, 14.30, balance only 01 KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION-065 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2617 DIXIE HWY._______676-2234 LIKE NEW coppertono got ranga, Norqo, 375. 673-5563, Bed spinge to be tpven away. LINOLiU»r“RUi AM-FM STEREO ANd r«dlo. comob modal, S50, 1 yr. oM. 1666 Cots Lake Rd. Keege Harber, » BLACK AND WHITE, 31" Magnavox conioto TV, $75. 33S4I761 attar 4. stitching, r Johnson’^i TV. FE 0-4565 45 E. Walton near Baldwin GRUNDIG-MAJESTIC conoola roi AM-FM Ihortwavf 4-tpaad chant LOANS ns to . BA ------ FE 4-7051.________I 1,50] LIKE NEW COLONIAL tlvlng room, MANUFATTIIRER'S CtOS&bUT' ^-1 or per si.iu per weex. tail oay or set, 9 pieces. Best otter fakes ll.i '“'^NUP^'-TUBEB’S CLOSEOUT bujti_night. 336-2544, Imperial. __ i No dealers please. 653-3238 after jItKtU ^ i APARTMENT SIZE GAS stoveTlS'' ________^__________________ A| perfect tor cottage, 610. 673-0075. i LIVING ROOMS, BRAND new, about --- .7— I i/, price. Lllllo Joo'S, 1441 Baldwiti, FE 2-6M2. NECCHI FARRELL REALTY ^S405 N. Opdykt Rd. Pontiac 3324S5? - PLENTY OE^SED washers, ■'“• *■ Baldwih, stoves, rotrlgorators, and trs ‘ fumituro boroalns. LIttto Bargain House, Baldwin at WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE Diamond Noodles oxcollent for medical building, restaurant, beauty shop, offices, etc.. Soil, Trade, or exchange. Contact Bob Bortlobough, Com-morclal E x c h o n - -■ McCullough Rlly. 676-3 Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" DOWNTOWN HOTEL 3-story fireproof hotel with liquor llconso and beoutitul lounge. 60 rooms Including banquet and mooting rooms. 9 oftlos rentals In addition. Full kitchen loosed out. Exclusive and profitable. 6150,000 down. 6250 to 61,000 COMMUNITY LOAl 30 B. LAWRENCE______ STOP YOUR HOUSE FORECLOSURE / Sion Uto bill ooltoctor 7/! vqur citodit oroblams /- v millions of dollars tot mc..,_,„ - widows, dlvorcqol. and people with bed credit qhi O.K. with us. Any-Rlsk^drti--■■- FURNITURE Next to__________ “AIR-CONDITIONERS pin^-- Warehouso sola of Name Brand olr-conditloners, new direct shlp- DELUXE AUTOMATIC zio leg sewing machine. Cabl. .. „ model. 'Embroider, blind hems, buHonholas, etc. 1947 mf -^ “ ‘ " over payments ol: y $5.90 Per Month for 9 Mos. OR $53 CASH BALANCE . GUARANTEED UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 261S Dixie Hwv. g. A. Thomwonp 7005 h Garage Doors and Openers Solos. FE 2-0303. ESTATE REEL MOWER, S' riding, 6350. 673jML___ FLINT AND WALLING dOOP Wtll Jot ---- 1 ftlftegs also a lot s. 429 N. Paddock. GARAGE. SALE; Clothes, lewelry,. soma furniture. For Intormotlon coll FE 2-3570, 2444 Alorton St._ GARAGE SALE; July 2W7 _______70 S. Tasmania, 10-S__ garage YOU-NAME/IT soio. Magazines, books, furniture, misc. Hrs: n a.m.-4 p.m., 7 p.m.-9 p.m. —■ -ft opdyka ' t Rd. d to salt; Hundradt of Ronowoblo-typa fusos. Frocllen of Original cost. BOULEVARD SUPPLY S- Blvd. E.__ _333-7I41 5fr matched MK'aiimond rTnos, 6100. Rovoro 0 mm movlo camaco, 675. 625-2643. ^ _______ submersibTe pumps —4" 5 H.P.—3 phasa In warranty - 14" '2 'h.p. -3 phase used 3 years also' 2 other 50 aallon watar . tanks. 363-3160. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 110 W. LAWRENCE ST. ' Evarylblng to matt your noodt Clothing, Furnlturo, Appllancos TRAILERS K 16 TIRES. 4 x . hoivy duty, 125. 651-1271. UTILITY TRAILER. 4X0, rock, spa tiro, $100. 601-2315. Igun primort tpoclol .. ... thoutond. FE 4-1754. ^ sVgun* ' Evorjrthlng tor too iportoman - ANTifONY SWIMMING poolt. Bonk -otos. Coll today for dotollt. RHODES POOLS M304______^ 250 W. Waltor BOWS AND AR^ROWS, 334-6349'" _Gano'6 Arcltory, 714 W, Huron rROWNtWfl Gougi supWp^, i: ----- ■■■- 'tntad rib, skoot one --- 6325 firm. 663- ________ , 0. 651-3665 ai.. Ppift |SALE _ DACOR "Scuba t rTbERNARO PUftS ~ ---- Jhamplon tirad by CH. HIGHLAND BIO STORM W-THUNDER. Paranta X-rayad, ax-caltont padigraa, pat or atwwv wormed and theta. 166-7766. : PbTF'applia^SorvIca 79-A 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edwards' High Fashion Poodto Salon, optn 7 day weak. Bloomfield PonUog. 335-5259 AKC TOY P^OD^^atod service Poodle Salon, 332 W. Huron rs 335^635_____ EVOI. 6M-S667 The solf^lon ol.......... _ For spbrtamon at Oxtord'a OAKLAND GUN RACK B & B AUCTION EVERY SUNDAY ....Vi:00 PjK WE BUY - SELL - TRAD*’y' Ratall 7 Days- '* ' UPRIGHT PIANO, Maytag v a furnitun A radio ccnieto. 163-7070. UNCLAtmED LAY-A-WAY SINGER sawing machine, Zig-Zog oqulppod. Mtrely insort fashion disc for dacoratlvo stitches. Stw Ilka new. Yours tor 628.70 or will accept . per month tor 5 months. Coll WEATHERED BARN siding. Highest offer tekos. 797-4742. July 3l, i LRD and' C aiM FrI. 9:0. __ Furniture, diahaa ai r 26 gauge. i or 474-9395.____ $anil-er(ig«l-Dirt I Dixie Hwy. ■ OR S-35iy BLUEBIRD AUbtidN I housat of quality modorn dhd Early American lUrnltura, ap-pllancat and mIsc. to be oold at auction. 'Sat., Aug. I at 7P.m. 16053 DIXIE HWY., HOLLY «r. of oak Hill Rd. SALES Safvlta! Awf*^ - PERliirNS' i; Swartz Crtoit SERIES 0# EXCAVATIONS irou ghaut Whltb Lake, dopandenco, Waterford Twp., fill dirt, cloy, gravel. If you r In notd of such, wo shall do-tor this to you for the coat of lulll^. pR 3-0935, 6 a.m.-11 p.m. k omt. Vtrna Saylti 400 N. Davison In uovison Victorian Noodlopoint chairs Completo tiquMhold-r^Bovarlan end Norltako dlnnlrwart, glosswora,' Sllverplote items, appliances Perkins Sale Service Auctioneers. PH.: Swertz Creek________655-5400 LhfBBtGck 88 HACKNEY YR. Ud pony; 1 holt ____ range, side-by-alde I broiler, 5 burners with grht-645. 007-5393. )le Gibson, Chrys. ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE - 40025 Van Dyke 0561 E. 10 Mila 'Illl 6 . ■ • 75 A HANDY PUCE TO SAVE MONEY I, PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 640 AUBURN, PONTTAC, FE 4-7181 . RCA WHIRLPOOL HEAVY duty H COPPER WATER PIPE, 26 I a ft. and M Inch copper , Rao-Riial'^h 673-2625.__________ m INCH PLASTIC d ml. East of Back Rd. GARAGE SALE rug loom, sov '-clothing, goi -----------Thu . Hand Taaii—Mnciiiinry 68 e YEAR OLD, like now Snop-on Valve grinder and lotacor, cost 11100 - soil tor 6650. KAR'S BOATS A MOTORS GARAGE SALE: 1295 EXsON, off boom. 630-4693, Pontiac Lake Road, Wad., Thurs., ----------------------- FrI., furniture ~ COMPRESSOR. GOOD running — runs ont "------------- 336-7477. sailing tor r, 674-0529, Thempion A Son., :__________ 7 PIECE DINING Room sal. HMi 2Vi mower. FE 4- OM Cooloy Lk. Rd. Nestors Store. NEED UP TO $5,000? ' You may bo surprised how cheaply •'ou can odd naw rooms, r—■--- emodol your present h ding your own work on, ______ ur money or matorlals. Whatovor our homo nteds sat: ' Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1408 Pontiac Stato Bank Bldg. 334-3267 !AND NAME REFRIGERATORS. ,__________ mN O R S, WASHERS, DRYRM NEFRIGaftATOB, STOVE, fraazar, 4D TV's. . pillows and mlscalTanaous, 673-3133, builttIn type' PHONE: 335-9724 gas tc 334-5183 BUFFET, TABLE, 5 chairs, 635. 336- S RESTAURANT, Keego Ha bulldlm property r““ ■- MI^SCT or 612-7672. Elizabeth tetoTrd!'^'... Easy Terms. 482-9524, Business Opportunities 59 HP ROTO-TILLER BUNK BEDS Choice of IS styles, trunc ■-'e trundle br^ - ^ " , ____________I. FE 4-7801, BRONZE OfTCHRUME DINETTE sale. BRAND NEW. Large and REFRIGERATORS. DISHWASHERS, “~">rs, washers, ranges, crate laged and Kratchad modali. y guarantood. Terrific saVingi. APPLIANCE LAKE RD, 674-1101 : doubla-ovan gM I, laavng itata, bast rRTSALE~ irds of malarial, 4 » Yard, Lay-ur r furnitura -now — _________ -.jrkmanshlp. COMMERCIAL UPHOLSTERING 335- BUILDING MONEY ont and End money, partlclpa-n for singles and multiples with CHOC-LiKS’ womsn needed In this______ tms part of the greatest llscovory since chotole''' soil, 665. 602-7565. WILLYS JEEP, waik-ln' ail truck), for what. H ilth Moving Co., to 5. Jessie 1967 TRIUMPH 650 TR-6 motorcycle ----------- —- ligger. Aft. 4 BUfCK SUPER hardtop, good *' ?. 363-0061, dir. “CARPETING' 501 1 I yards wIectlOn of color! DuPont 501 Nylon, must sacrifice 100's of yards of better carpeting, ss:i? ::r r:; 64.68 sq. yd., tree estimates. Household ------------ ■"" IROME DINETTE SETS, yourself, save; 4 chal,>, i°uiv, 669.95 value 629.95, also 6 chair sets hew 1969 designs,* formica tops. Michigan ' Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake. FE 4-6462--33. DOVE CAR TOP camper -canbpy and tent, adjust __________ ____________________________ car, original cost 6300. Lead guitar! DINETTE SET, REFRIGERATOR, with-ompi will trade for motorcy- ..'— —'—■ '— -------------- clf in oxc. condition or soli. 674- $54 CASH OR $6 PER MO. PAYMENTS GUARANTEED UNILVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2615 Dixie Hwy^^_FE 44)905 SACRIFICE Extremely high prol realized In this ne vertited product. Part time OR full time positions available. Only sincere need apply. Required o Small Investment In 6995.00 To T 62,995.00. Investment return can, be realized very quickly. . , For further Intormatlon write Nationfl Suppliers Corn. 7262 Natural Bridge Road St. Louis, Mo. 63121 ' Include phone number wllh request NEW MbTOR'CVCLE," swap pickup. 682:9455. ? SfeE 'ad for'SO Northern ec ■■—‘fr classltlcatlqn 51A ___ ~ 3RdbM home n BEDRO. . Will trade large brick. 3 with basement and ai-garaga, near Clerkston. Clarkston branch, 625-2441. Sale aothing YELLOW LONG FORMAL, i CALL: Bill Word, 674-3184, eves., 851-3432 | PIZZERIA FOR SALE, in MlTtord.l Mich. Property and building incl.i Mutt : soar Oorit'a Driva-ln Plz-I izerla, W. Huron St., Milford. Cam ItaS-ttOS or 615-1623.__I ROYER HOLLY OFF^E y ServicaStation-Store with Z bodreem homo, located Holly. All r- ■'-* ... NEW SCRATChId rofrlgeratc Also dinatto sals, new tpring ai mottress sets, 829.951 CSU, 10 I washer, sofa bed, bedroom set, rnisc, jtem^Call Eves. 651-3015. “ “ ■ DISHWA^ffER SALE Wholesale prices to public, r 1969 dishwethers,' Hotpolqt, C Kitchen-Aid, Whirlpool. Ph 111 Westinghouse.'eic. 698. ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 48825 Van Dyka ... 8561 E. 18 Milo I Dally 18 - 9 739-1810 64|Tum., Sat. 1^6 ____ 755-9090 DRAPERIES, brand naw, gold, 1 10. X 82-100" 82-72" x 63. Orlg , ( I 6100^ MCrjtico 650.J3M^ ______ AC DR-y'ER. 635; REFRIOERAfdft~625; 21" TV, 635;_bunkbeds; _apartmeiti 1 5-2766. I LlltirJne's!j46TBaldwrn,‘T=E 2^ 'ESTATE FURNITURE, living, .dl'n-I inq, bedroom, some antiques, ! dishes, misc. Basement sale. Bs I Ejgioore. Ellz. Lk. _ ELECTRIC STOVE,' S25; Gas Stove, 635; Refrigerator with top freezer, 649; Wringer washer, 640. G. Hor-i rjs, „F£ 5-2766.______ , . - FRIGrOAIRf ROOM aiR conditioners , 8.000 BTU Slide window, ’ Used 2 months 6,000 BTU. used 2 months 16.000 BTU Floor modol CRUMP ElECTRIC 3465 AUBURN RD. FE 4-3573 —------------------------------ J. Vi WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3T~) AO* r i DJNE'ftE SET CLOSE-OUt' BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN ‘house 1461 Baldwin of Walton FE 2.6a«, Acres ot Free Parking _EveL_'fllJ;Jot. JHI 6. E-Z terms ELECTRIC STOVE, GE, over^-*51 njl except, meat fhormometor. ' hshdmower; tondom tral cttossls; trailer oxio. 500-7205; 'S' BOAT, 35 h.p. ihd fktllor, I motor; 10 h.p. Johnson, .... moplo love so— vltw. Complete, Ing. Must soil. F I HP evinRUdc winter coats, h.— ........... men shirts,' encyclopedia sat, 6 2569.__________________________ W" CHROME BRONKLE bika ma by Matel. 620. 2 ping pong lab) 67. FE 2-6405. K7 GALLON AQUARIUM, Oil 1 cessorlas, 640. 2" commarc water pump, 650. Extarlor dc.. with aluminum storm and tcraan ^Joor, -64»,'30 h.p, -A6ar«urV, --- start out-board, naads —• — Elactric cour GARAGE SALE: Clothas, gamoa, old -,.y antique hqn#lnB lots of lunk, July 31 I. 61S7 Elizabeth Lake «• GARAGE SALE. C______________ Ilzas 34, ladiM sizat 12, odds a ELECTRIC DRILLS, baiKh grindtr, ^ .Kohlar aoiomw alacfric gtnarator, Bushman saw, powar taw, alactric plannar It'' -------- drivar, 10 Rochastar Wtdnatday and Thurs, 9-7 p.m, Fancing, and mlsr AraQE SALII 3935 Du Drayton Plaint, off Walton I 8 Tut, to Pri._______________, GARAGE SALE, VERY good ctalhlng, oxc. priett, 694 E. FIrit ■■ St., 3M-22B1, Thur6.-S«, ________ ' - DARAGE SALE: MOVjt» must Mil, '* furniture, appllancoa, ^wotar m loyct houia lock, 6-c floor lack,.oir aandor end grinder, car tow bars; rtWII floor model grinder, paint spray bunt, Homellta gas wafer pump, Sioux 0' eloctrlc polllshor, vacuum cleaner, typowritor, WoBoor.topa recorder. $ H.P. outboard motor, 1 H.P. air compressor, 1 — 4 drawer screw bins full of motal screws ■ " misc. tools. OR 34575. .^11 griiuai products, fill sand a dirt, crushed llmeitona, A-I I toll black dirt. Phona 3944041 . araat dallvered.________________ 9 SAND, GRAVEL, AND dirt. Latham Precast Stone IS3-I920 or OSl-tC" eves. ________________ SPECIAL - LIME atone, 10-A ato id gravel, a >, MA 5-2161 ■ Pen^ntiRi^gs__________________ 79 Abordtan terriers, b I a ------t, poodlat, tropical flah, otic pets, pot auppllot a GROOMING. Nil Odor, 61.49 , . Dog sllvors. Artificial aquarium plantt, Vi 1 Gorblls, $2.99 a pair. Uncle Charlie's Pat Shop, 696 W. J ARABIAN gelding. 