The Weather IfJ. WutMr Bureau t , i . ' Perfect THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 126 — 3*0. 175 ★ w * PONTIAC. MICHIGAJf..WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 —72 PAGES Home Edition ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 10c 3 HHH Closes In on Victory; Gov. Maddox Calls It Quits CHICAGO (AP) - A boomlet to draft Sen. Edward M. Kennedy for the Democratic presidential nomination continued today but Kennedy asked his political supporters to stop all activity in his behalf. Kennedy, in a statement issued by his Washington office, said he his holding to his statement of a month ago to stay out of this year’s race for vice president because of personal and family POntiBC Pr*u Photo by Ron Untornohror Pontiac Firemen Fight The Blaze That Destroyed The Roosevelt Hotel Fire Guts City Hotel; Are Missing By MEL NEWMAN f At least four persons are missing in the wake of a fast-spreading fire which destroyed the 42-year-old Roosevelt Hotel, 125 N. Perry, early today. Fire Chief Charles Marion said this morning, “it will be a miracle if we don’t find some bodies in the building.” Firemen, at the scene since .the blaze was reported shortly before midnight, were preparing for a search of the gutted four-story structure about 8 a.m. Some 15 persons, including one fireman, were rushed to city hospitals. Four were reported under observation this morning, the rest were treated and released. Early estimates place damage to the 200-room building at 1300,000. No estimate of damage to contents has been made. Assistant Fire Chief Lee Nye said More Photos, Stories Page B-10 every piece of fire equipment in the city except one was dispatched to the scene. He attributed the relatively small injury toll to rapid evacuation work by firemen and police and said a panic was narrowly averted. Balmy Weather Perfect for Poets Poets may write about the beautiful days of'June, but what could be more perfect than the balmy days of sunshine this last week of August? The weatherman tells us skies will be mostly sunny with the high temperature . a pleasant 72 to 78 tomorrow and fair and warmer Friday. ★ * * The low isexpeeted to fall into the 60s tonight. A sunny 50 was the low thermometer reading preceding’ 8 am. The mercury stood at-73 at 2 p.m. In Today's Press • Christmas Trees Thumb orchardist offers § “pick-your-own” market. — 1 M. Wall Street Power Institutions play key role in shaping stock trends.’®- PAGE D-7. Area News 7 Poachers decimate Meadow^ Brook deer. — PAGE A-4. Area News ....... A-4 Astrology 04 Bridge Crossword Puzzle ... ...... D-15 Comics - G4 Editorials A4 Food Section C-19, C-Il Obituaries B-10 Picture Page D-7 State Fair Events A-4 .Sports Heaters „. D-1—D4 ; c4 TV-Radio Programs D-15 Wilson, Earl . ... .: D-is Women’s Pages .... B-l-B-4 Ford Introduces New-Look LTD DETROIT (UPI) - Ford Motor Co. introduced^ the Lincoln-Continental look in its top-bf-the-line Ford LTD today as the star attraction in the division’s new lineup of cars preview. Costarring were two new Mustiangs, a higher performance Mach I and a luxury-loaded Grande, and a -new Fairlane' Cobra. Both toe Mustang Mach I and the Fairlane Cobra have toe new Cobra Jet Ram-Air 428-cubic inch higher performance engine. * Sr ★ The Ford LTD,; borrowing heavily from the Lincoln-Oontinental styling on toe exterior, featured also a breathtaking new flight cockpit instrument-panel with all instruments clustered in a deep semi-circle immediately in front of the driver. On convertible models, design changes in toe top stacking mechanism permitted removing the wells on either side, adding' a full ten inches to the rear seat width. * * t . Full size Fords will be built on a new designed energy-absorbing frame, It consists of hollow front side rails shaped like an S. In a severe front impact, much of the energy is expended on telescoping the S rathed than being transmitted to the passenger compartment. N Side window vents were eliminated in., the LTD and on the XL sports roof model and the convertible. They were also eliminated in all Mustang models and in the new Fairlane Cobra, a fast-back. Nye said the blaze apparently started , in the building’s basement and "mushroomed upward” quickly. Cause of the fire has not been determined. ‘VERY HOT FIRE’ "If was a very hot fire and this had people on the verge of jumping from upstairs windows, but we were able to prevent that,” he said. This morning’s search of toe ruins was ‘held up until a building inspector could determine the strength of those walls and floors still standing. .* ★ * Marion said a small fire was still burning in toe remains of the lobby and electricity is still on in toe building. A ladder truck and a pumper were being held on standby. Twelve vehicles were at the scene at the peak of the fire, including one truek from Waterford Township. A Birmingham truck was sent to the city for backup duty. Marion gave much credit for the evacuation to citizens who helped firemen set up their large ladders and lay hose._ “This gave us a quick start and made it possible for us to contain the fire in the one structure,’’ he said. "There was a definite danger of the blaze spreading to other buildings, but we avoided that,” he added. He said the fire was brought under control after about two hours. Traffic is being routed aroynd North Perry between Wide Track and West Huron and authorities emphasized that spectators should stay away from the gutted building. • Residents of the hotel were urged to contact either the Salvation Army ’Citadel, 29 W, Lawrence, or police so that queries on their whereabouts could be answered. Flash An unidentified man was fatally shot in the chest shortly after 10 a.m. this morning at 2753 Churchill, Pontiac Township, Oakland County Sheriff’s Deputies said. Held for investigation of murder is Donald Caskey, 32, Of 2773 Churchill. Name of the victim was being withheld pending notification of next of kin. Fisher Body Plant Gets New Manager Thomas F. Wietoorn, manager of the Fisher Body assembly plant m Pontiac far 12 years, has been named manager of the Fisher Body assembly plant in Lansing. ‘ He will be succeeded by John F. Dudas, who has been plant manager of Fisher Body-Fleet wood in Detroit for the last three years, ★ ."*• ■ * Dudas is being replaced by Kenneth S. Bid well, former manager of the Lansing plant. r , US. to Hanoi: Butt Ouf PARIS (AP) - The United States accused North Vietnam today of meddling ia internal American affairs with comments on the presidential election campaign and demanded that Hanoi stop tt.' '' * ,„> V. ...■■* * Going into the 19th session of th£ Paris peace talks, U S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman also called on the Hanoi government “to stop toe carnage, stop toe fighting and get an with toe making of peace.” “The same decision and toe same reasons apply in the case of the presidential nomination,” said Kennedy. Most political pros appeared to be taking Kennedy at his word that he does not want his name offered before the Democratic convention for either president or vice president. NEARS NOMINATION Meanwhile,- Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, facing a Democratic convention revolt on Vietnam policies today, moved within 146 votes of the 1,312 needed for nomination. At toe same time, backers of his two major opponents, Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy and George S. McGovern, merged their efforts early today and forced a crucial delay in the showdown battle over toe party’s Vietnam policy. And, in another development, Gov. Lester Maddox of Georgia quit his brief bid for the. Democratic presidential nomination today and said he would campaign against the Democratic party’s nominee in the fall. Maddox left open toe possibility that he would support third-party candidate George C. Wallace in the November election. ★ ' ★ ★ The convention suddenly adjourned after meeting seven hours when large numbers of delegates started shouting and handclapping when reading started of the proposed platform plank recom-mending continuing policies set by President Johnson and Hurhphrey. Humphrey forces maintained their march of convention victories in seating contests over Southern delegations, and the vice president picked up a parade of endorsements from favorite-son candidates in Texas, Tennessee and South Carolina. But the convention pace was imperiled Related Stories, Pages A-2, A-3, A-9, AA2, B-1,C-11,D-15 when efforts to reach the critical test vote of Humphrey-McCarthy strength on the Vietnam issue were forestalled by the shouting demonstration to adjourn and reconvene at 1 p.m. EDT today. McCarthy and McGovern forces hailed the adjournment as a victory. McGovern aide Frank Mankiewicz, press secretary to toe late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, shouted jubilantly, “We have 11 hours to get 80 votes,” and said the insurgents were that close to winning, Mayor Daley, playing his role of convention master to the hilt, was in a position to give Humphrey a final shove toward a first-ballot nomination if he chose to do so at an Illinois caucus today. Minnesota and Missouri sources said Humphrey still hadn’t given up hope for Kennedy as a running mate despite the senator’s statement. Humphrey lieutenants insisted no decision has been made. Still figured high on the list. of possibilities were McCarthy, Gov. Richard Hughes of New Jersey, Sens. Fred Harris of Oklahoma and Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, and Ambassador to France Sargent Shriver, a Kennedy brother-in-law. Even Mayor Daley Couldn't Calm The appointments, announced today by Kenneth N. Scott, a vice president of General Motors and general manager of the Fisher Body Division, will become effective Monday. 29 YEARS WITH GM Wietoorn joined Fisher Body shortly after receiving a degree in business administration from the University of Cincinnati in 1939. Within two years he had risen from (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) JOHN F. DUDAS THOMAS F. WIETHORN By HARRY J. REED Managing Editor, Hie Pontiac Press CHICAGO—Seat-sore delegates to the Democratic National Convention rose in revolt and relief at 1:15 a.m. today. Even Humpty-Dumpty Daley couldn’t put them back together again. He tried, a 1-though no one knows why. He isn’t the chair-map, _it~-just hap-_ pens to be his turf. But short of the muscle which his policemen have . been using io betid REED nightsticks over newsmen’s heads, he couldn’t stop the stampede. ‘OFF TO BED’ MOOD Following seven hours of speechifying and sitting, the mood was “off to bed, and nuts to leaders who say ‘nay.’ ” After droning speeches and endless roll calls chi rules and order of procedure, the delegates balked when it became apparent the. supposed highlight of the evening, debate on a Vietnam plaftk in the platform, would keep them seated until at least 2:15 a.m. ★ ★ * As preparations were made to begin, the Viet talks, the leader of the Wisconsin delegation waved his sign frantically for recognition on the floor. The Wisconsin delegates were joined in their uproar by the Indiana members, and a chant began: “Let’s go home.”'". Permanent Chairman Rep. Carl Albert of Oklahoma seemed to lose first his poise and then his control of the convention. STANDING REBELLION His pleas for order seemed to encourage toe rebellion, which by now had, most of the delegates on their feet, shouting. Chicago Mayor Richard Daley charged the loose ball and blustered to the microphone. “This convention will not be taken over by the spectators and guests l| the balconies,” he .boomed out. “Behave, or we will clear the galleries.” * * * - That was the red flag to thousands,of bulls., The convention was out of control, r An attempt to recess the convention until 6 p.m. today had been ruled out of Order just seconds before, but now Daley reached to pull the fat out of the fire., • He called for immediate adjournment until noon, and, with a roar that riffled em toe bunting and shook the seats, the second session of the convention ended. For much of the evening, the Michigan delegation had been absent from the floor, in more caucus action. They seem (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) Sen. McCarthy Hopes Faltering CHICAGO (AP) — Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy’s own view of his candidacy , for the Democratic presidential nomination was left unclear today after he said Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey had wrapped up toe race, but then indicated he wasn't conceding anything. ★ ' ★ ★ He went to bed without further comment last night as Democrats wondered whether he was just being pessimistic or conceding toe nomination to Humphrey when he said: “I think it probably was settled more than 24 hours ag°-” ★ ★ ★ The print was hardly cold on the Knight Newspapers’ publication of the interview which contained that statement when McCarthy aide Richard N. Goodwin insisted — after talking with his boss — that McCarthy was not conceding defeat. INCREASINGLY EVIDENT But McCarthy’s pessimism, which has been increasingly evident of late, showed through clearly aS he tokl his interviewers: “I don’t even think Teddy (Sen Edward M. Kennedy) could get enough votes to win.” In typical fashion, McCarthy also let it be known that his oft-stated reluctance to Support a Humphrey ticket might not have reflected his true feelings. And his words tor the youthful supporters who have followed him since New Hampshire seemed less than kind: “I expect I’d probably, after a couple of weeks, say that there's not much choice, and I would recommend Humphrey. “The problem I have had is with the young people.'I’ve been more insistent than I really wanted to be about not supporting toe ticket, because they’d figure this is a sellout. They’re ready to .accuse you of a sellout anyway 4' k . > ' , A—3 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1368 Fraud Charges Leveled Against Securities Firm WASHINGTON (AP) - Hie Securities and Exchange Commission has leveled fraud charges against Wall Street’s biggest securities firm on grounds that it leaked a big-money secret only to certain major investors. lire regulatory agency set no date yesterday when it announced hearings would be held on charges by its staff against the nation’s biggest and best known broker-dealer, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith. * ★ h . . -k Nine officers and five salesmen of the firm, as well as 15 institutional investors—the alleged receivers of the hot tip from Merrill Lynch—also were-called on the carpet. The investors included the Madison Fisher Body Plant Has New Manager (Continued From Page One) personnel clerk to labor standards analyst at the Norwood, Ohio, plant. ★ ★ ★ Following his discharge as an Army officer in World War II, Wiethom returned to Fisher Body in Norwood and became supervisor of labor standards in 1947. Three years later he was named shift superintendent mid promoted to plant superintendent the following year. Dudas has been with Fisher Body since 1996 when he started as a layout man at the Detroit Die and Machine plant Later that year he was transferred to the Flint No. 1 plant where he became foreman in 1940. IN 9 STATES Dudas was assigned to the Norwood plant in 1945 as a shift superintendent and became , plant superintendent there the following year. He was superintendent at Fisher Body plants in Lansing, Atlanta and Euclid, Ohio, before joining Fleetwood in that capacity in 1954. He was production manager a t Fleetwood for five years before being promoted to plant manager. Fund and Dreyfus Corp., top mutual fluids. | FIRM DEFENDED “We are convinced that none of our people acted wrongfully and you can be sure we will defend our position vigorously," Merrill Lynch said in a statement issued in New York. According to the SEC, Merrill Lynch was helping Douglas Aircraft Co. prepare a bond issue when it learned the big planebuilder’s earnings, contrary to earlier Optimistic reports, were in bad shape. ★ * * The SEC Version of what followed is that this word passed through the Merrill Lynch personnel to a chosen few investors and that immediately thereafter these began to sell off their holdings in Douglas in the expectation that its value was about to drop. Meanwhile, the regulatory agency said, other Douglas shareowners were left in the dark—indeed, Merrill Lynch continued to sell Douglas to anyone who wanted to bujOhe SEC said. The dumping lasted half a week—until June 24, when Douglas publicly announced it might be faced with a nonprofit year. During the unloading, the SEC said, the large investors it has cited cleared their portfolios of 199,000 shares of the unwanted stock. An infofmed source said these shares sold for some $4.5 million more than they would have brought if traded at the price that prevailed June Judge Leaves Door Open 1-696 Hearing Injunction Nixed An Oakland County Circuit judge yesterday refused to issue an injunction that would have blocked an arbitration board from continuing hearings on the proposed route of the 1-696 freeway. * ★ * The cities of Lathrup Village and Pleasant Ridge and a taxpayers group from Lathrup Village were seeking the temporary order pending a foil-scale bearing on the issue. ★ ★ ★ While ruling that arbitration on the question is constitutional, Judge Arthur E. Moore left the door open for the case to be continued at a later date., “There may be further litigation.” said Moore, “if the complainants feel that their rights have been violated by the arbitration board." The lawsuits were filed against the Michigan State Highway Department after-Gov. Romney appointed a three-man panel to end a four-year fight over a 6.5-mile section of the route through south Oakland County. The section in dispute would go through the cities of Royal Oak, Pleasant Ridge, Huntington Woods, Oak Park, Lathrup Village and Southfield. * ★ ★ The arbitration panel will meet again at 9 a m. tomorrow in the supervisors Auditorium at the county Courthouse to listen to alternative proposals offered by affected communities. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and pleasant. High 72 to 78 with variable winds six to 12 miles per hour today. Fair and warmer tonight and Thursday. Low tonight 50 to 58. Friday outiookr Partly sunny and warmer. , Direction: Varloblo Lowest temperature . Weather: Sunny n rises Thursday at 1:2» p.m. town Temperatures Unrecorded" < Highest temperature . Lowest temperature AAtoan temperature .. 67 40 Detroit 73 43 Duluth M «v 69 45 Fort Worth *1 49 74 44 Jadcaonvllli 88 73 63 43 Kansas City <4 64 70 35 Los Angeles If 61 63 39 W*mi Beach 88 78 71 41 Milwaukee 66 48 60 47 New Orleans II 49 68 44 New York 76 57 64 43 Phoenix • 101 76 61 33 Pittsburgh 73 44 70 36 St. LOUIS 76 50 01 60 Tampa B State Delegates Sitting Firmly in Hubert Camp Bartender Is Held in Bombing Death SOUTH LAKE TOHOE, Calif. (AP) — An unemployed bartender was arrested today in the death of a Lake Tahoe gambling casino owner killed yesterday when a bomb demolished his automobile, police said. Sgt. Don Johnson said officers served a warrant on Donn Lee Cavnar, 24, of South Lake Tahoe, charging first-degree murder in the death of Richard L. Chartrand, 42. Chartrand was tom to pieces when the bomb exploded as he Sat behind the wheel of his luxury car in front of his house in Zephyr Cove, Nev., across the lake from here. No one else was injured. * * * Sheriff George Byers of Douglas County said the bomb was under the floorboard, Federal Bureau of Investigation agents were called in to examine the bomb. Agent Max Wilson of Reno said a technician will conduct laboratory tests. CHICAGO UB— Michigan backers of Hubert H. Humphrey called on delegates today to remain firm in their support of the vice president for he Democratic presidential nomination. An Associated Press poll of the delegation noted a slight shift to Sen. George S. McGovern of South Dakota. * * * But Humphrey backers--------Including the United Auto Workers — appeared successful in stopping a dump-Humphrey movement within the Michigan delegation. LATEST AP POLL----------------- Here is bow the delegation breaks down in the latest AP poll: Hubert Humphrey 73 Eugene McCarthy 12 George McGovern 6 Uncommitted 5 “The United Auto Workers is putting horrible pressure on delegates,” said one delegate who asked not to be named. ★ * ★ A shift to McGovern appeared after the senator addressed the delegation yesterday afternoon. McGovern, a supporter of the policies of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New York, told delegates that his goals were “to tame the savageness of man and make gentle the life of the world.” “I believe, as the late Sen. Kennedy (fid, that the issues of peace at home and peace abroad are indivisible,” McGovern stated. But he added that an end to the war in Vietnam would not insure an end to violence in America. ‘HE’S GOT BOTH PIECES’ “He’s got both pieces of the puzzle. Each of the other candidates has one piece,” commented one Negro Michigan delegate who asked not to be named. “All these black delegates who can actually vote their conscience and haven’t been sent here by the United Auto Workers or Secretary of State James Hare will support McGovern because of his position on the cities and the war,” he added. ★ * * Sen. Philip Hart endorsed McCarthy late yesterday in a caucus on the convention . floor. The endorsement came after it was rumored that the Minnesota senator had withdrawn. “I just hope he hasn’t withdrawn,’’ said Hart, whose wife, Jane, and daughter, Ann, are McCarthy campaign workers. LECTURER — Harry Van Hook, director of training for Pontiac Motor Division, shows community votonteers how to give a successful presentation at yesterday’s signs NEEDED Pontiac Area United Fund Speaker’s Bureau meeting. Presentations of the United Fund story by these volunteers are available to local groups. Birmingham Area Intersection May Get New Traffic Signal BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Township motorists may be seeing a new traffic signal at the Quarton-Franklin Road intersection as a result of Township Board action this week. „/ At this week’s meeting the board requested that the Oakland County Road Commission erect a blinking signal at the busy intersection. The request asked that the light be blinking amber on Franklin and blinking red on Quartan. ★ ★ In another request the board asked the road commission to put up no-parking «ign« on Lincoln around the barricaded entrances to Bradford, Breckenridge and • Windham. ........ .....- - - - r - Officials noted that the barricades prevent traffic from turning from Lincoln onto the residential streets, but that they can be broken by fire trucks If an emergency exists. Pontiac Div. Exec Heads Area UF Speakers Bureau Training and coordinating this year’s Pontiac Area United Fund Speakers Bureau will be Harry Van Hook, director of training, Pontiac Motor Division. Van Hook, a member of last year's bureau, is coordinating 18 community volunteers who will present the United Fund story. This year’s campaign program in- Bronson Studies Police Report Oakland Countjr Prosecutor S. JeroSie Bronson said today that he is studying a statistical report from the Pontiac Police Department concerning law enforcement throughout the city. The report was prepared oil Bronson's request after Pontiac City Commissioner T. Warren Fowler Sr. last week charged that Pontiac police are afraid to patrol Negro areas. * * * Copies of the 15-page study were distributed to city commissioners prior to their meeting last night, but because of its length and the little time to review it, the report was not discussed publicly. During the meeting, however, Fowler briefly noted that he had met with police department officials Friday concerning his allegations and that he was “satisfied” with the outcome. MEET WITH BRONSON Later, he said that he will accept an invitation from Bronson to outline his accusations. He said that the meeting with Aronson wilf take place after the prosecutor has had a chance to read the report. The report has not been made available to«newsmen. eludes a 15-minute film titled “Hie Day Love Died.” The film relates the decline of the Mayan civilization — which died the day love between its citizens died —’ to modem civilization. Taken on location in the Yucatan Penninsula in Mexico, the film illustrates how love for our fellow rpan is crucial in our present period of unrest. The local theme for this year’s PAUF campaign is LOVE — and this year’s slogan is “That Love May Live — Give.” * * + Any chib, group or organization may request a PAUF Speakers Bureau presentation by contacting the PAUF office at 131 Franklin Blvd. The complete presentation takes approximately 25 minutes and is available stinting Sept. 10.. This year’s PAUF campaign begins Oct. 15 and runs through Nov. 8. Monies collected support 55 health, welfare and youth agencies in Pontiac and the outlying areas. The no-parking signs are needed to keep cars from blocking the barricades so that the fire route can remain open. In other action the board approved the construction of a special commercial bus stop lane on the south side of Maple west of the Telegraph intersection. A ★ ★ The proposed lane would be about 150 feet long and would be used primarily by the Great Lakes Transit Authority for embarking and disembiP king toother business the board accepted a petition and set a date for a first hearing on the construction of a water main for the Lone Pine Heights Subdivision located north of Lone Pine and west of Franklin Road. SIGNED BY 54 pet. The petition was signed by 54 per cent of the 67 site owners. The project will be assessed on a site basis at $1,029 per site. The first hearing on the project was set for OCt.,28 at 8:30 p.m. In other action the board okayed a new taxi insurance ordinance for the township reducing the coverage required forcommercial taxi companies. The new plan calls for basic 5-10-20 coverage which is $5,000 property damage, $10,000 personal injury and $20,000 public liability. The old ordinance called for more than twice that amount of coverage. Detroit May Close Mayor's Mansion DETROIT (UW) — Mayor Jerome Cavanagh may have to look for another home if the Common Council carries out a threat to close the mayor’s official residence — the Manoogian Mansion. * * * Donated to the city by businessman Alex Manoogian, the mansion has served as the residence only for Cavanagh. Some of the expenses in keeping up the place have irritated several members of the council. * * * Council President Ed Carey yesterday said the deed to the mansion would be examined to see if it couid be returned to its former owner. Dem Delegates Rise in Revolt 1989 FAIRLANE — Ford's new addition to the 1969 Fair- gered shock absorbers, wide-oval tires, competition suspension lane line is the performance-oriented -Cobra., Available in the and four-speed fully synchronized manual transmission also are fastback design pictured here or the hardtop model, the Cobra available at no extra cost. A functional hood scoop funnels has a 428-cubic-inch V8 engine as standard equipment. Stag- cool air directly into the Cobra’s carburetor automatically. Cobra Joins 1969 Ford Fairjane Lineup (Continued From Page One) to leave the room more than kids with a substitute teacher. This time, though, the meetings were about a Vietnam plank proposal which the delegation was to have made from the floor. It had been under discussion most of the day at Michigan headquarters in the Lakeshore Drive Holiday Inn. AMENDMENT BAN Introducing the platform discussion, Albert included a provision which would eliminate amendments, which is what Michigan’s maneuver would have been. He asked twice if there were any ob-“jections from the floor to eliminate amendments. Among convention delegates and officials, it was common knowledge that Michigan was planning to submit an amendment to the majority platform report. ★ ★ k Michigan floor leaders were busy trying to convince other delegations of the \ value of their amendment, and talking to TV interviewers. If they were aware of the move to prevent amendments, no one moved to object. SUBSTITUTE PROVISION The Michigan amendment would have substituted a provision for one contained ; in the majority report concerning the bombing in Vietnam. Hie sense of the amendment was to stop the bombing immediately in the North but not in South Vietnam, with the expectation of a response from Hanoi. Such an amendment might yield common ground cm the most controversial issue facing the convention, it was felt. ' * * k Unless they can arrange some legal backpedaling to get around the successful move to block amendments, Michigan delegates did a lot of packing for a trip and then missed the tritin. NATIONAL WEATHER -- Showers and thundershowers are predicted tonight for Florida* Montana, Wyoming, New Mexico and western Texas. There will be rain to the Pacific northwest. It will be warmer In the upper Greaf Lakes region and the upper and middle Mississippi Valley-and cooler to the northeastern plateaus. New to the Ford Fairlane line is the 1969 Cobra. Available to both hardtop and fastback roof designs, the car has a 428-cubic-inch V8 engine and four-speed manual transmission as standard equipment Also featured are recessed door handles, brushed aluminum instrumait dials and wide-oval tires. Other Fairlane series models are the Torino, Torino GT, Fairlane, Fairlane and 560. Three sedan, station wagon and sprats roof models, as well as two con-v vertibles, wifi be available soon at local dfealentiiips. k k k Fairlane styling characteristic of the 1968 models will be retained while new, external orientation includes dual bead lamps and a hoizontal, aluminum grille. Fairiane’s Torino GT features a unique plastic grille, ornamental hood scoop, steel wheels with chrome GT bubs and belted,; white sidewall tires. A 302-cubic-inch V8 engine is standard equipment. MAGIC DOOR-GATE’ ''All I960 Ford station wagons offer the “magic door-gate” which opens either outward or downward. > * * Agaiq the basic Fairlane design will be Safety features included im all new Font models are an energy absorb-ing Instrument panel and steering column. Dual hydraulic brake systems, emergency flashy* and two-speed windshield wipers will also be standard equipment Convenience -options to' the Fairlane pqpducts are a “rimblow” born built into the Inner side^ the steering wheel. Also available te a new power bench seat that is adjustable four ways. Local dealers handling the 1989 Fairlane models are: Harold Turner Ford, 484 S. Woodward, Birmingham; Don Spiker Ford, 130 S. Milford, Milford; John McAuliffe Fort, 630 Oakland, Pontiac; Troy Motors, 777 John R, Avon Township; Shuman Ford Sales, 1111 S. Commerce, Commerce Totenship; Flannery Ford, 5808 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township; and Jade Long Ft)rd, 215 Main, Rochester. * Ike Reversal Possible WASHINGTON (AP) — Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s doctors are tempering their most optimistic Report with a warning, that “this favorable trend is capable of reversing at any time.” Medical bulletins yesterday said Uie 77-year-old general is still experiencing the Irregular extra beats described as heart irritability. ,, , No Market Page Today Because the Stock Market te dosed today, there fa no Market Page to today’s Press- THE PONTIAC PRESS.,WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Unusual Coalition Has HHH in Drivers Seat By SAUL PETT AND JULES LOH CHICAGO (AP) - With all its floor fights and intense debate, how open is this roaring Democratic National Convention? The public argument might suggest it is wide open, especially as contrasted with the decorous parley in Miami Beach two weeks ago which handed Richard Nixon the Republican presidential nomination. ■ * A v * But votes taken in the first two days of the Democratic convention, despite all the hot oratory, clearly show Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey consistently in the driver’s seat, riding an unusual coalition of bedfellows—conservative delegations from the South along with many of the big, presumably liberal delegations from the industrial North and Midwest. Humphrey agents have been all over the hall, according to his opponents. In addition to pressure applied directly by the vice president, his opponents insist the platform committee’s majority recommendation the Vietnam plank was dictated by the Johnson administration. Their view is that the President left his vice president free to call the shots on the-domestic .issues but moved in himself, positively, on the foreign affairs planks. SEVEREST TEST The glue holding Humphrey delegates in line will get its severest prenomination test today when the Vietnam plank goes to the floor for a vote. If Humphrey survives the all- out assault planned by the doves, he should have clear sailing then to his noiplnation. The “1!” here remains a big one because it was on^ the issue of Vietnam that Eugene McCarthy was consistently underestimated By the experts from New Hampshire to Oregon.. ' Nonetheless, on the that have already reached the floor the vice president has shown steady control. ___■ * * * - Two votes—on the question of seating contested delegations from Georgia and Alabama found states such as Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan and Illinois falling into line on the same side as South Carolina, Louisiana, Tennessee and Arkansas. What they agreed on was ostensibly a matter of civil rights, the one issue that has driven a regional wedge through Democratic party for a -generation. VOTE WITH SOUTHERNERS Even delegations from Puerto Rico, the Virgin; islands, Hawaii and the Panama Canal Zone voted with the Dixie delegates to defeht the challengers. When you get delegations like these to vote against the seating of black delegates, you know the convention is being controlled,” said John Kenneth Galbraith, who is working for McCarthy. ‘‘This one is under the management of Hubert Humphrey and Larry O’Brien.' ★ ★ ★ But in both votes, there was another consideration involved. Both challenging delegations were thick with McCarthy supporters. Seating them would not only have replaced Humphrey MSU Astronomers Hunt Clues to 'Fireball' in LANSING (UPI) - Michigan State University astronomers are seeking more information on reports of a ‘‘brilliant bluish-green’’, object sighted overj write Chamberlain at Abrams Planetariun at the university. Chamberlain /said he’s f terested in knowing the time the Mw,hi,.on . jc - meteorite occurred, the number Michigan about 12:45 p.m. of seconds the “fireball” lasted, Tuesday. MSU astronomer Von Del Chamberlain said the object was ‘‘almost certainly’ the direction from which it came in relation to each person’s location, a description of any sounds it may have made and the appearance of votes with McCarthy votes but also might have precipitated defections from the vice president In other states. Put- another way, Humphrey forces in the North. scratched the South’s back. The SouthV it is-assumed, could be-expected to return the favor nomination night , . WHIPS BUSY ‘‘Humphrey’s floor whips were awfolly busy here the first two nights,” said Pierre Salinger, former White House press secretary and now a lieutenant in Sen. -George McGovern’s presidential campaign. --The effect is surprising to some, said Rep. Edith Green, chairman of the Oregon delegation, which as a result of the primary, is committed to McCarthy: “The outcome of the votes we’ve taken so far make me think that the vice president has more strength than any of suspected and . maybe even mere than he himself expected.” ’ * ; ■■», A third contest, on whether to abolish the party’s unit rule, revealed the same pattern and, when examined behind the scenes, more mutual back-scratehing. The unit rule is a voting device traditionally dear to south- erners. The North went along, knocking down a challenge by the Texas delegation to postpone its abolition until 1972. Humphrey was expected to disagree with Texas. But, won-drously, Texas spokesman Tom Gordoh came to the rostrum with a statement he said he obtained from the vice president himself now supporting the Texas position. Why? NEEDED VOTES Die answer, said a highly placed Texas delegate, lay in the fact that Humphrey suddenly found himself needing Texas’ 104 votes more than he did before.. Explained the delegate: Gov. John Connally brought his Texas delegation to Chicago with two goals: retain the unit rule and fight for a strong, hawkish Vietnam plank. He wanted Humphrey’s support on both aims and assumed a favorite son stance to increase his bargaining power. For days, however, he heard nothing from the vice president. * * ★ Then the boom or bobmlet for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy echoed through the Convention hall, and Texas’ 104 Votes became more precious. Key Texans found themselves being called and pressured by Humphrey aides from the wee hours through the day. On Sunday Humphrey delivered a hawkish Vietnam statement. On Monday he supplied his statemen/bn the unit rule. Humphrey, baid the Texas delegate, had now delivered. Con-nally then dropped his favorite son role, and endorsed the vice president. ★ A * On the question of the pro-administration Vietnam plank recommended in the majority report of the platform committee, Salinger, who opposes it, said: “I know that it was written in the White House and the State Department. This is not sur mise. I was told this by members of the committee-” S&SffiBBl ms 2-pc. suits, shirtwaist'Styles and others, sizes 8 to 16, but not in all styles. . —Main Floor Ladies’ Famous Brand Bras Choice of podded, circle stitch, Kodel fiberfill, and others, first quality, famous brand. — Main Floor 87* Girls’ Assorted Purses Choice of black patent, or blue leather dutch' bag with Shoulder strap and chain. Reg. $2.49. — Main Floor [67 Ladies’Asserted Blouses ; Summer and fall styles including White Stag, Queen Casuals, long and short sleeves. Values to $8.00. Sizes 30 to 38. —Main Floor [99 Ladies’ Knee Knockers ■■■■. at * - Machine washable Cotton knee knockers in sizes, . 8 l>H 2. Green only. —Main Floor' 84 0 Ladies’ Swim Suit Tops Chbjce of several styles iii block or white or print. Sizes small and medium, —Main Floor 84* Ladies’ Dresses Special group of ladies' summer dresses. Values . to SA.95, sizes 8 la 12 but not inall styles: ■ —Alain Floor 84* Famous Brands On Sale! 3x5-Ft. Storm King Flag Outdoor Flag Set With 18-Ft. Matal Pole i SI7.55 list. You get q 3x5-ft. i Storm King bunting flog with em- Ijj broidered stars and sewen stripes u plus 18-ft. metal pole with ground | socket and hardware. |i Sundries—Main Floor 12" GE Lighted Dial Alarm Clock $5.95 Value model #7253K self starting GE snooz alarm clock with lighted dial. Beige case. Sundries—Main Floor 333 Asst. Dnbreakable Combs Famous ACE combs of unbreakable nylon. Choice of pocket, dressing and curl styles. Asst, colors. Sundries — Main Fleer ffP Kapok Filled Life Jackets 45-lb. Childs’.....1.66 AduN Size......... 2.22 90-lb. Bhilds’.....1.88 Coast Guard Approved. SundriM—Main Floor Box of 64 Crayola Crayons $1.00 value, box of 64 assorted color Crayola rayons with built-in sharpener. t , Sundries—Main Floor 59* 500-Ct Ruled Filler Paper Reg. 98c list, 500 count ruled filler ^per fits -Sher 3 ring binder. Buy now for school. Limit ~2. Sundriee—Main Floor 69 Adjustable Razor Bah&Gillatta Techmatic Razor $2.98 value, use a Gillette-Tech|tiatk razor for the lightest,touch in shaving. ' Stainless, steel I bond gives weeks of gentle, close shaves.. |43 Gillette Techmatic Razor Band Cartridge. Drugs—Main Fleer Colgate’s 100 Antiseptic $1.79 value, new 25-FI. oz. size Colgate's 100 oral antiseptic1 for breath control and gargle. Drugs—Main Floor 87* 100 Dpjohn’s Unicap M $3.38 value, pig. of 100 Unicap M vitamin and mineral vitamins with 30 extra bonus. Drugs—Main Floor [99 Preil Liquid Shampoo $145 value, 11.5-fl. oz. Extra rich Preil liquid shampoo leaves hair clean and easy to 'monage. _ ________________. Drugs—Mo in Floor 93* Noxzema Cosmetics $1,50 value. Choice of famous Noxzema medicated liquid, pressed powder or matte. Cosmetics—Main Floor 96* Jergen’s Hand Lotion 32:00 volue 22-fl. Oz. The world's best known ' •hand lotion in big economy size with FREE -dispenser. Cosmentics—Main Floor [29 Maybelline Eye Cosmetics $1.00 value. Choice of Maybelline mascaraA eye-brow pencil, eye liners, or Neye shadow. Cosmetics—AAoin Floor 66* You Get It For Less At Simms Precision Built Polished Brass Door Lock Set Carlton entry lock set of polished brass, fits all knob holes from 1 % to 2Vb. With 2 keys. Hardware—2nd Floor Battery Booster Cables Model #BX67P9, easy start battery booster cables, 8 feet long. Start without dangerous high speed pushing. Hardware—2nd Floor [99 Fedtro Battery Charger Hooks up in minutes, with heavy duty built-in rectifier and transformer. Keeps battery fully charged in any weather. Hordwore—2nd Floor 3M 25-Ft Trouble Light 'Handy for workshop, garage, etc. 20 gauge, 3 amp trouble light, 25-feet long. Bulb extra. Hardware—2nd Floor [39 Fedtro Auto Vacuum. Easy to use, just plug it into your cigarette lighter. Cleans , ashes, crumbs, dust, 10-foof-cable. Hardware—2nd Floor 3*0 Sealed Beam Headlight For 12-volt systems. GE auto headlight bulbs, so -you can see and be seen for igiety. Limit 2.__ Hardware—2nd Floor Cast Iran-Adiuatabla Grill Single Hibachi ) Ox 10-inch size single hiboehl for snacks and picnics. Twin handles and wooden base. — 2nd fleer 24-Inch. Bar-B-Que Grill Crank lift, rotating grate adjustable grid, Bar-B-Que grill on easy-roNing wheels. -2nd Floor gee Teflon IroniHg Pad t Cover 'Glide-O-Maf pad set custom tailored to fit all standard ironing beards. Scorch resistant. Housewarei—2nd Floor 54* Folding Metal Table Decorative woodgroined metal top folding table with bronzetone legs. Ideal for indoor or outdoor use. 36x36-inch size. 5" Swing Top Kitchen Can Easy to use, polyethylene container that is unbreakable. Holds 44 qts. Has swing top cover. Housewares—2nd Floor |<9 6-Gal. Poly Garbage Can Unbreakable polyethylene 6 gallon garbage can with cover. Easy to dean. ’ Housewares—2nd Floor 88 Decorative Garden Figurine Statue of St Francis garden figurine and bird bath. Made of Dapol plastic Sturdy. . , ■ Housewares—2nd Floor [99 Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Tame Deer Herd In Park Near Rochester Seems Easy Target For So-Called Hunters Poachers Decimate Meadow Brook Deer Riot-Power Ordinance Eyed by Rochester City Council Five years ago, 47 deer roamed the 17-acre woodlot on die Alfred 6. Wilson Meadow Brook estate near Rochester. Today there are only 26 animals left, a result of the continuous work of area poachers. ★ • W ★ Ray Clark, a'grounds keeper on the estate, estimates that 22 whitetail and four black and white European fallow deer are all that remain of the larger herd. * ★ ★ First established by the late Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson about 30 years ago, the original herd was composed of Japanese, “dog-sized” sika deer. These eventually died off and were replaced by the native and hardier whitetail deer and the European variety obtained from the Detroit Zoo. Recently, poachers and malicious youths have kept the deer herd from growing at a normal rate. The large, wooded, private grounds are a poachers’ paradise. Security police patrol the area, but still the deer toll rises. ★ * ★ Clark said, “Just over a week ago a boy came in here with a 30-30 rifle and began shooting at them. They finally caught him after a 100 m.p.h. car chase. . “it doesn’t seem like it could be much sport, but every now ahd again, poeple just start shooting at them through the fence. We found seven-of them dead in one night, as a result of poachers. PACKS OF DOGS “They even have tried bows and arrows, leaving the wounded animals to die during the night. Occasionally, we even lose some to packs of wild dogs.” Naturally there is a penalty for poaching deer from the Meadow*-Brook estate. . * * ★ “We caught up with one man who shot a buck and then came back to get the carcass with his car,” Clark said. “He paid $200 for the privilege of shooting a penned animal.” When any of her animals were killed, Mrs. Wilson felt a genuine loss. ‘REALLY HURT HER’ • “It really hurt her when these deer would be killed,” Clark said. “She just wanted people to enjoy them and she couldn’t understand why they would shoot at them.” Although the deer park is fenced in to protect the deer from getting out and the poachers from gelling in, the herd has relative freedom. Rolling meadows, - dense foliage and access to a creek-fed pond provide the deer with all the comforts of home. A supplemental diet of grain, hay and salt is provided year around. Two wooded shelters protect the animals in the winter months. Bordered by Adams Road on one side, the deer park is located deep inside the Meadow Brook grounds. Party-goers and dinner guests passed by the park on their way to Wilson galas some years ago when the old front gate was in use. Now Oakland University is the legal owner of ihe herd as the entire Meadow Brook estate was bequeathed to the school in the Wilson will. In hopes that the deer will remain with the estate, a faculty committee has been organized to work out a plan providing for the future care and expense of the herd. ROCHESTER—The City Council has agreed j© write to the Municipal League . for a sample of ah ordinance governing the enforcement of local curfews and bans during civil disturbances, p City manager William Sinclair said, a similar ordinance for Rochester would probably'be drafted “in the not too distant future.” . ★. * , - * Earlier this month the council approved a letter to State Rep. Donald E. Bishop and Sen. Robert J. Huber asking that they take action to override Gov. George Rpmney’s veto of a bill allowing municipalities to enforce curfews and' ban the sale of liquor and gasoline when they feel it is necessary. ★ a- ★ » The council also asked Its lawyer to compose a draft of an ordinance banning parking on Main north of University to the city limits. ACTION EXPECTED Sinclair said he expected action to be taken on that ordinance at the next regular meeting of the council. The ordinance is a result of an extensive traffic study made for Rochester by the Automobile Club of Michigan, a a a The council moved to hold a special meeting for property owners and businessmen in the central business district Sept. 16 to discuss possible action on other recommendations of the study. The council also has accepted the resignation of Frank Kelly, urban renewal director. Kelly of 2374 Lakena had served for 2Vi years. He resigned because of “other business matters,” he said. THE PONTIAC PRESS faal/ms WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1908 A—4 West Bloomfield Planners School Vote Is Sept. 7 More Questions on School Pay Dispute Is Settled in Troy TROY — The board of education and the Troy Education Association last night reached an agreement on supplemental pay for teachers who perform extra duties in the school system. The settlement came at last night’s board meeting which lasted until about 1 a m. Hie two parties had settled on a master contract in June but had agreed to negotiate for supplemental pay over the summer. • * * * The board had offered a 10 per cent raise over the supplemental pay scale of , two years ago. Extra duty personnel had worked for no pay last year due to an-unsuccessful millage vote. In the pew agreement the board offered an additional 5 per cent increase over the 1# per cent which, in effect, gave the affected teachers a raise for last year’s work and a raise for this year’s efforts also. REFUSED TO WORK The extra duty pay goes to coaches, driver education and special education teachers, dub sponsors and department chairmen.. The crisis came this week when football coaches sent players home, refusing to work until an agreement was reached. ★ ★ ★ The coaches were following a stipulation in the master contract which stated that they would not work until the supplemental pay agreement was reached. Nine area women havewon awards in Michigan State Fair conimunity arts judging. Mrs. Charles L. Walter of 2244 'MSrsfofiT wateifofff TownsWp, earned*; six first places, two seconds and three third prizes. ..0 ★ it Mrs. Walter’s white, orange and potato bread earned top honors as did her plain rolls, cinnamon loaf and gingerbread. Mrs. Travis A. Lively of 5580 Cruse, Waterford Township, received one first prize, four second places and four fourth-place ribbons. The judges considered her crewel embroidered pillow as best at the fair. * Other local winners in community arts judging Include: (EDITOR’S NOTE—This is the last m a two-part series on the 7.7-mill request which will be before the Avondale School . District voters on Sept. 7. Questions are answered by school officials. and the Millage Support Committees.) Q. If the millage proposal is passed, will the Avondale School District be able to hire additional telchers? How many, ,and in what areas? A. The 7.7 mills will provide funds to hire teachers so that all classes can be placed on regular schedules. We will need to hire approximately 30 teachers following approval of the millage. These are primarily elementary teachers, but there will be some need for a few junior high school teachers. ★ .★ ★ Q. What effect will additional mills have on teachers’ salaries? A. The 7.7-mill Increase has not beej\ Identified for increasing salaries. It is only providing enough funds to hire the teachers necessary to restore full-day classes in grades 1 through 8 and to restore most of the economies adopted on July 1, 1968, as a result of the June 10 millage defeat. 9. What effect on the competition for teachers will the mills have? , A. Passage of the 7.7-mill increaise wjll enable us to recruit the staff members Elizabeth C. Ross of 380 Ditroar, Pontiac, third prize corn bread, fourth prize pound cake; Mrs. Martha Cuff of 513 Pearsall, Pontiac,, first prize- chiffon cake, second prize Boston brown bread; Ann Adamo of 672 Linda Vista, Pontiac, first prize candy-brittle; Mrs. Ann De Mino of 925 Emerson, Pontiac, third prize decoupage-glass. - ★ * * Also awarded ribbons were: Diana I. Hunt of 5319 Vincent, Waterford Township, fourth prize knitted afghan; Lynda McLaughlin of 1471 Woodlow, Waterford Township, fourth prize teen’s knitted sweater; and Mrs. Mary E. Strieker of 1845 Ladd, Commerce Township, third prize painted article. needed to return to a full-day program. Quality staff members are naturally attracted to a school district wherein the staff experiences rapport among themselves, with administrators, with parents, and most of all with boys and girls. ★ ★ ★ Q. How do teachers’ salaries compare to those of other districts? A. The Avondale teacher salary schedule will compare favorably with other comparable school districts. We do not plan to be number one in salary schedule for the 28 school districts within Oakland County, nor do we plan to be 28th on the salary schedule list. Q. Will school physical facilities benefit from the additional mills? A. There will be no additional benefits to the physical facilities of the schools if the 7.7* mills is approved. ★ ★ ★ Q. What effect will the proposed mills . have ort extra curricular activities? A. A successful millage election will enable the Avondale School District to retain many of the extracurricular activities such as class advisors, club sponsorship and musical programs. Q. What effect will added revenue have on bus transportation? A. Busses will run on all main roads. They will travel on. secondary roads in extenuating ’circumstances where the safety of the children would otherwise be jeopardized. Also on the ballot is a proposition asking authorization to discontinue free text book distribution for grades 7 through 12. Q. Could additional revenue effect that proposition? A,-NO —-verjt4ew-kleal8choolspro-te-vide free textbooks for secondary grades. The recommendation that the Avondale School District cease to provide these books free came from the citizens of the. community. A vote of the people is required before this can be done. At the present time the school plans to rent textbooks to the students if the voters decide that the schools should no longer provide textbooks at no cost to the students. ★ ★ ★ Q. How much money will be gained if voters pass that resolution? 9 Women Among Fair Winners Avondale A. That is difficult to say! Fifteen thousand ($15,000) dollars has been budgeted tor secondary textbooks for the 1968-69 school year, but this amount may vary from year to year. Somes years new series of textbooks are necessary where the costs might involve greater outlays of money. In such instances/ the school district will not be able to recover the full amount immediately by renting textbooks to the students. ★ ★ * Q. Didn’t the school district get more funds in recent years from the rise in property valuation? A. Yes—however, most additional revenues received from the rise of property valuation have been put into salaries for all personnel,, The school district has been forced to increase salaries and that increase has been made possible because of the added funds from increased property valuation. Also, other costs of education have risen such as supplies and utilities. * ★ * Q. What happens if the millage request is defeated? A. The School Distrait will continue to operate with grades on through eight on half days and nope of the cuts- in services can be restored. Singles Club Party Set The Klub, an organization for singles 21 and over, will hold a Dolly Madison party 8:30 p.m. Sunday at Fairlanes Bowl, 29600 Stephenson, Madison Height*. .... Waiting to Vote LAS CRUCES, N.M. (AP) « Dona County, in southern "New Mexico, was plagued with faulty voting iqachines in Tuesday’s New Mexico primary. One Voter at an inoperative machine pulled a chair into the booth and sat out a three-hour wait for his machine to be repaired. Back Rezoning for 2 Projects WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The township planning com mis s ion recommended approval of requests to rezone two parcels of land for large ; developments at their regular meeting last night. About 60 residents present at the public hearings heard the petition from developer Harman Frankel on the rezoning oTland north of 14 Mile, east and west of Farmington Road, from residential to multiple dwelling and business' ★ ★ ' ’ ** Frankel, an area developer for about 12 years, presented his plans for a private community complex comprised of about 201 single-family dwellings and 1,200 multiple family dwellings on the 250-acre site. He said the complex, which would take about seven years to complete if approved by township and county officials, would provide complete facilities for its residents. yiLLAGE SQUARE The development, to be called Village Square, Is designed to attract individuals in the upper-middle income bracket, and would pay for most of its own services, he said. Frankel said Village Square would provide private roads, its own police department, a commercial center and complete recreational facilities including a nine-hole golf course. ★ * * Harry Castle of 3279 Harfslock Woods protested the petition and was joined by -fellow residents of Powder Horn Estates* subdivision. v The planning commission approved Frankel’s rezoning request by a six to one vote and will recommend to the Township Board that the land be used for Frankel’s development. SECOND REQUEST Most of the residents present showed up to protest the second rezoning request for land Porth of 14 Mile,, east of Mid-dlebelt, from, residential' to husiness as requested by James Rubin. Rubin exhibited plans for an indoor shopping center to consist of a bank, a few offices and several small shops to serve the immediate area. 0 0 ★v The main plea of residents living in the Franklin Valley Subdivision located directly behind the land parcel was that a business area would lower their property value and provide traffic congestion. A spokesman for the subdivision residents presented the board withjy petition containing approximately 240 signatures in opposition to the rezoning of the 4%-acre land parcel. ★ ★ * The planning commission approved Rubin’s rezoning request by a four-to-three vote. A public hearing was also held on an amendment to the zoning ordinance requesting that electrical and other overhead wiring be put underground in future developments. Adult Enrollment Is On in Rochester Schools System The -Rochester Community Schools System is enrolling adults in its basic education program. The program is specifically designed for those individuals who have not completed eight grades of grammar school and who wish to better themselves through education. ★ * * There are no fees for instruction, registration or books. Financial support is supplied by the Adult Educaton Act of 1966, the State Department of Public Instruction and the local districts. The program is aimed at those who wish to earn a high school degree, brush up on basic skills, and knowledge, aiMiweptfre'fo^ Eddcatoif Development Army test. NO GRADES Attendance is not mandatory nor are grades given. Classes are limited to no more than 15 adults to one teacher. The Rochester program will start Sept-16 and 17 and continue every Monday and Tuesday for 39 weeks. Classes will be held 7:30 p.m. in room 204 of Central Junior High- School. Enrollment may be made in person or by phoning the Rochester Adult Education Office. Governors Day ot State Fair Tomorrow The annual Governor’s Day activities at the. State Fair tomorrow include a dedication ceremony at the new administration building. A Special attraction at the evening horse show will be Arthur Godfrey with his horse, Goldie, at 6 p.m. In the coliseum. Other activities are: 8:15 A.BL—Showing and judging of Belgian draft horses, coUseum; judging: Sheep classes, sheep judging area. i:H ajn.—Registration for pony-tati and ball throwing contests, coliseum gme; Michigan State Fair Junior Livestock Judging contest, coliseum; Judging wool, sheep building. 16:11 ijk-Pony-tail and ball-throwing contest, colieem grove. USM sum. — Family fashion show, community arts auditorium. 12:99 noon—Horseshoe pitching until 8:30 pa; band concerts, music shell; Tom Saunders and the Surfside Six, flnRiwum grove; Pat Sherril Dance Studip, international grove; Noble Wilson and his Jamaican Band, the Tropics; Looking your best, community arts auditorium. 1:00 p.m.—Quickies with convenience foods, community arts auditorium; meat preparation demonstration, coliseum. 1:30 p.m. r— Aerial spectacular, grandstand. 2:M p.m.—Battle of the Bands competition, Teen Scene stage; judo demonstrations, Teen Scene; “From Mastodons to Motor Cars,” community arts auditorium. 2:30 p.m.—Dedication ceremony of new administration building, Intersection of Avenue A and First Street ; John Kepley and his Good . Old Summertime Orchestra, coliseum grove; Mokie Tugab .and his Polynesian Fantasy, the Tropics. 3:06 p.m.—Arthur Godfrey and the Godfreymen, music shell; Ricardeau Dance Studio, international grove; . Hats in History, community arts auditorium. 4:00 p.m.—“Wendy Ward Happening” Teen Scene stage; judp demonstrations, Teen Scene; Personality Plus, community arts auditorium. 4:30 p.m. — The Cowsills,' music shell; the Seabee Drill Team, grandstand. 5:00 p.m. — Aerial spectaular, grandstand; Tom Saunders and the Surf-side Six; coliseum grove; Noble Wilson and his Jamaican Band, the Tropics; “Gas. Light Barbeque," community arts patio. 5:30 p.m.—Tony and Carolyn, music shell. 6:00 p.m.—Carol Kimmel Dance Studio, international grove; Battle of the Bands competition, Teen, Scene stage; jiido demonstrations, Teen • Scene; “Unique ideas in zippers,” community arts auditorium; .“The Inside Story,*' community a r ts auditorium; Meat preparation demonstration, coliseum. 6:30 pjn.—Evening horse show, coliseum. 7:00 p.m.—The Cowsills, music shell; Judo demonstrations, Teen Scene; Travel and Vacation show, community0 arts auditorium; judging Cheviot sheep, sheep judging arena; judging Tamworth swine, swine judging arena. 7:8$ p.m. — The Seabee Drill Team, grandstand; John Kepley and bis Good Ok! Summertime Orchestra, coliseum grove; Molde Tugab and ‘ his Polynesian, Fantasy, the Tropics. 8:08 p.m. — Tony and Carolyn, music shell; Aerial spectacular, Teen Scene; judo demonstrations, Teen Scene. 9:86 p.m.—The Cowsills, music shell. ,' ■/ :v #r* * «r, . Throughput the day various demonstrations will be given at the coho' inanity arts building on sudi crafts as embroidery, pottery making, ice carving,-etc. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 A ^ the usual Foot tVaifier value features. Supple, sturdy leather uppers, leather counter linings, aolw/ unlined vamp for no-snag buckles: Brown or 8^-3; brown, in 4-9. Hud-son’s Children's and Young Teen Shoes. S|f|§ / , So much for so ... . . Permanent press culotte ; ; For girls who like to sleep and lounge in style—this pretty, • ' ^ ■zip-front culotte. Double-ruffled at the ankles, lace-and- ' ribbon trimmed bodice. Soft polyester-and-cotton lino- j - .'V r * ; , *"1 ^TCrirls* Accessories Departments " - < y ?*?«$*• g i AS T ACT\^TKTTTTT7 "RTTVQ" T70P RfifY. I ir^ti ) I. “ivmi w j_ j_j jl jl vyix wwm' TO-SCHOOL L. all specially- priced Trench coal with the looli The luxurious look and feel Save on girls' knit underwear. Get a season’s supply of these Comfortable white cotton knits. Ribbed vest, sizes 4 to 10; pant, 4 to 14. * specially priced 3 for 1.3 7 Wide choice of slips in A-lines and natural-want styles. Cottons! Nylons! Synthetics! White and colors; a variety of trims. Sizes 6 to 14. specially priced 1.48 Pretty pettipantc. Just the thing for short skirts and we have so much to choose from in color and fabrics. Sizes 6 to 14. shirts * w»c)aur pd*** 1.97VjwiL Ijjjfer . Poly- ester cotton. Mediwi wale? half-boxer atylizg or wide wale with fastback styling. Navy/: brown, gran and bronze fere included in the assortment. 4-7. Juvenile Boys' Departments Many, many knee highs with ribbed and cuffed tops; bancs and bright*. Light and medium weight nylons and nylon-and-syntheties. S-M-L. • specially priced 3 for 1.98 THE PONTIAC PRESS 40 West Sinil Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 „ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 SmMMW Ol NWBMrt Denis Follow Time-Honored Script As the 35th Democratic National Convention in Chicago brawls its way to the climatic moment of truth scheduled for tonight—the nomination of the party’s standard bearer-little has occurred thus far to change the script regularly followed by these conclaves. Monday’s opening night session, that ran well into Tuesday morning, saw the traditional bitter and prolonged credentials hassle eat up foe hours though paired with the suspension of the party’s time-honored unit rule for delegations whereby foe total vote of a delegation goes to foe presidential candidate with a vote majority, sp- It also saw foe embryonic boom for Sen. Edward Kennedy die aborning only to be revived in a riotous, marathon session last night highlighted by hassles in foe credentials area and an inconclusive debate over foe Vietnam peace plank in foe party platform. But over-shadowing it all was foe tacit admission of defeat by foe No. 2 presidential candidate, Sen. Eugene McCarthy, all but sewing up foe nomination for Vice President Hubert Humphrey. On a lighter note,. Michigan’s senior Senator Philip A. Hart had come out with foe unpolitical remark that he was not a candidate for vicek president since there was possibility that it might lead to foe presidency and “he’d make a lousy president.” Finally, foe convention is proceed-ing under protection of an unprecedented array of law enforcement might, induding elements of the U.S. Army, those of foe Illinois National Guard, detachments of State Police : and contingents of local police. ★ ★ ★ But, regardless of these and other incredible manifestations likely to materialize, foe convention moves inexorably toward the purpose for which it was assembled—foe nomination of presidential and vice presidential candidates. It is a strange America in which we live, reflecting many changes, but its established institutions reassuringly endure. New Submarine Will Plumb Ocean’s Depth The Ben Franklin, a middle-depth submarine, was recently christened and launched. Next April, foe Franklin will submerge in foe Gulf Stream and drift with foe current for between four and six weeks before surfacing somewhere off {Cape Cod. Hie undersea voyage is expected to yield information' about foe Gulf Stream that will/interest not only oceanographers but also industry and foe Federal government. One of foe tasks to be performed by foe Franklin’s six-man crew next spring will involve study of foe plankton layers which reflect sonar signal* and thus distort ships’ depth readings. The crew also will study underwater acoustics, foe fertility of foe Gulf Stream, and sections of foe ocean floor. Undersea exploration has expanded greatly in recent, years. Federal expenditures for oceanographic research have increased tenfold in less than a decade, and foe number of Kluxers Zero In on Xerox Over Racial Program An item on foe wire informs us that a branch of foe Ku Klux Klan, imperial Wizard Robert M. Shsl-ton’s United Klans of America, has ordered Xerox to remove its copying machine from foe Klan office by way of protesting tl^e company’s sponsor- ship of a network television series on the American Negro. ★ ★ ★ . 4 ■ ;;; i ' V It appears foe company that vows its products can handle anything has come a cropper on a white sheet. Retreat From Chicago David Lawrence Soys: Dissension Could Defeat Dems There is something going on at the Chicago convention which could seriously affect Hubert Humphrey’s chances of winning the election. For while his graduate students working toward degrees in oceanography is growing by about 18 per cent a year. In 1964, about 16 per cent of foe world’s oil production came from , offshore wells. Within two decades, -as much as 25 per cent of all oil production is expected to come from that source. Extensive heavy metal deposits — zinc, lead, copper, silver, gold — are known to exist at-foe bottom of foe sea. ★—- ★ ★ Undiscovered riches no doubt abound, since only 5 per cent of foe 140-million-square-mile ocean floor has been explored. Moreover, foe oceans offer a source of food and fresh water for a world increasingly in need of both. “If one measures foe ultimate benefits to be gained from foe deliberate and orderly development of foe seas,” Dr. Jacques Piccard, designer of foe Ben Franklin, told a House Judiciary subcommittee in July, “expenditures equalling those of foe space program, at least, are justified.” vote, will leave evidences, of disaffection. It is unfortunate that the convention has developed into something of a personal squabble among the rival candidates who profess to be friendly when they appear in public. But the battle that goes on underneath among their respective supporters doesn’t augur well for the Democratic party in the coming campaign.. PMtfimvtSn'syndicate) Bob Considine Says: Moley Offers a Political Parlor Game By RAYMOND MOLEY For all and sundry hosts and hostesses who will need to relieve the boredom after their next din-1 ner party, suggest an amusing and n o ncontrover-sial parlor' game. It has to do with pol-j itics, which everybody discovers once in four years. It will save hot arguments about the question of whether anybody who is for law and order is a racist. Or whether this is a new or an old Nixon who was nominated by the Republicans. Or which of the two candidates for president will have the better television You might start the game by giving the participants cards on which you have written flbe names of all the pres- MOLEY since IMS. Or, If yon have plenty of guests and 'more time to play, the names of an the presidents beginning with George Washington. Then ask the players to wrfte on the back of .each card the Vice President who was elected with the President named on the other side! ‘OHS’ AND ‘AHS’ The game will start off with tod vice presidents that everybody knows, Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey. But as the players inove back through tiie years, the difficulties will mount. That is when you will hear many “ohs” and “ahs” from your guests. If you really want to have a long game you could have cards With the names of the candidates for President who ran and lost. Or you could change- the game and write on the cards the names of the Vice Presidents who have been elected along frith their ticket mate who served as President. : * * A ' f The moral of the game, ff there be any moral in a game, will be tiie low percentage' of true answers or any at all. FLEETING FAME Thus, there is revealed the fleeting fame that is accorded the people who ran for or were , elected Vice President. Jt is a long list of forgotten people who had their moment of glory when they were nominated and if elected had “listening Senates to command’’ and who have since passed into oblivion. Such has been the fate of those many Americans who have stood as the saying goes “only one heartbeat from the Presidency.” ‘ As I indicated in a recent column, the rule has been that no vice presidential candidate has ever, with one exception, helped the ticket. The exception was Lyndon Johnson in 1960. Mostly they have lost votes for the presidential candidate. And incidentally, I remind the host or hostess who tries this game that toe necessary facts are on page ,206 of the 1668 World Almanac. Mmlu Time*) could take passive a 11 i- LAWRENCE tude toward the presidential contest and defeat him while concentrating on the election of local candidates. The main trouble seems to be reflected by the McCarthy and McGovern candidacies. The irreconcilability of Humphrey, McCarthy and McGovern was illustrated in a three-way debate on television yesterday at a caucus of the California delegation in Chicago. McCarthy would not promise that he would support the ticket. McGovern pledged himself to stand by his party, but his followers may not do so. This kind of dissension could hurt the Democratic party in November. For it is based on deep-seated emotions rather than logic or even solid information about America’s repeated attempts to settle the Vietnam war by negotiation. CONVENTION RUMORS There are rumors around the convention hall to the effect that the supporters of Sen. McCarthy tod many others who are known as .strong adherents of Sen.. » Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts ere seeking in some way either to draft him or to conduct the kind of campaign which win virtually hand over the election to Richard Nixon. . * This, they hope, would make possible a Democratic victory in 1972, with Sen. Kennedy presumably the candidate at that time. ★ * * Vice President Humphrey has been striving to bring harmony in the party. While he spoke confidently in the debate before the California delegation, i£ was obvious that he was troubled by the sweeping criticism 6! tiie administration’s Vietnam policy, and particularly by the implication. that peace could readily be obtained merely by stopping the bombing. tome of the differences of opinion are reflected in the controversy over certain planks in the platform. But the document submitted by the platform Coinmittee, though adopted by a majority Verbal Orchids Mr. antL Bits. William Gingell of Bloomfield tolls; 56th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse H. Griffin 1 of 3120 S. Lapeer Bond; 56th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrt. Alex Martin of 2874 Otsego; 51st wedding anniversary. People Getting WithConventionSystem Voice of the People: Serviceman C on News of Strife at Horne I am in foe United States Navy presently aboard foe USS Forrestal CVA-59. I’m one of five siblings of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Quince Jr. of $74 Earimoor, and a former student of Pontiac Central High and Kentucky State College. My reasons for writing are related to foe feelings of foe men on this vessel and my thoughts concerning foe useless acts taking place in foe cities of our birth— Pontiac and Detroit. : ' W ' ★; W - ‘ ■ ' It really hurts to read newspapers, almost a million miles from home in, another country, and find strife, confusion and rioting of our home cities as headlines. We hope the editor of our home town news will let the people know that the war in Vietnam is more than enough fpr our mental capacities to accept, not to mention a war against one another at home. MARVIN V. QUINCE CORPSMAN ON USS FORRESTAL CVA-59 —- Resident Unimpressed by Campaign Talk I am not impressed by candidates running for public offices, including those of law enforcement, who offer to tear down Campaign signs which have been put up throughout Oakland County — in many cases illegally. There must be a better way to campaign. OAKLAND COUNTY RESIDENT Views on Recent Invasion of Czechoslovakia In a recent editorial The Pontiac Press impugned the “new-style liberals” for their belief in government intervention. The pejorative connotation effused on “new-style liberals” .is often stretched beyond the specified scope and laid an anything “liberal,” though there is a double standard evidenced by Czechoslovakia’s lately-squashed “new-style liberalism,” which trend was toward less government intervention. CHRIS RAND STUDENT, CENTRAL CATHOLIC HIGH CANTON, OHIO ' The Czechoslovakia invasion by Russia should have shocked our gullible leaders who have been busy building bridges to those Reds because they think the Reds have changed. GLENN U. YUILLE 86 NEWBERRY Questions Coverage of Recent Statement Why do you give coverage to such statements as that just made by the Commissioner from District 1? DISTRICT 1 RESIDENT CONSIDINE NEW YORK - At Sflami Beach the true bleeders were for Nelson Rockefeller. They got* Dick Nixon instead. At Chicago most of toe breast - beating will be in behalf of Eugene McCarthy. But ail signs point to an early victory probably on •the first ballot — for Hubert Humphrey. The vice president’s camp is as confident as was Nixon’s. The Nixon people had the GOP convention in the bag for days and perhaps weeks before they moved on Miami. The last-hour Lou Harris poll and the joint Gal-hip-Harris warning that Stocky would make stronger candidate than Nixon in November sent few tremors through the Nixon delegates. There is i dearly defined parallel shaping up in Chicago. GaUup now says the vice president’s chances Question and Answer far us in a troubled and oft-times demented world. This could very well be the why did toe City Commission dedde to pave Dearborn end of the convention system, Road with al cost to be paid by toe City when no buildings this explosive drama which or homes exist cm it? And why are there barricades on Dear-“““J «||| | Mamm born at Fairview and Stanley Avenues? JESSE DeBOLT 912 STANLEY opened Monday in Chicago. The people of today are too smart, too educated, too tough . to' accept lunatic rituals of this pature, and toe travesty of the dectoral college. Its very origin is an insult to toe Americans nearly two centuries later. It was erected as a buffer between toe freed but still illiterate Colonists and the choice of a proper president. The fear of the patricians among the Founding Fathers was that if there wasn’t a restraining force of thli nature, the people might eled one of the people. REPLY According to Mr. Christian of the Public Wbrks Department, the road is being paved because a developer plans to put homes there, The City is not paying all the cost. It will be charged to the property owner under special assessment formula, with part paid by the City and part by the ; owner, as is customary in special assessments. The barricades are there to keep cars from driving through, because that section has never been grad-ed as a street. However, the plan is now to pave it all the way through. : Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Sobering Report Adrian Daily Telegram In the last two years 199,000 against Nixon in the election Americans died in motor are sliding, while the chances vehicle accidents. The Most people who have been drinking do not drive. Only a small percentage do, but that small percentage causes a disproportionate ratio of highway fatalities. o( McCarthy are firm. But most head counts show that Humphrey will have about 1,250 first balfot votes (1,312 are needed) and that’s not counting Texas’ 104 votes for Gov. John Connally, a Humphrey man, and a majority of the 306 votes of other favorite sons. The defeated McCarthyites will come away from Chicago as torn and distressed as were Rocky’s supporters as they left Miami. Between the two camps theycould produce a record number of people who will not bestir themselves to vote for Nixon or Humphrey in November. The Republicans have made their choice for rice president. For reasons known only to the inner sanctum of toe GOP, they chose perhaps the least-known man in the running, Spiro Agnew, of Maryland. But toe GOP could win if Humphrey comes up (or down), with some equally faceless choice. WANT LOUDER VOICE The American people want to have a louder voice in the selection of their presidents and vice presidents. The times being perilous for ail who sefck or accept the burden Of the highest office, the people want to know the man who will be called upon to step up to bat and suing It is a sobering report. It s u pports .. recommendations the National Safety Bureau has made to ail toe states for laws to crack down on drinking drivers. Michigan has .... . adopted such a law. Other This frightening situation state, need to fall in line, has led to *....... casualty lists from the carnage on American afreets and highways have continued to increase despite the demands of safety groups that there must be an end. various sources that “government” do something; And this in turn has prompted efforts to find toe causes of automobile accidents and tiie remedies, if any. • „ * * it The results of a new federal study have been announced. Among other things, the survey examined . the link between highway safety and alcohol fobibed either by drivers of vehicles in total accidents or by pedestrians struck by cars. It reports that some 600,000 of toe 14 million accidents each year, large and small, are toe result in some measure of drinking. . Ur A ...v it' Written $jr Dr. William. Haddon Jr., director of the National Traffic Safety pureau, toereportsays that at leari half of the single vehicle mishaps in which the driver died, and almost half of tiie fate! multiple-vehicle acc.idents were the responsibility of the one per cent to four per of drivers who had hem drink-; ing. ' up one-third of toe cost. Then the people must be reeducated, they must develop a new attitude, they must learn to ask for help, whether they want it or not. The good federal shepherd is ready to take them trader his wing. ★ it. ★ A poverty official said, “Most of these people don’t know where to find help. We point them to toe employment office, the welfare office, to the- abundant’ foods program oe wherever they quality.” The good people of Mount Angel didn’t even know when Federal Shepherd ««i«i help, but they * win .learn, as wiD ail the in- Toledo Timet Mount Angel is a peaceful rural community of 1,600 persons tying in the lush, rolling hills of the Willamette Valley in Oregon. It is a religious and agricultural center, similar to thousands of other tiny communities throughout the United States. No mates of the welfare state, as time goes on. Exercise... Gamer (la.) Leader When tee were children we walked to school and back ML- each day. Nbw wo spend than the residents of Mount *>** for • bur to save toe Angel when they were advised by poverty officials recently that 46 per cent of them were poverty stricken. iV’db * A v ' -It seems dwt the people of Mount Angel are on the wrong side of the arbitrary line that officialdom has drawn between poverty and affluence. So now Mount Angel is officially classified to a blighted area. The* first step, apparently, is to establish a poverty office for which the residents of the Mount Angel area must put kids from walking and 150,000 for a gym so they can exercise. THE PONTIAC AUGUST- 28, 1988 ms THE-NEW. NEW SALE Great values on all-weather coats Selected group of hotter rainwear. Nehru styles, belted trench coats, tingle and double-breasted novelties, classic balmacaans in fashion colors. Jr. petites', misses' sizes. Spectacular purchase of 'great for fall '68' ladies' dresses, big; 14.99 values Hey, look them over ... Nehrus, coat dresses, popular pleated st)4es, waist-clinching belted looks -. . . all new, 'now' fashion silhouettes sweeping the country! Wonderful fabrics, too, seldom found in dresses at this low price — 106% wool tweeds, wool/mohairs, bonded Orion* acrylic knits, wool/rayon worsteds in dazzling fait colors: Red hot red, deep purple, gold, green and brown. In sizes 7 to 15. Scnie at the season's start with these groovy cotton corduroys and wool meltons "With atrylic pile linings. Some hooded. Misses' sizes 8 to1 lBin the group. Terrific! Play • the add game in reg. *5 to *9 dyed-to-match coordinates that give you five different looks with one slack 3.9S9™ Here's a sale you won't want ;to miss — your chance to save tremendously on 1st quality, beautiful better sport separates for now Into fall. Trim fitting, well-tailored; perfectly mated. Black, brown, navy, green, and royal blue, Tops in sizes 34 to 40; slacks in sizes 8 to. 16. Hurry and save now! A. SHORT SLEEVE BAN-LON STRIP! TOP 0. SOLID ACETATE I. SOLID IAN40N NYLON KNIT SHELL E. LONG C. SHORT SLEEVE STRIPS TURTLCNICK f. DOUBLE DOWNTOWN AND DMYtPN HAtN$ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY-, AUGUST 28, 19«8 Ptans for2 County Buildings Air Services Supervisors Act to Be Boosted "s- msyi As Dems Powwow Swanson Associates Inc. at 74 • w. Tvwig Lake Road, Bloomfield Tfcwhship, will draw up plans for Old' new county sendee 'building, planned to house the ■ Drain Department, the Depart-, ment of Public Works and the; 'ft ft J % , 1 l‘ The new site will be adjacent to the Road Commission offices on Watkins Lake Road near . Pontiac Lake Road. Cost of the project is not yet known, and no ’ target date has been set fdr its , completion. SERVICE BUILDING : Supervisors agreed the I present facilities bousing the three departments involved are will be submitted to the ways been deemed inadequate and' and means committee and tike .antiquated, buildings and grounds com- ft ft # mittee for approval. : Methods for financing the new IMMtt fONNEL I structure are still being studied. Spodflcafidns for the two- Possibilities are a bond SSue, a story structure b*ve b e e n My-w-you-go program, or some drafted by the firm of Giffels other not determined ntethod. and Rossetti Inc. of Detroit. Tbe| Architects announced work complex will Include a tunnel could begin by September and from the jail to the courthouse be completed by July of 1970. facilities in the county. i Two resolutions were passed, providing for stepped-up air, services. ] ■ ft ft ft One agreement was made to, purchase and construct 51 additional T-hangars for use at the Oakland-Pontiac Airport on M59 | in Waterford Township, ft ft * Upon recommendation from the supervisors’ aviation committee, the board also agreed to direct the County Board of Auditors to apply for a Class C liquor license for the airport dining facilities. JOINT LEASE I The petition will be made on I bdbalf of the county to the ! Michigan Liquor Control Com-[I mission. Committee members j j said plans call for the dining [ and cocktail facilities to be held [Jin joint lease with the county by a caterer and liquor dealer, ft * ft | .Elmer R. Johnson, aviation] committee chairman, told the board the license would be beneficial to the financial operation of the airport, fit PER MONTH The additional T-hangars will Le rented to pOots te fiie mea at a rate of about $70 per month per hangar, Johnson added. Construction cost for the [ hangars will be 9400,000. R was hard to understand how be got there so quietly, Fm sure I would have beard him arrive in the deadly silence of fids maelstrom. “HI there," I said, as I always do in such circumstances, “would you like a raisin?” LGM: Thanks. (He puts it in what I thought was his ear) What is a raisin? Me: Never mind, what do you think of this convention? LGM: Is that what it is, a convention? Me: Yup. LGM: What’s a convention? Me: Well. . . it's a meeting to select leaders. That’s a simplified explanation. Hg - iSf LGM: Then stop staring. Me: Never mind, I thought you wanted to know about political conventions. LGM: I do, I do. But why do you need so many people to pick a leader? Me: It gives them a sense of participation, .and a chance to get away for a week. LGM: Get away from what? Me: Never mind. LGM: Wfay don’t they just put all the names in a barrel and pick out a winner? Me: How do you know what a barrel is? LGM: Never mind. It doesn’t matter who they pick, hah going to lose. Me: How do you know? Can you read the future? LGM: As a loyal Republican Martian, I have no doubts at all. Me: Get out of here. And take that silly raisin out of AT HIGHLANJD WILL BUY THAT WOty" Link With Detroit ■ Now o fide-by-side at a price for every family budget. 2 full size appliance* in one! Just 33" wide—fit* in the *ame •pace as your old/ refrigerator. Refrigerator section never needs defrosting. Separate true freeier section holds 235 lbs. frozen food. 3 full width freezer shelves, full width porcelain crispor. Dairy keepers, and egg rack. Super storage door shelves and many more features. i “But do we owe it to Mr. i Langs?” countered Irwin. In other business, the . commission accepted the low bid of , $374,293 from the A&A Asphalt Paving Go. for the 1968 paving program in the city. $74,Mi LOWER The bid was 174,000 lower than the estimates of the city engineering department and; $50,695 below the second bidder, | the Ann Arbor Construction Co. j, Also accepted was a bid of j $118,716 from the Taylor; Brothers Go., Inc., for ooncrete paving in the Pontiac Industrial Park Subdivision. ft - "ft * - I The commission rejected a! proposal for the resoning of property on the south side of [ Woodward corridor that has ottered into the agreement with Detroit. A mutual-aid fire agreement with Detroit was approved last night Ity the Pontiac City Corn- Adoption of the pact was Birmingham City Commission recommended by Fire Chief will consider the contract at its Chanes Marion. Monday meeting although * ' * * Birmingham City Manager _ ^ ... Robert S. Kenning has recom- oJT after (LnmissiSr^ S^aSSnf** ** Jack Douglas was assured by agreeme . City Attorney Shirwin Birnkrant A discussion on the establish-that Pontiac could ref use assistance If equipment « «nes of tte one set up ____hi Detroit after last summers manpomr were unavailable. postponed for at least Idon t want Pontiac to get a ^ ^ that commissioners shortchanged,” said Dougtes, ^ review a detaQed report who is on leave from the fire of the program, department. HRCPROPQSAL FIRE FIGHTER SHORTAGE ^ ^ter has He said his concern stemmed been proposed by the Pontiac from the fact that due to a Human Relations Commission. * ■«* ** Also postponed was a request the city • fire stations are from developer Charles Langs; always in operation. to share in cost of water mains In answer to another query to serve the rent-supplement from Douglas, Birnkrant said housing he is building on Ken- .^. Pittsburgh Pleads Innocent to Ticket . w me uuuuoaiuu was act a on strike. when commissioners learned PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pitia-j * * that the city has not yet ac- burgh’s transit authority wa*j, As approved by the com- quired title fpr all easements cited by the city of Philadelphia mission, FoafiSc Will have 30 required for paring lit the area. Tuesday for illegally parkuig a| days to pull out of the agree-) The dty already has com- bus on a Philadelphia street.; ment If its found to be in-mitted itself to pay for street The summons accused the au-effective. paving in the project thority of illegally parking bus "I don’t find any problem in. Commissioner Robot Irwin No. 1144 on May 9. the document that would coo-Jobjected to further subsidies to! “We are innocent,” said an front the dty,” said Birkrant.jLang. authority spokesman. “Bus 11441 After many drafts there are Mgf fagy AP1 has never been .to. Philadel- many safeguards written into ____ ._____. , . ., phia. Neither have any of our1 ^ rontred to protect the dty, ^ ***”" because at our need for hous- • . w MAJOR DISASTER tag - said Irwin, “but this is not NO iP/UrieS - Yet He said that the contract is the obligation of the dty.” 1 geared only to these cases: Commissioner Wesley Woods SEATTLE (AP) — A Seattle where a major disaster taxes a said he, believed the dty should policeman, reporting an autolocal department beyond its! participate in the p r o j e c t mobile aeddent to his radio dis-1 own capacity. because “we owe it'to file peo- patcher, said: “I have an acd- To date Ferndale is the only pie on social security who will dent here with an argument.: other community along the benefit from the development” I There are no injuries—yet.” FALL SHOWING To- Vim -Att "Tlift NeuMt FtJwtitt RE uuL VA*tot N»iTk»Ti»T»Md» ' jjaaw Sifafea fmm, TW 1 ' 'Tl' r"'' ... Wft UNIOIM ' naru10081 908 W. HURON st TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC 60th birthday cake. The celebration was sit the home of the president’s younger daughter, Luci Johnson Nugent, in Austin, Tex., yesterday. ennetff miaVb cirst nbALiTV ” Yule-Tree Market Sign Up Now for Do-It-Yourselfers forSpecial Hike ' I Hike reservations for die District and haven’t been all special Chief Pontiac Trail an-along. niversary hike Sept. 22, are NATURAL EXTENSION . C®nt“ tm. ' -■ • ... .. . | Valley Council Boy Scounts of _ The extension pi the idea to America service center at 1)2 pick-youwiwn Christinas trees pranklin Blvd. The hike, which begins at 9 a.m. is to (hark die 10th anniversary of the trail operated by the Clinton Valley Council Boy Scouts of America. The hail which begins at Orchard i Lake and continues to the i southwest through some of the1 “The trees have been in for most scenic portions of Oakland] about nine years. We plant [County endB at Kensington tome every year — some yeafs 'Metropolitan Park, more than others. We have little' The anniversary hike, open to trees coming up all the time, j ail scouts will reverse the In 1967, he sold about 2,500 normal route *nd begin at the trees and in 1966, he hopes to Group Camp Area of Kent-sett about 3,600 trees. ington and end at the Proud Boys' 'Fire Hose' canvas Penn-Prest jeans Boys' high stylo Ban-Lon® knit shirts Boy*'Towncraft rope rib socks of stretch nylon Public-Employe Morality Decreed TUCUMAN, Argentina (UPI) — The Tucuman provincial government ^as issued a decree calling for “administrative mor- Made of shops holdinp Ban-Lon with fashion collar or turtleneck. Shore sleeves. Sites 6 will be Held at the park at 8:39 a.m. prior'to- the hike which is expected to take . about five or six hours. Units Of the girl Scouts, I Camp Fire Girls and similar organisationsare invited to participate. All units are ex-pected to hike in indform. f A fee of U per hiker will he] charged' to cover costs of purchasing special unit ribbons and individual awards and patches - for ail those taking A White Lake Township man was placed on two year’s probation yesterday with first Girls' long sleeve turtlenecks Newest catch , 1 ouf fishnet tights! Go«with*all crocket look knee-hi socks! 20 (fays to be served in the Oakland County Jail for aggravated assault in connection With knifing of two brothers at a New Year’s Eve party. Circuit Judge Philip Pratt; ordered the sentence for Fred Parkkiia, 28, of 9215 Funston. Knit tops innever-iron Penn-Prest Kodel/ combed cotton. Fash- Stretchy nylon fishnots with opaque nylon filament backing keep the gids ’ nice and warm. Plenty of colors. Perfect fit stretch nylon knee highs in assorted lacy’ 5 patterns look groat, with all gear. Parkkiia had been charged with attempted murder but was allowed to plead guilty to the lesser offense lastmonth. The stabbing victims were Randall and Thomas Ryan, 1# and,' 21 years old* both of 21355 Farmington, Farmington. They were home on leave from the Army at too time. STABBED IN BACK The brothers told police that they ware attacked by seven men in a partinglot at the rear of a borne at 6551 Drake, West Bloomfield Township. Both were stabbed in the back j during the scuffle. ’k T* >! Parkkiia, w h o voluntarily; surrendered to police two days-I later, also was ordered by Pratt I not to drink during ins pro-]’ bation and to pay $246 court]] Boys’Towncraft moc too stylo slip-on shoes ^Smooth, scuff resistant black n leather uppers. Penntred 9 polyvinylchloride soles jpK and keels. Elasticized top. 8Vs to 3. • 13-Mllfl WOODWARD • TELEGRAPH S SO. IA Nortfcwoo. Shopping C,». lkK.mli.ld Tmnuhip Our smooth leather slip-on casual fea- , turns hand sewing. Sizes 8% to 3. p CAPITOL SAVINGS A IBM ASSOCIATION CHARGE ill SHOP TILL 9 P.M. MON. THRU SAT. Pontiac Knifing at Party Brings 20 Days In addition, Hoyt also was and is in one of the largest pick-your-own cherry businesses in the Thumb area. From his orchard, he sells about 30 to 35 tons of cherries, sweet or sour, every year to families that drive up that way to pick them. “In other areas of the state, the entire cherry crop of mi entire orchard is generally contracted h y supermarket chains or fruit processors or canners,” Hoyt explained. “But pick-your-own, fruit operations are not unusual in the Thumb Iqr styling. Whit* arid fashion colors. Sizes 6 to \ 16 Girl*' Favorites ... stretch waist pleated skirts ■ Pleated skirts of Dacren® _ polyester/cotton are Penn-™ Prest. Assorted plaids just ' right for back-to-school. 3r Sizes 7 to 14. Sizei.l to Sx ..... $4 Tailored in oxford weave polyester/cotton. Lang sleeve, button down col- Girls' oxford weave shirts are Penn-Prest /TUB PONTIAC PRBSS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST : LBJ Keeps Hands Off, Favors Hubert . AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) - President Johnson, while declaring a hands-off attitude, toward the work of the Democratic National Convention, has edged dose to an Indirect endorsement of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. ^ Meeting with newsmen at an informal 60th birthday party Sere Tuesday night, Johnson said he hoped the views of the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates, “will not be too divergent” so the world won’t have to wait until file November election to assess fh’> nation’s future course. With Vietnam and foreign pol- icy obviously uppermost in hlsj later—after candidates have mind, Johnson’s statement was been nominated, widely Interpreted as meaning] The presidential nominating is he would prefer a Humphrey set for today, the vice presiden-norainatton-though he carefullyHiaj selecting for Thursday, had some kind words, too, tor, For Ws birthday Johnson and the vide president's principal rivals, Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy and George McGovern. iteppMican nominee Richard M. Nixon is on record with Vietnam views much closer to those Of Johnson and Humphrey than either McCarthy or McGovern. TRIP PASSED UP The President passed up. a wife Lady Bird joined their daughter Luci Nugent andj grandson Patrick Nugent to cut' the Nugent home here. That’s a small cake and open gifts at where newsmen saw him. Then the first family flew to the LBJ Ranch, 65 miles west, where they were joined by their other daughter, Lynda Robb, for ... ' . . chance to fly to Chicago for aja country-style birthday dinner birthday salute at toe conven-j topped off by homemade peach tion. But he said he might go ice cream and angel food cake.j Both Johnson sons-in-law are on active duty in Vietnam, and toe President, after being asked [to state one birthday wish* said: : "I guess I’d like for all of bur boys to be able to lay down their arms and come home and live i in dignity without fear.” tew. t/ As his 13-month-old grandson romped at his feet, Johnson remarked that it would have been wonderful had toe child’s father, Airman Patrick J. Nugent, been able to leave Vietnam behind and join the rest of the family. Talking about the Democratic convention, Johnson said he’d! been watching it on television and found it exciting and generally pleasing. Democrats don’t always think alike, he said, but he predicted party harmony once toe job of the nominating parley is completed. NO EMISSARIES As for his own convention role, he said he had none—that he had no emissaries in Chicago, was receiving no private re? ports from the convention city and did not intend to get involved. “I haven’t involved myself in atiy of these matters—rules, credentials, platform and peril sonalities,” he said. Operation School Is Under Way! JEDDO W — Saw-your-own, c h op-your-own, cut-your-own, call it what you will, Donald C. Hoyt, a Jeddo orchardist, now has branched out into a unique do-it-yotirself Christmas tree operation. Prospective Christinas free buyers are invited to his tree plantation from late October on, to select their trees. They, tag them, and then, shortly before Christmas, come out to cut them and take them home. ★ ★ * “It’s mostly retail,” said Hoyt. “Occasionally, we sell to wholesalers, but most of our sales are to individual families. “I had some land on U.S. 25 that wasn’t good for anything but growing trees,” he plained: “Also, it was a good location for retail sales because we are halfway to Lextagton, and on toe way to Port Sanilac and Harbor Beach. RIGHT CROP “It was just a matter of finding the right crop that would make the land productive.” : Also, at about toe same time, Hoyt, who had been raising turkeys, had decided to get out of that business because of the intense price competition, so he also was looking for a replacement for his Thanksgiving Day and Christmas; Day, turkey business. Boys'long wearing briefs and T-shirts ^ 3 for 2.69 frrttel polyesfer/Pima T-shirt* and fofoty ««rt to Penney'. ri®W Specification*. Size. 6 to 20. Gifls' comfortable briefs afrd shirts Ila.tic tog brief* eft cotton/rayon dimpl. knit and aleevele.., combed cotton, rib knit •hirt*. Size. 4 to 16. Mothers! Don't wait . . . stock up on special values, in school fashions . . . put them on lay-away with a small deposit the Pontiac press, Wednesday, august as, ixw PORTABLE! FULL-SCREEN ZENITH color tv mm mmm ■ 18" viewable diagonal (180 square inches) ■ Has all the virtues of modem electronics ■ Deluxe cabinet in walnut-grained vinyl ■ All 82 channel reception, VHF and UHF ■' Zenith quality features; hand-crafted chassis ■ Automatic color clarifier for true picture ■ No down payment needed; just 33.80 monthly Mi Complete with stand in Hudson’s Music Store A—11 Toshiba 8-transistor AM-FM pocketable radio in carrying case. SALE S9.99 Lloyds solid state portable radio; AM-FM-M&-VHF-Police bands. SALE 169.99 Lloyds AM-FM stereo/ SW with 8-track cartridge player. Turntable. <44. SALE 89.99 GE black/white TV port. able; 12' viewable diag. SALE 129.99 Sharp’s hew 7' reel, 3-speed, 4-track stereo tape-recorder on sale. SALE 79.99 Zenith portable stereo in walnut-grain metal cabinet; transistorized. SALE $479 AMC color console TV; 23' viewable diagonal (295 sq. in.). 42.50 mo. AMC console stereo in Early American, maple color. 23.50 mo. SALE 89.99 Toshiba solid Sixth 2-track monaural tape-recorder; 7Yi and 8J£ >ps- SALE $469 AMC color console TV; 23' viewable diagonal (295 sq. hi.). 41.75 mo. SALE 42.99 RCA AM-FM solid state wood radio with ferrite rod antennas. SALE $389 AMC console stereo combination phonograph/ radio. 81.75 monthly. SALE $938 RCA co^pr console TV; 23* viewable diagonal (295 sq. in.). 47.50 mo. SALE $913 Zenith color console TV; 28' viewable diag. (295 aq. in.). 46,75 i$o. SALE $484 AMC color console TV; 28'viewable diagonal (295 sq. in.). 43.50 mo. • 4 SALE 439.98 Zenith color portable TV; 18' viewable diag. (180 sq. in.). $39 mo. SALE 199.95 GE black/white portable; 22* viewable diag. (282 sq. in.), 13.75 mo. SALE 12649 GE black/white TV portable; 18' viewable diag. (172 sq. in.). $11 mo. AC. adaptor SALE $449 AMC Color portable with stand. 23'view. diag. (295 sq. in.). 39.75 mo. SALE 299.95 AMC color portable TV; 18' viewable diag. (171 sq. in.). 26.25 mo. THE FONTIAi ,C PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 SALE 17.95 RCA portable phonograph has solid state transistorised operation. SALE $499 RCA color console TV; 23'viewable diagonal (295 sq. in.). 44.25 mo. HUD B ON’S Shop lath for these valuos in Hudson's Mwsic Store. Heaton's Downtown Detroit opon Monday, Wednesday till 8t30. Northland, Eastland, Westland Centers, and Pontiac, Oakland Malls open Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday till 9 P.M. GREAT SOME SALE DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Grand River NORTHLAND CENTER 8 MB# and Northwestern EASTLAND CENTER , 8 Mile and Kelly Roads WESTLAND CENTER PONTIAC MALL Warren and Wayne Roads Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road OAKLAND MALL I-7B and 14 Mile Road lie. 451 r w$ "CH coupon Jm noun Coupon good at all Cunningham'» Drug Storoi through Sunday.Soplombor I, 1968. ^ON AL L /gelusil PAPER PLATES WHITE 13 OZ,,- REG. OR HARO-TO-HOLD OIURCOAL *^1 REG. BRAND-QUART! SOLARCAINE MAGIC TUftBAN INKSTER OJPI) - Th e resignation—of 23 policemen from the 43-man Inkster Police Department in a contract dispute appears to be official. Wayne County Circuit Court Judge /Cornelia Kennedy Tuesday rolled against the Detroit suburb and refused to issue an Injunction to force t he policemen back to their jobs. i| The citybad claimed the men were simply using the resigns-, tions as a bargaining tool and were bcttan^y on strike. But the Judge said the Assignations ap- peared valid. 1 To back up the validity claim,: 19 of those who resigned Monday applied for positions with toe Detroit Police Department. Three were ruled ineligible by toe Detroit fores and the.re- mainder were being processed, a Detroit spokesman said. — KEY TO DISPUTE The key to the problem In the police ^dispute is a wage package. The Inkster Police Officers Association wants a retroactive pay hike to $9,300 a year from $3,177 and an increase to $10,000 within the two-year pact- An offer of $8,9}S retroactively with an increase to $9,490 was made by toe'city. ; A A A While the dispute rages between top officers and the city administration, the 40,000 residents df the community are relying on protection by a depleted city force, augmented by. members of the Y/»yne County Sheriffs Department and toe Michigan State Police. A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Demi Settle Seating Scraps CHICAGO (AP) - The Democratic National Convention has wrapped up two days of hectic and often bitter floor fights over credentials by ratifying a Georgia seating compromise which triggered a walkout by about a third of that state’s delegations. The convention also dealt Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy’s forces twin setbacks by rejecting McCarthy-backed attempts to unseat regular delegations from Alabama and North Carolina. And before a sudden adjournment early today, the convention approved creation of a spe-j del subcommittee to propose reforms in delegate selection procedures—and thus find ways to avert credentials disputes like tot ones that troubled this year’s convention. The Georgia compromise, supported by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, was adopted on a voice vote. It seated all members of the regular delegation and a elate beaded by Negro State Rep. Julian Bond, splitting the state’s votes evenly between the two groups by giving each delegate a fractional vote. M WALK OUT But about 20 of toe 64 regulars refused to sit alongside Bond’ date. They pushed their way off the convention floor, with one saying “We’re going home.” A short time later, Gov. Lester Maddox said he had called Princess Sees Red Peril BOVINE LOOKOUT - Startled residents of Santa Cruz, Calif., found this 100-pound, life-sized plastic cow atop a rocky point off the city beach yesterday morning. Police theorized that a group of youths took the critter from a Santa Cruz dairy farm during the night and hoisted it to the top of the rock. \ Peop/e in theNewsj By the Associated Press Singer Keely Smith’s husband, James Albert Bowen, sued for divorce yesterday in Los Angeles, charging extreme cruelty. Bowen, 30-year-old record executive, and Miss . Smith, 40, were married July 10, 1965, in Las Vegas, Nev. They separated two months ago. Bowen has been married onfce before, the singer twice. Miss Smith won fame as toe deadpan partner of Louis Prima. | ► Honeymooners Get Unusual Welcome John and Shirley Daylcy were ltopped by state police and detained for one day in the centra] Maryland town of Frederick while en route to Washington) D.C., on their honeymoon. , The Thornville. Ohio, couple were pulled over by police and a representative of the Frederick Jaycees yesterday, not for any offense but just to get acquainted. Their sentence for receiving the Jaycee’s annual welcome mat was honorary citizenship to the historic town, a night’s lodging at a local inn, keys to the city, a tour and numerous gifts at a reception that left Mrs. Dayley “surprised and still a little shaky.” The Dayleys, wed Saturday, were free today to continue their honeymoon. Senator's Home Vandalized; 2 Suspects Sheriff’s deputies say two young boys have admitted entering the Skowhegan, Maine, home of Republican Sen. Margaret Chase Smith which was vandalized over the weekend. Two divans in the living rood) were slashed with knives, books were strewn on the floor and a portable television set was I tipped off its table, authorities said. A silver ; I cigarette holder was missing. Officials said the boys were aged 10 and 13. A deputy said the older youth would prob-Ably face juvenile court hearings. I Mrs. Smith is in New York, recuperating ! from an operation. Shoplifting Part of Schoolwork Mrs. Mary Canning admitted she took candy, toothpaste, a Pen and other items when brought before Spokane, Wash., Justice of toe Peace James Mclntnrff on a charge of shoplifting. ,,\L- •-4; Mrs. Canning said she was working on a master's degree in sociology and psychology at Gonzaga University and took the stuff on purpose. She told toe judge the only way she could understand about hostility of some youths towarp the law was to have a brush with it herself. Mclnturff dismissed the case after reprimanding Mrs. Canning for “playing games with the law.” Judge Backs Resignation of 23 Inkster Policemen LANSING (UPI) - A deposed Romanian princess said here Tuesday the Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia' is part of a Worldwide Soviet land-grab scheme. Princess Catherine Caradja lid the Communist threat under Russia is even more dangerous than Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler. “Book out,” said the 75-year-old grandmother. “They want to color the world red — and that includes you.” A, The princess, ousted from Romania during the Nazi occupation of that country, is in the United States to speak cm: ‘What it is like to live when liberty and justice are gone.” upon State Democratic Chairman James Gray, his staff and the Georgia regulars “to vacate their places to the assembly." \ -★ . i Maddox, who with Gray lud selected the regular delegates, resigned from the Georgia delegation a day earlier. But he said he still is a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination. Georgia cast separate votes on latef roll calls—one by the Bond slate and the other by the remaining regulars. The Alabama challenge was Marriage Licenses Jaihea J. Zimmerman, Devlaburg an Patricia C. Plummer, Marlette. Mich. Gary A. McClain, Birmingham, Theresa ^A%%,%*£t.r and Valor'. . Slovens, Rochester Moroni. Teplln, 244 Cottage and Bol , Johnson, 142 ProieafCt Harold P. Freeman Jr„ Walled La nd Sharon S. Corby, Detroit Robert R. Drobll, Farmington, Ruth ■mo, Livonia Dentil M. Trent, Iff Ascot end tut I. Mather, tost- Serene Antonie DeLeRote, 47 Ivy end Unde Shelton, II Ivy . , ' J James L. Event, Farmington a holme C. longer, Farmington Leon J. Larange, 47 I. Jessie ' a Agnes M. Scribner, 50 Blehw David L. Price, BkKHtlflald Hills a Mdrgarat U. Thompson, Bloomfield Hilli William j. Henry, tio Lake Holly e ‘one a. Cook# Hotly Howard A., Kravltz, Royal Oek e aula C. Tauber, Orchard Lake Glen V. Sutton, Charlevoix, Mich, ai /lima F. Snover, 4273 Motorway Norman E. Auer, 30S S. Telegraph a usanne M. Klnchelot, Oak Park Truman R. Rowe, Drayton Plaint a Carol M, Meyer, Drayton. Plaint pressed by a group led by Huntsville dentist John Cashto Jr., who contended toe state's regulars were a tool in former Alabama Gov. George Wallace’s third-party presidential bid. Guv. Richard J. Hughes of New Jersey, Credentials Committee chairman, said Alabama’s regulars had beta required to sign a pledge not to support the nominee of another party. “Nobody would be happier if this certified delegation were unseated, than a man named George Wallace,” he said. 1 A «w .....★ .......... The convention then turned Dwn the Alabama challenge (to 1,607 to 68tW roll call vote, A lopsided voice .vote disposed of the North Carolina challenge. It had been brought by a group headed by Reginald Hawkins, unsuccessful candidate for governor this yeap, Hawking group taught to add 1014 votes to the 3% votes held by Negroes in North Carolina’s 59-vote delegation. ‘■k..it it Also ratified on voice votes were the credentials committee’s rejection of challenges involving Louisiana, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Michigan and Indiana delegations. jd245acd ang 28 NO MINDS CHANGED — Movie star Shirley MacLatoe, a member of the California delegation to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, pauses to try to bring Mrs, Hortense Young of Louisville, Ky., around to her potat of view on the Vietnam plank of the party platform last night. Miss MacLatoe wants the bombing of North Vietnam stopped- Mrs. Young replied she doesn’t trust toe Viefoong. Neither persuaded the other, and they parted friends. uiminatiains DRUG STORMS ‘fh£Ac/Uptio^ Sp&ua£c4t4- Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center, S. Telegraph Tel-Huron Center, S. Telegraph - Rochester, 1451 N. Main Pontiae Mall Shopping Center, N. Telegraph Watarford Plaza, Cornar M-5f and Crescent Lake Rd., Waterford Twp. ...REPUTATION FOR PROFESSIONAL INTEGRITY IS A PRICELESS INGREDIENT THAT MATURES WITH ACE... , CUNNINGHAM’S PRESCRIPTIONS OYER FOR Z33E ■MI1MUHHI JUMBO COLOR PRINTS FROM SUMS (STANDARD SIZC) HURRY...WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! * COMPLETE ASSORTMENT NOT AVAILABLE AT ALL STORES! Styrofoam CU PS r. OZ. SO'* • REG. 66i NEET LOTION BRIQUETS HIDDEN MAGIC L1STERINE aam SKI LOtlOl THE PONTIAC I’ll ESS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 A—13 Soviet Press Indicates Kremlin Still Angry Over Czech Affair By WILLIAM L. RYAN ^ iviet press indicates that theiat some of those Czechoslovak!Romania and some at Red Chi-iand narrow path for Czechoslo-itation of the two countries’ lead-ion Monday, when the confer-iwith giving “active help to AP Special Correspondent JKremlin’s chiefs are worried [leaders who have been permit-|na. |vakia and to have.warned thejers was going on. Pravda said ence ended. (Czechoslovak counterrevolution- leaders in Prague not to stray!0181 these were “days deci-| The same Pravda editorial!ary forces,” were joining an ”1 ” “ and Moscow may be satisfied that] and enraged by all that has hap-lted to return to office, at least] |H| I........................ it has stalled C^hoslovakia s pened. (temporarily. Some of it is di-l The Kremlin appears to have]r“^'T js 1 v e and uncompromising'carried a warning to all Cze-j imperialist chorus by contend- reform movement, but the So-| Much of the rage Is directed Erected against Yugoslavia and drawn the outline of a straight”0™ striiggle.. .against tne black; choslovaks. It complained thSt]ing that the military forces sent / ■ jCensorsnip on a roi uy i Derai aiforces of imperialist reaction Soviet soldiers were doing their:to Czechoslovakia were “some .press ana must pui^uie Drases.^ counter-revolution” in duty in Czechoslovakia in com-jsort of occupation." I pleased Moscbw. , 'Something for World to Think About' Yarik Describes Resistance to Russians Alexander Dubcek, the 46-year-old chief of the Czechoslo- pfny. 10 iral* rarnmnniei nopfu ViQo ; Sll*UClUre. (EDITOR’S' NOTE — After Soviet troops invaded Czechoslovakia last week, AP Correspondent Gene Kramer drove from Vienna to Prague and toured the countryside around the Czechoslovak capital. Now back in Vienna, he reports on the resistance of the people to the Soviet occupation.) center of Prague, hooting and shaking their fists at Soviet tank crews. ‘OUR GROWTH’ During one of the demonstrations, a retired factory foreman told me proudly: “Look at Detroit Prohibits Guns for Firemen DETROIT (UPI) - Firemen By GENE KRAMER VIENNA (AP) - Often regarded as the more docile and pragmatic of the Slavic peoples the Czechs and the Slovaks wrote a new chapter last week| . in the chronicle of resistance to1™0 carry guns on duty, threats of fosce. because they claim they need Their conduct during a week the protection, face immediate of occupation and their first suspension. , reaction to the agreement in j The Detroit Fire Commission Moscow between the Sovietl Tuesday ruled firemen should leaders and the men from not arm themselves even Prague suggests that some re- though the Detroit Fire Fighters sistance may continue. Association claims firemen * * * have come wider increased On a 300-mile drive through harassment while answering occupied Czechoslovakia 1 saw calls. anti-Soviet sentiment to a de- ★ * ★ gree that would pave been un- Included in the harassments thinkable a year ago. were 119 incidents in an 11- Hundreds of Czechs, 15 to 40, month period which included have been parading the past the throwing of bottles and week in Wenceslas Square, the rocks at the firemen. them, they are our youth. A whole generation that grew up under socialism and was taught to regard the Russians as broth-But in one week, all is changed. This is something for the whole wotld to think about.” At Frantiskovy Lasne, near the German border, a cook “The resistance we are putting up is not new to us. Our fathers used it against the Germans. And now the Russians have taken the place of the Germans in our hearts.” * * * He pointed to posters showing a swastika and Russian star superimposed and the symbol for the dreaded German SS, Hitler’s elite guard, scrawled over the U.S.S.R. Using classic tricks of the French Resistance against the Nazis, the Czechoslovaks overnight turned their country into jungle of towns and streets with no names and road signs. From the northwest comer of Czechoslovakia to Ceske Velenice, on the Austrian border, this reporter did not see a single crossroads with highway markers giving correct directions. They ed, hostile forces were conniv-;while being subjected to slander' Tass said a provocative state-ing with “rightist Opportunist .and provocations inspired by jinent by Yugoslavia on the “so-elements” in the Czechoslovak] “counterrevolutionists.” This .called Czechoslovak question” out or replaced with “Moscow’ in Russia’s cyrillic lettering. NO MAPS NeAr Karlovy Vary, anyone following the signs to Prague wound up at the German border.. Not a map was (m sale. Even in the center of Prague Soviet tank drivers huddled over their charts with bewildered looks. |: Wherever the Russians movej! they encounter unmistakable : hostility. People turn their]: backs on the occupation forces; signs in shops warn that they] won’t be served. * * * Young Czechs glare unflinch-j ingly until the youthful Russian! soldiers avert their eyes or smile sheepishly. “Hate intelligently,” said a placard on Wenceslas Square. I |The message seemed clear: So-* * * ] viet troops will be in Czechoslo- Only a week ago, the Soviet vakia indefinitely, and Moscow 1 press called Dubcek a "rightist] is in no mood to tolerate inopportunist” and accused him | terference with them, of. treachery to communism. Ifj vak Communist party, has re-] turned to Prague after being' taken, virtually a captive, to Moscow. But he remains in serious danger. ‘DAYS OF DECISION’ (“rightist opportunists" re^j Also on Sunday, the news,and Yugoslavia.” This is made clear by a lead- mained so dangerous in the So- agency Tass published an offi-| This sounded like a warning nig editorial in Pravda publ-viet view on Sunday, it is unlike- cial statement complaining that to Yugoslavia and Romania to ished Sunday, while the confrontly they were any less menacing! Yugoslavia and Romania, along!watch their steps. compatible with “the positions of the countries of NATO.” It added that “in the same spirit, the group of Mao Tse-tung in Peking now is closing ranks on this question with the U.S.A. Bloomfield Miracle Mile Telegraph at Square Lake A MIRACLE MILE The 25th Amendment to the] U.S. Constitution provides a procedure for the vice president taking over the presidency whenever a president is disabled and for selection of a new] vice president whenever that were either reversed, blanked (office becomes vacant. 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The smoothness, the shape, the nice clean press are baked into the fabric for keeps—so all you do is wear the shirt, wash it, dry it, and wear it again... and again... and again. And the selection we have in stock right now is great: thin stripes, multistripes, tatterplaids, neat checks, framed stripes, minichecks; in lights and darks and halfway shades. All in £ never-iron blend of Kodel *-and-cotton; sizes 8 to 2Q. at 4.50. You don't have togo back to school to learn hoyv tp take it easy. Farah teaches the course—with a whole wardrobe of permanently-pressed slacks, and jeans that never, ever need ironing. Because the shape and size and smoothness and press are baked into the fabric forever: in this case, handsome.hopsack blends. Shown above, left to right: tradi- tional ivy slacks in a fine hopsack; sizes 6-12 reg. and slim at $6, 26-32 at $8.. .trim-fitting jeans of super hopsack; sizes 6-12 reg.and slim at $5, 26-32 §t $7...beltless, drop-front pocket slacks in fine hopsack, sizes 26-32 at $9...drop-front pocket slacks in super hopsack. sizes 26-32 at 8.50. In all the groovy shades. [FARAH] IT'S BACK TO ! PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY TO 5:30, MONDAY, -THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY,TO 9 P.M. TELEGRAPH & ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS IN FARAH HOPSACK SLACKS & JEANS THAT NEVER NEED IRON! Bolivia Chief Seeks to Uplift the Indian THE PONTIAC 1’ltKSS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2fc 1968 A—IS WARIZATA, Bolivia UP) - The tiny helicopter landed on _ "barren, brown plain 13,500 feel above-sea ievebond-eut jumped President Rene Barrientos. Under his houndstooth sports jacket was an automatic pistol. In his pocket were 5,000 bolivianos — about $415. He carried a few deflated soccer balls. * ★ * A crowd of Aymara Indians HH bowler-hatted women usually stolid men — surged toward him. Cheering youths carried him on their shoulders to the stairs of this poor village’s best building and symbol of hope, a gleaming school. “Brother peasants,” declared Barrientos. Every good Bolivian has Indian- blood. Only some! cultural differences, but no racial differences separate good! Bolivians. There is no question] that we are all Indians. But ' Indian a good word? It is hame the Spanish conquistadors gave us as a subhuman type.' MIXED BLOOD Barrientos, light-skinned, man of mixed white and Indian blood, paused before the mass of bronzed and stoical people. 'Why should we celebrate name the Spanish gave us? We are peasants. That is our power, that is our glory. Every year we have celebrated this day as Indian day. No more, is from now on Peasant Day.’ It's Nothing to Sneeze At The erowd first looked at the village leaders, who yelled, ‘Viva Barrientos.” Then the crowd roared, ‘‘Viva Barrientos.” “I must free the Indians from their past and their feelings of Inferiority to the white man, Barrientos told a reporter later. His speeches invoke ‘ ‘ •> i c M peasant” almost as a talisman Peak oeason in e a r 0f his poUticaT’survival. Bolivia' for Baffling Affliction *flion Peasants a among 4% million people. UNCEASING VISITS While politicians bicker in the capital city, La Paz, and the armed forces follow the prog-his government, Barientos visits peasant villages unceasingly. Some villages are pilot projects of relative prq-gressiveness such as Warizata. Others are backwaters peopled by sullen Indians plying subsistence agriculture. Barrientos has said he wilt rely on massive peasant support' should his government threatened from the politicians and generals in La Paz. ANN ARBOR— Hay fever, again approaching its peak season of the year, remains one of man’s most baffling afflictions, say doctors at the University of Michigan. There is no sure cure. No panacea* Not even a precise scientific explanation of the midsummer miseries that come to a sneezing, wheezing climax right about Labor Day. * * a i Nevertheless, researchers keep probing, studying, analyzing, and hoping they will find the key that will furnish jreljef to millions of sufferers. What is now known about hay fever tends to be disjointed, "hedged, and confusing: • A person with ragweed hay -fever often shows a positive reaction to the skin test, but a positive skin test does not always mean you have bay fever. MIGHT GET ASTHMA If you suffer from hay He ended his speech here by passing out the soccer bails to village boys and handing the 1,000 bolivianos to a village leader in charge of a new building project. “My money, from my pocket, for the people of Warizata,” Barrientos told his audience. On cue, the Indians cheered fever, by age 25, you probably I again. Barrientos hopped into won’t get it. But if you arrive the helicopter and loosened the in North America as an adult, ] shoulder holster for his pistol—i you might get it at any age. reminder that—coopS" are j 'staple of Bolivian history. Bar- , • Hay fever is one of the most common “new” diseases experienced by foreign students who come to the United States, blit they usually don’t show any symptoms for their first two years here. • Your sex, race, color, or rientos himself came to power in a 1964 coup that overthrew the leader of the National Revolutionary Movement, Victor Paz Estenssoro. Barrientos was a product of that movement which brought land feform, nationalization of the socioeconomic status has no ob- Un mines and universai suf. vjous bearing[on your suscepti- frage t0 this Andean nation, bility to the disease. MORE VIOLENT NO CUES • The same amount of pollen *^"8, "ere '» seems to produce a more 5 ’ ° ll lpnt rpaptinn Into in tha aaaann ' P « a « ■ » t S,* a™ed everything from bolt-action rifles to modern submachine guns, marched past Barrientos at an agricultural center near! lent reaction late in the season 4han at the beginning. *' - • Antihistamine medicine, allergy, shots and air conditioning which filters out the pollen provide relief for some. it it ★ t • Patients with pure ragweed allergy can tolerate short periods of exposure to high concentration of pbllen out of season without showing any symptoms at all. Cochabama, his home town. These peasants, m osTl y Quechua Indians, needed no cues to cheer Barrientos. He, was a local bov. who made good, This time he donated 10,000 bolivianos to the peasants. “My money, from my pocket.” DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING nnmir PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SARIHAW and HURON) Furnished* by the Following Merchants: ARTHUR'S 40 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN'S MEN’S WEAR v ^ 51 N. Saginaw St. \ BOBETTE SHOP * 16 N. Saginaw St. BOOB HOUSEKEEPING SHOP « 51 W. Huron St. COMPf CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. Floor Sample NO MONEY DOWN On Sear* Easy Payment Plan Up to 3 Years to Pay Ton Can’t Do Better Than Sears Saturday Last Day 2-Pc. Modern Suite, Save *67 Handsomely styled with graceful g* sloping arms. Reversible foam latex «|p I VJ vP cushions for comfort, long wear. Choice of colors. Delivered 2-Pc. Bedroom Suite, Save *62 Includes panel bed and triple dress- Was 189.90 er with mirror. Contemporary styl- $~| ing is complemented by satin walnut I x ww finish; Matching Chest, Was $8tf $68 DBlivertd 5-Piece Dinette Set, Save *50 Was 119 95 Teakwood grained plastic top table ^ _ opens to 54” with 12” leaf. 4 vinyl r\q JOO Delivered w waaaa f V1IIJ1 covered chairs in floral amber print. 6-Pc. Dining Room Suite FruitWood veneer Italian Provincial. Includes 42x60” oval table with leaf, 3 side chairs, 1 arm chair, and matching buffet. Was 372.95 180 coil spring mattress. Vinyl covered reversible: polyfoam cushions. Save! Mi*-matched mattresses and box springs. Complete with frame; headboard and legs. Sale! Mattresses or Box Springs Wsrs 29J5 to 34.95 VS• 24“ Wsrs 39.95 to 49.95 VH .29“ Wsrs 59.95 to 19.95 Full QQ88 or Twin tl 7h, A money-saving assortment of floor samples and mis-matched , mattresses and box springs.' Some are slightly damaged, some-' are brand new. Harry in to' Sears and save np to $40. 18” PICTURE MEASURED DIAGONALLY ONE SPEED CONDITIONER All-Channel Portable TV Floor Polisher Console Stereo 4 Speakers *98 Transistorized chassis and amplifier produces breath-taking stereo sound. Handsome-walnut-veneer cabinet. & late Price 88 No Money Down on Soars Easy Payment Plan a Delivers rich, static-free sound a Attractive cabinet house* 174-sq. in. viewing area e Provides exeellsnt reception even in fringe areas Large enough for living room viewing -jSE'-sifiall enough for use in kitchen, den or bedroom Sale Price 18 No Money Down • Powerful, bait driven • Cleans 12-ineh path • On«ff swltob an bass— Scrub, wax and polish all hard floors with combination brushes. 18’ cord. Exciting Floor Covering Values From Sears \mmMM fr m ***• 9x9-in. Vinyl Asbestos Tiles 5C Sale Price each 1/20-inch thick; tiles are easy to install .. . cut with scissors. Flagstone design in slate gray, brick red or charcoal, .< 9xl2-Ft. Vinyl Surface Rug This heavyweight vinyl surface floor covering is ideal for family rooms, kitchens, etc’. Attractive prints, choice of decorator colors. *9 | “Vermont” Nylon i Pile Carpeting 077 Sale Price A. A ‘ • P *q.yd. I Ideal for light traffic areas. 100%. nylon j with a cobblestone textured pattern. Royal ! Blue, Majestic gold, Milan green. Jamaican 1 Sand, Spring Avocado, Bronze Gold. 12-ft. [ width. For modern or contemporary decoy. 201»-40% OFI Y on remnants, roil ends of carpeting Some J litrjie enough to carpet a living room and 1 , dinirig room. Hurry ia for the best selection. 20%-50% OFF an 6-ft. Vinyl Remnants Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9. Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5>SO Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 KASA ROERUCK AND CO. - t ■Pi? y ^ 7 “7^ r Tip THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Reg. $135 14-et. solitaire .... . $99 Matching bride's band, only.. $34.99 Reg. $135 14-ct. solitaire ..... $99 Matching bride's band, just.... $30 Rough diamonds arO marked and soldorod to motal holder for cutting. Ring lllu.tratlon* •nlargua to ihow d.talf Disc coated with oil and dlamont dust polishes the stone's facets Lathe Is used to shape cut stone Into traditional round diamond. MONTGOMERY 3 DAYS ONLY Diamond Spectacular! Aug. 29, 30 and 31 You’re invited to meet an expert diamond cutter, Mr. Maurice Langereis of Amsterdam, Holland. He will be demonstrating the art of diamond cutting and polishing... at Wards! An object of exquisite symmetry, sizzling with white fire, clear as a dew drop... that's what you can expect of a LeGant* diamond. But nature's most precious gem doesn't emerge in this state of perfection. Highly skilled craftsmen labor over precise and painstaking procedures to draw fiery splendor from the confines of a natural stone* And then Wards chooses only the fin^stl Now, you have the rare opportunity to see diamonds actually being cut arid polished! Only when you've seen this process can you appreciate the fine quality of LeGant* stones. Whether you already have a LeGant* diamond, or are about to purchase one, do visit Wards during this event. Our selection of diamond jewelry is greater than usual • • • and there are many sale-priced items! Reg. $275 % Sesmsster DeVille winds itself as you wear it, and is perfect for sports or evening Wear. The ladies* watch feature, a facct-edsed jewel-crystal. 18K gold dial-markers, (ally jeweled movements. Other Omega watches' from $65 to over $1000. REDMOND’S Jewelry si N. SAGINAW, Pontiac Frem Parking in Rear of Storm THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 B—8 FRESHEN THE IMPRESSION! ---Back-To-School mMHM lot* of work and preparation and wito mothers call Gresham first to got an early start. New friends and situations call for that very Import-ant 'best' first impression and Gresham Professional Drycleaning processes . give you confidence at every occasion. Time is growing short so call today ... Gresham guarantees your child will be 'up front' in appearance when the first school bell rings. Storewide Savings on Modern, Transitional and Mediterranean Bedroom, Dining and living Rooms. Save on Drexel, Flexsteel,— Thomasville and Many More Name Brands. Terms t© Suit You ' Professional Design ond InteriorDecoratingServrea mrsmmvm........................ ■■MMMMHI I^W*n*^* .. 2600 N. Woodward, Bloomfield Naar Square Lake Rd. LI 8-2200 FE 3-7933 OPEN: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 10 to 9{Mem., tuts, *Hl 5 PM\j>v Dacron & Cotton Size 7 to 14 ll98 Reg. & Half sixes Q98 from One of Pontiac'm Largest ' and Mott Complete Uniform Dept. Dickson, bridesmaids. Oh the esquire side, Ross, was best man with Jackson. Rodger Coder and Rod hey Dietzel, ushering. Following a reception in th< Bloomfield Centre Hall, the couple rlpnartcd for a southerr Florida honeymoon trip. Bobette SHOP 16 N. Saginaw Downtown Park Free, FE 2-6921 Michigan Banka rd & Charge Accounts BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Commode Right Stand NotetllS Call Tdtlay for Convenient Pickup, and [Delivery £uZs&i_ in the winners circle mIuLOUS VALUEat Soft, supple luxurious suede crafted into jackets that go everywhere busy gals on the go-go. And you'll wear them all year, too . . .zip-in linings are their built-in heaters. Taupe, beaver, town brown, navy or willow. Sizes 8 to' 18. , Ponfiac-Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday Til 9 U«a your Hadley1* convenient "multi-charge" The Pontiac Mall—Uto Elicobath Lake Rd. Entrance - ■ • PRECISION WATCH REPAIR Crystals Fitted While You W*it NEISNER'S Watch Repair 42 N. Saginaw \ FE 8-3593 Id Mann, Manager Grow Old ? l/oseph/a/e /omuha/ MRS. GARRETT C GEIGER G. C Geigers Will Live in -Virginia- Walled Lake United Methodist Church was the setting for vows exchanged Saturday evening by Susan Lee Apel and Seaman Garrett Carl Geiger, USN. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Radcliff of Walled Lake and the son of Carl C. Geiger of Beach Terrace, West Bloomfield Township and Mrs. Helen iSainnie of West Palm Beach, Fla., will make their home in Virginia Beach, Va, where fie Ts stationed. * "★ * ss Apel chose an skimmer of rayon organza witt collar and sleeves of ered Alencon lace. Her dral train was accented Alencon lace appliques. Clusters of lily of the and leaves of Alencon lace cured her elbow length veil illusion and she carried wh roses, carnations and tisV Maid of honor Linda was assisted by Bums, Linda Davis and I know one way to beat the age gap—write a column about beauty and being one’s most attractive self. There are no age limits, so far as feminine interest in such subjects. I hear bom women 80 years old, and older, and from some readers as young as 10 years old. I receive many letters from young ladies whose ages range from 11 through 13. ♦ A A These are such very important years that I want to give the space today to this age group. For instance, the way you care for your complexion now may save you much trouble and unhappiness later on. These are the years when the little oil glands in your skin are begin-- ning to become more active. They will become increasingly so during the next few years. As you know, blackheads and pimples are troublesome to many teen-agers. Why wait until you develop these later on? Why not adopt some preventive measures now? Wash your face with soap and water two or three times a day. If your skin is very oily make It four times daily. DON’T PICK And, PLEASE do not pick at your face! Many a IS or 16-year-old girl has a crop of pim- ples because she picked at her face when she was your age. Keep your hands off of your face excqpt when you are washing it. AAA Try to avoid many of the handicaps of the teen years. Enter it with good posture. The way you carry yourself and hold your head today will have a great influence on how you will look a year or so hence. If you have a tendency to slump, correct that right now. If you already have round shoulders get to work on them! It’s easier now than it will be later on! A A A Develop a liking for sports. Become good at several of them. This will build a backlog of health which you will need later on when you assume the responsibilities of womanhood. Also, sports are so much fun! They will add to your popularity too. A A A Do not enter the teen-age years with too 'many pounds. If you are overweight correct this now. Being fat can make a big difference in your enjoyment of years that should be wonderful, filled with lots of friends, and good times. Overweight may cause you to be self-conscious and shy. Wed Saturday in First Presbyterian Church were Janice Faye Abel and Sgt, David Edward Rogers, USA. Attendants for the ceremony, followed with a reception at Pine Lake Country Club, were Marba-ra Navarre\and John West. Parents,of the newlyweds are the John Abels of Moto rway Drive and Mr. and Mrs. David'A. Rogers of Mohawk. Road. Don't Ruin Smile With Unclean Teeth No matter how perfect your teeth may be, the beauty of your smile can easily be marred by traces of lipstick or (horrors) food. Make it a habit to quickly and discreetly check after eating or applying fresh lipstick. HAS YOUR PERMANENT GROWN? Are Those Little Straightends In Back Annoying You? WE CAN HELP YOltl A*k About Our Glorifying PROGRAM for SEPT# 42 N. Saginaw Street NO APPOINTMENT nIcessary Beauty Shop FE 4-4462 WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD - - - TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-6181. Drexel • Thomasville Baby Oil Does Cosmetic Tasks Some of the multitude of cosmetics tasks that baby oil performs well include: whisking away make-up quickly, even stubborn eye make-up. A thin film of the oil left on overnight keeps your skin lubricated and helps prevent moisture loss to keep it smooth and soft. School^DaysaareMereBAgain! special DS-QX PERMANENTS from f695 White Swan UNIFORMS ■mwvwr w 48 N. Saginaw St. Injterior Decorating Consultation 1680 S. Telegraph Rd. S. of Orchard Laka Rd. Free Parking Front and Sida of Storo Open Thursday, Friday, Monday Evening* 'til 9 P.M. Budget Termt Arranged Note Correction In the engagement an-[ nouncement of—DianeMar-jolaine Obomsawin to Ronald j Ellsworth Hodge in Tuesday’s1 paper, her address was in-j correctly reported. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Come! R. Obomsawin of Forestfstreet,: Pontiac. Airlines Add Another Service A good bath may soon be as important as a ticket in getting you on an airline flight: Commercial airlines, already refusing shoeless hippies, are considering also rejecting those! whose readily apparent bathing negligence would pollute the cabin air. One more service for the fastidious passenger! I A few weeks ago I showed you how to cut your striped fabric so that the skirt or culottes would have a chevron effect at the center front. My sketch showed how to find the true bias for cutting the center front. ______ If one of our readers hadn't called it to my attention, I wouldn’t have realized that, I didn’t warn you about cutting the fabric double. You must cut each piece separately. Cut the garment on the right side of the fabric and remember that the second time1 you place it on the fabric, you must turn the pattern piece over or else you will have two pieces alike, ★ * ★ Dear Eunice Farmer: | Will you please tell me what kind of material to buy for a raincoat for my college-bound daughter? Please don’t say vinyl material; we don’t like them. Mrs. I. L. Dear Mrs. I. L.r 5 S A raincoat that can double as a fairly dressy coat has always been a big problem in college wardrobes. The girls usually need both, and we don’t want to spend that much money plus buying winter coats. This year we have a perfect solution for you. Velvet tyss j come back strong on the fashion picture and there is a water-repellent velvet that has a velveteen backing Which is easy to! Imanage for the home sewer. This kind of coat with a frog !closing instead of buttonholes can work beautifully for a raincoat! as well as a dressy coat. * * ★ ................. There are other solutions to the all-purpose coat. You may use some of the heavier canvas or cotton brocade fabrics and have your dry cleaner process them for water-repellency. There i is also a commercial spray on the market that you may spray Ion your garment yourself. If you follow the directions, you will! find it does Work beautifully. ^Mid-Summer SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS! EVERYTHING INCLUDED EXCEPT A FEW PRICE-ESTABLISHED ITEMS!. SPECIAL ORDERS AT SALE PRICES! DOROTHY GRAY DISCOVERS ‘ALGENE’ WITH IRISH MOSS Malaga and Lynn Bauer were! escorted by ushers Robert1 Cornell and Daniel Malaga. ! The couple is honeymooning in Canada. A natural ingredient that recaptures the \outhful appearance of your sfyn-Irish Moss. Almost immediately you’ll notice a decided improvement in the appear-anceof your skin. Algene-’s-am^ue conditioning pn\cess makes chap* as ping and flaking disappear. Little ■ If lines seem to melt into st >it, smooth • perfection.Touch your face.You’ll j get a wholesome fresh feeling you may not have known n since you were—how young? Dorothy Gray’s Satura Algene Con' ditioning Cream is non-greasy. Use it at night and under make-up. *.oo. Also available—the same richness in lighter liquid form—Algene Con- O ditioning Face Emulsion. s.oo —Alger.eConditioningHand and Body Lotion. 4.00. • 140 N. Saginaw Near Saars • Huron Straet Corner Telegraph o 4895 Dixie Highway TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. M. Hilton, San Diego, CaHf., is this week’s Tailor Trix pressing board winner for her sewing suggestion. ★ ★ ★ “This summer’s sewing provoked a number of experimental projects. Among them was an occasion to finish the neckline and hem of a cotton dress with scallops. I tried the aCcfepted method of double stitching at the pivot points and sometimes it' came out smooth and sometimes puckered. Through trial and error, I came forth with a winner. Take two stitches instead of one at the pivot point, pivoting each of the stitches. The results are no pucker at all!” Antiqued hinges harness a duo of great sport shoes, squared-up and hand-stitched for handsome, country-ed looks. Both have extension soles with blacksmith type trims... both I in soft glove * leather uppers. A. In Expresso Brown and Duck Blue, $11 B.Tn Cactus $12 e*E Campus*' 1 girls hinge-on to li^teJiaberdasher^ hardware — B--I— TIIB PONTIAC Pit ESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 FLOWERS... TO CHEER A SHUT-IN... or for no special reason at all. FLOWERS 101 N. Saginaw Street, FE 3-7165 Shop and Greenhouse* in Lake Orion LAWRENCE P. MAZUR Take Two Pails Experienced campers carry two separate buckets — one of metal to heat water over open fire. Fill one With sudsy water for washing dishes, clothing and people. Carol Bauer Is Wed Candlelight In a candlelight ceremony Friday in St. Michael’s Catholic Church, Carol Ann Bauer became the bride of Lawrence Pliilip Mazur. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bauer of Pickering Street and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mazur of Blast Detroit joined the newlyweds at a reception in the Knights of Columbus Hail. ★ ★ * The bride chose an a-luw gown of peau de sole featuring a bridal neckline. Alencon lace I appliques accented her chapel: train of empress satin, A crown of seed pearls! secured her elbow length veil of! illusion. White snowdrift mums, pink| Sweetheart roses and pinkl Stephanotis comprised her! bridal bouquet. Mrs. Robert Cornell, the. bride’s sister, and John Rainko were honor attendants. Bridesmaids Mrs. Daniel for Eyes Avoids Pink-Look albinos and rabbits are to have pink eyes, t r a i n attacks time to time, a rabbity look that attractiveness, eyes are caused factors, such as late hours, overuse of eyes, outdoor glare or smog, arid distance driving. * II To return natural sparkle and whltepess to eyes, do what many photographic models douse decongestant eye drojta. Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Ruggles of Milford will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary Saturday during an open house from 2-5 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. The affair, hosted by their daughter and son-in-law, the Clifford Shefflers (Dorothy) of Rowe Road, Highland Township, will be held at the Ruggles’ home. The honorees, who were married Aug. 31, 1918 in Royal Oak, have t hre e grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer BUSY BEE Variety Shop COME IN AND SEE WHAT ONE DOLLAR WILL BUY MATERIAL - S yd*, far 81-- NYLONS - 2 for >1.00. Bag. $1.39 Sa. Men’s and Women’s WALLETS - 81.00 E*. GO-GO WATCHES GIRLS* $9.95 BOYS’ $11.95 RADIO Open 10:30.8:30 — Cloted Mon. andTuet. 4676 DIXIE HWY. dkl$n GLOBE LAMPS $25.95 12-Transistor *7** OpM Men.& Fit TM» CHECK THIS KNIT COSTUME The price Is light — but it couldn't be smarter, richer looking, go more places. From our * collection of zephyr-weight,/ double knit acetates that bares its shell, slims its skirt, checks its jacket (even to the contrasting facing). In Navy* herb green, brown, curry and paprika. Sizes 10-18. only *30 Sportswear — Main Floor Last 3 Days! Ends Saturday, August 31st THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST OP|N LABOR DAY 10 A.M.-6 P.M. Whirlpool 3 cycles: wash anything from delicates to heavily aoiled articles. Magic-Mix lint filter traps, holds lint as it passes through. “Surgilalor” (L agitator; for ^WWliiWP&.w... . *Floating Quiet99 Rotary Compresser Is Precision Built 12.3 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR FREEZER NO MOfiEY DOWN Built With Highrund Low Water Temperature Selections WHIRLPOOL 3-CYCLE WASHER I744? ™ ^ ™ Price Or Pay Only 7.50 Monthly NO MONEY DOWN Versatile washer has 3 cycle selection: 3 water tempera* tures, 2 water levels, Free-Flow draining, 3-point suspension, self leveling rear feet. Installation on existing Detroit Edison lines. Pay Only 8.42 Monthly mmm ■ ^ * Price Features refrigerator section that never needs defrosting, adjustable temperature control, 109-lb. freeser, Million-Magnet doors that “lock” in cold, full width crisper. Holds (25.2 qts.), more. Price Big 105 Lb. Freezer WHIRLPOOL 14.1 CU. FT. Refrigerator FREEZER Whirlpool NO MONEY DOWN Price Pay Only 14.85 Monthly 14.1 cu. A. of space; true no-frost spacious 105-lh. freezer; glide-out shelf, 10 lit- meat pun witli cover, bushel size twin crisper*. You’d expect to ;Miy much more lor this great value. Completely Portable Now ... Permanent Later If You Choose WHIRLPOOL CONVERTIBLEWASHER NO MONEY DOWN A am Compact “Convertible” washer fits into a space only 24" wide- Has 4 cycle selections, 2 agitation apin speeds. Features Super Wash for extra soiled clothes and improved care for Permanent Press. Or Pay Only 7.74 monthly Store Hours: Open Daily 10 AJS1. ■—10 P«M. Sundays 11 AJH. — 6 JP*M. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 38, im Compare at 3.991 Charge it! Oxfords, slip-ons 102 Sq. In.,14” Picture Measured Diagonally No money down —Pay only 10.2 7 per month Smart Slimlina Cabinet Vinyl Walnut-Grain Finish M The distinctive set for family or per* •onal viewing. Features all channel tuning, tJHF 6lide-rule tuning dial; A VHF telescoping antenna; advanced, circuitry and much more.' Charge It Smartly styled school shoe* with wipe-clean vinyl uppers lined with leather for greater comfort. Black, brown. 8V4-3. “Toujti” shoes with the bold, new look ... straps, buckles.. . mors. Black alipens, oxfords. 8 Vi-3. Special purchase! Uppers of wipe-clean vinyl for easy care, longer wca r. Blue k, brown. 3 14-6.— -— Machine Washable! HERE’S A SURE TWO-POINTER!! Has All Channel Reception PORTABLE TV WITH 75 SQ. IN.* PICTURE Perfect Family Portable SLIMUHE BUCK & WHITE TELEVISION Discount Pride Charge Jfcof Discount Price | Charge It Black and White portable with front top mounted controls, superb sound and picture performance, “semi-concealed” carrying handle, trim styling. Decorator styled portable with' 184* sq. inches of viewable screen. Outatandiug reception, front mounted speaker and controls. Earphone and jack. •I»‘slci.n ■aasaiaSSIsaSasSs. Thank You” for shopping at Kmart Open Labor Day lO-6 GLENWOOD PLAZA North Perry at Glenwood OPEN DAILY 10- 11 to 4 Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. <«8 ■ m m i < artf'tegi Name Brant 4 J Discounts Colgate Toothpaste ‘JUST WONDERFUL' namits \urr. Plaid Covered Notebooks DUcount Price Binder, stenogra-_ pher, composition. I ; 500 sheets paper Reg. 83c _ 5-ring filler paper C Vt for 2,3-ring binder ■ lie PEN PAK A. Kmart DUcount Price . 2 med. point, 1 extra fine point pent. , FIBRE-TIP PEN B. Kmart DUcount Price Black or blue fine line pen,_ FELT TIP STICK PEN i 0. Kiptart DUcount Price Choose black or blue. Save! 4 10-STICK PENS ON CARD 0. Kmart DUcount Price | Color of pen ia tame as color of ink. 1 10 RETRACTABLE PENS E Kmart DUcount Price I Ideal for the student. Charge It. ' 5-HOLE VINYL CARRYALL F. Kmart DUcount Price | Convenient container for paper*. SMALL BINDER FOUOH .... 2So ' Papermate® Ball Point . 0. Kmart DUcount Price j Famout Papermate ball point pen. 1 TYPEWRITER PAPER •H. KmartDUcount Price A 250-sheet package. Charge It. " > WATER COLOR SET ( J. Kmart DUcount Price I Set includes 10 water colors. " BOX OF CRAY0LAS K. Kmart DUcount Price Box of 16. Buy now and save. 24JIRAYQLA® CRAYONS | L. Kmart DUcount Price Box of 24 Crayola Crayons. 4 CLEAR VINYL STORM BA0 M. Kmart DUcount Price j Zipper top. Protect* papers. I BINDER WITH FILLER ■ N. Kmart DUcount Price 1 Choice of canvas and vinyl. ■ FILLED VINYL BINDERS DUcount Price A A _ Walnut or Birch "uwm pattern Vinyl. Mk For your Labor Day picnic . . . and to have on hand for the school lunch boxes you’ll soon be packing. A favorite kind for everyone. m DavritAalu “Hp* Reg. 3.97 M7 * Virtually indestructible! £asy-to-rlean jumbo size kit Extra-buys vacuum bottle. Pontiac Store Only h nvwrrniwutai.a nugativft itw-nm» t»T This would mean that a family earning less' than the poverty standard would get payments to make up the difference. This is just one proposal for a national economic security program.;. Another variant is the guaranteed annual income which would do about the same tiling but would be separate from the tax structure. PARK FREE in Lot at Rear of Store here. Why WKC Is Headquarter (a FRIGCWRE REFRIGERATORS-FREEZERS-WASHERS-and DRYERS NO MONEY DOWN • UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY • FREE DELIVERY • FACTORY TRAINED SERVICEMEN! Frigidaire Frost-Proof Refrigerator with Automatic Ice Maker Frigidaire Frost-Proof Upright Freezer Stores up to 406lbs. Juice Can Holder Makes Small cans aasy to find. 4 Roomy Shelves 1 adjustable for , ' flexible storage. J WKCS LOWER 108 N. Saginaw ,- FE 3-7114 OPEN THURS. and SAT. 9:30 am to 5:30 pm; FR1. 9:30 am to 9 pm Buy Your 'FRIGIDAIRE' From WKC | —Downtown Pontiac's Appliance Store for 44 Yedrs • Small load Setting. Sqvos you hot water and detergent on< leitdbao-fuH loads.____________________l------------- • Automatic Soak Cycle. Ideal for heavily soiled clothes os well as diapers. • Deep Action Agitator. Creates currents that plunge sudsy wotar-forthorough wo*Wnff~-^ • 2 Jet-Awoy Rinses. Get rid of lint ond scum so thoroughly there's no need for a lint. trap. • Cold Water Wash Setting. Saves hot water. Saves clothes from shrinking and foding. 'FRIGIDAIRE' CUSTOM DELUXE AUTO-WASHER WKCS LOWER PRICE i nnriuKJ $228 Frost-Proof! You’ll never defrost again. 11.6 Cu. Ft Size I All tha extra freezer space p you want! 4 Door Shelves With removable fronts for easy cleaning. Magnetic Door Seal Helps keep cold air in, warm air out FRIGIDAIRE With Durable Press Care AUTO-GAS DRYER WKCS LOWER PRICE • DPC. Proper temperature plus end-of-cyde cool-down bring Dufable Press items out of the dryer ready to wear or put away without iron- • Gentle Flowing HUat. Pampers fabrics, dries them fresh and soft. • No-Heat. Setting. For airing and fluffing. • No-Stoop, floe mesh Dacron lint screen. It's -right on the door foY easy cleanihg. 'Let Your Gas . Dryer Do Your Ironing . . . __ FREE INSTALLATION ON CONSUMER POWER GAS LINES When You Buy Your Gas Dryer No fill! HD spill! Ice Mokor fills, freezes, releases cubes into door server. All automatically! Frost-Proof! You'll never defrost again! No space lost to frost! Defrosts only when moded! Up-Front Lighting! . Puts everything in your refrigerator in plain View. Door Storage! Butter compartment, 24 egg nests, deep door shelf for largo cartons, cans. *Tht 20% dubuthn applies to ■ am'i topcoats and overcoats only AR BORLAND • BIRMINGHAM tEABTLAND • GRAND RAPIDS •GRAND RIVER & GREENFIELD • JACKSON •LINCOLN PAR K •LIVONIA M ALL • MACK * MOROSS MACOMB MALL • NORTHLAND . PONTIAC MALL • SHELBY & STATE • UNIVERSAL CITY • WESTBORN . WESTLAND • WONDERLAND < WOODWARD A MONTGAfeM OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY TO 5.30, MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TO 9 PAIL TELEGRAPH AND EUZAIETH LAKE ROADS THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Ancient floating Village Filipino Sea Gypsies Visited (EDITOR’S, NOTE They have roamed the eea for centuries, these Badjaos. The wth ter is their life. Then oat, steep, work and play 2 ' HART SCHAFFNER t MARX TOPCOATS IN PURE MONGOLIAN CASHMERE 0UTERC0ATS LUXURIOUS IMPORTED FABRICS, REGULARLY TAILORED BY AIPACUNA, REGULARLY $150, ,, y ^ $130, NOW 20% OFF___________________ _______NOW 20% OFF Alpacuna it the leading maker of fine cashmere coats. These ere exceptionally luxurious: a silky, soft cashmere imported from-Mongolia. Tailored end hand-detailed in , several styles. Black, navy, grey, tsn, rust.... 9120 Some of the finest costs in Pur stores—ell tailored by one of the country'* most celebrated makers, snd all in luxurious imported fabrics: herringbones. Saxonies, cheviots. etc. Several styies. Now'..............91B4 ALL OF THESE FAMOUS IMfiOS ARE REPRESENTED: GGG, EAGLE, HART SCHAFFNER A MARX, ALFACUNA, BARRY WALT, MALCOLM KENNETH, CUSTOM SHOP, SARR0N ANDERSON, MONTCLAIR, CHARTER CLUB WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1868 Deaths in Pontiac, Nea Areas Mrs. Walter Colling ^. D. Little J. D. Little, 44, of 3M Central died yesterday. Arrangements are by the Frank Carrutbers Funeral Home. Mr. Little, * an employe of GMC Truck it Coach Division, was a member of the Bray Temple CME Church and Harry A. Waldron Harry A. Waldron, 87, of 4Wj N. Perry died yesterday. His body is at the Voorhees-Sipte Funeral Home. Mr. Waldron was a retired employe of Pontiac .Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Ida . Service for Mrs. Walter (Vera *M.) Colling, 55, of 1364 Irwin, .Waterford Township, will be 1 p,ra. Friday at the Haley Funeral Home in Highland Park with burial in Roseland Park ^ete^. Royal Oak. chairman of the board of'E7 a daughter, Carrie C. of Mrs. Colling died yesterday, trustees of his church. Pontiac; three stepdaughters, Surviving are her husband, a* Surviving are his wife, Mary Alice Olson of Union sister and two brothers. |Lee: Ms father; and five mj.s. june Garrison of Union brothers. j City, Tenn., and Mrs. Betty DeGrandchamp of Utica; two J. W. Smith stepsons, including Robert Beull Service for Mrs. George F.j service for J. W. Smith, S8,H^“^;J3 (Edith L.) Kirtland, 78, of 3255. of 143 Carr will be at the! “d 17 great‘grandchUdren-Windcroft, Waterford Township, Macedonia Baptist Church at 1 Mrs. George F. Kirtland will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at theP-m- tomorrow with burial in ^sjOak Hill Cemetery by the Divine Science Church, Birm- Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. ingham, with bunal m White ^ Smith, a construction Chapel Memorial Cemeteiy, worker died Sunday. Troy. Arrangements are by the| Surviving are his wife, Del- C. J. Godhardt Funeral HomeJ Keego Harbor. Mrs. Kirtland died Monday. Surviving are her husband; a son, George F. Jr. in.England; two daughters, Mrs. W. Kenneth Crowder of Waterford Township ores; six childrehr J. W. Jr. Samuel, Theresa, Rachel, Rose Mary and Rose Marie, all at home; six brothers, including Willie May Owens, Howard and H. R. Smith, all of Pontiac; three sisters, including Mamie and Mrs. Marcia D. Prior in'Draper and Margaret Owens, England; and two sisters. I both of Pontiac. Czechs Ask Deadline for Troop Pullout . PRAGUE (AP) - The Czech-, oslovak National Assembly today adopted a resolution demanding a firm deadline for the withdrawal of Soviet-led occupation troops and condemning the occupation as illegal. Informants said the National Assembly also declared it could |kot ratify the Moscow agreement because it was reached under pressure; There was no immediate resort from a secret meeting of he Communist party Central Committee of its position on the Moscow accord that continues he occupation and has forced he Czechoslovak regime to rein ip on its liberalizing program. Bp* «m»rrojf indicated that op-tosition to the terms of the set-lement was hardening rapidly despite appeals by Alexander Dubcek, the party leader, and President Ludvik Svoboda Tuesday for Czechoslovak under- standing while they work to end file occupation. DUBCEK A DDRESS Dubcek was expected to address the Central Committee meeting at the clandestine Com-lunist headquarters. Reformist sources said that Dubcek has been asked to deny rumors he yielded to Soviet demands to declare the special 14tk pirty congress illegal. The congress met secretly last week and elected a liberal Central Committee replacing one that still included a strong conservative Wing. ___ '.. * * ' * Informants said there growing opinion that Dubcek should be voted out of office if he confirmed the rpmor. This could result in two rival central committees with reformists holding membership in both. Mrs. Abbott Avery HOLLY — Service for Mrs. Abbott (Angella) Avery, 83, of 313 Sherwood will be 10 a.m. I Friday at the Dryer Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hilt! Cemetery. Mrs. Avery died yesterday, j Surviving are two nieces and nephew. Mrs. Nicholas J. Dailey LAKE ORION - Service for Mrs. Nicholas J (Celia) Dailey, 53, Of 94 N. Axford will be 10 tomorrow at St. Joseph Church, with burial in EasL lawn Cemetery. Rosary service will be 8 p.m. today at Allen's Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Mrs. Dailey died Monday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Wallace G. Tatro of Royal Oak; a son, Lloyd L- of CUo; eight grandchildren; one^ great-grandson; and three sisters. John A. Tischler AVON TOWNSHIlP - Prayers were offered at 3:30 p.m. today for John. A. Tischler, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph -J. Tischler, 1168 Shenandoah, al Mount Avon Cemetery, Rochester, with burial b/Pix-ley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. The infant was dead at birth yesterday. Surviving besides-his parents re three brothers, Thomas, Rickey, James and three sisters, T-aurle, .Tania and Julie, all at home, and h i s grandparents, Mrs. Wesley Wendorf of Rochester and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Tischler of Utica- CITY BLAZE — Smoke from last night’s fire at the Roosevelt Hotel drifts across downtown Pontiac. The 42-year-old structure was gutted. No deaths have been reported, although this morning some of the hotel’s residents were reported missing. Survivors of Fire Happy to Be Afive Several Roosevelt Hotel oc-i "As he tried to return to hist hotel, Amos Spivy, this morning , hospital but doesn’t know where: at the hotel, WM- to cupants were out on the street!room, the floor collapsed credited Pontiac firemen with he’ll stay tonight. Manhattan Bar on tne mmn this morning watching firemen j beneath him,” said Espinosa, [saving his life. Spivy was lifted! * * ★ 1 umg ot ***. rf pour water on the gutted frame “Firemen had to carry him from his fourth-floor room by. Another elderly hotel resident, aaid\ *There "? of the hotel. Many wore or car- from the building.’’ an extended aerial platform on'wJJ™R §§§§ said he Pe0P*e T?,r® just stunned and ried the wily possessions they) The two other employes,!one of the fire trucks, Iclimbed down a fireman’s lad-|f“fPrJ*^^^®^ could save. Some were James Rivonia and Raymond disgusted and would not talk about what happened. The mar jority, however, were thankful to be alive and gladly admitted it Alan Brummett, who checked into the hotel for the first time last night, was gettihg ready to go to bed when he first realized tbereirltarfire. Opening the door to the hall he found, "Smoke that was so thick you couldn’t see your hand,” he said. Assigned room on the third floor, Brummett fell down the stairs to the second flow, hurting his back, and then crawled to the first floor, where firemen helped him out of the building. Three Salvation Army employes were living in hotel at the time of the fire. One of them, Floyd Hendryx, was treated for smoke halation at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital before being released at about 4 a.m. STOPPED BY SMOKE According to Maj." Leonard Espinosa, Hendryx had tried to escape by descending the staircase to the lobby when smoke stopped him. Clark, came to the Salvation Army’s Men’s Social Service directly from the hotel. Other Sal v a li o n Army members were busy throughout the night providing clothing the fire victims and serving coffee to the firemen. FIREMEN PRAISED According to Brig. John Grindle, 20 persons were taken to the Army’s Citadfel, 29 W, Lawrence, to stay overnight. A five-year resident of the pt was sleeping-when I noticed the smoke coming into my room. I walked out in tije hallway, and I couldn’t see my ■ lo front of my face,” he said. could npt have gotten out of there if. the firemen hadn’t lifted me out,” he added. Spivy was taken to POntiac General Hospital with three others, where he was treated for smoke inhalation. He stayed the night at the climoea aown a the„ immediately began to help der when his rooom hlled wtth| n ^ ladders. ..j 8tarted smoke. I^men smdje was miviring coffee,” j8he said, overcome by the smoke out u - otherwise unhurt, although he lost his hearing aid and glasses. Another resident, Clayton Zeizler, said he didn’t know there was a fire, fle said he was awakened when a fireman broke the window of his third-story room- He came down the fire escape. He is at Pontiac General recovering from smoke inhalation. Mrs; Dorothy Rickner, cook ‘We were all so stunned.” 1 ★......★ ★ ^ Walter Sunders lived to Room 249. He placed the call to local firemen. In the lobby to get a drink of water from the fountain, Sunders saw smoke coming put from under, a door leading to the basement and opened the door to see flames. “It was all lit up,” he said. He then called the fire department. Roosevelt Served Pontiac for 42 Years Pontiac’s Roosevelt Hotel, has served the city for 42 Vears. Built in 1925, the four-story hotel at 125 N. perry is owned by an Independence Township man. John C. Ktonally, of 6911 Rattalee Lake purchased, the Structure in February, The purchase price could not be learned. * ★ ★ The hotel operated'more than 200 rooms, Ktonally said. It built of stone and brick over a structural steel framework, addition to the four floors of rooms and facilities, the building had a full basement. # it ★ Fire officials said today they believe the fire started, in the basement. ’Boiler rooms, laundry, store rooms and refrigeration units were operated there. The hotel has changed hands [quet tax land sale by the numerous times since its con-[Michigan Land Office. Pontiac’s struction. At one early point ini bid of $72,000. bought . the Its Wstory, the city owned the building-building. In the early 1940s, owners of the then-third-largest hotel the city fell more than $85,000 behind to tax payments. The building was put-up for delin- It has been owned privately since August 1048 |rhen the Roosevelt Hotel Co. .Inc. purchased it from the city. The sale price then was reportedly $337,500. 5 Are Accused Grave-Looters KALAMAZOO (UPI) - Two men, a woman and two juveniles were picked up by police Tuesday for allegedly looting graves at an old cemetery. Officers said the group had opened eight graves and had taken bones from some of them. A picnic lunch was found at the scene. : The two juveniles were turned over to juvenile authorities. *Priests Opposed toChurdt Stand Should Be Still' CLEVELAND (AP) r- Roman Catholic priests who cannot accept the Church’s ban on birth control should remain silent or ask to be relieved of teaching, preaching and confessional duties, the director of the Cleveland Catholic Diocese’s Family Life Bureau says. “A priest should eeho the voice of the Church to this important matter/’ the Rt. Rev.) Msgr. Francis W. Carney said! Tuesday in a 2%-page statement i on Church loyalty. News in Brief .Hanford Twaddle, owner of . Pontiac Radiator Repair at 240 JB. Wilson, toldPontiaci>oliee — today he was robbed of $70 cash at knifepoint about 8 p.m. last night. 'Mom’s Rummage, Thursday, $-12, Indianwood at Baldwin. —Adv. Garage Sale, Aug. 30 and 31, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Bikes, toys, clothing, furniture. 2018 Wood-told, off Orchard Lake Rd. —Adv. Rummage 8ale, 393 W. Iroquois, Fri. and Sat.. Aug. 29 and SO, 94. Flute, child’s organ, record player, ate. Also free kittens. —Adv. CHgmrtfe Rummage Sale, ; starting Thursday. 29 E. Cornell - ,y. Free Surprise Package Available Mth Each Shoe Purqhi BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE A tC)/\ -MIRACLE MILE* In a class toy themselves... Taka famous Buster Brown qua lity—add the right touch of fashion and you’ve got the perfect shoes for school. All the styla and grown-up good looks that boys ana girls want. Mothers love them because they know Buster and Tige In the shoe mean they’re getting the very best. Let us send them back to school with the expert fit that's so Important-— to growing feet. Hfw... gg lO ■ ■ Priced according to eixa and style BUSTER BROWN. 5TRA1GHT-A PILOT 9:30 to 9:00; Mon. hmhrhh| *A*M60 T»TI« JUST IN 4 GALLON CASE LOTS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 B—11 Empty-Belly' Nations in Throes of Agricultural Revolution WASHINGTON U) - A food production “explosion" in India and other “empty-belly" nations offers real hope that they can— by their own efforts nither than handouts — prevent mass starvation in coming years Struggling under the double curse of runaway population and inability to meet their own food needs they have long ex* isted with the threat of famine on a scale the world has never But in a remarkably short time the experts have switched to the opinion it needn’t happen. ★ * 4 “Assuming reasonable monsoons” William S. Gaud administrator of the U. S Agency for international! Development said in an ih-j terview “India clearly will be self-sufficient in food grains in three or four years — no question about it” Gaud would never have made Such a prediction in 1965 or 1866 probably not in 1967. But a development that is continuing today began to unfold in those years. The emerging nations are in the throes of agricultural revolution fueled >y superproductive new hybrid grain varieties developed by U.S. foundations at research centers in the Philippines and Mexico* *' ★ ‘ * They have had such astonishing impact in such a short time that the consensus among food production experts in and out of government is that the techology now can assure any nation self-sufficiency. ; ... ' . f< r 4 The other essential willingness of the needy nations to take vigorous advantage of this gift of life is beyond the powers of the scientists. But in the nations where the food-vs.-moutha problem is most critical, the response has been excellent. “Anyone who thinks the problem has now been solved is out of his mind” said Dr. J. George Harrar president of the Rockefeller Foundation “but we do now have evidence that it can be done.”1 As promising as it is the Sudden spring forward in agriculture leaves untouched the companion problem of putting a damper on the rising population curve. But it will buy time they say and time is what toddy’s feeble family-planning programs need. ■4t • ★ ★ In the meantime the rush is on fo switch to the new high-yielding ?wheat and rice hybrids. “The new varieties are to the agricultural revolution in Asia what the steam engine was to the Indistrual Revolution in Europe” says Lester R. Brown, administrator of the Department of Agriculture’s International Agricultural Development Service. In 1964-65 Brown said only a few hundred acres in Asia were planted with the IR8 “miracle rice” developed jointly by the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations in the Philippines and the equally potent “mirade wheat” they perfected in Mexico. 1 .' ' i * ★ * In 1965-66 he said planting mushroomed to 23,000 acres. The next year it was four million acres; in 1967-68 20 million. The prediction for 1968-69 is 40 million acres. ■ ★ ★ ★ This spread occurred almost unnoted by the West, taking place mostly during '1965 and 1966, disastrous growing years when the monsoons failed badly.' But there were stunning increases this year when the rains returned. 100 MILLION TONS The Indian government esti-mates this year’s crop of all food grains at 100 million tons, up nearly a third from last year and 12 per cent better than any previous year. The wheat yield is 30 per cent above the old record. ★ ★ Pakistan also topped its previous best year in wheat by 30 per cent and is scrambling to exploit the new seeds even further. Its importation of 42,000 tons of wheat seed last year was tile largest single seed purchase in history and will permit next year’s wheat crop to be almost 100 per cent the new high-yield strain. The Philippines, unable to fill its own rice bowls.since 1903, became self-sufficient this year and had the heady experience of exporting a little. Ceylon is actively converting to the new agriculture, and so are Iran, Turkey and other nations that refuse to shrug off the results they can see in the countries that switched early, PEASANT FARMER From a few hundred acres to 20 million hi three years means the seeds and the special fertilization and Irrigation techniques that must accompany them are not being used just on tidily run experimental farms. They have been taken over by that most tradition-hobbled Of all men, the peasant farmer, and put to work on his skimpy paddies and fields. Harrar isn’t surprised.* “Agriculture in much of the world,” he arid, “Isn’t so much a way of life but a life sentence for those who can’t escape it.” Given the proper incentive — especially a whiff of protit—the farmer will accept new methods, even fight to try them, he said. CAN SEE RESULTS “The first year that you introduce a new improved variety of seed on a sufficient scale so all the farmers can see the results,]’ Harrar said, “you automatically create a black market the next year because of the explosive demand.” Human nature being what it is, he said, the scarcity and price gouging help to convince the undecided fanner that he must be missing out on something. Monroe County Gets HUD Funds MONROE (AP)—The Department of Housing and Urban Development approved Tuesday a $1.5-million grant for Monroe County to provide water service for the village of Luna Pier and Erie, Bedford and Whiteford townships. The federal money will go toward phase one' of a $3.4-brin million project desig bring water service to southern Monroe County, on which the foundations I had been carried out over the years by the government. But they agree it was the foundations that focused on tailor-making new wheat and rice strains for Asia. The Department of Agriculture, Brown said, has been “almost entirely domestically or-ln its research programs, lacking sjpedfic authority to get deeply into international problems. the department has not been authorized to do this,” he said, “it’s been a natural thing for the foundations to pick up and to work with their own resources. It’s been a very strategic input on their part.” AID’S Gaud feels the miracle seeds may one day be recognized as the most significant monuments to the Rockefeller and Ford foundations. The two have shared expenses on the projects, but Ford’s contributions have been almost entirely financial while Rockefeller has put in both money and people, the cadre of top-level researchers. “The foundations deserve 100 per cent of the credit for these developments, the Rockefeller foundation in particular,” Gaud said. Other U.S. officials point out that much of the basic research That’s what they cama up with. ■ * ★ * The new varieties are from dwarf stock. They demand , heavy fertilization but also respond to it handsomely by converting the nutrients to grain, not straw. ‘MOST AMAZING’ “It’s the most amazing thing, said Peace Corps official Jack Frankel, “to see the |IR8 rice plants standing about half the height of the traditional Philippine varieties with about three time the grain.” * ■*?■.# Frankel, agricultural program and training specialist for the Peace Corps, feels the miracle in the fields is matched by one in government chambers. At the International Rice Research Institute of Los Banos in the Philippines and the Interna-1 tional Maize and Wheat Im- tl provement Center in, Mexico, jng agriculture a top priority After years of drift in its agricultural policies, he said, the government of India is giv- one of the researchers’ main problems was.the tall, weak stems of Asia’s existing wheat and rice varieties. GANGLY STEMS Heavy fertilization caused the sngly stems to grow even taller, allowing the precious heads of grain to droop to the ground to rot or to be eaten by pests. The target, then, for the researchers: a plant with a short, sturdy stalk, one that would grow well under a wide variety of conditions, be disease-resistant and use fertilizer to fatten the heads. and spending heavily to assist farmers. (Advartliwnwtt) TEETHING PAIN? --------1 toy many pediatricians. Easy to lisa. Brings prolonged relief. Carries Good housekeeping warranty seal. Ask pharmacist for baby . ’ ora-jel MARY CARTER OOO PAINTS ViCtOr ^ ouM.trrmo SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED ROL-HIDE S5^atLATEXWAH PAINT • ONE COAT COVERAGE • NO-DRIP, ENDS MESSY PAINTING 4 • DRIES IN 30 MINUTES > OUTSTANDING HIDING POWER « NO PAINTY ODOR • WASHABLE AFTER ONE WEEK • SOAP AND WATER CLEAN-UP tQtf. *6 50 PER GALLON 16 FOOT ALUMINUM EXTENSION LADDER QUALITY FLAT STEP EXTENSION! LADDER 5 FOOT ALUMINUM STEP LADDER "LAST-A-LIFETIME' NOW ONLY.. 9X12 FOOT LINOLEUM RUGS SP&CIAI AMERICA'S BEST PAINT VALUE! MORE THAN 1300 STORES FROM COAST TO COAST! , yictots earn. • oowpMt of Mary Carter P IN North Saginaw St. Next to Scare, Pontiac-Tele phona 338-6544 906 West Huron St. at Telegraph Rd., Pontiac-Telephone 338-3738 AV0N-TRQY CARPET* 1650 Aiibum Road Utioe, Michigan Telephone I62-2444 DAYS ONLY CLEANING DRY Coupon Expires Thurs., August 29, 1968 BACK-T0-SCH00L SPECIAL 0 OFF ON ALL DRY CLEANING With This Coupon Only! Bring Coupon with Cfoih^ng, .Sofly 1?a£n£ Omm M-59 at Crescent Lake Road WATERFORD PLAZA - 673-8833 S. Telegraph Road TEL-HURON S. C. - 335-7934 71 South Squirrel Road _ Auburn Heights — 652-3737 Ay. STORES OPEN 7; One Hour Martinizing; South Telegraph Road MIRACLE MILE S. C.-332-1822 763 Baldwin Avenue BALDWIN PLAZA - 335-2200 3387 Bfcabith Lake Road ’ ELIZABETH LAKE S. C. 682-8910 s30 AJ& - 7:00 P.M. CARRYING THE CROP — In countries where famine follows a lade of rain, new grain development has brought about a miracle to hungry thousands. In India (top pic- ture), women carry harvested corn throiigh the fields; men harvest the “miracle” rice in Pakistan (middle photo); and children in the Philippines help harvest the crop. ROL-EZE COAT LATEX HOUSE PAINT • UP TO 8 YEARS DURABILITY • SELF PRIMING ON ALL SURFACES EXCEPT BARE WOOD • DRIES IN 30 MINUTES • FOR USE ON WOOD, BRICK, MASONRY, SHINGLE8 AND SHAKES • SOAP AND WATER CLEAN-UP • FORTIFIED WITH ALCOA'S HYDRAL F30PER GALLON B—ia THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1988 U,P. Catholic Schools Cite Need for Help ESCANABA (UPI) - The ) future of the Upper Peninsula’s largest school system is in jeopardy, a joint legislative committee on aid to nonpublic schools learned Tuesday. the Rev. Lawrence Gauthier, superintendent of schools for tile Roman Catholic diocese of Marquette, said “Few, if any, CathdUc schools in the Upper Peninsula will be able to con-tinucto operate for many more years without some financial Wp.M ★ * Father Gauthier told the committee that enrollments in the U.P. Catholic schools have declined 11.4 per cent during the past five years while costs have gone up sharply — mainly because a shortage of religious teachers has forced the schools to increase their lay staff by 84 percent. Despite the decliningj enrollments, the student, population in Catholic schools in the U P. (about 9,000 this fall) is largo* than any single public! school district, he said, andj many Catholic parishes are spending SO to 75 per cent ofi their entire income to operate their schools. AID IS NEEDED “The handwriting is on the “ WilL”~ Father Uautheir said, “the majority of our schools are operating under considerable financial stress, and nnlftM they receive financial aid from other sources, many, if not all, will be forced to close their doors.” A veteran public school board member also urged that the Legislature provide, state financial aid for Michigan’s nearly 1,000 nonpubtic schools. “If the Legislature does not act soon to help these nonpublic schools financially, we are going to see the day in the not-toodistant future when Michigan Will have only one school system,’’ Dr. Robert gejdl of Menominee told the .committee. “And that,’* he said, “will indeed be a tragic day.’’ SITS ON 4 BOARDS Seidl has been a member of the Menominee Area Public School Board for 19 years and the Meno»i*«e County Intermediate School Board for 15 years, as well as the Menominee Catholic Central Elementary board and the board of the Marquette Diocese, which takes in the entire U.P. “As a member of these foui boards of education, I . think 1 have a pretty good idea of whal public ahd nonpublic education is all about and some of tiie problems these two school systems are having,” Dr. Seidl said. —~it—W ' "W-------e?1] “And believe me, both school systems are haying financial problems.” 1 % He urged the c o m m 111 e e develop a program of “meaningful financial assistance for nonpublic schools” and that the Legislature enact it “at the earliest possible moment,” flewAirRotrte Ruling Battled WASHINGTON m - The Bureau of Operating Rights in the Civil Aeronautics Board filed a number of exceptions Monday to the Aug. 14 ruling by Examiner James S. Keith that nine airlines should be granted new routes between the Gulf States and the Midwest. it *■ it' ■ it . The bureau told the CAB the examiner erred because: • la the Dallas-Detroit market he selected Delta Air lines rather than B r a n 1 f f Airways; he proposed Louisville, Cincinnati and Cleveland — but not St. Lou as intermediate points for American Airlines; and he failed to name Chicago and Kansas City as intermediate points for Braniff. • In the San Antonlo-Detroit market — he failed to find a need for a second airline, and to select American. He named Houston, Memphis, Nashville and . Cleveland as intermediates gn this route, rather than Indianapolis and St. Louis for American and Dallas, Kansas City and Chicago for Braniff. Holiday at Dump The land-fill on Kennett Road wffl be desed Labor Day,*ac-to the Pontiac Depart-meat of Public Works. PEOPLE'S Sale Begins Today Open Nightly Till 9 I rm 4-pc. 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All 5 pieces. sqaa jio money down Wvv7 $20 a month OTHER STORES IN DETROIT • PONTIAC e ANN ARBOR • FLINT • JACKSON e PORT HURON » TOLEDO • PONTIAC Telegraph ft Square Lake Roads PARKING. Miracle Mils Shopping Center THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 B—18 East, West, Russian or Czech—It Was a Bad Week By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent - For those who thought the Cold War might fade away, last week was a bad week. The words ‘peaceful coexistence" took on a hollow ring. East-West understanding became an even more distant goal. For the United Nations and the West it was a week of frustration and futility; for the Soviet Union, a week of immense propaganda setback. * ★ ★ For Czechoslovakia, it was nightmare and agony. Some freedom-seeking Czechoslovaks had gloomily anticipated events, the world being what it is today: carved into spheres of influence among inimical ideologies. Two weeks ago one of thi most outspoken of Czechoslovakia’s newspapers, Literaml Ldsty of the Writers’ Unionr asked rhetorically what might happen if the Russians invaded to smother a liberaliba-tion movement deemed a danger to Communist authority. It came up with the answer: “nothing.’* ‘WOULD SUIT WEST’ “In fact," it said, ‘‘nothing would suit Western interests more than the occupation of the territory which they have crossed off the sphere of their interest. They would be merely glad of the tremendous propaganda gain achieved without any losses.” To a Czechoslovak, it would seem that was what happened. Czechoslovakia is in Russia’s orbit. It is considered of great strategic importance by Soviet militaiy leaden. It was outside the U.S. sphere and the Americans, beyond protests, did nothing, ir they ImkL Tione nothing iri 1956, when a revolution in Hungary was crushed by Soviet gun& ★ , ★ ★ ,As the week begain, Pravda, the Kremlin’s voice, was thundering threats. “In the field of ideology there can be no peaceful coexistence as there cannot be class peace between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie,” it said. “Communists remember well Lenin’s words: Our task is to crush all the c a p i t a l i s t s ’ resistance, not only .military and political resistance, but ideological as well, the deepest and most powerful." The die already had been cast when that appeared. In the dead of midnight Tuesday, combined forces of Russia, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria and Bast Germany struck. Before the 14.5 million Czechoslovaks knew what was happening, they were at the, mercy of the invaders. ••• ★ ★ * For those who reached for freedom, it marked the collapse of efforts of more than a year, of a dream constructed in many months of struggle. For the second time in three decades, the nation was prostrate under an invader’s boot. It invoked bitter memories of Munich 1938 and the Nazi invasion, 1939. For a small country that once prided itself as an oasis of prosperity, the last 20 years have been bitter. The postwar government was seized in 1948 in a Communist coupe while Soviet troops poised on the borders. From that time Czechsolvaks knew the weight of the Russian hand, through Soviet-directed purges a n d years of a top-heavy Communist bureaucracy which brought stagnation to the economy. UNREST ON RISE Restiveness began to assert itself openly a year ago, stemming from protests by students and writers. Gradually they were joined by others in demands that police powers be curbed. Pressure from below mounted swiftly and b y December it was bearing fruit. Antonin Novotny, pro-Moscow party boss and president of the! country, was in trouble. Leonid I I, Brezhnea, the Soviet party chief, flew to Prague to help him, but he failed. In January, the Communist party Central Committee fired Novotny as its first secretary. Alexander Dubcek, 46, and reform-mined, stepped in, the first Slovak to hold that position. The ruling party Presidium was shaken up. By HERE THEY ARE!... MATCHLESS VALUES Iron NOTHING DOWN - UP TO 7 YEARS TO PAY! We Design • We Monuhnture • We Install • We Guorontw WINDOWS and DOORS always dreamed about Always shiny :ii«ypit 'VwdilriirtBr--rode. Jwt wash off... that’s afl. April, Novotny lost the presidency, too, and Gen. Lud-vik Svoboda succeeded him. A, ff ★ The party adopted ah “action program” intended to cure the nation’s economic Bis. At the same time, the party vowed fealty to the Warsaw military alliance and to Marxism-Leninism. But the Russians were angry. (hi Lenin's birthday in April, i high Soviet leader pictured immature elements” in Czechoslovakia as hoodwinked by what the West called '‘bridgebuilding,’’ and therefore open to subversion. FEVER OF REFORM But 'the Czechoslovaks were caught up in a fever of reform. One of the chief manifestations was abolition of censorship. With no holds barred, elements of the press raked over the ashes of what was called “20 years of crime” under communism, a story of Soviet inter f e r ence, . Soviet-directed purges and Communist mismanagement. Moscow sent in Marshal Ivan Yakubovsky, commander ,of Warsaw Pact forces, ostensibly to talk about mutual defense problems. Actually, it was military pressure. Warsaw Pact staff maneuvers were a feint in that direction. The Russians had summoned Dubcek to Moscow. He held his ground. They had called him to Dresden, Easty Germany, to meet with other leaders of the orbit, all of them — including the Russians -v- obviously worried that an infection of freedom fever would spread to their domains. Moscow seemed more angry at the lifting of censorship than over any other single aspect of the reform. In June, that anger boiled when a group of Czechoslovak intellectuals produced a manifesto called “2,000 Words.” It was a denunciation years of communism. Over and over thereafter the Soviet press alluded to the document as proof that counterrevolution had taken hold in Prague. MEETING DEMANDED The Russians demanded that Dubcek and the Prague leaders meet with the rest of the bloc. Dubcek replied he would meet only with individual parties, and then only On Czechoslovak soil. Moscow summoned the bloc leaders to Warsaw, where they produced an ultimatum t o Prague to end the reform movement and reestablish total party control over publications and broadcasters. This, too, failed. Moscow stepped up the pressure, ominously reminding Prague how much it- depended economically on Russia for raw materials and for markets for manufactured goods. At the "me it warned that Czechoslovakia was about to fall victim to the “intrigues of the imperialists.” ★ ★ * At the end of July, Moscow seemed to back away. It agreed to meet with Prague leaders unilaterally on Czechoslovak soil. Special trains took nine of 11 Soviet Politburo members to Clerna, a brubby Slovak town on the Soviet border. Again Dubcek remained firm and reassured his people that the reform movement would continue. The Russians insisted on-yet another meeting, this time with bloc leaders, but to hold it on Slovak soil. This Bratislava meeting in the first week of August seemed to procued little other than confirmation of what had been done at Cierna. But soon the Russians would say that the decisions were being violated in Prague. PRESSURE RESUMES It had seemed the Russians were defeated. They appeared to have moved their troops away from maneuaers, though slowly, weeks after they had been scheduled to go. For a time — a brief time Czechoslovaks' breathed more easily. Then the pressure mounted again. Moscow was telling the Communist world it was sure Czechoslovakia was on the point of being wrenched out of the Communist family and the alliance. ★ ★ “The contemporary situation emains complex and dangerous,” said Red Star, the Soviet Army newspaper. “The imperialists are directing the spearhead of their aggressive prepartions primarily against the U.S.S.R. and the Socialist community as a whole.” Red Star said the American CIA, the Pentagon and NATO hatching plans “to carry out an aggression against the Socialist community,” paving the way by plotting to snatch Czechoslovakia out of the camp. The rsst of the Soviet press echoed this line, and the heat was on again. AWOKE TO INVASION others. Yugoslavia and Romania, which gave Prague strong moral support, denounced the invasion. Romania, alarmed, placed its forces on alert' to protect its independent stance^ Red China cried, ’shame,” though considering Russians and Czechoslovaks both outrageous “revisionists.” The United States and the West protested, but there was nobody to help the Czechoslovaks with anything but words. In the United Nations, Russia blandly insisted it had been invited to invade. The Russians, with their 105th veto, killed an eight-nation - resolution asking the Security Council to condemn the occupation and calling on the forces to get out. In streets of Czechoslovak cities, crowds jeered and taunted the Russians, whatever resistance there was could be only feeble and futile, an4 could tempt the invaders to mete out punishment. But for the nation built from a dream of President Woodrow Wilson and founded by the patriot Thomas Masaryk, there was little left to command faith. YOU MAY HAVK PIN-WORMS AND NOT KNOW IT 3 persons examined. Entire (amiUse may be victims and not know it. To set rid of Pin-Worms, they must be id lied in the large intestine where they liveend multiply. That’s exactly what Jayne’s p-W tablets do... and here’s how they do it: First—a scientific coating carries the tablets into the bowels before they dissolve. Then — Jayne’s modem, medically-approved ingredient goes right to work—kills Pin-Worms quickly, easily. Aik sour pharmmehl. Don’t take chancee with dangerous, highly contagious Pin-Worms which infect entire families. Get genuine Jayne's P-W Vermifuge . . . smsU, essy-to-tske tablets. ■. special sizes for children and adults. Many Czechslovaks went to! The Czechoslovak reform bed Tuesday night hopeful fori leaders were spirited away inj the future. They awoke to find I Soviet custody, their nation occupied by) * * * elements of five armies. President Svoboda went to The world was shocked ,| Moscow, along with several pro-Communists, stunned, faced Soviet members of the even more splintering of their Czechoslovak party, to movement. The influential “negotiate.” He asked h French and Italian parties countrymen to have faith in criticized Moscow, as did many;him. Poor kid. He’s old enough old enough for Osmuh’s. W for school but he’s not Someday he’ll be a size 14. Then he’ll be able'to come to Osmun’s before he gqes back to school. He’ll find out what so many students have learned over-the years: School clothes can be neat as well as comfortably, well made without costing a t. fortune. ■ * j ' And the mysteries of “What to wear, when?” and “How many do 1; need?” will be solved for him. The people of Osmun’s have been solving those •' problems since the size 14’s of 1931. (Of course, we’ve had some pretty good help from the people at Farah, Levis, McGregor, Van Heusen, Botany, Adler, etc.) - t-------- ----- ■ - - ■ '_ Meanwhile, about the only thing we have that a kindergartener can use is a clean handkerchief. j FREE PACKING AT ALL STORES ■ USE YOUR OSMUN’S CHARGE, SECURITY CHARGE or MICHIGAN BANKARD Tech Plaza Center in Warren (12 Mile & Van Dyke) * Downtown Pontiac • Tel Huron Center in Pontiac . \ fjfr s ... Open Day Night 'Til 9. j Open Fri.‘Til 9 Open Every Night'Til 9 B—H THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Strategy Is Different for British Bias Fight Functional and Good Looking,Will Not Chip or Peel! Trim Black Wrought Iron Furniture Road Execs Meet TRAVERSE CITY (AP)-The I Northern Michigan Association of Road Commissions Tuesday opened a three-day annual meeting with approximately 200 LONDON (AP) — Basic tolinson, Birmingham's liaison of-!persons expected to attend. English law and government is fleer for colored immigrants: jprof John Frederick of the theideaof “keeping the Queen’s] "This new race bill, is like the of Iowa J peace,” whether it involves the jincome tax law. Evasihn may, '----------------rr~—t———ji capture of highwaymen or. aslbe illegal, but people are going!*®™* Alcona County joaff nowadays, the problem of racial to enjoy finding a hundred ways I commissioner, is scheduled discrimination. ] of getting around it.” I speaker at today’s .banquet. It means Britain’s need for order can come ahead even of the individual's rights. From this concept is emerging a subtle but basic difference between methods and principles of the U.S. and British governments in trying to end discrimination. In .America, ending discrimination is seen as a matter of equal rights, in Britain as a] matter of stabilizing and strengthening society. After the most inflamed par-— liamentary debate on—racial) problems ever seed in Britain, an expanded law has been passed banning discrimination in almost every area of business] and public life. Significantly,) the British chose to call it a] race relations law and not an equal or civil rights measure. jjH SOCIAL PRINCIPLES ] § The essence of the argument £ on the bill was whether it would M disrupt society. Enoch Powell,) g the chief Conservative foe of the) g law, likened it to “throwing ai | match onto gunpowder.” Quni-j g ton Hogg, the Conservative par- -g ty advocate of the law, accused g Powell himself of throwing the) g match and argued that the bill was needed for social rather] g than purely individual princi-l g pies. "This,M ) he said, “is not aj £ problem which will ever go) g away.” ' | The law comes into force late | this fall; and the government’s! | Race Relations Board is ex- § panding to administer the new; provisions covering housing,) employment, finance and public) services such as education andj welfare. Leaders of Britain’s million Asians, Africans and West In-j dians are waiting with somej skepticism to see how the new law works. • \ ,U.S. BOARDS STUDIED John Little, the board’s chief conciliation officer and a lawyer by training, has traveled to the United States several times to study federal and state antidiscrimination boards in action. There he was struck by the fact that every complaint was processed fully, despite delays during which the aggrieved Negro! f might have lost the chance of | the job or house he wanted. | Under the new British act, the| | government estimates the board j still get about 1,000 complaints a year. It is clear to board officials that they cannot handle all the complaints at once, and they apparently do hot want to. * * * . “The strategy will be to pic out "black and white cases discrimination,”, as Lyttle puts) it, and try to achieve a solution or bring a case to court within! , six weeks. The aim is to set precedents and give them maxi-| mum publicity through Britain's centralized national press andj television. ^ .Social pressure, the board] hopes,"should db the rest. PENALTIES NOT STIFF Penalties are not stiff. Maximum fine is 500 pounds—$1,200] —and the courts have no power to issue injunctions to end discrimination.. Thus, the board is looking for quick, exemplary cases. He recognizes that this system might not work in the United States. Discrimination patterns have hardened in America more than here, ang the American citizen’s right to petition his government for redress of) grievances is more deeply rooted in the American Constitution. ANOTHER TACTIC | Another point of British strategy is based on working* with the nation’s established in stitu-tions and traditions, instead of with an infusion of reforming ideological zeal. Mark Bonham Carter had little to do with race relations before he became chairman of the board two years ago. But he is the grandson of Britain’s World War I prime minister, a former escort of Princess Margaret and a,pillar of the British Establishment. As sucb, he lends the Establishment’s weight to the ad-ministration of the law. ffiTT ,, » ★ *T believe that this is still a law-abiding country,” Bonham , Carter has said, "and the mere: presence of the law will allow) those who don’t want to discrim-inate-but do so because of business or social pressures—to do what they want to do” Others in the field are not so) Pure. Said the Rev- Peter Hutch- OU- Reports op the Faintly Almost half of the parents of students at Oakland University have a gross income of less than $11,833, OU officials report. .' This information can easily be determined by the university for the first time, because of its graduated undergraduate resident tuition scale based on parental income. Statistics from the first year of its operation during 1967-68 show: ★ ★ ★ • Almost half of the Michigan undergraduate students — 1,480 — paid the minimum tuition of $189 per semester, their parents’ income is below $u,833. r About one-third paid maxi- mum fees of $262 per term. Their parents’ income is above $16,700. ★ A * , • The remaining one - fifth paid sums between $189 and $262 per semester. Their parents made between $11,833 and -$16,700 per year. '— ‘ . This coming school year f§e hikes ranged from $3 to $33 par semester. College officials estimate'the ~ralses will bring in an additional $250,000 over last year’i* tuition revenue. 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Clip and Sc rue Coupon Specials/ While huunt/t/es Last! S. S. KRESGE COMPANY THE PONTIAC PRE$S, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 B—15 Saginaw Valley Indian Relics Hint at Big Culture Changes BRIDGEPORT — Little itj Hopewell and Baehr pottery of taoira ahwt t^ Indians who the nilnois drainage, ‘"me Uved J'L0* Sagta#wv are "nailer with thinner *?utU “ walls, more constriction of the thought that both the land-use***, mi a tende„cy t0Ward systems and tte material thickened rims,” Dr. Fitting elements of their culture werelgaid. undergoing a drastic change. upper ports of the vessel, mis was the more common of the two wares Dr. Fitting reported. FISHED, GATHERED The Indians who occupied the single-edged cutting tools out-Spoons, awls, shuttles, tine in diameter and a yard apart,”I ■ hunting, according to Dr. Fit-2 ting. More than 90,000 pieces of B chipped stone*, including over 500 classifiable tools and cores, were found on the sites, and most common artifact was the turtle shell spoon engraved in a fashion reminiscent of those from western Michigan. Projectile points, toggle head har- “One of the major oc-i One set of mounds in the area cupational features at the site had been disturbed several was a stockade about 180 feet I times in recent years, but exin diameter marked by postjcavations were attempted, molds approximately six inches Damaged remains of several "Our knowledge o( Saginaw Valley prehistory is greater than that for any other part of the state,” Dr. Fitting said, yet our work is just beginning. “me bodies tend to be plain, with decorations limited to the valley, 2,000 years ago were numbered the arrowheads. I flakers, ground teeth, polished Dr. Fitting said. The stockade Dr. James E. Fitting, assistant professor of anthropology at The. University of Michigan, discussed the Indian occupants of the valley Sunday St the 12th annual workshop conference of the / Michigan Archaeological Society (MAS). The conference met at Bridgeport High School. Dr. Pitting is familiar with the archaeology of the Saginaw Valley, having directed excavations there during the past eight years. ,★ * ★ “The Saginaw Valley/’ he told the MAS, "was an old lake bed which formed within the past few thousand years, and the drainage system has not developed to maturity. The valley region contains alternating tracts of clay, sand and gravel, and it follows that there was a great deal of variation in the presettlement vegetation patterns. PERIOD OF FLOODING "Starting about the time off} Christ there was an increased period of flooding which culminated in a high-water stage apparently associated with a Widespread high-water stage in the Great Lakes.” The sites which were excavated are located along the Tittabawassee and Shiawassee valley. 2,000 years ago were not revealed. ★ * ' * Dr. Fitting slid the ceramic pieces collected were similar to the earthenware used by Indians of the Illinois River . Valley. The most common vessels _____ ____________ ____ were large jars with a little JremenclouS Values! Stock-Up ! neck constriction, beveled rims which were often notched, thick walls, and rounded bases shaped like a cut-off cone. The vessel bodies were usually smoothed or smoothed over cord marking. Another type of earthenware discovered was similar t o probably more interested ini Many shell and bone artifacts bona, and shell beads were also\contained a series of pits withprom one mound, fishing and gathering than In | were found.Dr, Fittingsaid the | found. j charcoal, but little other debris.! many artifacts. were r e c o v e r e d We are now at a point where we along with I can begin to move beyond the daily lives of the people.