5 yoart olb, 14.3 hands; ^yaar-old Tannatioo walking horat, gaMIng. _^blo D. C. Arabian Farm, 62S4MI. ARABIAN STUD gray.,s— — BEAUTIFUL 0 yr. 6^ qbartoMypo pitatura horse. Wtll tall to ox-parlancod rldar only, 627-2544. •o'S.tTS 5«5Se« Also mllE goat, naw tnUklng, PINTO GELDING PONt^. 3 ................. ___I, gantla, broka. Vkrag. Arabian itud colt, 693-1400. palomino. Alto aaddloO a n 4 - Stocc" i^o 6 GARAGI ^SAL^: Mostly ladles, children's clothlh condition, 9 unll 9 p,m„ 616 Sharon South, corner of,M-59, Watarterd. SMALL DELTA WOOD shoper .icuttert, Carpenters Plants, Grinder, small surface Plata ^i^.^Tap and Die sat. PI TORO POWER HANDLE 'With 2V rotary mower and “ tachnionts. $150, 334-0S27, • TOY POODLE STUD SERVICE, h PUPPIES, ALL COLORS, 3720 BALL MOUNTAIN RD., OFF M-24, 335- rABSOLUTELY Adorable Sealpoint ".Pnu Slamtta klttona. Exe. Color. 3^- TRADITIOMAL SOFA gold, 6 year -■-' refrigerator copMrtona both ellent condition, 651-3612, TAKE OVER PAYMENTS of 6 ~-~ins ot furnlturo. MY 3-1412. 12^EEL RIQIN6 lawn rf n portoblo TV; 623^. • 63 SQ. YDS. WOOL carpafing, 6 i, ^alT after 5t:FE~ 24601.----- StHT OF ANCHOR FENCE With gate'end-all fittings, never us: 690. French. Provincial dining rw suite, buffet, and hutch, sort table, 3 chairs, 15 months old $2 6644750. )947 SEARS .AIR COlbDITIONER, 11,000 BTU'C $123. 473I-5866. 1968 ZIGZAG SEWING MACHINE Manufacturar goofed. Wrong color. Yours tor only •" ““ -- *''” — mo. per 6 mo, _________ _______ _ with good credit. Call dealer 336-: 4537. WsiSb BtU Air cdndlflo«rF plan^ 1 twin bad frame, < PARTS. Mlacallanooua, Free co and lamondda. 7275 Pontiac L Rd. ,Uso Elizabath Lake Rd. _ ■■ ~ ■ “• ' ■ Rontlac Carntrai - SBrvIcB 78 BESEUER TOPCORN 35mm cameri and motor dthto. Call 363-0129 of tor 6 p.m. ' '_____________________ q BELL and HOWELL Super I W40.*?E ^7r> ' BNLAftGER., BOGEN Suptr 66-A, i ION plcturo 2 pups, champion itock, roody N now. Sire wr'—* ■“ ““ pSp/^»o*S P, WOOD iotntar. and, PJanot, , 0 and ktand, 6475. FE A UPRIGHT i-KBecEK, sou; ^j^tdolro rofrigarotor, 620. 601- meetlng rooms, office!., awival chairs, desk, bluo-prlntoftlas. drafting boards, 5x0 multi draww r cablnats, tlraproof eablnair, : typewriters, adding in a c h I n ot, mimeographs, and effsat printing prastat for church work. FORBES PRINTING Ol OFFICE SUPPLY, END OF MONTH-' . 6199S5 RADIO ANd’aPPLIANCE INC. whit'e llama si _J:os*‘61, _ ____________ WESTINGHO'USE I960,' 0,000' BTU air condltionar. 6130. Attar 5, 602- :onditlan, originally w _6S0^ __ APPROXIMATELY 1000, 13x19 alumiMm siding with bock... white or colors, 637.50 dollvorod. 667.50 instslled - 338-6966, 325 EIIZ. f ^ C 6 L V I N A T _ ______ i AKC bIaCK toy Poodle pupphll. I wks. old. 693-2709, i AKC IRISH Sattar pupi. a, axe, blood lines. 6024034. AKC DOBERMAN PUPPIES, 11 ! I MEAT CUTTING, Proozor vrappad. Wa cure and amoko neats. Call FE 241SS. • ROMEO MEAT CENTER - HomO s .--------- A 9,, , iirtc ... ___ .. Jraaztr. Cut. wrapped batora you. Give ua ■ call ITcSf!«VW8S!rl — “----V. 67140 van Dyke. ' BALED STRAW^ HAY^^61I4657 OVa., I CHERRJES. Montmorency, you pick, good supply,. oxcollent . quillty. French Orchards, 1290 Stato. Rd., S, side ot Fenton. CUCUMBERS, ALL SIZES,' Sweat , com next weak. 43» Moroan Rd., ~-a»V4009.,. . • ...... CULTIVATED bl l06. iquarl Ol M ME3, 351 .jrAW.®L FE S-1341 WAREHOUSE SALE open to p entire Inventory'of now wai ranges, rotrlgorators, etc. Mu sold. Every item discounted, i . , below cost, scratched Items ptlcad HILP APPLIANCE CO. ..14 14 Mile niar Telegrapi 24123 W. IP Mile near Teiegrai ALUMm'UM vortical, bl panel, tmoi 619.95 In loti 336-6966. 225 eiizaooin uoxo Ko. "ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN * FE 5-7; ih.^ ^wdtr LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPS, to 2 ho., priced from S62.50. ( Thompion and Son. 7005 M-5 LAWN SPRINKLING tystOmli, Inch Plastic pipe, 6345 par 100, 1 plastic pipe, 5.61 .par 100, 1 Plastic ploa, 60.51 per 100. 1 - plastic pipa, 110.01 per 100. 6, i , Thompson 6. Son, 7qos M-59 w. ' Leaving state, tumiiurb, i ■ pllancos, tools and •tc,_M7-46H. MUST SELL Singer model No. 66, In ioi walnut cabinet, complete wl «w,l LLCHRMriLC i PIANOS 6150. 2-900x15 Firestone snow' 'S cfTIONAL Dayon'port, GOOD REFRIGERATOR BUYS Also close-out on all floor s— ranges, tvashtrt, drytrs and E-Z terms. Litfla Joe's. TVs, k for‘’H-!’ S'ECflONAL~l ---- ------;, FE 2-6862.______ .. *«' HAMILTON DRYER, used, ’( condition. MA 6-7430. _ ___ HOUSiEHOLD SPECIAL USE YOUR CREDIT - BUY 3 ROOMS- OF PtJRNlTUR*—hCoik - YOUNG MARRIEDB Need furniture? Undor 217 Wt < RVusyh"oi/”AM5?."^6as!&^' ntiqur ; 45.4 BLOCK GARAGE SALE. MOBILE HOME, 3 badroom, couple only, 61,000 down, --------- — . ... __________ mo., <225 ElIz.Lk.____________________ Comotory. 673-7924, NORTHWEST 6 Crdno, W boom b-6 UPRIGHTS $59 RESTYLED AND RECONDITIONED PIANOS FROM $199 GRANDS $195 SPINETS $219 .. ORGANSl... THOMAb SPINET WALNUT ’' 4-6433~paroio^' aiid 'Qerblls;’~^ BEAUTIFUL ALASKAN rnolamute ' puppy, AKC, fomale, 3 mo. old. Will sell to good home at vtry reasonablo price, FE 2-5077. BEAGLES, 3"RlGISTERED an net. 10 wooka. $30. 336-9773. COCKER PUPPIES, AKC, champion COLLIE PUPS, Male AKC shots _ . wormed, healthy and adorable, $75 to 3100. 644.4106. CLOSE-OUT FLOOR MODEL ~ Whaelhorsa tractors and mewert, Wa will net bo undersold. Lowest prices. Tom's Hardworo, 9 01 Orchard Lk. Ava. FE S-2626. ■ GRAVELY 5 H.P. ttactor 'SltST sprayer, 36 In. and 41 In.; rotary reel mowers, 50 gol. spray u $750. Both tractors In No. 1 wi Ing order. Moving to apt,, tai COLLIE, MALE, 6 COCKER PUPS, ALL eolori, AKC, health and^ disposition guarantood, STUD SERVICE, Dorfl Ktnnols, ------ -----------Chairs* chllda desk, drasaart, 6424159, BASEMeNt SALE. Monday-Frlday, .... 04/Catorplllar l---- ploneter Gravel Plant, mo home trailer,' ! bads,i lea I UlCE'CANO^ lEa", parfict i PEARSON'S FURNITURE ..... NOW OVED TO 640 AUBURN, •PONTIAC, FE 47001. 3 badroom ranch home. Built t PHONE 623-8204 AAOTEL AND RESORf S Looking tor a ttwtol ar raaqrt? M "srAfmiDTnat est/^e^ Pontiac Press Want' Ads for Action :. ANTIQUE DISHES, ’ Or., Oft Michigan. ' rf" 7-piaca badroom autto with double --isar. Cheat, full-slia bad with irsprlng mattress and m—*-'-" chairs and table. All fgr 3M Credit IS good at, Wyman'A / WYMWkN / /furniture CO. ANTIQUE SHOW TEL-12 MALL Aug. 1 to Aug. 1A Mon. Ihr 'Kd^iyvi.............. CAMPER FOR 1963 Chavy Slap 6lda DiCk-UD. 1704163 ' ____ l?toor!j?h CUSTOM AwtiauE r6pinishii Spoclallzlng In fUrntnire rotihlsh and iuwiiFt Of air typos. 3634 PICNIC Tables — oftfaT lokas. navaltlai. I “—*' Ou.tpott, 3265 Dixie $649 . Plus MANY-OTHER GOOD BUYS LOW EASY TERMS GI^INNELL'S (downtown Store only) ----- 2f-$.-SAGmAW— DOGS TRAINED -home or ours. I frai^^ _!^hUa you^ Himdwara,"9^roriicart'Lilw*A'va. 6-OP ftUMAAAOE SALE - lota Of ava^fhlng, rsasenabta. 2f Augusta St, Pontiac Thurs. thru Sun, 9 *■“ T PORTABLE STEEL ftgOt * Phan* «a4634. , ______ Pickup cover completely tinishtd, wired tor 12 volt 110. CB S5SopSss..*pr^iqi*"- FOR SUMMEMUNT „ BEACH - HOME Ukaa — ^pranq tonor — Barit MORRIS MUSIC I braadtJ Your -.....jva ' yqUr dog while you are on vacattOn. ind^ti boarded.: Pupa tor ENGLISH SETTER PUPS. FOSB, latge aaiacthin. t-765-y"~ FREE KITTENS TO g males and tamale. 673....... FEMALE CAT, NICE pat tiir aMirly parson. 6234943 mif 4 p.m. i^is^lTdritidc Press Want Ads For Action JUSP CRII/' *. 334-4981 ; ’ 7;M92. ■i^our ''Homaiito chain■ SPEClAi, OFFER FREE CHAIN FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY. JJeCULLOCH SAwSSriCEO aS $119:95 KING BROS. I' PICK-UP CAMPER, 14'TlGiiiUR^Lf Iftil , ■ For Want. Adi Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEPyESDAY. JULy-30. 1969 \»J|TIZZY D—18 Chick our deal ( SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILER! . FROLIC TRAILER! AND TRUCK CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS Jacobson'’'Vra?ler Sales MOTOR HOME 71', S3', 75' MODELS Sm thlt Callfornl* buHMn unit which li No. 7 In motor horn ulu. PrIcM ilort at up. STACHLER tRAILER SALES, INC. tm Hlahland (M.5»_________<12-744! *'‘*"1^5* O 4 used travM trail.... — ......... MUST 60 — at Yoarand Pricti. Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 1S210 Holly, Holly ME 44T. FACTORY. .-.SPECIALS ■ . JJM WCHE KAMUA plastic windows, curtains, i *TrE0O°US SAVIN6 AT $1595 ny used camping trailers, res EVAN'S EQUIPMENT *...... <25-2514 . CEDAR LINED CLOSETS, ancloted utility room, king-sizo master bedroom, and front kitchen.. You'" leva this Marlottal S E L E C . MOBILE HOMES. 6-5055 Corunna Rd., Flint.___________ DETROITER-AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KROPF < Double WMat, Expandd. Custom built to your order Free Dollvaiy and Sttdp WlHtln SM Mliaa AT . BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Dally y and ! !ELECr^OB*LE' HOMES, 6^3055 Corunna Rd. Flinf. Anderson's Super Summer Sale Newl 441 cc BSA . . .$ 895 Newl 500 cc Triumph $ 995 Newl650 Triumph ..$1195 Newl CB 350 Honda .$ 695 Newl 450 cc Honda . .$ 995 New! 90 cc Honda . . ,$ 339 Newl 50 cc Honda Mini Trail ...$268 Newl 250 cc Ducatl : :$ 495 MANY MANY MORE! 300 BIKES IN-STOCK LOW DOWN PAYMENT EZ TERMS (All prices Plus Tax) ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE HAVE YOU SEEN THE ALL tlfeWI OMEGA Motorhome with the Chevy ChassKi 3501 angina, power staorlng, brakes, whttls,'Mmm!^^ 5nly at Holly Trovol Coach, Inc. 1.1210 Holly. Rd» Holly WE-a,to7. '^LITTLE DEM" pickup campots, covers custom built. 4251 Hatchory Rd., Prayto". 3, MOST EVERYTHING In the way of part and for tht travel trailer. jp JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS WdlWi at JQslyn___FE 4-5153 -McClellan travel fRAILERS 4*20 Highland Road (M5t) Phone 474,3143 JULY SALE ' 5 Trallirs Reduced to Cost 1 23 foot west Wind Supremo 1 22 toot Bonanza Deluxt MUST SELL 1^40 ilcona, bedroom, don or 3rd bodro Located, furn. Extras. 33S-51t7. MOBILE HOME ON lot. Boat Of BIG SAVINGS 50 CC Bonelll mlnlcycla ... 125 CC Bonelll ....... ._______________ 250 CC Bonelll .............. NEW MO^>, eiixl condlllon, 175 CC Brjdgojjon. |^.IL 350 CC Bridgestone.............. . Perry Lawn & Sport Equip. 7405 Highland Rd. (M-57) 473-4234 ROYAL-OR'-REGAL ACTIVE 15'xlV* IIvlnflroom~^^ 3043al. gas hot vrater hooter Nylon carpeting over rubber pad TOWN 8. COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy, 334-6694 tally 'til I Sat. 3. Sun. 'tl ..........'M bedrooms, aeparatod for n privacy. Sto this 12' x 40" ..- at SELECT.MOBILE HOMES, G-, 5055 Corunna Rd., Flint. '_ ReBt Teller Space 90 ^Im^MOBiiJ^ priced 1 MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE LOW RATES $. K. JOHNSOt^OENCY MG'S^ SPECIALS 1969 Suzukis 2S0CC SAVA6E ENDURO . 500CC TITAN............ 35()CC REBEL .......... 750CC Hustler ......... 1747.15 H-P. EVINRUDE, 1747 ib. capocity ahoy trollar. Also ly 32,575. Sae the 14' and -------"-‘on display. .... .. W. HlghlonL. _____ to Hickory RIdgo Rd. to Demode Rd., left and follow signs f* DAWSON'S SALES, T I P S I C LAKE, Phono 427-2177._________ BIRMINGHAM BtfAT CENTER Slorcraft, Sllvorlino FIbarglas and *■—’----boats. Mar- —— - __________Woodward__________ IRIS craft ski boat 115 folding top, - *------- - Ogy 'iM hoV/^ yrivolo* CHRISk;RAFT HUrlno engine, 115 kio lllFA oa,.sa. ” FOR 'TLKAN'* used CARS TOP S FOR CLEAN ^CARr"6R trucks. Economy Cars, 2335 Dixie TOP $ PAID All Cadillacs, Buick Electro 225s, Olds 98$, Pontiacs and anything sharp with air conditioning. WILSON GRISSMAN CADILUC Tl» H: Wsodwird 1743 VW RED, tunroof, ~ OP DOLLARS FOR SHARP, L 17« tRIUMPH^ 2 tOPO, jgp^, brakaa, <74-25D< ei Junk Can-Traek^^ 101-A CARS' trio tUCKS, trad CHRIS CRAFT FIBEROLASS SKI BOAT ; 230 H.P. LAKE 8. SEA MARINE Blvd. at Saginaw . FE 4-7537 DO IT YOURSELF BOAT DOCK» -ALUMINUM ^ WOOD. LARSON BOAT YOUe^ EVINRUDE DEALER Harrington Boat Works 1177 S. Talattraph 333^033 DONZi. — 211) H,p - Beautiful CompidliP^rtrnovad'fi^. '241-5524. Rocket Trailer. 34500. 3733 Lake =--■=—------.. Front, Casa Lake. ALWAYS BUYING'ji hK CARS < 5-2(X)5. John McAuliffe Ford 1745 M6 Sedan, with 4-spaad, radio, haotor, root nleo eoiwllon, summer special at only — <74! full pried. P.S. We've MovedI 1S45 s!'T’elogro^*Vd''^*'** *4-41 FOR THE BEST DEAL ANYWHERE ON- . I FREE~ TOW anytime! Star Craft; Glastron; 6. W. Invadir boats. Johnson motors; Crest pontoons. Scrtmblar; Terra WANTED; JUNK CARS HliW TOWINO Come To JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT...... M Mila E. o^Laj^|r City Limits Open'll to 8 Mon-Frl. 7 TO 5 SAT. 3. SUN. HYbROPLANE and trailer Uted^t^rtfdr Parte I TIRES, 470 X 15. $11 each. l 454 POSITIVE TRACTION Chevy TAKETw-^*hi™W.*HlBhfairf rl --------RIdgo Rd. to Dmod clean. 