*’ ) Animal Ills Big Problem for the World By Science Service BOSTON — Last year’s outbreak of fbot-and-mouth disease in Great Britain, undoubtedly a factor in the devaluation of sterling, dramatically illustrated the havoc that animal disease can wreak in a developed country. ★ * * In the undeveloped world,) without sophisticated means of detecting danger signals and reacting immediately, animal disease is an endemic problem rather than an occasional scare; despite advancing technology,' it appears that it will remain - so for many years. A partial conquest of animal disease could make a large, immediate contribution to alleviating world hunger. Largely as’ a result of disease, half the animal populations of the world are economically in the red: The animals absorb more in food and services than they- return in production of milk, meat and other products. * ★ * Unfortunately, technological solutions to the problem which could release billions of dollars worth of food to the hungry world are at the mercy of economic and political factors. Gains offset In the developed world 1m-p r o v e d immunization and screasing methods are gradually removing the threat of animal diseases such as brucellosis, animal tuberculosis and hog cholera. -Unfortunately, these g»in» are being' offset by the. increase of such diseases in developing countries. The subject of animal disease has oopie under scrutiny in a panel on world food problems at the 105th annual meeting of the American Veterinary Medical Association. . - ' * * . * Dr. James H Steele, chief veterinary officer of the Public j Health Service, estimates that) animal disease may cost the | world as much as $25 billion annually. Foot-and-mouth sease alone probably soaks up |3 billion to $4 billion a year, Dr. Steele says, and animal tuberculosis rivals this figure. Sophisticated Sweat Shirts with Creslan* 37 Rag. 1.84 S-M-L-XL B ^,2*3 Boys' 10-16 For fun-loVing folks of all ages. 50% Grecian* acry-lic/50% cotton, sleek and carefree. Boys'! frosty teal, Olympic blue and heather tones of forest; canyon, navy, orange. Men’s: navy, charcoal, forest; canyon heathers. OAmtrictm CftmmmU Ce. 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Up to 252 sq. ft. of carpeting, heavy padding installation. Even the metal strips are included. FREE PARKINS AT ANY CITY LOT . you can't •loole-at samples. No THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1908 Molotov Momom^Bone^PMf&^thn Doubtful QUESTION: Why didn’t American Indians have mustaches and beards? -----★ ★......★.... ANSWER: American Indians, belonging to the Mongoloid racial group, have less hair on their faces than the heavily-bearded white men. It’s not true, however, that they have no hair at all on their upper lips and chins. The fashion of most Indian tribes was for bare faces, which showed their sharp, rugged features and gave them a more warlike look, It also made it easier to apply war paint, something very important to an Indian. Most Indians carefuly plucked ont the coarse hair on their feces, one hair at a time, often using sharp shells as MOSCOW (UPI)-What are probably the world’s most interesting and fascinating historical memoirs have been completed, according to authoritative sources. The writings cover practically everything of significance In the Russian revolutionary movement for six decades and every important secret and public East-West development. ★ ★ But the exhausttveffiemolrs, worth a fortune both in terms ~~ of capital and scholarship, will probably never be published. Or at least not in the foreseeable future. .For they were penned byVyacheslav M. Molotov, the 78-year-old former Soviet premier and foreign minister, Communist party secretary and politburo member but now an “unperson.” SURVIVING BOLSHEVIK Molotov is one of the few surviving old Bolsheviks who, as members of the revolutionary committee in Petrograd, played a major role in the Communist seizure of power in .1917. His memoirs, spanning more than half a century, cover 46 Americans Die in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - Forty-six servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been named in the latest Defense Department casualty list. They included the following 15 from the Midwest: ARMY INDIANA — Pic. David S. Lassltei KANSAS — WO Jamas D. El sen hour MICHIGAN—Staff Sgt. Gal* a. During irand Rapids. WISCONSIN -Cap*. Robert H However not all Indian tribes plucked their faces bare. We show men from two tribes which were among the exceptions to the fashion. A young man from the Yaqui of Mexico has pushed aside his ceremonial mask, showing a handsome mustache. Below, right, Is a chief of the TIingit tribe living .in the Pacific Northwest. His mustache is grayed with age. Elders of this tribe, and young men as well, often wore beards. You can tem po cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize. WISCONSIN - Pic. David Chtsum, Oost- irg. ' Missing as a result of hostile action: PfC. Gilbert Died not as a result of hostile action: MARINR CORPS MICHIGAN - CpI. Stavan K. Brandenburg, Battla Creak. Changed from missing to dead —nonhostile: ARMY WISCONSIN — WO Byron C. Tucker, MICHIGAN -iakar, Mandon. MINNESOTA — Pic. John / ..taler, Lakeville; Pfc. Uevln I Bloomington. OtMQ —Lanea CpI. Michael Cincinnati. SOUTH DAKOTA-CpI. John W. Hutchl mi, Pres ho. Changed from missing to dead -hostile: MICHIGAN - Pfc. Otli L. Hartry, Mraft. MISSOURI—Pfc. I FAMOUS DuPONT 501 NYLON! MONARK CARPETS 2 COMPLETE ROOMS Completely Padded and Installed No Monty Down Up to 6 Years to Pay Sparta Missing not a tile action: a result of hos- tile history of Soviet communism, since 1906 when Skryabin (Molotov’s real name), a ,16-year-old student, joined the Communist party . /. . 1 „dr( *_ • it Molotov enjoyed the confidence of Soviet founding father Vladimir I. Lenin and of his successor,- Josef Stalin, i With Secret Police Chief Lavrenti Beria (executed in, 1953) and former Premier Georgl M. Malenkov (now an , electric plant director in far-off Kazakhstan), Molotov formed a power triumvirate after Stalin’s death. WIFE WAS VICTIM Qne of the three orators at Stalin's funeral, Molotov wept when the premier’s body was burled even though his wife, Paulina Zhemchuzhina was in prison then, a victim of Stalin’s purges. Four years later Molotov was engaged in another power play, with jthe help of a majority of the party presidium (now politburo), designed to oust Nikita S. Khrushchev as party leader. - Khrushchev outwitted the majority and had them all ignominously removed from the central committee as “antiparty” men to Assume supreme power for himself. Although Khrushchev, probably out of respert for Molo-tov’s historic contributions to communism, kept him busy with small assignments, first At ambassador to Mongolia and then as representative to the Vienna International Atomic Commission, eventually he expelled him from the Communist party and cast him into limbo. „ WORLD-FAMOUS ‘UNPERSON’ j By a quirk of fate Khrushchev himself was to suffer practically the same fate seven years later to become the world’s most famous “unperson." But Khrushchev was never expelled from the party ranks and still considers himself a proper Communist. Molotov’s life, like Khrushchev's, is one endless period of sulking. ★ * * He refuses to see anyone but immediate members of his family, his daughter and grandchildren. He does not answer letters or write anything for publication. Apparently still In good health he can often be1 seen tubing bln daily walks with his wife, in the neighborhood of thtfgovemment apartment house near the Kremlin where -jkolhas the same dwelling he used during his days of glory. [ / . Unlike the extrovert Khrushchev, who mjsses the public exposure he once enjoyed so much, Molotov avoids crowds and is never seen at art and industrial exhibitions or making dramatic appearances at local elections where the foreign press is certain to be. AUTO PARTS Ws'rs Now Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (We Also Pick Up Junk Cart), FE 2-0200 Pontiac Scrap 135 Branch Drink a keg of beer. Now you can buy Black Label, beer in a keg one man can handle. A new 12-ounce reward, made for any time you feel you’ve earned one.; We call it the new, improved victory celebration. IHE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESl5XYr^UQUST 28, 1968 ONE COLOR C—1 U.8. CHOICE TENDERAY Chuck Roast Rib Roast f US DAi CHOICE 4TH AND 5TH RIBS U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY fryers PLUMP, JUICY FRYERS, FULLY DRESSED AND READY TO COOK SPLIT BROILERS, ROASTING CHICKENS OR Quartered Fryers CENTER CUT RIB SERVE YOUR FAMILY THE FINEST PORK, LEAN TENDER SILVER PLAT. TER PORK FROM KRONER. HYGRADE’S WEST VIRGINIA Smoked Pork Chops u99* GORDON'S ROLL ^ Pork Sausage.......2 ROLL 79* SLICED COUNTRY CLUB OR Rath Bacon........ • •••t-LB FKoTf9^ PORK STEAK OR COUNTRY STYLE > Spare Ribs...........M4 COUNTRY CUJB POINT CUt Corned! Beef............... W4 HYGRADE’S * : k £ Ball Park Wieners ••••LB 73* FROZEN CHOPPED, ALL BEEF family Steaks 10 pSmZ * 88* r plus i 1 SO EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS; WITH COUPOH FOR DISHES-MILD NO DEPOSIT-NO RETURN fUORTED FLAVORS FaffO Pep T'-mmjM Nobody But Nobody Beats Kroger For Meats * II.S. Choice Tenderay Beef * Complete Fresh Meat Variety * Extra Value Low, Low Prices * Plus Top Value Stamps Why Settle For Less? ' U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY Beef Rib Steak WITH THIS COUPON ON 2-PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS 2—PKGS FRYER PARTS 2-QUARTERED FRYERS OR 5 Valid Thru Sun., Scut. 1, I960 gj | At Kroger Dat. 0 tout. Mich. Vi|l m I WITH ! ANY V a SEA ■ Valid Thru 5 At Kruger l TOP VALUE STAMPS THIS COUPON ON mOLEORHALP M-BONELESS HAM Sun., Sept. X I960 Jut. 0 East. Mich. |£| m - WITH TOP VALUE STAMPS 7-INCH CUT WHOLE OR RIB HALF FRESH PICNIC STYLE Park Lein 59. TOP VALUE STAMPS U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY Pork ChopsA Bonele^^lj^ Roasts 10 7 BRISKET, CHUCK OR BOSTON ROLL ROAST TENDERAY Boneless Hams Half WHOLE mmmoB BONELESS SEMI West Tirana Ham 89! 951 WHOLE ■ TENDERAY80NELESS S ■ BEEF ROAST ■ ■ Valid Thru Sun., Sapt. 1, 1960 _j Kroger Dat. A Boat. Mich. | COUNTRY CLUB Canned Ham ft SERVE N* SAVE SLICED 1-LB PKG SPENCER SKINLESS Wieners 297 BARLEY, HIGH PORTEIH OR MIXED Hi-Ho Crackers............«» 41* Almond Delites 39* Heiaz Baby Cereal...........!|p 1iS* ...tJoiln SS* TENDER TOUCH Bath Oil... 3.5-FL 9f| 9 . OZ STL I flnl» Crackers,............'««41*• Hehiz Baby Food..........14* Ivory Liquid. ,BA*Y CEREALS BLUE RIBBON Heipz 6 Pack..............«» 24* Ammonia................."SS? 29* jWMftMGMMMT Halil Baby Food........»r«« 17* Floor Wax.................nJuL* 75* LIGHT CHUNK Breast 0’ Chicken Tuna 6%-OZ FT CAN mmmm P THE PONTIAC PKESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Crackdown Fails to End Viet Student War Opposition | SAIGON * - A crackdown hy the government has stifled an upsurge of antiwar protests among South Vietnam’s 40,000 university students. Unrest and discontent persist despite a network of police spies, threats of drafting ■Hr and prison Many students privately denounce the government as antidemocratic and dedicated to perpetuating the war. South Vietnam's students are odt given to rioting. Although they have taken part in protests staged by 'Buddhists and other groups, they have rarely initiated protest movements of their own. When students are arrested, their colleagues' protests tend to take mild forms such as hunger strikes statements to the press. ‘REPRISALS FEARED* They say they dare not speak out openly or stage public demonstrations for fear o reprisals from, the army dominated government. ' Officials admit that a special watch is being kept ringleaders, >primarily in the big universities of Saigon and Hue. The students opposing the regime are not necessarily pro-Communist, nor does their attitude' necessarily reflect the population at large. It echoes deep war weariness expressed throughout Vietnam. The rector of Saigon University, 63ryear-old surgery professor Tran Quang De, admits there is widespread dissent among the university’s 25,000 students.-TIRED OF WAR’ Everyone hare is tired of the r»*f he said. “It is not surprising that the students, fearful of being drafted and of disrupting their studies and their careers, should be in the forefront on those opposed to the war. “But they do not understand ie real issues involved. They don’t have access to all the facts in their International context. The government, which knows : the true facts, has an obligation to maintain order and discipline because we are In a state of war." Student spokesmen claim the police broke up several recent attempts to stage peaceful an- tiwar demonstrations in Saigon and arrested the leaders after informers within the student body had given the authorities wanting of their plans and pinpointed those responsible. large turnout of armed police stopped a news conference called by student leaders Aug. 4. Student sources said this was meant to protest against prison terms imposed two student leaders for allegedly “weakening the anti- communist fighting spirit of the people and army." One of the students who planned the abortive news conference said the sentences were ‘'trie acts of s dictatorship which fears nothing more than the voice of its suppressed people"' He admitted that the student body was by no means unanimous In its opposition to the war and to the Saigon regime. We have a minority — i would estimate them at 20 per cent — who want toe war to go until the country is bled to ith,” he i said. “They are mostly Roman Catholics or refugees from North Vietnam. Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky is their hero. Hie overwhelming mass of the students reject thdr attitude. We feel sure that those who act as spies for the police are to be found among this group." • ONLY AT KROGER A ocjei Compel Aeywhere...Compare Asytime! Y..1I rmmm* You This Outstanding Combination Ot sav. m Features- • TopVdlua Stamps - Thk ExUa Saving. feature T at You A No-Cast Way To Gift-Shop. „ . » a. itami You Want And Need • W..WY S.U-M» S|).t>«l» °* ,0" _ .. In Ev.rv D.portm.nl Ivnry Doy • Deop-Cwt Discount Prices In every p Of The Week. I Krognr T.nd.roy .r„d l.nd.r-y S** Guesswork Out Of iuying Effective At Kiager In Detroit And Eaetem Michigan Thru Sunday, September 1, 1946. Nona Said To Dealer*. Copyright 1968. The Kroger Ce. yoty Settu0?** A 7» Seiaol SttpftlUih 6 PIECE School Starter Set ns e Presented In Tha Spirit Of Our Pres-idantial Election Year. e Handsome...0 I tpl ay-Worthy... En- hanced With The Symbols Of Amorl- e Colorfully Designed In Glorious Rod, Whlfn And Blue Banda. e Re-usable Containers-Fine Per Storing Sugar, Suit, Flour And Other Staples As Well At Coffee. ASSORTED COLORS Bit Fees ...— THRIFT APE-WHITE GLUE Lepage’s Combo.29* SEAMLESS MICRO MESH Jubilee Nyloss....29* JUBILEE QUALITY It. Miss Hosiery. eeePAIR 59* LEPAGE'S Twin Paste Ceabe PM 48* 6" X 9" RULED Writieg Tablets.....««. 21* RED OR BLUE Marbing Pee til.... • EACH 17* 8INCH BY 10 INCH Resell Tablet EACH 24* 8 IHCH BY m IHCH Vlhomr Peek MACH m 0?te4& eject Ovou IO‘ Off ON ALL Punish Pastries i KROGER Angel Food Cake 90 > VARIETIES 1S-OZ WT PM KROGER Homo Sty la Cookies MIX or ^Hu-craV H MATCH PMS | VARIETIES KROGER Hamburger or Wiener Buns Sjt PKGS ■ Save Tttwic at 'Kvupnf REGULAR OR HARD TO HOLD WHITE RAIN REGULAR OR HARD-TO-HOLD Adore HgirSp«» ««« *1** Hair Spray............. TAME REGULAR CLEAR OR LOTION Creae Rinse.... • •OZBTL 59* White Raia SHAMPOO OZ BTL 73^ REGULAR OR HARD TO HOLD SETTING GEL REGULAR OR HARD-TO-HOLD Dippity Do........75* Adorn V1 WILKINSON SWORD MENNEN PUSHBUTTON Reser Blades......49* Deedorast.......99* JOHNSON 4 JOHNSON FOR ATHLETES POOT-QUINSANA Baby Oil ......5ft 85* Foot Powder. ...^. 79* CLEANSING CREAM BRECK GENTLE Happy Face......CfSL 85* Baby Shampoo .;«*%. 77* REGULAR OR HARD TO HOLD HAIR SPRAY FEMININE HYGIENE SPRAtf Suave...........STS* 44* FDS Doodorout.. ozcamM** AEROSOL Endust Spray GRANULATED Pioneer Sugar ASSORTED FLAVORS Bi« "K” Canned Pap BAR 3H-0Z WTPM J ERGEN’S Gear Complexiee GEL L4. t i/8-oz am * WtTUBEmW Floshabyes Disposable Diapers MEDIUM NEWBORN 24-CT 24-CT 99* ft* 99* 'eeumTemT Imperial S krooerVrand ! Morporiio A HALF A HALF ■ j -lb OOf h r * ” SPECIAL LABEL THE ALL-PURPOSE CLEANER Mr. Clean U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN Petatoas GOLDEN RIPE Bananms JUMBO 6 SIZE Hanoydaws 20*89 2 29 59. V 9, TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 28, 1968 C—9 Northern JUMBO 50 SIZE OR RIO-OSA Peaches Area ScdutsAid Home Lend a helping hand of scouting’s precepts — was practiced firsthand this summer by a group of Clinton Valley Council Boy Scouts who ■worked at a mission home in Appalachia for a week. The area boys participating in Appalachia, Good Turn II constructed a garage-storage building at the Dora Lee Children’* Home in Wonnie, Ky. ★ * '* The Dora Lee Home was founded in 1952 by two women from Cleveland who went to Kentucky to do mission work with schoolchildren. The home houses 27 children, who are being raised without governmental support or aid from any church agency. During the Clinton Valley Scouts’ first trip to WOnnie, last year, they built a small storage shed at the rear of the main building. a IN GROUP This year’s contingent composed of 13 scouts, nine adults and five other children. The trip was sponsored by the Council’s Catholic Committee on Scouting headed by Charles Brucker. - The scouts each paid $35 for cpehses. They made the trip ith the leaders in their Vehicles, loaded with food and building supplies, largely donated by area merchants. * * * The group came upon a wrecked car which had skidded into a bridge on the way home. They rescued the driver a young mother — and her son from the flaming car and gave first aid to a fatally injured daughter. ■k k k Plans are already being made for next year’s trip. Dims Lorraine E. from Milton _. Ethel from Richard W. Marbrey Marlorie E. (ram Robert N. Aik LtfUan * ~ ~ - H| Mbne E. from Robert N. _______ ■fi S. frrm Xharlfi Creamer, from Harold once i D. from Bobby S. Tloran Donna B. from J. Beniamin Banned .Alberta L. from Dexter I- DuPree Barbara A. from Charle* L. Warner Raymond O- from Ruth A. Wilson Barbara J. from Roger A. Slain leilla from Norbell A. Whitaner Glenda F. from Sidney H. Milch .Carole P. from Bruce N. Parkinson Mery L. from Elton L. Maltrott Jeannette ••• CTN 39* FOR FRYING OR COOKING-JEVIEL Shortening ^ "JaAt "pray* COUNTRY CLUB Twin Peps or Fudgees 12 ""44 KROGER FROZEN Pot Pits. ....... NIST6* GOLD FROZEN Orango Joke.. KROGER FROZEN lemonade..... MORTON FROZEN Cream Pies.... 3 6-FL OZ CANS IS* 2S* 22* POLAR PAK Ice Cream VANILLA, CHOCOLATE. NEAPOLITAN CUT GREEN BEANS OR Green Giant Sweet Peas CHOICE OF GRINDS COFFEE Maxwell House WHITENS AND SANITIZES Reman Bleach sunrise FRESH HOME GROWN Sweet Cora All Prices shown here are EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES! You’ll find these same items at these same low prices weak after’week to help you save more on your food bill whe/i you shop at Kroger regularly. ASSORTED VARIETIES I Betty Crocker MUMS 26 1-LB 1-OZ PKG KRAFT SALAD PRESSING Miratlo Whip...... RICH TOMATO FLAVOR Dol Monte Catsop KROGER REFRESHING Tomato Juico..u-« NESCAFE lastaat Coffee..., 1-LB am •i4-oz cm mm .24* 17T AVONDALE BRAND Parplo Flams.. PENN DUTCHMAN STEMS A PIECES Mushrooms.........39* PACKER’S LABEL Sweet Peas •••• iJTzcah 10* ASSORTED FLAVORS Stohely Drinks i£&r19* ASSORTED COLORS Northern Tissuel 4 28 T-pr raiy SPECIAL LABEL-RED ROSE no-cr j •••PKG { 35* SPECIAL LABEL Prof Spray Starch SPECIAL LABEL-SPIPFY BowlCleaner... SUPER CLEANER Miracle White...Sll*l4* GREAT LAKES CHARCOAL Briqaets.....30 He99* Pop Torts ‘ Joy Liquid |ii is OCR Too Bags... ALL PURPOSE Krogor Flour......5.«39* CARNATION Instant Breakfast 1.^59* KELLOGGS ASSORTED FLAVORS io-oz m mi ,,,wtpkg mm SPECIAL LABEL_ Comet Cleanser..” SPECIAL LABEL Ajax Detergent d SPECIAL LABEL Top Job............. SPECIAL LABEL BATH SIZE Zest Soap........4 i FOR PRE-SOAKING LAUNDRY ,14* Axioa... ..»-«««67* .68* SPECIAL LABEL Dash. :*-««r61* 55* SPECIAL LABEL Formula 409.. 33* 69* SPECIAL LABEL Choor 68* SPECIAL LABEL King Size Fab 88 5-LB 4-OZ PKG JIFFY ASSORTED Frostiag Mixes..10* SEMI-SWEET CHOCOLATE Nestle’s Morsels *7?Sf 39* BABY PORMULA-SIMILAC OR Eafamil..........oTc^ 22* REGULAR, LIVER OR CHICKEN Vat’s Dog Food.......«! 9* FOR FRYING OR COOKING Kraft Oil.........*l“. e—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Hie MORE You Buy at A*, the MORE “Super-Right” Fully Cooked CANNED HAMS 4s3” Plumrose Canned Horn • • e -e e*5' 2^ Boneless Cooked Ham ■"tk11"' »•1M Semi-Boneless Ham rs • • *79‘ Hormel Cure tl Ham......> 1** S we care “SUPER-RIGHT” FROZEN Hamburger Beef Steaks 2*"* I39 “Super-Right” 2 to 3 Pound Sim ML SPAM mniBS P/LQ< ■&? i99i JANE BARKER SLICED ~ Hamburger Rolls .. 39C BOSTON-STYLE BUTT BM40£ Pork Roast . . . "SUPER-RIGHT” SKINLESS ^ _ All-Meat Franks - 65c CUT FROM BOSTON-STYLE BUTTS AT Pork Steak .... ibOV "SUPER-RIGHT" LIVER SAUSAGE j Braunschweiger m 49 i ENDS AND CENTERS MIXED mAAf ’/« Perk Loins *?««!>* » 7y people! Dedicated men and women. EageHeen-agers and experienced adults. Newcomers and old-timers, full-timers and part-timers. Store clerics and managers, truck drivers, — warehousemen and secretaries. Butchers amfbakers and ff“Fish Stick” makers. They do a great job for you. They all work for A&P. They are A&P... and we’re proud of them. This Labor Day, we have a message for all our employees: i “We Care About You, Too.” COPYRIGHT 01967, THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO., INC. / YUKON CLUB CAN BiVERACES 12-OZ. CAN Popular Flavors Diet or Reg. 8 A&P Potato Salad ;• !m 69c Paper Plates w • .40 * 39* SUNSHINE Krispy Crackers... ««•' 33' KEYKO Margarine....... i™: 29* KAVA _ _ Instant Coffee.... 85‘ GREEN GIANT WHOLE _ _ Asparagus Spears.. 57 Sweet Peas.... 2 iSk41 GREEN GIANT NISLETS ^ ^ Mexicorn ...... .. %SF 24* Whole Mushrooms W 29‘ GREEN GIANT WHOLE KERNEL A M Niblets Corn...... ’«» 2l\ INSTANT m IT Yuban Coffee..... “ 1 LADY BETTY ND ■ Cucumber Wafers .. 25* ULTRA BRITE KING SIZE - ^ Toothpaste....... 69' SAV. ATA*. 14.,. ... Bowlene............ <55-41 KLEENEX BOUTIQUE ^ 2.PLY Facial Tissue... 2 '■$££ 59 FOR NORMAL HAIR ^ — Breck Shampoo..., *»”» 87 Wonderfoil Paper Cups Paper Napkins Tomato Ketchup 25-FT. ALUMINUM FOIL • • « « ROLL 23* 85 24* 27* Ann Page Mustard.... H 22* Soft Ply Towels.... .2 ik 35* MARVEL 5 Delicious flavors Ice Cream ft-GAL. CTN. 59 20c OFF LABEL Mr. Clean 39* ISc OFF LABEL ■ — _ _ Zest Soap...... 4 KS 7Y 2c OFF LABEL _ _ Comet Cleaner.... -cSf 14e l-PT. 12-OZ. SIZE Tomato Juice AGP Tuna Fish Spam LUNCHEON MEAT ^ Iced Tea Mix .... 4 1-QT. 14-OZ. CANS LIGHT, CHUNK *Vi-OZ. • • • CAN OUR OWN WITH LEMON AND SUGAR 99* 37* 12-OZ. Aftc > 0 0 0 0 CAN HffO 31 Vi-OZ. O0( FKGS. XT Dole Pineapple Juice 3 B 89- Miracle White SURER CLEANER« % % ^SuV" 99* , HW FRUIT DRINKS ORANGE •r GRAPE 1-QT. 14-OZ. CAN 28 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUSX 28, 1968 a Save oh Yow TOTAL f ood Bill! Whole fryer Legs OR Fryer Breasts SACKS REMOVED BCKRICH SLENDER SLICED Smoksd Turkey, Chipped Pork Loin, Smoked Hem, Chipped Beef or Chipped Corned Beef PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SUN., SEP' IN WAYNE, OAKLAND, MACOMB AND WASHTENAW COUNTIES Bar-B-Q Chicken ARP—OUR FINEST QUALITY Instant Coffee,. IMPERIAL Margarine..... CREAM STYLE French’s Mustard l-QT. lO'/i-OZ. JAR 4-OUNCE GLASSES 10-OZ. JAR MI4MITTIS SPAGHnri 1AC 7-02. IS'/i-OZ. , CAN Cut Asparagus KLISMSS Z6-0Z. CTN.. Tasty Dressing SOCIETY Windmill Cookies 24^SIZE HEAD SULTANA SALAD Dressing Pane Packet Baked Good* JANE PARKER WHITE, SLICED m 4*4*. Sandwich Bread 4 %' 99‘ JANE PARKER GOLDEN OR MAR Pound Cake.., JANE PARKER NEW, DELICIOUS Soft Cookies CHEESE FLAVORED Buy 2 Pies at Special Price of 49c each ... Get 1 Pie FREE! MICHIGAN Blueberries 3 CALIFORNIA Fresh Plums.. GREEN Peppers... 3 CALIF. M-SIZE m Nectarines 6 RED ( jiL Radishes. ^2 15-OZ. HALF j aiue • Fudge Sundae Cake sultana m an, kitchen charm m 68 Waxed Paper.. 2 WITH LEMON 63 Johnson’s Pledge . — WITH LEMON 67 Johnson’s Favor • 68c Lavoris.. _ 4^ CARNATION CHOCOLATE m 62 Instant Breakfast 6 _ U— CARNATION CHOC. MALT m 67 InstantBreakfast 61 j a( CARNATIOIR VARIETY PACK » 48 Instant Breakfast O' Make A&P Your Headquarters for Pencils, Tablets, Comp. Books, Fillers, Paste, Protractors, Compasses, Pencil Sharpeners, Typing Paper, Steno Pads, Memo Books pier;: A &•?»>* ENVS. i IN 7Vi-OZ. VfGeTABi ENVS. I IN 7Vi-OZ. 1 : pkg. ENVS. I IN 7Vi-0Z. 1 PKG. Apple Sauce beans J ISV2-OZ. cAn 1-LB. CANS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUfiUST 28, 1968 | Jacoby on Bridge | 4b A 10 9 2 ♦ 85 ♦ 1094 ♦ K7 62 NORTH (D) 21 ♦ 41 ♦ AJ10 ♦ A J 7 5 ♦ A8 5 4 \ ' EAST ♦ KQ78 ♦ 432 ♦ KQ862 ♦ 3 SOOTH ♦ J85 ♦ KQ97-8 ♦ 3 ♦ QJ109 Both vulnerable Mrt North East Sooth 1* It 1¥ ► 2H Pus 3H S3 4 ♦ Pus Pus ss Opening lead—♦ 10 clarer a chance to go wrong In accordance with Parkinson’s first law of bridge: "Any time I a player has a chance to make; i mistake, he may make it." ★ 7 * * ■ There was nothing remarkable about Benito’s opening lead. Even the Italians open1 their partner’s suit. I South took dummy’s ace and played a spade from dummy. His plan was to get around to ruffing his third spade before drawing trumps. Giorgio rose with his queen and led the three of clubs. South played the queen and Benito followed with the deuce. rdonna ruffed and the king of clubs became the setting trick. I We don’t think much of declarer's play of the club ace. He should have seen that if Belladonna did hold three IclUbs to the king, he would have been silly to play the suit but the hapless declarer was at the table, where these things are much harder tb see. Q—The bidding has been:7 West North ' East Sooth 1 ♦ Pais > 2*. Put *X \ Pass Pass ■ 3» . Pan .7 ■ ■ You, South, hold: ♦J4 VKJII >A2 +KQ1054 What do you do now? A—Bid three no-trump. Thla Is slightly better than lour spades. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding three clubs over your two dubs; your partner jump# to four clubs, what do you do now? THE BETTER HALF ROBIN MALONE HE BERRYS AM&TKI660Z5 A SECOND EXPL06I0M .. ^ n—|—’-----THaSKWiGH/ By Carl Gmberi By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Benito Garrozzo and Giorgio Belladonna of Italy’s World Champion Blue Team are also members of Omari Sharif’s Bridge Circus currently tourihg the United States and| Canada. They bid play the dummy! well but their real forte is brilliant de- JACOBY The Jack of spades was led next. Benito won with his ace and led the seven of dubs. Now put yourself in declarer’s position. Your problem is to avoid the loss of both, a club; trick and a ruff. You know that Belladonna is perfectly capable of leading away from' three to a king. You also know that Gar-rozzo, who had played the deuce of clubs without any evidence that he had a problem, is perfectly capable of recognizing a;-----—*—1—— --------------- singleton club lead by his!KERRY'S WORLD—By Jim Berry partner and ducking just as he had. n THE BORN LOSER By Art S&nsom “But you surely know the saying: Marry in 1 repent at leisure." fense. A large part of this de- Anyway, declarer rose with ' fense consists in giving de-| dummy’s ace of clubs. Bella- iD By SYDNIY OMAR R For Thursday "TOo wtM mm controls Ms dtstlir Astrology Mints th# way." ARIES (March 21-Adrll If) I Confront surprise. Utilise facts, diplomatic approach. AQUARIUS Igc coulc ______ „ Win way through 30-Fob. II): Now isj obsorvo and GiMINI (May Jl-i_______ , _____ resources. You may ba hanging on to outmfad methods. Boot to sir------- procodures. Soparoto actual requl from mart doalros. Put sontln proper place. CANCER (JUM 31-July 32)1 Good for new contacts. Expreti Maas. Find out whan roadblock exists. Ba daring — taka InltlMtva. Day la attract elitas. sail.your prodoct—act with verve. So a showman. LEO (July SfcAup. 13): Numerous GstalM could jnultlpy.^Be ^ thorough. , feml Luton. egroemo Older p future aecurlfy. Listen. • VIRGO (Aug. IMapt. 23): You I arovlded with Information which lands .. . optimism. Enlarge viewpoint. Avow being I narrow. You have much to offer. Let I LIBRA (Sapt. 23-Oct. 22) > If obsa. JUMP I you couM find way of getting what you I mod. Accent continues on money sector. I Gain shown If you repay kindness, f— LEO mossaga. accordingly. PISCES (Feb. if-Merch 20): Personal! philosophy could bs put to significant1 test, stand tall. Your own principles aral your greatest ally. D If man to begin protects. ★ ★ THURSDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY BP are a natural taacher. You unique way of Imparting knowledgi mcerned. Thera GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high .ar SCORPIO, SAGITTARIUS. CAPRICORN. Special word to GEMINI: Sharp_ retort from associate will bring T-M imi Gen. Feature Carp.) By V. T. Ham HP toy • NMlyWMac. “Of coune, one of the most important considerations fa which wife can carry on Lady Bird’s ‘Beautify America’ program!’’ CAPTAIN EASY THEN VOirW* DEAD GET ON ACQUIRING AN OLD CA5TLEANC strength Js before opposing f FIX 'EM FDR SUPPER? ' SURE/ YOU CLEAN ’EM An1 i’ll fry ’em/ vou L DON'T HAND TH’ COOK f A COW AND TELL HIM VOU WANT STEAKS FOR SUPPER, DO VOU? of Impetleneo. Obtain hint from SC6r?IO ——— — any ------- rs. Quiet Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Wednesday, Aug. a, the 241st day of 1968 with 125,to follow. The moon is between its new phase awMirst quarter- . The morning star is Saturn. ★ * * The evening star is Venus. On this day in history: In 1833 the British Parliament banned slavery throughout the Empire. In 1922 a New York realty company paid 8100 to sponsor the first radio commercial. > ★ , * In 1941 Japan sent a note to President Roosevelt saying the Tokyo government was interested only in peace. Japan-ese planes attacked Pearl Harbor less than four months later. In 1963 more than 200,000 demonstrators staged an orderly protest march on Washington against segregation. Bollworm Sniffs at Insecticide SHAFTER, Calif. (UPI) -What happens to bollworms after |a cotton field is sprayed; with an organic phosphate in-1 secticide? University of California eit-, tomologists say anly a smell! portion of thi worms are killed. They say the apray apparently only destroys the adult, egg-laying part« Hie bollworm pop- OUT OUR WAY AN' I SUPFDiSE IF WE WANT FRIED SPUDS WE’LL HAVE TD PEEL AN’SLICE 'EM/ OR IF IT’S BEANS, WE’LL HAFTA OPEN THE CAN... SGsrr/ LET’S BURY \ JH'FISH/AN* DON’T ' RILE THE COOK! IF TH’CHOW SETS ) ANY WORSE I’M / SONMA BE FORCED ) TO LEAVE CAMP// By Leslie Turner NO. IF THEY LEARN I TYCOON J.R MtKEE WANT5 ’ IT THEY'LL AEK AN OUTRAGEOUS PRICE'. YOU'LL GO AND RUY IT CHEAP! z. .-‘til ■*' SPELL! NS IT OUT BEX & MEEK WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT THE PROBLEM OF POVERTY IF YOU'RE > ELECTED % VOU MEAN my “ POVERTY OR YOUR! By Howie Schneider DON oidm't mention AhjyTHING ABOUT THE THE PONTIAC PRESg. WEDNESDAY,* AUGUST 28, 1068 d—T Brothers Make "Millions 'Ploying With Dolls' By GENE HAND6AKKH ' I haired and mod-clad and Vague-, .JWf resembled Victor Maturt;is1 puppetry—P** W lb® way about their ’TOiXYWdOb (AP) ®Pl|g ancient art of puppetry— thought by Jome to have origin* rs * Ff •* J a* a producer wallf In. IIP_________Japmwling plant atetT4hoianda of yeart llgo '“T°“ M * W with the Chinese- has been K'JbKHS and deta very good to two brothers ofl<>P » entlrely-chstumes. props Greek ancestry. scenery, special effects, anima Greek, ancestry. Sid and Marty Krofft operate what they call “the world’s first and. only show bumness factory*’ “We are absolutely unique,1’ claimed Bid, 40, who is shaggy- tion, music, everything.*” lfc ARTISANS Walt Disney’s creators appear to be the nearest thing 1» toe Kroffts, but they work only on Disney projects. NOW! NOW! "Sopeitr* motion picture oneofthebestr’-wwc, SteveMcQueen Faye Dunaway., iheTltwmJA Ow A$wi to-.««rinK Ruil Burke JackWeston (■SuiswudrorMOiwAiiOiwicw^^ COLOR by Deluxe WlO.-SAT.-SUN. at 1;-3:-5:-7:-9 THURS.-FRI.-MON.-TUES. 7:-9: Krofft Enterprises, lac., employs more than 100 artisans, entertains about 36,000 people a day at shows In Georgia and Texasand will gross this year about fl million. Their main customers are amusetaent parks, tourist attractions^ advertisers and television sponsors. They’re coatinning a man as Tony toe breakfast-food, tiger tor new commercials. ~v ★ ★ Small orders are accepted, too. A sideshow fat man wants "bright, flashy shirts and loose, baggy pants” to accommodate 700 pounds and 85-lnch waist, foe Kroffts sent [estimate. “A man walked in toe other day with 10 picture frames he wanted painted,” said Marty, who’s 30 and slightly less shaggy and swarthy than Sid. “We sprayed them for him free.” THNKBIG Mostly, however, the Kroffts think big. Sketches show how one developer will turn the top three decks of ’the liner Queen Mary into a sort of glamorous Disnfeylarid at nearby Long Beach. A cigar-chewing Paul l-Bunyan gets mechanical innards that will swing his ax at terrified customers.on an Eastern amusement park’s thrill ride. The brothers started as fifth-generation puppeteers. Sid was born in Athens, where in the 1700s, their great-great-grandfather Peter opened a theater that launched the Kroffts as masters of the marionette throughout Europe, for 201 years. ★ * * Marty was born in Montreal, and by 1960 the brothers were doing a supporting act to Las Vegas, where bare-breasted French revues had become popular. Sid told his brother: "Let’s do a puppet show like the follies.” They borrowed 126,000, including $5,000 from their butcher, to create and costume 3-foot-high Showgirl puppets for a program they called “Les Poupees de Paris" (The Dolls of Paris). SMASH HT’ The adults-only show played to 40,000 in five months in a small San Fernando valley theater, Jt moved to the Seattle World's Fair, where Time magazine called it “the smash hit”; to PJ’s, a Hollywood nightclub, for four years; and to toe New York World’s Fair. Road companies took it to various cities, and "original cast album” has grossed about $12 million. television the Kroffts created seven puppet characters for the Dean Martin show in 1965. (toe, a svelte blonde named Collette, drew 3,000 fan letters a week. “She because she became too popular,” said Marty. ★ ★ ★ This summer the Kroffts have 112 puppeteers at work in their family-type shows at San Anto- nio’s HemisFair ’68 and at big amusement projects called Six Flag* over Texas, Dallas, and Six Flags over Georgia, Atlanta. “All this,” marveled Marty, “from playing -with dolls.” nnUUEDftE DRIVE-IN THEATER UUmmEIHlC Union Lk^atliaittrfy N. FIRST RUN SHOWTIME: DUSK CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE THEY PlAY AROUND WITH MURDER LIKE THEY PLAY AROUND WITH MEN! Dogs in Suspended Animation Deafh Definition Challenged 12 NORTH M8INAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY Open ffriK AM. Shew Stmt* 12:00 Noon Continuous—334-4430 - AIR CONDITIONED I MUST DE 18 — PROOF IS REQUIRED ’»By Science Service WASHINGTON - Transplant, surgery has brought to its wake 'A worldwide effort by physicians >tq define .exactly toe symptoms 'of deaQi. But their colleagues ,ta toe laboratories are making [the job increasingly difficult. Some little-noticed experi- linnnnfnnrrTGfrymT« : DANCING 5 l Thursday * Friday v Saturday - Sunday * I * ^ r-rolri^ cbrowr* . . . —JO SELECTION • ^ Y.ur F.v.rit. Nviracno PONTIAC LAKE! II INN mm* Z 1190 Highland Road «mmi< aju lUUUUmJUimjul ments at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex., open serious questions about the most generally suggested definition of death-toe absence of brain waves,, those electrical discharges are present to the living even when they are asleep. Nonexistent brain waves have been mentioned as a certain [symptom by almost every group wrestling with the problem. But at Lackland, Air Force doctors have succeeded to keeping dogs to a true state of suspended animation — without oxygen, without nutrients and witooiit brainwaves — for 80 minutes at a time. The majority of toe dogs have returned to healthy life. The reanimated dogs received very special treatment. Leader of the experiment group,; Lt. Col. Gerald Klebanoff, took all toe blood out of the animals — which meant that their cells received no. oxygen, usually thought essential to life. But at the same time he cooled their bodies down to between 41 and 50 degrees F., about that of a cold refrigerator. The cooling allowed toe cells toswitch off to the extent that they did not need oxygen to survive. The absence of blood cells prevented any dots to toe brain’s blood vessels, a potentially fatal ocburrence. | With every bodily function ^suspended, toe dogs spent 80 minutes in toe apparatus. By every clinical test they were dead. Seventy-five per cent of them were successfully thawed, their blood returned, and today they bark and frisk as 40-pound mongrels should. CHRYSLER MOTORS CORPORATION it ____ I RUNS pmrmm • ■ ■■■ j ; Dealing you a hand in the nQWUr $ k INGER RODDY » ..*»■**- ... ---—^ t M-ltP*11 most exciting suspense Western ever played! DRIVE-IN THEATER ■ -332-3200 0PDYKERD. AT WALTON MVO. CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE “SUBERB SUSPENSE” , ' . . / ■ ' FINAL CLEARANCE ON 1968 PLYMOUTHS. (But the end it neer.) OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 724 Oakland, Avenue Pontiac, Mich. HAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 6673 Dixie Highway Charleston, Mich. THB POKyiAC faass wedn^pay, august 28, ma l£s a Fleasum tn gm STARKIST LIGHT Blue Ribbon Soft wiW w&mfflm Wwwm Corner Celuipbia I Union Uk. Villa*. OPEN SUNDAYS Everyday Jaw Pricey+Frieiidty Serviv* • Hllebury Flow,25-lb, Bag....:...."r^3S””1AS: Hershey Chocolate Syrup, 1-lb. Can .. "wSt"y IB* Kooi-Aid, Regular, 6 Pkgs..........?£~ , »• Rod-Out Salt Ragcets, 40-lb. Bag.. Jello Dessert, Xsitt flavors..... I. PnrinaDogCbew,5-lb.Bag•........6S* Deniag Red Setaoa, ;Wb.:Gai*p, IS^|S »' Spam Camed Meat, CaiapheN’s NashroomSoup^O'/r-oz Can IB* FmMMHRaM'ittaii' Spa|lM^15^Z;iG^^^^'M* Omtaftm Slender, 4-oz. Pkg....... 79* CREAM HILLS ||OS. COFFEE SI1!* *«£ Philadelphia CREAM cheese “The Pause Th KELLOGG'S •CORN FLAKIS 1-lb. 6-oz. Pkg., 2i ; LUCKY DOG FOOD jfl FREE GOLD BELL DP Stamps With Purchase Any Pkg. of > CUBE STEAKS j PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS What are you looking for when you shop Plus You Get Gold Bell Gift Stamps, Too 1. Lower Prices? 7. Friendly Service? 2. Trading Stamps? ' 8. Clean Markets? 3. Brand Name Products? 9. Laca||y Owned? 4. Convenient Locations? supporting i««i «twtos 5. Ample Free Parking? 10. Weekly Specials? 6. Money Back Guarantee? 11. Everyday Low Prices? 5-.1 Boneless ■eel of Ground Beef Round Hy grade's | BALLPARK Rand STEAK FRANKS -89' 79* 69‘ |H| Stamps With Purchase IDI Stomps With Purchase* 20# Any ,, OHflROOfll BUG COMB : THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Feature Ribbons of Gelatin for Dinner Part Buffet Dice Tongue, Add Pickle. for a Salad Every homemaker has learned the tenon that when the wfrm weather come;do the odd foods. And most women have their stahdby recipes that they’ve nrveC«f<^’ summer successfully. * Ribbons ojf emerald , green lime gelatint a pearly white center of cottage Cheaaev and the brillanqiofthe -Japanese i Mandarin Orange segments i combine to m|ke this gleaming j jewel of a sstadtograce your < buffet table or your luncheon spread. 1 ORANGE RIBBON MOLD j1 2 cans (t| oz.) Mandarin ‘ ] oranges r" m m r" '"' 1 package lime flavored gelatin I 1 tablespoon lemon juice || 1 cupgingerale 1. envelope unflavored gelatin 2 tablespoons cold water %. cup hot water 2 cups cream-styled cottage .cheese;. . . . . Vi epp sour cream 1 teaspoon chopped chives 44 cup shredded celery cabbage Drain Mandarin prange segments. Heat % cup of orange syrup until boiling. Add lime sour cream; add gelatin, chives '«fiit’ Mt cup bi$tftr or margarine, It room temperature IMi cups firmly packed light brown sugar 1 *1 teaspoon vablUa 2 large eggs Custard Mixture Almond Topping , Vt cup sliced natural blanched almonds Grease afid flour a square cake pan (9 by 9 by 1% inches). On wax paper, sift together the flour, baking powder and salt. Thoroughly beat la the eggs,i at a time. ir in' the sifted dry ingredients in about 4 additi6n8,| alternately with the Custard Mixture, only until smooth after each addition. Fold in the almonds, turn into the Distribute the Almond Topping over the batter- Bake in a moderate (350 degrees) oven until a cake tester inserted in the large mixing bead, taste. Yield: % cud gradually beat the sugar into the hotter. Add the jft| Curry Condiments Go Well in Shrimp Salad Here’s a simply smashing salad for your next bridge luncheon — Shrimp Salad Indl-enne. Pretty to look at, delightfully different iii flavor, it’s a party dish that can be made ahead {and served up while your guests are totaling their score-cards and post-morteming their hands. This is also the kind of-salad you could serve to the family when the temperature soars. It’s cool and refreshing, yet packed with good nutrition. ★ ★ ★ The shrimp will provide the protein your husband youngsters need to keep them going during all their extraactive summer days. ------ .................. -For a family meal, serve the salad from a big bowl; and, partner it with crisp rdishes, crusty bread and milk or iced tea. center comps out dean — about 50 minutes. ' Place pan on wife* rack and allow dike to cool for 15 minutes; turn out on rack; turn right side up; cool completely. Note: The amount of baking _ iwder called for (1 teaspoon) Ii cornet; this is a moist, teiirty dike with a compact texture. We like ft sliced rather thin — easy to do when the cake is cold — because this to help ■; the delicate flavor of the light brown sugar and the almonds in the cake itself to come through. " CUSTARD MIXTURE 1 cup milk 2 egg yolks 4 teaspoons sugar M teaspoon salt Scald milk. In a small mixing bowl, slightly beat the egg yolks with the sugar and salt. Stirring constantly and vigorously, add the hot milk to the yolk mixture; Oyer low heat cook and stir constantly until slightly thickened — do not boil. Stir to toe nutmeg. Allow to oool, stirring occasionally. Use a s directed in recipe for Almond Custard Cake. ALMOND TOPPING 2 tablespoons butter M teaspoon nutmeg. margarine, at room temperature V* cup firmly packed light brown sugar Mi cup sliced natural or blanched almonds In, a small bowl, with a spoon, heat together the butter and _ ir; stir to the almonds. Use as directed in recipe for Almond Custard cake. Add Coconut to Medl Fruit Ambrosia, the food eaten by tiie Greek gods to preserve their, immortality,, is more familiarly known to us as a oranges., and coconut.. A lbng time favorite dessert to the South, often traditionally served with the Christmas dinner, ambrosia has gained popularity all over the country. , As with many classic recipes there are variations by the L medium pineapple, pared j blended orange juice and rum and cut into chunks on top. Mix lightly, and 1 papaya, pared and thinly Sprinkle coconut on fruit before sliced serving. Makes 8 servings. , j j . I Noth: If papaya and Mango 1 mango, pared and cut into ^ ^yalE-dse 1 small Spanish melon or cantaloupe. score, although oranges and,6™1*8 coconut in one form or another) ***** still remain as the base of this B chunks 2 large bananas, sliced Mi cup orange juice plus M cup light rum, hr 1 cup orsmge juice 1 cup flaked coconut Combine cherries and fresh to large bowl; pouri CHERRY MELON AMBROSIA 1 jar (8 ounces) red maraschino cherries, drained and halved 3 cups cantaloupe balls (1 medium melon) 2 cups sliced fresh peaches 1 large grapefruit, sectioned 1 large orange, sectioned 1 large banana, sliced V« cup grapegruit juice 3 tablespoons honey % cup flaked coconut, toasted Combine cherries and fresh fruits in large bowl. Blend grapefruit juice and honey; mix lightly with fruits and chill. Sprinkle coconut on top before serving. Makes 6 servings. TRY THE BEST 1890 SHRIMP SALAD INDIENNE to. small shell mtcironi Mr cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon curry powder 1 tablespoon wine vinegar Vt cup diced radishes Vt cup green pepper, diced— Vs cup diced cucumber, seeded Mi Clip green onions ' % cup celery, chopped Vt cup parsley, chopped Vi cup chutney Mi teaspoon salt 1 lb.. shrimp, cooked, cleaned mid chopped (about 2 cups) Cook macaroni as directed on package and rinse in hot water. Drain. Combine mayonnaise, curry powder and vinegar; toss with warm macaroni. Mix with remalntogtogrodt ents and let stand, refrigerated, for 2 or 3 hours. Serve maca-roni-shrimp mixture over greens or in avocado halves. Makes 6 to 8 servings. dessert which can be served' jgP year round. FRESH #RUrr Here are a couple of ambrosias that' are perfect for summer dining making use of the fresh and tropical fruit so readily available at this time of year. Tropical Cherry Ambrosia is heavenly combination of pineapple, papaya, mango and banana with added dash to the 'form of bright red maraschino cherries — their delicate air mond flavor complementing the fresh fruit. This ambrosia is spiked with orange juice and light rum then topped off with! coconut. The second recipe, Cherry Melon Ambrosia, is a tangy concoction of plump red maraschino cherries, melon, peaches, grapefruit* orange and banana mixed with grapefruit juice and honey. Just before serving, coconut is sprinkled over the top. ^Tropical Cherry Ambrosia1 maraschino cherries, drained andhalved & * SAUCE MIX DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION STATESend POSSESSIONS £ —| m — JSI — m pi I — r ■ -i pTj| rr-i > — .PUERTO RICO 'VIRGIN ISLANOI . i *■ rt\ — lT1 Cj i mmm ]TTm ■ 1 | 1 ■ 1 ' 'CANAL ZONE ts ZD m , , .,„zd • . n'-.'-J I tjj AM , BB zz ZmZ ZJ I JZJ pmm- TROPICAL CHERRY AMBROSIA—This heavenly concoction of pineapple, papaya, mango and banana with added dash and flavor in the form of bright red n Cherries, is food for the gods—perfect for hot summer days, tod. MILANI “EASY-WAY” SPAGHETTI SAUCE MIX Milan! Foods Inc. 12312 W. Olympic Boulevard Los Angeles,.California 90084 SAVE tih on 2 cans ofVan Camp’s Pork and Beans. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 OAgC*** RtP***" HHM Nte«A ,, skuck CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP BACK TO SCHOOL LOOSE LEAF 10% OZ. Pops! a Cola TOWN PRIDE toll Mar faring PLAIN OR PIMENTO . Kraft ;Volvoota ■ KRAFT SLICEfiNAfURAL Swiss Choosa MR. PITTS REGULAR SIZE GRADE 1 Polish Saosaf# MR. PfTTsTRESH AND SMOKED llvar Saosaf • BIRDS EYE TOPPING Pineapple Orange MISSMUFFETGRADE A FROZEN 100Z.' Strawborrlos pkg. Slim Jim Potatoos p°l: FROZEN IN MUSHROOM SAUCE 10QZ rnuun «wmw riw.u,w » . JOMi* Slnalaton Shrlma wt. ■ “ ^ KG' ■ MRS. PAULS FROZEN COOKED SOZ. I ilsh Flllots pkg'. I PQHTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER # GLENWOOD PUlA SHOPPING CENTER • MIRACLE MILISHOPPING CENTER SRRFAn OU TOAST- 1 SMUCKERS BRAND WM Grape Icfy f : USE WITH'SOUP COUNTRY GLEN [ Sa|tinasAt-P THJfl PONTIAC* PttKSS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 28, 1968 ^—18 FARM MAID THICK OR FARMER JACK Sliced Bacon US. CHOICE FULL SLICE Round Steak U.S. CHOICE SPECIAL CUT Steak DOUBLE GRADED U.S. CHOICE Sirloin Steak FARM MAID SPECIAL LABEL Hen Turkeys agarfiirfi A FAMILY FAVORITE WHOLE OR HALF SPECIAL LABEL Chicken AGAR DELICIOUS Canned BLb.< _____C^N SPECIAL label Chicken LB Drumsticks Wo Virginia .Cooked Ham ALL FARMER' JACK'S CLOSED LABOR DAY OPEN SUNDAY 10-5 FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER it * ;/rdT* »«..£»*,! ^ n*f. *!« /;v^. V*' ~ %-* IfoiijililliK Sweet Onions for Slicing iSlaiililS I V%-^-, 'ExtrrLean feeel Ground Round HH frlm Good Aim. 27, thru tug. 31, 196B. Right to limit Quantities. Agar or Mohawk Boneless Sl icod into 9/11 Chops 1/4 Pork Loin..... 94s Holiday Delicatessen . OrWe'0" '*sSawEi Relax. It's easy to proparo a picnic with thoso read/ to oat, easy to fix moats. Boiled Ham............ Eckrich "Cold Cuts" Smorgas Pac.... Tiger Town Corned Beef..... ’ Somi-Bonoloss, Fvlly Cooked West Va. Hams C—U ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 J THE,PQjNTi AC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 WceXIenfefCffl *- * < v* ■# *' * *4 »V> ''IS!...O....A1..._...: Meadowdale-Assorted Flavors Meadowdale, Froth Frozen Sliced Meadowdale Concentrated Kfc? A Help 5'C *' ;V th« day right iff - Meadowdale Saco ■H|tMrlj|a ttW " b? «*„* ■v: WTO no wast*f «»flt*i»Hdll quality. CAMELOT COFFEE , 3 l«». $1.59 ' < van ! Whole Kernel Corn, Creom Style or Green Giant Peas >*«**&* £«#/£*• »^ee«e*«*» ••»«*«»•< • -st Z„ ,, Michigan Grade 1 if wjjj> Hellmanns...........J"...5 9$ />* Old Solent Charcoal Briquets.'?..90$ ♦, Fr/#t^--^ MfJl^Fresh, Hond-Cut lb. §|lff^6rade A| S Fresh Brand Fine for the picnic outings end on enjeyeble snack anytime. Fresh From the Ovens of M.el-0-Crust ^5 A great picnic and great hamburgers-'demand the great taste of Mel*0‘Crust Save 4f Condensed Tomato Campbells Soup. Comelot Saltine Crackers C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Number of Cuban U,S. Citizen WASHINGTON (AP) - Relatively few Cuban refugees have been naturalized—6,895 between 1959 and 1967—but m< cause of the mechanics, .involved. Hie number is expected to rise dramatically in the next few years. More than half a million have arrived in the United States from their Communist-dominat-ed island in the past 10 years, most of them legally. Others risk death in harrowing ocean; crossings aboard small boats U.S. citizenship, and rafts. I In the early days of the Cuban Florida, 90 miles from the sunny Cuban island, is the arrival point for most refugees, but the majority has quickly as-similated into communities across the nation, and all 50 states now have native Cuban residents'. Official government statistics show that less than 5 per cent of them are on welfare. * ★ * The spokesman explained the situation that has kept the number low among those getting influx, the refugees were left indefinitely in a “parole” status, under which they were unable to take even the first steps toward acquiring U.S. citizenship. In 1966, however, Congress passed legislation permitting these so-called “temporary guests” to obtain permanent resident alien status, the initial point from which they Could advance toward citizenship. ★ ★ ★ This entails a five-year waiting period. And the legislation permitted only a portion — no more than 30 months — of the time the refugees had already spent in this country to count toward the five years. What type of people flee from dictator Fidel Castro’s Communist island? * * a Many of the adults are professional men and women — doctors,lawyers, accountants, teachers—from the cities which Castro has permitted to decay while concentrating on rural development. What is Cuba’s loss, it ap- pears, has become America’s gain. ★ ★ w File after file at the Department of Health, Education and Welfare provides success stories of Cubans who have settled in the United States since the Castro take-over a decade ago. Dr. Augustin Castellanos, here for -six years, works in the Cardiac Children’s Hospital in Miami. He is one of the world’s great heart specialists, and recently went off to South Africa for consultations with heart transplant surgeon Dr. Christiaan Bernard., WORK AT UNIVERSITIES Cuban lawyer Jose Coutin, and his wife obtained master of library science degrees and now work at Cornell and Ithaca Universities. Jose M. Quintina rose from door-to-door potato chip salesman in Miami to partner with fellow refugee Luis Roca in a restaurant in Nashville, Tenn. A dentist, Dr. Cesar Lugones, got such high marks in revalidating his credentials in the United States that the University of Alabama, where he studied, took him onto its dental school faculty. The fact that 2,000 Cuban refugee physicians have cost the United States a total of $300 a head to retrain for practice this country is pointed to by resettlement officials. The American Medical Association estimates it costs the country $40-, ill to turn out each American-born intern. Government officials closely tied to the Cuban Refugee Program say it’s their educated guess that more is collected in income taxes from, Cuban wage earners than it costs to assimilate the refugees into American society. A new device developed in England injects disinfectant to a cow when it itches to clear up the irritation. 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Fire Extinguisher C&.I 3" Just 8tt” tall... fits in dove compartment or kitehen drawer. Ready for instant use. Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, ^Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to St30 Sears Sears Auto Accottories and Tire Dept. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO,. Downtown Pontiac o Phone FE 5-4171 * Tigers Hoping to Escape Rut After 2-1 Loss CHICAGO (AP) - With their American League lead dwindling and their confidence staggering, the Detroit tigers are banking on Denny McLain and Dick McAuliffe to pull them out of their current rut. The Tigers blew a 2-1 decision to the Chicago White Sox Tuesday night while the hot-handed Baltimore Orioles swept a doubleheader from Oakland, 5-3 and 7-2, to creep within, four games of Detroit. * ★ * How Important are McLain and McAuliffe to the Tiger cause? ----Since their current tailspin, McLain has lost his last two starts and missed his turn Tuesday night because of a sore shoulder. McAuliffe was suspended five days by American League President Joe Cronin for his run-in with Chicago pitcher Tommy John last week and during that span the Tigers have lost five of six games, all by one run. ' PLAY AT HOME McLain, a 25-game winner, will pitch against California tonight and McAuliffe also will be in the line-up. After a .two-game set with the Angels in Tiger Stadium, the Tigers take on Baltimore for three games over the weekend. “We have no complaints,” said Manager Mayo Smith after Detroit’s loss to the Sox Tuesday night on a ninth-inning error by second baseman Tom Matchick, McAuliffe’s replacement. "We had the bases loaded with none out in the top of the ninth and should have busted it wide open but we couldn’t score,” said Smith. "The kid (Matchick) made a good play on (Luis) Aparicio’s ball but couldn’t get anything on the throw. Don’t worry, we’ll get straightened out.” White Sox Manager A1 Lopez said, "I was surprised Matchick even came up with Aparicio’s ball. It should have gone through for a hit. It’s a tough game for Detroit to lose but it was a good game.” "I don’t know who’s going to win the pennant,” said Lopez "but I sure wish we were in Detroit’s position—four games in front;” ~ McLain, meanwhile, wasn’t with the chib in Chicago, He was in Detroit getting treatment for his right shoulder "HeTl pitch Wednesday,” said Smith "and again on Sunday against Baltimore. up rf 3 0 10 DdVit If on if 4 0 10 Josophsn e lb 4 111 Wood p me 2 0 0 0 Ward 3b 3b 3 0 0 0 WWIIam* rf ikl *» 3 0 0 0 McCraw lb E—Xtatchlck. DP—I ---lefrolf 4, Chicago H IR—Cash (20). Pattrson o J.Fisher .........0 Wood (W.104) 1 HBP—J.Fisher (Fr Freehan. T—2:34. A-10 AL Countdown , W. L. Pet. GB DETROIT ........ 82 SO .021 -— Baltimore ...... 78 54 .591 4 Boston ......... 71 62 .534 iltt REMAINING GAMES 20, California: IfomfaiSj^—£at 11—at California; 13«, 1 23a 24a 2&-a» 28a 29—Washington, 30, 3 , 22—af Wash- THE PONTIAC PRESS SPORTS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 John French Eying U S. Amateur Title By FLETCHER SPEARS COLUMBUS, O. — With some rounds he’s glad don’t count behind him, young John H. French of Bloomfield Hills launched his bid today for the top prize among amateur golfers — the U.S. Championship. ★ ★ A French, 21, a junior at Duke University, is one of four Michigan players here for the 68th edition of the U.S. Amateur tournament, which has become a spring- on Teen-Agers Grab Women's Berths £]?$,Squad LOS ANGELES UR — Uncle Sam’s women swimmers won’t be worrying about getting back from- the October Olympics in time to vote — none of them is old enough. Sue Pedersen, 14, and Pokey Watson, 1.8, became the latest in the'group of amazing teen-agers to win events in the Olympic Trials as a couple of records fed. r * ★ ★ Miss Pedersen, of Sacramento, Calif. ( won the l60-meter freestyle with the fastest time of her life, 59 seconds flat, for an American record just one-tenth off-the world mark set by Australian Dawn Fraser in 1964. .. '._____* -A * — The top four finishers all eclipsed one minute, the first time in the history of swim racing this has happened. GOLD MEDALIST Miss Watson swam the 200-meter backstroke in 2:24.3 to win a place on her second Olympic team. She won a gold medal at 14 in 1964 swimming on the victorious freestyle relay quartet. ★ dr * Pokey, from Santa Clara, Calif., didn’t decide until Monday that she would try to qualify in the backstroke race, which she had worked on just this summer, instead of the freestyle. She couldn't race both on the same day. ★ * * Her time was the -fastest ever by an American and goes as a citizen’s record. Karen Muir of South Africa, a country which isn’t eligible for the Olympics, swam 2:23.7 in Los Angeles last month for a world and also an American record. 1 (Continued on Page D-2, Col. 7) board for a handful of the players now traveling the professional circuit. OPENED TODAY The first round of the 72-hole event opened this morning at the 6,762-yard, par-70 Scioto Country Club, a course with several demanding par-4 holes. ★ * * ■ Other Michigan players in the field are Peter Green of Orchard Lake Country Club, current holder of the Michigan Medal Play and Horton Smith Memorial titles, Joseph Grace Jr. of Detroit and Charles Kocsis of Royal Oak. The field of 150 will play 18 holes today and 18 tomorrow, with the low 60 plus ties moving to the final two rounds Friday and Saturday. PRACTICE DIFFERENT Practice rounds and the real thing are different, and French was hoping his game would change a bit as he teed off this morning. ★ ★ w In practice here, he hasn’t played well, but the tuneup rounds don’t count. AUTO MISHAP French, an economics major at Duke where he’s a member of the golf team, has played well during the past couple of months after recovering from an auto accident near the Duke campus back in May. * * * He suffered multiple jaw fractures in the mishap, and spent the next seven weeks with/ his jaw wired which necessitated a baby food diet. The ordeal .cost him 20 pounds. He regained the weight during the summer and reported here in top shape. Cltvbltndi 14. I! From Dales to Chargers HILLSDALE UR — Hillsdale College has officially changed its nickname from Dales to Chargers. The change, approved by faculty, students and alumni, will be used with the opening of the first football game Sept. 21 against Eastern Kentucky. Balliet AlsoAionored Sanchez Gets Pike Award The 23rd annual Billy Pike Memorial Award was presented Tuesday night to ' Santos Sanchez of the R. T. Clippers for his outstanding play this summer in the Pontiac Class A baseball leagpe. The group also presented the "Duke” Greenway Memorial Plaqde to Gary Balliet* promising young golfer from Pontiac. Hie Pike Memorial Committee honors a former Class A player who lost his life during World War II in France. IBs parents, Mr. dnd Mrs. W.C. Pike of St. Petersburg, Fla,, attended last night's gathering/ ★ * ★ The group revived the Greenway Plaque—also in memory ofa former city-league diamond standout Who lost his life in a traffic accident — after it was dormant for several years. - Nearly 30 persons —, committee members, wives, former honorees and guests — attended last night’s banquet at Devon Gables. „ Sanchez is a hard-hitting Outfielder-pitcher who helped the Clippers claim their first Class A playoff championship and district trophy this season. The 24-year-old Lake Orion resident paced the men’s league in home runs and runs batted in, and was second in batting average with a .397 mark. He also had the most hits and scored the most runs. j( ' * * .★ “ Although the award normally goes to the outstanding men’s baseball performer, Sanchez succeeds Bill Tipton who was the 1967, prep national hurdles champion from Pontiac. , ' LINESMAN Similarly, the Greenway Plaque -usually gees -to -fee top city junior baseball player but it was presented to the 18-year-old BaDiet who fills summer won the state Publinx Golf cham-, pionship. The husky Avondale High School graduate sparked both the Yellow Jacket and Pontiac Central teams to some of their brightest performances to golf. He will attend the University of Michigan. Baltimore Cuts Gap to 4 Games With Twin Win BALTIMORE UR — The irrepressible Baltimore Orioles, back in the American League pennant race after a fantastic surge, produced a trio of unfamiliar heroes to pull within feur games of the Detroit Tigers. Curt Blefary and Wally Bunker, forgotten men of 1968, shook the shackles of season-long frustrations, and newcomer Mer’v Rettenmund overcame the jitters as the Orioles whipped the Oakland Athletics 5-3 and 7-2 Tuesday night. ■ The Orioles, who visit Detroit for a three-game series next weekend, have won 17 of their last 24 decisions and gained 3% games on the slumping Tigers since Saturday. , Blefary, struggling with a .209 batting average, slammed a homer in each game against A’s and drove in five runs. MAKING COMEBACK Bunker, trying a comeback at 23, hurled his second complete game of the season while, taming Oakland on six hits in the nightcap. Rettenmund, a rookie recently recalled from Rochester, socked his first major league homer, a two-run pinch drive, to win the opener 5-3. ★ ★ * "It certainly has been frustrating this year,” said Blefary, whose 12 homers and 35 RBI are far below his previous totals. (Continued on Page D-2, Col. 6) FIRST GAMS OAKLAND BALTIMORE ab r h bl ah r h hi Cmpnerls ss 4 0 0 0 Buford c i fSb” H 3 BRobinsn 3b 4 1 0 DJohnson 2b 4 1 o e • i Total • out when « Total 13 S 7 I . ilng run icorad. 10 0 0 0 0 3 0 0-1 100 101 IU-3 ough, Campanarlv _______ .. -altimor, l. LOB— Oakland 1, Baltimore 5. HR-Blafary R.Jackson (25). Monday (4), Bando E—Belanger, DP—Oakland Balk—Leonhard, (1). SB-1 R ER BB SO OPEN DOOR — Chicago infielder Sahdy Alomar (1) heads for the plate with the tying run Tuesday night in the fifth inning at White Sox Park. Catcher Bill Freehan is about to grab an on-target throw from Willie Horton but has failed to block Alomar from the plate. The host White Sox grabbed a 2-1 triumph on a gift run in the ninth inning. Sunday Racing Law Passed in Windsor WINDSOR, DnMAP)—Sunday harness Windsor Raceway, A law to allow file racing — and its accompanying betting racing on Sundays was passed 5-3 Mon-— will be allowed starting in October at day night by the Windsor City Council. HURRY! LAST FEW DAYS OF PONTIAC RETAIL STORE’S saw SALE OUT THEY GO! 1968 P0NTIACS FIREBIRDS TEMPESTS fimtpfafe Sett Out! ALL 1968 Mileage and Demonstrator Cars! Hurry-While SELECTIONS Are GREATEST! jl Pcnfeie fitoAR A OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY 8:30 A.M. TO 5:00 PJM. E. WIDE TRACK at UNIVERSITY DR. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC D—2 T1IE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 s BRAKE JOB 30,000 mile guarantee HERE'S WHAT WE DO • Install new linings • Install fluid • Check seals, master cylinder • Bleed brakes • Adjust and lubricate hand brake • Road test car for safety • .Check wheel bearings, fluid lines • Turn all four drums Lion Fans May Forget Trade 1 27.88 s SELF-ADJUSTING $4 MORE FRONT END ALIGNMENT By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Forgetting Stilt Plum in the trade which brought Bill Munson to the Detroit Lions may not be difficult if Munson should continue with the quarterbacking performance he gave against the Baltimore Colts last week. However, in the trade with the Rams, the criticism directed at the Lions was inclusion of Pat Studstill, one of the team’s top pass receivers Spartans Set to Open Drills 75 Candidates Set for Early Workouts and the leading punter when be was healthy. Now the question is — will Earl McCullouch make everyone forget Studstill? REGULAR POSITION The speedy McCullouch, who pondered an Olympic berth for many months, saw the . ity of moving into a regular position after Studstill’s trade. He signed his contract and in one home appearance in preplay the fans have already forgotten Studstill. I He has had only one starting appearance sincr his arrival into Lions’ camp from tbe All-Star game. Last week on one pass play,! Munson threw long just over McCullouch’s reach and the 35,000 fans at Tiger Stadium gave Earl a hearty applause when he left the field. “That’s really different when the fans applaud for an im-complete pass,” said General /Arn . I manager Russ Thomas, who is EAST LANSING (AP) - A .firgt * admit that ‘‘McCullouch press preview Thursday will be followed by the sweat of regular workouts for 75 Spartans invited for early Michigan State football workouts. There are 24 lettermen turning from the team that had a dismal 3-7 won and lost season last year. * The squad will include 17 sen-McCullouch has caught three Air Conditioning $3 oxtro ’ tors, 27 juniors and 31 rookies, sophomore-to-be this year. First game will be against Syracuse in Spartan Stadium, Sept. 21. ’Purdue, Ohio State, Indiana and Minnesota are the teams to beat in the Big Ten this year, Coach -Duffy__Daugherty—has commented. TOUGH FOES Michigan State plays all four later in the season, in addition to always-powerful Notre Dame. Meanwhile, Daugherty is only modestly predicting a better team than the one he had last fall. His 1967 record was the poorest in his career as head coach. The return of many of the cripples out with injuries last fall will help the Spartan chances. [ “If we stay healthy and have some playing luck we should show improvement over last Daugherty ventured. SEEKS NO. 26 TONIGHT - Detroit Tiger ace righthander Denny McLain makes his third start in quest of victory No. 26 tonight at Tiger Stadium as the Bengals open an important five-game home stand. California’s Sammy Ellis is the opposing hurler. McLain is 25-5 after losing his A. WirepHoto last, two starts, but still is regarded as a strong bet to become the major league’s first 30-game winner in 34 years. After a Thursday afternoon game against the Angels, the Tigers will play a crucial three-game series with Baltimore. Second Chance for Others has already made the fans forget Studstill.” “I’ll wager that when the; season is over, if they both stay! healthy. Earl will have a better! pass receiving record,’’ said Thomas. THREE RECEPTIONS To date in pre-season play, Lombardi in 'Second Effort' passes for 93 yards including a 50-yarder. Studstill has also caught three for -35 yards including a 16 yard TD pass. Studstill and Jon Kilgore have shared the Rams’ punting By The Associated Press Vince Lombardi has become a movie star in a film called Second Effort but Jim Harris and Claude Crabb are starring in a real-life drama entitled Second Chance. While Lombardi was giving tips on salesmanship in his new venture, tackle Harris and de- on Monday, 'was recalled bethel Meanwhile, Lombardi was out American Football League club1 to prove that movies are better Tuesday when nobody claimed than ever, the same plateau to duties, and the ex-Lion has 11' back Crabb were going cunts for an average of 3518 through reruns with the pro The Los Angeles Rams of the audience of executives from 86 while Kilgore is punting for a football teams that recently sent I N a t ion a 1 Football League j Midwestern companies, involves him. A three-year starter at defensive tackle, Harris was switched to offense in training camp but lust out to rookie Sam Walton. The Jets said he will return to defense as backup man for John! The movie, previewed Tues-Elliott. | day in Green Bay before an The Los Angeles Rams of the;audience of executives from 86 which he coached the Green Bay Packers before stepping down after last season to concentrate on his duties as general manager. while Kilgore is punting for a 39.1 average in 12 kicks. “Iem packing. For the Lions, Jerry dropped Crabb last week but in-1 a salesman in need of a victory * * * jvited him back because Chuck j who turns to Lombardi for ad- Harris, who was released on Lamson must undergo surgery vice. By Tin Associated Proas I Bet. OB .