4M-4460 aft, i_______ ‘' 1742 OLDSMOBILE DYNAMIC I sell tor parts. OR 4-3371.__ ., IW p6nTTAc front bumper. BONUS 3 months frao lot rent purchasers. Holly Mobi....... ....... ..... Located Dixie Hwy. (US-10) corner Coll 343-7704. of Oik Hill Rd , Holly, Michigan -------- Commercial Trailere 90 Plus tax and llcansa MG SUZUKI SALES 147' Dixie Hwy. 473-4451 Driyfen Flalni_______ SUZUKI MOTORCYCLES, SOCC. 1 500 CC., all Iniactlon, 12 nwnths oi 12.000 miles warranty. Cycle ac cassorles, Rupp's Mlnl-Mkat. AKE M-57 to W. Highland, right h Hickory Ridge Rd. To Demodo Rd., loft and follow algns to DAWSON'S SALES, TIPSICO LAKE. Phono 427-2177. Over .100 1969 Boots NOW ON DISPLAY Glastron, Sea Star North American Aluma Craft, Mirro Sail-fish, Sun-fish Mercury & Merc Cruiser Cruise Out, Inc. -- ", WalfPn- ewsod Sun. FE s -Open 7-3, Men.-Frl., 7-5 Sat STING RAY FUN BOAT, 20 hp. electric atarf, 1320. The doorsman Sport Centor, 1744 GMC 305 V-4 or 371-0745 HEADER aulofnoMvt, 3 8374. SALE, '.m ITEMS: 1744 PONTIAC 317 power, comglote, $55 287 Mustang angina 3150 1945 Mercury 370 ang'--1745 Ford 352 inglna Ford 4 cylinder ei3 CL 1744 Pentlac-387 angina 1150 3:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Fri. 8:00 to 12:00 Soturdiy 701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 14 VW, LIKE NEW, lautlful blue It llk« NEWl So •ngini tiftoMt swovti SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 855 5. Rochostor Rd. 451-5500 1744 VW, LIKb NEW. I'iiM 1966 RENAULT $475 GRIMALDI CAR CO. lakland Avo. FE 5.7421 FIAT 1744 ino SPYOER Convs 473-4723 bolwoon 5 and 7 p.m. 1747 TR4A CONVERTIBLE, powder Call 41 I rack, V i, 81450. 60 to 75 USED CARS AT ALL TIMES Transportation cors LuxuiV -Cars Foreign Cars Compacts 2-door 4-door hordtops FromJlSS Up No reasonable otfar aver Refused I GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 218 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 2-7 BUICK Wildcat custom 4door dlop, with boautlful hi-tant ■p.S.'We've’Movedr'“’ V> Milo N. of Mirada Mila rologroph Rd. fe 5-4101 1745 CHEVROLET Malibu Sport Coupe. Olivo groan with matching imarlor. v-s, automatic, bucket consgif. radio, haotor, br.m*''F’di>??j?; Al at 482-2041. Doalor.___ Tom Rademacher CHEVY-OLDS On US10 at Ml 5 TOWN 8. COUNTRY CHRYSLERiPLYMOUTH ROCHESTER' N. Main St.________451-4220 174! DODGE CORONET' 44!), 7 passangar wagon, olr, power •iMflng and brikoa, 82300, 343-2134 power slooring and bra'-..........' top, radio, heitor, i iarry Sheehan's HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 125a«okland 333-7863 ntiny extras, 1 1747 BUICK ELECTRA 225 Custoit), 2 dr. Black vinyl top, uphol$tory. Air, power, rodlo, . .. wheel, and other oxtraa. Offered by original owner. Extra clean. 82400. Phone FE 5-4434 or 343-7713. fully 0 It 482-2041 Doolor. Bill Fox Chevy 755 S. Rochostor Rd. 451 John McAuliffe ford automalle, power ttoorlng, beautiful metolllc turquolso with matching all vinyl interior. * — roer special only 81480, full pri P.S. We've MovedI 68 VW FASTBACK 2 door. White with burgundy tarlor. Excellent condition. F ’ [New biid l^d Trucki^ 1-1742 GMC TRACTOR s troilers. FE 2-8247 or FE 5-3! 1968 llAT 850 4 speed s y n c r 0 m transmission, rtally fine and 11475. GRIMALDI CAR CO. K) Oakland Avo. FE 5-7421 ir TRI-AXLE TRAILER, It special prices._______________ See Us for Specials COLEMAN CAMPERS . SUN AND SKI MARINA On Cass Lake, 3781 Cass-Ellz.-Rd.. THEY'RE HERE HI-LO . ’" TELESCOPING TRAILER UP FOR LIVING t DOWN FOR TRAVEL \ '"village TRAILER SALES <470 DIXIE CURKSTON ' SALES-SERVICE-RBNTALS k^gL. FRAME^ PjCKUP: — dustrlos, 554 Franklin R TirefAHte-Truck _ 92 REPAIR, MOUNT, and baldflco mag -----whaals. Npw and usad :-Amarlean ET, Craetr, Stmtaw f YlrV*CoTs^OrSuIrd Aoto Service — Re|wh' 1- BoattrAcceisorlet__________ ’ 3 POINT RACING hydro wl H.P. 4-cylInder mere. steorln< dead man's throttle ready ti .UMINUM BOATS (LHatimo guar- - —), IS ca 91 ■ TERRIFK DTCOUNTS in all boats, pontoons and cano AT TONY'S MARINE Johnson motors — 33 years repair experience. 1 3475 Orchard LK. Rd. Sylvan Lake 1754 GMC 1 ton condition, FE 2-17 1757 chevy W to ‘■g fibirglM runabout! .....85 Save $$ at-Buchanan's 7447 Highland Rd. 14' BOAT AND meix,. 31 . «8 Unlvar*ny Or. ley TRUCK CAMPERS **^‘ivtld^ Aluminum frame, l™.„ ______________________ Insulation, loads of closot space, 125 CC RIVERSIDE -•--ohy W ton can carry. , AMERIGO / / Flborglib top, f I 0 X I g I d i s wlndihliia, boautlful d 0 s I g n , /•"Navaly Interior, sloops«, /lllver-Eaglo ^ ’// Nimrod Trpvol Tratloro - Comping Troilott y Treohor'i Tra'rtgrs 4kl-8745 ^ 2012 P^tlac Drive T Vilk. NW Tol. and OrSi. L'- \FIBER6LASS boat, 46 hp, \ — —■ ________________ EVlhruda alictrle, tcollar. SI,125; (UPP.mini-bike, S HP r nmei 8734B83. *G«iti!y used random boat trailer, g'__________________ 473-4043 YOUNG' JOHNSON. & CHRYSLER MOTORS Open dally 7 til 4 Sunday 10 to 4 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lake Drayton PliHno.^...gS 441411 Waiite4 Cmre-Tro^ ■ 1i EXTRA^biiors Paid~ FOR THAT ’ EXTRA Sharp Car 1742 CHEVY V> Ion pickup, folks this .ls-.a.-.iouthai:iL truck with no ri-*' Solid man. Solis'.'axtraroxtri-Ti * ShIlTON Pontiac-Buick 55 S. Rochostor Rd.________<51-5 142 CHEVY 1 -liON truck, cabT chassis, good condition,'S275. FE i 8105.__________ ______ ^ f74S VW MICRO-BUS, Ideal for camping, oxcollent cofidinen. Balge and white. 4S2-7350. ^________ BRAND NEW 1968 R 4A with IRS, 4 spaed syncromaffi transmission, radial ply tires, mag wheels, radio, was S37S0, NOW ONLY $2750. . GRIMALDI CAR CO. H) Oakland Avo. ____ FE 5-f42l BEFORE YOU BUY .... Bill Golling VW 15' M'ilo Rd.'(Maple Rfr;7 Across from Borz Airport betwoer Croaks and Coolldgo Rd. _ Just minutes away Troy Meter Malt Ml 2-4700 STANDARD AUTO . SALES . 742 Oakland Avo. VY IMPALA ■ $200. 423-1270. , 1742 CORVAIR, 2 door hardtop $7^. ' Sovo Auto ___ ■=■= 1742 CHEVY 7 passengi automatic, double 5. $2,7110 474-2803. 1966 CHEVY Wagon '“O deluxe, • — 425-4044 attar 4 p.m. or can_____________ Fodaril Auto Center, 1710 W. 10 Track Dr., $ to 4; AAon.-Sit. Doug. Prlvalo o)------------ P S, We've MovedI _Vfi Mila N. of Mlrclo Milo , S. Tdlagraph Rd. PE SdlOl fTdl FORD, GObb MSTbR, naoda battery. ofsoMS. 1742 FORD cbNvMbYibLl, omS On M24 in Lake Orion 6,93-8344 , r<7 CAMARO, V-0, This C ' ‘ ad. Bast offer. <82-2513. 1747 CHEVY Caprice 2 door hardtop, ‘-;lth automatic, power, V4, vinyl oof. Hero Is stylo and clasal SHELTON Pontiac-Buick $55 S. Rochester Rd. • 451-5 all original, no rust truly a classic, sumr only $488 full price. P.S. We've MovedI W Mill N. of Miracle Mill 1845 S. Tologroph Rd. FE --- CHEVR( Caprice station wagon. V8, factory air, power stiirlng, brakes, win- radio * ***^' healer, whitewalls. Low i $3095. Lorry Sheehan's HELSIDE, Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Ooklonjj 333-7863 743 CORVAIR. STICK, neodVwork. _ 474-2774 attef 4 pjin. __ _ 1743 CHEVR'OLET BISCAYNE s Wagon. 4 cylinder, ablomatic. 1968 Chevrolet 4 door sedan. Midnight blue . powder blue Interior. V! automatic, power steering and brakes, - Munic title. Full price $995 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Meple Rd. dXTroy, Mich. __ 642-7000 BEEN BANKRUPT? tlEED Reestablish your credit? chodse from. Cell Mr. Al, 2061 Dealer. _______ 1948 CHEVY Impala convertible with tJ7, power, automatic, this Is real black beauty. Something the young at heart I SHELTON Pontiac-Buick ■ Rochester Rd, power steering s price $375. Call A/ Dealer. l'748 CAMARO CLOSE re'tTo7'3 John McAuliffe Foi^ 741 FALCON itatlon wagon, SSJklg ictual mllet, i^tlosa condition. V* John McAuliffe Ford 742 t-bird hardtop, Landau, I beautiful candy apple rid fi ... «wjf 1962 T-BiRD Hardtop Excellent transportation, drivtt good, whlto^ finish, with rod Interior, only — $395 s TOWN 8. COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER ndl N. Moln St.______. 451-70W ' MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 743 Ford Country Sadin, 4 ossonger; V8, automatic, power steering, $175, 477 M-24, Lake Orion, 473-8341._____ 1743 FORD FAIRLANE automatic. Air shocks, good cohditiort. 8300. 424-1704. . 1743 FORD 6ALAXIE VS, automatic transmission, good condition, best offer, 852-5847 attar 4;30._. 17k T-BIRD, FULLY aqulpped, lusl Ilka now, can bo purchased with LUCKY AUTO John McAuliffe Ford T744 T-BIRD Landau with full powar, and new tires, runt Ilka a new one; summer special at only $988 fyll price. P.%, We've Moved! Mile N. of Miracle Mile 84S S. Telegraph FE 5-4101 lust LUCKY AUTO FORD 2 door, 4 cyllndoi, excellent condition, $375. Haro—Pay Here, Marvel Moto Oakland, FE 8-4077.______________ >■ DUNE-BUGGY, FINE $hi ......................flb^last , top. '43 ehas 4EVY tandem dump, trade tor 425-287$.________ up M pquol value. 3434)7tB. bUNE BUGGY CDNV( , $$50. 1742 DOpGE POyyER WAGON, 4 S yard d .-..JS, convertible top 481-0173, 482-2711. ,• 15' SPEfeO"'bUEEN, ---- --../bRTIBLE _ — curtains, hooter, and custom seats. Roil sharp, 81,300 " 4734348.-—— ^ _____ Volks wagehs [Maverick trade-ins) T^6r-*66^6S------ Several to choose from at 482-2041. _________________________ 1743 CHEVROLET Impala. Sport! Coupe. Silyeir blue with matching vinyl Intertorl V-8, factory 4 speed, buckats' seats, console, radio, haater, whitewallsl power stoar-.'Ing and brakca. Full price 8375. Cell Mr. Al at <82-2041. Dealer. .. 15' star' craft flborglaht b h.p. , Johnson excoUont cor skis,'cover, trailer, tlJUM), 338-4871. „ 15' FIBERGLASS SKI'boat, and '* .. h#, Mercury mdWr, will i..... for qylOL saH. 334G72T, trgllar. 874 =E 4^ r./Want Ads ’ For Action 5 CHEVROLET M-foii pickup .i Chevrolet y^-tdn pickup. i 1745 GMC '84.fon long box, paffeef $599 Call Mr. Parks »dtt msnaur, for pa/marit i^ula at Mr4r75O0. Ban? terms ....— — - —- -- ^------n- Immadlata delivary. whh no mpney ^wi^^.Easy farms. New location of LUCKY ^UTO , Turnbr Ford ............. 2400 Maple Rd., (15 Milo) Troy Mall 1 mile oast of Wo^arrl 1765 Chevrol* 1745 GMC • , condition. 1762 Ford Vf- ........• Tr II these trucks c Radio, I- --- matching interior. $295 STANDARD AUTO SALES 742 Oakland Avt. 1764 IMPALA SS 327, - --- megs, reverb, beautiful, 87^. ^32- 144 CHEVY CONVERTtBLE, V-L 'utomatic, good condition, 1^. FE - i'767 CHBVELLE, SS 394, automatic, - deubla power. FE 84000._ 1767 CHEVELLE 300, 4 cyfindo luxe sport coupe. 644-717S. DEMO / 1969 IMPALA Iport^ Sedan, loaded with, p TAYLOR CHEVY-OLDS -•HVaKact-traka-- MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH "I Chevy caitisrfai<6 cw vartlblow AutemaHe trai^u F4II prica./' f ! IHt FALCON Station wagai.. ..-CrsmT'^' Lorry Sheehan's 'hillside Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland ^ 333>7860| i*M' fordsT v^^aDtoMatics, powtr (taarlng and brakrn, SIOO, . FullJ»rica. LUCKY ALJTO P.S. We've Moved! ■ IMS 5^T!Haqhiph*'lff!'“^^ PE VnOl MUSTANGS -65-'J6'«7 Sovaral to cIwoh tram. . BUY NOW AND $AVE! feQB BOPST Lincoln^ercury Soles last W. Maota Rd., Tray Ml 4-23W t»M FALCON WAGON^J^^ transmitslon. Roof rack and radio. Full priea $»S. Bank t- avallabla hara. I m mad I , dellvary. Call Mr. Farki c managar for paymant schadu Ml 4-fsoo. Naw location of TURNER FORD » M^N^CM^Ha 1, AUTOMATIC,“radio 1467 FAUCI baautifi- ■ malChing itlcfcahlH, McAuliffe Ford .CON 6 door, with illvar bluo finlah, y intarior, radio, haa caa'XJM fold from n r «haw car warrai pacaaga, wliltawalli. and ow mint condition. Special $2195 'Bill Fox Chevy I ^ m i. Rochaitar Rd.___________im-1000 ' t^ COhPFlNeAL convartlMa. Fac- ■ rar,.."^--------------------------- New Mid Used Cm "shIelTON Pontioc^uick IW S. Rochaitar Rd. WM 19A7 FIREBIRD V 2 dear hardlab. Bhia botl4tn black cordovan tap,, Cuatam blf^ trim. I cylindar, jSutemattc tranamlMlon,, radla, haatar, powtr ttaaring and brakaa/ Lika now 'In-tida and out. Only $2095 “Could you slow down to jet speed?! I” ISO P.S. We’ve Moved I ’.O'MIla N. or MIracIa Mila ‘ Talagraph Rd. John McAuliffe Ford 1467 MUSTANO hardlDP With angina, 4 ipaad, r— powar itaaring, bral canary ydllow with b tob.’^^iummar tpaclal P;S. We've Moved! planty. Saa It for tura. . Lorry Sheehan's HILLSIDF Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 baaulifuii),*, comet w«Bon with luggaga jwdj*^ rack, bargain. 26341011, dir._____ wi' cometT lew oiidi Used Cm 154 OLDSMOBILI *4 door t Good condition, SI7S. Call at p.m. 674-1437. _____________ 1462 OLDS bynamic Bl, automatic. . thockt, 160. 62S-1774. i 1461 COMET. ... ^ ’-1 iwtiie w. nriiw ] automatiCr 3324369. mercury CoNvERWeEi^ 1M6 MUSTANG ^ hardfopp wfftt 269 w-«r _ pawor, baautIful -Wua finith, whi laathar buckat aaati. An Exti *siSatON Pontioc-Buick est s. Rochaatar Rd- 651-5SOO 1466 FORD GALAXie SOg hardtm, Kii!S!'^llfi Vrl^^iy.' Bank tarmi avallaWa hara. Im-modlata dallvary. Call Mr. Parki, aiaTX'4.7i51. tJSr'TS **"tl/RNER FORD . 260B Wapla OS Mila Rd.) Tray Mall 14M FORD loipiauangw wagon. OR ■ 3-535S. --- 1466 FdifO GALAXIE vartibla VI, automatic, p John McAuliffe Ford 1467 FORD Galaxia 500 hari vlth baautltul matalllc lima E 5-22701 "gofd 1464 MERCURY HARDTOP fattback. fr. Full ^ric( nty. Summar prica at only tllTI II prica. P.S. We've Moved! % tini WII NORTHWtSf AUTO SALES 2023 Dixia Hwy: FE 0-2820 , 1466 FORD Galaxia convartlbla, V-i, ■>,,» Hara — Pay Hara^ ASarval I, 251 Oakland, FE a-4074. 1467 FORD CUSTOM --dan, ttick thift, S42S, John McAuliffe Ford 1467 MUSTANG hardtop with \ ttick, radio, haatar. baautltul tori - ShoWrt^''*haw*’’*summ claaranca tpaclal only t15N t “‘l-S- We've Moved! H Mile N. of Miracle Mila S. Talagraph Rd._FE 5-41 11467 MUSTANG, 2 plui 2 automat air, warranty, and many axiri ■-------‘-‘- bondman. Dr, f. 1461. Bank 1 jmmadiata _______laoar for paymant tchadula at Ml 4-7500. Naw loca- TURNER FORD. 2600 Mapla (IS Mila Rd.) Tray Malt 1 Mila Eatt of Woodward 1465 MERCURY M9NTEREY. 4 door hardtop. Sahara gold with brown vinyl 'top ami matching vinyl Intarior. V-S automatib, radio. haatar, power ataaring and brakat. Whitewall tirat. Full price $345. Call Mr. Al at 6S2-2061. Daal- John McAuliffe Ford 1466 T - B I R D‘ CONVERTIBLE, beautiful - arctic whita with black top, automatic, radio, haatar, full power and factory Vacation ipaclal P.S. We've Moved! Vk Mila N. of MIracIa Mila 1045 a. Talagra^ Rd. FE 5- ». V-I, aufo., i ______IS-7447 afar 5 p.m. 1466 FORD FAIRLANE hardtop. "3W" V-a, ataaring. radio, haatar, S1445. Larry Sheehan's HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1466 FORD "GALAXIE, convartlbla. r hardtop. VI, automatic, ri ,«itar, rad Itna flrat. $1545. Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 MERCURY COMET station « Villagar, 1466, 23.500. ML, 6, SHOO. Call 54^2077. 14«'~fcOMET CAtJENTI two door hardtop. PaetorY' air, autoi— powar ataaring and brakaa, haatar, whitawalla. This ana must saa for value. $1,345. Larry Sheehan's HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 Tremendous Close-Out Prices ,:.19«9.0LDSMOBILES Best Olds 465 OLDS 442 SPORT COUPE, li mlNaga, original owner, car In II naw cond. $1145. 612.307$. Wl days attar 3 p.m. New and Used Cm 1462 PONTIAC eannavllla. Matalllc eT":izr'::r T whitawall tiros, powar ataaring brakes. Full price $34$. ciilT Al at 6i2-M6l. Oaalar. 14M TE/APEST Waibn, clean. 1 owner, no rr— ratuaad. FE 4-6442. 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA hardtop, power itaaring, r brakes, radio, haalar, factory -Id with black vinyl top. $895 STANDARD AUTO , SALES 'IJat. OLDSMOBILE, 4 :, 4 paaiangar VI, automatic, itar, whitawalla, $1445. Lorry Sheehonrs HILLSIDE Lincbln-Merciiry 1250 Oakland’ 333-7863 oCds vista < power sti haatar, * warranty. Buick m and brakes. Radio, iwall liras, naw car II ^rica $aoM. Plachar SAVE MONEY A______ _____ CHEVY, 1400 W Maple, Ml 4 2735 NEED A CAR?"WTr over, have . itaady tobVCall Mr. Bob at 602-i06r Dealer PLYMOUTH 1455, a: -ulsamitic, double power, FE radkr, haatar, pdwer .... — -------,. . — price $2281. Bank farms avallabla, Im-madtata dellvary. Call Mr. Parks, credit rnanagar, tor ■ payment schadula.at Ml 4-7500. Naw loca- 1461 FORDS, V-I AUTOMATICS, LUCKY AUTO 1440 W. WIda Track , FE 4-1006 or FE 3 7154 dehn McAoliffe Ford mlngi^WI, ri iteeiing, bn P S. We'Ve Moved I Vt Mila N. of Miracle Mila I S. Telegraph.RsL_...,J=E Hm New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 Driver ' Ed. Cars 1969 Plymouth Fury III 4 door, sedan, VI angina,. automatic transmission, radio, haatar, power steering, white , wall tiros, many extras. NEW CAR WARRANTY GIVE US A TRYj BEFORE YOU BUYI OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth ■ 724 Oakland Ave, FE 5-9436 John McAuliffe Ford 1466 COMET Csllanta sport cou baautitul bronze metallic w matching Interior, VI, rad I haatar, power steering, black c doya top, summer special at a - »T,Tiig ian »riesr.^ - P.S. We've'Moved I '/k Mila N. ot.MIra-i* 145 5. Telegraph Rd. 1462 PLYMOUTH, 1465 PLYMOUTH station MERCURY Parklana powar and air conditli pcica $1in. Bank terms hara. Immadlata delivery. Parks credit manager for schedule at Ml 4-7500. h _____ Oakland, FE i-4074. 1466 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR Balvadara . ------- -------------- _ . axcallant condition — 1467 MERCURY AAoidcrav two hardtop. VI, automatic, p steering and brakes, vinyl radio, haatar, whitewalls. Sint Larry Sheehan's HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 John-McAuliffe Ford. ir CgOCAR Hardtop, with V dio. heater, plus all the goodl Intarior, summer apocial Ot-oi $150$ full price. , P.S. We've Moved!; '/I Mila. N. of Miracle Milk ----Talagraph Rd. FE 5-41 f468 COUGAR, J top. I'fght' black I 'isik.re $711. Bank terms avallabla fora. immOdiala dellvary. Call Mr. Parks credit managar, tor paymant tchadula at Ml 4-7500. Ntw location of TURNER FORD 1600 Mapla (15 Mila Rd.) Trey Ma 1 mile oast at Weadward tempest LoMana. T- ----ic, power,’^firebird groan ........yl top. $475. 6S2-6446 aft, 5. I46S|aP0NTIAC Ventura 1444 tEMPEST USMANS, f 424. 4 snaad, buckat seat- -avail, 11400. wagon. Power traiwmliaion. 4 Bank tarmi tv_____ ____ .... madiata dallvaix Call Mr. Parkk, credit managar far.payment ichtdula at M 4-7500. Naw loea- TURNER FORD 146$ CATALINA 2 ter hi Vantoro groan wltti black li..,. Automatic, powar sMarIng — brakes, radio and haatar. Excallant lact^ warranty. Call 642-32(1 Audette Pontiac iiaO W. Mapla Rd. • i 14M FIREBIRD Sip, ^lant ditlon, full power, vli^ top, ai bucket sMto, naw tirpa, 612- anar'6 p.m. _________________ 1460 OtO, IMO MILkd, 44p “ mags, AM-FM, 674-4414. aft. 6. vartibla, 14,000 miles, foit warranty left. Naw Tiros, fully aquippad, oHar 5 p.m, 651-4341. 1464 GRAND PRIX. dOlllb Niw ood Ueoi tm IBB IKS. SAVO 1965 RAMBLER Wagtfh Light brawn; light braian inWrlor, claiatc. 660, with Vt, Mrtontotic, powar ttaaring, brgkM, radio, haatar, whitawallt, back up fight. Chroma luggage rack, extra nice. Special $995 Bill Fox Chevy '"Il3^0t*t Union Lake,' EM 3-61557" I Ipaad, #0. Storao, If staM, muit MIL 623- New and Und Con 106New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Con 106 New and Used Cart hardtop, MIdnIdht malchlno vlnyf Ini automatic, buckat S4 GO! HAUPT PONTIAC 1444 TEMPEST CUSTOM, John McAuliffe Ford 1465 PONTIAC Bonnavllla ttatlei wagon, with baautltul daai m«tallle burgundy with piatchtni nyl Intitrary t u m m 11 P-S. We've Moved I Vk Milt N. of Mirada Mila 1145 S. Talagraph Rd. •— ' “ 166 PLYMOUTH WAOl Balvadara, 3)0 angina, S( angina- axe.- orWngr"BV 625-3147, 4-4 p.m. 1466 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR —Ina. Avtomatle. Exc. ____,___ powar. 4OJ0O ml. $745. 363- 1445 PONTIAC TEtiXPEST , -------- LIgit blue, with ..mat^ng.^ Vhwl white__ brakes. . ... --- .. Al at 6(2-2061. Daaler. 1465 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. Blud MILOSGH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1467 Fury III, full power, 303 —• ....—-iron, 477 , 1965 PONTIAC Tampast Lament convartlbla, ■la, power ttotrlng, clean, GRIMALDI CAR CO. 400 Oakland Ava. FE t-4421 MERRY OLDSMOBILE ' 520 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN $1795 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH » Maple Rd. Troy, Mich. 642-7000 Air Conciitioned SPECIALS 1967 Chevy Bel Air ' loor, sed«n, VO, automatic, paw ering, air conditioned. $1695 j 1968 PLYMOUTH Satalllta, 4 door taclan, full powt air conditioned. I $2195. I ■- VAN CAMP I Chevrolaf ! On N. Milford Rd. SAVE MONEY / mo OLDS n ; 'wuilh halo. In latt power. steering price 595. Call A Dealer. Custom. White .. V-I out " whitewall 1 brakes., run Al at 6(2-2061. New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cors 106 New and Used Cars 106 HAHN d - - ■ -TODAY^S-SPECIAL 1965 RAMBLER Classic Wagon $795 - ' 6 passenger, V8,ifulh power, must see to appreciate, , ' 1967 FORD Galaxie' . . . .$16'9S EjlW^^hardtep^ with automatic, powar itaaring. 1968 CHRYSLER Newport ..!.. $2595 2 door hardtop, with full power, vinyl root, factory official car. 1965 FORD Wagon $1395 10- paasenoen factory air, 340 an-«(Mk pmMr ataaring. Lika naw condition. 1968 JEEP Wogoneers . . $ave Factory official can, thraa-tp chbota from, lomg with air conditioning. ■ 1968 RAMBLER As Low As !.. $1795 Mwl. d-ter'tean, V«, automatic, full powar, .. fidary -tUleM car. Threa to chpou from. 1966 PONTIAC Cdtolina $1395 2 door hardtop, with V-«, automatic, full powar. ..Silver blut with blue Intarior. Excallant condi- 1966 CHRYSLER y/.. . . $1795 4 dpar hardtop, ful powar, ilka naw throughout l 1964 CHEVY Bel Air .....$595 i door with V-I, automatic, radio, haatar, no ruil, A-l condition. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH irJT 2395. 6 >42 PONTIAC, I diflon, ■ not rus.„ best attar. 6«2-1015. 1462 GRANb PRIX, $475. Or bast It 682-2061. Dealer. Air Conditioning Beat The Heat SPECIAL^ 1967' Buick Cla^ston 6673 Dixi^ Hwy. MA 5-2635 candlttonlng, all P..... _ white finish, black vinyl to.go and priced to still 1965 Cadillac 1963 Cadillac I door hardtop. With air conditioning, and tun power, white finish and black Intarior.' Priced to $a)l a* only— ' ^....$995 1967 Pontiac :tlallna 4 door, with air. ear ditlonlng, power itaaring, brakas gold finish, with gold Intarlpi priced to sail— $avBl , Grimalcii Buick-Opel. 210 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 2-9165 Suburban ^Glds' 1966 Olds 88 4-door. Power steering, brakes, 28,000 miles. $1395- 1964 Chevy Malibu . 2-door hardtop. V8 outomatic. \ $695 ' 1967 Olds 88 2-door hardtop. 8, automatic. $1695 - 1963 Olds 88 Hgrdfop . 4-door, power steering and brakes. -$595: , 1968 Olds Luxury Sedan, full power, factory air. ■SAVE I 1967 CUtioM ^ 2-door hardtop, power steering and brakes. $1995 19^8 Olds . Cutlass Coupe Automatic, power. $2495 1t67 Olds F-85 2-door. Extra clean. $1795 1968 Toronodo, oU4>ower,-factory oit..__ $AVE 1967 Mustang Fastback, power steering, brakes, factory air. $1895 We hove" 0 huge selection of ■ '66-'67-'68 Toronados Priced From ^ --$1995 Suburban 01(ds 'll60 Woodwaird Birmingham’; , Ml 7-5111 J WANT YOU TO BE Satisfied ciistomers ore our best advertisement . . . they all tell their friends about us . . . and they come back when ready to trade again. That's why we want you completely satisfied with the cot and deal you get from usi We go out of our way to trade your way . . . and we stand behind every cor we selll 1967 Pontiac Cotalina 9 Passenger ‘ 1967 Chevy Bel Air Wagon 1967 Tempest Custom 4 Door ' Wagon, with automatic, powtr Itaaring, brakaa, radio, haatar, whitawalla, tllvar blue .finlih. Only- ' . . — „ with’‘VI, automatic, powar ttaar-toc|^luggaga rack, India Ivory leatar, whitowallifburgundy fl^ * th. Ivory tap. t $2095, $2095 . $1695 4969 vw , 2t)oor Sedan ■Lika naw eondltlon IhraughoutI Sparkling toratt graan finlah. Only— $1795 1965 Ford Country Sedan Wagon With V-l« ■utomattCy powtr itatN Only ''****°' finish. $895 1966 Chevy Bel Air-2-Ooor with V-S, stick radio, hottor, » colonial Ivory tinlih. Only— J $1095 1968. ; Malibu 396 Convertible with 4 tptad, powtr itaaring, buckato, oonaola, radla, haatar, whitawalla, laquolB graan flnlth, Black top. Only- $2795 1966 Chevy/ Impola Sport Coupe wltlf'v^, automatic, gowar ttaaring, radio, hoator, whitawalla, daylont blue flnlth. Only— $1695 : 1968 Chevy Impola 4 Door^ Sedan, with V-I, automatic, powar, Itaaring, radio, hoator, \ whltewolli, . factory warranty , avallabla, tropical turquolaa -finlah. Only- ' $2295 1969 ■ Tempest Custom S Co(ipe with automatic, VI, power atedr-Ing, brake!, radio, haatar, whlta-walli, factory warranty, charcoal 1966 Mercury Montprey 2-Door W®' automatic, radio, hoator, Imearlal Ivory flnlth. Only — 1966 Riviera. Sport Coupe with automatic, powtr ataaring, . brakes, black vinyl roof, platinum , finish. ’""'$2595 $995 , $2295 1967 Plymouth Belvedere 11 Sport Coupe, with V-I, automatic, power Hearing, radio, hatter, whitawalla, burgundy finlih. Only— 1967 Cougar Custom Sport Coupe with V-I, itlck, rodia haatar, whitewalls, imparlal Ivory finish with a turqualta Jntorlor. Only - ^ ‘ 1968 Buick LeSabre Hardtop 2 doer with power ataaring, brakat, radio, hoator, whitawalla, granada gold finlah. Only— "““$1695^ “"TO5-- —^2395-— 1968 Chevelle El-Camino h v-a, tUd^HIr raeiay haah 1968 Chevy Caprice Hardtop' top, garnat rad flnrah, FAC-' OPPICIAU Only- $2895 1966 Pontiac Bonneville Convertible iutomallc pawaV ato haatar, whitawalla, I Wade flniih. Only- $1495 1966 Chevy Caprice Sport Sedan ......»nu tr stctrlnor brakMp dowsy $1895 1967 Chevy Biscoyne 2 Door -$1595" 631 Oakland at Cass FE 4- /'/ Our New Bargaih Lq\ — 630 Ogklapd Aye.^ Acr-Llnkletter Show (4) C-Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R —Topper 3:25 (4) C - News 8:30, (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (7) C — AnniversSry Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (56) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C - Love of Ufe (4) C —f Steve Allen — Guests include Sam Posey, Kelley Garrett, Dorn DeLuise and Dave I my li-fessional and a nice man, Iwt T -his own name in this SchoU, •"“tch. of his hours — not all the way. 