<21 — PePoyster has taken over the, waivers by the New York Jets'on an injured knee, punting duties from Lem B BSSjj B ' Barney, who was Studstill’s successor, and although the former Wyoming University kicking specialist has not connected for long range distance his average of 37.5 for 11 kicks is slightly ahead of Studstill. ★ ★ ★ As for Plum, who started the [last game for the Rams and. NEW y0RK (AP) _ Kathyjtionally but is not among the was victimized by tire Sar| Rarter can’t remember the last eight seeds, headed by Billie “d gets off one of the better Diego Chargers, me ex-Lionsi t t ^ n an(j she Jean King. ! lines. The salesman asks Kra- n-f-«! Attractive Kathy Harter Out to End Tennis Slump The salesman is played by an actor. Lombardi is cast as Lombardi, a role in which he became stereotyped during nine seasons as Packer field boss. He was very convincing,” said Lee Remmel, a Green Bay sports writer turned critic for the ULCER CARRIER Jerry Kramer, a guard for the Packers, has a role in the film Most American Can • Cuttom coated Steel • Mechanically sealed Kami guard against muff lar leakage Installation Avails bis Dodger Lost ior Season LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los Angeles Dodgers team physician said Tuesday pitcher Don Drysdale could be out of action with a shoulder injury the remainder of the National League baseball season. “The Dodgers seem to feel that even his return would not help the team at this late date,” r. Robert Woods told newsmen. Woods, an orthopedic specialist, said Drysdale suffered an inflammatinn. of the muscle at the top of his right shoulder two weeks ago and re-injured it last Saturday. t‘,k completed terceptions. SIX RELEASED The Lions yesterday cut injured linebacker John McCam-bridge, defensive end Seth Cartwright, free agent linebacker Dan Sartin rookie guard Mike Spitzer from San Jose State. Two other players’ names U.S. Open Tennis Championship starting at Forest Hills Thursday. But the willowy brunette from Seal Beach, Calif., shapes up as of the new glamor girls of the tennis circuit. She has her opening match against Nadine Netter of Scars-dale, N.Y., Thursday. Mrs. King, now a pro, won the singles and doubles at Forest Hills last year when she was an amateur. She accomplished the * * * I same feat at Wimbledon in 1967 Kathy draws the whistles off and then won both in Wimble-the court with her street attire don’s first Open this summer. - ... j|« - mini minis. On this attractive Austrlia’s Rod Laver, the pro "laitnpH waiver* from other21'yeai"0*c* 5-*°°t-9 California, winner of Wimbledon’s men’s clamed waivers from otter ^ lool$|fo$ Singles, is the big favorite to The Lions face the Redskins Has she anythin8 SP^8* «jcapture the $14,066 first prize in ..i Washington Thursday night .mind for the opening at Forestthe $100,060 tournament. The top with Munson expected to start'Hills? purse for the girls is $6,000. against rookie Harry! “I don’t know exactly yet, Theofiledes, a free agent from,®be said today, “but I’ll try and Waynesburg State Teachers in Pennsylvania. Theofiledes has been playing, ahead of Jim Ninowski with Sonny Jurgenson out with injuries and he had 39 completions in 62 attempts for 270 yards. 1910 Widetrack Drive, Pontiac 5272 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains Drayton Plains Open 9 A. M. to 9 P.M. Pontiac Optn 9 A.M. to 6 P. M. get something attractive. You know we’re limited at what we can wear at Forest Hills. But I’m interested in design for tennis clothes and I’ll try for something different.” How about her tennis game’ “You know, I feel I’m ready for a big effort,” she replied. “I honestly feel I’m putting my whole game together for the fir|t time. I’d like to win a tournament for a change.” THREE VICTORIES The record book shows she won three in 1967, Cannes, West of Scotland and the Canadian title. She also played in 27 touma-ments, most, for an American woman, last year and had average on 58 wins and 24 ‘ ases. The daughter of a California Pro, Kathy is ranked eighth Orioles Gain on Six-Hitter, Pinch Homer Gains Early Lead in Gymnastic Trials April. LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) -Joyce Tanac of Seattle, Wash, scored over nine points in each of four events Tuesday night to take the first-day lead in the U.$, women’s gymnastic Olympic Trials. Miss Tanac, a 17-year-old who plans to attend the University of Washington this fall, scored 36.95 points. Linda Matheny, of Champaign, II)., National AAU champion, withdrew early Tuesday, saying a chronic shoulder injury reinjured two weeks ago failed to mend. She -will be allowed to join a team of M or 11 girls at a special high-altitude trailing camp at Lake Tahoe. (Continued from Page D-l) Bunker, a 19-game winner as a rookie in-1964 who slumped to 3-7 last year with a sore brought his record to 2-0. “I knew it was going to be a bad year when I was sent to Rochester,” h e deadpanned, “and with two decisions in 10 starts, it has to be frustrating. The young right-hander has a 2.79 earned run average for 61 innings. Rettenmund, who was leading the International League in batting when recalled Sunday, said he has., been extremely! nervous although he batted mer about Lombardi and Kramer replies: He doesn't have ulcers, but he’s a Carrier. On the field, the Packers took look at rookie placekicker Mike Gemons, recently cut by Cincinnati of the AFL. Gemons booted more than 20 field goals during his college days at Sacramento Stpte. ★ ★ ★ Kramer is the leading candidate for the job vacated by the retirement of Don Chandler. Fullback Chuck Mercein and dr-fensive end Frank Winkler are other possibilities. Washington's plans to try Heisman Trophy winner Gary Beban at halfback In Thursday night’s exhibition against Detroit were shelved when tbe former UCLA quarterback pulled a hamstring muscle in practice. He probably won’t play at all. Ctevitend'71 <4 .526 12V* Oaiulnd ...... .67 66 .504 15V* N«w Vorfc ...... 65 65 -5*® )* Es.2 if j4 Tuesday's Results Boston 7, Cleveland 1 New York 2-0, California 0-2 Baltimore 5-7, Oakland 2-2 Chicago 2, Detroit t Washington 2-1, Minnesota 0-7 Teday'e Games New York' (Stotfiemyre ’7-10) at Chlce-o (Horlen 9-11 or Nyman M). nlgtrt California (Ellis TO-*) at Detroit (Me- , ain 25-5), night Washington (Hannan 7-3) at Baltimore Hardin 17-0), night . „ Minnesota (Kaat 10-10 or Boswell 9-10) t Cleveland (Tlant 10-9), night Oakland (Odom 12-9) at Boston (Plzer-* 0 6-4), night Thursday's Games Oakland at Boston California at Detroit Minnesota at Cleveland,, twilight New York at Chicago, night Washington at Baltimore, night Nat!anal League _ . wan Last vet. OB St. l^uls ....... 13 » .424 - San Francisco ... 71 <0 .542 11 Cincinnati ...... 49 59 .539 111* Chicago ......... 49 65 .515 14V* Atlanta ......... 64 41 .455 1JV* Pittsburgh .... 44 40 .405 T0‘* Houston . 62 71 .444 21 Philadelphia .... 40 70 .442 21’* New York 61 73 .455 22‘* Los Angeles^^. 56 New York 4, St. Louis O Houston 4. Los Angeles 2 Cincinnati 10, Philadelphia 0 San Francisco 0, Chicago 4 Pittsburgh 4, Atlanta 3, 11 Innings Today's Gamas St. Louis (Gibson 1W) al Pittsburgh (Vaate 10-121, night Houston (Cuellar 4-10) at San Francises (Sadeckl 12-14), night . Atlanta (Jarvis 13-9 and Stone M) at Philadelphia Fryman 11-12 and Johnson 1-1) 2, twl-nlght ■ - Cincinnati (Nolan 5-2 and Arrlgo 10-7) at New York (Cardwell 7-11 and Koosrrten 14-1), 2, twl-nlght Chicago (Jenkins 15-12 and Nya 4-12) at Lot Angeles (Singer 9-14 and Purdin 3-'), 2, twl-nlght Thursday's Gamas Houston at San Francisco Atlanta at Philadelphia, night. Cincinnati at New York, night St. Louis at Pittsburgh, night Only games scheduled. Sue Pedersen in Close Win y TIM Assadatad Prase Yasftzempkl Bsn a AB * H Pet. ------1 41 111 .291 I 54 132 .290 .120 434 65 125 ,.207 121 400 ‘SO 135 .283 130 523 69 147 .251 ’ 1M 425 41 119 .200 123 440 42 131 .200 121 424 55 119 .279 121 430 70 119 .277 F'.Howard. Washington, 34) k.Harrel I Boston, 321 W.Horton, Detroit, R.Jackson, Oakland,- 25; Po> Baltimore, 20; Cash, Detroit, 20. (Continued From Page D-l) A foreigner can set a U.S. record if she is competing in the United States and an American can set one competing anywhere in the world. TRIO QUALIFY Three qualify for the Olympics in each event. Jpining Miss Pedersen were Jan Henne, 20, a thr^Timelifor'BaUimore^last! Chico, Calif-, State College It, 69; W.Horton, Detroit, Pltchina is DmINom McLain, Detroit, 25-5, .133; Santiago, Boston, 9-4, .692; Hardin, Baltimore, 17-8, .410; McNally, Baltimore. 17-8, .410» John, Chicago, 10-5. M7i Tlant, Cleveland, !M, .647; Culp, Boston, 10-5, 447. coed, 59:1 and Linda Gustavson, “The dub is in the race, and,18, Santa Clara, Cialif.59.57. it’s coming down to tbe end,” the 25-year-old outfielder said. “But, maybe now I won’t be so nervous.” SECOND OAMB ar«, Cincinnati, 7t; R .Allan, Philadelphia, 75; Shannon, I ~i; Santo, Chicago, 72. Pitching Marichal, San ^NoSSai .772; Kllno, —iiwWl, 11-3, Ji4; Regan, ChlCMp, .749; Gibson, St.Louis, 10-4, .750; ir oooo Miss Pedersen declared ? J 2 2 o “N®w I want to try for the ? 2 o o I worW H’8 *,*^n standing 4 o o o so long.” Miss Watson feared for her ___chances this year wh b?».! I mononucleosis struck her down 1««,-* last November and she had to lijPj spend three months in bed. sell “The Olympics mean a lot Djotinson more to me this time,” declared ‘1| 2 2 l » ? the Santa Clara girl. “In 1964 I *, ! ! 1 iiwas a little ldd ou( there ___________ i ! { j 7 fighting. Now I know , more what HBP-r-igria'io (fnwatl), Aker (DAtoyl.liA >» PB^uncen. T—2:27. A—13420. means. y Greene Leading in Cup Race SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Walter Greene of Chesapeake Bay, Md.y wastirttand tMrd in LOB—Oakland 5, Baltimore I __ncan, Hendricks, Cempenerls. Buford *■-' ------- ““ CamparH isgr Bunker (W.2-0) Tuesday’s two races for the Sears Cup North American Junior sailing Championship. ' ★ . . * .•* . He has 21Y« pointoior the first three of the eight cup races which will be sailed through Thursday and possibly Friday morning. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 D—8 Jwins Slump 26 Innings , By The Associated Press :r;The Minnesota Twins finally ■apapped their scoring slump last night, j „Tbe drought ended after 26 innings and the Twins went on to down Washington, 7-1, in the nightcap, of a doubleheader. The Senators had won the opener, 2-0. • ‘ * * * - In other American League games, Boston stomped Cleveland, 7-1, and the Yankees split 2-0 decisions with California. Bruce Look's three-run double gaye Minnesota its first runs in a long time in the nightcap behind Jim Roland’s first complete game since 1963, a five-hitter. CHANCE LOSES But the Senators grabbed the Opener when Mike Epstein’s lead off single in the eighth ruined Dean Chance’s bid for -no-hitter, and Bernie Allen -followed with his fifth homer. Camilo Pascual, 12-8, allowed only four hits for the triumph- Rookies Bill Harrelson, 5 2-3 innings, and Andy Messersmith stopped the Yankees on one hit — Joe Pepitone’s bloop hit in the sixth — in California’s victory after Stan Bahnsen, seven innings, and Steve Halimton combined on a six-hitter for New York in the opener. GOOD IMAGE - Indiana-bred Don Johnson changed his unkempt appearance when appointed head of the Professional Bowlers’ Association image committee and he now is an All-American in performance and appearance. The result left the Yankee^ with a 5-2-1 record for four doubleheaders in five days. Ray Culp, 10-5, turned in a _ four-hitter-for Boston’s triumph,^ and Reggie Smith squeezed home one run and Floyd Robinson singled In two in a four-run third inning. tMndaz. W—Bahnsun, Harrelson, Mniarsmlth (7) and Egan; Vtrbanic, Womack (I) and 6ibba. W- Harraison, 1-4. I___Vtrbanic, 4-5. First Gama Minnesota .......... 000 000 000—0 4 1 Washington ......... 000 000 Ota—2 5 ( Chancs end Roseboi Washington ........ 001 0(______ _ I Roland and Look; Bosman, Ortega (», Haywood (4). Humphreys (0) and Casanova. W—Roland, 4-1. L—BaMHBHRlta HR—Minnesota, Tovar (5). Cleveland ............. 'too 010 i Boston ............ i Williams, Hargan .... . ______ Sims; Culp end Gibson. W—Culp, Openings Avaiiable| in Industrial Golf Team entries can still be made _iiL the annual Pontiac Industrial Golf tournament to be held Sunday at Pontiac Country Club. Pontiac Motor’s team is defending champion. Other challengers are expected to come from Fisher Body. General Motors Truck, Bell Telephone, Pontiac Press and Pontiac Police Association.; j - Four-mad teams should be entered and entries can be made by calling Pontiac Coirn-i try Cltib at 682-6333. Junior Reign Bob Sigler, 16, put together rounds of 86-89 for a 175 to take the junior golf championship at Birmingham Country Club. Doug Leonhard was second with a. 83-98—18L Winning the girls title was Barb Beale, 15, with an 84. SHAVING STROKES by frank Beard Needling or "psyching” ani jponent is part of the tour game. Other golfers often try to make you worry about your game, your swing or anything else to throw off your concentration. They might ask, "How long have you been holding the club that way?” Though it’s the same way you’ve always held it, you start thinking about‘it It’s not malicious, I don’t think. It’s just second nature to do everything one can to wii CAGEY PLAYERS Some players think hitting first is an advantage. Some try on purpose to hit shorter off the tee than their opponents. So that, being away, they hit first. If they get on the green, they hope their opponent is worrying tiiat “he’s on the green, I’m still in the middle of the fairway.” * * * Arnold Palmer tried to psyche le in the Houston Tournament of Champions that I won last year. We were tied on the par 4, 18th hole of the final round. On his second shot he hooked left of the green. I hit 15 feet from the hole. He used a putter from the edge, and it rolled to within four feet of the hole. PUTTED OUT Ordinarily, he would mark and clean his ball and 1 would putt first because I was away. Butiirthrheafrof battle, he went ahead to putt out. I’m sure lie was thinking that ii if he made his putt I’d be worrying about mine. That I’d suffer a mental letdown. But that if I went first I would be thinking positively for a birdie and that he might get a bogey. Well, he made his. And made mine. The psyche did not work. But it could have. Leads in Mallory Cup RICHMOND, Calif. (AP) -Richard Rose of Seattle won both races Tuesday and took lead in the Mallory Cup North American Sailing Championships with 33% points for five races. ---- ANTONIO, Tex.—Manuel Ramos. WiVi, Mexico City, «toi----- **--*■- ~ 1M, tan Francisco, .. JUSTON—Manr Houston, knocked 15144, Philadelphia, R BEAUMONT, Tax—Paul Patln. Highlands, Tax., knocked out Tony HOUSTON-Manny Gonzales. 1493.4, Decides Against Olympics Alcindor Enjoys Work With Youth NEW YORK (AP) - Lew Alcindor who could now be getting ready to lead the U.S. basketball team in the Olympics is working instead with the underprivileged youngsters of New York. “I don't know of anything It done yet that’s been Warding” he says. “We know what we’ve done has worked. It's been that good. It’s wonderful.” ★ * This is the same man who not long ago said of his decision not to try put for the Olympic basketball team: "We have a racist nation and my decision not to go for the Olympics is my way of getting the message across.” Alcindor the 7-foot plus ter of UCLA’s collegiate champions and already considered one of the greatest of modern basketball players was a cinch to make the Olympic team. He is now part of Operation' Sports Rescue along with other famous athlete^. Teams each headed by ap athlete talk to youngsters in small groups. “Young people idolize ath->tes” says LeRoy Wilkins director of the project. "If you can get athletes to say the same thing that religious leaders and educators are saying they’ll listen.” * ...*..it ' Tine objectives of Operation Sports Rescue are to instill selfpride in youngsters of the street, to impress on them the value of remaining in school, to underscore the value of independence by acquiring marketable skills, and to encourage youngsters to take an active part in community affairs. Among the athletes working on the project in addition to Alcindor are Emmette Bryant of the Boston Celtics, Ron Blye of the.New York Giants, Tom Hoover of the Houston Mavericks,. Bobby Hunter of the Harlem i as much as all the rest put to-Globetrotters, Carlos Ortiz and gether,” said one of the project Jose Torres, the boxers;, Oscar]officials. Robertson of the Cincinnati I Operation Sports Rescue is Royals, and Walt Bellamy of! sponsored by the Mayor’s Ur-the New York Knicks. ban Action Task Force and fi- ''Alcindor has worked almost nanced by the Bristol-Myers Co. Pick Three Lady Golfers COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -Phyllis Preuss of North Lake, Mich., is one of three players who wilt represent the United States in the Women’s World Amateur Team championship at Melbourne, Australia, Oct. 2-5. The United States GoiPAsso-: ciation said the other players are Jane Bastanchury of Whittier, Calif., and Mrs. Anne Quast Welts of Mount Vernon, Wash. UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. wmm. * * _ sf JiII ■vni o Midi* Inc. 196B Track firivi v Tlwntty l;» a.m. t* <;» ajn. 7 a.m, — tawraay l a.m. n 4 a.r FE 2-1010 . MUFFLERS-PIPES-SHOCKS-TIRES lUBtBiQASBWinMBmtnAtainloASRhaiiusawbMSB ninu aafhus Bmizuu amlDAs a mi das ■ "Ask"Your- Goodyear Dealer for Hit Competitive Price—Goodyear Retail Prices Shown Above/' GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE maMKU> ™ of Rochester 1370 WW. Track Driv. 335-6167 651-4007 D—A THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 six run^| Tuesday night as the i fifth homers after delivering {York Mets. Cincinnati blasted; grand slam homer in his first and connected off Bill Stoneman surging Ciants whipped the one with a bases-loaded ground {Philadelphia 10-0, Pittsburgh game three months ago, gave with one on in the sixth. j U S ★ * * . .. Snipped Atlanta 4-3 hi 11 innings right-hander Bob Bolin a 1-0 -257, with 21 The 22-year-old speedster,,h-\second place GiaSts, who have fn2dinHoXt0Nrbeoat L°S Angeles lead in the second inning with " 49 games wlth the jcently singled out by teammate won 14 of their last 17 starts,! n otner INb*ames- his bases-loaded .grounder. He * * * iMays as “the guy who douldjpick up a game on St. Louis’!LEAGUE RECORD greeted Chicago reliever Jack Jim Hart’s two-run single in [take my place,’’ accounted for National League leaders, who| Bonds, who set a modern ma- Lamabe with a 400-foot homer, the sixth capped the Giants’ at- good for three RBI, in the fourth lack, enabling Bolin to breeze to losing streak and Tommie Agee Fred Whitfield hit a two-run homer, tommy Helms contributed a two-run double and Pete Rose extended his hitting streak to 17 games with a fourth inning single. Donn Clendenon reached first on a third-strike wild pitch to open the 11th at Atlanta. He took second on a sacrifice bunt and scored the winning run on Jerry May’s two-out single. Norm Miller’s homer touched off a four-run third inning burst that carried the Astros past Los Angeles behind the six-hit pitching of Denny Lemaster. ....... 000 <20 02x—10 II U), O. Jackson (5), B< Dalrympl*; Clonlngsr, -Clonlnger, 5-4. L—WlM, natl, Whitfield (4). HR-CInc Pittsburgh ......, 200 I Atlanta .. ....... 000 u hMim I Sunning, Kline (0). Fa | Reed, Upshaw (8), C Smith (4) a and Dletx. \ 1. HRs-Chii co, Bondi t. DEPENDABLE ECONOMY BECAUSE: . . Patented Uni-Lock Bonded , A total of 26 teams took part Jin the Best Ball of Foursome event of the Women’s District Golf Association at Knoll wood yesterday. I A pair of foursome tied for ;honors, including one team fronj host club Knoll wood, made up jof Mrs. Arthur Rosenberg, Mrs. iLinda Kayes, Mrs. S. ‘G. Sherman and Mrs. Milton Rotenberg with a gross 76. LOW GROSS Mrs. Robert Campbell, Lochmoort Mri. MacFarlane. CC of Detroit. Mrs. Arthur Rosenberg, {Kayes, Mrs. s. G. Sherman, Rotenberg. Knollwood, 74. 30 MONTH GUARANTEE •FULL 4-PLY •PCP NYLON CORD •SAFETY-BONDED h FISK CUSTOM 300 TRUE FULL 4-PLY TUBELESSCAS1NG 100% NYLON CORD FISK CUSTOM 240 HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS RKG. PRICK 3 JT (8.88 onlyiOoOO 86-23—65. MUFFLERS] Ofi i INSTALLATION M Wheel Balance™ *H“i .39 Wheel Alignment 5^71 Air Conditioned Can $2 More **** I Brake RelinelSflfrfl 27,771 19.95 tJOOx 13 7.75/7.50x14 7.75/670x15 8.25/8.00x14 8.15/7.10x15 Charge It at Kmart m PRESTONE PERMANENT ANTI-FREEZE & COOLANT Freezing weather ahead . . . that’s for sure! Be ready . . . be safe with Prestons JM Why W CHARGE ITI OUR CONVENKNT CREDIT •UY WITH NO MONEY DOWN Anti-Freeze. It guards car in coldest temperatures . . * plus gives (yeaiHronnd rust protection. Contains exclusive Magnetic Film.'Now’s the tune to boy! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD BLACKWALLS TUBELESS SIZES PRICE EACH SALE PRICE EACH PLUS F.E.T. EACH TIRE 6.50x13 REG. 15.95 SAVE 40%^ 1 t 9.57 1.81 7.75/7.50x14 REG. 17.95 SAVE 20% 1 14.3 6 2.19 7.75/6.70x15 8.25/8.00x14 EEC. 17.95 SAVE30% REG. 19.95 mmmmm 1 1 icn IN3 I CO! €71 6 6 L 2.21 J 2.35 Giants Putting Faith in Bonds as Security Backing Mays THE PONTIAC PRESS, WKDMKSDAV, AUGUST 28, 1968 D—a Mexico City Concerned Olympic Site Hopes for Calm MEXICO CITY (AP) —World and local controversies swirled air of the Olympic headquarters Tuesday addle planners of the 1968 games waited with quiet desperation and no *Wre hoping everything will calm down before Oct 12," said one Olympic official privately and bravely. “There is no place for politics in the Olympics." * * * He referred to a running fend between Mexico (Sty’s students and the administration of President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz plus the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. There is also a lingering I worry about a U.S. Negro nth* lete demonstration and a possible struggle involving Rhodesia ahd Negro African countries. One report hinted Herb At pert's"Tijuana Brass Band had canceled a scheduled appearance in a bullring here on opening day. He was to appear as pul of the ^o-called cultural Olympics biit one source said Alpert. wanted to avoid controversy between the students and the government. FIVE POINTS Thousands of students have scheduled -demonstrations and picketing to demand a dialogue Horse Racing DRC Entries 1st—<2400; Claiming 4-YMr-Oldi and 0»: « Furlongti Hill Haiti He Beoger Federal Caw Ac« Pub • Bundy Hill, Rangeline Road Omky Joe Policy Power j Added Money Red Dare Living Ownw All AmirJcen Boy 2wl—{2,r00;Clalmlng i-YeOr-OM Maiden* l Filliei; « Furlongs: Hazel Park Entries Royal Mi NWHOn Happy^ Medium tin DMIon ie Gelt ilrling Seo id of Galilee 5X NitoUk Belleguerre ting 4-Ytor-OMs end Jn/M 'iphtt i ______________ Pit's Belle J Chief Grattan Id^SSTondMaMd I I 4-Year-Oldi end Magic Missile Dawson's RgMtr Fighting Phil Pop Kerne , Stipend's Boy Almaze . Grand Stand Wjg-dMMt Claiming 2-Year-Otdsi « John Colby 2-Year-Olds, Elbe rod |M||| Sonnys Tony Hi ,jf tftduw Etta E. 7th—S3,500; Claiming 4 Year-Olds a Mr. Pollyanne Jvglgy Grand Marala Tufty Twist tfl^-UJiai Aliawancas, 1 A SY.»r-Olds; Shlaway Low Shlaway Lad eth—«HMi Claim phyms c. scon Reapers Return .Entanglement 2nd Banana Royal Jth-dMM; Claiming J-Yeer-Olds» 11/1# |^j£5toood ITVac stelbud Morambo Run Nurse Run MrShv. First Royal Mothar NmMOreem ' Brushed Gold Ruby's Mishap Man Dad* as Biff ___d Nde. Mighty Knox Our Valley Jerry Wayne SPlndeltop Joan if Pact! 1 MHei Aceway Stymie Royal Robert Double G. Battle Duka Doyle with the administration. They; had a five-pojnt program which includes the dissolution of the lidt police corps, resignation of the police chief and Release of. students jailed since Hie July 26 riots. ' I Student leaders have hinted broadly they have put out a Meier for collaboration with U.S. Negroes who may also protest, although their causes are not connected. However, the government has obviously worked out a program to placate the students before Games and is trying to'| avoid any further confrontation. | There will be no dosses of any kind during the Olympics. The Czech crisis could have' more severe consequences. Norway’s Olympic committee already has voted to break sports relations with the Soviets aiid their satellites-in protest to the invasion. “The Dutch refused to come to Melbourne in 1956 in protest *•“ to the Soviet invasion of Hungary but we think they regret it now,*’ says one Olympic source. ‘We are in constant contact with- the' European diplomats : and we are optimistic.’’ [j UNDER ATTACK Soviet offidais may well be weighing their Olympic attendance since Mexican demonstrators attacked offices of the Mexican Communist party, smashing some windows. They may also recall that Mood flowed in Melbourne during a water polo match between Russians and Hungarians. Although U.S. Negro athletes apparently have eased up on their plan to boycott Hie Games —a threat which troubled the Mexicans for1 several monthsj-some form of demonstration has been threatened. An encouraging sign is that African singer Mariam form at a leading hotel during foe Games. She’s the wife of Stokely Carmichael, a Negro militant. There has been no report whether Carmichael himself will come. : Still in debate is whether the breakawaiy government of Rhodesia will be allowed to attend. Mexico takes tne position that the United Nations has asked member nations to reject Rhodesian passports, meaning! their athletes couldn’t get through the airport. iKalona J«y Good Pals Lad 7th—snog; Conditioned Fatat 1 True Heather Jodie Creed 4 Reiner Abba Sudan Express Soudartcker Mtf-jiWf Michigan coi/ stake*; Face; Makeba has been signed to per- a I lowed to (Soy home Sunday* for many, mo . . . Sunday ban «■ for example, to Phil, nttiburgh until 1934 teams weren't allowed to play at Iwma on Sunday* until 1939 . . . Sunday game* weren't permitted to New York until 1919. ' .. ♦ 3 * ★ ; One af the mast amazing feat* In the history ef ba*ebaU was accomplished by the Now York .You’d think having a .400 hitter ir players h to 1900, lb hit over .400, and an each af ♦hose 13 occasion*, the team with, a .400 hitter failed to finish • winning a pennant I* DRC Results Brand O’Pete 44.20 14.00 7.04 2 13.40 6 “ ' 1— I- Year -Olds; 1 6.60 4.00 2.80 ' 4.20 3.00 2.60 Fast Shot DQ-Shady Rett Storage king aafftopltd' Itth^lwof^aldern 2-Year-Olds Foeled ------ss, 2-Yaar-Otds, Foiled E5E Hazel Park Results *.» 6.00 £ Olid' 0000; Conditioned Paca; 1 I___I 9 Janldawn 3.80 3.00 2.60 01 Frisco Rush 3.60 3.00 Rampaga 4.00 DAILY OOUBLtf (7-4) PAID S3&M 3rd -07.000; Two Year out Filly Pact) t.-----m call Stakei 1 MRat ____,____-a 10.00 5.20 4.20 Adloa Nancy 3J0 3.00 Wilma1 Knox 120 — a‘a“- -— Year Old Trail Mirth 4 00 £00 un CMt Slakes; if} Choice 0.00 4.40 2.60 6.00 3 00 ..Synergism Thught i Claiming ,M iS »» Hudson's Laddie 3.00 9.00 340 ids; f I rwvvut Gif! Oils—<1,600; Conditioned Pace; 1 Felly Bee 12.40 i Irena Ensign Briar Lea Andy •Ns-ai.saa; cend Dollle Furtangit Cyd's Rom lbln Pina " ToSSF*90UPLf (1 Portoway ! totls—<1400; Claiming Pact; l Mila: McMansv. i».ao *.20 3. . Trefoil Kathy 3.60 2.00 Lucky Dominion . PERFECT*: (Ml <45.20 . gmm uu' . ~ .<■ HANDLE: <560443 "SALE" 'USED" TRACTORS & EQUIPMENT SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1968 9 If 12 P.M. (4) Ford 9N Tractors II) Fordson Dextra w/ Leader ft) Fordson Major w/ Loader (I) Ford 850 w/ Loader (3) Ferguson Tractor T020 Or 30 11) Ferguson 203 Diesel w/ Louder Sr Buckhoe (I) I.H.C. —- 340 w/ Louder (1) Cose W-3 Tractor w/ Loader Sr Backhoe (!) M-M Tractor w/ Loader Sr Backhoe TIT M-M 355Tractor (l) Maggy-Ferguson S.P. Combine w/ Corn Haad ALL EQUIPMENT TO BE SOLD “AS IS" CHEAP ,r" On Display Now At; Pontiac Tractor & Equipment Co. 1751 S, Telegraph Rd. Pontiac, Michigan 48053 m GUARANTEED TO FIT Reg.»»» Value! We also specialize in roar window dnd zipper replacement! 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Once Again It’* M Tag Bay* at Matthew BargraavOa One of MMrigaa’s Largest Automobile Sates Events ... Choose from a big selection of new 1968 Chevrolets in stock. Many cars and trucks are ready for immediate delivery. Come early for best selections! Don't Miss Out ON THIS ONCE-A-YEAR SALES EVENT Immediate delivery on most cars and trucks' in stock A wide selection of body stylos and colors. — This Is What You Get When You Buy New LOWER DOWN PAYMENT because of the bigger trade-in values, or incraaosd discounts. 2. MUCH LARGER TRADEJN ALLOWANCE on -your present ear so that we may build up our stock. 3. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY within the same dev on most can because of our readiness to handle a fast flaw of cars at this time with extra help on Opr sales staff and extra mechanics in our garage forseivicB. REMEMBER Matthews-Hargreaves MTU TO Bl WMR60UI BUY NOW SAVEtFt’ftOW! 1968 Clwvslle 2-Doer No. 13227 PUIS DEMONSTRATORS AND MILEAGE CARS AT HUGE DISCOUNT PRICES! Miw Savinga Service. Satisfaction MATTHEWS HARGRt, 631 Oakland at Cast, Pontiac FE 6-4181 “T'T scheduled mouth of the creek in time for removing surplus splmon. Department engineers have developed a feasible weir. As announced earlier, the weir site at the mouth of the Be ar will be one of 4 pick-up points where the department will trap salmon for routing Into commercial marketing channels. : _“In addition -to this operation, we will ^release enough fish! above the weir to provide for a' high-quality salmon fishery,”.: reports Department trout and: salmon s p e c i a 11 s t Dave11 Borgeson. j PLATTE CLOSED ' , anglers have until 3 to top the current the pike and bass An 8-pound 3-ounce eads the pike class n the bass division is-rnd five-ounce WHAT’S THE FUSS ABOUT? — Lisa Hyde, 3, seems, to be awed more by the attention a six-pound class largemouth black bass is attracting than the size of the Thank You! The reception by both our customers and employees to our Saturday closing has-been most gratifying. This ‘Opel’ will really be the ‘apJN k of your eye* with Qrlmaldl’e Juicy A price of Just $1,688. Yaei this two-doot Model 31 is Just one of she Opel models, which ate General Motors lowsst priced care. Grimaldi’* fine service on alt Tuesday thru* Friday 8 A.M. tad PM, Closed all day faturday CITY GLASS SERVICE poAtiac division Buick-Opel Inc, Just 2 blocks west of Woodward >88111 Id Hi1*——— THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1908 Conservation Explored Problem—Future Usage of (Third in a series) I By NORRIS INGELLS The Lansing State Journal j “The banks of the rivbr are so many vast meadows where the freshness of these beautiful streams keeps the grass always green. The neighborhood is so temperate, so fertile and so beautiful that it may justly be called tiie earthly paradise of North America.” This Is how Antoine de La-mothe Cadillac described the area along the Detroit River in 1702. Today, this same area is one of the largest urban-industrial complexes in the world. The "beautiful streams” are slowly being brought bad from death by pollution, and the grass long dice replaced with steel, glass and concrete. A few of the “vast meadows’ still exist so the city-dweller can view trees, flowers and grass— if he is lucky enough to get there before the "Sorry, Park Full” sign goes up. BEAUTY THREATENED Man is supposed to profit by his past mistakes. But there is considerable evidence to show that in Michigan man appears determined to let the city invade the "beautiful streams” and “vast meadows” still existing in the outstate areas. There are also indication that Michigan residents, blessed with a vast and resource-rich state, still believe* despite warnings to the contrary, that the supply of wild land and clean water is inexhaustible. LOST WEIGHT They might be compared with the residents of our westejn a municipal parks to provide recreation close to home.” Sen, Gordon Rockwell (R-Mt, Morris), chairman of the Senate Conservation and Recreation Committee, says he makes it a point to talk to people using Michigan parks when he visits them. I ask what we could do to make them better and most of the time they don’t even have an answer,” he declared. But Rockwell and other state officials agree , that more will have to be done to obtain addi-tional park and recreation land if the demands of the future—or even the present—are to be met. “By many standards, Michi-n is well off,” Smith points out. “But the true measure ' not so much a matter of quantity as it is kind and location. With most of its recreation lands in the northern part of the state, the fact remains that there is not enough public land suitable for outdoor recreation, particularly day-use, in (he southern Lower Peninsula.”' Michigan has 1,100 lakes more than 100 acres In size. But the conservation 'department reports that “less than onefourth of these .1,100 lakes have state access sites. Present state lands will provide relatively few new sites.” In spite of its record1 number of campsites, the department re- ports: “Even with continued expansion, thousands of day users and campers are turned-away every year. Availability of new areas of State Park caliber is rapidly shrinking, particularly in southern Michigan, the region of greatest need.” Department officials estimate that 50,000 to 60,000 vehicles year are turned away from state facilities because they are filled to capacity. fling the OutflTrail wHfr DON VOGEL-Outdoer Editer, Pontiac Press Last Call for Press Fish Derby Other factors indicate that the demand for recreation facilities will be phenomenal during the next three decades. Michigan population is expected to rise to 13 nMlUon by 2000 and this growth alone "cotild mean a 60 per cent increase in recreation requirements,” department studies show. Bear Creek Remains Open Special Weir Slated to Collect Salmon But there is also evidence that aome types of recreation activities are rising at a much faster rate than the population. Salas of outboard motors, for example, increased five times as much as the population during the past 25 years, department statistics show. Studies also bring to light factors thatorili affect the that vigorous s t e px mustXSa taken to obtain more puttttc parkland, most ■ of them sjpp short of urging condemnation actions. . *»££ Harry H. Whltely, chairitita of the Michigan CbnatrVRttgi ’ ‘ 1 lot agree with recreation needs of the state. Families are likely to have to spend less for food, housing and other necessities in the future, which may cause a greater percentage of income to'be spent on recreation. BETTER TRAVELING Capacity to travel is growing more than twice as fast as the population. Citizens are expected to have more leisure time in the future, placing more pressure on recreation facilities. “The trend is for young people to start work later and older people to retire earlier,’ state studies predict. “Conserva- Commission, does not ,T. those who say the conaerYailSl department needs greater condemnation powers to take oyer privately-owned land for public use, especially prime recreation acreage along the Great Lakes and major rivers and streams. “I don’t think there Ji any grave necessity for that now," he ! observed, “but there may come a time when it will be Engineering details have been worked out by the Conservation Department which will permit Manistee County’s Bear Creek to be left open to coho salmon fishing this fall. _ Earlier, the stream wastlve projections indicate a 32 to be closed to fishing hour work-week by I960.’ because it appeared that a weir 'k * * * could not be installed at the1 Lifter and Pollution are rendering much land unfit for recuse. As more and more going into private own- states, who in 1850 watched 20; largemouth Time is running out on the 1968 Pontiac Press Big Fish Derby County noon Sept leaders in the divisions An' northern heads Leader in the six-pound million buffalo roaming free and declared that there were more than man could ever hope to kill off. Tbirty-ninie years later, the records show “only 551 buffalo could be found alive in the U.S. Michigan residents can be justifiably proud of their natural resources and park system. Norman F. Smith, chief of the Recreation Resources Planning Division of the Conservation Department, reports: "Michigan has park, national wildlife refuges and over six million seres of state and national forests open to hunting, fishing, camping, hiking and other forms .of recreation, giving it - the second largest'fiib]ic forest area of any of the states eaatottfae Rockies. The stSte manages 72 state paries with 11,000 camping sites, a larger number than in any other state except California. There are 59 state game and wildlife areas, and over 600 developed water access sites —] again, more than in any other state. State and national forest campgrounds total over 200. In addition there are numerous county, township, regional and Savings bonds of $50 each arp-awarded for the heaviest entry in each class. Only Oakland County residents are eligible and foe fish must be caught in county waters. All entries must be brought to The Press sports department for weighing. Had this happened with one bass it might be foe new leader s attracting than foe size of the , ather, Marty, 428 S. Broadway, caught the 22-inch bass in Lake trolling for pike with a bucktail. Marty Hyde 428 S. Broadway Lake Orion and a friend were trolling for'pike on Orion. Hyde, manager of, the K-Mart Sporting Goods department in the Glendale Plaza landed a 22-inch largemouth, “We weighed it on machine scales In the boat” he said ’and it weighed .6% pounds. Later we weighed it at a store and that’s when 1 found out that fish lose weight in a ‘It had lost almost a pound. Hyde was using a bucktail and trolling for pike. Coho fishermen drew a blank I in the Manistee-Frahkfort area Turkey Hunt Applications Due Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, hag,been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times; if you wish to find the best $port that each day has to offer: ' 2:30 S 3:30 < 4:35 7 5:30 1 r. m. Min. MM. 10:15 SUB Sportsmen may start applying for 1,500 hunting permits covering foe Nov. 1-10 wild turkey season in the Mio and Baldwin areas, foe Conservation Department announces. Setting the stage for their applications is foe mailing of 1968 small game licenses. By early September, these licenses should be available at all local dealers. Few Oakland County weekend. Strong winds kept'dealers [even the charter boats off Lake [supply. Michigan. Rough water has! Eligible applicants, those been a major handicap the last residents and nonresidents At two weeks. Roger St- Amant who produces tiie Bayou Special lure spent last week fishing for coho. "It was so rough that I actually got seasick twice” he Said. “And we were using a 20-foot boat with high freeboard. At foe end of each day I felt like I had been through the mfiMfcheeanfe^wurir instead of fun.” The boat was equipped with a fish finder and the Pontiac man iiiii silt caught several cohos using his - *!*jlure in fluorescent red finish 2-os olSiThe fish were in depths of 50 to 3:35 lt:S|120 feet. of foe two areas, are to be mailed to foe Department’! Lansing office. TWO AREAS In the offing are 500 permits for the Mio hunting area (No. 1) which takes in most of Oscoda and northern Ogemaw counties plus parts of Alcona, Iosco and Montmorency counties. The other choice is the Bald- have "received thZl*in artea . *> ,for J.-00® permits will be issued to hunt turkeys in all of Lake County, and portions of Newaygo OcMnaMdmsOTcouRties. As last year, the procedure for making permit applications is relatively simple. It- works this way: On foe blank or back side of a 5-cent U.S. Govern m e n t least 14 years old, may get in the running for free turkey permits by postmarking their entries before midnight, Sept. Their applications, limited to one ]>er hunter and to only one postcard, foe applicant prints foe area of his choice (1 or 2), .writes down his 1968 small game license number below that, and then signs his name in ink. On the postage side, he preaddresses foe card tp himself, typing or printing his name and address there. Final step before mailing is to place foe fHled-out card in an envelope addressed to: Wild Turkey, Michigan Department of Conservation, Lansing, Michigan 48926. applications outnumber permit quotas for either of foe two areas, foe department will bold a drawing shortly after the Sept. 23 postmark deadline to randomly determine successful applicants. of obtaining foe land rises. “We have some very good for buying additional ” Smith observed, st don’t have foe available to go ahead.” lakefront acquisition be “continued and pur-vigorously” and called for )h public support of the program, for al “Costs of Great Lakes front-' salmon fishery,” a*e-e8P«c*a,,y lower Lake, >artment trout and ^c^anvfre a maj°r b,ock i” i e'e i a 11 s t Dave future public plans, even with Jenzie County’s Platte River will temporarily be shut down to fishing in October so that the department can collect some 10 million salmon eggs there. Unchanged are plans to ban ail fishing from foe mouth of foe Little Manistee Ri upstream about six miles to another weir where surplus ion will be trapped for Commercial marketing. Department workers Will pass fish above foe Weirs to provide fall angling upstream to 18 Mile Bridge. federal help,” he warned. “But the nature and attraction of Great Lakes shores are such that every opportunity which slips by us now wifi be regretted and lamented in foe years I960 and 2000, just as v'° chide ourselves for those ooportunities we should have grabbed in foe past." Sen. Rockwell agrees that the state should continue to buy parkland, and “concentrate on land in the southeastern part of the state.” "That where foe people are, he declared. While many officials agree (Next: Need Pifolic Support) ARMSTRONG THE SAFE TIRE 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRE 1 Pad. b. Tax and oM tire BRAND NEW ALL WEATHER IV Any on* of these tins ONE LOW PRICE 7.71x18 7.71x14 MIX14 $‘I295 Blackwall Tubeless Whitewalls $3 More EASY CREDIT NO MONEY DOWN FREE MOUNTING See Our Display at the Imported Car Show in The Pontiac Mall... Exclusively by The Grimaldis .. AIT This Week! FROM THE EXCHANGE AT < FAULT-FREE COLLISION PROTECTION) THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 19 They came from all points across the land; the Wacos, Stearmans, Ryans; the P81 fighters of another era and the homemade models reflecting individual ideas. There was alsoTRe big Ford Trimotor; available for flights lasting 15 minutes and providing a sky-high View of the 16th annual “Fly-In” at Rockford, 111. The event, which was held the first week of August, was sponsored tJy the Ex-* perimental Aircraft Association (EAA), an organization founded in 1953 by Paul V Poberezeny, Milwaukee, Wis., and now boasting a membership near 40,000 representing all 5Q states and 43 foreigmcountries. The EAA, a nonprofit organization, also sponsors an air-education museum and headquarters at Franklin, Wis., but one week per year it conducts the international convention of its members, regulating some 27,000 landings and take-offs of their unique aircraft. Currently, some 2,000 amateur-built planes have been completed by members, while roughly 6,000 other members are currently busy constructing or refurbishing their own planes. For the visitor andorgariizationalmembers who came to the small town 90 miles . northwest of Chicago, 111., the EAA provided free parking space, food tents and viewing access to the over 160 airplanes lined in patterned rows across the field. Each evening at 7 p.m., when wind turbulence was at a minimum, an air show provided spectators with upside-down flying, wing-walking, parachute jumping, precision flying and airplane acrobatics. Scattered between tents and campers of those remaining more than one'day were larger tents featuring the latest in factory planes and parts for the interested flying buff. This year’s event, with its brightly colored aircraft and the strange shape of things to come, drew more than 400,000 people to the Greater Rockford Airport, south of the city on U.S. Highway 51, to take part in the Experimental Aircraft Association’s biggest, and best, “Fly-In.” f DOUBLE > BONUS!; King or Queen Sin QUILTED BEDSPREAD Plus King or QUMnSiz* HEADBOARD (not as illustrated) \ with Your Purchase of 12 PIECE KING SIZE SLEEP SET HUGE 7 FEET LONG • 6 FEET WIDE Here's What You Get • King Size Mattress * King Sizo Box Spring • King Size Metal Frame with casters • King Size Mattress Pad • 2 King EASY CREDIT TERMS EASY CREDIT TERMS ’ DOUBLE BONUS! Beautiful Plastic Head, hoard (not at Ulus* trated) and Metal Frame with Casters with the Purchase . of any Twin or |U Full Size Set! A EASY CREDIT TERMS LUXURIOUS-QUILTED BUTTON-FREE! • 7 FT. LONG *6 FT. WIDE MATTRESS AND 2 BOX SPRINGS! Hire's What You Girt * King Size Mattress • 2 King Size Box Springs • King Size Metal Flame with casters • 2 King Size Fieldcrest Mle Sheets • 2 King Size Piltowcdses • 2 _ Size Pillows • King Size Mattress Pad! 2211 S. TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC PHONE: 332-2227 Open Daily 10 a.m.-9 p.m.• Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. • Sun. 12-6 p.m. (Livernois Closed Sunday) • Phone Orders Accepted • No Cash Down, Up To 24 Months To Pay! THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1908 Mexican Troops Disperse New Realty Throng Camped at Palace ls open t for Business MEXICO CITY (AP) - Army! troops early today dispersed hundreds of students camping in front of Die national palace following a peaceful march Tuesday night by sopie 200,000' persons protesting the regime of President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Troops and armored cars sur- students had pitched tents. The New School Program Hailed 5 to 30 Yeqr$ for Wife Killer rounded the Zocalo, Mexico! "political prisoners.” 8t“d*"t81put “P no resistance ^ Jpaeph singleton ReAltyj and the troops burned the tents. ~ __, Student leaders had said they00” * reslden0al- would maintain a constant pick-|colwnerc“i and tocome prop-! et line in front of the palace un-erties, has tU Diaz Ordaz met their de-opened for for restoration of "stu- business at «17 dent ^dignity” and release ofS. Paddock. By DICK ROBINSON One student said, “I love It.,. being able to speak ypur opinion is'nice.” x . \ “You can be at ease and loosen up,” says another. Owner Joseph City’s central plaza, where the Proposal! must bo submitted In Sbpll-—*- -n forms fumlsnod by It* Township, -tnled by equipment data required spacirkattoiis, and shouMf Ua R)------ed to Mrs. Bstty Sue Dupree, Clerk, Woet Bloomfield Township, 4460 Orchard Lake Road, Orchard Laka, Mlch- of opening of bids. rWKiniia required to In one of the biggest such [jtiigleton h a s demonstrations in Mexican his-: the real estate tory, some 200,000 university, polytechnic and high school std- business since dents marched four miles down most per the main street, the Paseo de la ce n ^ y. ,as®°" Reforma. The noisy protest “ated *lth tae SINGLETON gave further warning that the Wy™an L**i1* students, in an attempt to em- ”ea*ty’ 389 Whittemore. barrass the government, may. * * * try to disrupt the Olympic! Chosen Metropolitan Life In-1 Games opening Oct. 12. surance Co. Consultant of the! SIGNS ‘ASSAIL PRESIDENT iYear 1967- Singleton recently A third student comments, “It’s like a family here," These are the comments of Pontiac high school students who had either dropped out or faced poorly in the past. They are talking about a new individualized instructional program (HP). ‘ ■„ ' INNOVATIVE PROGRAM __________S . I . __ resigned his position as a con- ■me marchers carried rigns 3Sfor thatcomparty. and banners calling Diaz Ordaz * a murderer and a'dictator ■JSjgNUf 5 ordering police to quell student Schools, High-1 2 disturbances last month. and Park Junior CoUega and ci«Gd biddar*. ~ T" T Along with red flags and pos-the Meminger School of Com* Th# Board of Trustee* of West Bloom- jmercial Art. fftld reservos the right to reloct any or tCFS honoring ChB GtlOVara, all bids In who!a or in part, and to walvo morphppc PArriMl sierne Hp- 1t It 1t any informalities therein. mareners carnea signs ae- nfflrfnniffflfn-- ini jmanding Soviet withdrawal Singleton, his wife, and four 4440 orchard Lake Reed * from Chechoslovakia and U.S. children live at 365 S. Marshall ----------- -----~Y sue Dupree, j withdrawal from South Viet-and are moving soon to 606 EASY CREDIT TERMS *148 Twin ir Fill Sin, Quilted Button Fria MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING EASY CREDIT TERMS Quilted luxury, finest quality! Long wearing, deeply cushioned comfort. Attractive extraheavy cover. Fully Guaranteed. *78 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS i 12 PIECE QtlEEN SIZE SLEEP SET 60 IN. WIDE • 80 IN. LONG MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING Here's What You Get • Queen Size Mattress * Queen Size Box Spring • Queen Size Metal Frame with Casters * Queen Size Mattress Pad • 2 Queen Size Fieldcrest Percale Sheets t 2 Queen Size Pillowcases • 2 Queen Size Pillows! *128 Twit sr FnO Sba MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING Fabulous low price! Heavy duty^cover. Good ' Fully t ............................... looking. Long wearing. Fully guaranteed. When You Sleep On an “Ortho” You Are Really Sleep-' ingl *59 • Grades went tip from an average aUghtiy above a "D” to a “B” minus. • Average behavior ratings given by teachers increased N -from slightly below average to slightly above average. • Reading increased slightly less titan one year to the ,10% grade level. Students read almost two books a semester before IIP and 6% during the program. „ • There was a significant reduction in six of 11 problem areas,and total number of problems. TEACHERS UKE IT Teachers found the program to be an exceptional experience too. Some cotaments were: “The first time in 20 years of teaching do I feet I’m accomplishing anything.” “It seems I really get to know them (students) , and they get to know us.” “There’s a different atmosphere here. It’s a whole new world. It’s wonderful.” TYPICAL PROBLEMS “The individualized instructional program was designed A 5-to-30-year prison sentence has been ordered for a 53-year-old Pontiac man convicted earlier this month of killing his wife. The prison term was imposed Monday on Robert Humphreys by Oakland County Circuit Judge Farrell E. Roberts., to Improye the attendance, achievement, behavior and academic motivation of students Who were characterized by problems typical of the disadvantaged,” Robertson said. “All relevant data from evaluation of the program gives evidence of its success,” he said. Students’ and teachers’ comments bear out an evaluation of the program, which has been called “one of the most, innovative in the state,” Forty-five sophomores, juniors and seniors attended school with a special curriculum in a house across the street from Pontiac Central High School for six months at the end of last school year. ■ ★ A ★ Dr. William Robertson, coordinator of research and evaluation, pointed out these gains: a Students were only absent an average of 17 days ih IIP for one semester compared to an average of 37 days ih their last regular high school semester. Robertson cautioned, however, that the results could have come from what is called the Hawthorne effect-enthusiasm of the participants in something special. But the program will be continued for the complete 1968-69 school year with $62,311 of federal funds under Title 1 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Humphreys’ Of 229 E. Walton was found guilty of second-degree' murder in ,the fatal shooting of his wife Earline, 50, last December. She died at Pontiac Genera] Hospital a few hours after the shooting. POSITIVE EFFECTS “Positive effects must be first obtained before they can be tested for their lasting benefit,” Robertson explains. Some 250 students, who had dropped from school during the past 1% years before* the program started, were encouraged by letters to participate in IIP, Robertson says. Only 20 responded, according to Robertson, The remaining students were recommended by teachers -and administrators. The shooting climaxed an argument, according to Kathryn 0. Hall, Mrs. Humphreys’ niece, who was visiting the couple. Death Notices - Of the 45 students, 22 were dropouts, including suspended qpd pregnant students. Sixteen had “D” minus or “E” plus grades and seven had discipline problems. .IIP features the psychological advantage of a separate and comfortable setting, Roljertson said. TEACHER RATIO . It includes a reduced’pupil-teacher ratio (15 students to one teacher), individualized instruction, programmed material, small group discussions and individual counseling for both academic and personal problems. Instruction emphasizes the language arts. Social studies, mathematics, science and vocational education are'also integrated into the program. w High school credit may be granted oh performance on achievement tests and hours of satisfactory instruction re-reived. ' , Students return to regular high school classes as their progress permits. About eight returned after last year’* program mid II graduated from high school. COLLING, VERA M.; August 27, 1968; 1364 Irwin, Waterford Township; age 55; beloved wife of Walter Colling; dear sister of Mrs. Eva Pearson, James W. and Gordon Cox. Funeral service will be held Friday, August 30, at 1 p.m. at the Haley Funeral Home, 16065 Hamilton, Highland Park. Interment in Rose-lawn Park .Cemetery. Mrs. Colling will lie in state at the funeral home. Institutions Effect on Trading Is DAILEY, MRS. NICHOLAS J. (CELIA A,); August 26, 1968; 94 North Axford Avenue, Lake Orion; age 53,'dear mother of Mrs. Wallace G; Tatro and Lloyd L. Dailey; dear sister of Mrs. Jack Barton, Mrs. Jens Warwick and Mrs. George Crawford; also survived by eight grandchildren and ohe great-grandson; Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight at 8 at the Ati«n!s Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Requiem mass . will be held Thursday, August 29, at 10 a.m. at St. Joseph Church. Interment in Eastland Cemetery. Mrs. Dailey will lie in state at the funeral home. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Busin ss Analyst NEW YORK - In just four piuch of this asset value is in stock. On the Big Board on some! days now, 40 or 50 per Cent of ! GROMMES, KATHE M..; August 25,1968; 4040 Hardwoods, West' Bloomfield Township; age 44; beloved wife of 6ohn Grammes; beloved daughter of Frieda Langen; dear trading days through last Mon- ^ j, by inStitutions and mother of Margrit, Michael day, more than $200 million shaved from the mfcrket value of shares in Control Data Corp., a computer manufacturer. During these days more than $200 million of CDA stock also changed hands, a figure which isn’t far from the value of an entire week’s trading in all stocks on the New York Stock Exchange not so many years ago. In this time some 1,510,800 shares were bought and . sold and the price uf the stock, called CDA . ftrf short, dropped from $1§2 to $126.52. About one-sixth of all CDA shares were traded in the four days. Just as interesting was the pattern of this extraordinary trading. Big blocks, defined by the stock exchange as those at 10,000 shares or more, account- in certain stocks the percentage 'is much higher. much higher, for CDA is a fa- HOUSTON, FERMAN B,; Au-▼rcite of other institutions, too.) ^ 26, 1968; 575 Montcalm OTHER FACTORS East; age 68; beloved hUs- Other factors add to this insti- band of Bessie Houston, Moose just one transaction on Thursday, when shares tumbled $16.75, 374,000 shares, changed hands. A survey—by Capital Gains Research—of mutual fund holdings of CDA show, for' instance, that, in the first quarter of this .year 41-mutual funds owned 2.5 million of CDA’s 8 8 million shares outstanding. This, remember, is -the amount owned by mutual funds alone. The hundreds of thousands of shares owned by other institutions brings that total1 Susan Grammes; also survived by one brother and one sister. Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight at 8 at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Funeral service will be held Thursday, ^August 29, at 10 a.m. it Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church. Intermentr in Pine Lake Cemetery. Mrs. Grbln-mes will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 ,to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.> , tutional volatility. Some of funds are rather short-term owners of auch stocks. Although they claim to invest for longterm gains, their record of sudden trading sometimes belies this.•_ ; Another factor: Many institutions “obtain their information from the same source, from ed for about 750,000 shares. wholesalers of research. And MOST ACTIVE STOCK On that day. CDA was the most active stock on the Big Board, with sales of 927,000. For such a high-priced stock to head tiie most active list on such volume is almost unheard of, something like a $25 book heading the best seller list. Curiously, although gains outnumbered losses on the most ac-tive list that Thursday by 2 to 1, CDA lost nearly $150 million in market value. since they receive it at the same time, they often trade the same stocks on the very same day their neighbors. Memorial___service . will be Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home followed by an Elks Lodge of Sorrow at 8 p.m. Funeral service Will be Mid Thursday, August«29, at 1 pjir. at the Doneison-Jdhns Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr.' Houston will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting bouts 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) As is obvious from such statistics, the selling in CDA during these four days had nothing ,to do with thetavasionofCzeclKK Slovakia or with any other news events, which frequently are offered as the reason for wide swings. ’ t ^ Equally obvious is that such selling Wasn’t the result of panic by small investors, who never could muster such selling power. Cleariy, this was the work of the so-called institutions. FUNDS, TRUSTS The institutions are the mu-tuaf and pension funds, the insurance'Arms, the bank trusts, the endowments.: they control assets of many scores of * “ lions. Mutual funds alone account for between $40 billion iand $50 billion, and pensionsac-1 count for twice that much, ted This speed, can easily damage the investments of some small tipie investors whose access to information usually is slower Qian that of the institutions. They can be caught flatfooted, as they, were when institutions got wind of a CDA earnings prospect that was poorer than anticipated. And another factor: Many! funds are operated by the same! management companies. Ihej funds have different names but' the same address. It is hard to! imagine that their business af-j fairs are conducted in ignorance of their neighbor’s plan. IMPACT ILLUSTRATED CDA in just one of several situations in recent years that illustrate the impact that institutions can nave on stock prices. True, sometimes their move* cause little price movement. KIRTLAND, EDITH L.; August 26, 1968; 3255 Winlcroft, Waterford Township; age 78; belbved wife of George F. Kirtland; dear mother of Mrs. W. Kenneth (Doris K.) Crowder, Mrs. Marcia JD. Prior and George F. Kirtland Jr.; also survived by two sisters and five grandchildren. Memorial service will be held Thursday, August 29, at 8.p.m. at the Divine Science Church, 1128 West Maple Road, Birmingham. Cremation at White Chapie Cemetery. Arrangements by the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego ’Harbor. LITTLE, J. D.; August 27,1968; 394 Central Street; iage 44; beloved husband of Mary Lee Little. Also survived by tw6 sisters and five brothers. Funeral arrangements ate pending at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. But wide swings are not uncom- It isn’t too soon for Washington to get moving on its contemplated $875,090 study of the impact OT institutional investors, particularly because of their threat to the security of smaller investors. WALDRON, HARRY A.; August 27, 1088; 490 North Perry; age 87; beloved husband of Ida E. Waldron; dear father of Miss Carrie C. Waldron; dear stepfather of Mrs. Alice Obon, Mrs. June Garrison, Mrs. Betty DeGrandchamp, Alfred Pearson and Robert- Buell; , also survived by 13 ipand-The'question is whether the! children and 17 great-grand-elephants should pay with the] children. Funeral arrange-mice in the same pen under the ments are preding at the same old rules of the game. I Vorhees-Siple Funeral. Home. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST . To Buy, Rant, Soil or Trodt U$l Ppntioc Press WANT ADS 6ff|co Hoursi 8 am. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Daadljna 9 a.m. Day Fallowing i First Insertion lOlBS CALL electrolysis or removal of facial hair. Ac Dowell, stale Rcgl,ter, Help Wwitn^ BMjlo t-AOIBS SLACK WAU.OT. Reward. 157 Baldwin. Pontiac. LOST - whit* Mala Toy naadla. silver cellar with blue stone*, last seen Wallers Lk. are*. Ctwkston. “-------' ------s to peppy. 3944133. BUILDER'S HELPER To work tor builder In SoutMl Apply tsiTa m ymm Km. i... Mile Rtf., ) Black west ef Groan-WOtO). BUMP AND PAINT MEN, to ban alt acttvttles of active bump six sM-ssii ______ BODY MAN, SOME kkpfelilHt GAS STATION attkndant,______ per lance, ^mechanic aHy^^UKHned, Telegraph and Mapff.rt * handyman itr. .tiito owtomwiB Holy Wortod IBilt MEN LOST IWALL BLACK dog. Reward.; guarai halide I wages, vac V. FE 5-MI* Lost BLACK MINIATURE Foodie I IDS. KOYB fOK cefetert wearing biiif collar. Last teen In restaurant, ^evenln^ Unlit^o INTERIOR bECORATOR Excellent opportunity for qualified men. Salary open depending lost In vicinity of Kennett Rd., Reward. 335-9SSS. Coit_- IT. GERHARD, male, vie. of ToLHuron. Reward. PE 5-4034. ply 2-5 CAREER MINDED MEN ! Do to new stores opening In north pave need ter LOST: WHITE TOY poodle, 2 yean , old, apricot ears, vicinity -* RajSg • Ave, In l*— Card of Tfioab ^aresT Rewertf. SparkVGrlffIn FuneraV^H&mo' ami i all our many friends and nelnhbori management. A 'salary ana mission that offers better _________ average earnings. Company fringe benefit! and an promotions maos from within me organization, “Salary experience helpful M «| necessary If you have hlg education and a desire to ctssful and wlllmg to w will pay you full Mary a... _______ minion while training. Apply te manager or call 549-4254 evenings. n Chevy convertible CARPENTERS. ROOFERS, I TOT » ^1 *».? «• itSSI Sparke-Gflffln Fwteral HtmT Mr I "a!*f|jout of tan Chevy con-------BRUM A Mrs. Bill Spencer *Ar a' aa™ Perked at VFW Club on Atrport; part time. 02MI2S._________ EdSobltuczyk and all our friends iJSSJftTr nWlt- R*tulF" ,>S,y> CARPENTERS AND axpartoncad and neighbors for their kindness *.^.LmgSrtf!!l P«P«r»- helpers, aver 2S. 07S-1S01. The^Sielmn Brooks>fam?h>**V*m>n<' SMALL TAN^ritRRidR with whltoj CARPENTERS—ROUGH ®tv,nV OSL’TTr MS W IN LOVING MEMORY OF Sari JjjJJY who possod sway Aug., 2 Peacefully sleeping, - resting . Jh*. world’s wssry troubls si trolls pro post. In silence she suffered. In p ----Wence.she bere. —-------------c ‘Till God colled her home . suffer no more. Ssdly missed by Daughter Ethel er Family. . IN LOVING MEMORY OF FLOYD McRath, my husband. Who i— ewey August 2B, 1964. Often a lonely heartache. T COCKER a._ __J years old, vicinity ofHftchory a Frtmbes. Reward. 4734781. PURSE LOSTV sKliWilMILL Fork In Highland. please return identification fo either address or call COOKS AND SECOND cooks, nights, apply Machus Red ... 6*76 Telegraph Rd., Birmingham. ClARKSTON ROOFING an tw nnraiiw m permanent, Steady, hill time employment? With union scale, hospitalization and paid holidays, vacations, pension plan. Apply In parson 7C00! Powell Rd., RstftoO, Mich. ' equal opportunity omployor. STOP! ASK. Yourself ATTENTION MOTHERS!! Arp you looking tor sdmgthlng dl terom? iilil TOYEI No o parlance necessary, we train ye For further Information call — THE PLAYHOUSE CO. FE S-7377 47S-1748 APPLICATION NOW GEING captad fi Miracle BABY SITTER LIVE If JANITOR-PORTER IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR."EJcfton" ________ SSHra LIBERAL BENEFITS, . ««. weekdays, American Plastic APPLY IN PERSON. ; Products Co., 2701 V JACOBSON'S WallodLk. NBEb MAN WITH PltkytDuiS tn- Wo have ““ experience. Real _ op- surrounding "Where will I be, and what will I be doing 5j 1TTW(>> years from today, if l| : ssmbi continue what I am doing Today?" JANITORS, PART TIME-FULL TIME, DAYS AND AFTERNOON SHIFT. CRITTENTON HOSPITAL, ROCHESTER. SEE MR. VESS. LABORER ON CEMENT crew.Ex-perlenced preferred. Call attar 6:30 PM. 682-3373. LOCAL WHOLESALER SEEKING I Opportunity" -------- position, car year attar t —jes ^ald.^reply nilr«n»« mix Need Money?? An International corporation Is looking tor o man to amor Into our solas program with complete training. Full company fringe benefits available, ana an axcaltonl carter opportunity. Wo will guar- WE GUARANTEE $175 A WEEK TO START r of ^schooling ipportunlty to i o management. • canvassing. BABY SITTER *XPER|4nCED. mv horns 4 days, off of Joslyn. Call attar 6, 33M739.