'There couldn’t be a better' Jaycees Hear Romney Decry Welfare Concept FLINT (UPI) - Welfare programs , that give people something for nothing corrupts both the giver and the receiver and must be changed. Housing and Urban Development Secretary George Romney said! last night. The former Mi c h 1 g a n governor, in an address to the concluding banquet of the three-day conference of the U.S. Jaycees, said the present welfare programs, have 'created a new form of dependency for the nation’s poor and the Hacks.” they’ve got to be changed,” ROmney said. Romney said that in addition to chan^ng our welfare programs, the nation’s priorities also must be realigned. 'We proved our country to be iPrivate organizations must technologically superior b y landing a man on the moon. But now we must turn our attention to the problems at home,” he said. We must demonstratr that we can unite in meeting the problems of peace in our cities and in our rural areas right here on old terra firma.’' HAILS JAYCEES The Hlft>, ^etary also conunended the Jaycees fm picking the Flint Community School Concept as a model to take back to other communities. The spearheading programs now being financed by the federal government, Romney said< “Whm you just hand people something for nothing, that’s/. . the least you can.do. When youi j® “"J" » do it with govei^ment, it cor-l*e C- S-. Mott Foundation, en-1 rupts those who give it and those who receive it. BE CHANGED’ / ’s where we are ^ wdlfara proigems ta thlk coun- visions., the use of, schools as nore than just for iHlucation ei ' ‘ try, and that’s one reason whyychi^en. for all activities for/adults and //!■ Barry. (7) R -T- Movie: - “My Sster Eileen” (1955) Janet Leip, Jack Leih- drawing card,” said Sheppard’s trainer, George Strickland. “Dr. Sam is in great shape. He is ready,” said Strickland, himself a professional wrestler known as “The Great George.” Sheppard is 6 feet tall and weighs 195 pounds. “The Dating Game” and "The Newlywed Game” hold me for about a minute each time I tune in. “Gomef Pyle” Just isn’t up my alley, and I havo absolutely no .feeling for anybody -or anything in “'The'Wild, Wild 'The truth is,” Strickland led, “Dr. Sam had to make a hard decision in college between entering medicine or becoming a professional wrestler." Sheppard, in a telephone in-ques- (9) C —Bozo , 4:25 (2) C -News 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas — Guests include Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Maine, Mel Torme, Garry Moore, Jack- Gilford, the Woody Herman bli n d, EtHeT Ennis and the U.S. Naval Academy glee club. (50) R - Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C^eorge Pierrot — “Puerto Rico Beckons” (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) RC-FTroop (50) R —Superman (■56) Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver ' terview, brushed tions as to whether he would fight future matches. “Ibis is going to be a benefit. ’That's it.” TELLS WHY Asked why, he had agreed to wrestle, Sheppard replied “It’s one<>of thosertWngs.” Sheppard was .sentenced to life for the 1954 bludgeon slaying of his first wife, Marilyn, in -thbir suburban Cleveland home, but made a series of court appeals and was freed from prison after serving 10 years. West.” NOT TOO EXCITING I stopped watching ’"IlM Guns of Will Sminett,” ‘“nie Fel(«y Squad” and “N.Y.P.D.” a long time ago except fiw occasional ’Judd for the^Defeaso” never excited me as much aa it did some viewers and critics. Things like “'The Flying Nimi?— and “Bewitched” must b a strictly women’6 shows, however professional, and so they never aroused any interest in me. The trouble with television, really, is not that iPs bad —• because it’s often good — but tiiat there’s Just too much of it, too many hours, and the odds are simply against it. The U.S. Supreme Court dr^ dered a retrial and in 1966 Sheppard was found innocent. His current wife, Arlanhe, whom he married after being freed' from prison, has filed for a divorce in Cleveland. Day, Week Set LANSING (AP) - Gov. William Milliken has proclaimed Sept. 17 as Citizenship Day and Sept. 17-23 as Constitution Week I in Michigan. Gostar of 'Oz' Is Coming Back By BOB THOMAS Associated Press Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) -made 50 motion pictures in my day,” says Jack Haley, “but the one. that every- , one remembers 9 ta ‘The Wizard of Oz.’ ” Naturally. Be-cause of the repeated show-i ings on televi-| sion, a whole new generation 0 P*-y p u m g -sters knows the THOMAS Tin Woodsman even though they aren’t familiar those years when be was growing up. “I still can’t get over it. I’ve worked with 46 different directors in 50 films. Then to come on a set and see a million dollars worth of equipment and , a crew of 90 people, and my son is in charge of ail of this ! ■- A ■ “To realize that my own has such a responsibility «was a strange feeling. I wondered R he was capable of handling it. ™en ■n saw him work, I realized that btwas. How did he get that way? Nine years of making documentaries for David Wolper, when millions of feet of film business has lulls in his career, and I occupied mine, that way. "Eventually the business took over my time. Fortunately I never had to perform; I was not one of those extroverts who needed to ha\^ an audience. I found I could get Just as much «iJoyment from a real estate deal. I also found that you couldn’t take your reviews to the grocery store.” Haley was asked how he reacted upon hearing the recent news of the death of Judy Gar-, land. with the career of Jack Haley, iwent thrbugh his hands.” Those over 40 would be. Through the 1930s and into the 1940s Haley starred in a succes-. Sion of musicals and comedies. His fayprlte: “Wake Up and Live,” in wliich he sang in,his bland style “Never in a Millioh Years.” Jack Haley is making his first movie in 25 years, and it’s a sentimental return. The film is “Norwood,” and the director is Jack Haley Jr., making his feature debut after a distinguished career in television. visions.. more ei^t hours eadi day. nder the program, the schools also become copunui^ty centiera -hsked me to do the picture and ‘HE ASKED ME’ Explained Haley Sr.: because I love him, I obeyed. Aft^r al|t he obeyed me during The elder Haley is playing a brief role as a farm owner in ‘Norwood,” which stars Glen Campbell and Kim Darby. It’s doubtful if Haley will resume his acting career, since he is one retired performer who is reputed to be wealthy. 'GOD’S BEEN GOOD’ Accused of, this, Jie smiled, "God has bqen good to me; they’ll never have to give any benefits for me.” Haley made his money in real estate. He ex^amed; “I alvDays had an interest in business, and I got Involved in real estate as a subdivider. Eveyone in show / ' A GREAT SADNESS felt a great sadness,” he said “Not only for Judy, but for the millions of young people to whom Dorothy in ’The Wizard of Oz, was a kind d symbol. The whole substance of the film was the belief that Dorothy wanted to get home; that’s wlty it has such great appeal” * ^£NiTH SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S I D-^16 THE PONTIAC PKESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 80, im Oakland University to Open A/ew A new ichool is going to be established at Oaidand University. It will be concerned with management in its /broadest sense, with the privAtd, pt|blic and nonprofit sectors of the economy included. The academic unit, new for the fall term, will be known as the School of Economic and Management. It ^1 replace the Department of Economics and Bt^siness, which previously had beenla part of the University’s College of Arts and Emphasis wflt be ,but,,. By DICK ROBINSON A Pontiac General Hospital “search committee’’■ has found the man they want to succeed fired Administrator Harold B, Euler. But the question remains whether he will take the job following the controversy surrounding the “ dismissal of Euler. think. Identity of the leading candidate wasn’t disclosed. ; - One - tnember of the 12-nian" .search committee said “there has been considerable discussion” between job candidates and interviewers on the hospital controversy. Board chairman Aleck C^psalis said yesterday a field of 50 candidates has been narrowed down to five, “We’re talking to our first ilAioice now,” he commented. “We’ll go right down the list.” Turmoil started brewing at the hospital “Whesr Euler fired liis'assistant, Donald Carros. Then Euler was fired last montlr by the' trustees after 11 years in the t^ PRE^jlliENT IN VIETNAM—President Nixon is surrounded .by. combat infantrymen.of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division at their headquarters at Di An, 12 miles north of (Saigon today. U.S. rajiitary men said the base is fefStively safe during the day but can properly be termed a cdmba( field operation post. NOT IDENTIFIED A new administrator could be named in a week or so, some hospital sources The only explanation the trustees would offer for firing Euler -r- and this came after several weeks of nriHci.qm — was that EuleT had a communication problem with the board. Rogers joined the legal department o( the industrial bureauipf Oakland Motor Car Ce., a forerutufelr of Pontiac Motor Division, where he remained two years. Rogers entered the private practice of law with Patterson & Patterson, Whitfield, Mahikoff & White. In 1922 he was nam^ director of law for the City of Pontiac, a position he held until 1932. He was appointed to serve on the. Oakland County bench, filling the unexpired term of Frank L..Covert in 1935.' Rogers was president and general manager of American Forge and. Socket Co. for IS years before retiring in 1999. Rogers serv^ as a director of Pontiac Statb Bank,/knd past president of the (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) ' Accord Reached in Waterford 'No More Concessions' Nixon Flies fo S. Vietnam 2 City Hospitals Up Room Rotes. ‘FAR ABOVE’ The committee’s choice for administrator is said to be “far above” the other candidates, an e x p e r i e n c e d hospital administrator, and from Michigan. The selection committee, formed early this mot^th. is made up mostly of The 45 Waterford Township employes who walked off their jobs last Wednesday today returned to work after a tenative agreement was reached last night. Terms of the agreement are being withheld subject to raitficatlon by both parties, according- to state labor mediator Leonard Bennett who was in, charge of negotiations during the past five months. SAIGON (AP) — President Nixon flew to Saigon today and declared the United States and South Vietnam could make no further peace concessions*. Later he told U.S. soldiers at a, nearby base that the war “may have been our finest hour.” Nixon flew first into the heart of Saigon becoming the first U S. president *to visit South-Vietnam's capital. He was accompanied by his wife v^o made her own bit of history by touring a field hospital and a home for war. orphans. No other First Lady has visited South Vietnam. in Vietnam, much of it in conferences with President Nguyen Van Thieu and other government leaders. The employes include , all township workers except ficemen artd policemen. Negotiations tegan six months ago. * y * The strikers were mehibers of the, AFIrGIO Council 23. . Nixon also became the first president to visit a combat base in South Vietnam. He spoke to the American troops at Di An, headquarters of the U.S. 1st Infantry 'Division 12 miles north of Saigon. Nixon spent five hours and 25 minutes RETU^S TO THAILAND He returned to Bangl^, Thailand, late today. While meeting Thieu earlier a t Saigpn’s Independence Palace, Nixon issued a statement reciting concitiatory moves and proposals made by Washington and Saigon in an effoii: to get the Paris peace talks off dead center. " ', ★ ■ ★ * “We have goftc as far as we can or, should go in opening the doors to negotiations which will bring peace,” he said “It IS now time for the other side to sit down with us and talk seriously about ways to stop the jctiUng ... ” Room rates are going up at two of the city’s three hospitals. , Pontiac General and St. Joseph Mercy hospitals will hike the dost of rooms starting Friday. Room rates wiil climb by $4 fo $6 a day, depending on the type.of room. The ,new daily rates (and old rates): ‘Gener^ St. Joe’? $46 ($421- $48.