______ BABY sirfiRT ...... _______ days, own transportation, awoi----------- BABY SITTER. MY HOME, ISPWM working conditions, goad wi For appohtttnant cot 353-5511 10 o.m. to 12 noon. .— .------to tint" ' EXPERIENCElTWArthiSiweniodi, 25 yoaro or older. NOM apply Richardson's -Perm Dairy, Highland R<< *«x sal Richardson, f FASHION SALES - SPORTS Wear and ready to wear, full sod port time. Soma experience desirable, axe, apiary plus benefits. Hadley's. FOUNTAIN GIRLS WANTED. Full or part time. Cunningham Drug. Tal-Huron Shopping Canter,_________ FULL TIME CASH TER. retell start, good working conditions. Fringe I Benefits. A. L. Damman Co., Bloomfield Plaza, Tstogrsgh and Maple Rd., «64DH. TO QUALIFY: $800 PER MONTH st our raqulramsnts. to earn 112,000 par Ml prove yourself. Ap- BABY SITTER, OLDER WOMAN to Tvo In, own room, TV and both, Mi Ice country homo, 6EM7J2. BARMAID FULL OR port time evenings. Lakewood Lanas 3121 W. Sadly missed by wlto. Electa! 1—Used Car Top Mechanic I I musi os able to wold, yaar around! I work, excellent salary, frings benefits. Good working conditions. Sat Tom Norton st John McAullffe Ford, 630 Oakland Avo. I 1—Experienced . Auto Reconditioning Mon arauunua - , tor under hood cleaning and ptln-l BEGINNING September 2, Ben I ,,n® Interior cleaning and Wheeling.; n it ry-r i ,, . i yaar round steady work, top wages! rowed Disposal Servicer^ end benefits. Apply to Tom Norton, will start winter schedule | _Fo?d, aorowuStd a*»! ponttec1.1** of 1 pick-up per wk. Pick- 1 PART TIME MAN up days will be, same as .T*r.rl!? T-*'! last winter. For informa- cm tm i p.m°7 p!m. tion call 625-5470. su'halbfcFie ijubab. M PER HO. is and paid B Life Ins., s holktoys Ml NnllKMtrd of LAB ASSISTANT nanont position. Young r -----'-*-^grplastics-t— plastics firm sxporla - ------- tunny FOR THE RIGHT MAN, THIS IS A LIFETIME CAREER OPPORTUNITY WITH A N INTERNATIONAL GROUP O F COMPANIES. h OPPORTUNITY AT HOLIDAY INN, Night auditor, will tram. Hours 11 p.m. to 7 s.m. Apply in parson, Innkaopor's Office, Holiday Inn of GENERAL OFFICE ANrt lady lor typing and general office In a busy company. Btosiey to Hr. weak. Paid holMays, vacation, hospitalization. Apply MO [ a^mr^Ganaral Lock, 244 W. Bhafr GENERAL NURSING. WORK nights for Jesuit . Seminary near i. Vacation pay, meela, BAR MAID DAYS 11 a &R«ua% ., GENERAL STORE, M reliable woman, aflat “ T,_,‘n Lake Drugs, RE, shin. Coo toy Airway L BAR AND POOD WAITRESS, Experience helpful but «rU|||W Nights. EM 3-0611 after 1 An tqusT opportunity employer. ™ Light Mocnanical Work TM-im x tt i irCrN r Wlirtii full time ind dwpcndabl DETAILEHS ^”7,WHuro"-^---------------------------- nterested In learning lastlc mold designing K Dla Design Sarvics 2790 Auburn Rd. Pontiac, Mich. END WORRIES With A Payday Payment Let Debt-Aid. professional i counselors provide you with fMsntiai money msnagsm service that has helped thou.. ttwlr blll probtoms. Gettlr Draftsmen Junior and Senior Civil and Structural HUBBELL, ROTH & CLARK INC. 2709 Teleoraph Rd. Btoofriftold Hills ____ all your bill MO your problems: DEBT-AID, Jnc. M Community Nafl. Bnk., 2 FE 2-0)01 Llconsod A Bonded | AMBULANCE PERSONNEL OVER 11 FULL TIME ONLY . EXPERIENCE PREF. NOT NECESSARY BENEFITS _____________________ ______:£ „„ DISHWAStlER AND BUS boy tor INTERVIEWS WILL BE—CON-, evening shift. Apply at:--— DUCTED AT 79 E. HURON ST. 8 ELIASBROS. Ptmllac. BET, 12 NOON AND, aj BIG BOY BESTAURANT * ftalagraph fc Huron MACHINE BUILDER EXPERIENCED TOOL MAKER EXPERIENCED LATHE HAND TRAINEE SOME SHOP EXPERIENCE GRINDER HAND TRAINEE SOME SHOP EXPERIENCE CALL FOR APPOINTMENT NOW I Mr. Frank MacAlpine ■ Holiday nn t . ____334-2444, 9 a.m. to 9 O.m. _______, , , . iSm 0«r “Sfrrtod1 SE.hitt'CEll "p^to^Vm.'. ' mip. ^UtL no reliable. CalM7AlS20 between I backroom vtork,' hospltallza'tlo'n and g,Rrl*"“.not "9casioTv. 612-SI p.m. and 7 P.m. _______| paid vacation. Good starting.-01* Parts Manager j station, i^ith Experience Needed at Once) LLOYD BRIDGES DODGE lb ltd.. Union LakK'363j'lS4T" E GENERAL OFFICE, soma typing. Interesting work, fxc. working conditions. FE 8-0429 or FE BQ449. <• GIRL TO LIVE IN or out, close to St. Mika's Sdiool. Nights. Mon. thru. FrL 330-4W6.______________ Al R-con- Dixie Hwy!, Clarkiton ___GENERAL o_____________ bu accurate typist and good ---- ----lamatlcs* 40 hr*. 5 experienced* iT, morning 8:30 |a S DANIEL MILESp Pi DISPATCHER WANTED Must hsvs typing (xperionca, go •1 figures, able > to handle mt Contact R. Corbin, SSS.1970.— It — wo do Itt" 3*3- public accounting i HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, ‘ DRIVERS Four handicapped chlldr *«,r ar ■ I. OR 3-S202., FE 2 MICH. 48011. R< intxmdable, E q u a I Opportui r, ’ go an ii isirtLi a bb* i Employer, excellent working A , dltions. Call althar 585-2684 or 515-idenc* Wl1 60 400 for IwT^MW appyr t-ammar witn service siarion _ FOR a CLEANING OFFICE operations, a^riancad prafarred ding, full timig local rats, but not wiwtfil. wt will also k ___W Pontiac Press Box C-19, i consider gas ilstlon nvanagars for ;Hiuyy>nsn or equivalent. *9« u reSr** CBmPl*lr P°nU.c°.nnroc^^^-34oP , other pnNT|Af pppc-' f ^ TELEVISION., STWO^ALISMBn, ! frinS' benefits. Cali Mr. Moors, PONTIAC PRESS C-64i 'PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 48056; ORDER OESK AND OFFICE I Industrial. Steady lob for over 30. Send comploto return. .11 ) pay information to PontlaC Prtst Box 35. , _________j Ft PART TIME DELIVERY help. I TO BELL SMALL appliances, .. or over. Hourly wago plus commission. Apply in parson = WEIGHT SAFELY « ASPHALT RAKERS AND laborers.1 KIDDIE KASTLE, Oav Cai Opening Sept. 16, locoh Andrews Lutheran C Telegraph Rd. ■ Caters to w i Rd. __________muwm Friday, Pram 7:30 0,m. to S:30j p.m. Pra-roglstratloo and open house Wed. Aug. 28, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Sat. Aug. 31, from l1 p.m. to S p.m. For further in-lormetion coll 549-3432 or S76-3432. | G W G A R B A G-E P 4 C'K U> SCHEDULE FOR VILLAGE OF LAKE ORION. Effective the week ' " ‘ Garbage will b* inly each Saturday.; nr» pickup Saturday, 7th. 1 Man, tralnod, w ability, and several y perienct In PA Systems Ironies to sarvics dnd ............ I ''.oloctronlc aqulp-l —7—*— Public! Dig program. Vacation Pay Holiday P— _ i at setting up and running ~ general machine shop equipment. SgytffBB!^ Mr- ^’i VETS ARE HOLDING tl.. . ----- August 31, $ept. 1 i, agl Unlon Lake I BOX REPLIES —At It a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: C-lD, C-13, C-l«, C-28, C-28, 034, 054, 044. Schools, Cetl 64A9300, E_ auto SERVICE permanent full time openings foi experienced men in the foiTowinc classifications: Tire Mounters Lub & Rock Men Mechanics \ Many txcallfnt company benaflti Including Immediate discount Apply Personnel Department1 Second Floor Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL n tqual opportunity amploysr Lift Insui____ Retirement Progr: aerial boskats, ch . BAVEY TREE EXPERT C0- 3844 Rochester Rd., Troy .1 JO 4-6007 or MU 9-2200 7 AM-5 PM I stter l PM WMltf_____ j EXPERIENCE^ GAS ' AND '»U burner service man. 04.50 par, 1 hour. O'Brisb Heettn0. FE 2-2919. | EXPERIENCED MODERNIZATION! MANAGER ir Franchised Du Clark Dll I. Refining Corg. n the Pontiac At iiion -manager a. FE toll Sy, 0-0251. MercsV Construction j EXPERIENCED MARINE mechanic. Steady, full tlma workar only need apply. 335-5660. ________ EXPERIENCED CRANE oparator, ‘boom typo drone. FE 5-0141. EXPERIENCED TRACTOR '■ ■ mIchanics - With own Holt, goad pay, staady employment, ----v ------------ benefits. Apt 6---Egulpm. __________ ' Ttlursiph y., Pontiac, 2. Experience I 3. Excellent I surance; paid vacations- Apply in person, to. KOSl Heating G Cooling Ce„ 500 S. Telegraph. Pontiac. EXPERIENCED FURNACft Installer, yur round omploymont. Hospital Insurance,- paid Vacations., Apply In parson to Kast Heating G Cooling Co. 580 S. Telegraph, It Interested call Royi 7222 or 260-6557, attar 4 Equal opportunity employer DRAYTON 'PLAINS 'A TRUCK MECHANIC I Huntoon with , proof of ago. Apply > on a a.m. and 4:30 p.m. at !. A10l^, TtUy, fN&z v- ' t,i EXPERIENCED BRUNSWICK setter mechanic, top ulary, vs._ li tlons. Blue Cross Insurance, sick H Bay- Apply 114 Orchard Lk. Avt. l.1 EXPERIENCED COOK, MAN AUTO PAINTER, GM experlance, noj ^— work,' frlngi - » Ken Dudley. Bc_# — ■-**- Haupt Pontiac Saturday g|||r ^ I >mc., Ctorfcstom toStoT SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ."ThoughWiil Sonrico* machines- Staady workers re s_99Aft Good working conditions and FB.?™ benefit* Wolverin* Mac SWACTORY ^WORKERS VoorheesSiple EIIMFBAI MOMS 1A CC O UNT1 N MEN NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED PHARMACISTS "ssnoftt * lima to loin I established . t program worth dollars. Excoliont salary, ir medical and dent *'— I, life insurance, paid ... , vacations, plWlt sharing plan. Call WO 37-74 anus CikO RE. 612-6670. ,T.!,2'Ji'on'i' CASHIER Pull tlmo. Night Shift. < furnished. Benaflti. Vacation ties work, year arouna pay. Prater mature parson. rtt XmmS: Boy -37M. An oqusl opportunity Totogroph and Huron mr. v'. 1 , CHRISTIAN TEACHER NEEDS tody TURCK MECHANIC, EXPERIENCE to give tender loving cars to ' necessary, llbaraf benefits, Mr. yur okl boy. Mon., Wjtl.. F Sowers. 682-3000. Mornings only. Tuos.« Tnuri. TURRET LATHE OPERATOR. Some daj.^Gontlee-.WatttlnslsubdlvlsIt ?uT&W.3fVS^Pb.r.; COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY dunlng “.."“.L...” Bushman plant. Paid., vacation and holidays. Rochester, WIM train If Mceseary. Apply 534 i - ..^3=—. ^-Tnlnrototn. PROGRAMMERS SI™2LJ Counter Girl Tad's of Pontiac A 0 counter girl, 3 ideal working In parson only. PRESS OPERATORS OVCRTIMR-PROFIT SHARING PHMRiMIVR STAMPI NO CO. 725 NAKOTA . ROYAL 06 , 14 MIL&-COGLIDGE AREA PERMANENT FULL TIME position for Wqtor lanced cabinetmaker. Seauty-RBa Cabtnats. 673-1191. PORTER. PART YtME, steady employment, paid -~||EIIWuauG working conditions. Dry Ciogttwis. 66W0W. REAL ESTATE Will tralni 2 more sales people handle large volume of business ... sales, trodts, new and used houses and commercial property. Full time only. Guaranteed draw, bonus, and commissions. For ' WANTED; YOUNG tor caruf In OR___________ V7$ S.AfPiT -,,nd*rd Eltctrlc Co- e!2S; Ln otortrksl^wholsul- CURB GIRLS FOR day and n 3CKTAIL WAITrEIS . MECHANIC \r Brunswick macnmes. rocK ■ lskswou LopstojlM W. Huron. nights, apply Marttui Rod WANTED^ EXPERIENCEp; DrtUO- 6«6 T6l«Brodh Rd.. Blrtnlnghf —toem-n, apply; ;?Ch«3(s’ COSMETIC ‘ GIRL. EXPERIENCE FROM 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's Pontiac Mall HOUSEKEEPER, MATURE WOMAN INTERIOR DECORATOR Our custom drapery department has a career opening for a 'woman expsrienced In Interior decorating, custom bg|Hg|roMto sales in related WONDERFUL OPPORT0NITY~tor meals’furni^ Pojd .jllui I —man to urn ex- The Westener Beef Buttot. 41tl W.’ ilgh Income. We have' Maple Rd, Birmingham, 436-4767. ibraTdwTwb! CLERK-TYPIST I will train and assist; SrSl1, 0ffic« experience helpful, permanent work, paid insurance: holidays and vacations. Raply *-Box C-16, Pontiac Press. Apply Perse_HR SECOND FLOOR Montgomery -Ward PONTIAC MAU JUDY lee wants y N G BACKGROUND,1 laborers; Cemetery Ut*_____________ AAujit Sacrifice r choice lols In but loc White Chapel Cemetery, iw market value. Coll way it Ml *■ and mltc. Accounting education,' experience desired. MtaTbtont, Pontiac area. ESSlcPrm ,8X ^Igsas barber WANTED, steady, Onleii'Ferndsle Eigployers Temporary Service 65 S. Mein ... Grand Rlvbr 1330 Hilton Rd. WHITE CHAPEL. OAKLAND Hills. BARBER' WANTED,' JOE'S' .Barber| EXPERIENCED S1DERS ■P^rtu^ Oton E^^Grevu <55. j Shop, University Drive, 662-6232. I Top woges, profit Sharing, w§6«o |retirement plan, group hos-blockmmonwanteo. pitaiization, yhar-a round w 18 * •! -—r*—-------—■ {work, poia workmen's coin- Wlglsnd. 332 W. F ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING! e friendly Uvlser. phone FE 2-5122 AWIP GARNISHMENTS Get aut of debt with our plan Debt Consultants HtLLANDDALE CAMPSITES 1 Mile South of M-46, Kingstoi Atony sites, ovoltoble tar Labi Day, s.tr" - ^ ^ jBim [ Pontiqc Press I Want Ads For Action pensation. Call 332-5231. FULL TIME CLERKS, rotell store, | good working _ condlttons,__ fringe ULL TIME HARDWARE t clerk. RateH (tore. Fringe bent Part time , clerk for nl( Saturdays, and Sundays. A. Damman Co., Bloomfield Plaza fTOtaproph ami Jtooptol. CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. OR 4-3105 MLS Crou1 Intorvlaw, 363-7259. _________ 1 YEAR-ROUND JOB, EXPERIENCE preferred, Johonnot Landscape mg' and Tru Service, call Oft«r 4 p.m. Real Estate Salesmen wwmm hontos,' tradti' YOUNG MiN TO Oparata Automatic “9-NL®”,T. Screw Machines second optrotton* —yyr«2 ■ Earn aT a jgbd * w. learning a lop trade. Fostorla Screw Products. 99S S. Eton Rd. A Ship ___________ riiwyf^ DENTAL ASSISTANT; t to 16 hrs. par woak, experience desirable, rets, required. Call 363-5907. RECENT HIGH SCHOOL graduate, or part tlma student far land survgyor's ^sslstent. Nonsmoker. FOR INTERVIEW PHONE. FE 8-9444 EXECUTIVE OFFICES 15032 GRAND RIVER AVE. . OPEN 7 A.M. TO Id F.M. 6145 WEEKLY SALARY To start otter to all pllcents. For personal Ilf Call Mr: Backer 9 < TELEPHONE SOLICITORS Would you like to do better? Do you Hove a pleasant voice? If this is you, you con earn a substantial income selling newspaper subscriptions over the telephone. CALL m 338-9762 GARAGE A N D MAINTENANCE Wparvnor. Exparlancad . -man needed to take camPtoto charge ef large totorettW mroil.vttiiE.ba** working knowledge ef dlewl and gas aqpip. and trailer repair. Salary open. Raply to Pontiac rroBG EEfcCiRCT^ ’ , * v equal opportunity emptoyet and puns for progress com pan-Vacations, rettrontont ana ell fringe benefits. Apply st < Orchard Lotto Rd. or 56S4 Highla 6Sw-t ^ulSli^cutttaS” Farmington area. Wa — Drtunhy ompk 5 p.m, Ully. iperieNced uuEDB7 Shafl MACHINE OPERATORS DAY AND NIGHT —45HIFTS^— Experienced-Semi Experienced GRINDERS MILLS DRILLS LYND GEAR AND TOOL 3*1 SOUTH STREET ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN i^vaJuaT* Rutty* g Bulwng^co/HBlp Wanted Female 10 Women Needed PUNCH PRESS OPERATORS ~ PENTsiL CHAIR tiOE > RFre ,_______ fill In assign; ...BHR Itlsc Plant madlcal departments. Industrial axgananca required. NEED YOU NOW. Far 4-6 Week!. 'MALE or FEMALE. c.F&tt£rr*r' Salesmen MEN'S CLOTHING AND SHOES FULL TIME OR FART tlME Career opportunity for the a yryttye' petyjp why | DENTAL RECEFTIONIST ASSIS-I TANT, 31-35, accurate typist, *' 1 telllgantLnaafc-roilabla, 2 girl tlCb. &tiVlbirFtofis. 635-391sT DAY BARMAID ghd waitress krontod ^^^^^^^'W^SSr^jjft WtSar In Lake .Orion, Albet's inn, ceil I reur Corpora _Rest«ur»nt, earner 693-17111 tor Interview. -! DAY HELP, GENERAL heusewerk, k Metamora sru. Call *25-3303 or mmT - I S. Dart Hwy. Gri is south of Flint. LADY TO HELF WITH Ctoriuton °" " *"* perienct preferred. Day end nipt shifts. Apply between 4 a.m.-6 p.ir Employtrs Tamp. Service Erosrtenca prafarred ;2trt7 Grand R I ut aManflal. Ea MAXIMUM EARNINGS pu1c9m|I ororoutm HOSPITALIZATION Apply in Parson Employment Offtca Basement Hudson's e ASSISTANT SERVIcd STATION ATTENDANT, experienced, pert tlme memlngt and weekends. Walled Lake EMB. tSMnr ■ STATION ATTEND Roy's Walton STOCK MAN WANTED, retired ir protarfg>*rar_fik m ngwt GUARD IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Fart pat dnd full ftma -1 Mt. OMMS and Detron sru. Union j scato paid — Blue Crass, vocation ahd holiday benefits. Cell us caltect, — Bonded Omni Services. 661 E. Grind Slid. Detroit LO BOSK work. Raply Pontiac Press, Bax C- 4EV FOR GOLF cauroa outdoor work.. Moray's Getf and Country SIGHTING APPLICATOR WOMAN FOR COIN opm-atod Iwur. i.m»nawt«». AFTERNOON AND EVENING tl and part-timt. gala yncgtBwi, ■ Cross, mutant dining roam, RsiuWant, T331 w. IS Mtto and Croaks IfwlpKciliGVit Ice. Full-time 40 hr tollant working con ply Grlnntll's Pontiac Attention , Housewives ENJOY DRIVING? Want to Maka It Profitable? dal Ivor a Pontiac mss wwnr Kauto each sftornor between 2:00 and 4:55. COMMISSION R MILEAGE SALARY SIM TO SISt per weak — ' -aflabla car «8ha wo< of flee and maka * t-.. - ■ roiiiL su to n SALES EXPLOSION "NEED HELP" salesman. CaE Avon waro'mwt Oon't delay . . . colt fba n^ooif/conVctPontiac Press Circulation Do- dishwasher TO work In Blrm- LADY Ingham, 12 to 9 p.m. Call Ml 6-6186 between 2 and S p.nr 21 wlfli Bood driving Equal Opportunity Employer, excellent working dltions. Call aper 565-2684 Of ' inhMwww —' * ■ ELDERLY LADY TO baby Mf for *3 boys, mort for home than wagu, call attar 4 PM, 4744)233. Clsrkston EXPERIENCED TELE P N6.NE solicltsrs to war71^-11 or your homas. EXPERIENCED ♦rom our at all G32-3053 a I ENC ED GROCERY _ -------jm Supermarket nights, 82.00 par hr. Must h car, 667-2E61. ___________ EXPERIENCED W A I T R E S S _ . wanted, good tips. Blue Cross and other benefits, apply In Parson only. Steak and Egg, 5395 Dixie EXPERIENCED «RL for general office work. Typing Mt required. Full tlma. Apply at 143 N. Saginaw or phone 331-4091 tor Information. 2 boys ol live tn er out 682-8959. LADY for repairs and alter-Tstkin work. Ogg Clsanars, 379 E. Pika. FE *tan. LP.N. $3.50 Par Hour Plus many other fringe benefits, full or part tlma. Uhlan Lakg area. “ 3-4121. .XUNDl.. _______ . parlance not nacasssry. IDRY HELP FOR Ironera, s Many banetits. Pontiac Laundry, A.iyiL Totograph. _________ Live-tb 1 babysitter, -swrajUL woman. 646-1899- Caffittiari. 1:30, EMifc. ; ___ MAID WANTEp'*FOR MOTEL ’work, call 333-7906. TT MAIDS, FULL TIME, DATS AND AFTERNOONS. CRIT-TENTION HOSPITAL, ROCHESTER. HOUSEKEEPING DEPT. SEE MR. VESS. Help WnrtaR PomIg 7Halp Wanted FtmaU Reafly?*! partmant Today. 332-8181 GUARANTEED EARNINGS (all Taya * Gifts, Airo-Oac. Fraai Supplies and Hostess Gifts. No ax- • parlance or cash nsaasd. No, delivering — Ha CoHactlno. Call Groce Hedges 6934127 or wrHB "Sandra Parttas^TTIW S. 4 Mila, Oahratt, Mich. 41212. > INCREASE YOUR PRESENT INCOME Work part-tima or full-tima. Choose your own hour*-fronr 8t30 o.m. to 9:30 p.m. Aga no ■ barrier if 19 or ovar. Ho $^r|anca nacasHry. C Telephone solas work in circulation solas. FOR INTERVIEW CALL* AIDY 338-9706 P-10 jL Xm THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 28, 1068 JUuo ■» part MODELS WANTED MM a home to taka •ami Invalid, private room, l off. flexible, wages ample, n* moatly evenings. FE S-SS aft ■ MEDICAL ASSISTANT AND I laboreotry toch. tor * mat doctors, formal trstolM — parlance datlrable,' full time, i only, good titery, paid ftolk,-— and omar benefits, medarn offlca, MWBI, . NOON HOUR SUPERVISORS Birmingham Public Schoola ara li naad of naan hour supervisors a work In Ma alamantary school! M. hours aach school day.. 6100 par Phans 444CTH, mg NOW THAT YOUR chlldran ai going back to school da you hat time an your Hands? Wa hat openings on sll shifts for woman do light , factory twrk. Pa holidays, vscstlon, health andi II; Insurance, and ovar-tlma. Apply person Jim Bobbin's Co., 14 Mil itovensan Hwy. Troy.____________ NURSES AIDS WANTED, one ft day- aMR--end-one-tor eftamao •Iso part-time .relief aid for a. tarneon and midnight shift. No 'rotation of or malntanar policies, hospitalization employee benefits, and good rates with merit Increase. / - and pleasant place to -------------- Orchard Lk. Resthavan. EM 3-7T«. ....... n Lake area, EM WOMAN FOR PERMANENT posl-i s------------sing and laundry, MS-7144, Transporatlon essential. MALCOLM PALMER HOME 30301 W. 13 Mila Rd. MA *-2295 SCR BOOKKEEPING MACHINE operator, 5 day* — * |Uh ~ Waterford, *23-1333. . OFFICE HELP, STEADY -... „ dependable, soma bookkeeping re * quired and typing. No shorthand. s Apply In person, 314 W. Walton. - Office nurse assitant. for .PHYSICIAN. *■ --- PART TIM! VENDING Attendant - for Lake Orion *“ *'—----------- 12:30, Mon.-Frl. Ml HI ■ Box C-U. Aufnmatle »«t«llar. m America, IKJORotunda Or., Dearborn. ARE yOU RFALLY ’tying? Or H existing? Call Mr. Foley, YOI REAL ©STATE 07441363. ARE YOU ---------IR ,3_ llADY ... Cell Mr. Fotoy, YORK R ESTATE, OR 44MX ■- AFTERNOON — PART TIME, I woman with car - — da newspapers. Far Interview call 0B1.________________________ BARTENDER NO a EXPERIENCE ‘‘‘5^Xrs^,,, ply Oaklan f>RESSER FOR DRV cMUm department. Ogg Cleaners, *** ;ms industrial aiift viPMI—M RECEPTIONIST switchboard operator, small pr gresslve company In Troy pleasant working condltlena, ci *47-787a atk far Mr. williams. doctor's offlca, Birmingham a, must have own transporta-L Salary open. Call Mrs. Oakes, vumw ccM,ion‘i . REGISTE medical 2ff*"al hospital I 335-7821. h ESPONSIBLE TIABY S I T T E ' wanted, 5 days waekly, my home '. Drayton Plaint area, call fe , 3541 bat. 7 a.m.-S p. RESTAURANT WORK - Days or nWit, good salary i fringe benefits, good fu t u r RELIABLE BABY SITTER In Perry Park vicinity, mutt have own tram. Call attar A 335*295. - RECEPTIONIST _ SATURDAY on- - Ty, Donnell's *3241421._________ -Receptionist- SALESWOMAN, FUtt'“T1WE7 S * days, no evening or Sundays. Good nay. Anderson Bakery. 124 W. 14 Milo, Birmingham. Ml 4-7114. SECRETARY FOR LAW office, .* downtown Pontiac, jagej experience iH 330-~tfl1, tor appointment. SALES ’IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR 'FULL TIME AND SOME 30 HOUR -— CHILDREN'S x-N ■GIFTS M CHINA AND SILVER ' DOMESTICS MEN'S SPORTSWEAR ; EXPERIENCE P RE F E R R E D . • LIBERAL RBNtFITS AND GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS, APPLY IN PERSON . ..... JACOBSON'S S3* W. Maple Birmingham BITTER FOR i CHILDREN, vicinity of Will Rogers School, 3 to S P.r 335-7903 after *. ' SHIRT PRESSER EXPERIENCE or wa will train. Plash Cleaners 330 ' W. Huron. SILK FINIshiR Pfrt DRY cleaning plant, steady, guaranteed aalary, plus many fringe benefits, apply . 134 S. WeedwardTBirmingham . ffYLIST FOR PROGRESS necessary. Call 334-403* for ■ polntmant. ■ tCACHCR WISHES RELIABLE woman with transportation to MHi tor 2 chlldran. Good Ison araa. • tEMPORARY WORK FOR STENOS - — DICTAPHONE OPERATORS • TYPISTS SR, AND JR. — PI ■OPERATORS - COM. ■t OPERATORS - KEY PUNCH . OPERATORS — FILE CLERKS. . ' WITT AMERICAN GIRL ftS S. Adams Rm. 124 *42-3655 ST. 45 WORDS.per lonal Insurance, org ! __j hiring typists *with »_ clerical experience. Many benefits and paid vacation, excellent ad vancemertt opportunity. Phona 33: 4874 before naan tor sppolntmant. >r part time. II to 45. Amf Apply Bull and Boar jrant. 1012 N. Hunter, Blrm- i fWUTRESS — NIGHT SHIFT, top - pay, meals, uniforms, paid ----- . ; jjahs,. Hunter Heuaa 100 N. Mi *0 .Ra"* ...fRESS FULL TIMrf-O Harbor Ear, Kaago Harbor, ■llrnmna- ", A... iY,„. 1 WAITRESS WANTED;. Neat ■ !,i pearance, nlifif aw*. Apply Awhjuo Ban 137 Oakland Ava. | Pentto WAITRE WmrtedPswule t Help Wonted M. er F, »anpliymel A|stlss t Wanted te tent WALLED 1AKE SCHOOLS a seeking-' EteNientery adult alavgraund suparvltor Elementary end I WOMAN WANTED. MORE tor he alary. Companion lor d ), *10-4044. Attar 7, *2*-ll7t WOMAN TO LIVE In to a ' ll age chlldran 3*55412. woman For general work. Parson's Drugs. 1000 Ai Rd. earner at Croaks. I appearing. Intelligent, Ing. only *145 WEEKLY SALARY WOMAN FOR office counter I holidays, pel ether fringe ire, 332-1IB. Your "Road to Success" DO you have an AVON repretei tatlva calling on you regularly? van don't, perhaps It Is an ops Itory which could altar you a BEAUTY OPERATORS, must good and know how to cut • • i wlas. M7-5S75. MANAGEMENT TRAINEE 14 W. MSSBT? A<**a!rm Ingham -647-8880 ROCHESTER COMMUNITY SCHOOLS Excellent Employment Opportunities Sick Leave Allowance Hospitalization , Paid Vocation .... Paid Holidays Pension Plan BUS DRIVERS-PART TIME CUSTODIAL-FULL TIME Apply at Board of Education Office at 4th and Wilcox or Phone 651-4210 Monday Thru Friday — 8:00-4:30 P.M. - SALES REPRESENTATIVEi Finest company, no experience needed. lUtO anti expanses. Bob Thomas, 334-2471. Snaillng tnd sntlllna. SALES TRAINEE: around work, no wyym Should You MAKE AN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE? NOW IS THE TIME I Michigan Bell Phene: 373-3745 SALES TRAINEES $600 plus car, exp. Guaranteed salary with cor mission, car, expanse accour Excellent opportunity. Fee Paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL .310 S. Woodward, B'ham *453263 SECRETARY: LIBERAL beneflfT SHOULD YOU MAKE AN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE? NOW IS THE TIME Michigan Beli Phene; 3752*15 WANTED TO DELIVER ... samples of grocery product. Piece work basis, door to doer. Car needed. Light outdoor work. Earn vary good money. Apply Mk?'— Employment Security Commli Pontiac Office. S WANTED WOMEN, ALSO young boy, not In school for full or part time work. Call Mr. Hot Dot — 4 9298. Sales Help Male-Female 8-A COMBINATION ’ WOOL AND XPERIENCED SALESLADY curtains, draperlts snd br*-■- “—‘--n Birmingham. Irving Kay't |ob. Griff's Grill. 4? N. t, »£*1«3 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED FULL OR PART TIME rtsl estate. licensed or will train. Over 500 I vacant Mi, houser —' — paresis In Oakland ■I ‘-ads, check ou Ion without IL_. terms. Call Sheldon, 425-5557. HELP WANTED M OR F SALESMEN , _r vary active real astata office Plenty of floor time, alto wa wll (.».«» Mr license. SHINN REALTY-------------- Atk tor Mr. Thomas SALESMEN man tor aalss position with, large firm. Offering draw while In training In company school. >10 "* to SI5.H0 first year. Call *07-0760 RAY REAL ESTATE 2 DESIGN ENGINEERS $5400 FEE PAID EXECUTIVE MGR. TRAINEE Ms PARTS Ideel location tor right Jack .Parks, 334-2471, : InaSlhg. Public Relations Trainee unMmTted M. W SX& tion with upper management. Call Share Living Starters PUBLIC RELATIONS TRAINEES Company car and expanses, as tensive public contact, with UP limited patontlal. PMLQaldt INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL cdLLidi graql; lakaslda apt. «KM7M_____ WOMAN TO SHARE country horns ----------OfW *■ MA 5-»27. 134-im/iniiww girl. « SECRETARY: TAKE charge girl imall branch offlca. 5433. Merwln. 134-2*71 Snaillng mailing. 32 Apartments, Uaftrtlihei 31 RETAIL MANAGES WANTS fr bedroom heme or apartment In Watertord area. MA 5-10a. VALLE D LAKE CONSOL. SCh District seeking hauelng tor n toadtors. Call Parson net Off! 1 to 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS. FARMS, .BUSINESS PROPERTIES. AND LAND CON* TRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor .158 N. Opdyke Ft M1*5 Urgently need lor Immediate aalal Pontiac MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE STEN0—$390 Active organization soaking girl with goad typln. g and light shorthand, capable at working with the public. Call — SUPERVISOR: Energetic man to til In to company plans. Will train, f7,000. Bob Thomas. 334-2471, Snaillng and Spelling. ________ TRAINEE: LEARN high finance. G >5,700. Sob The..... Snaillng and Snaillng. TYPIST: Opportunity unlimited lor ----rt trainee. SIM. Kav Roy, 334- KSnalllng —' contracts, mortgages or buy homos, lots or acreage outright Wa will give you cash tor voi equity Our appraiser Is awaltln your call 674-2236 McCullough realty >40 Highland Rd: (AILS?) ML ____n Hot Paint agpllanw open dally 1 to ? p.m. Woodrow------------ all Cash For hornet anyplace In oaklai County, Money In 24 hours. YORK WE BUY Ht TRADE OR 443t* FE S-717* 4713 Dixit -Hwy. 1702 S. Telegraph BUY OUTRIGHT SAAALLER homo In Avon or , Troy, or Madison TYPIST TO $400 The only requirement for INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL Adams & Adams 647-8880 YOUNG TYPIST—$70 It you are a H.s.G. and typa 50 w.p.m., you will be trained I* ganaral offlca work. Call — INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 10 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER Pontiac PE *-f?47 1342 Wide Track Dr. Mon. thru FrU ? a.m.-Wadr1:p^m-7P.- CASHIERS AND CONCESSION help needed. Pert time and full time. Apply Mirada Mila D r I v a -1 n Theatre. CASHIERS, CONCESSION, ushers, and offlca help. Must be It. Apply In parson only attar 1 p.m. BLUE-SKY DRIVE-IN THEATRE, 1150 OPdYka. JIGHTS. EXPERIENCE I, or will train. CM 3-0*11 _________ TIME, apply In per so Clewson-Troy Elks Club, 1451 I ■to irRd.,Ttqy.__________ rd Ops e both poly or D«H|aR.’( 2280 Union Li DAYS OR NIGHTS. EXPERIENCED COOK WANTED. Good wages. Excellent hours. Wonderful wportunlty. Call aftar «, $7200 PLUS CAR, NO FEE CLAIMS ADJUSTOR TRAINEE A collage degree and a dttlre learn ara all you naad. This Bh Chip company will do the rti -Ceil—---------— INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $9400—BE PROUD Represent an International Corp. With broad advertising. Top "100," respected world wide, car and ex- E SHARP, CAPABLE G with credit department, --- Kathy King, 332-9157, Associates RETIRED GM EXECUTIVE « --------lima,^2 days^a wk.^ ■ GOOD DRIVING record helps this position, ell driving will be Pontiac Area, $5100, call Ant-. Rook; 332-9157. Associates Parson- ,-1 BOOKKEEPER, capable of aitumlng responsibility, exc. location, Sim Call Anglo Rook, 332-9157, Associates Paraennal. ________ ACCOUNTANT TRAINEES $550 UP Soma experience and soma colleoa required. Fee Paid. ESTATE. OR 440*3. Full or Part Time Over II, Dayman, concession, Blue Sky Drive-In THEATRE 2150 OPDYKE BOOKKEEPER: ■Esaiwatl groo . Kay Snallln loray's Goll i 180 Union Laki I Country ( .... ......... available. _________ vacation, Blue Cress, apply Duly lurant, 1331 w. Maple, near 15 and Croaks Rd. c REAL ESTATE. LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED, > manage *2 unit motel It MIDDLE-AGE OR RETIRED —-------to work at fruit si Cl MANAGER IT Burn Heights, 10 employes, be sMa to keep double books, use standard accounting methods, payroll, coat control, etc. Give full information. Bex NURSE ANESTHETIST Moflarn 300 “ yVir*”has'. Plush atmosphere potential tor twice that. -’Shfttlnff -i Shelling. ____________________ COMPANY REP. Salary plus bdnus, exp. Top National Carp. t“’“- - * produc* * Instructions-Scliooli ATTENTION AUTO MECHANICS CLASSES START SEPT. 1 Gl't and nOfl-GIf* ENfeeXiL NOW WART —-TRAINING ON ACETY-ARC WELDING H EU-ARC WELDING AUTO BODY REPAIR WOLVERINE SCHOOL uiphiMn't niri*st Trade School ht School Income Tax Instruction Associated Incema fax aarvlea t ----. .. --------1 m arhool. T - for both 'a annual tax « fth. For enrolment call *74-2312 -write 4135 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains 48020. Licensed by State of Work Wanted Male______11 LIGHT" HAULING ANO movIng. Brian Realty Inc. 623-0702 Multiple Listing Service 5268 Dixie Hwy., Watertord I HAVE A. . PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT ________*74-1*98__________ BUILDER I N T E R ESTED In purchasing building tola. VAL-U-WAY BUILDING 334-3531 LOTS-WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUE LIGHT HAULING AND odd |obs, —z. rates. 335-11S2._________________ Work Wanted Famale IRONINGS WANTED *73-7744. MATURE WOMAN WANTS STEADY 5-day weak baby sitting near Pontiac city bus line, or naadi transportation. Phona 334-3943. Late mferences: , sitting; *12- _____ jr land contract. Call Clark Real fe stats. FE 3-73S3. RAY REAL ESTATE Now hat 7 offices to hath ^our community. For bast SELLING TRADING BUYING Your real, astata today, < RAY REALESTATE 689-0760 RAY REAL ESTATE ----^3T=CT5DCT” COUPLE WITH Want to Sell Your Home? Buyers waiting — any area. DON'T DELAY CALL CHARLIE TODAY LAUINGER'REALTY WANTED: BY PRIVATE buyer, 3 or *-famlly apartment In good location, condition not Important, LI 7-8759 aftar 5 - - WANTED: Listings an vacant land and bouses. In ths Clarkston and Waterford araa. Clarkston Real Estate 1 '585* S. Main MA 5-5821 t iOOMSAND EATtl, Drayton area, atova and rafrlg., carpeting and drapaa and garage. *73-3849. AMERICAN HERlVAfi APARTMENTS Accepting applications sv*lL°O0. "ffltoehibfan" 33*5 Watkins Rd. *73.51*8. ..... _M 3-2123.________ IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Coral Ridge Apts. SECOND-WILCOX ROCHESTER 1 BEDROOM APTS. $145 Mo. PH.i 651-0042 BLOOMFIELD MANOR NEW DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS 1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 bikHndMtD includes; in deck — pool — air i__ AU utllltMaaxewt electricity Medals Open li AM4 PM 585-1125------- ALUMINUM ANS WOOD, windows repaired. Pickup and deliver. 4-2079 er OR S-9498. President Madison APARTMENTS 1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 in R between 11 and V Madison Haights near J. L and Sears Oakland Mall Mila R Frem S152. Chlldran welcome. Phene <82-9031 or 357- Rent HoasMs Furnished 39 2-BEOROOM HOUSE, GARAGE. 1 of aluminum, boat. Gas heat. Sei June. *74-tS92 altar 5 p.m. ASPHALT, SEAL coating, 7--i. Free ast. *7*4)722. ___ ... Round Lk. Rd. .. _______ 3*3-9*23, 427-7577.________T 3-BEDROOM, LAKE FRONT, modam, gas heat, gsraos, *82-3*9). BEDROOM, UNION gas hsat. Sspt., to J lacerltydae.tlsO me. DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, 335-4980, ring pavi 4, W«1I AWARDS, NAMEPLATES, I Dura-Plate Co. 1972 AA-15 villa, *27-3270._____ LAKE FRONT, BOAT, IDEAL teachers, 3 bedrooms, 2 L...... family room, 2 fireplaces, well furnished, phona *82-*341, or new * room Lake rttONT TEACHERS OR SAAALL fi Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 BEDROOM, 1V5 BATHS, BEDROOMS, SUBURBAN living, data to schools. . MICHEALS REALTY *27-3840 FREE RENT PLUS WAGES for services, woman, housework, no cooking, riOIPWI care tor lawn' and toad horses. 10 miles W. of Pontlsc, mutt fui ~ ' recant riTarene#. FE . 4-/257 EM 3-*824. REE RENT* MODERN LAKE FRONT Big Lake, 2-bad room, - ----- paneled walls, year round. 35*- NEW HOME ON THE LAKE. 2 —ir Waterford. 353^7*9. Apartments, Furnished J7 1ST FLOOR, large d*sn,\ Bsfchalor MOTHER WANTS B. 1*88. _______________ QRiON TWP. .lRONS-to-Ja_4n JBt ^—t niiooi. t--------; : t NURSE available, 142-ROOM APARTMENT to elderly .EXECUTIVE SEC.-r$500 Dynamic boss needs a top-m— secretary. Convenient location, exc. ■working conditions. *" •““«*« FEE PAID Management TrainN National firm, rar,J —— 144 W. Maple Rd. Adams & Adame 647-B880 FOOD SALES MANAOER: Fin 304-2471 Painting and Decorating 23 LADY'S DESIRE INTERIOR to Watertord *r“-OR 3-8304 pc GENERAL OfFieE) Sparkling girl gats this uniqut poslftom , 12*5. Sue Miirwln, \ 334-2471. Snaillng and general hospital, located, ...w fff lljiMiii WMII“ 1 Immediate opening^ Snaillng. GENERAL OFFICE $325-$450 Receptionists, typists, accountingl mensurate with t x p a r I a n c t. I darks, bookkaapars, variety at Generous fringe bensflts.Jncludlng positions In north suburban arts, retirement plen. Michigan's famous Many tea paid. summer winter vacatlonland INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL OtnmaTQt. ux eww vrxm TO PAINTING AND PAPERING. TO next. Orval Oldcumb, *73-049*. Uphoistaring ?4-A 20 TO 50 PCT. OFF a selected group at fabrics --=4. y „ v ] erica. Cali n nr Tree nimlli Com'l.UPhoistery. SAGH&AW.GENERAL HOSPITAL 1447 N. HARlflSON . SAGINAW. MICHIGAN 400*2 person. 875'Baldwin A - WAITRESS -SATURDAY ~ NIGHTSr 1 inn. 3481 EHzabath Lake Rood. BAHTlPil' ETWWaRAPhgl^ tor, Real Estate Training Evening classes starting September 9 through November 11. Aff-plications will be accepted for those soaking a career in tM Real Batata profession. Call npw for daialls. Openings limited. ROYER REALTY, INC. ---OXFORD: phone *28-2548 j ‘ Ask lor Randy Davisson '*' HOU-YTbhena *34-3204 i. T Ask tor Norris Walls _ ORTONVILLE-GOODRICH - *27-2881 A8k tor Jim w*~~ Autematlen)ar>d| Measurement RESTAURANT PERSONNEL. , f counter girls, bakers, porter o linen laeW .IIWW aid untton tortiMad, paid Blue Craaa, L' insurance. Apply Graanfla Restaurant. 725 S. Hunter B ■ mlnghem.; ;, IQ S. Woodward, B'ham GIRL PRIDAT! Lika activity? Pawls? Fast pace? This lathe job tor you. Start now at BOO, Sue Merwln, 334-2471 Snaillng a ' furniture s! nan me 335-1700 tor fret estimate li home. Com'l. Uahelttory. Wanted Household Goods 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND a* pi lances, 1 place or houssful. Pearson's. FE 4-78*1 ■ _ HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good furniture and appliances. Or ' have you? B & B AUCTION SOW Dixie Hwv. OR 3-2717 WILL BUV 6R INVESTIGATOR TRAINEE $450 PLUS BONUS Earn while you learn. All you m< Is a high school dwoma and desire tor public contact. Call — ThOMM toiling MANAGER: Bright amblttous dir with Interest In fashion. 53*8. Su Marwto, 334-2471. 'SianthB SELL your I tlon, 7*05 19*4 to T9*t TRAVEL TRAILER, U' to W *34-1149, CWPBW BRASS, kAplAtblkfc starters and generators. C. Dlxson, OR • 5-53*9. m I i |£| MARKETING E8*GINE1R: NEWSPAPER - _85 cents par Lhs. dallvarad., Raval Oak Wai Paper and Metal Co., 414 Hudson. Royal Oak, LI 1-4B28. U. S. SILVER_gOINj^>AYlTiSl !E 5-4492 WOOD WLANt'R~M>D WDOB w tools wantod.' *52-4128 or 334-2471. shaHlaa ai MARKETING-NO FEI Move now durlna. pension period: Call — international personnel SMALL 1 BEDROOM home, >30 ■ deposit. 375atommwHWriHW *82-77y45.a Women i«to 'call aSar^iw._____ ROOMS, DOWNTOWN Pontiac, 820 ROOMS. PRIVATE entrance M bath, utHItles turn., 300 N. Saginaw. I ROOMS ANU UAIIIi small NMN wekom*, >35 wk., 875 dep., Inquire at 273 Baldwin, ealt 3S >100 dapa*lt. baby APARTMENT; West side, 3 largo rooms, .private bath, twin .bads, suitable tor 2 men. Quick possession.,,Also 1 room ef-ticlsncv apartment. 331-9134 er avanlww SS7-573*. FOR GENTLEMEN, FE 2-5*42, 53 LOVELY ROOM IN private I., lady only, board If needad.Unl Lake area, no smoking. 343-0M4. MALE TEACHER WOULD like to rant' roam In hit house to another professional. >25 P» Wk. 338-0053 NICE LARGE FURNISHED sleeping room On first floor. Kitchen privileges. 338-0157. 115 Stott, lorth and factories, su-nz/. ORE MOTEL,; ;BI»w|lI ^j3C;, cy, >35 aar _ wask. AAsW », TV, talaphona. 7*9 &. WOMEN, SHARE OWN LIVING ROOM, BATH, COOKING. EM 3- LARGe AREA. PLENTY el parking, rut. rates by th* year._ MICHEALS REALTY ......... AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OP M—ai w&M. WMni ,111c, CPA ate. Excellent location Sit I Woodward north of Maple. 447-S4 Rant ResIebss RrBRfttT 4y * 4615 DIXIE 25,000 aauarp ft. war mSStaSnsTddg. *•* « Immediate possotalon^MA 25,200 SQ. FT, MtolSlVal.. Site HioEBt 2 BEDROOM RANCH Nlca locstlon, _ blackj top strut, large Ipt. gaapaat, 314*0#; 2 BEDROOM RANCH 2-car garage, *io,*oo, ti,>00 dawn. proviof bids, with parking on pit* 130x140. Contact inw Annan paiaonally- Annett, Inc., Rtoltors 29 E Huron St. 1 338- Office Open Evanlngs fc Sunday* BUILDING FOR BARBER SHOP lease, good- ■*'»••** no a petition In • hm. plenty virfet; c*n FLATTLEY REALTY Rd. BEDROOM. ©! APPROVE^ In country. W-TdO*. . iaeoROOM airTJOLLAE tali*, Keago Harbor, gat trad. 31*5 Kanrlck - 2-BEDROOM, SO* 14* . LOi, msi Immsdlats possession, 2-1399. er 179-9139, ne Jack Ralph. FE S9H1. OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE, » Mm |g>ri UAri{jw|||gwL Southfield, Sale Houses brokers.’’ .-JfX-: ’ _ , ' . 2 family MONEY^kar, ranting for 070 weakly full furnltbatf# far Mich. 100 feet to iAoo hi. fe«t. Secretarial iarvlca tveiltble. 393* 1, 3 AND 4 BEDROOMS. n#wly decorated. $49 down Yj« . feWf lust 12.500 daunt an land contract.1 s^SmTiH D^YtftHTTarw comer lot, 12x«l living room, 815,300. 83,500.down, to assume 897 paymanti Including tax** and In-Buranca. OR 4-1541. RtEt Busintis PrepirtY 47-A 30x50* BUILDING WITN LOTS at parking. W. Huron, FE 3-79*8. Iggft MmIrdDARd!*iiFlW 2 BEDROOM HOUSE IN wry Park. New fumaci and _c»rpet' newly decorated. 810 900, PE .5-0434. ASPHALT PAVING Residential and commercial No lob too amall. Work guaranteed. Fru estimate! PONTIAC ASPHALT CO. Basamint Waterproofing MASONRY PAINTING OF all typai Boats ami Accassariat BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcratt, I.M.P., S11 var I I n Mercury outboards and atat-drives. 12*5 S. Woodward at Adams Rd.______________ Beach Services Cement Work GAR A_____3$I tq. ft. FE 4-2876, ( ______________ **2-1719. Dressmaking, Tailoring A-l PAINTING A— PAPER HANGING _ THOMPSON do you want yeur b_ ..ERP Ron Beardsley. MW14*. PAINTING ANb DECORATING. Fru ntlmates. For quality work I call «73a538. INTERIOR. Guaranteed first 'dsu work. John McFall, 682-2273. JOHNSON PAINt WORKS, 10 yttrs 'experience, tor ’— —— “ Plumbing A Hunting M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED —#a vest roughing servi it 673^366/ 67^5462. IXCOfOtiMf 623-2128. Bsckhoe. Basements. *74-2*39. HOT TAR, BUILD UP ROOFING, 15 ----1 experience. Robert Price ______nq. FE 4-1014. Fru estimates. b NEW ROOFS FOR OLD HOT~RCfOP. Shingles, 24 hrs., fru estimate, repair rr-*- -- - — BULLDOZING, D-4 _____OR 3-11*5. *74-3218 FRONT END LOADER by hou QUALITY ROOFING, ALUMINUM -‘-“ng. fru ast. *02-7514. I CHAIN LINK fi “I repaired, ., 33jf-0297, Sand—Grovti—Dirt BLACK DIRT, VIBRATED procast, ''“■led and dallvarad, 7 days, 120 lyk* near Auburn, FE 4-1731 or ACKER A-1 FENCES ARE now ■ ~~N price*. 25 vrs. In Pontiac f. Fru *St. 682-5482. PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5932 Dixie Hwy., Watertord *23-1040 Floor Sanding Breakwater Construction SHEET PILING BREAKWATERS INSTALLED. 334-7*77. 6U,U“ CONSTRUCTION CO Brick Block & Stone LICENSED BUILDER, alterations, ■ and rar— 335-3894 ______B TOO SMALL! Brick — Block — Carpentry uminum Siding Roofing R. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING, _ Floor Tiling Clarkston, Floor Covering CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING, -noleum, formica, til*. Carpeting ... - Psrrv, FK - ■— House Washing Carpet Cleaning APPER CARPET SERVIC low rates, 333-470* Insurance Homeowners - Automobile — i,ife -Motorcycles MobtteHomes-Businesses ANDERSON & ASSOCIATES 104* Joelyn * PE 4-353 A-l CARPENTRY, NEW and repair, 1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR - CABINET MAKING AND rapalr ----'U OR 3-1402. CARPENTRY AND CEMENT WO free estimates. UL 2-5252._ CARPENTRY - AjLL KINDS, I me make your home more fun tlonal and more beautiful than, m-5$& CARPENTER WORK. RusonaWt _ Its but. Recreation roams, celling tiles, wnnlce work, kllchsns, roofing end siding, window replr-mant. Atumlnum trim. 3*3-2337, INTERIOR FINISH, kltchans, unel-40 yurt experience, FE ^ LANDSCAPING, SEEDING. MMmmiBrii" ~ tractor t------ Gilbert Landscape MASTER feWGUSH CRAFTSMAN, specializing In all types at carpen-j— —-nasonery; brick, b'“*-cemant. Price and i exceeded. 336-9430. PAN.ELING, ADDITIONS RE-MODELING, ttl-0512 or OR 3- ti ARE CARPENTERS, ,de all work ours* Ives, specializing in room additions, rec-rooms, roofing, aluminum swing. GuaranM* work-' BRICK, LAKE FRONT terrace apartment, tiled bath, large rooms, ■beautiful view and grounds, ideal for 1 or 2 girls, or couple, 6150 per month, hear Elizabeth Lk. Rd. and EFFICIENCY 2-ROOM, all. utilities —iq condition, from *50 BsJOawuk. 10 332-2096. Apartmtnfs, UnfundibBd 38 BEDROOM, 3 room apartment. East tide, comer of Prospect lag Goltng, >20 weakly. 343-4*45. BEMOOP6, mm) WITH security deposit.' No Spokane. 332-4134. 2-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR AAall Carpeted. Appliances. Air and IP,' conditioned, heated. Rec. om. Adults, no pats. Frem $140. Rant Office Space Of beautifully paneled office , for laaia. Separate^ private . attached. Walton-Baldwln Util it let Included In.rapiWWafcla rant. CALL MR. TREPECK, *74- IWI|wniSa1' i",'contractpr7”CaH dey ’ or 3*NBri«, Tfi-lPP ar ■W-iii*, CEMENT WORI 3 ROOM APARTMENT >30 peri waafc, l 5 iuuni apaHmant, m weak phis W»W jjjqlK: utilities furnished. No pets. lnqi carpeting, utllltiu,' Drsyton Pli araa, *lS mo., no chlldr*n er pi :' ''BEDROOM' BRICK,, Wolyarin* BUYING-SELLING-LbOKING-TELL IT TO. 260,000 People With A Pontiac Press WANT-AD Phone 332-8181 "driveways, S%^iss5: BLOCK AND CEMENT WOKE. IJC^PORCHES l COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL id residential. Block and parnsnl GUINN'SCONST. CO. 334-7*77 er 391-2*71 CUSTOM CONCRETE CO. is? itonable. *23-1372 ai FILL SAND LOADING DAILY 58 cants per yard. 430 Wll ROAD GRAVEL, BEACH Sand, fill sand, stone, top soil. Reasonable prices—fast delivery. *73-8849. Septic Tank Service Tree Trimming Service 1 TREE SERVICE BY B A I ------mete. FE 5-44---1 AL'S TREE SERVICE, REE CUTTING AND cleanup, fra# estimates, FE 1-11S5._______________ -Call Dave. 851-2289. - insect Centro! I. C>H Spraying. *74-3945. *23- I broken Concrete, Blaming wans. Free estimates. J. I4 WlWhifl. FB M316.______________ TRIMMING, REPA$R> REMOVAL Spraying, fertilizing free estiirletef 1 «■ c TPCC cceuirc _ ---...............3*3-7295 A-l LIGHT HAULING I reasonable. FE 4-WS3. LIGHT HAULING AND ODD lobs. Phene 335-4M*.______ . LIGHT HaOlING. REASONABLE RATES. 338-126*. : LIGHT HAULING 6 LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS, garsgas cleaned. <74-1242.___ l,IGHT HAULING, LAWN SPRAYING; tertlllzar, waad RAILROAD TIES _____/ood lumber, all sl» general uie. 626"HS3. tar id front and loading. PEI- A PRICE TO SUIT YOU, light haul-Ing, anything, anytime; tree trim-mlng and ramevil. 23*9049. THOMAS JAMES liACH. Brkfca, blocks, and cement repair. UdM hauling and moving. PE 29*52, 472 TAl BOTT LUMBER Glass service, weed or aluminum. Building and Hardware supplies. 1825 Oakland FE M595 Moving, Steragn LIGHT AND HEAVY hauling, — structlon clean up, rest, rates. FE 89*45, FE3SSECMBS824. SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving ,ap*claH*te. FE A4t*4. Truck Rontnl Trucks to Rent W-Ton Pickups l'^-Ton stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT SemlTrsJlers Pontiac Farm' and Indtisrtial Tractor Co. 625 S. WOODWARD a 4-04*1 FE 4-1441 Open Dally Including Supday BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walla cteaned. Rus. Satisfaction guarantead. Insurad. FE 3-1*11. Mewtr Servict CHET'S PORTABLE ------OT wrought Iron, bitem truck Mrvlca, /damwltlen wetfcTiwBdgM. 1 FRANK VENICE/AND hte orettestra “ formerly of ladle stations WJBK 2' - WKMH furnish 3 to S F‘— THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 _________ large i corner J o 75'xl50'j new alum, tiding, outtlde maintenance, Ideal , retireei, price tn.too,*3500 do HM Dixie MWYT m 623-1400 OK 34455 A&um- EM 3414$ 1 ■EDKOOM WW» 3-- | owner. $17,500. 2130 Pine Lake Ri gtewn663-4554. t-BEDROOM,. rtrORY brtcfchouu. 1 years okl;’ family room W£3m<«ri 6 Spacious Niw Homes By ROSS Available about Aug. 28 2 RANCHES—2 LAKE FRONT SPLIT LEVELS-2 COLONIAL HOMES IN (1 LOVELY COMMUNITIES) $30,900 to .$47,900 . itichiiding Lot MODEL OFFICEt 623-0670 Open 14 dally. Sun Closed Frl. LAKELAND ESTATES S. Telegraph Kd. fb 605*1 bJM shaded with 14 maple I treat, IS apple trees end orchard, JVk car oarage, dining room, 300• S ROOM RANCH xg%% fessi: $13,890 wM8fr tfOMES AGAIN WE HAVE 2 and J bedroom homu on land contract, alto FHA many 363-661: 5W AT ROCHESTER S4EDROOM BRICK RANCH — family rooT UMjaa — —Intaniyjh .. _____ . car attached garage, country lot. Asking S34,300, tertns available. RETIREMENT RANCH — Aluminum swing, r *--- excellent condition. BEAUTIFUL 14' Beauty Rite. Homes HUNT00N SHORES $25,550 Colonial with 1.2S3 1 1 to 6 p.m. C at 47a4l34 01 Models open Monday-Thur*:-. day, 4 to * p.m. Sat. A Sun. 1 |o 4 p.m. Or call Dick Stier (----- ------144-7773. BUENA VISTA HEIGHTS I u‘ 5 drapes, of tha ____ home including carpeting. --------- wnn piasierad walls, completely fenced confer lot, and- a 2-cr-garage. $16,500. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Shaldon B. Smith, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph Rtf. — 333-7848 — BRIAN'S Beduty Rite Homes PLEASANT LAKE WOODS »««SaTiS8!S comnunltu*mT “TflS ,h* mw,v “a^ i COMMERCE AREA only NUN FHA COSWAY REAL ESTATE 681-0760 n Orchard Lk. (At , Rd.) Cass Lake Privilege! 9 Ort* homo with bulh- u«t bo*uen", r*dwo°d paneling. ART DANIELS REALTY 1230 N. Milford, Rd.... , Highland Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 . ^ or BY Appolntmont 3-bedroom, family room and 2-ci MKrw streets, curb, putter, sidewalks at cBy water. Drive out MS* Crescent Lake Road, turn right Crestbrook Strut and model. DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE . 6734 I Highland Rood (M-59) Stfo Housts H0LLAWAY REALTY •wry as-i to aw— HollowayRealty Co. IS Milford Rd.. High 1-684-2481 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Raalty Appealing snow white tromo homo on extra large comer M with lake privileges. Among tint nomes. Living room k carpeted and draped. 2 nice bedrooms, kltclwr ; Is largo and has built-in even era range, breeie-wey, IM car garage pas furnace, Priced right. Show, ay appointment only. $14400. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2SS3 UNION LAKE ROAD EM S-320S____ 363-71T HIITER NORTH SUB — New I r 'll, full basement, aim sr garage. 1*0* 165 ft VACANT Aluminum elding ranch, new gee furnace, 7 bedrooms hardwood floors. Aluminum S.S. payments YORK REAL ESTATE WE BUY WE TRADE FE 8-7176 OR 4-0363 1702 S. Telegraph 4713 Dixit Hwy. I PRIVILEGES — V WEST SUB LAKE FRONT -— | rooms and bath, fir had. $18,500, farms. WE BUILD — 3 bedroom ranchers with oek floors, full basement, alum, swing. AH Mr S144M7 on your M or wo have lots. Can n C. HITTER. REALTOR. 37*2 6427. a Rd. M .. THE VILLAGE OF Oxford! I bedroom homo with bastment and fireplace, I17-M0, *2500 down. Pmsossnlon Immediately. Phone 6W534. oft. 5:36 n.m. IRISH HILLS 3 bedroom 1 clary completely furnished In Esrty American Llv- J.S. 12, $24,500. HAGSTR0M, Realtor t° 4C3MUr°" EVES. FE 4-7005 Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 priced Mow the DOCTOR'S RESIDENCE, rone., . —— IT deft. Completely carpeting and drapes. DRAYTON PLAINS Rancher, three bedrooms, 1*61. Large kitchen, SVk bat.______ living room with carpet, drapes, large fenced lot, *vycar — ATI A1 condition. Lake ~ priced for quick uk Broker. BB4514. HK: SCHRAM QUICK POSSESSION Immaculate 2-bod room easily.. be 4). r7“ - aluminum Mdbq market tor »aio. List With SCHRAM And Call the Van OPEN EVES. AND SUM. 1111 JOSYLN AVE. FE M REALTOR M Serving Pontiac aru *or » vw KENT 49 NOTHING DOWN 227 WILLARD room bunaalai*. — gas Iwot SO closing coats moves you In. WRIGHT REALTY OAkLAtip lAKp VIEW. JOTI 37X14 living room, fireplace, 1 garage, utility and known. price 622.900. Sheldon, 635-5557. ORION - 2 BEDROOM ranch on paved road, yjjvlnp room, prlv. n Long Lake, $11,H furnished lot, land OUR PROGRAM Is designed to leva you money, doolgn-plan-construet now hot Years of know-how will uve money. WrIM Mr Information to Albee Homes, Inc. eluding large lot Mr only 119,71 KING-PHIPPS AGENCY 628-1274 SolB Houses P—u MALL AREA It whan this lovely doll house located. AtmM hew paneled i a ml* home is Iwi 'siMof. Has LAKE FRONT Fabulbua Is the word tor tl sprawling custom built ranch nmlSiwiL MMnvwon. Bum an area of tlnalr“ Mat hat lust about ova with gorJ —— - MIL. 6384M Avon LAKE FRONT RANCH room brick rancher, living pm with wall to woll carpet, tchen with bullt-Tns, m bath*. II basomont, fireplace, 75 it everything e ft ,___ .jste could aik to incoma bracket calls f «0 home, why not call us d leva M aim* you this h gir5ux REAL ESTATE 37137 . 673-0200 4511 Highland Rood (MS*) GILES SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE A pool table room for dad and tha boys, a party room for mama and tha girls, you mama It, n't got It, ths whole family will anfoy mis om, I side, hurryll Roed lust norm ACREAGE 5 acres on A of Buol Road, Coll ut today. ARE YOU A Gl? are, yot ./ter* It It. You c Clauds McGruder Realtor ___JeWwIn FI 5-617S Multiple Listing Service Open EASTHAM BRICK COLONIAL 1*63. Large living ■oom, kitchen with .._ , -jms, tM boms, plus ... 13' family room with fireplace, full ----- -----water aoftnor PRESTON BILT-H0MES AND REALTY double garage attei large tot. Clow t ana Pontiac Norttwr Owiiir. ternu. 3364*7*. mt Realtor,__ ROCHESTER SUBURBAN — 3 Incinerator. 2Vi car sprinkling system ixlras. Fries and tc excellent Waterford i H to woirearpotln rgo tot and ivy a l possession! Wl AVON REALTY EXCLUSIVE SALES OF WEINBERGER HOMES „ 142222 3324755 4624124 KINZLER FINE LOOKING Inside and out. Yea, you will edoi owning this spacious 5 room cods, shakos bungalow. Haa modernised family kitchen and pawled 30 S recreation room. 340 ft. ft. deep li uS.soo." Large Family Special 3 extra largo bedrooms, 1 acre .. land In the country too, 115,500. Listed by Dove Swan. DOUBLE YOUR MONEY This Incomo property hoo 4 ms down and 4 rooms up. Both l full baths and attached 2 car garags. A real bargain at 313,500. Lot us show you. Bill Eastham, Realtor 5*20 Highland Rd. - (MS*) M Waterford Pies* ■ . 474-3124 kitchen with huilMi____ 4W---bathe, -tiled basomont ana 2 car attached garage. Anchor fenced rear yard. Plush carpatlng, custom draperies, water, softener end loads of extras. Lake privileges. Owner moving t o Florida. Just what many hava bun waiting tor. Batter see a—^ VACANT-* 13,500 Extra sharp 5 room ranch, ___ at edge of city. House completely remodeled, walls, kitchen caolwts, etc. New carpeting In living room, kitchen and bath. Now gas furnacs and water.- heater. Cash to new mortgage. JOHN KINZLER* Realtor 521* Dixie Hwy. 6234335 Across from Packers Store MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE CAST CITY VACANT , basomont, fenced yard;. $12,50 ?hl* XtolTl^U^'hiS NSWE.Snd \ym faki BLOOMFIELD HILLS located on the East ecMfifln- kirat lot. Gas htat.._3 bedroom 2-bath, tr tlac. Includes alum, storms, and ' W^00 cash. and porch* treed IS, FLOVD KENT. INC., Roller • —‘Dixit I. $41,500. tsss| Wideman VACANT 4 BEDROOMS Immediate possession can bo yours with this largo Mmilv noma located In tha Drayton Plains.—i includes porch and 3 — ly $10,500, termt to $u A. Taylor Agency, Inc. I HIghlaid Rd..(M4t^ OR 4430$ F.H.A. APPROVED mom ranch, full ld|nM sraoe^ ^About SS3 Mo. Owners FOR SALE: OUR very comfortabla ----L 5 rooms, 2V4 csr garage, tto i, on blacktop road. Phone FIRST IN VALUES , RENTING $78 Mo. $10 Deposit LARGE DININ - AREA OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PRO-, BLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. 1 OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. LAKE FRONT — WOODRUFF —pSpr ' uotf uuii/ waf roww. Redwood sided, flroplaco, good Excellent retirement homo. LH eer* HOWELL Town & Country Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT . Mtla WALKING DISTANCE TO (•need FISHER BODY Si PONTIAC MOTOR .Good 3 bedroom home, largo living’ room and dining room, with and wall-to-wall carpeting. SHINN REALTY I* Crescent Lake Area: Zoned M ft. frontage x 4*7 due with 40 ft. Building on|y *17,375 down, »nt«go x 4*7 deep. Vac* *3,050 Down. M5* between Cass Lako Road i Pontiac Lako Road about 1 aero ft. on MS*. Located tor busini Ideally. COHO AND RAINBOW Salt Hbgsbs________ 49 Salo Boosts LAZENBY 0 beautiful ■tot. Trots ■ outstanding Val-U-Way OFF OAKLAND Extra sharp 2 bedroom homo ivy cor garage. Lika now carpatlng to IM large iMng room, ““ venlant kitchen wltn dining natural brick flroplaco, cat._________ formal dlplng room, breakfast nook, largo 11X12 kitchen that hot many coblnats, in oaths, carpotod bedrooms with walk-ln closet, dltsiod-ln Jalousled sun poref * casement has flnlohed room uuottoched garage. Call for LISTING NEW US ban home. 6 corner lot. Nice sin Hvlni alw dining room, largo uj|o|— with load! - — room and glassed-in front '* $U.95o] R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open dolly *4, Sun. 1-5 4424 W. Walton - OR 44301 Mattingly no-way to th* garage. It's located on a quiet dead-end strut In ths Auburn Molghts area, and It's available to a qualified Gl. Full price It $15400. THtNK YOUNG Located In tha village of Wolverine Lake, this 4 room brick and aluminum sided ranch has r“ gradients necu— the ydung at Ih isery to pi aluminum storms room,Kseparate dln^ig rum with doorwall to balcony, and a family room arc great lor antortolnlng. Situated on o nicely landscaped^ lot with yours for |usf*$21,*00. YOU WERE SMART TO WAIT Until wt listed this 3 storms and screens, garage, and a screened tn back porch. Extras Include all carpatlng and drapes. You will like the Close-In location, and It Is avatlabte' to qualified Gl. Full price is $14400. DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY OFFICE : MODEL —6824000 OR 4-356$ $ LAKE PRIVILEGES 3 bedrooms, built—1*61, basomont. Large kitchen, IVy baths, largo living room with carpet, drapes, largo fenced lot, 2vy car garago. A,! condition. SZLSMi Broker. 565-0514. Drayton PlolM. Quick Pos-sesslon. FRANLIN VILLAGE On this beautiful N . Paradlu, with Private Lai oouth ot Traverse City alSQ. Is a beautiful 2 bedron temporary homo, wlfh full ......... end oil hot - water heat. You will I nevor^ find (a bettor • paradise tbaa ALSO DRAYTON PLAINS Rancher, 7 J rooms, 3 bedro closets galore, family room, atta 2W car garage, patio. Ail carp and drapes. Large lot, txc< garden Mil. L TODAY. SOUTH SIDE — 29* CENTRAL. „ - — -------------- rooms and both, 2 bedrooms, St,750 412 W. HURON ST. With $750 C- H| ------- “ —■“- • I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 334451. 335466* ANNETT COZY BUNGALOW Garage workshop.. Term*. SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES MODEL ' OPEN DAILY 9-V SUNDAY 2-8 P.M. ttefui luxury ant. carefully mean more In That's why you can still naw home of your dream your lot tor only $1*400. you bring your family a... .. ... spect our modal at 1052 N. Cass TLaka Road today. Sato* -------------- down and balanca at $10 eve. » mvnrii. Walking , dtetanca to —~ .. _ __ _ _ moral Motors Truck Plant. | /^"IT 7* T IT •w™ CLARK 165 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. I ___ ... _____......... . . , Corner lot, 2 car garage. Term*, walkout base- I UNION LAKE BRICK separate djn-|3 Bedropm rarKh In excellent i fireplace, eaparate r - ^KB. ~ | AVON TOWNSHIP: 3 bedroom renen, lVa baths* 7'n Kpdrnnm r«nrh wl car attachetf garage. All rooms; aas heat n recreatton ““rUL'" fihMrJS SBmhSm *XTj car ESTtel. 'oT"extrVs!* pOT egg»Jjy.J«LAlWBll furnished. No brokers. S30,i yard, landscaping, awnings a piano thrown, in. Call now tc thle cutle. ' Multiple lilting service Brian Realty Inc. 623-0702 BEAUTIFUL 3-BEDROOM nice wooded lot, many < pleesant lake privileges. 62 Evening* 4 also 624-5112, Mr. Hyatt. HUBBLE ASSQC GAYLORD IICE 3 BEDROOM plus jdormar X^°non1hrth,%i. li down poymont, easy terms. I 2621 or FE 346*3. MR. DEVELOPER. S60 OCru, form house, 3 acre lake, targe creak running through property can make lho lake over a mile long. Take a look at this om. MY 2-2*21 or FE 146*3. GORDON WILLIAMSON L. DOEGNGES MANAGER APLE E. BIRMINGHAM BEAUTY RITE HOMES LAKE ANGELUS LAKE VIEW ESTATES flow storting savers! now homu In mis picturesque community at fine homu. Located om mite north of Walton on Cllntonvtlle Rd., turn right on Costa Mesa. appointment. Call Dick Stier aF 6744l|* or S44-7773 tor complete Information. BEATS RENTING! approved, owners agent 674-16*8. NER, CLARI I ■■ Sbadraams, l1 attaciiad garago,,661 — oru In walk-out blllfll fireplace. 110x150' : woodac $29,500. 625-2042. BY OWNER, , ________ ...— ®— ; "'*ythv formal dining room, IVk completely flnishod b a eon.------- carpels, drapes, 2 car garage,. In Rom^Sr^*1**' water, excl ecliufs, 2 ViVles from 1-75 expressway. Call 1774231 .■ ecpolnwitent. PrjoA f26, ■-■■- 2*6 W. Kennett Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 GOOD CREDIT NEEDED 2 bedroom ranch. Full basement, gas Mat, :2 car garaga. F.H.A. approved. Agent tar owner. 674- HAYDEN NEAR OAKLANO~U^ Attractive-J. munlty water, $14,900. NORTH SIDE. 3 bedroom ranch - lull boumont, gas hut, it end sower, $16,500. WIXOM. 1-year eld 3 bedroom brick ranch on % aero lot, 2 baths, family room, many custom features, *32,160. J. C- HAYDEN, Realtor 3434404 10735 Highland Rd. (MS*) ___tfe mite west ot Oxbow lef— HORSE” LOVERS: Wo hove MODEL' HOME OPEN $AT« SUN. 1-5 ANYTIME BY APPT. 3 bedroom brick trl-tevol with 2 c J. c HAYDEN, Realtor 163-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M-3N W mite wost oTOxbow Lake MODEL HOME NOW ON DISPLAY Open 1 to 6 dally except Frl. gg w. Yolo St., 1 Mode west Baldwin. MOO down and clot cost. 30 yr. FHA mortgage, bedrooms, largo living room, i hut, 40 gollon hot water ta country kitchen and dining roc oak floors, full bosomsnt. tl_ bailee copper pjumMng. Parsonson LARGE HOME 3 bedrooms, formal dir wg kltchan, natural nm ‘•----pai, ^ jiM 6ayt, NEW HOMES * AVAILABLE NOW DESIGNED FOR HAPPY LIVING. Youtl find charm “ ------------ prestige and pk by Pontiac* to 2 FAMILY INCOME *7,406 I* the full price at this It coma on Shirley Strut. Has WYMAN LEWIS 38T Willi IOIISHO — bswaorno) approx. Clerkston, on 4.7 Ctefkoton4 adloolt. ”ii*466,’~"iandj . - HOMES BY BQQTH. IHC; ■ BELA I RE HOMES, INC. YdU'll like their modols - and -... mSu~N c4 Kuo modofi°at SnsSTOlS^ VOF TOfi iJitoru|WATERFORD, i|Wf> 0*1 the Dlxjo n«ssssr? ^MEDIATE POSSESSION^ Hwy. at Our Lady CMwBd" Church, - — — ANGELUS LAKe VIEW ESTATES. . family room 1362 W.CHURON ST.L ESTATE*634S50 llropKe*/metoorn'kitchen, jlk 'both*! ----^:^..rE^5Sn.Mr.‘»,m I HILLT0PSPLEND0R 3 bedroom custom designed ram Swimming pool* Huge HALL aiwn*with! BRICK TRI-LEVEL In tha In t*6>. features 3 WATERFORD 3 prlv lies ceramic bath BUD" WEST SIDE Brick ranch homa with attach., garaga, walking distance to shopping cuter, splc and open condition, 2 bedrooms and dan (or 3rd bedroom), flroplaco, separate dining room both, big kitchen, toads of beards, toll basomont, Iroc-room heat. Priced at 627,980, make opener. Reduced fb TRADE JACK FRUSHOUR REALTOR WE TRADE ELIZ. LAKE ESTATES This new listing futures bedrooms, toft boumont; wll flnishod roc. room, alum, siding, garaga, o fenced and shady backyard ami prlv. on one or- — WE HAVE ITI Just what oven and attachu garago in Clarkston, This sharp homo Is high---- and bright new bah Offered at only 625.95 are anxious to Show this, I right away. 623,500 price MLS 674-0819 674-2245 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. I irtgage. Coll, oorly rsocial appolntmont. financing. i novo you In on FHA terms. LAND CONTRACT Oldtr 3 bedroom, 2 story h_____ — — —- Funirlngt largo illy sized dining i. Known wnn omplo cupboard o, gas heat, toll h““-----I price 57400. 81,260 < EAST SIDE fi^s only 814466, 6666 to m Valu-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Avo.___Open * to ROYER OXFORD OFFICE 4 bedrooms make This 2 story older homo o, fine value at $13406. 11 x 21 ft. living room. Country kitchen. Carpeting and hardwood floors. New pump and now root. Situated on tencad corner tot. VA terms available. Possibility of land ebhtroct. 3 bedroom rancher Clear Loko privileges. Unusually ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONEi 628-2548 ARRO Mary, Mary quite contrary_ Thought lwr land was feflow Dot o subsidy from ADC And listed the land with Anna .. IF YOU LIKB PRIVACY Here's lust tha spot ter yeu. r~ aero, Mtedreant „ bungalow < walk-out basomont, 1-bodiT— f ON THE LAKE ■ '—‘ ^ 4 completely ----Q cottage* wttn ------ —J screened porches plus veer around 2 bedroom noma. Gas neat. Baa* wit- —3 Excellent fishing a for further details. PHONEt 682-2211 5132 Cass-Ellzabeth Road ALS REALTOR OpdnDally *4 tacit cottage, hunting.Call STOUTS Best Bu?s-Today PLENTY FOR THE M0NEY- to 2Vi cor garage. Only *17,756. TRADE-TRADE- ---Your present home In as part payment on this 4 family brick Income which contains 5 rooms and bath in uclt unit. Each tenant hat separata basamuts. Showing good Incoma and Includes largo *0x220 porcol with frontage on 3 streets. Lot us shpw you this hard to find Item. HOW SWEET IT ISi— This horns, is in spplo.pl* order ‘— tha sparkling brick and ------ *-T through each wm. The lines VON lyTiving r t, carpeting Gas hut. Included. Gas •‘- Must ba „ _ Call tor appointment landscaping. Must ba appreciated, f ” today. *16,300. aluminum exterior tl freshly pointed roonr.... on this 3 bedroom brick ri_____ ore terrific and It has only 3 birthdays. Th* f I replete In th* freshly carpotod living room adds a cozy note plus s 2nd for th* younger sot in tn* 16X2S tower level recreation room. Streamlined kltclwn with breakfast bar and very attractive cabinetry. 2Vi baths. Loaded with oxtroa throughout. Th* hutlng I* gas and In* attached garage adds votu*. Big mentor'*1 overlooking Oakland WARREN STOUT, REALTOR Ming. 3 Approximately | KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" Custom'bum w!thm*ny.xtr„: OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Lake privileges on Walter's Laks. adca $28,*00. AKcA I Cramped for space? Than this IS I, th. wotoTZ 3 bedroom brrek •ruch" lt,9^.,h«l‘c.3rp5JuT| T", .‘tov." ■om lig 661-5660 Brown SYLVAN VILLAGE • appointment to ua this homo. Only S26400. IT'S A TRIPLE STEAL ON FHA TERMS Would voU Ilk* to steal a u woll at tha Tiger's hexes? W*ll, you can _ « makes mb tl we: ltion nent, largo kltchan, exit hooch, fenced bock yard, r moving to California, d at *16,500. OPEN MODEL HQMB.J he.vf be.m ment, 2-car garago, material* throumout. If minklng Of buiidi home tor MOM an Opu dally by apt. .. every Sunday from 2 .......I p.m, Located In Elizabeth Shores OUR an Artesian eff Cnalav Lake SHF. IN THE CITY swimming. KSro,1* fw* •T JVi baths, panated.famlly .room, largo garage with workshop; fiSteS^mTW *nyVfeahjresS an3 Artesian off Coolay ■ad. BUILDING SITES — Lake front_____ —— wooded lots — exclusive tub-divisions. Priced from *14004* tp $7,500.00 —' Acreage 2 to acre parcels. LES BROWN BUILDERS & REALTORS 5*0 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD n id DESIGNED ffiirWb. HOMEOWNER — WITHOUT IT OU MUST SELL BEFORE YOU BUY— OR BUY BEFORE " SELL — CALL RIBHT nSW^ TRADE THE HOME. Y«0 FOR THE HOME YOy WANTI ---- tor Ku Hall, Bob HaitteK Olota Howard, Leo Karr, Bill Mountain, Elteon Mayor, Elalnt Smith, Thurm wilt, Lu Bogart, Dave Brodtey, Dick Brayn, Emery Butter or Donna i ecruxB T\ RIGHT NOW.' we Yoy_.e» YOU WANTI A 500 sq. ft. ) X 300, a . a witar h :tric garaga «panar, oak 1 sterotTwalls and a family with a fireplace. Thto It a_________... exclusive Hating and I* Ottered at Only *25,550. aiT'--------I----------1 peraonal —— bedrooms, carpotod . living — dining ,r06flt. Kltchan ■ *•? tfn ■ i • Is a small bam. roMhg Ottered on land contract term* f *24,500. WHEN YOU SEe/oUR SERVICE YOU ''JOIN THE A6ARCN TO TIMES" Times Realty 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY 234600 Realtor Opu *4 Doll OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, on this NO HOUSE PAYMENT SZte furni^'end metirs. Only tte.tSO. ONLY S A60NTHS OLD I* this —‘idt ranch at Fax I k baths, double h place In Jgvaly tan eliding glass doors In even and rang*, i y landscaped. A steal csrpafed living r wim natural flrop to patio, to. wc miiwi SfiSaiBftl 3 bedrooms, toll 929,900. Su It today l Muma “ESTABLISHED 1930", ryming In rau* ir lho boa t aubd it neigbbortiood with toll bosom .Jtarlng ________-_____llnib ltetna wtth full baoamant and otteched garage on a fenced lot IOO'xISO' tor th* bargain price of 623,900. Finished basement with fireplace and buHt-fi ban, lf'xlS' living room, handy kRcton plu* dining area, thru Mrooma; oak floor*, ptaatafd*. walla, numerous sales foaturu yeu will Iwva to su to •maetata. SEE AND DESIRE—This extremely eye appealing. ahlfWte ranch homo looaud within walking dlttanc* of DuM Whnflold School, six WKJ!BBaWLopBE tor room* with thru bod rooms, luxuriously carootod U|d druid IMng room and dining area, modern to mlnut* known with bullt.ln man, rang* and breakfast bar, toll basement. CAN YOU** . IBRI______________ ________________ _______________ Is qualify constructed throughout, full boumont, VrOCt atteehod garago, breath-taking kltchon, 10x17 with pll formica cupwantt, ceramic both wtfh built-in vulty, marbw tills, haturol slate entranca, aluminum storms and doors, lust decorated end. situated on e large lei tor 1114007 Sura you con, call today tor appointment. 114 MECHANIC. Drive by and call us on om of th* boat homu th* 40*t side hot to oftor. 2 lot*. 2 .garages, a cmrmi drive -and' an Im-maculate home. FHA appratoal applied tor. S rooms to all, wtto 85% now - carpotbn. Basement and om heat. FHA appraised In at $15,650 and all exterior trim freshly painted. IDEAL 1 BEDROOM HOME! Naw carpeting, 12xl| living room, 10x12 MMiig -yBf lMjwr«lnd7aiw|iawlir. Full puomtnf, alumi—• A-l condition tolid* ond out. *7456 with S1400 down W* bring dlti orty without 2536 Dixia. Hwy.—Multipit Listing Service—674^)324 ftoRTH END FIVE YEARS OLD-3 bod room rancher y hut, aluminum storms, carpeting and a I with built-in bar, refrigerator, piano and rot a largo lot with plenty of elbow room and for a total price of *16,950 on FHA term*. ird player. LIVING TWO-FAMILY INCOME—Live In et>» 5-reom^of*.^ » th* other 5-room piiting a term* wl 6cmo8tg3ge costs. %«,.t,^.i: sWS; isms! DON'T LOOK TWICE THERE WON'T BE TIME—This 2 bedroom bungalow In town hu on extra taro* lot, full basomont, carpatlng, drapes and awmtoum storms. Built In 1*57 and bargeIn-prlead ot $14400 with U little ON THE EDGE . OF CLARKSTON, clou to schools ai I shopping. This Is a dulrabl* privacy. I 5600 down, OWNERS GOING WEST AND YOU CAN MOVE Into their 3 bedroom In one of Wotartord'o most desired areas, clo ping. Thar* Is go* heat, attached garage, i At a price of |uit $15,*50 you had batter mot — appointment. TRADING THi BATEMAN WAY you can avoid the_.risk of owning * homes. Wt Will GUARANTEE IN WRITING Ih* Ml* Of yt present home. NEW MODELS rebuilt kltchon, toil Bug, I_________Jd garaga mm gteamtog white caretru aluminum elding. Comer of Scott Lake anr’mipjHs Lake Rd*. f COLONIAL AND MID-LBVELi 3 end 4 bedroom*, family ra fireplace, IV? ceramic bath*, custom kltqteM with bunf-Bto of Watt Huron and Voorhal* Rd. RANCHER; HP OL 14511 UNION LAKE D—19 'falg PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST Bv Kate Omu IRWIN IRWIN IMB owner, 3-bedroom brk*. Ito baths, mil* living room with fireplace, large kitchen, laundry room, tor garapa, houa* nowly doe., now Mut^^Tisn^o IeVvTci 99* w. Walton ft t-WH id •Maphn. 61 — . JtA IQO down, pigs doting cosh. EAST PONTIAC 7 ROOMS, 4 BEDROOMS, full bpsamank hardwood floor*, plastered walls, alum., storms and screens, 61 — zero down. FHA $400 down, plus dosing "CROSS Lange Realty & Building Go. work throughout area, outdoor living at Its d*s«. $18,350. Whit* Lake Twp.. near Oxbow Lake area - Wonderful Op- business. . .Zoned Commercial. . . Milford, Row* Lata, Private Sandy Beach, 4 b.r.. Cap* Cad. $14,900. ART LANGE 363-2514 $545 Commerce Commerce, Mich. FLORENCE STREET. _ ._JW ' (Clean) --- dltlon. L•— • ™. . .. i ■ w* i» mm and would Ilk* quick tale. Price only $12,500. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K» IRWIN & SONS 311 West Huron — Sine* 1913 PI 54448 AfWrl PM, Pi S-484 -LOT- LAKE FENTON Lak* front on sandy Lake with boat and boat dock Ir The 4 room, j bedroom 1 eomptotoly —I enjoyed year Mfhe Rolfe CfinWTCo, Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor 344 s. Telegraph Rd. 333-7848 privileges. Zero down VA. LAKE PRIVILEGES Sharp clean 2 possible 3 bedn garaga, excellent lak* prlvl $2,000 down. Lake Privileged Lots 120x150 ft. Excel' *-•"*“ Full price 2,100. 10 Acre Ranch Mi Land Contracts________60Selel HAVE SIM,000 AVAILABLE A JOHNSON .Sfina t!04 S. TRLBqRAPH Rd, ffljflg Leona Loveland, Realtor 21M Cass Lak* Rd. C. PANGUS, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 430 M-15 . ' Orton CALL COLLECT 037-ISM "I know all about protests—I’ve been protesting my allowance for years!” price $S0,$00. Bank Middle Straits Lake 'bJK EPS ,'emltv IvM mode ' “ OVERLOOKS CASS LAKE _ 3-bedroom with 2 porches. Meet family year round home. Only $15,950 on 61 tertm or contrect. C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 ION Commerce Union Lakaj SYLVAN VILLAGE Mi Business Prepsrty 57 LAPEER 63 ACRES -MMycfffr. 402-000 SYLVAN 6733650 price. ADJOINING STORE BUILDINGS located In downtown Oxford. Will " Together er separate. Total i. $25,500, easy terms. ■_________ __| JHH. m all built-in* Jn kitchen, j _____ family room Large family Ivpe r |figj fi| lot. OvtrkwAmy mraailj LaKe. Ttrms. Immediate Possession { Highland Area — Brick and' aluminum, 3 bedrooms. Larga family type kitchen. Aasum* ex-! Istlng land contract. S3,700. No Closing costs. ienne. BUILDING 1 K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 3 bedrooms. Full baesmant. 2 car 2339 ORCHARD ----- —■ garage. Excellent lak* ------------------- . Sea, our RHODES .ARGE HOME sites, Indlanwood Shores. Mutt be teen *- — 1 predated. I 100' LAKE tad business wirn garage arm ornce building. Priced to sell at S1S.S00. 01900 down. Backus Realty, 482-7131 or, beach. privllae**. Si ROYER OXFORD OFFICE BRICK RANCHER Custom built larga 2. baa room i ranch type home in the vicinity of . Lake Orion. Lr‘ 1|— “ beautiful Long utility room; ivi of cupboard spa kttahSC f m u .r.- street back to lha next straat. Lota of elbow room. Beautifully landscaped (hraba and trass. Storage shad for lawn aqutomant. Call to *** Iht* tin* horn* today. BURCH KNOLLS RANCHER New ham* trade-in within walking distance of Oxford School*. This I completely 1 ng of this prop Lauinger 74-0319 VA-FHA 6744)311 MSI Williams Lake Rd. ot M-J9 TED'S Trading JUDHA LAKE ESTATES rely 3 ^bedroom alurn^ sided TOWNSEND LAKE 1M ft. lake frontage. 2M ft. deei *4500. 10 par cant down. SISL0CK & KENT, INC. J 1309 Ponttoc State, Bank Bldg. 384194 . _________338-9294 PRIVATE LAKE, with 1 -" T*i Lapeer. Gou — M-24, Edward Hutchings, Ftwida ’Ob' LAKE front horn# alts *9,000. nm* Marly other-home sitae to choote-from. J3L500 20 ACRES Hadley Rd. *15,000 " 10 ACRES. Ortonyllle, 88500 A. J. RHODES ! FE 1-2308 258 W. WaltOn FE 5-4712 ; MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE [SEVERAL CHOICE PARCELS, zon-■ ad slngl* residence. LOckhaven Rd„ varied pries*. LAKE HURON BAR-RESTAURANT Located pn stale _hljpiwa|^^Norl Soli HooseBeld ln» W SILVER TONED ELECTRIC » SEASONED- sa^#l I mrii incurs* matching c Warrdn Stout, Realtor " ‘ - -* *4,< CAIN Wr.IaND CONTRACtt 456B«mIm5o.Off 3-1355 NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL DISCOUNTS. . JUT ------- MA 44400 OR EM Mousy to Io«r 61 (licensed fttonsy Under), LOANS- *25 TO 81.000 ___.IQNITV !*““ G ** B- LAWRENCE - sSopaTSsave Lowest Prices in Town 5 Place dlnatte, *49. IWirrsPMts, to*-, ' Iota, Mr, or'™-I scotchguard R#' 9x12 linoleum Rugs $3.89 , " " 'IS!! . IS" CjteT TV^th irtMd tot*. - I Maple Dlnatte and / chairs, $189. Stereo Consolftte AM-FM radio, 199. Stnuoua Clamant r£ton, M*9S «p. yof 37" Itareo Consol,* spaakah, AM-FM MWN iBlr inal role and^ matching chair, 14 CM. 0. Jefrip- n?i indoor-outdoor carpttlrlg, *5.95 aq. yd. i-z TERMS HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE LOANS Ml to *1,000 Insurgd Paymant Plan ■AKTII.6 LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac Slat* Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 ESAKIS fill per wSto. Cell enytlme, 3*4- a S CMiw. g#...tiBkfa! vesppp MjeZwgwetors, *W. furniture herqeln*. LIHto JQ*i Trade-In store. Baldwin at Walter BlydT FE 24843. _____ ■. ( Attention Housewives mltotmtQ Kurwfcit* FC 5-1501. MUBsawi Mi miee. I 4744511. * 3 (girls). BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE Mto BRAND NEW. Lam “9 email slie- (round, drou-leat. •angular) tablaa In 3-, S- and h"%|aR»0&‘8 FURNITIjR*^ NEED UP TO $5,000? 334-3267 BUNK BEDS Choice ot M styles, trundle bads, triple trundle bide I—k complete, M?40 *~ Furniture. 218 E. COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD furnishings, *200 Gala Rd„ Pontiac. CUSHIONS SINGER ZIG ZAG Sawing machine. CiWlWt WOtfll. Automatic blind hamte dwtans, bytti “•“tSTosH Or Payments of $6 per mo. Ouarantsad Universal Sewing Center 2815 PIXIE HWV. XE 40904 SAVE PLENTY TODAY On *|l 19M floor *ampl«, of rangea, ratrlgaretora, washar* and TVsLihi# Joa'a Bargain Hom* keldwto at Watton ltUd. FE 3-4842 SOFAS, reuFholstered, save -1 fabrics during aumnyr sal*. -CUSHIONS , IPL_,ibr Oanlah, Coionlall 3M-1700 o MT^oH^'WISo TWIN BED. BEAUTY Rto M.nro», :p of tabrE. Call SlTOO. -l. upholstery Co._ COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 60x632' at 452S Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plain*, OR 3-1949. _ 'HOT SP0T- i - Corner location In Haights Ideal tor many purposes., '' ■ good preNfiatonel aerviet ■— Non. size 93x184. Terms,on I aSLSKftwllS * HORSEPOWER SEA , aneys. Takes substantial down. ' WARDEN REALTY I a 3434 W. Huron, Fentlec 4*2-3920 1*;, BOAT, INBOARD. mm 1842* Dixie Hwy. or call *34- MAKE MORE $ $ $ sail S1300. OR 4-0449. XYAtliC1 ‘ COMPIETEIY DEEP FREEZE,----------* ■ washar MS, rafrlgaralor $35, dryer SJS, electric water heater *45, 30" stove, mlsc. 0. Harris, FE 5-2746. I DeTROijJEWSk OAS-itovallH new. $75. M2-7031. DINETTE SET. TABLE chairs, formica ‘ UMd RADIO AND AFFLIANCB, t 3. IB B 30 ACRE PARCELS of: beautiful land for homes , and cabins. 3 minutes to Houghton Lake., Small down. Ben ScMnCk, 200 Ixm BROOCK y 12 ROOM BOARDING houta tor rant to coupla. StoNirat* ^Ivln^ quarters. Nearos*! competition 2Mr n low rent. I'm netting *20* ’ after lexea. *3500 for q .. Only l STh^e T 07*6114. --- MOTEL NEAR PONTIAC condition, tor sala 4340, or tree*, mt *dWl, ’ _________________ 1933 CHEVY PANELED truck, tough, reliable, *175 or Will trad* tor ""VOLKSWAGEN, REM- ,or 1945 IMPALA 4-DOOR, toko In cheep*- — -boat. 6*1-0114. Nationdl Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new 4-piecs Bedroom Sulla Only set 16 sets to sail 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY 1984 SUZUKI 230 CC I ELECtklC STOVE. $50. SIN. burn In 1947 w“a 4,WA?PmltocLT AO' ■ tot. lull price *5.500 .... . J)LPon, *c 1 d contract, farms or let's MA 6-4000__________ 4444890 m 2 — S0*x200' loir In Otsego County, BRICK BUNGALOW bedroom brick ranch, ■n living room, gas ‘“lto ■ .... .....j $12,500 FHA or fil AHM I Carpeting and air conditioning Included, exc. investment. SHARP RANCH Lovely 3-bedroom ranch, a siding, storms and sera*ns, ... baths, 2«ar attached garage, large wall landscaped lot. Beautiful location, lull price 13 1,7 5 0, Independence Township. PONTIAC KNOLLS 3 bedroom trick ranch.home al Pontiac Knotla, full easement contract, Otsago County. — 30 acre parcels, - *4000 $1200 down, land contract o trade, Otsego County. 'SPECIAL PRICE REDUCED from $3,250 to S25M tor a quick sal* on this nice 100x360' lot bordering paved road Jt. of Clerkston, must have si ooo down. 20 acres N. of Holly with larga aluminum barn, high and dry semi-rolling terrain, can b* divided, $22,000 terms. 5 acres N. of Clariiston, samt-i wooded, 16,250 10 par cam terms. 16 acres S. of Business Opportunity LAKB ORION Walkers Dry Cleaning; a going business with an owner about to retire. Over a quarter century of vary successful business. Completa necessary equipment to wont With. !Xn,,« E^CT35!3C.37STOVE-B00d co"ai,'on' “■________ with snow blade, or ? 692-4261. ELECTRIC BtNDIX DRYER, 61- BACKUS REALTY bibbbclass boat. MOToT, tachments tor totri oparator M0. ____ _____• Tips led' , ... M road, 015.M0, MSOo i, can b* divided. CASS LAKE LAKE FRONT MARINA cSrSjmb and dining ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 628-2548 Oxford Office, M3 S. Lapaar Rd. O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? COUNTRY ELEGANCE Nature's Paradis*. An Mibsllavabl* thrill awaits you whan yet 1M i , 2 car garage, pay* tsar round horns Emmet County, McCullough realty , 1440 Highland Rd.(M-59) MLS Span 9-9_______________ 474-2236 _____ „ra, 1 . on river, Gladwin UNDERWGODSS^- WATERFORD HILL DcautifuJ loti on Wattrford Hill. $6,000 i'nEW-Y r^STJRUCoTED,fin24,x2. noobEOL at Lewiston. On! STRUBLE REALTY REALTOR—MLS 5925 Highland Rd. 674-3175 •59) DRAYTON PLAINS $18,500 This lovely 3D' ____ ACRE ... Kalkaska County, fireplace, * I * c t r bottle gas stove, bu table. I Miles south - - m. to 12 noo- hR»soH Praptfty First come flrst serve'ExclLsIva CLASS tales by Las Brown, Realtors Pontiac. 332-4110 and 332-0552. NSE, 6M-7131 or 33S-1695 _ MULTIPLE PROPERTY 6 acres zoned Multiple dwelling, okayed for 60 units, sewage okayed, small pond on property, frontage on 2 reads, near Dixie Hwy. and Walton, Exc..location. _i McCullough realty REALTOR 160 Highland Rd ,450 or ? UL 2-1694. LICENSED CONTRACTOR trad* concrat* work tor all gn pood M ton pickup, 1 or old. Call altor 6:30, Mr. NGJOELJ ' gai „ 1M. , FLANNERY MOTORS INC. 5*06 Dlxl* Hwy. Watprtord GARAGE SALE. 10 ______ 91 Wall Straat, Pamtoc._______ 5AS REFRIGERATOR, RCA Whirlpool with auto. Icamakar. Good condition. SIM. 6*2-2502. HEAVY DUTY FLOOR POLISHER. 6-plect dinette sot. Simmons hWe-a-bed sofa, epartment-slza electric stove and rarrlgarator, all jn.*)«. condition. EM >3246. - HOUSE [WANTED: OLDER USED^uroTt^,h°JP°^T'^h.f7C,T"'^ »TOVE. II l-R-Zl. c refrigerator,! Salt Form* ik beds, picnic --—-------- , , Of 72. 33S4S55 Vk ACRE 4 BEDROOM remodeled HIPV LIQUOR I------------- building, fixtures and s located on 2 of Watarfords.------■ highways. Plenty of Parking,_ak-in» food. Gross over .... cel lent seating capacity, over | m,!-. caoacltv keeps *100,000 gross? Lend contract .terms 1hopping! ThlshT’ BOY'S And GIRL'S clothing, *100,000 gross? Land contraa farms 1 #mDl0;t, h , ACRE 4 KURUUM romoua,™ ®r “*h ^ ^ home, basement, garege. *17.000, Mccutlouah6 B,rfl,b*UBh #r ‘".asa-am now |X OAKLAND COUNTY BAR Vi A real money maker bar oparalk '--- - Gross ^ over *90,000. who wants comfort, IF YOU ARE looking tor something --- - —— for year around plaaaura, with bin front«aa. we have several available priced is a large wall landscaped car garage. The horns Is pletely carpeted. In a vary lak* frontage, a with E-Z terms between *9,000 ana *i«, nished and unfurnlshad. » Ski «■ Spring a. An elegant. fully Into Tho the landscape. basement, large I elum. sided, Tenci room’ In baaamant. 2 car oarage. Fin* garden area Will fy of berries, deb pan, you c*i a hors* hare too. Th* prnw ■> *49,500. By appointment only. No. 12-27 t r- . " WHAT A SETTING 109 beautiful tost of Elizabeth Lake frontage. Hard, sal* sandy beach. This desirable lake front brick residence !* ottered tor th* first time Pt-mfy *39,900. If you'v. been looking for onto* lake front property, call your O'Nall rapresantatlv* today at OR 4-2222 and he will arrange your private showliw. No. 15-43 olan- located in wa ESb 8)0,900. FHA I various areas of MiChlgi of them close to water, private access. Fishing swimming, boating, 1 fingertips. With prices y taro an E-Z terms. price tor both $2,895. S300 down, MS par month. Prlvata access on 2 beautiful lake*. Swimming, fishing, boating. Truly year-round pleasure for your family, with prices and terms you can afford. DAVIS REAL ESTATE 674-2236 __Farwll SOGaSOl. W MAGIC WORDS "Rochester Colonial" on* rare finds In a scenic am —... .. town. A custom Colonial situated on approx. 3 acres. A small *9*-“ to* | growing family. Seclude. ... _ prlvata Ilk* read. An axcallant horns BM'itoBiffgn. cad forjnfr—|aa regarding the many detail thi# An* noma 1 No. 14-5 IT HAS EVERYTHING At a price that's right Sparkling 3 with 2V*» car WHAT'S YOURS A 3-bedroom ranclb family and basamant for *15,990 plu A 3-bedroom tri-level with I room for *17,990 plu* lot? A 3 l, todroom 2-story colonial family room and basamant for *19,9901? plus lot? What's yourtT Call us now for details on one of McCulloughs Baauty Croft Homos, vnu ran smell th* nawnass, you the pride of new horn* lots—Acreage 1 LOT, PERRY ACRES, L*k* Orion. 6344850 er 391-075D-. ACRE iPABCELS, wooded- McCullough. wiison.______________________I mccullough realty | 10 ACRE^FARM tor sal* DV Owhor REALTORS ... ,1 near Brown City, Mich. 5b*droom 5460 Highland Rd. (M-») MLS brick bouse, good barn andjppen $-9 ________674-2236! buildinas. Approx. 60 mllat from/; Pontlec® t4G0^ turgain. DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT rnltos* E. 6f Brown city on Gu5? jL,to?l|mn*IWAvJielc&MhlDn^eer 80 to 800 ACRES In lower Mlchloan. Dairy, grain, TAVcRN beef or hogel Nam* - your form yv|nB quarters Included In lha real needs, Wl hlVR I*' ' B* out w anil N.wUna# I nrataff Klnrth Writ* orBSl'rsi7-27*-2377U- days'. eh,nB* t0'' Head^uartar^— Dean, Realty Co. down. This Is th Business The BOY'S CLOTHING OF ALL. I good as new, tin 12 to Is., shoes. 3344E3S. FALL OPENING ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 Wast Huron St., Pontiac 4-3581 965-0759 Quail nit** HI 9 i Orlonvllle, established ROYER HOLLY OFFICE QRTONVILIE-- HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL *20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists at: PEARSON'S FURNITURE e. pike . Open til 0 P.fh- Mon.. Frl., tit * P.m. WAREHOUSE SALE OPEN TO PUBLIC. Entire Inventory of a* refrigerators, ranges, washers, etc. counted*!* sicretched^Tfems priced KcorOlngly. No roes. o«tor ratused; tomorrow. lo'a.m°9 p^mTHlif Ap-pllance. 2416 14 ||||4 “■* between Woodward and 'i_____ W1DDICOMB DINING I— modern tabta, 4 chair* Inciudirw host and hostess chalr. SyeafS olp o china cabinet, 673- The opportunity Shop, St. . Church, . Birmingham, will Aug. 27, regular hours. FLOOR LENGTH CH wedding aown. size I gies. FQR SALE^ WOMEN'S clothing, size Pbvld K. living room suite, 2 stop cocktail table, 2 labia la ) rx 12' rug included. ilty lam Nth 4 box spring and 2 vi 5-piece dinette set chairs and table. A.. .. credit la good at Wymi WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 117 E. HURON I&NS* ', full-size bed^wltn’r^cE ANTIQUE furniture, dishes, itching QUn> Much traik and traasura. |bbv turn. Turn on Pondama M ,UOBa. *nd1A'i.^T,0Bm Bmp-'AUCTh suite With double! 334-07*2 or 1-434BMI. sags . Mon-Sat._ ££±!*1; gate-leg tableTI GIRL'S CHUBBY DRESSES, blouses, cor* *|M ’*"*• *“ -" OR 3-9225. National UncloimBd FURNITURE- Brand n*w: Mapl* or Walnuf Cl t Davlsburg — O EAGLE to size 14W. ____IMPI - __________ '_____ 1 4-Orewer — S29.88 i . to* »*" ^,45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 Hi-Fi, TV & Radios ! Orion. 693-: FREE DELIVERY - ------—------- FARM-142 ACRES L COLLECT 427-2815 . GIRCS AND WOMEN'S clMhesllzei h ------14. Ml 42833 attar 5:3» TED'S CORNER glassed especial I ally (in schools screened had patio; rthwest toe______ lake privileges. NO ADJECTIVES i Arm statement that 9 -TS" -ih btBrt bedroom bridtljlMa ffi* Mcoat - ... .***. Lacgfi. .......... tow minutes to shopping, -----■ - || rtotshao Highland s,^. * Interest. Asking *20,1 fn»5.?JSat 8 | 820,750. Ni possibility tor the over ago American to understand all the IPs, and'* and but'* that with th* legal documents you ... counter In th* sale or the purchase ot a pMe* of Rail litai* “Tr suggest you have legal count -advise you progeny, we tool you at the buyer or sallar cai more at aesa It you have your realtor and your attorney working together tor you.* M is tor j peace of mind Wo make this gestion. McCullough realty REALTOR >480 Highland Rd. (ht-M) ______ -..- |S I ’ 874-2238 2 FAMILY APARTMENT IN I , tlac. 2 apt*, completely furnlsl Total Income per month I Price 017,500, FHA terms. Sr 3 LARGE LOTS IN, Long Meadows West of Llvernols, | of Tlnkan Rd. Paved street ___ .ere approved and gas. $4250 each. Northglen Realty Company 851-9500. ■ 3 SMALL L.AKES, I acres wlty —'— northwest 825-5581. Nroom houm.CMltmsnt.*Cai) Ro*s - Brown, l-517-072-2M1 attar 5. ROYER 5 ACRES NEAR Ortonvllla, ___________8MQ8I9. ____________ LOTS NEMK. LONGFELLOW School —Trad* for land contract, house or what hav* you? WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE !4 Rlker Bldg. FE 4-5101 ves. and Sundays 802-2073 14 Acros, TyronB Hill need. 4U x ru mp-4 car garage. 7 All buMIngs In on. BaaulTful r settihg. axcallant condition. -—*— Id__. r dairy. Whether . Or pleasure or .profit t place, tor you. Undar .BATEMAN COMMERCIAL I. INVESTMENT ' 177 S. Telegraph Rd. . 338-9641 ' Weekdays attar S,_ Sat. A Sr - '■*' * KEATING 3060 W. 13 Mila, -. Blrmlnohan 46-1234 5*8-795 A Wondarful Invastmant Recreation area, IraVal Irallar campsite on almost prlvata ~ Approximately 12 mil** trem On* 2 room cgttaq*. not mo two ) bedroom mobllo homes lVk baths. Electric .slay* rafrlgaralor*. One servlet bu tor traitor park with servlo ceM-, WEDDING GOWN, SATlif-lae*, i .SSdtol: New wlr- chepel train. Hie l4. rr. ’ 9675._____ KENMORE AUTOMATIC washer, Ilk* new, used only 8 months. 575.1 8204824. ' II 391-3020. 5 a.m. to , muskrat coat. Size 1 GOING BUSINESS Ornamental Iron and steps. Two 2 bedroom apartments, 30x20 shop tocUdOt all Inventory, fhtturil, welder and 2 trueki. Burner -trad* buyer, AH Hhto tor 8 *25,000. WE build-trade ROYER REALTY, INC. “ PHONE: 634-8204 Holly Branch______ HoHy FI sacrifice, class c Oar in cm Pontiac, High Gross, owner rt Ing, Reply Pontiac. Press Box i PniitlacMlchlptn._____ Industry3 hii” wltchod to toon-1 9 chising. 25 par ewAot U.S. already! gone, small Invastmant backed byi consignment fund puts Y?“ In ■ business. Opll tor details Charles Martlhaw at 873-7098. ____ g WANT TO SELL YOUR BUSINESS? X n—i,,r Partridge t* th* « Huron, Pontiac, d 334-3501. Ml WHAT YOU'D «XPBCT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 tL50 par weak LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1481 Baldwin to wanwi, FE 2-8042 -Acres of Fret I KENMORE 2-SPEED WRINGER ------- B-1 ,y5e,r Bxe' *®nd'*l«n' KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - *50 ______FULL GUARANTEE-------- Kirby Service & Supply Co. 1817 DIXIE HWY 674.2238 lineo2 OAK . .. 02998 „ ^ ^OpanM 45 E. Walton near Baldwin cuuOR TV * BARQAINfc "Im — Joa'a Barflaln Hoitoa. FE 34043. _ Fbt Salt MisctBanBEEB 67 )' GIRL'S BIKE, automatic washer ' gas dryer, excellent condition; liraplace, tools, woman's good ' '— 6734463. wining cor tor.llwS ___;ed air h sasi MATCHING AHTIQUE loveseat > !fjch..brakan cotwrato. 00,000 on contract. WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 634-8204 INHMMMrlaiMi' .... each. Two 02 gal-water tanks. 3500 4lat si rr \ service. building. :Of* division Site, New Home Surrounding th* alts, close to Expressway. Call Lillian .Jones, Landmark Realty, Flint. T3W197, Evenings, Flint CEdar 5-5344. 4> ACE IS RSI Srit BbsIhbss Proporty S7 INDUSTRIAL LEASE OR SALE Modern 2 year aid building,.5000 sq. ___ 3 phase wiring, gas hath double awThittop'gL. ior12!!S!l*Stoin £• ■vnJiiiti.ifad If root, WJ. IO acres, mem IS City on Van Dyka (M-S3>|! d for ovary purpose. Land tt'f jarad can b* developed I gravel, pries *13,000, good tom For more totormatlorl coll code.. a 370-23*0, Tack. Mich, or wrlla P. t-75 Expressway. Quick pot- •I'py._ ”1 iHc'tank ... I ^ IwSByS. a 1500 gai. aaptle tank. Two water towers. One (Or byre drinking water — on* tor tank cleaning. Two water fountains for drinking. Electrical fystam will . afr commodate 100 traitor*. I boats, 21 tabtos, Also 27 ranted tables. Dram field moots; Stott apocfflcMtonL Dotp lake covers approximately 35 acres. Approxlmatoty 80 acres of land which t* useable. Beautiful traa*. 20 acres has been rezoned and accepted tor Iht above Dart. IxciieM* aauiy, country store and gas station In growing community for other Income properly,..;' , TOO' COMMERCIAL Lots on pavod road.In Waterford, axcalltflt building altes tor office complex, would consider ex- i. Zlz-zagger, makes button-fancy stitches, overcasts. Pay small balance of W.10 or! 15 month. Call credit 3354203, Household M 82347*7 MIRROtt jMERm 2 TABLE Dishes. Mlsc. household Camard.' Washar. Bad....... furniture. Braldad rug, txio. 114 Notional Unclaimsd FURNITURE Brand new Posture Mattress Box Springs. Regular *139—Our ^ 45116 Caw^tkaT731-0200 _ FREE DELIVERY Amarltod- MMiwt, . 075. . gar dryar *50. Both In 1 condition. 620-1*39. National UncloimBd FURNITURE LandacepeTslWHA- FISCHER 875*3C PIECE WALMUT dinatto *•! */». Stall RATIO CANOPY — l-mo.-old. "5. 623-0959._____. j r iffkaRDM RUGS, i V FURNITURE - More devtlepment i but not rezonad. All , 60 acre*. Taxaa approximately 0 a year. No specta) aasaaaim.... Seed Parcototton. On eraval .read R M-59 HIGHLAND ROAD 92 AND 90 PRALL ST., houses at dormitortot will net ever I_____ annually, price at *20,500. Details 3791 Frt. « Loka Proyarty INCOME PROPERTY 2 family Incoma tow 2 shaping {earns brings In 040 par month. Zoned commercial, real close to downtown, • rooms plus 2 ' cer garage, can b* purchatad on LC PrlC*S16,250. NO. 12-20 DIAL OR 4-2222 tw* wiu b* Em moat I . iour O'Nell ’reprZwtatlw W«wjSLS£ Ore him m starts. No. 1544 w«TR.^r puiissszi ssr .:ro?S north at Dixie OIB4B) to Our Lady dry room, 2 baths. pawWad totortor,:„ZZZZ “ Bm'-aw ntetty landscaped, 021,750 S JB j north of Ortonvllla. «74679 or 627- JJ 1,13 pjn.to 5 p-m. 10 ACRES NEAR WaM Branch. . js ,half mil# Riven 32500, S500 down. nanCk. 200 Main St. East. 14184BSW4I. ' BUNNY RUN LAKE FRONT HOME CLARKSTON AREA Large beautiful building I Fowler Realty, 30X813, 36314531 EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY. 140 acres close to Pontiac, many pos-slbilitias, expressway to ““- H RAEBURN & S/JESSIE ornar, 3800 *q. tt. bulldli|H, . i special aasMsmant. nation. On gr—1 *“ ilililUlPl woods. laralB RER'-aPWI | Doing business. Good Income. Owner wishes to travel, Prlre *140,000. Slightly ttoxtolt, C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT Dovisburg Highland Township 80 acres With farm buildings small lake Price *58,ooo - s Corner, 3800 *0.^ used as bump shop, i *4000 c sio,ooo — 12500 down. AVON TWP. light industrial, arx •M 01200 down. ..*nAinv i COMMERCE ROAD Al PAULY ' 02500 — *1*0* down, tot sl» 35- ) ear 12$'. Ideal for Mrbar ohop, boouti Eves. 8734272 salon or email business. MONTCALM 4 STANLEY fativa to'this area. FulMjtoChtagL Kem.Call XS2-l6i°or 8744H9. | i- LAKE OAKLANb — Store; gardga,: 4510 ropony. call:. CROSS ALTY AND INVESTMENT Cl DMMERUAL ORPTn’TWRI# Zoned Heavy Commercial Ponttac Tawnship, zoned Industrli... 2700 *q. fl. 1 omcos, presently leased til and at <*rt- Exc. ■' vestment, land contract te trad* or axchanq*. mccullough realty 4M Highland Rd. (Mto)^ t $Sb UhMI C—WlKtB 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us batorp vou daat. '-. ■■ 1 L"-'Y Warren Stoat, Realtor I 150 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-1181 ■ Open Eve*. ~ j „ Vi v^r,7.'L,—.'^1 OVAL IVArLc wnin» nm wim 1 ^A.RLXTA?TjFST5AW COUCH and axtoumi leaves and custom made . BEEMER. slaapa 8, w ------ ---- rojin, tyoo. IS5 KMpl. oritpa, A*l condition. 0275. C*» hatwaon 4 and 4 P.m.. OL 1-5022. -AiMlki- 1 OF gWIbROBES, dlsossantotod: 16 sHding wild birch door*, hard-ware, rods, floors, etc. 0815. 425-3145. - '; " \ ’ OF POWER rotor 3 alament Moslty beam, and aoUMna*, Coax cabto. 75', 0135. Air e^Wtonar Ny car, *45. Guitar and tonpmr, *M. Portable Phltoo TV, *3 5. - -----, Bo. Btoqrlc drIH, __________________ _______________i .flip covers, . DO O R F RJ • 1 DA IRE *' "O Plenie tobl* W. : REFRIGERATOR *75. FE 5-7537. PIECE MAPLE DiNETTC Wt JU Uck FE had ream >at. 040; llvlno room sat. 5h*|rS.Vwvat 0*0; REO*C6k*Tij|IR — MUBT .SRClI pc. vretout dining ream wt, Itvtog room furniture, good condition. 333 4245. I DRYER Mi Si! Holly. 834BIF7 V , #? ^0N.tank J^xr, 105,000 BTU NEW BM~tiim«C*/ to- 'JmS marbtojRoa*. ASM W 404119. ' 4 _IL FUR8L-9, FR 0-7010, National Unclaimed FURNITURE horse Johnson, Gator tandem traitor, aacrlfica, S13M; full alt* mattress and aprlnOa, 7 and 5 HOLLY ■ AM,, w, OINTMENT. . RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor Oakland 0-2515 MY 1-2291 tllCO AREA. .LAKE MVtotoS,' Mini-Farm 10.04 acres, 1 mil* to Hjgjv. W*«, t, ow Norwood Cemar, 18500 - *1400 down. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL. 3 INVESTMENT 377 S. Tetograph Rd. 33P641 to purclww and assume land tracts, mortgages or buy homes, an or acreage am right, wa wl" givt you cash tor year equity. Ou appraiser Is awaWln» Mr call to 674-2236 Mccullough realty (Acre**TR^tfi^Fjgnitoe **•••) JSSWH^h^nd RA (Mto) wM£i . Business contracts — everything . goes - *110300. LES BROWN BUILDERS & REALTORS WOgl-I^AERTO LA»«RaAO ' *59; chair, Mil J pc.'^lnSte? S38; *20; washar,' $15; porch sal, SIS; deep tract*; TV, china caMnat; sac. desk; droptoat table. M. C. Ltonard, Hi N. Siglnaw. National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new Safa; Mr. A Mrs. Chair* ONLY Mil ,' 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 nmmmm v i nH(MI , . ,*y_' . j ' ■ • ~i4S116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 aSi#niC amtoHen.- lMa^Oarkatan Pontiac Press » free delivery Want Ads ARE FAMOUS FOR ‘ - "ACTION" hfMllBlrtlMHI 47 ~TANcff MO MONEY DOWN Ft >-7471 ANTIQUE OAK DRESSlft. green chrome table and, 4 chair*. Maytag iRAIDED .wOM. nMrt box spring ***• quality furniture. 685*334.1 BACK TO SCHOOL SALE Up to to eft an- used typewriters, desk*, chair*, drafting board* and tables, Lergd discount — — portable tynewntert, machines, fife*, ate. Pet__ ..... ting 4 office supply, 4500 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton. OR 3-97*7 - BOLtN'S 800 TRACTOR Used 3 year*, has SI" rotary mower tnqw blade, fly. start, JMSO, HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 W. University Dr. . tSl-7010 Downtown Rochester ' . Jone* Rd , off Tubh*. _ _ I "UMMAOE 7sALE{. August *4 through 3l«t, * to >. M-flfto Boole *nd*m!ic 4,0 Vouno M' Ck>,h*> RUMMAQE SXtE A FURNITURE. Poodles, to N. Roselawn. 315-3738. RUMMAGE: ANTIQUE MARBLE JW table, 8108. Antique tove seeh » ». electric range, some antique dishes and other odds and end-11* Putnam. Pontiac. I AM-Tue Camper trailer, ssoo. COMMERCIAL WINDOW W a DSJ CABINET SHOP, *24 A DELUXBSDlALRelax-A-ctlpr ^ used lei* than Id time*, *270, PE i-3142 after 4:30. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over tha bathtub with a beautiful glass tub |rama. design, *28.*5. ____ ____ JMR W. FOR SALE ELECTRIC rang* tia. upright piano *20, matching crib and dresser, 020, baby scales and Infant seat *1 JoT 65H452. FREE HUMIDIFIER FAIRWAY For Salt Miscellaneous im THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 D—18 2040 Krai CARNIVAL SAMSONITE lUgoaDe, III SIZE I ski boots* $3; txt tint, tisi bkmd cablnit radii end phStol Oreph, *20: blond eaUn*trTV— nMdi work, «0> can* backed chair and rocker, tabto lamps. $1; wrought Iron sofa and cw“'" fill mofltur, Q. fti-0441. HAIG ULTRA COLE tat. . LIFT HAND MCGREGOR goM sat, 12 dub* and bag. In exc. condition. til Pro Golf, 542-5405.__________________ SLIDING .GLASS DOOR Wall, i SOFAS UPHOLSTERED AT half the price of new. Call 32t-1700 Coml. Upholstery Co. Fishing SuppUes-Bait 75 SPREO-SATIN PAINTS. WAliWltK *34.50. Lavatories compleT* with faucets, (u.*5. toilets, 111.** Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchei Lk. FE 444*2. _______________ SWIMMING POOLS End of season eel*. Buy now an save. Clerkstan Fool Co., 425-2474, GARAGE SALE. ............, JRRI Miscellaneous, Thurs.-Sun. 3833 High Villa, High HHI Village of- ** ' GARAGE SALE: etove, bike* clothe* end mlsc. 2*70 Keelay Ct., off Scott Lake Rd. Auo- 2*. 30 and 3i, tanas*. GARAGE SALE: SOME antiques. GARAGE SALE: 140 Ora Rochester. Thure, 8. FrL *-3, GARAGE SALE, OFFICE equlp- GARAGE SALE, TUESDAY -.*y, moving, mlsc. and ar » Savoy. Crescent Lake. GARAGE SALE, 3411 ST. MARY < Baldwin ---------- ' GARAGE SALE: THURSDAY-1 —'ng state, |W|g| lure, cloth! lay magic VHRMEI mlsc. Items. 435 Cherry GARAGE SALE. F U doming, b*1— ___Rd. 10 AM GARAGE SALE, F U R N I T U washing machine, clothes. Items, 3074 Wanamaker, » w Trail to 2515 Litchfield. LADDER, pip* THE SALVATION ARMY REO SHIELD STORE _ 1H W, LAWRENCE ST. Everything to n—*-----------| d other tools. WASHED WIPING RAGS, as low as .24 per lb. 25 lb. boxes to 200 lb. bales. . ■arge table saw. Bend taw, exc. condition. lew^S hp, 3 phase air compressor, tew and used steel, angles, channel, beams, plate, pip*. ........... Jsed metal Oarage doors, ideal for signs, temp, sheds, etc. BOULEVARD SUI SCOPE, 1 hex I GNUM CARBINE: ucr carbine; 4.10 shotgun ana ai mo. for each. Alio 4 comple model airplanes. FE 2^4644. 1*42 NIMROO TENt 'tr*l(ir~ “■—'■tom beat. FE MM2. AAA* GOLFERS Ena of, season clearance sal Largest Inventory In the city of; name brand merchandise : unheard oi discounts. YOU CAN'T BEAT OUR DEAL PRO GOLF DIST. *03 S. Woodward _ Roy*i Oak at iov* mi. Dally )0-» • Sunday 11-4 BOWS AND ARROWS—334*4349 GENE'S ARCHERY-714 W. HURON we buy - Jell -'trade' Retail ? Days Weekly . CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION By Dick Turner SATURDAY AUGUST Red pump FOOTBALL SHOES. WILSON Mm Mm ft, good condition, «. Cell 4254044, aft. « p.m. 10101 Eagle R3“*Davlsburg Details here on Thursday irklna SalesGervIce Auctioneers WfrttoB V ■ Swart* Cree Livestock " sum GILDING, weixii *100. 425-2430. Clarkston. CHESTNUT GELDING, I ISHING EQUIPMENT Retiring. Spinning reels, i bargains, 44444*4. HORSES — GENTLE WITH < j _dr*n._43*-27**, Ox»ord.__ ■' HORSES FOR RENT OR SALE. 3015 I I ipeer Rd., Pontiac.- Bald lin Riding Stable.___________ Sand-Gravel-Dirt 76 I-aaa SAND and gravel, all areas delivered. 4755514, Waterford. T3TBIACK DIRT * tested; also topsoil, sand and rel fill. Builders supplies. Bud ard, 423-1410; Lee Beardslee AT LAST THE typa of topsoil you —it and need. Free consultation, i loading and delivering the 1 In topsoil*. Open dally except . 55, *445 Highland. Rd. ■" CHOICE DARK, FLAY, black dirt, shraddad, delivered. FE 445S*.-: equitation, jumping I PONY AND HARNESS. SPIRITED 6r SENTlK horses tor Double D*" RenSv 473-7457. WE CURE AND SMOKE MEATS. 1*44 HONDA 4S0, many extras, excellent condition can be seen at 4111 Parkway after 5, or call FE 1*44 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE 450cc. ,1944 SUZUKI, X-4, “I’ll say one thing! He knows where to be if he’s going to need a doctor on a Wednesday afternoon!’* ....... ..... J. & 5:30, 3944041 ___ WE ARE NOW EXCAVATING a series of basement* In the Airport, 500 S. Blvd. E. 0 SUPPLY 3357141 24'X32*CONVEYOR. DRIVE. SSOO. 4335 LftaM- 5-2161. ____________________________Hay-Grain-Feed PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP- _--------'“I------- ply Send, gravel, fill dirte. OR 5 ALFALFA HAY, CHOICE, . 1524. . y ,____________| per bale in the Held. id produc sizes. ' h, reasonably prlci I, 4 e.m. to 11 p.i Pets-Hunting Dogs 1 AKC MALE Apricot Mini Poodle - - -5. 673-0969. H O U N O S, COCKERS. lorWeglan Elkhounds, toy chocolate and Mack, farts, 1014 Doxies, tropical fish. Pet supplies ^50106. | end GROOMING, Uncle Charlies! -1—■ Pet Shop, ---- - E. AT MIDDLETON’S ORCI Dutches* and Williams Re l 1510 Predmor* Rd„ Lak J* BLUEBERRIES Pick your own 25 cent* pei Bushes are loaded. Plckln days per week from 1:00 a.MIRP Sundown. Andersen B lueberry Farm, imlay City, M-24 to M-21 then 3 miles east of Imlay City on M-21. Sign on Comer. Travel Trailers Check our deal on —1 SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS ANC TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 21 ft. on display at — . Jocobson Trailer Sales 54*0 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5951 GO GO WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOMES PICK-UP CAMPERS DRAW-TITE, REESE HITCHES >. E. HOWLAND SALES LABOR DAY SPECIAL APACHE MESA equipped with sl( sink, water tank. Icebox, air t plastic windows, dinette, bottle and heater, save *20*. PRICED at $12*5.13 APACHE FALCON SPECIAL 88 Mobile Homes 81 BOB Hutchinson's 21st Anniversary SALE YES, 21 YEARS Sob has been in Mobile Home Sales Bob Hutchinson .Invites you to see . the aH new $22,000 DOUBLE-WIDE KR0PF HOME raph) 332-8515. Open] [jarRd°n right l\niie to Perry'Lk I lcc"riT«. ««--------I M'.- Ralph M. Kroger *051 >*rnl gW NOW ONLY 5475 I APACHE EAGLE SPECIAL I Ith hardtop. Only! CRAFTSMAN TABLE saw table; floor model ligg saw; Bradley tractor with enow garden plows; cultivator mower; Roto-tiller, 335627*. 3-YEAR-OLD COLLIE, 7 C GERMAN SHEPHERD p -! FRESH SWEET CORN fi last week, V* ml. N. Blvd. on Adam* Rd., 2 1400 SQ. FT. FLOOR SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITERS — *42*5 AND UP Free delivery up to 300 ml. Open Dally 'til 8 p.m. Saturday end Sunday 'tU J DRAYTON PLAINS | Dixie Hwy.(US, 10). OR 1-1202! 1*45 BSA, 450 CC. 47517*3. Cell *1 1p.m. 1*45 NORTON 750 CC 1500. 5 HONDA 5*0 f “• Bridgestone E 58*45. t YAMAHA 100 excellent el durance,, plate*, helmet, nd *hlold >250. 451-461*. Boats-Accessories COHO BOATS PINTERS ' "YOUR JOHNSON DEALER" 1370 Opdyke 9-6, Frl. 9-8 (1-75 e» University Used Auto-Truck Parte lit * 313 CHEVY_EN|IN1, ML 327 ENGINE AND~~3»* engine. 8150 : AUM U*rb* *■ •age, ___ ____ „ . only *375, 345*450. HONDA CHOPPER, original 4 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE many CRUISERS AUTHORIZED DEALER TROJANS LEFT OVER SALE - NEW 31'TROJAN Voyager Sedan TS 28' TROJAN Voyager Exp. TS 21' TROJAN Skiff Exp. tingle 24' TROJAN Sedan Bridge 24’ TROJAN Exp. demo CHRIS-CRAFT-NEW 25' SEA SKIFF Sport Cruder 17' SKI boat 210 hp USED CRUISERS 1*65 24' Owen* Exp. new paint, fully equipped, radio . 56395 1*45 257 Owens Exp.....f "" MANY OTHER BARGAINS COHO BOATS NEW-USED LAKE & SEA MARINE 5. Blvd. at Woodward FE 4 DAWSON SPECIAL rocraft deep -fishing boat. |jv1nr!ide*motor. 1*57 CHEVROLET BOBY'lUM. Michigan Ave. ... — -ck, v*tBVT FE 53270. .mum M..4n ere eoen ■ ^ New ami UmhI Track* 103 VAN SALE 3 Days Only (2) 1*45 . 14) ir" (V) II NO MONEY DOWN HUNTERS-SPORTSMEN Beat the Price Increase _____________________*59?: I SAILBOATS. Ray Greene 14' Rascal; BkHP. rigged and In the to sail. These boats reduced demonstrator. going a STCir1 CLOSE OUT -•••- '! Used march,______ Glaspar Steury, GW Ml 4-7500 HAROLD TURNBR FORD new end 5YARD DUMP — t 52,500. 4335 Saxhabaw, Clarkston, 7 305 HONDA, SCRAMBLER, 67i5 1*47~HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER"* or be*t o1ler; 45l-5716. 1947 305 HONDA, EXCELLENT ci ditlon, Includoi helmet, 0400 ca 621-14*0, after 3._____ DAWSON'S SALES i i, excel Itnt condition a * trailer, I ___morloi, l_ I. OR 34»33 offer « HOT SPECIALS FOR HOT WEATHER > complete li tilery, o 2-1896.___ 953 CHEVY STAKE truck 2 ton, $75. 1*51 Cadlllec stake truck, $125, 1 ton Ford pick up box, metal bottom. 520. 3*1-2050, after 4. 967 SUZUKI, X6 Scrambler, 250 CC, lmrri,,cula,e 'Water' Skiing Ikuipment' condition, 474-1105.__________ FEATURING —ooo^1 »84 anf?43DSH NORTHLAND WATER SKIS yHs^ia 'ssn ! ALL SPECIALLY PRICED 1 TON PICKUP 4 snow plow, S97J. 9! FE 4------- I CHEVROLET PICKUP, 5325 or Autos, FE 53278. N '$145. Save Used 1*6* YAMAHA 305 CC, 2 helmet* ai 1948 KAWASAKI - 250 CC, : ANNUAL SUMMER SALE ALL 1968 MODELS ON SALE I BSA, TRIUMPH, HONDA, NORTON. DUCATI, MONTESA, AND MOTO-GUZZI. ANDERSON SALES 5 SERVICE , 145 S. Telegraph_____FE 571021 HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS Telegraph 332-0033 LUGER BOAT ......... fiberglass runabout, partiblly built, u*«- everything but motor. *5*7 $3*5. 338-0109. TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS At Tony's Marine L, e brown. 394-0008. SEALING ( drive; pllen, sets, etc. 25 p purchases of tsu or more, purchases of *100 list FERRY SERVICE, 412* Roed(M-St) 1__________ WOOD PLANER WANTED and wood working toole, 052-4120 or 052-4003. Musical Goods________________71 PIECE DRUM SET, reeeanlble offer, 674-2*20. AKC WEINMARANER weeks, S45S55, els female, reodv to hu i GUITAR. Original ly *140. 343-9S41. Bargains in Used Pianos Uprights end grand*/ ell dean tuned end delivered. Morris Music -A POODLE GROOMING, puppTei, toy stud .service. FE 4-443*. 1.A_agCHSI1UND PUPS, AKC, ESTEI HEIM KENNELS. 391-188* 1 POODLE PUPPIES. A.K. M color*, some older dogs and stud service. Royerde, FE 5Q120 , ADORABLE PUPPIES, 7 weeks old. puppies, more* Rd. 1 mile ei POTATOES, PICK-OUTS, 2541 Clarkston Rd., bet •nd Joslyn. *' Baldwfn Farm Equipment 87 3 POINT 2 OOTTOM blow , Marrows; Corn Cultivator, a point hitch, 425 3550. sleeper — save over *200. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT .J70 Dixie Highway, Clbrkston 4251711 4*53* Mon. through Frl., I a AKC MINIATURE SCHNAUZER 12 AKC POODLE P AKC POODLES, PUPS AND older dogs, reducing stock, reasonable, 3353730.____________ AKC POODLES, 1 math, 1 female, n. to S p. ! Closed Sun NOW ON DISPLAY Travelmate 10 ft. Double Bed, Dinette *13*5 12 ft. Doubl* bed, Dinettp 51,495 Pleasure Mate FARMERS TRACTOR WHEEL DEAL No money down, mteresL fret .... ----------- 1969. Tell us whet you got to Only *1385 tractor ^•?rinj,0taciSSS,ra*t Holly TroVel C°°ch' LnC* tK,° "Meilv^ sundry6! Vrec^ors!*»2J OAKLAND CAMPER FE 4. Midwest covers a Definitely show CASE TRACTOR, VAC, wide front, and accessories. ______________________________’ i heavy duty front end loader, 3 pt. : SILVER MALE Poodle, 1 year hitch, bottom, 14" plows. 427-1 Baldwin at Cplgeto ■mffrto quality. 628-4372. old* excellent bloodlines, v sonable, W7-92S8. i. Movie screen a GARAGE S proiector. Tee skates i £SDfi «*nvt» end dining ---------- I complete/ tools* etc. 3853 j f COLLIES. Pups. $35 u CLEARANCE SALE, BABY GRAND PIANO Dorothy L . OR 852-5735 7 MONTH QLD FEMALE ST. I oernard. Needs room to roam. Good watchdog* loves chlldr w model at $1195. GARAGE SALE. Everyday » to 5. . 144 Cherry I and. Auburn Heights. | Hagen Musi EVERYTHING MUST GO TO' gArden mark rotary lawn MAKE ROOM FOR OUR ■I i reel, 1969 MODELS BALDWIN SPINET Organ, walnut, Jleas. to right home, 335161S. ^f.1.l,'!!!.J.Thf?,rf:Lr®m010' •imost ALASKAN MALAMUTES, AKC, exc. in nxm! *h<>w quality puppies, sired by the second highest ranking dog, imjilon Tlgara's JEskimo Eddy INVENTORY REDUCING SALES Ofi tractors and equipment tor term' and lawn — don't forget to pie PIONEER CAMPER SALES bilee. Globe Star berth r —- Inger, Mackinaw, i, Car'bou, Berth SCAMPER FOLDING cemper, s Inquire et Davis Machinery Co., Orlonvlllo, , NA 7-32*2. Your new Idee end Homellte dealer, John SPORTCRAF1 MANUFACTURING Steel frame pickup sleepers 5 tops. 4160 Foley Weterford 423-Q4S0. E, terms, call 443-Q730. ALL PET SHOP, 55 Williams, FE 4 f-propelled; Ha years Thomas v Power-Craft old!" FE 52545. ' Baldwin was »B»5.' GIFTS, JOKES. GAGS, NOVELTIES G?l?lSrrwa^*M9f”’ LIBERAL BILL'S OUTPOST Wurtozer was J695-3245 DIXIE HWY., OR 5*474 Lester'was *795; GOULDS DEEP WELL let pump. Lowrey was S234S; OR 3-1315.________________________ Bush and Lane was 81*95; i GRAY OAK DRAWER type trundle I Gulbransen Was *25*5; n hou“ tral,,r' WorHtzer'wes S2495 .l! ! ! I. 482-5258. Na()cy Har, wgs ,„J; ..... , V $2*5 A » $17*5 r*ijw ° TRAVEL TRAILERS FOR sale rant. 345*531, 4851404. TRAVEL TRAILERS WtS u" Goodell Trailer Seles 3200 Rochester Rd. 852-4550. HUGE ftUMMAGE SALEr 154 Auguste st. otf N! Johnson. Tools, Tedders, load* of music, articles, some antiques, moving to Florida, everything must go. * e.m. to KENCO SUBMERSIBLE PUMP, LARGE YARD SALE: Anl lurry! etc-.', 3254* 'werr'en Frembes, Drayton. Wed., T ell day, Frl. til 2 p.m.__ LAWN SPRINKLING SYS!------------- available. Check our plastic pipe prices. W‘ 83.45 Per hundred 1" 85.41 per hundred U4" *5.51 per hundred IV* »10.»1 air hundred ---GT~XrTT16tops6n7 7005 M-5* W, te,'1F%"»",1»h.,n£,eiS3 Fotf FIdk-UP, 473-0074. LOCKES MOW large eels without II . Michigan I d Lk. FE 4-84 N 84*51 BEAUTIFUL DOBERMAN w *4*51 puppies, AKC-registered, ' ' ---------------»diwTl '• w BOSTON BULL PUI feds, 81 IPS. Ph GALLAGHERleMUSIC CO, 10 S. TELEGRAPH FE 4-0546 PONTIAC OPEN. MON. AND FRI. TILL HO RT-I ENGLISH SETTER, A month*, champion b r • wonderful d I s p o si t I personality. GERMAN 8 H ( POINTERS, 2 l show and ‘-- mu KenneL weekends.______________. CATS AND KITTENS FREE Ml 7-0*80 ntlng sti 5-2444. CUTE PUPFIES—45 EA DACHSHUND PUPPIES. AKC, dark male end , female, 040 — GIBSON 12 STRING GUITAR. WITH case. *185. 3324522. GULBRANSEN ORGAN. GOOD shape, reasonable. 673-1*54. MEDIUM GRAND PIANO, ..good condition. 482-6082, PIANO ROLLS, 26l REGULAirrefH 188, 40 mint Duo Art 840, 7* Amplco, >40. 338-010*.______ PIANO, ACCORDIAN AND guitar prlv-*-*52-2574 SILVER TONE AMP, d condition, *125. 475 FREE 10-month-old male black end German Shepherd. NEEDS MdRE ROOM -FREE—I , LITTLE —K1TJEN--“1s someone desperately to and provide a good horr-. . ks old and box trained. 682- » Also Gerbito, *2 t FREE PUPS, MIXED BREED. bench tor solo. 4251154. 'I GERMAN SHEPHERD, ] MISCELLANEOUS - FOfe clothing, some furniture. adding ir Ks end el 'S PONG TABLE. Htw. .*trai^: 4753209. *40. Swivel chair, *5. WjBtir PLUMBING BARGAINS, standing toilet, 014.95; heater. vSltti 5piS» .■— *5*.*5; laundry tray, trtm, H*J5; shower stall* With Trlm, *3*.»5; 5 bowl sink, O-MrSeVV CLfSf 120 and up. Pip* CUt " ““ PLUMBING 4-1514. SAVE' PLUMBING FIXTURES SPECIAL V bathtub* *39.95 ir' Venlty, **.»5 _ ........ Mi OC Twee. Thure. 8at »;TI),5:30 Wed. *:3»WFrU 9:359:30 IL etter ,5 FE 4-544*. UPRIGHT PIANO, i USED ORGANS Choose tram Hammonds and 0 wall known brands, prices as as *21*. GRINNEU'S Downtown Store . 27 8. Saginaw FE 53148 WALNUT BABY GRAND, excallanf condition, reasonable. 444-3415. WILDER AMP., 240 Weft Outfit, GERMAN SHEPHERD MIXED Gordon setter, 5 week* old, 425 IRISH SETTER, MALE, 12 weeks, buff'color, 7 me weeks, 4251035. 2 males and t female, 4 PUREBRED GERMAN SHEPHERD, 2W year* aid, mate. Loves children. Exc watch dog; ' needs room to room. *35. 4757 eftordPJA. _________________ REGISTEREO IRI^H IZ T T I, mieiiin mil rail 1 o.m.-i p.m. 33548IB. ________ SAINT BERNARD PUPPIES, AKC, 1 X fbyed stock, tlld. 428-1*31. .SIAMESE XITTEH ANDiTt u tarvlc* Yhur home; 4*3-492*. SILVER MALE PoodI4s ! Pontiac Jtd.at Opdyke Wt‘ CAMPER, SLEEPS 4, 61 482-0808._____________________ llff ALUMINUM TRAVEL tral After 5, 402-4545. . UTOPIA PANORAMIC Early American int., self-con., elec gas lights, rtfrlg., stove, gas self-contained, 007-4583. h hitch, completely 1944 FROLIC STEEPS 5 *9*5 481-0344 after 4 r 334-91*5 10 PM-4:30 * 1*44 WAYFARER CAMPER trailer, sleeps 8, 10x11 zlP-on edd-a-room. *450. 332-27*4. _____________ 1*44 vr WILDCAT, self contained. Sleeps 6. Complete, with Bock hitch •nd elands. Like new $1400. 335 *97* eft. 6, all day Sun. 1*47 FORD PICKUP with c 1*47 DODGE to TON t special. Power steering and brakes. 1947 10V* ft. camper. contained, sleeps 6. 4*52*27. 775 N. MIHWd Rd.. Highland. 1968 Starcraft Campers I--Inside dlmley-------- —CRU1SfbUT,iNC.— I E. Walton Dolly 54 FE 54402 AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEI, TRAILERS Since 1*21 Guaranteed tor life. See them end get * demonstration at Warner Trailer Seles, 30*1 W. -Huron (plan to join — APACHE-DEL REY cioso out prices en all, new Apache camp traitors and 1 trailers. Cleee out prlea* a*. ... new 1*40 pick-up truck campers. 20 different model* of truck campers to choose from. 14* travel trailers. a Auouet 25 t vacation and n *1*5. 341517*. , rmm wmi stud-gtaBis. . , , .ESS°94S. united KENNEL CLUB . Seles-service. Also piano tuning, toy ton torr’-- — PlthmedtLjDR 555*4. i ffv. r* 625-2177 record*, hlde-ebed, porch awing,! ,»r. boat, end miscellaneous article*. I XEROX MACHINE, Model — CENTURY ^ YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS Queu^t^budg* Yellowstone Truck Camper One imV and il' Special price' i, V STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. ncRT cMraia MSjn. rt Campers. Call MtFfjMKr Am, Sat. 8*1-2111 TRAVEL TRAILERS Your doaler tor — CORSAIR, GEM ROAMER AND TALLY-MO ALSO ' 7* I Corsair una Gem pickup campers end Macknlaw pickup covers. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy. 4254400 TRUCK AND CAMPER .for Goodell Trailer*. *79-0714. SLEEPERS. Factory r and parte, new and 1 teies'cwingJ* bumpers, * spare ' —'--- auxiliary gesol mm ~—m Sales, — Lake EM : WRIGHT trailer, < time tor 427-3*0*. FOLD OUT camping mplete with kitchen, ie holidays. Only, *3*9 1-A Beauties to Choose From WE FINANCE-TERMS RICHARDSON DELTA MONARCH . 1 . PUKE HOMETTE LIBERTY COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 2-1657 6251210 25 OPDYKE 5430 DIXIE -------------l ot... - -1 52 SUBURBAN EXCELLENT titton, «n00, 474b444. GENERAL. SKIRTING..... Buyer may live on lot. Cost HomeGraft ACTIVE 50'xl2' Mobile Home SPECIAL $3895 (one only) TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph et Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 BACK TO SCHOOL CLEARANCE 200cc Scrambler, was $640, now.................$520 250cc Scrambler, was $725, now ............. .~$575 Plus^m*n|f more to choose from et' °r* mg' SUZUKI SALES 4457 Dixie HwV., Drayton 67544 DAWSON SPECIAL - used 11 Tt>S321 •t is "iocc’to" SOOcc! I USED BARGAINS ,15' Dorset!, *0 h.p. Johnson . *13*5 .114; Duo, « electric^ Evlr . rud 1*62 FORD ECON-O-VAN, Exc. co dl»on.| cell Jeck. 5*56111 deys, 44 1963 FORD %-Ton Pickup, with radio, heater, new rubber, reel dean, no rust. Only— $695 *44 FORD ECONOLINE, GOOS condition. *500. 451-34*0, , 1964 INTERNATIONAL V* ton pickup. VB. now tires, ct owner, only $695 CHRYSLER, AND JOHNSON BOATS AND MOTORS OPEN DAILY * TO 4 • SUNDAYS 154 PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 DIXIE HWY. MARINA on LOON LAKE OR 4-041 535*. EXCELLENT J-3 C 4951750 or 62* SCRAMBLER. *300, OR MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE S. K. JOHNSON AGENCY "E.52533 _______ GROUND INSTRUCTION Personalized to tit ell ■ Retired ground Instructor t housewife doing Instruction It TRIUMPH 1943 engine, 3,000.. mr many e Royal Oek, 549-8770 after 4 o m Wonted Car«.Tr»ck» lOT ' * d BUICKS, CHEVY'S PONTIACS, end Bicycles A I REPAIRED BIKES, I 1*41 12x45. 84200 miles. We will t undersold. Jpen * to * 2257 Dixie Hwy. Oxford Trailer Sales c sp*c« . ______ _ ml. ! Qrtor«nw*»r~-------m MOVING: MUST SELL 12 x $ 0 SAVE 2 Ways! to IncreaseI BUY NOW ANO SAVE I COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1004 Oakland 335150* Rent Traitor Space SQUARE LAKE TRAILER PARK, — beautiful Square Lake, fust Hies from ell shopping, no pets, C'sorMri!m^i^JW Pontiac, 335*54*. WT COLONIAL IExST. 6252*34. 1*42 ANDERSON- SO' mobile honw, Insulated; lived In by mother. On 1*45 LIBERTY ItotSfcSbedrooms, only (31*5 Including delivery, ,'-,k' carpeted. 334-I5W. 1*44 RICHARDSON,______W.. x S ateume payments, 3*1-0934. , take ever peymento. Phone *4514 deva.~!M4522Q4 aft. 4 p.m. 1*4^ ROYAL EMBASSY, 12X01, tuliy furnished, t4J»0. 5* Brentotood, f Lake Mobllr ---------- ir call 674-3094. Rest Mobile Home Sotos Open Daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m. ..jrlette Champion Rovwl Embassy LandSa *620 Hlghler3IRc|V,il(4^S*) 2 miles w2HWtotdW«.tomlLk.Rd/j_iwi BRAND NEW 289 FORD ENGINES Complete with plugs, bellhousing, oil filter, clutch and pressure piste, cerburetion and heeds. „______ Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., West Pontiac REPAIR, MOUNT, Hid balance Mag end chrome wheels. New and used wheel*, MARKET TIRE, 2435 Orchard Lake Rd„ Keego. GOODRICH n .,75 X ,14. 1.-- Otter. >79-0273. Ante Servtoe— Repair 93 MOTORS FACTORY REBUILT, Cere, trucks, $89 up. High perforramce specialists. Terms. 12’ ALUMINUM BOATS ........... Trailers *120, 15' canoes . BiO Coho boats, 14', *289; IS' Big flbgrglas* runabout ...... 1.000 lb. boat trailers ..... EXTRA Dollars Paid . I 1 FOR THAT !_'i EXTRA Sharp Car ' | Especially 4 speeds end corvettes. ^ "Check the rest, Jhen get the bes * Averill's *5*5 FE 2 i Bldg j ——— ^57:30 13' ALUMINUM canoe, *160. 402d4t •Iter 5:30. 14 FT. ALUMINUM AEROCRAF' 1 Model Q, *140. FE 51054. 14 FT. FIBERGLAS, 1 40 hp Johnson j HIGHESTDOILAR PAID FOR Extra Sharp Cars) Grimaldi Buick-Opel control, 210 Orchard Lk-___FE 2-1 Mastorcraft trailer. 6 FT. FIBERGLAS end 35 H.P. Evlnrude with trailer. MY 51237, 16' SKI-BARGE WITH 40 hoi Evinrudo Lark, electric start, • 6 FIBERGLAS BOAT complete with top, Ice end storage compartment; running light* and controls. *0 h.p. Mtrcury excellent condition- *1700 or best offer. 482- I' FIBERGLAS BOAT with 80 Inboard outboard motor, frailer, convertible top, etc., ui Mansfield AUTO SALES f. 300 Sharp Cedlll«c5 POntlec. Olds end Bulcks for out-oFstate market. Top ..dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES - 1104 Baldwin Av*. FE 55900___.____FE 5M25 " FOR f CHRIS CRAFT, 220 h.p varnish, 682-8913 alter S;30. STOP HERE LAST M&M c brakes •nd lights, t Controls. Ges 1 1957 CHRliCRAFT, excellent con--amon;-4M-7m, SEA SPRITE 16' Trl-hull, S8 Merc 450S and trailer. *1895. KAR'S BOATS & MTRS. I W. Clarkston Rd. Lake Orion MY 51400 I960 SILVERLINE MAVRICK, 14' with Merc 1000 ELS, complete. *21*5. KAR'S BOATS 8. MTRS. 405 W. Clarkston Rd. Lake Orion KAR'S GOATS 5 MTRS. Motorcycles , 95 I BSA 450 CC, 473-07*3 c 1*45 HONDA 305, BUILT UPanglne, regeared Irens, full custom, 0500. 334-5492 before 5. 1969 BOATS 1968 PRICES OUTBOARDS 4-Trl Hull* 15 to 1$ ft. i.iyDtc INBOARDS • OUTBOARDS Hulls 120 • ISO HP. . INBOARDS 1*48 Correct Craft - Mustang* 145 IP. V* level 2-USED OUTFITS Comptoto with 40 G.70 HP. t-oededt MERCURY AND CHRYSLER OUT-. BOARDS Alum, Ftohlna Boats-— Fibergie* Canoes Cliff Dreyer's Marine Sport Center !T0 Holly Rd., Kelly ME 4-4771 Open Dally end Sunday*— otors end trailers'. _________ ercury and Merc-Crulser dealer. CRUISE-OUT INC. :. Walton FE 5440! Dally M, Set. M Closed Sunday* ' TOP $ PAID for dll sharp-Paafiacsu-and CADILLACS. We are prepared to make you a better offer!! Ask for Bob Burns. WILSON GRISSMAN CADILLAC condition, 651-»322. PICKUP, V4 ton, | TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*45 CHEVY Suburban Carryall with V8, 4 speed, 4 wheel drive, ^.•oWot^rr'to'to frgm-on US 10 .♦ MIS, Clarkston. C.^YR<£% for camper. Ex- ceilent condition, 81,too. 4*54355. TOM RADEMACHEK CHEVY-OLDS 44 CHEVY W toft, with 8 ft. retslde box, 6 eyl., click, radio, •sh air heater, new truck trade. 4*5. Over 75 other cart to select im. on US 10 at MIS, Clarkston. FORD RANGER V-d, VMen, MILOSCH S2595. 477 M-24, Lak* Orion, MY 5 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1947 CHEVY Vi ton, I ft. ftoatsida box, vt, automatic, radio, fresh air heater, In new truck condition, only *18*4. Over 75 ether car* to select from. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. .8 ^CUSTOM SPORT JTruck, Vi ton « FORD PICKUP, 3800 mile*, fdd with white camper box covgr, this ona Is almoet brand new, priced reel low. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake, COMPLETE SERVICE ON ..Starters.. . .Alternators.. ..Generators.. OPEN 24 HOURS Monday thru Friday GMC- Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS ________FE 59485___ TRUCK CLEARANCE!. 1966 CHEVY ’/z-Ton Fleet side pickup* with Showroom COnd “$1495 -Stvleslde—pickup, wl average condltlonl $1395 1350 N. Woodward “TOP DOLLAR PAID" -GLENNS FOR "CLEAN^USTO CA** FE 4-737; *”W* Hurwi >e 517*7 We wou Id like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUIOK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Junk Cars-Tracks 101-A j JUNK OlRS- FAY FOR~j ALWAYSJBtjYIN^^jyN^ CARS and ER - BRASS; RAOIATORS -lers and generators, C. Dlxswi, 1965 FORD Tractor Heavy duly, with full air, * tractor equipment. $2595 TAYLOR'S CHEVY-OLDS i PORSCHE COUPE, 5*0 engine, ed, black Interior, AM-FM, ne —t. 445411* aft d P-ttl. 1*41 VwTgOOD rawttFORTATION, d condttton. FE 58*81.' 1*45 VW, PRICE 8788, $450. 474-8432. I. Or Will trad* ft 1944 AUSTIN NEALY, Sprite, good *44 VOLK5WAGCI , FASTBACK moving, out et n, $1280. 424- 147 RED VW WITH radio. Ilk* new, 7,080 mi- tfsso,mmsi . f; D—1* THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28,, 1968 NwifiCff INI VOLIC month* o 105 Niw o.id Usad Con 100 WAGEN Kerman Ghia. 1, 1380 miles, radio. oxi bob mHoago. Call S3NN ext, 113 or oGirlrtbJlia._______ DUNE BUGGY INI Sharp, 11400. MA 4-1091 ' top ouAtilhr NEW AND USED IMPORTED CARS » ARE FOUND AT >■ GRIMALDI CAR CO. . r. 900 OAKLAND AVENUE f WANTED:. .VOLKSWAGEN f o I Interior, IBSfW fi 19*4 CADILLAC, ------,----- - convertible wen at 921 OnlverBlty Dr., Pontiac.____________ 19*4 CADILLAC BLUE 4-DeVllle. private 1 owner liki 24.000 miles, call *52-2431 a vm?-cou pe'Y>e~v7lleT ' whiti air and AM-FM radio, 1420 noi or 363-49SS after S. I 2DEL l____________ D AT ALL TIMES Nbw wd Uwd Cm 100 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1964 Chevrolet lirlpBiB 2 door Super Sport, G-3 angina, autom power steering and brakes, New wid UwO ^ °rV____1 00 W_1 '1961 FORD CONVERTIBLE, I condition. Newly overhaul automatic transmission. Make S ler |MtS-32»TL. *; i96i t-bird Take ov Ngw ond Used Cart 10 ■ 1966 FORD Galoxis 500 4-doar hardtop, V-» automatic, radio, heater, power steering, this block beauty only: $1295 Mew and Iftwd Cert 964 OLDS, NINETY EIGHT, 4 hardtop. This car w1g|gjjjjfi|j price, Tus’B81M'd — month. IN M 630 Oakland A 'BIRMINGHAM! ? ' Chrysler-Plymouth out, RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin, FE 4-4909. 2964 OLDS, F85, 2 door sports coupe. 1 automatic, orlg. owner; vary n, Calif, car. 642-6050. I Iliad Cart \pt Factory- Official CARS I Models Power Equipped —Many with AirT Priced From $1895 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward New aad Jeed Can 10* 646-3900 1964 PLYMOUTH 1 HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER Birmingham •LYMOUTH BARRACUDA, Ight stick, radio. w"“-----1 i, power steering, a >nlng, vinyl roof, I n ................... HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER “** Birmingham /MILOSCH CHUYSLEK-WYMOUTH INS T,mpOt» LeMens 2 door. Rod, VS, automatic, power steering, power brakes, bucket soots, .vent very sherp, S149S. 877 M24 Lake Orion MY 2-2M1. RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-TEMPEST °"MYl34>266fB" 1965 TEMPEST Custom Fischer Buick 545 S. Woodward 647-5600 966 TEMPEST ll.Mo'mlles* G MILOSCH tody to go S99S. 877 M-24 Lake rlon MY 2-2841.. 7 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 2. "LUCKY AUTOr^ 1965 BUICK Electro 225 brakes, power ':, radio, heater. $1795 DEALER ’ 33*92381 ..JBHIBNl..... _ brakes.: 335-5i36 o> 33*90181 i ,9£^LATUPMC^AronD*]w Very good condition. *225. 628-1618. m( CORVETTE 427, 4-speed, ex- — 1960 CHEVY 6 STICK, S100. 682-5869 cellent condition, 682-4463. _ >**2 FORD FAIRLANE —--- • "* —- '* ~ ~n. 1968 CORVETTE YEtLOW. block 35,7 p' ■M|__________BSgfe, as***- mu“- - wBaagggr^Bfe g Suburban Olds I CORVAIR SEDAN, Jomotic .excellent • mt_ _ I ndition. 42.000 miles, 8325. 626- 11941 CORVETTE, GOOD condi 1965 FORD XL Ilbte with 390 engine, 1 -2* steering, brakes. Ilk* new. On! *1195 BILL FOX CHEVROLET j Rochester_______________ 651 -7000: 1M8 MUSTANG FASTBACK, 81550. c. 075. 338- rrirnr BIRMINGHAM L 2-1377._________________ 161 CHpVY CONVERTIBLE, Sporhels, ' c 6035. CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, 1962 FORD GALAX IE 5 running condition, good ti 625-3904. 01197 H LUCKY auto! 1940 W. Wldt Track I 1965 OLDS 88 $444427. 1. $275; 1944 MUSTANG — Yallow 6 cylinder, ^ - USs. saurag&i; Xh£r\ Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM |] 673-:lM2 FORD XL, fr 860 s. Woodward 1964 BUICK STATION w let! 1940 W. Wlda Track 1965 BUICK 2 DOOR hOrdtop, gray, block vinyl root, V-8 automatic, double power, radio, neater, 81595. —ery Motors, Inc., 5806 "i.i. , wotortord. Michigan. 1962 CHEVY 8. AUTOMATIC, I ' !. 882-9223. Riggins, dealer. CORVAIR MONZA Coupe. ■BtfSaWtlLj- ‘‘ape 693-6529 1963 CHEVY IMPALA, 2 d hardtop, 327-300 hb. 4 sp< SLojo.nCol* 625-2075'after’ 1963 CHEVY bTsCAYNE. 2-d After 8 p'.m. EM 3-0417„ CHEVY SUPER-Spori, po1 . __________'CHEVY II Novo, Deluxe ird Like j mileage, 363-7780._______________ Now is' The Time 1 DEMO SALE I* ! 1968 mwtm TURNER FORD. — ____________ _______ „ 1963 FORD 2-DOOR, V-l automatic, Spotless condition. Vocation spech OR 3-3500. ' I “ —............ ; 1963' FORD STATION Wagon, 8 ------— *“« 984 Orchard (. Rd. _ FAIRLANE A-1 $395 with 897 < >wn TURNER FORD Ml 4-7S00. I T-BIRD LOADED, 8795 <-!«< «»7 > iwn, TURNER FORD._ FORD CONVERTIBLE ' mention, 8550. MU 9-1559 II 4-7500. t IMHP lown, and 855.75 per month. 5 yeor ir 50,000 mile new car warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD i Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 ,7 FORD PICKUP VS, 4 Spaed, S OLDS Jetstar 2 d 1957 PONTIAC, NO RUST, n( paint, extras, SJ75 or best ofte 651-8278, 139 Woodward, Rochester 1960 PONTIAC. -Somt $2145 1963 FAIRLANE 500, Good conditio 6 cytlnder automatic, i J^lng?Ak,^BLvfbrSiarc,^l^ r,h^!'65tt??9.ruab,r- mU,t “"'! “!|8?t conditlw, RONET-S 1968 BUI^K CONVERTIBLE, powarj steering and brakes, elr, 01595 private owner. 673-1958. 1965 Buick I *97 down,'TURNER'FORD. Mt 4-i ~ — I TN4~FALCON FUTURA, Tdoor~209, SPECIAL 11943°CHEVY II. GOOD worklng~cw mileage. 332-1206 _ . - 6 PONTIAC TEMPEST LOMons itendard shift, radio, leering, factory I CATALINA VENTURA/ I 1965 T-BIrd conv......}W5 1988 CotolTno 4-door ..SISM 1965 CMV. Impale Conv. .JIJ95 198S Impale St •••••;■•.■ FKf. 1985 Tompost convortlblo ON 1984 Calollnt 4-door .S-6JS 1943 Impala hardtop ..-J 1983 Bel Air 2-door ■* 395 KEEG0 PONTIAC \ Koooo Harbor ______ 8M-34BI SHELTON 1962 RAMBLER AMERICAN, cellent transportation, flood “ now battery, 1100. 824-1187. 1984 RAMBLER STATION wagon, runs good, good car, noads body , work. 8150. 338-3514. 1984 RAMBLER WAGON *493 With $97 down TURNER FORD. Ml 4- full price, no money down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 30 Oakland Ave. FE *4101 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLD* 1985 RAMBLER Station Wagon, s 55 $795. Over 75 other ™ fl(LD(^?berh*r3d,,S&1 wlgonRA^.R|lc CLradSioC S" rack! IREBIRD 400, 1967, 4-SPEED, Vacation special only SMB full price, positraction, low mileage, l-owner, I n0 money down, ptwn. 334-3989, alter 5 coll 334-1 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 2 Oakland Ave. ' IRE gh . 2635 Orchard Lake! STANDARD AUTO PONTIAC FE, 8-4033 167 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE wagon,! *UV> « 1 owntr, full power, nice condition,! hooter 693-3084, - /'■ ■ “GOL HAUPT PONTIAC HUNTER DODGE 99 SOUTH HUNTER __________ And Save $ $ $ good. 095, 674-1CLARKSTON Mm _____425-S500 -'ar-______- ■■ -r- ______11987 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-door, I 1961 PONTIAC STATION wagon good; double -|||j|...... S2.050. 693-1761. immediately. Call afternoons, TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1968 OLDS 91 2 door hardtop, v n TURNER FORD. 8 PONTIAC 1983 TEMPEST .stick, ' condition. 8495. 842-9104. 1983 PONTIAC Bonntvll NFED A CAR? - New in the area?; — Repossessed? — Garnisheed? — .______________________ Been bankrupt? - Divorced? — j 1943 GRAND PRIX, PONTIAC STATION WAGON, power brakes. Best offer. 651-j.___ LOOKING FOR A BARGAIN? TRY THE PONTIAC- RETAIL STORE FE 3-7951 Got a ____? Call A , 681-0802 1966 OLDS 4-SPEED $1295 with down TURNER FORD. Mi 4-7j TOM" RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1966 OLDS Dynamic 88 4 i ver sfoaring. Clean. 651^0474* PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 door 1967 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE 4 door, deluxe interior, air conditioning, power brakes, and steering. Auto, transmission, under warranty $2,795. Phone Holly, 634-0401 days, 634-9032 nights.________________ BARGAIN HUNTERS OR DO IT YOURSELFERS 1947 Pontiac Executive offer. 825-5452. 1988 TEMPEST CUSTOM. 2 door automatic 6 cylinder. 9000 miler 363-8357, ‘69 models. ROSE rambleR-JEEF, Union Loko, EM *4155. lc SALE BUY A NEW 1968 Javelin 2-Door Sedan for $2469 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Automatic Transmission or Radio for Lc HARP 2-DOOR HARDTOP Catalina, 1988, low mileage, power brakes and steering, decor trim, auto.! S2575. 5484 Waldon Ld., off Soshabow, Clorksfon . I CATALINA WITH I NOW AT Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 h black vinyl 5071. finish, only $1795. irs to select from. , Clerkston, AAA 5- i4 PORD^V-8, 2-d( i4~FORD_9 i, TURNER FORD. N $85.25 per month. 5 year or 50,( !3» mile. New car warranty. -1 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD {!1430 Oakland Ave._____FE 5-41 NEED A CAR? - 111967 OLDS 98, 4-door sedi >»| conditioning. $2795. 47*0532. ___ n OLDS ‘81, DEL, MONT 88 Custom w| HoHdoy Cow iliday Coupe, t. GM englnee PLYMOUTH7 lc GRIMALDI ,Your New BUICK-OPEL Dealer So Got a problem? Coll with black! Xing Auto, 681-0802.___________________ fun people.11968 TORINO GT FAIRLANE 500, ’ 81088 'full •■■-—■-i— in wagon, table. 651- passenger wagon beautiful metallic green with white fop, sharp as a houi tooth. Vacation special, only $ JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 0 Oaklanjl Ave.______FE 5-4101 CATALINA 4-DOOR I BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS () NO MONEY DOWN BUY HERE PAY HERB 1 • 1965 MUSlaftO, VS, automatic, $695 ' 1983 Pontiac. VI. power stee oower brakes.^495 1961 Chevy, 2 door, hardtop a $295 1961 Cadillac, 4 door Jardtop, $495 NOW AT S Village , Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 1984 •CHEVY. Bel Air station vc V8. automatic, radio, hi 1965 CHRYSLER Newport loor hardtop, factory i $1395 R--See tht, -auto at 'our new location at the T R o r “I MOTOR MALL, on Maple *! Rd. (15 Mile) 1 Va miles East of Woodwart). BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 4 CHEVROLET, 2-DOOR, Bel Air, automatic, excellent condition, AAarvel Motors/ 251 Oakland Ave. sad*. Buv Here - Pay Here, il Oakland Ave. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 830 Oakland- Ayr. ■-----FE *4101 '>64 FORD GALAXIE, 2-door .hardtop, 390 engine, 4-speed, Hurt! linkege, Ivy groan, black vinyl top with black vinyl interior. Red line tires, wire wheels. $1050. 801-0870. 