($42) Ward Semi-pvt. _ $50 ($46) $52 ($47) Private $54 ($50) $56 ($52) Both hospitals attribute the hike to rising costs and salary increases and indicate raises in other patient services will come later. They reportedly have put their top choice comrtetely through the screening process, including an interview with one jerson on the committee "and then with llioSt of the committee. As-the committee starts to make its selection, applications are still coming to and candidates are stUl being added to the selecnist. COMMITTEE OSTEOPATHIC MAY FOLliOW Meantime a spokesman for Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital said that hospital had no plans fo increase rates there, but now may have to follow suit. Current osteopathic rates are: $49, semi-private (Cttntinued on Page A-2, Col. 2) Trustee members of the selectioa committee are Capsalis, board vice chairman Harold Goldberg, secretary Mrs. B. B. Roush, treasurer Dr. Lynn Allen, John F. Munro, Victor Woods and Elwood G. West. Others inclucte Dr. Rockwood Bulfard Jr., chief of the medical staff. Dr. Charles^ R. Sempere, medical d|reflor: Dr. Robert Tupper, medical education director; Dr. Murray Levin, vice chief bf staff; and Dr. Edward Elder Jr., past * chief of staff. • - I. TV Airs Moon, The Eagle Lands Again~in Color Mors Close-Ups Mariner Again Focuses on Mars In -ji-m GOODLORH. ROGERS SPACE CENTER, Houston OP) — For seven minutes television viewers rode the lunpr module Eagle to a landing on the moon. They watched movies yesterday of the moon ship as it descended to the pocked surface July 20, Veered away from- a-hazardous, gapjng crater and touched down « amid outflung lunar dust. And they saw Neil A. i^mstrong go cautiously down a ladder, pause, and then .................... ‘ moon. I I Tl 1 And they saw Neil A. i^mstn vyutlook I hUrSClQyi p’®"* footprint on the y FineFyn in theSpn ' PiOures, Pag, A-5 PASADENA, Calif, (ypi) — Mariner 6 began taking a second series of television pictures early today as it hurtled toward a “near encounter” with Mars to find out whether life can exist on the Red Planet. The first batch of 33 pictures of Mars, broadcast live on home television sereens last night, showed a small egg-shaped orb with the white south polar cap standing out clearly. . Mariner 6 began snapping the second series of pictures at 2:23 al.m. EST today. State ptessores Jfbt Mnor ' Pontiac area residents may fook This was the first of the* Apollo-11 mo«ie footage in color, and it captured much forward to fun in and out of the water of the drama of the landing by Armstrong and Edwin E‘. Aldrin Jr. tonight with a low ofS7 to 61 and blue The color films were shown to newsmen at Rie Manned Spacecraft Center and skies tom(HTow, the hl^ reaching 82 to transmitted simultaimously by network television to viewers across the country. "■-^of the adventure was’ folevi^ live dhly 20, but that was in black and white. The first' still photographs, also in color, were sprinkled with, footprints and 3 silhouettes of the spaceship, and slicked the American flag perchM on the ih-Iike surface. There’s a chance of showers, Friday with temperatures a little cooler. Probabilities of precipitation are noar- zero today, 5 per cent tonight add 20 per _ . cent tomorrow. 4 moduJje, showed'the landing site from above and rocks on the lunar soil. This set Sixty-four was 'the low tetuperature ’ also included a picture of earth with Europe, Africa and Asia visible, before 8 a,m. in downtown Pontiac. 'Ae The film closed with a view of the American flag, wired for a waving effect and surrounded by footprints. ’ ■ ..V- ■ ■ ' -.r -" ■ , I ■. A second S|et Of stills, released last night, caught Armstrong inside the lunar moduJje, showed T............ ‘ ucguic ® ui uuwmuw] l2:jM pjjm. reading was 83. KI \ ; 'V Related Picture, page A-12 . , '■ -■ -y- - '• They will be beamed back to earth starting at 8 p.m. f - Mainer 6 will fly past Mars at a distance of 2,000 miles tomorrow at 12:03 a.m. aftera voyage of 241 million miles through space. “ EhiriRE SURFACE Mariner 7, the 850-pound space twin of Mariner 6, will make its flyby five days later. Between them, they will photograph the entire surface of Mars twice^"' Mariner 6 will have 25 minutes to perform its scientific experiments and take two.dozen television pictures of a region near the Martian equator which should show areas ps smaU as 900 feet across . L o ____________ Instruttients wiil make a chemical analysis and map the surface by measuring thermal radiation. Dr. Robert J. Leighton qf the California Institute of Technology said last night's pictures showed detaUs never before seen by man, such as ragged edges of the ^uth polar cap. , J-'' } -X THE PONTIAC MESS. WEDl^ESDAY, JULY 30, 196ff. '\VT Bill Weakening Gun Act ~^Gets a Boost in Senate ‘■.''WA^HINdiON (A^) — A parliamen-'tary gambit, Nixon/Administration sup-[,]^t and crucial shifts in the Senate have '^given an added push to attempts to rip ''dome key provisions out of last year’s jftun Control Act._____ ; _____ . Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, R:;Vtah, announced he had administration backing as he reintroduced a bill Yesterday to remove restrictions covering 90 per cent of the ammunitimi sold in this country. Surcharge Gets i Long-Distance [Plug by Nixon Bennett’s bill was bolstered by eight cosponsors whose positions represent, a change from last year, when they or their predecessors voted with the 41-36 majority in beating back an attempt to exempt shotgun, rifle and 22caliber rijpifire ammunition from the ai?t. ■ The law prohibits a person from buying, either in person or through the mails, any guns or ammunition outside the state in which he lives. ... . President Lyndon B. Johnson, who coiti-plain^ on siming the law that it wasn’t strong' enough. Johnson’s Justice Department also .supported inclusion of shotgun, rifle and -Which............................the department estimated accounts for 90 per cent of ammo sides. Bennett’s new attempt involves bypassing the House Judiciary Com-' mittee chaired,by Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., and the Senate Juvenile Delin- quency subcommittee headed by Sen.^^‘ Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn. The two areW persistent advocates of registration. ; WASHINCTON (AP) - President ' Nixon has reached from halfway around i the world in. an attempt at pr^suring Senate into extending the mcomC surtax, in danger of dying at midnight tomorrow. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said last night he had been in communication with Nixcm in Thailand. The President “is deeply concerned by the inability of the Senate to act and the injury this 'threatens to every citizen,” Agnew said. CUTBACK REQUIREMENTS In addition to exemptii^ the ammunition from the law, Bennett’s "bill would also specify—and in effect cut backf-tiie information required of gun and ammunition buyerg. “This redrafting w)as accomplished with the full cooperation and support of tiie Treasury,’* said Bennett. "nie administration position represents '3 departure from the policy of former The new bill, rewritten to amend a different section of the law yet ac? complish the same purpose, would go to. the Senate Finance Conunitiiee, chaired by Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., and the House Ways and ilommittee,^^^- chaired Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark.. The latest actions followed on the heels of a warning by the National |Com-mission on ^e Caus^^ and Prevention of ./Violence that the nation must break “the vicious circle of Americans arming to protect themselves from other armed Americans.” CUT-DOWN — The biggest tree, in Pontiac? That’s the word of cutters from Gardner’s Tree Service, 671 Kenilworth, wh(Thad to cut it down yester'lfy- The looming elm, which measured some 6t^ feet in circumference, wa^ ordered cut by owners Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elmyv 235 Voorheis, because of Dutch elm disease. “He intends to disdlias these matters frankly and fully with, the . American people upon his return Monday,” the ■ vice president went dii. An aide said Nixon might go on radio and television at that time to get the public behind him. ' Prior to the .statement by Agnew, who canceled, a^West Coast speaking engagement-today to be on, hand tb fight for extenapn, the sifftax appeared^^ft^ probable victim of a Democrat-GOP Senate deadli^k. .j, . ^ EXPIRES THURSDAY _The- temporaiy ektension, af ^jayroll withholding rates including the surtax expires at midnight tomorrow,” and botb sides iif the dispute agree if this happens it will be very difficult to revive the surcharge. — -«rhe Senate Democratic Policy Com-luttee yesterday held Hrm on its prb-jjbsal for a five-month etxehsion of the fiirtax. Tratiier than the one-year plan of me administration. Dirksen 'Saved' From Farmers WASHINGTON (AP) — Capitol police take up to 10 million acres of farmland plucked Sen. Everett M. Dirksen from , 'tiut of production and to end existing Ex-Pontiac Industrialist Birmingham Area and County Judge Dies the midst 6f shouting, fist-shaking farmers yesterday, ending a pnfronte-lion oyer protests that U. S. faiin policies are leading to rural ruin. The 200 ' farmers, wives and children—who drove from ^11 j n o i s, Dir&sen’s home state, in caravan of traetors-^urr^ded the Republican leader as he femergyd from the Senate chamber. ■ , ' , They demanded a return to full parity in farm prices and a stronger voice for farmers on all future federal agricultural farm programs within five years, he was answered with shouts of, “No! No!” (Continued From Page One) Oakland County Bar Association, Pontiac Area United Fund, and the Pontiac Manufacturer’s Association. He served on the University of Michigan Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics from 1946-52. ; 2 Firms Aid Road Project policies. When Dirksen told his constituents he s one of 20 senators support a bill to SHOUTS GROW The shouting got louder when he responded to a request that he buy a bushel of grain at the parity price-63.06 - cornpar^m^i^e "pirst” Presbyterian from his^wallet. He told the farmers to u® ^^e thb change and the wheat >0 the and Delta The ribise attracted Capitol police who . , * * ^ wedged their way through the throng He. belonged to Bloomfield Hills Coun- and opened a path for Dirksen to retreat try Club, Orchard Lake Country Club fo the Senate floor. and Detroit Athletic Club. ■ 1 BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - The &stro Corp.,’Columbus, Ohio, and the Redstone Theater Corp. have contributed a payment of $25,000 to the State ^partment to help the state meet nnaiwecosts for a left-turn lane in front oN Miracle Mile Shopping Center on ■|elegraph Road. Left turns have been considered by police officials and residents as one of the major traffic problems “on the heavUy used section of Telegaph. Township officials said that left turns .would have to be prohibited in. front of the sh(4>ping center if a. left turn lane could not be constructed. > Castro^ which owns the Miracle Mile complex, and the Redstone Corp., '* operator of the adjoining drive-in theater, agreed to make up most of the balance between the original Ifighway Department estimate of $100,000 and the final ’‘bid cost of $126,092. No f^eral funds were available for the project. -i- The Democrats saW their proposal would give the Senate time to wwk out a broad tax reform bill .which they say must- accompany continuance of the 2 of 3 Hospitals in Pontiac Ifrireasing Room Rates BLOOMFIELD HILLS — A pilot program designed to stimulate youi^sters into pursuing careers as naturalists is under way af Cranbrook Institute bf_ Science. Jainese Ar^jahde-sald^ the program’s aim “is to make a trqe indoor-outdoor laboratory of the three-gcre environment Study Center at the Institute.” surtaf. Andtl J the Democrats turned die screws tighter by announcing they would not consider a 15day“* extension of the pzqndieck withholding rates which the House approved Tuesday. — Although the administration again turned down the Democratic proposal, a possible break appeared in the Republican ranks when ^nate Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen said he favored accepting the temporary extension as the best that could be obtained. (Continued From Page Ope) room; $45,,ward: $50, special cases; and $43,^diatrics. Pontiac General’s board of trustees approved the new room rates' at a special meeting July 21, it was Ifiamed yesterday/- No announcement of the meeting was made to the public. unannounced meeting the Pontiac Genoral trustees was all explanation of why a body wasn’t turned oyer to a funeral home for hours. The rate hijee at .private St. Joseph’s was approved yesterday morning by the finance committee of the lay advisory board. / Among several items of business at the OFFERS REASONS The reasons came frmn Dr. Robert L. Tupper, director of medical educaition, in response to a complaint made previously by Fred Thompson of VoorheeS:Biple Funeral Home at the regular board meeting, July 17. bodies were turned over .to his Juneral home, j No autopsleh were performed during . the interim, Thompson stated. Tupper said in one of the cages a , woman died at 11 p.m., an autopsy was ordered and it took several hours to seek permission from her five children. p.m., the body will be turned Over to the funeral home no later than 11 a.m. the Xiext day if an autopsy is (wdered. Hospital officials have been unable to check out the second complaint lacking . the name of the dead pemon. Thompson cited two instances since Hospital Administrator Harold B. Euler was fired of patients who died in the hospital and lay there for what he said was more than 11 hours before the ‘KEPT AC^REEMENT’ Two weire located in the western paft of .the country and the fifth child contacted refused permission, he said. Her body was then released to Voorhees-Siple at 9:35 a.m. the next day. Tupper said the hospital kept its agrpment, which applies to all funeral homes, that if a patient dies after 3:30 Trustees also reelected the board’s officers at the special meeting. Board Chairman Aleck Capsalis explained that the electim Is usually held at the regular July meeting, but that the nominating coiqmittee didn’t have time . to prepare a slate. Otter reelected officers are Harold S. Goldbttg, vice chairman; Mrs. B. B. Roush, secretaiy; and Sr. Lynn D. Allen, treasurer. ' • Seven boys form the nucleus of the . Assistant Naturalists Club. They are involved in the basic fundamoitals of. cutting, clearing and surfacing the nature trails and assisting iA the planning of current and future programs. Survey projects include ponds, woody plants, insects, nonwoody plants, small mammals, mosses and ferns. Lahde feels that by working, together, { the ba.sic the boys are learning the techniques used by naturalists in collecting, preserving and cataToging specimens for future use as well as supplying the center with a usable collection of its own. The Weather Fisher Theatfer Review FuU U.S. Weather Bureau Report ' PON-nAC AND VICINITY - Today mostly sunny high 78 to 84. Tonight fair low f. to 61. Thursday mostly sonny, high 82 to 85. Friday outlook: chance of showers 1 a little cooler. Winds variable 5 to 12 miles per hour t BIRMINGHAM - The City Com-' mission recently authorised a request by the Baldiyhi Public library to hold an art actiohXSept. 120 on a portion of Shain Park. The library win auction pictures from its collection of reproductions which are rented by local residents. 11$ 8 to 16 ’Thursday. Pndiabilities of precipitation are near^ro today, 5 per cent Jptaight, 20 per cent Ihursday. Your Own Thing Done Well Today In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 .At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity 5 m.p Direction; Variable Sun sets Wednesday at 7:55 p.m ^ TuesdayNn Highest temperature Lowest By DON BRAUNAGEL musical—is little-known, except for If you’ve ever wondered how the Sheree North, who lately has been geen , ___t___I t__— tmi.l.. niir Mina Maaik’n ann Mautiful n rists Wednesday a ona Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature ..... ....... Lowest temperature ............... Mean temperature ................. Weather: Mostly sunny Tuisday's Totnporaturos Alpena 77 S5 Cincinnati' 77 61 Cetrolt . 80 64 Denver 9) 65 Flint 77 60 Duluth 82 S3 G. Rapldr* 79 56 Fort Worth 95 69 Houflhton 76 57 JactS*onvI1lo"'90 73 ' " n LK. 28 55 Kansas City 84 68-. 80 57 Los Angelos 79 69 82 57 LoulsvIlTe 83 iX 74 62 Miami Beach 89 69 81 54 Milwaukee 77 60 ' 77 58 New Orleans 87 72 . 79 56 New York 77 74 -- -- - ■ 85 67 Marquette Mu^egon l^avBse'c'* 73 54 Phoenix 78 57 Pittsburgh 98 70 St. Louis Highsst and tewsst Ttmpsralurss This Data in 97 Ytars 98 In 1916 51 In 1965 Bismarck Boston .. ... S. Lake City 93 62 89 68 S. Francisco 58 51 79 73 Seattle 76 55 72 67 Washington 84 78.. LAKE CONDITIONS: St Ctair - Mostiy northwesterly winds, 7 to 12 knots, Ijiday. Variable, 5 to 12 knots, tonight. Fair. Huron — lyinds nortowest to west, 8 to ijk knots, today, becoming west to southwest, 5 to 12 knots, timight. Fair. Erie — variable winds, 19 to 15 knots, today, diminishing to 6 to 12 ^knots tonight Widely .scattered showers today, clearing tonight Broadway musical evolved from “Oklahoma” to “Hair,” see “Your Own Thing” at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit. The opening drumbeat keynotes a I a score that — al-thou^ mostly ftir-L gettable and frequently sounding like Top 40 love bal-I lads of the late ’50s - was musically in-I novative for Broad-i way and g^w into 1 the “Hair” style of advanced mL BRAUNAGEL But the score is secondary. Mildly irreverent and cheerfully irrelevant, “Your Own Thing*' is mainly bright, bouncy fun. The music, by Hal Hester and Danny Apolinar, just adds to the lively pace. mostly in TV roles. Miss North’s con- Director-author Donald Driver has wisely staged the short (about 1% hours) play with no intermission, so tho'e’s no break in the meity, mood. The Story is loosely based on ShakeSpear’s “Twelfth Night,” tiie,comedy in which, a girl (Viola), masquerades as her twin brother, who she believes is dead. Ihen he shows up to confuse matters. Most of the laughs in “Your Qwn Thing” come from this unisex theme. For instance, the brother’s nurse, who thinks her patient is a girl, asks-him, “Since when are we wearing our armpits Italian style?” NATHWAL WEATHER - Rain is predict^ tonight for the Gulf and East coasts extending from Louisiana through Mgine. Rain also is fprecast for the northern Plaini states and for the southern Rocky Mountain region. ' I ■ ■ ■■ , * ■' ■ And Viola’s employer, Orson, finding himself having strange feetings about her (him), fearfoll/ consults hi lb psychology books about latent homosexuality. The nine-member cast—small for a tributions to the play were mqre visual than auditory. As Orson, Allan Hunt was properly perplexed, although (possibly becausq of the power of suggestion of his role) Ms' voice sounded greatly like Orson Bean. CAPABLE PERFORMANCES Priscilla Lopez andderry Glasier (as.# the twins) and Alan Martin; Gerry Burkhardt and Gregg Smith (as Fire, Pestilence and Death in the Apocalypse rock group) danced and sang capably, although some of the songs would sound better with less volume. Press put 3 Hours Everything- Sold. 6. “We are so pleased with results from our Press Want Ad. Twdnty calls, everything sold.” Mrs. G. W. DINING room table. 6 Vpli0Ht8r«d chair*. PRESS WANT ADS do all the wmk for you. In addition they are people-pleasers —the sellers, the buyers. A nice fast way to do business. Dial: 3344981 or 332.8181 this is th'g faatMt CBlaratitialwe-whMlad stMk mo-tercyel*. Big cylindar daaign with 500 cc's that out- , parfontit tha 7S0*f., AfulieOHartat with a tap gpaad «f ,ri,24M0H.B1agttt Hiraugh tha 14 mifa 12.4 fhedtid*, end all this it gteck, G6t it? get it at ROBBINS SNRT CYCLE SHEREE NdRITI 2881 A Near Creeks Road Phone W2-45S1 QUICK SERVICE ON MCST MODELS m/: THE PONTIAC PRP:SS. WJEDXESDAV, JC Supervisory l^rsoiiiriisLijet 8 Pet. Hike A—ir * The Pontiac City Commission last night voted to give all city ’supervisory employes an 8 per cent pay hike retroactive to Jan. 1. . Tn a package pay agreement, all 115 of the city’s supervisory employes^ also sHll be. given longevity pay ifetroactive to 1967. The hikes, proposed by City ■■“Manager TbsepET A.“ W^urST, received the unanimous support of the Gonunission.. ■ Warren s a i d comparable cities in Mi^ig^ recently ha^e settled contracts giving salaried workers pay hikes ranging .from 6 per cent to 25 per cent. __ COST 0F LIVING He offered the ctmtinued rapid rise in the cost of living in the Detroit metropolitari area as reason for the boost, the salary plan for supervisory employes. The commission also agreed \ have a management consultant firm review and update Inequities haVe resulted in some areas, according to Warren, which allow nonsupervisor^ workers to receive higher pay than their supervisors. ^* * T^e J. L. Jacobs Cp." of Ch)r cago likely will review the pay plan, Warren said. TWO RESIGNATIONS " Ip other business, the epted resignations from two men who have served on two city boards. Kenneth G. Hempstead resigned froiA the Hum Relations Commission and Oscar L. Bolin resigned from duties' with the Pontiac Zoning Board ot Appeals. ★ ii Hempstead of 368 W. Huron and Bolin of 559 Nebraska both told ^the commissioners prior commitments prevented them from spending enough time with their committees. On Interference With Police/ Firemen Reward Proposal to Get Further Study Warren had recommended tha the' reward offered last summe: should be reinstated this year. The Pontiac City Commission last night agreed to study further a,, propos^ 81,001) reward HfOr mfOTmatiori. Jeading to arrests of persons who in* terfere with ‘ policemen and firemen. ^ ^ ^ significantly after a came up for adoption at last. . School, 511 S. Sanford, exploded about two week; ago. Police Warran -said the-city’s W theorize Ibe cidence of fire-bombings and police and fire nuisances was came up for adoption , night’s meeting, could be expanded to include information leading to arrests of any persons guilty of serious crimes in the city . Commissioner Robert C Irwin said he did not want to limit the reward to only information conC'erning terference with policemen and firemen, so he asked that the matter be tabled; for one wedk. ★ ' w. ■ , w He said the reward should be offered to all citizens for any criminal information leading to arrests. REINSTATEMENT ASKED City Jdanager Josepji A Navy to Probe “Crdsh Further Manila (ap) - The" c.s. Navy vrfll reopen its investigation of the collision between the American destroyer Frank E. Evans and tiiie Australian carrier Melbourne text week to determine if legal action should be taken against American offi-cers.'‘ A Navy spokesman at the Subic Bay Naval Base said the investigators want “to determine whether further legal proceedings are warranted’’ against Cmdr.' A. S. McLemore, the Evans skipper, Lt. (j.g.) RJbiald C. Ramsey or Lt. (j.g.) James A Hopson. . * ' Ramsey, officer of the deck, and Hopson, junior officer of the deck, were warned earlier that they were suspected of negligence leading to the collision. The fleur-^e-lis is used to mark the north point of prac* tically all compass cards. The Wilson Elementary broke if it offered the reward explosion was caused by a fire bohib. for all criminal offenses, Irwin agreed it should be extended only to informants who offer information about serious crimes. COULD GO BROKE’ “If we are to offer rewards! The commission will consider for criminal information,. welreinstating the reward next “®P3‘a- ought to solicit all kinds of in-1 Tuesday, with the formation, not Just information ] made by Irwin> • There has been at least one on those who interfere with cityl-------------------- incident in the city this sum-1 employes like firemen and! mer believed to be the work of ipolicemen,’’ Irwin said. i an arsonist, and o f f i d a 1 s| After one man in the audience reportedly have no suspects. ! predicted the city would A proposal is expected in the' next several weeks. CONSTRUCTION CONTRACT j Commissioners also directed dtyv officials to sign contract! documents with ^he Askenpzy Coastruction Co. for construction of the Collier Road Landfill Site Maintenance Build-1 ing on the city’s far north side! The commission also received request from neighborhing Bloomfield Township for sanitary sewer services to a 67-acre site, south of Golf Drive Telegraph. • •___ DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES ’ City Manager Warren said he id been contacted by Bloom-1 field Township officials about allowing the township to connect to Pontiac’s sanitary sewer system in that area. Land-development activities there involving the removal of large quantitites of sand triggered the township’s request. ★ jk * Warren said Pontiac also' could benefit" from a cooperative sanitary sewer effort, but' advised the com-■'‘Hon to study the matter' carefully before making any! decision. I four bidders who tried for the job last June. Estimated cost of the building is $251,153. We Now Have Lots Available on the MOON* , _ Also Hoto'on_Eart(ii ' MOBILE HOMES OF LAI KE ORION 1488 S. Lapeer Rd. Mount Clemens Lake Orion Summer Clearance! SAVINGS UP TO 50% ON SUMMER SUITS AND ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE! RANOQLPH 3Kartuo0$ 908 W. Huron at Telegraph Gordon!!. Id^lioiv the En^i^, keeptheir A ennetft. ALWAYS FIRST aUALITY ^ OUR SUMMER WHITE GOODS EVENT IS HERE!' LAST 3 DAYS REDUCED THRU Fashiori Manor blankets, and all our Fashion Manor sheets! Let down on the distinctive dryness, the delicate flavour of Gordon's Gin? Never! Every bottle is based on Mr. Gordon’s original 1769 formula. So you stir a drier, more precise martini in 1969. A fanatic devotion to our discoverer? Perhaps. But then that's why your dry . martini is made with the biggest selling gin in England, America, the world. Cheers! rMDUCTOF U.SA. imKin«am:iBnuaFnMtMM.NniiF.ciimii^KrDNa..in..u«w.x.i. THArS HOW I Ha ABOUT For that ArOK foolinO. moko it Capitol. Whani you hOvo tho.tloxibility of saving any amount... any time, with yoi^ funds always convenieotly available. The cu r-rent tote of 4%% is paid and compound-ed quarterly. '' PENN-PftlST WHITE PERCALE 50% polyoitor, 50% tombo'd cotton fwin 72"x104" flat or Elotto-fit bottom REG. 2.99, NOW , 2A7 full 81 "x104" flat or Eloita-fit bottom roB.3.99................... .....NOW 3,47 pillowcotki 42"x?6" rog. 2 for 1.99...... .NOW 2 for 1J7 ^~1Penn-prest percale FASHION COLORS 50% polytitor, 50% combod cotton twin 72"x104" flat or- Elaita-fit bottom rog. 4.19, NOW 3.67 full 81" X 104" flat or Ela«ta-fit bottom • Tog.5.19....;...... ..............NOW 4.6J pillowcoMi 42"x36" rog. 2 for 3.19.........NOW 2 for 2.7T PENN-PREST 'COMPANIONETTE' PRINT OR STRIPE percale 50% polyostor, 50% combod cotton . fwin72"xl04"flat REG. 4.99, NOW^ 4.57 full 81 "xl 04" flat rog. 5.99---------------........NOW B.57 pillowcatot 42"x36" rog.2for3.59...........NOW 2 tof 3.27 LUSH VELLUX BLANKET FOR LIGHTWEIGHT WARMTH Twin, Full 66"x90" PENN-PREST WHITE MUSLIN 50% polyottor, 50% coHon . ifWln 72"xl04" flat * REG.f59,NOW 1.87 full 81 "xl 04". flot or Elasta-fit bottom rog. 3.59.................. NOW 2.87 pillowcatot 42"x36" rog. 2 for 1.69. ,.... NOW- 2 for 1.37 Cdpitd't BONUS SAVINGS CERTIFICATES offer higher earnings bn funds invested for o epedfied time . six months, dr. longer. Certificates in amounts of $5,00D dr more are issued and .'dutbmatic-ally| renewed. The current rate paid on these longer term savings certificates is S\k%. 1 NATIQN-WIDEJ^ WHiTECOnON MUSLIN 133 count bloachod end finishod full 8D'x108" flet or Elotto-fit Sonforizod bottom REG. 2.29, NOW 1.65 plllewfcotot 42"x36* rog.2forl.09......;...NOW 2 fOT 83c PENCALE ^' WHITE COMBED COnON PERCALE 186 count bloachod and finished twin 72"x108" flat or Elotto-fit Sonfbrizad « bottom ^.2.39, NOW 1.77 full 81 "xl 08" flat or Elattd-fit Sonforizad Ji bottom rni. 2.69..................... .NOW 2.07 pillpwcoiat 42"x36" rag, 2 for 1,39 ........NOW . 2 fOr 1.07 SHOP TILL 9 P.M___ MON. THRU'5AT. . . . THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDnAsDAY, JULY 30, 19^ MARKETS The foUdwlng are top prices, covering sales of locally grown produce by groweru and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Dow-Jones Average Off 4.13 Stock Market Continues Slide Produeia PRuifl ti'frati".:’' B)ickl)errH$, ■ Blueberrin, 12-pt. -................. Cherries, Sour, 16 qt. ctn........... 7.0 NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market continued to slide . active trading e^ly today, with the Dow Jones hidus-trial average piercing the 800 level.’ : The DJI at 10:30 a.m. was off 4.13 at 797.83. Deeiines^-fed^ -advances' by about 200 issues. A 20,000-share block of Evans Products traded at 39, (tff 1. A 14,500-share block of American Telephmie & Telegraph traded at 511<&, unchanged. Control Data was off 1 at 136. Xoroa was up % at 87%. Chrys- iS^asupTS'llSf"............. Othei; opening prices included: Brunswick, off % at 18. on 13,300 shares; Occidental Petror leum, up % at 29% on 11,600 shares: U.S. SteeLoff.% at 39% on 10,000 shares; Lcasco Data Processing, off V« at 23% on 8,700 shares; and Westinghouse Electric, off % at 55. on 7,800 shares. ^ After dipping in early trading Tuesday, the market reversed couree and began to climb. advance was described by analysts as larg'ely technical in nature, resulting from' the market’s oversold condition. The upward puish rah out of steam, in later trading and the market fell back, with the Dow Jones industrird,average closing off 4.27 at 801.96, the lowest it had closed since the 791.14 of Jan. 4, 1967. By JOHN CUMfillFP AP BnaliiMs Analyst YORK X Parhaps It has' nevte, happehbd to you, but in your drpams at least you can imagine how it feels to be told by your. 'Surplus' Not TteretoSM U. S. Cash Outlajft —SttlU-Runfimg- 4a~Re4 more dun WASHINGTOPT (AP) ^ De-^^^JfeJ' spite its first budget surplu^ in eight years, the fi^eral government doesn’t have $3.1 billion left over for spending. ^ Its general fund—known the federal funds->-is in the red once again, but running far closer to balance than last year. Carr% CBuflfknMr« Celery, Pesc.„ ... Celery, Pascal, 2 to 5-dz. . Celery Hearts, Cello Pak. The New York Stock Exchange The Budget Bureau said Tuesday federal funds, when all the figures are in, will show some-less than the $8.6 billion defidt predicted in April, On the other side, the trust funds account, money set aside for such things as Social Security payments, will show a surplus in the neighborhood of f9.S billion, or slightly more. RECORD DEFICIT Last year the federal funds deficit was $28.4 i>alion apd the trust fund suiplUs $3.2 billion, for a record net deficit of $25.2 billion. The two funds must be kept separate because trust funds, by law, cannot be used fw general spending. But two years ago all government accounts were lumped into a “unified budget,” whieh simplified booUceeping and made it A bit easier to tell what sort of impact government spending was having on the ecmomy. The.federal budget is unlikeii famUy’s household budget in two major ways, former Budget Bureau dire^r Charles L. First, he said, in the “crudest sort of terms” the federal budget-keepers just add up all the cash they get in and subtract fihnx ‘ 'that air The' casIT'they spend. The difference is the surplus or deficit. Spending-known as oCi^ys ^ven cons)^ of bu3ong {woduc-tive assets such as mortgages or stock or making loans. In a household those wouldn’t be ditures. INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YORK (AP) .The following quo-"^ns, supplied by .... Natlpnal Association of ^Securities U, S.;*Bntam Unco\/er Bonuses in Treasuries Smnething ofj tbef sort has been the good fwtune of both!______________ the iTnited CUra«FF States and Britain this wmath. And in both instances the discoveries came when the atmosphere was bleak indeed. ★' Nothing concerned the Nikon ffibiiini$t»tion more than pdiieybig its widely publicized r of produidng a budget )lUs. It appeared nip and tuck for jthe ai^ent surplus was less fiian $1 bOlion, a paltry im. Now the Treasury has discovered that, unexpectedly, it has collected $2.8 billion 'more hi pemnal income taxes-than was foreseen as recently as last April,. pushing the budget surplus to well oyer $3 bilUoni^ a respectable figure. UNDERESTIMATES EXPORTS Britain found its good fortune in underestimating ijte exports, one of the critical areas of its economy. And compounding the good fortune was tee fact , that tee same error has been made every year since 1964. As many-Americans and all Britishers realize,.......... ecomnny has- been in the doldrums, one of tee reaswis-or effects—beii% that exports have not been strotig enough to produce an inflow of cash. • ★ ★' ★ The Board of Trade made a mighty (»ntribution to rectifying that poor situation earlier teis mmth when it aimounced ing these exports by between 2 and 2per cent. ★ Certainly this isn’t going to correct the imbalances in the British economy, but it do^ mean teat the country was bef-ter off by between ^ million and $36 million a year since Mutual Stock Quotations 9 a fa Am Bus 3.16 3.42 *- Dvin 9.8310.74 spl 9.37 .... Grth 6.44 7.M , 2.89 111'. , Pst Slera 39.20 42.98 - AOra SC «.16 8.92 Com St 13.03 14.26 Pul Ad 9.00 JJ4 Grth Ind 20.38 30.99 Orypn 14^15.91 r 10.2911.12 r 8.60 8.60 11.6612.73 2.90 3.17 4.96 5.42 > tSlO.*^ . 7.14 7.76 I 11.63 12.20 ‘ Nat Sacur Sar: Balprt ll>.0510.98 Bond 5.41 5.91 Grwth 8.64 9.44 DIvId 4.30 4.70 ' Pt Sfk 6.94 7.58 , “Incom 5.35 5.85 . Stock 8.18 8.94 Nat watt 5.90 6.47 NEL Glh 8.85 9.62 Nauwth 22.73.22.73 Now Eng 9.4710.24 Naw HOr 24.90 24.90 Naw WId 12.7213.90 NY Vent 14.7616.16 Newton 13.6214.90 Noraast. 16.1616.16 Ocngph 7.99 8.73 Omega 7.83 7.9S 1?9 K K Oppanh 7.01 7.66 Penn Sq 7.75 7.75 Pa Mut 7J7 7.37 PhIM 14.1615.52 Pilgrim 8.50 9.29 Pilot 6.96 7.61 Pine St 10.48 10.48 , &'SI!“Tnv Price TR 22.56 22.56 Pro Pund 9.60 9.60 Provdnt A67 5.10 Puritan 9.9810.79 Putnam J=unds: 9.4610.34 13.45 14.70 10.5911.57 . 8.06 8.81 6.69 7.31 Raveri”" llJs 13.» R»" T.V7 8.61 Equit Incom Invest , Vista Voyag Rep Tech Spci "WTiWio:. S3 a isa ' 11 ______________ IJ.l’l- H«wSt I ” I E Teehnci 5.69 6.22 .?■]?.Techvst 7.70 . Technol 7.46 8.13 Temp Gt 21.97 34.07 Towr MR 6.54 7.15 Tran Cap 7.72 8.30,.. TriV Eq I.U 9.68, Tudor Pd 15.8217.29 Twnc Ot 3.ra 4M 9.12 9.97 19M. And it provokes interesttof speculation. / DEVALUATION TOO HASTV? Did Britaiit act too hastily in reducing the stated value of tee pound sterling from $$.80 to $8.40? One of tee reasons for so doing was the, dlstreesiiig flfr ures teat showed big ~^p6Hi and small exports, j It is unlltady that tee errors would have meant tee differ^ ence between a strong pound and a weak pound. But in some monthly reports tee could hav^ meant tee difference between a poor export month and a terrible one. ' ..a. Equally interesting is specidation on tee U S. Treasury’s jewor. If nearly $3 ..... more than was expected was taken obt of the hands of Ameri-isumers, why in tee world didn’t this have more of an impact? In other words, why wasnT the decreased spendiriig' power of Americans more obvious in reduced sales of, let us say, automobiles and mutual funds and clothing, and in lower expenditures for travel and vacations? INCOMES HIGHER ' The explanations are perhaps as common as errors. ()ne reason, it is safe to say, is comes also were a bib higher f(>recast, * aiid hi^er m-comes sometimes mean, higher taxes. Another is teat savings were dipped into. ★ '■ ★ > ★ But an entirely unprofessional explanation of why taxpayers can part with tedr caite and stm continue to spend, is that side of tee ledger glso. . it -it / . - ■■ That is, while the government was siiteoning numey from taxpayers it was leaking and sidl-llmig ah awfiil lot of it back into the economy; in tee form of unexpectedly hlgb Itures, for example. 7 Note that on the same day as the government announced the budget surplus, tee Pentagon conceded teat it will have pa^d out hundreds of thousands of dollars misre than was anticipated foe the C5A air transport. • , Hr W ' 'That’s tee kind--«lfhough not tee size—of error ordinary citi-xena are used to hearing about, both from their government and from their bank. Sheriff's Car Has Jts Difficult Days KALAMAZOO (AP) - Car 5, What ^are you up to noyr? After tee year-old Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s D^art-ihent car’s experiraices of the past week, that seems ^a natural question. * First, its top was smashed in the automatic security door at departmental headqus^ers and then; several days later, tee car caught .fire. There were no injuries in either mishap, and the cruiser apparently was not Conti Air Lubrizol Mltrad k.«n*«y-icord ■bit Lines .. .125 ; . .15 Q 8-15*9-1 .. .25 Q 8-22 ! 9-9 SEC Chief Faces Quiz Into 'Conflict of Interest' WASHINGTON (AP)-Thelto explwe a “possible conflict of S cbairman^iLihe Securities and interest,” that ff hpd been underestimate Gommission said he oa.. Exdiange Commission stdd he would like to become president of six mutual funds if Ms boss— apparenfly, President Nixon— iqqiroved. Senate’sources say. . ★ ★ A source close to tee Senate Banking and (kirrency Committee quoted tee report Tuesday The minutes, as quoted by tito committee' source, idoitify George E. MacKinnon, vice president and general counsel M tee - funds, as iq^roaidiing Budge about the jm. MacKinnon was confirmed May 1 and sworn in June 14 as a ji^e on the U.S. Circuit Court of Ap-rright^rdm minutes token peals for tee District of Colum- ditectors of tee six mutual 'funds managed by Investors Diversified Smiices Inc. met in hOnneapolis June 12 to elect SBC Chairman Hamer H. Budge their new president. ★ Budge and representatives of tee funds and IDS were called b^ore the subcommittee today News in Brief Shirley Scrlbaer' of ,888 University told city pollce.some-one stole a power mower Valued at $65 froth tee rear of her home early yesterday. Mom’s Rnniinage, Hum., 9 to 12 Indianwood '& Baldwin Rds. i^-Adv. bia; Nixon was a director of four of the mutual funds from late 1964 until May 1968. He and MacKinnon served in the House to^thw during tee mid-1940s. Budge, a Republican, was iq>-pointe^ to the commission by President Johnson. He was named SEX] qhairman in FeMli-ary and given a full five-year term on May 28. ^ His negotiations with tee IDS-controlled funds came at a time when the SEC had been asked by the Banking and Currency Committee to investigate tlie ’‘face amount certificate” busi- ess. IDS, tee largest mutual fund concern in tee nation, has 95 per emit of the face amount business. It provides half the company’s net annual profit. s- 9,13 2.98 Evertt In 14.0415.21 W 21.64 33312 10.10 fl.04 Parm Bu 10.4810.M PM