165 t-bird .convertible, fuii^jKjwor. vacation0 special at only — S18b1I. Full prICt, lust 5108 down,and SM.75 per month. S yegr or SO.ooo mile new car warranty. ' • JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. 7 FE *4101 ■— T-Bifid LANDAU with full ler, and all the goodies. Vaca- J0HN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Av». FE 5-4101 198S FORD LTD 4 door hardtop. Burgund#,. O^y automatic, wwer Flannery Motors, li eautlful metalic ‘ a TURNER FORD A this onei BIG TRADE Allowanca, 8,000 mites. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE *4101 1968. Ford Galaxie 500 hardtop 2 door, with 302 V8, power steer-Ihg, radio, heater, automatic, $2545 FLANNERY I. TURNER FORD. < condition. 62*23 1965 7 On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 1966 CHRYSLER Newport 2-doOf hardtop, powder blue power'^fairing and bi^akas. $1795 See this auto at our new location at the TROY MOTOR MALL on Maplt Rd. E 5-6129._______ DOOR, automatic, 1967 OLDS Delmonte 425 power brakai, ^automatic, turquoise finish with matching interior. $2295 l Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM $0 S. Woodward_ Ml 7-5111 HURRY I i Wi : BEFORE THEY ARE GONE LAST CALL YOUR CHANCE TO BUY 68's AT TREMEN0US SAVINGS LOOK TO BEST FOR THE BEST I BEST Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 at Voorheis Rd). i. 2841 Woodbine (off 4 PONTIAC GRAND FRIX. *995. -*-wn, payments, *8.92 week. r parxt,........... V944HONNEVI LLE CO^^E - 89SD. 1 town',11988 MERCURY MONTEREY, r 50.000 mite new c WontAds For Action 1964 PONTIAC 4 DOOR ft brakes, $497 Full LUCKY auto; T^ 3940 W. WWO tt'icK 'T'^ " ■ F6 >t00$, or - FE 3-785j> i 1964jC AT ALINA 4 DOO% — $800 DEALER____________338-9238 Hwy.r Waterford, Michigan. 1765 PONTIAC Bo :, condition. Extru 1965 TEMPEST ! DOOR SS 326 3-., original ownor, 1350, coll after 5, SEE HILLSIDE! BEFORE YOU DECIDE 1965 MERCURY, PARKLAND Breezeway, V-8 power steering, pot roof, radio, heater, whltewajls.. 1964 MERCURY 2-door, Hardtop, black with white Ini 4-door, braezeway,. automatic, double power, radio, whitewalls. 1965 MERCURY *door>te£ard»op, bucket seats, console, doublo power, 1966 FORD Mustang, 289, V . radio, heater, whitewalls 1966 FORD GALAXIf^^- ' ‘"!rT 500, 2-door, bardfop, V-8,' automatic, doubla | premium white- conditioning, whlto- $1395 $995 $995 $1295 $1595 $1595 $2095 $495 HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 $495 , JOHN McAUMFFE FORD You Can Buy a Car at 020 ooxiond Ave, ,fe *4101 Standard Auto Even If ’^urnlf randySSeppterd^' tin^lf! ** “ “ with matching bucket seats V8, automatic, radio, shea}J[rat,!, • ' 1967 DODGE Coronet 500 .......... $2095 2-door hardtop, with y-8, automatic, air conditioning, low mileage, factory warranty. 1966 CHARGER Hardtop ...... ,$1995 With V-8, automatic, power steering, silver, like new.' 1965 VALIANT 4-door, 200 ....$1195 With 6 cyl. automatic, low mileage. Ideal second carl 1964 PONTIAC 9-passenger ... $1095 Wagon, double power, ideal family car! 1967 JEEP yniversal ............ $2095 Only 3100 miles, like new, 4 wheel drive. . : 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury ....... .$895 4-door sedan, automatic, ideal school carl 1964 CHEVY Impala ....... $1095 2-door Hardtop, 283 engine, auto., power steering, radio. * chrysler-rambLer PLYMOUTH-JEEP Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 HAHN 4 m THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 p—ia Grains ACROSS solver (slang) 1 Ham on— sandwich . a a .(.« Indolent «SpanUh oflifa tiUe *—"P®**. 45 Biblical 12 Ktemlty name UBaSnAf 4tSTprtnt is&sr* «*»■•»»* Aajwart# hwlwi Farid 18 Smal -aeeded 87 operatic solo #FaU month 68 Foretell (ab.) SO Underworld (eomb. lorm) 10 Greek letter ViismWam 11 still* 8od (Roman) 59 Number 23 Mutual amity (eootrOi 61 Ring bell 11 Correlative 41 Singing 27 Scottish wind .instrument SO Border trimmer , SI Winglike part 32 Bird’s bill 33 Exist 34 Nothing 35 Brazilian rubber tree 38 Clime 62 Headpiece .DOWN 1 Twenty quires 2 Ascetic 3 Chemical suffix _______gpPRi 4 Baking dish 27 Woes 8 Chemical 28 Existent element 29 Pioneer 6 Chaldron doctor group 43 Anger 47 Piece of sculpture 49 Affirmation 60 Eye part 51 Temporary shelter 82 Cooking utensil 53 Native metal 54 Bind 55 Railway post office-. \ r 5” 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 W iS mm Hi If 18 24 2! 26 31 w 34 37| 38 41 44 y k 4T\ 5& SI ^2 53 54 s? S3 58 60 61 62 28 —Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed in this column ore subject to change without notice Chennelsi 2—W IK-TV, 4—WWJ-TV, 7—WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKSD-TV, 36-WTVS A Look at TV Lots of Action With Dems By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK — The restless convention - w a t che r, moving from network to network looking for the most action, may have had some confusing moments last night. What the CBS tefcm at first Interpreted as an' “important break” in a Kennedy draft ultimately appeared to be a strategy session on the controversial party plank on Vietnam. But this flurry wds icing on a rich viewing cake. From the opening gavel early Tuesday ■ * * * evening until the windup in the At the moment when ABC’s | small hours this morning, there top political expert William was plenty of drama, excite- Lawrenee was predicting with firm authority the nomination of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey on a first ballot tonight, CBS’s Walter Cronkite and company were excitedly tracking down reports that other candidates were in conference with Stephen Smith, brother-in-law of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. HOWARD DELL Is at the iBALDWIN PHARMACY 219 Baldwin Ave. FE 4-2620 Mt-AJdui. Laundry Village Self-Service Coin Operated 747 N. Perry St. Across From Kroger Super LAV HOME IMPROVEMENT EverytWne la hews tjorovo—s' 335-2102* muo1 ment, suspense and action. DELEGATE STUNTING Occasionally, however, it seemed to the viewer that some delegates might be doing a little stunting tor the benefit of the cameras. A few stormed out of the hall in full sight of the nationwide audience and, not quite as furious as they seemed, returned quietly and unobserved later, The camera caught a heated exchange when a couple of pros-i pective speakers were barred! by “security men”—they re-j fused to identify themselves to a network floor reporter—on the) ground that they were carrying newspapers. ★ ★ "> Newspapers, we were later informed, were banned from the hall lest bored delegates be caught by the -cameras in the act of reading, not listening to speeches in spiteof till this forethought, some people inside the hall forgot the cameras so completely that they roughed up CBS’s Daii Rather when he tried! to find out the name of a Georgia delegate who, he said, was! being “hauled out.” WEDNESDAY NIGHT 6:06 (2) (4) (7) C £ News, Weather, Sports i(9) R — Denpis t h e Menace (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Misterogers Regularly scheduled programming may be Infer coverage relating to t h 1 Democratic Couveutiou. 6:30 (2) C - News ' -Cronkite, Kuralt (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (6) R C — Gilligan’s Island (50) R - McHale’s Navy (56) What’s New - Story: “A Hole Is to Dig” 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News -Reynolds (9) R — Movie: “The Black Rose” ( 1 9 5 0 ) Englishman of 18th century encounters romance and adventure in the Orient. Tyrone Power, Orson Welle!, Jack Hawkins, Michael Rennie (50) R— My Favorite Martian (56) Eric" Hoffer -Discussion focuses on threat of automation to destroy source of man’s self-esteem. 7:30 (2) (4) C — (Special) Democratic Convention — Agenda is expected to include nominating and seconding s p e e c h e s , > followed by balloting an presidential nominee. The magic number is 1,312. (7) R C — Movie: “Blue Hawaii” (1961) Y 0 u n g man spurns family’s wishes that he enter family’s pineapple b u s i -ness. He wants the easy life. Elvis Presley, Joan Blackman, Angela Lans-bury (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) To Be Announced 8:00 (50) R C - Hazel (56) R — Insight — Fantasy-drama about three survivors of World War III. 8:30 (50) R—Honeymooners (56) R — ,U:S.A. - TWO poets discuss influences that shaped their style. 8:55 (9) C —News 1:00 (9) R- Lock-Up (50) R — Perry Mason — Man is charged with murder 0 f playwright. Barbara Hale is featured. (56) International Magazine — Study of life in England includes profile of sculptor Henry Moore,' a -Sdsitv-fe the famous Crufts Dog Show and a fox hunt, plus an interview with a contestwinning housewife. 0:30 (7) C - (Special) Democratic Convention — Compact coverage 10 focus on nominating speeches, balloting on , presidential nominee. (9) Festival 10:00 ( 50) C — Les Crane -An inside look at the FBI (56)R — Innovations — “New Fabrication Technology” focuses on Metal work. PROTECT YOUR HOME “Let’s Talk SIDING!” BEAUTY AND PROTECTION WITHOUT COSTLY UPKEEP Guaranteed Best for the Easy Life KA/£____ ALUMINUM m mcrwnomB KAL-SH1ELD PLASTIC FINISH • BOOnm si BUTTERS • WINDOWS • AWNIN8S • STORM DOORS • SHUTTERS 30 Days Only FREE 5” White Aluminum GUTTER With Every Siding Job ALUMINUM TRIM Customised for Your Home --Call Anytime... FE 5-4715 ■MW ERVICE COMPANY1 BETTER Than the BEST! £ 10:30 (9) It’s a Square World (56) R — On Hearing Music 11:00 (|) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock 11:30 (2) R — Moyle: “Callaway Went Thataway” (1951) Fred MacMurray, Dorothy McGuire, Howard keel, ; Stan Frebferg, Jesse White 4) C - Tonight (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) C — Wrestling (50) R *- Movie: “Adventures of Sherlock Holmes” (1939) Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce, Ida Lupino . 12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:30 (2) R — Doble Gillis (4) C — PDQ 2:00 (2) R — Highway Patrol 2:30 (2) C-News, Weather THURSDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the'Farm Scene 5:59 (2) C - News 6:00 2) U. of M. Television (4) Classroom % 0:30 (2) C — Gospel Singing Jubilee (4) C -Ed Allen 7:00 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Today (Program originates from Chicago this week.) \ (7) C — Morning Show 7 :55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) C - Captain „ Kangaroo (9) Tales of the River Bank 8:30 (7) R C — Movie: “One Desire” (1955) An orphaned 10-year-old searches for his older brother. Anne Baxter, Rock Hudson, Julie Adams, Natalie Wood (9) C — Upside Town 9:00 (2) C-Merv Griffin (4) C -Sieve Allen (9) C — Bozo 10:00 (4) C—Snap Judgment (7) C — Virginia Graham (9) R — Hawkeye 10:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) C - Dick Cavett (9) R — Friendly Giant (50) C"-r Jack LaLanne 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:00 (2) R Andy Mayberry (4) C — Personality (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C — Kimba 11:25 (9) Pick of the Week 11:30 (2) R-Dick Van Dyke (4) c - mm Squares___ (50) R — Little Rascals 11:55 (9) News THURSDAY AFTERNOON (4) C - Let’s Make ■ Deal (7) C — It’s Happening 1:55 (7)- C 1 - Children’s Doctor 2:00 (2) C — Love Is a Many Splendored Thing , (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game 2:80 (2) C — House Party (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Route 66 (50) R C - To Tell the Truth 3:25 (50) C — News 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C — Woody Woodbury (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Swingin’ Time 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (7) R C — Movie: “The Atomic City” (1952) Small son of an atomic scientist is kidnaped by foreign agents. Gene Barry-, Lydia Clarke, Michael Moore (50) R —Three Stooges 5:00 (9) C — Bozo (50) R — Little Rascals 5:30 (4) C — George Pierrot — “Round About Moscow” (9) C — Fun House (50) R — Superman 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant TV Features DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION, 7:30 p.m. (2), (4), 9:30 p.m. (7) INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE, 9 p.m. (56) LES CRANE, 10 p.m. 1 OPEN TIL 5 P.M. DAILY—CLOSED SATURDAYS Stores Are Short on Longer Dresses GLASGOW, Mont. (AP) -j The school board recently ruled girls’ dresses must reach the knee, but a survey showed Glasgow stores carry nothing asj long) as knee-length skirts. “We can’t buy them any: more,” said one perplexed clothier. Mothers plan to bring the matter up at the Wednesday night meeting of the board. Current regulations say the girls will be suspended upon first offense and called before the board with their parents on a! second offense. Today's Slate at 3rd Session of Dem Convention CHICAGO (AP) - Tentative schedule for the tlurd session of the Democratic National Convention today: % Call to order at 1 p.m, EDT. Resumption of floor debate over- the proposed platform plank on Vietnam. Roll call of states for nominations for president, Balloting by 2,622 delegates 'for presidential nominee. WILSON Wilson Pumps Up Acclaim for Chicago's By Earl Wilson Chicago — “Never mind who gets the presidential nomination — it’s who gets Booth 1 at the Pump Room that’s ini-portant," a girt was saymgrfr* “Booth 1 is a hotter seat than the Presidential seat.” Booth 1 is the first big table, as you come into the Pump ;Room, the restaurant in that great bastion °f ________ VIPs here for the Democratic convention, thefp^^RBRRi Ambassador Epst Hotel. There is some quiet f| jockeying for it every lunch, dinner and supper, t .The celebrities naturally want it as they want (pf | one of the two penthouses in the hotel. There are so many VIPs here that I was thinking of just staying in the hotel and not going to the convention. Gore Vidal, some of the of Humphreys, Perle Mesta, Huntley & Brinkley. Gen. David Sarnoff, and some singer — I’ll • think of his name — and Bob Tisch who heads jthe Loew’s Hotel chain that owns the Am-ibassadors East & West, They are among the occupants of the 700 rooms. PHHp}'1'-, ‘‘Let's go to the Pump” is the thing to say this week, “andj H o 11 y w 0 0 d ,hope we can get in.” There’s no pump in the Pump Room that I’ve been able to find. '_______ . t It was named for the Pump Room in Bath, England, which got famous around 1700. Beau Nash, the Perle Mesta of his day, said that at the Pump Room, society folk would deign to mingle with showfolk. ^ Today, of course, showfolk are royalty. The late Ernie Byfield, once owner of the hotel, in opening this Pump Room, said that here, “showfolk would deign to mingle with society.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . IN N. Y. Kim Novak’s gdrb at tHe Hollywood opening of her “Lylah Clare” film: A bare midriff dress with a diamond in her navel Barbara Streisand was asked by NBC who she’d like to have interview her during the “Funny Girl” premiere hoopla Sept. 18. She replied kiddingly, “Why not Huntley and Brinkleyr Jack Lemmon’s among those bidding for movie rights to! "Hair,” but producer. Michael Bntler may film it himself. (Hisj. first movie is...“You Are What You Eat”) . . . Marty jngels, filming in Europe, did cameo scenes with Virna Lisl, Anita Ekberg and Joan Collins. He writes, “This is really the way make a living!” WISH I’D SAID THAT: Someone described tact: “It’s a woman finding lipstick on her husband’s shirt, and calling the laundry to demand an explanation.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Friends are people who love us more than we deserve.” — Arnold Glasow. EARL’S PEARLS: Ted Berkelmann says he wonders about one of his acquaintances: “This guy sandpapers his fingers before turning a TV dial.” Dick Cavett explained why his ABC-TV show occasionally! has technical difficulty: “We use very expensive, delicate, equip-! ment, and it’s sometimes damaged when it’s removed from the Cracker Jack box.” That’s earl, brother. (PuMIsbert-Hall Syndicate) 12:00 (2) (4) C - News, Weather, Sports ; (7) R-Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date 12:25 (2) C-Fashions 12:30 (?) C - Search for Tqmorrow < (4) C *- Eye Guess (7) C — Treasure Isle (9) R — Movie: “The Man in the Net” (1959) Story of a wife’s neurotic behavior and her husband’s reaction, Alan Ladd, Carolyn Jones, John Lupton (50) R - Movie: “Million Dollar Baby” (1941) Ec-centric matron decides to give a department store employe a check for . a million dollars 12:45 (2) C-Guiding Light 12:55 (4) C-News-1.00 (2) C-Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) Dream House 1:25 (2) C-News (4) C - Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C T- As the World Turns Radio Programs- WHR760) WXYZ(1270) CKLW(800) WWK950) WCAR(1130) WPON(1450) WJ8KQ 500) WHFt-fM(94.7) " WWJ, I_________ Z, Netscape WJBK. News, Hank O'Neil WCAR, News, Ron Rose WPON, News, Rhone Opinion' WHFI. Don Bosco CM—WWJ, Today In Review, Emphasis WJR, Business Barometer, . Time Traveler C4j—WJR, Lowell Thornes, I,N«n SportsLIne WCAR, Nows, Rick Stewart WJR, NewvBl WJR, Reasonor Report, Re- port on U.S. Amateur, Fanfare 7:45—WJR, Tiger Beat, Baseball WPON. Music Till Mldnlte COO—WHFI. Tom Coleman CKLW, Scott Ragan 10:30—WJR, Scores 10:45—WJR, Muslctl showcase 11:00—WJR, News IlitS—WJR, Sports Final 11:30—WWJ, Dealt: Notices, ; WJIbSSk^c Till Dawn 13:05—WXYZ. Nows, Jim Davlo CKLW, Franc Brodle WCAR, NOw*, Wayne Phillips WJBK. NighNIma THURSDAY MORNING 0:00—WJR, MUSIC Hall „WXYt! Nows, Martin <■ 4:30—WWJ, Morrle Carlson 7:0F—WHFI, Gary Pur ace WPON, News, Chuck Warn 7:15—WJR, Open House CjOWL Mark Richards 10:00—WJBK, News, Conrad Patrick WXYZjt Note* Johnny Ron-WPON, News, Jerry Whit-WCAR, Nows, Rod Miller WHP1, Jim Zlnsar THURSDAY APTRRNOON I3:M—WWJ. News, Emphasis i WJR, News. Farrp CKLW, Jim Edwards III IS—WJR, FOCUS 13:30—WWJ, Marty McNeeley: WXYZ, News, Don McNeill Fanfare .1 1:15—Tiger Beot. Baseball 1:30—WXYZ* Johnny RahdMl 1:00—WPON. Nows, Pat pot " WMF), _________ 3:15—WJR, Music 3:0S—WCAR, News. WMK 4MW: I Lynch CKLW, iiSuTRtvors" WwXY^j Nows^Dick Purlan 4:15—WJR,’ Report an (14, Amateur, Music Hall 5:15—WPON, Lum V Abner 5:30—WPON, Pot Appolson G 8 M CONSTRUCTION t ELUS "OUILDINO IN PONTIAC 5INCI1745* m^ALxoNjmm PONTIAC'S *ONE STOP SW19/NO SERVICE* • ADDITIONS • ALUMINUM SIDING • BREEZEWAYS a ATTIC CONVERSIONS a AWNING WINDOWS • AWNINGS • DINS • PATIOS • GARAGES • RECREATION ROOMS e CONCRETE WORK-MASONRY • KITCHENS • FAMILY ROOMS e BATHROOMS • STORM and SCREEN DOORS and WINDOWS Owr 30 Ytor Nort|i|s Ploo 86 North Saginaw — Downtown Pontiac IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT WIbHuilderHE FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE KITCHEN CABINETS S-Ft. Kitchen $O£Q00 COMPLETE &UvJ 7-Ft. Kitchen $OAQ00 COMPLETE £99 INCLUDES: Upper and Lower Cabinets, Counter Tops, Sink with Faucets, CALL DAY OR NIGHT COLOR ALUMINUMS W00DFIELD CONSTRUCTION Sears ROEBUCK AMD CO. Phone FE 5-4171 for j FREE ESTIMATE INSTALLED Chain link FENCING Privacy and Protection for Your Property v Aears, Roebuck and Co. . N. Saginaw in Pontiac ALUMINUM aw MAINTENANCE SCULPTURED SIDING Stop Blistering, Cracking, Peeling, Give Your House KAISER ALUMINUM SIOIIMI For As Little As $3.45 A Weak No Money Down No Payment ’til November Member Pontiac Cl ROUGH SHUN SUNG FREF estimates (No Obligation) FE 8-9251 328 N. Per?/, POflTfAG it!® f: Wm W'T: THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1988 Floor Sample SALE Saturday Last Day Kenmore Washers LOW PRICE KENMORE 2-Cycle, 2-Speed 18-Lb. Washer Sale Price #157 Here’s a washer to help you keep up with the hefty laundry needs of a growing family. Cycles and speeds for regular and delicate fabrics. Save now at Sears. Check These Prices Reduced ; Even Lower Than Sears Everyday Low Prices FLOOR SAMPLES Kenmore Dryers HANDY L0AD-A-D00R 2-Temperature Electric Dryer Sale Price *87 Heat and “Air Fluff* temperatures. Load-A-Door folds down and makes a handy shelf. Top-mounted lint screen. More Great Washer Values Suds-Saver washer, saves on water and detergent. Suds water is held in a tub, heavy soil sinks to the bottom. 3- cycle, 3-temperature washer for regular, delleafeand Permanent-Press fabrics. Acrylic-finish top, lid and cabinet.. Low price 2-speed washer with cycles for regular and delicate fabrics. 6-vans AgifatoNoosens stubborn dirt.. 4- cycle, 2-speed washer with self-elsaning lint filter. 3 water levels... save up to 29% on water on small loads.. ■ Kenmore washer features built-in maze-type II fitter. 6-vans agitator loosens stubborn urt.. Kenmore wringer washer with Visi-Matio open-top wringer that leteyou guard against tangling or twisting.> #169 #179 14988 19988 #119 9988 #67 Wringer washer with push-bar safety release... hit bar and the wringer stops and rolls release. 8-position wringor.............. Kenmore Ranges Demon- strators Display Models GUARANTEED Quantities Limited Save on These Kenmore Dryers 14988 17988 13988 ... 11988 14988 #157 #157 2-cycle Kenmore electrio dryer for regular and Permanent Press fabrics. 3 temperatures: hot, warm, air only....... 2-cycle, 3-temperatur/Kenmore gas dryer. Permanent-Press cycle gives extra-long cool-down to fluff away wrinkles..... 2-cycle, 3-temperature Kenmore electric dryer. High, warm and “Air Fluff*’ temperatures. Load-A-Door folds down....... 2-temperature Kenmore eleetrie dryer with 3-hour timer. Top-mounted lint screen, Load-A-Door folds down for fhelt.... 2-cycle Kenmore gas dryer for regular and Permanent-Press fabrics. 3-temperatures: hot, warm, air only. •■■■■■..•< Kenmore electric dryer with easy-to-elean top-mounted lint screen. Load-A-Door folds down, makes handy shelf...... Kenmore gas dryer. Top-mounted lint screen is easy to clean. Handy Load-A-Door folds down to make a shelf.... Coldspot Refrigerators lfj5ggB| KEEP-WARM OVEN 30-Inch Gas Range Iflpi8®S i $99 Features automatic lighting, non-drip cook-top, removable oven door for easy cleaning. Smoke- 1 less, pull-out broiler. Lo-Temp oven keeps food ( | serving-warm for hours. THINWALL INSULATION 18.5 cu. ft. Frostless Sale Price 35988 No defrosting ever in either 219-lb. full-length freezer or refrigerator. Our most compact Super-mart features coil-free back, fits flush with wall. 14 Cu. H. Caldspot rsfrlgsrstor-freezer. Full-width erieper....... 16.6 eu. ft. alMrostlsss refrigerator-freezer............ freezer holds 47 lbs. . ;*197 .*199 .*249 .*169 Save on Gas and Electric Ranges Kenmore 39” electric rangs with fast, prs-haat oven. Infinite-htat burners for numerous heat selections.... 36” gas range with 24” oven has “Lo-Tamp” control. Oven door removes for easy cleaning. Smokalese pull-out broiler.. 36” eleetrlo range with aoH-oloaning oven. Added cooking convenience with handy infintto-lioat burners............ Kenmore double-ovan gas rings. Bakes oakss and roast at the tame time because both event work Independently.. .. Kenmore elassie double-ovan eleetrie range. Tight-fitting silieono door coal to keep in the heat........ * .1......... Kenmore “eye-level” oven 16” gee range. Le-Temp oven buiekly,defrosts frozerf food, keeps cooked food worm... ■ “Eye-level” oven in 36” olassio electrio range. Nfw plug-in burners with Inflntte-hsat settings.^ even racks.. *119 *127 *187 *199 *199 *157 *157 Coldspot Freezers HOLDS 525 LBS. FROZEN FOOD Chest Freezer 15 Cu. Ft. Model *157 Features thinwall insulation for more storage space inside the same freezer with thick walls. 22 60. ft. 6h«St freezer, thinwall insulation....... 11 du. ft chest frtezer, tt** *177 *199 . *176 *166 KENMORE HOME UIIMMY EUMUN1EE wUeh pm*, defertiv* within 3 ywn mt aU, batalUttoa atm S. onn.1. wmoo —S I WIM, Mfiliri imjEUai jwar. KENMORE DAS RANGE GUARANTEE Fief Replacement and Service of any parts which prove defective within one year of sale. Free Replacement of any defective glass or porcelain enamel and ether finishes within 30 days of sale. No Money Down On Sears Easy Payment Plan Up to S Yean to Pay Yon Can’t Do Better Than Sean REFRIGERATION GUARANTEE: If the sealed refrigeration system of your Coldspot prodnot fails to operate property within 5 years doe to defects in material 6*^*^^***^“" a SEARS MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT Appliances mar need service after the guarantee period. Sear* low cost complete Maintenance Agreement putt Seats nnder contract to yon. makes sure your appliance will be maintained in top condition. Open Monday, Thursday,' Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5tS0 Sears] Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5*4171 8EAR8; ROEBUCK AND CO. 1 WHILE QUANTITIES iASTt ITEMS ON SAU assorted colors CHARGE C IT* j SUPFlement TO THE PONTIAC PRESS Wednesday, August 28, 1968 has the late price! USE TOUR MICHIGAN BANKARO CREDIT CARD' HMNTIMSITT LAMP SALE! I^uynyiu I OUR ’ illumination! I Concentrated I mice light! Save! 12.99 G.E. ROOMMATE ALARM CLOCKS Easy to read dial! Pert miniature styling. Antique white. 2.99 SMM ■ GIRLS’ NYLON PANTY HOSE Special! Save Now! PAPER MATE "98" PENS Dependable, skip-free writing!, Unconditionally guaranteed! Buy now! mis on AVf. cor. or CHAMPAIGN-LINCOLN PR. CONNER G WARREN AVES.IlO MILE AT GRATIOT CORNER OS DIXIE MGWT. AND TELEGRAPH ROAD PONTIAC 74411 MICHIGAN AVE ROSEVILLE INKSTER AT MICHIGAN A MIODLERELT OEOUINDRE NORTH OR ■ MILE RO. IN WARREN h GIRLS' 2-PIECE NYLON GIRLS’ 7 TO 14 100% COTTON GIRLS’ 7 TO 14 COTTON SHIRTS Solids and prints! Assorted colors. GIRLS’ NYLON STRETCH POLOS Solids! Stripes! Assorted colors. Sizes 4 to 14. Your 99 Choice!^ ■Hill Each 2-PC. SKIRT SETS GIRLS’ 4 TO 14 NYLON PARTIES wS For*! Assorted colors. GIRLS’ 4 TO 14 COTTON SUCKS Cotton denim (iRI and corduroy. ■ A-line, waist and sailor styles! Button trim. Choose from solids, prints, and stripes! Permanent press! Choice of assorted colors. GIRLS’ 7 TO 14 Look of leather skirt sets! 100% vinyl. Also-cotton plaids in group! Reg. 3.99. Great value! Solid colors! GIRLS’ GOWNS & PAJAMAS Cotton flannel-ette. 4-14. Reg. 1.59 | GIRLS’ 7 TO 14 FALL JUMPERS Look of leather. 100% vinyl and 100% Orion" acrylic bonded to 100% acetate. GIRLS’ NYLON STRETCH TIGHTS Seamless! Sol-id colors. Sizes 1 to 14. * FANCY CROCHET THIGH-HI HOSE 2 F0* | Over- the-knee nylon hose. Sites 6 to 11 GIRLS’ 4 TO 14 SCHOOL SKIRTS A-lines! Woven checks! Solidsl Cottons! GIRLS’ HALF A FULL SLIPS 2 Nylon half or Cotton full. Sizes 4 to 14. GIRLS’ 4 TO 14 BULKY CARDIGANS GIRLS’ 4 TO 14 COTTON SLIPS . Bulky caraigafi and slipon sweater- *n assorted solid colors! 100% Orion-acrylic. Buy now for back-to-school. STRETCH SLACK SITS 2 1 99 SIZES 7 TO 14 GIRLS’ LAMINATED SIZES 3 TO 6 X 100% nylon stretch! Long sleeves, turtleneck collar, and sturupps! Assorted solid colors.- STRETCH SLACKS Laminated stretch slacks in solids, checks, prints! Cotton bonded to acetate. Sizes 4 to 14. Full slips with lace trim! 100% washablo cotton. White only. Ruffled bottom. 22 T BOYS’ 8 TO 18 PERMANENT PRESS SPORT & DICKEY SHIRTS SPORT SHIRTS Long sleeve Ivy styles with button down cotlart Solids, pin checks, wide track stripes! Assorted fabrics. DICKEY SHIRTS Long sleeves, stand-up button down collars! Removable dickey! Printed checks, and solids. Assorted fabrics. OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 2.99 Each BOYS’ FULL NYLON TURTLENECK 1" Long or short sleeves! Full turtleneck! In assorted solid colors. Sizes 8 to 18. BOYS’ 8 TO 18 NO-IRON DUNGAREES |99 Soil release Fortrel® poly-ester/cotton blend! Western style! Assorted colors! BOYS’ PERMANENT PRESS SPORT SHIRTS BOYS’ ACRIIAN' ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTS yak SPORT SHIRTS — long sleeve, button-down collar! 100% cotton. Solids, paisleys, wide tracks! Sizes 6 to 16. ACRILAN* KNIT SHIRTS - Choice of 4 styles in assorted colors! 6 to 16. BOYS’ PERMANENT PRESS PLAID SLACKS & CORDUROY SLACKS afanet PLAID DRESS SLACKS-Fortrel® poly-ester/cotton no-ironl Fast back model! Assorted plaids and checks. 6 to 18. BELTED CORDUROY SLACKS-rPoly-ester/cotton widewale and midwale! Fastback modell Vinyl belt. No ironl Sizes 6 to 16. BOYS’4 TO 14 COTTON CORDUROY PARKA Widewale, midwale corduroy! 2 front pockets, aK tached hood! Quilted lining, zip front. Assorted colors. OUR 1 Every day PRICE 3.99 iHf > r. St ' ^ j DELUXE 20" RENEGADE HMtlSER BICYCLES SUPER BUY! Sensational bike with front and rear caliper hind brakes, chrome fenders, white wall tires and deluxe 3 speed stick shift! Brilliant finish! BOYS’ BACK-TO-SCHOOL PERMANENT _ PRESS! ^ DRESS SHIRTS: Permanent press! Polyester 'n -cotton. White. 6 to 18. SPORT SHIRTS: Cotton corduroy. 6 to 16. SPORT SLACKS 4 TO 12 Assorted plaids and canvas cloth solids) Self beltl 2 front pockets! 100% cotton. Assorted colors. Notch coat style! Fully piped! 100% cotton flannel and rayon 'n cotton. Long sleevel Assorted plaids. 100% cotton flannel. 6 to 16. N0-IR0N SLACKS Boxer stylel Polyester 'n cotton. Assorted colors. 4 to 12. Washable! Full elastic waist. 100% cotton. Sizes 4 to 14. Washablel Full elastic waist. 100% cotton. Sizes 4 to 16. BOYS’ 4 TO 16 SKI SWEATERS *99 Long sleeve and crew neckl 100% cotton. White. 6 to 16. 5 pockets! Pre-shrunkl Cotton denim. Assorted colors. SHIRT: Printed cotton flannel. Long sleeve. SLACK: Boxer style. 100% cotton. Shirt: Permanent press! White onlyl Also: Tie, Handkerchief and Hose! ic Six patterns! Full turtleneck •a and hi-crews! Assorted colors. Has 2 keys! 6" long! Protect your valuables! AD chrome platedl Outstanding buy! Large 2" rear switch! On-off switch! Fully assembled bike basket) Terrific buy! TERRIFIC SAVINGS IN BIKE ACCESSORIES! Full turtleneck *tyle»in 100% combed cotton. It's the sport-irfg look for casual wear! Elastic collar. Choose from assorted colors. Sizes, S,M,l. PERMANENT PRESS! . LONG SLEEVE Turtleneck SHIRTS *2 MEN’S FAVORITE STUeV^^ Pullovers Cardigans EACH Exciting new sweaters in mohair blends, wool blends, 100% acrylics, and 100% Or- 1 Ion* acrylics! Choose from as-\ . sorted colors in sizes S,M,L. y i ■ _______ _/ MEN'S SPORT OR ORES! SHIRTS lUaH'/MII i mm m mmm ■fM l SPORT SHIRTS - Assorted collar styles, fabrics. Plaids, solids, fancies. Sizes S,M,L. DRESS SHIRTS — Regular or twtt"" down coHar^As-sorted fabrics. White and colors. 14 to 17. MEN'S EXCITING NEW Jnded Nehru Jadiets The NEW look, the NOW look in men's wear . . . the Nehru style jacketl Longer length with slim tailoring, stand-up collar! 100% Orion® acrylic laminated to foam to keep its shape always! Button front. Choose now from assorted colors and be among the first to wear the Nehru! Priced low nowl Small, Medium, or Large. NEWEST CHECKS! NEWEST PUUDS! Permanent Press Casual Slacks 2.59 Eg. Complete the new fashion look for Fall with a* pair of no-iron slocks in checks or plaid! A smooth blend or Fortrel®. polyester and cotton. Fast back styling, fine tailoring! Choose from assorted color combinations to compliment any look. Si.-es 29 to 38. ONE COLOR OUR > (VERY DAY PRICE 1.99/ 65% polyester/35% cotton blend! Bermuda or spread convertible collars! White, pink, blue, maize, beige! Sizes 32 to 38. OUR EVERY OAY PRICE 5.97 Full fashioned • acrylic cardigans havo beautifully detailed cable v stitch frontsl Choose from a variety of designs! White, pretty pastels and high fashion colors. S, M, L Ladies9100% Nylon ladies9 WITH NYLON BACK ZIPPER OUR > EVERY OAY PRICE 1.99/ Textured 100% nylon 2-way stretch knit top has long sleeves! Fashionable turtleneck or mock turtleneck has nylon zipper opening in back! White, black, navy, loden, royal and greyl Small, Medium and Large. ouR i EVERY OAY MICE 3.99/ SLACKS /*" Sup*r~~^\ ^^'99 100% Acrilan® acrylic fiber or 100% Orion® acrylic bonded to acetate tricot! Set-in waistband; stitched crease legs! Wear Dated® and machine washable! Choose black, brown, loden, royal, navy, grey! Sizes 8 to 18. Easy-care 65% Dacron'® polyester/35% combed cotton blend needs no ironing! Regulation waistband; side zipper! Comes in black, navy, loden, brown and berry! Sizes 8 to 18. Permanent Press PERMANENT PRESS IP® ladies’ Pile lined OUR \ EVERY DAY PRICE 8.99 LyA All Hie latest styles in-eluding A-lines, skim-jph>\ mere, shifts, Nehru's, Obi backs, pleated tor-so skirts, single and v double breasted! Knit I A fabrics include 100% | f\ (; A Orion® acrylic, 100% 0 V j f: Acrilan® acrylic, ray- n’ on/cotton blend, Co-■* loray® rayon and more . . all bonded to 100% acetate! Solids, tweeds, and checks Nehru golf neck closing! Drawstring bottom, 5 snap button front. Water repellent nylen oxford; 2 tone acrylic pile lining; Royal or in aB the newest Pali shades! FASHION HANDBAGS Choose totes, vagabonds, barrels, and shoulder strap styles! All with double handles, zipper compartments! Grained plastic! Assorted colors. ~ OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 1.39 Non-run seamless mesh PI with nude heel! 40 j denier panty, 20 denier • legs! Beige, Taupe,. or Spice. $, M, L, XL, j i from ccARTMf fjiw^ \1 Special Buy! 8*4x11-inch typing paper! Stock up now at this low price for back-to-school! Terrific Buy! Piano hinge type binder, in assorted plaids Or solid blue heavy duty canvas! Special Buy! With pend! pouch, subject organizer, class schedule, and looseleaf dictionary! Terrific Buy! Economy pack of 24 smooth Writing, smooth erasing #2 pencilsl Stock up nowl Super Buy! 64 crayons in a hinged top box with built-in sharpener! Priced low now! 100 Grabbies Plastic SANDWICH BAGS Special Buy! Solid steel shackle , with brass tumblers! Perfect for Jsjkes, tool chests, etc. Special Buy! Package of TOO tear-off disposable plastic bags! Complete with tie bands! All Steel Personal KWIK WRAP Super Buy ! Pure transparent plastic! Odorless, reuseable! Food and freezer wrap! Cutter bold A 2”* 29 PORTA-HUE Terrific Buy! Hinged carry handle! Trouble free lock! Complete With file foldersl 12*4x5*4x10" 1 STEEL PADLOCK ^ _ Super Buy! Strong laminated steel con-* ■ " structionl Cadmium rust- proofed! 1 *4-inch size! 59 STURDY DELUXE GYM DAGS Super Buy! Easy open zipper, sturdy handle! Choose solid color vinyl or plaid canvas! FAMOUS BOSTON KS PENCIL SHARPENER Super Buy! Good for wall or desk! All metal. Adjustable wheel for all size pencils! Pencil lock! 1 98 Our Every Day Price 3.69 SCHOOL SUPPLIES Choose Pencil Pakl Zippered Carry* Alt Pouchl Compass and Protractor Set! Super Pak Erasers! Pack of Drawing Instruments! Webster's Concise DICTIONARY BATTERY CLOCK ^ SOLID STATE i INSTANT SOUNDL Terrific Buy! Accurate, newly edited modern dictionary! Handy library sizel Illustrated. ,f JULIETTE ALARM CLOCK RADIO Solid state instant sound AM electric clock radiol High impact plastic cabinet with walnut grained front. Tele* chron clock movement. Jewelry Dept. COIL BOOKS PKG Durable cover fits any size binderl 10’/2x8 inches! 58 pages! A sensational value at this low, low prlcel Super Buy! Multi-purpose battery operated dock'. Remove brass plated stand for wall clock! Jewelry Dept. EACH ONE COLOR Podded or UnpoikM COTTON SMS Choose from podded end on-padded brat with embroidered cups! Comfortable! Flattering! White. 32 to 3dAj 32 to 38B< 34 to 40C. Long Leg PANTY GIRDLES Salih lastex back and front panel! Blend of hylon/acetate/ Lycra® spandex! Figure flattering) White. Sizes S, M, L, & XL. Ladies’ Dainty Trim PETTICOATS Soft acetate tricot petticoats with dainty lace I overlay. Small to XXXL A Permanent Press BETTER BRAS OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 1.49 '& & Dacron* polyester/cottonl Heavy fiberfill. Adjustable stretch strapsl Elastic under* band! 32 to 36A; 32 to 38B. Hi-Rise Long Leg PANTY GIRDLES [EVERY I PRICE 2.99 Reinforced side panels! Embroidered satin lastex front panel and satin lastex back panel! S, M, L, XL. Relax in Style! NEWEST FASHION DUSTERS i: /i V OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 2.99 Choose from an assortment of lovely floral prints with button fronts, Peter Pan collars, 2 outside pockets ... or solid color dusters with lace trim collar; stripe seersucker with Peter Pan collar. Assorted colors. Sizes S, M, L; 38 to 44. Ladies’ Waltz Length 40VELY TRICOY GOWNS Choose from assorted lace and applique trims! Beautiful waltz length gowns of soft acetate tricot! Buy several now in assorted rainbow colors at this sensational low price! Sizes M, L, XL, XXL. 5 IpW' jftt The spacious way to travel in stylet Smart looking plaid that's rugged enough for travel! Ideal for that weekend away) Holds everything you'll need for lightweight travel! CHROME FINISHED BATHROOM SPACE SAVERS .*099 Keeps suits and dresses neat! The easy way to travel by car and look neat on arrival! Many uses including day trips, overnight, carry on planes! Roomy yet practical! Ideal bathroom space saver! 3-^helf unit fits floor to ceiling! Expands to 8Vi feet high! Perfect for storing towels, cosmetics, all bathroom items! CHROME FINISHED GARMENT RACKS 67" High _: . ---: 38" Wide! Super Buy! Convenient, sturdy garment rack with built-in radcs for hat and shoe storage! Complete with nylon castersl Holds 60 to 80 tr Books! 3s 3 Shelf Hardwood BOOK STAND Hand polished walnut finished hardwood!. 3 shelves angledfor easy title selection! Sturdy assembly without nails or screws! 36x24x11". Colorful lids in Avocado, Sunshine Yellow or Whitel Clear see-thru bottoms! Full i9-in. size! Complete with chrome swivel hook! Sniooth waxed finish! THESE FEATURES: STURDY SPUN ‘HEAVY DUTY RAYON! ZIPPERS! RUBBERIZED & WATER REPELLENT! GREEN MCLEOD OR RED WATCH PLAID! RUGGED BUMPER BINDING Yl BEDSPREADS CANNON SCREEN PRINT TOWEL ENSEMBLE Beautiful floral bouquet screen prints on whitel 100% cotton terry. Hand Size 15x26" 476 Wash Cloth 12x12" 24C SIZE 22x44' WOVEN PLAID BEDSPREADS ♦. Colorful woven Jacquard plaids on a colored background! 100% cotton, machine washable! In twin or full size! Blue, Green, Brown or Beige. THERMAL WEAVE BLANKETS Choose from solids and stripes! A blend of rayon and polyester ... washable, mothproof! 72x90 in. fits twin or double bedsl Colorful prints, solids for kitchen, dining room, pic* nice! Wipes clean with a damp cloth! Slight irregulars. Sizes 52 x 52" and FREE FOAM SPONGE IRONING BOARD PAD & COVER SETS Silicone cover and 14 inch urethane foam pad! Fits standard size ironing board) All over floral print! Sturdy, long wearing type 140 cotton muslin; 4 elastic comers fir easy on and off! FULL SIZE FITTED-------- 1.68 PILLOWCASE, Pkg. of 2 _ 786 Soft, resilient 100% polyurethane foam filling! Washable, odorless! Covered in attractive cotton floral print! Assorted colors. 18x24 in. TWIN FITTED FTTeW FOAM BACir^ NON-SLIP ALL PURPOSE THROW) REVERSIBLE UTILITY LARGE WOOD GRAIN STORAGE FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM' FURNITURE THROWS our EVERT SAY MICE 1.87 72x60' Fringed woven tricot rayon and nylon yam) Washable. 19x33". Heavy Wood grain fibre< board; sturdy plastic handles! 28x1616x14". Cotfon/rayon bonded to polyurethane foam! Many uses! RAINBOW COLORS: MORE SENSATIONAL VALUES! 54" JUMBO VINYL Well tailored, quilted topi Long slide 36* inch non-tarnish zipper! Two hook drop frame! Decorator colorsl Choose from center-button, tassle, fringed styles! Available in rich decorator solids, attractive deep tone prints! Sizes 15x15"; 17x17" CHAIR SEAT & BACK REPLACEMENT SETSI OUR EVERY OAT PRICE 2J8 ea: set )4?s8®8 For kitchen or dinette chairs! Sturdy with self-welted seams! Patterns and solids! GAMBIT ME Heavy vinyl with nylon seamsl Holds 6 pairs of shoes! (Mi MMD Hand Washable No-lrohing ___Needed!^- lYm 11V4 «• Nylon filo-T®0' textured rubber Heavy Super Money Savers in Home Needs! 100% VISCOSE SOUP COLOR ROOM SIZE RUGS FIBERGUS DRAPERIES 100% Viscose rayon, thickly tufted, cut pile; built-in foam pad! S e r g e d all around! Decorator colors! — Pretty embroidered Jacquard woven look! Hand A washable . . . drip dry * . . . no ironing necessary! Ten 3-finger pleats! Blind stitched . heirisl A Champagne, white, gold I and olive. 48x84" SIZE 3.37 3-PC. TIER CURTAIN & VALANCE SETS decorator demon SCATTER RUGS 100% cotton thickly tufted loop and cut pile rugs looks just right anywherel Non-skid latex back! Geometric patterns! Avocado, hot pink, rose, gold, aqua, lilad Size 24x40" oblonal Pretty solids and florals! Novelty styles; decorative trims! Assorted patterns and colors! All are 36 inches longl WALL-TO-WALL BATHROOM CARPET Hand washable . . . no startch, no ironing! White onjyi .40x81 Rich cotton pile; non-skid latex back! Dec* orator., colorsl ootwear Favorites For Back-to-School BOYS' ROUGH 'N iuividle OXFORDS! BOOTS! L0-.CUT STYLE HI-STYLE BOOT 3*3 4** Both styles' boilt for hiking, comping, rough schoolyard play! Rugged leather uppers, PVC soles! Tan. Sizes 8Vi to 12; 12Vi to 3. Boys' Quality Built Leather Dress Oxfords and Slip-ons! Fabulous value! Buy now ond save on boys' leather dress oxfords and step-in styles! For school or Sunday bestl Smooth leather uppers, superior PVC soles that . . • m « n ». lOI/- 7 YOUR CHOICE! GIRLS' POPULAI LEATHER PINNY LOAFETTE SPECIAL! Go back-to-school in stylel Penny loafettes just like the college girlsl Leather uppers. Brown. 10-12; 12Vi-3. T-STRAP BEAUTY Big and little Girls Shape up for School in TEEHS! WOMENS! GOLD BROCADE SCUFFS GHILLIE OXFORD-Groovy style for your new school wardrobe! Easy-care grained man-made uppers with kiltie fringe trim! Brown. Sizes 8V4 to 12; 12Vi to 3. THE T-STRAP—Go to the head of the class wearing these beautiful T-Strapsl Easy-to-clean manmade uppers, perforated trim. Brown. Sizes 10 to 12; 12Vb to 3. Open back and toe for study-time or lounging comfort. Sponge cushioned mylar innersole. Gold. Sizes 5 to 10. Teens'-Women's Special Savings! Square toe; hardware look! Wipe 'n wear man-made uppersl Antiqued finish! Combination last! Brown. Sizes 5-10. SCUFF-PROOF SUEDENE Ladies' patents CROSS STRAPPED A 99 Men's Campus Casual Suedine Open-side styling in easy-care man-made patent! Black, brown and blue patentl Also black smooth. 5-10. Where the action is ... that's where you'll wear this oxford or slip-in! Because this shoe gives you good looks plus every comfort feature! Smart scuff-proof man-made suedine uppers! Soft foam-cushioned pigskin innersole! Long wearing cushioned crepe sole! Tan or green! 6‘/z to 12. (Imported). Fashion Right Teens'-Women's ^PVC SOLES ^ GUARANTEED NEVER . TO NEED REPAIR^ Soft suede split leather uppers have bright brass stud trim! Great-with sporty fashions! Brown! Black! 5 to 10. Sporty^ School Stylp Teens'-Women's Men! Treat yourself to these handsomely ftyled shoes in your choice of oxford or slip-inl Both have smart supple leather uppers, plus- long wearing PVC soles guaranteed never to need repair . . . makes these shoes both smort looking and practical! Black. Sizes 6tk to 12. Smart campus styling in rich cordovan leather uppers. . . comfort crafted heel to toe! Brown. Sizes 5 to 10. Cordovan^ Tassel Kiltie YOUR CHOICE ONE Big Values Priced to Save-you Do £9JL SPECIAL PURCHASE! if 3-BU LLE 4*o\ H «\ poll Plastic gold tone decorated bullets! 3-way switch. Choose from white, black, or cocoa poles. Idectl for any room in the house! Give needed light to a dark areal An outstanding value! Buy now and save! 14x53" FRAMED DOOR MIRROR W WIDE GOLD TONI FRAME 45-PIECE SET DINNERWARE Unbreakable! Dishwasher safe) Choose from 4 lovely pat-terns! 8 dinner plates, 8' cups, 8 |ra saucers, serving plat-H ter and more! 8 88 Our Every Day Price 13.99 Selected glass by .Pittsburgh. Shatter-proofed for maxi-mumsafetyl Silvering guaranteed for 5 yrs. against tarnishing under ordinary use! BALLERINA 12" LAMPSHADES Mt44t Highly attractive lace, floral, and eyelet printsl Gold lace over parchmentl Clip-on holder. Each shade with re-useable cover! . '* W 18 The Weather Perfect THE PONTIAC PRESIDE OVER PAGES VOL. 120 NO. 175 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1068 -*72 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 10* Veep Faces a Revolt on Viet Plank HHH Closes In on Victory; Draft-Teddy Reports Rife CHICAGO (AP) Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey faced a Democratic convention revolt on Vietnam policies today as he seemed within reach of the party’s presidential nomination. As Humphrey moved within 146 votes of the 1,312 needed for nomination, backers of his two major opponents, Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy and George S. McGovern, merged their efforts early today and forced a crucial delay in the showdown battle over the party’s Vietnam policy. shouted jubilantly, “We have 11 hours to get 80 votes,’’ and said the insurgents were that close to winning. Mayor Daley, playing his role of convention master to the hilt, was in a position to give Humphrey a final shove toward a first — ballot nomination if he chose to do so at an Illinois Caucus today.. ‘WONDERFUL TICKET’ While some members of his 118-vote delegation still talked of a Kennedy draft, Daley said he took the 36-year-old senator at his word that he would not The convention suddenly adjourned after meeting seven hours when large numbers of delegates started shouting and handclapping when reading started of the proposed platform plank recommending continuing policies set by President Johnson and Humphrey. As all this went on, talk of a draft of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy filled the floor and corridors of Chicago’s International Amphitheatre, site of the convention. ^ Related Stories, Pages A-2, A-3, A-12 be a candidate. Even so, he said a Humphrey-Kennedy combination would offer a wonderful ticket. In New York, there were indications the vice president would get as many as 100 of the state’s 190 votes. Pontiac Firemen Fight The Blaze That Destroyed The Roosevelt Hotel Fire Guts City Hotel; 4 Are Missing VICTORY MARCH Humphrey forces maintained their march of convention victories in seating contests over southern delegations, and the vice president picked up a parade of endorse'ments from favorite-son candidates In Texas, Tennessee and South Carolina. But the convention pace was imperiled when efforts” to reach the critical test vote of Humphrey-McCarthy strength on the Vietnam issue were forestalled by the shouting demonstration to adjourn and reconvene at 1 p.m. EDT today. New surveys indicated Humphrey would take a majority of Ohio’s 112 votes. Gov. Richard J. Hughes was standing by for an anticipated effort to swing most of New Jersey’s 82 votes to Humphrey. Sen. Joseph S. Clark endorsed McGovern, but more than two-thirds of Pennsylvania’s 130 votes were still headed for Humphrey. By MEL NEWMAN At least four persons are missing in the wake of a fast-spreading fire which destroyed the 42-year-old Roosevelt Hotel, 125 N. Perry, early today. Fire Chief Charles Marion said this morning, “it will be a miracle if we don’t find some bodies in the building.” Firemen, at the scene since the blaze was reported shortly before midnight, were preparing for a search of the gutted four-story structure about 8 a.m. Some 15 persons, including one fireman, were rushed to city hospitals. Four were reported under observation this morning, the rest were treated and re- \ Early estimates place damage at the 200-room building at $300,000: No estimate of damage to contents has been made. Assistant Fire Chief Lee Nye said firemen and police and said a panic was narrowly averted. Nye said the blaze apparently started In the building's basement and “mushroomed upward’' quickly. Cause of the fire has not been determined. firemen set up their large ladders and lay hose. More Photos, Stories Page B-10 every piece of fire equipment in the city except one was dispatched to the scene. He attributed the relatively, small injury toll to rapid evacuation work by Balmy Weather Perfect for Poets Ford Introduces New-Look LTD ‘VERY HOT FIRE’ “It was a very hot fire and this had people on the verge of jumping from upstairs windows, but we were able to prevent that," he said. This morning’s search of the ruins was held up until a building inspector could determine, the strength of those walls and floors still standing. “This gave us a quick start and made it possible for us to contain the fire in the one structure,” he said. “There was a definite danger of the .blaze spreading to other buildings, but we avoided that," he added. He said the fire was brought under control after about two hours. McCarthy and McGovern forces hailed the adjournment as a victory. McGovern aide Frank Mankiewicz, press sercetary to the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, Last night, Democrats who voted to abolish the unit rule at this year’s convention went a step further by barring unit voting at aU levels of the delegate selection process in 1972. In addition, the action requites that all convention delegates are elected through “procedures open to public participation within the calendar year of the convention.” TRAFFIC REROUTED Marion said a small fire was still burning in the remains of the lobby and electricity is still on in the building. A ladder truck and a pumper were being held on standby. Traffic is being routed around North Perry between Wide Track and West Huron and authorities emphasized that spectators should stay away from the gutjted building. Even Mayor Daley Couldn't' Calm 'em Dem's Child in Coma Poets may write about the beautiful days of June, but what could be more perfect than.the balmy days of sunshine* this last week of August? The weatherman tells us skies will be mostly sunny with the high temperature a pleasant 72 to 78 tomorrow and fair and warmer Friday. DETROIT (UPI) --Ford Motor Co. introduced the Lincoln-Continental look in its top-of-the-line Ford LTD today as the star attraction in the division’s new lineup of cars preview. 2 COMMUNITIES HELP Twelve vehicles were at the scene at the peak of the fire, including one truck The low is expected to fall into the 50s tonight. A sunny 50 was the low thermometer reading preceding 8 a.m. The mercury stood at 70 at 12:30 p.m. Costarring were two new Mustangs, a higher performance Mach I and a luxury-loaded Grande; and ‘ a new Fairlane Cobra. Both the Mustang Mach I and the Fairlane Cobra have the new Cobra Jet Ram-Air 428-cubic inch higher performance engine. from Waterford Township. A Birmingham truck was sent to the city, for backup duty. Marion gave much credit for the evacuation to citizens *who helped VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP)-Becky Godwin, 14, daughter of Gov. and Mrs. Mills E: Godwin, Jr., remained in a coma for the third day today. But doctors at General Hospital of Virginia Beach said she showed “slight improvement” including more regular heartbeat and “indications of some awareness in her surroundings.” In Today's Press The Ford LTD, borrowing heavily from the Lincoln-Continental styling on the exterior, featured also a breathtaking new flight cockpit instrument panel with all instruments clustered in a deep semi-circle immediately in front of the driver. On convertible models, design changes in the top stacking mechanism permitted removing the wells on either side, adding a full ten inches to the rear seat width. Fishier Body Plant Gets New Manager By HARRY J. REED Managing Editor, The Pontiac Press CHICAGO-Seat-sore delegates to the Democratic National Convention rose in revolt and relief , at 1:15 a m. today. Even Humpty- ■■■■■ Dumpty Daley couldn’t put them back together again. a He1 tried, al-, though no one knows Ml Jgf Re isn’t the chairman, it just happens to be his turf. But short of muscle which0Ws policemen wave been using to bend REED nightsticks over newsmen’s heads, he couldn’t stop the stampede. the bunting and shook the seats, the second session of the convention ended. For much of the evening, the Michigan delegation had been absent from the floor, in more caucus action. They seem (Continued on Page A-2, Cql. 8) Sen. McCarthy Hopes Faltering ‘OFF TO BED’ MOOD CHICAGO (AP) - Sen- Eugene J. McCarthy's own view of his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination was left unclear today after he said Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey had wrapped up the race, but then indicated he wasn’t conceding anything. Following seven hours of speechifying He wCnt to bed without further com- and sitting, the mood was “off to bed, ment last night as Democrats wondered Christmas Trees Thumb orchardist offers “pick - your - own” market. — PAGE A-9. Wall Street Power Institutions play key role in shaping stock trends. — PAGE D-7. Area News Poachers decimate Meadow Brook deer. — PAGE A-4. Area News A-4 Astrology C-6 Bridge 06 Crossword Puzzle ... D-15 Comics C-6 Editorials A-6 Food Section C-10, C-ll Obituaries B-10 State Fair Events ... A-4 Sports . D-1-D4 Theaters .. TV-Radio Programs ...... D-15 Wilson, Earl D-15 Women’s Pages ...... .. B-l—B-4 Full size Fords will be built on a new designed energy-absorbing frame. It Consists of hoddow front side rails shaped like an S. In a severe front impact, much of the energy is expended on telescoping the S rathed than being transmitted to the passenger compartment. Side window vents were eliminated in die LTD and on the XL sports roof model and the convertible. They were also eliminated in all Mustang/models and in the .new Fairlane Cobra, a fast-back. Thomas F. Wiethom, manager of the Fisher Body assembly plant in Pontiac for 12 years, has . been named manager of die General Motors division’s assembly plant in Lansing. He will be succeeded by John F. Dudas, who has been plant manager of Fisher Body-Fleetwood in Detroit for the last three years. The-appointments, announced today by Kenneth N. Scott, a vice president of General Motors and general manager of the Fisher Body Division, will become effective Monday. and nuts to leaders who say ‘nay.’ After droning speeches and endless roll calls on rules and order of procedure, the delegates balked when it became apparent the supposed highlight of the evening, debate on a Vietnam plank in the platform, would keep them seated until at least 2:15 a.m. v whether he was just being pessimistic or conceding the nomination to Humphrey when he said: “I think it probably was settled more than 24 hours ago.” Dudas is being replaced by Kenneth S. Bidwell, former manager of the Lansing plant. 29 YEARS WITH GM Wiethorn joined Fisher Body shortly after receiving a degree in business administration from the University of Cincinnati in 1939. Within two years he had risen from (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) \ The print was hardly cold on the Knight Newspapers’ publication of the interview which contained that statement As preparations were made to begin when McCarthy aide Richard N. Good-the Viet talks, the leader of the Wiscon- wjn insisted — after talking with his boss sin delegation waved his sign frantically _ that McCarthy was not conceding for recognition on the floor. The Wisconsin delegates were joined in their uproar by the Indiana members, and a chant began: “Let’s go home.” ..r__________ ______ Permanent Chairman Rep. Carl Albert increasingly evident of late, showed I jMmU || Wc through dearly as he told his in- defeat. INCREASING EVIDENT But McCarthy’s pessimism, which has’ of Oklahoma seemed to lose first his poise and then his control of the convention. U.S. to Hanoi: Butt Out STANDING REBELLION His pleas for order seemed to encourage the rebellion, which by now had most of the delegates on their feet, shouting. terviewers: “I don’t even think Teddy (Sen. Edward M. Kennedy) could get .enough votes to win. fo typical fashion, McCarthy also let it be know that his oft-stated reluctance to support a Humphrey ticket might not have reflected his true feelings. And his Chicago Mavor Richard Daley charged have reflected ms true teeungs. Aira ms. >e loose ball X blustered to the micro- PARIS (AP) — The United States accused North Vietnam today of meddling in internal American affairs with comments on the presidential election campaign and demanded that Hanoi stop it the loose phone. “Tbjs convention will not be taken over by the spectators and guests in the balconies,” be boomed out. “Be have, or we will clear the galleries.” Going into the 19th session of the Paris peace talks, U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman also called on the Hanoi government “to stop the carnage, stop, the fighting and get on with the malting of \pea*.” & That was the rdd Hag to thousands of hdpg The convention,was out of control. An attempt to recess the convention until have followed ton since New Hampshire seemed less than kind:, “I expect I’d probably, after a couple of weeks, say that there’s not much choice, and I would recommend Humphrey. ★ ★ • ' ‘The problem I have had is with the All «uciu|n icvcoa virc vvikhiuw --- i--t---- - . ■ . ■ . 6 p.m. today had been ruled out of order young people. I ve been more insistent just seconds before, but now Daley than I really wanted to be about not reswhed to pull the fat out of the fire: supporting toe ticket, because they d He called for immediate adjournment figure tins is a sellout. They re^ready to until noon, and, with a roar that rif^d ; accuse you c$ a sellout anyway ’ 4 JOHN F. DUDAS ...... FwPi A—2 fflVd H3A0 3WW THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1268 Fraud Charges Leveled Against Securities Firm WASHINGTON (AP) - The Securities and Exchange Commission has leveled fraud charges against Wall Street’s biggest securities firm on grounds that it leaked a big-money secret only to certain major investors. Hie regulatory agency set no date yesterday when it announced hearings would be held on charges by its staff against the nation’s biggest and best known broker-dealer, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith. Fund and Dreyfus Corp., top mutual funds. Nine officers and five salesmen of the firm, as well as 15 institutional investors—the alleged receivers of the hot tip from Merrill Lynch—also were called on the carpet. p The investors included tlje Madison FIRM DEFENDED “We are convinced that none of our people acted wrongfully and you can be sure we will defend our position vigorously,’’ Merrill Lynch said in a statement issued in New York. According to the SEC, Merrill Lynch was helping Douglas Aircraft Co. prepare a bond issue when it learned the big planebuilder’s earnings, contrary to earlier optimistic reports, were in bad shape. Fisher Body Plant Has New Manager (Continued From Page One) personnel clerk to labor standards analyst at the Norwood, Ohio, plant. Following his discharge as an Army officer in World War II, Wiethom returned to Fisher Body in Norwood and became supervisor of labor standards in 1947. Three years later he was named shift superintendent and promoted! to plant superintendent the following year. Dudas has been with Fisher Body since 1936 when he started as a layout man at the Detroit Die and Machine plant. Later that year he was transferred to the Flint No. 1 plant where he became foreman in 1940. Car Bomb Kills Owner of Casino IN 3 STATES Dudas was assigned to the Norwood plant in 1945. as a shift superintendent and became plant superintendent there the following year. He was superintendent at Fisher Body plants in Lansing, Atlanta and Euclid, Ohio, before joining Fleetwood in that capacity in 1954. He was production manager a t Fleetwood for five years before being promoted to plant manager. ZEPHYR COVE, Nev. UP) — A casino owner once involved in ' stockholder struggles over control of Lake Tahoe gambling houses was killed yesterday when a bomb exploded in his automobile in front of his house. The body of Richard L. Chartrand, 42, was behind the wheel of his luxury car, tom to pieces by the blast. Judge Leaves Door Open 1-696 Hearing Injunction Nixed An Oakland County Circuit judge yesterday refused to issue an injunction that would have blocked an arbitration board from continuing hearings on the proposed route of the 1-696 freeway. The cities pf Lathrup Village and Pleasant Ridge and a taxpayers group from Lathrup Village were seeking the temporary order pending a full-scale hearing on the issue., While ruling that arbitration on the question is constitutional, Judge Arthur E. Moore left the door open for the case to be continued at a later date. “There may be further litigation,” said Moore, “if the complaintants feel that The arbitration panel will meet again at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the supervisors Auditorium at the county Courthouse to listen to alternative proposals offered by affected communities. The Weather Direction: Variable Wind Velocity 6 m.p.h. Sun rliee Thursday at 6:55 Moon ut| Wednesday at 10: Moon rises Thursday at 1:29 Weather: Sunny Wednesday's Temperatures Alpena 47 so Detroit 7. Escanaba 73 43 Duluth,, 69 45 Fort Worth 1 m ____4 Jacksonville — Houghton 43 43 Kansas City 04 Houghton Lk, 70 35 Los Angeles 09 Jackson 43 39 K£| “ tensing " " Marquette Tuesday In Fontlac (as recorded dr ' Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature 74 50 Weather: Sunny IMVIlH^VPBPNew Orleans 00 ft Muskegon 40 44 Hew York 74 57 Oscoda - 44 43 Phoenix 101 76 Peiiston 40 33 Pittsburgh 79 u Traverse C. 70 34 St. Louis Albuquerque 01 40 Tempo Atlanta 05 " *-’* 1 ■- Bismarck 75 — .. ____________ — Boston 74 50 S. Sts. Marla 45 39 Chicago 45 59 Seattle- 47 57 Cincinnati 73 51 Tucson 94 72 Denver 03 55 Washington 77 50 c, city 04 i : NATIONAL WEATHER — Showefs and thundershowers are predicted tonight for Florida, Montana, Wyoming, New Mexico and western Texas. There Will be west. ft nounced it might be faced with a noprofit year. During the unloading, the SEC said, the large investors it has cited cleared their portfolios of 190,000 shares of the unwanted stock. An informed source said these shares sold for some $4.5 million more than they would have brought if traded at the price that prevailed June 29. The SEC version of what followed is that this word passed through the Merrill Lynch personnel to a chosen few investors and that immediately thereafter these began to sell off their holdings in Douglas in the expectation that its value was about to drop. Meanwhile, the regulatory agency said other Douglas shareowners were left in the dark—indeed, Merrill Lynch continued to sell Douglas to anyone who wanted to buy, the SEC said. The dumping lasted half a week—until June 24, when Douglas publicly an- State Delegates Sitting Firmly in Hubert Camp CHICAGO (JV- Michigan backers of Hubert H. Humphrey called on delegates today to remain firm in their support of the vice president for he Democratic presidential nomination. An Associated Press poll of the delegation noted a slight shift to Sen. George S. McGovern of South Dakota. Birmingham Area Intersection May Get New Traffic Signal BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Township motorists may be seeing a new traffic signal at the Quarton-Franklin Road intersection as a result of Township Board action this week. At this week’s meeting the board requested that the Oakland County Road Commission erect a blinking signal at the busy intersection. Hie request asked that the light be blinking amber on .Franklin and blinking red on Quarton. LECTURER — Harry Van Hook, director of training for Pontiac Motor Division, shows community volunteers how to give a successful presentation at yesterday’s Pontiac Area United Fund Speaker’s Bureau meeting. Presentations of the United Fund story by these volunteers are available to local groups. In another request the board asked the road commission to put up no-parking signs on Lincoln around the barricaded entrances to Bradford, Breckenridge and Windham. Official noted that the barricades prevent traffic from turning from Lincoln onto the residential streets, but that they can be broken by fire trucks if an emergency exists. SIGNS NEEDED And, as it appeared that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy would accept a draft, State Chairman Sander Levin and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley were said to be likely to endorse the Massachusetts senator. But, Humphrey backers — including the United Auto Workers — appeared successful in stopping a dump-Humphrey movement within the Michigan delegation. Pontiae Div. Exec Heads Area UF Speakers Bureau The no-parking signs are needed to keep cars from blocking the barricades so that the fire route can remain open. In other action the board approved the construction of a special commercial bus stop lane on the south side of Maple west of the Telegraph intersection. No one else was injured. Sheriff George Byers of Douglas County said the bomb was under the floorboard. Federal Bureau of Investigation agents were called in to examine the bomb. Agent Max Wilson of Reno said a technician will conduct laboratory tests. LATEST AP POLL Here is how the delegation breaks down in the latest AP poll: Hubert Humphrey 73 , Eugene McCarthy 12 George McGovern 6 Uncommitted 5 “The United Auto Workers is putting horrible pressure on delegates,” said one delegate who asked not to be named. Training and coordinating this year’s Pontiac Area United Fund Speakers Bureau will be Harry Van Hook, director of training, Pontiac Motor Division. 4 " Van Hook, a member of last year’s bureau, is coordinating ljB community volunteers who. will present the United Fund story. this year’s campaign program in- A shift to McGovern appeared after the senator addressed the delegation yesterday afternoon. McGovern; a supporter of the policies of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New York, told delegates that his goals were “to tame the savageness of man and make gentle the life of the world.” “I believe, as the last Sen. Kennedy did, that the issues of peace at home and peace abroad are indivisible,” McGovern stated. But he added that an end to the war in Vietnam would not insure an end to violence in America. Bronson Studies Police Report eludes a 15-minute film titled “Hie Day Love Died.” The film relates the decline of the Mayan civilization — which died the day love between its citizens died —, to modem civilization. Taken on location in the Yucatan Penninsula in Mexico, the film illustrates how love for our fellow man is crucial in pur present period of unrest. | The local theme for this year’s PAUF campaign is LOyE tap and this, year’s slogan is “That Love May Live — Give.” The proposed lane wold be about 150 feet long and would be used primarily by the Great Lakes Tansit Authority for embarking and disembarking passengers. In other business the board accepted a petition and set a date for a first hearing on the construction of a water main for the Lone Pine Heights Subdivision' located north of Lone Pine and west of Franklin koad. their rights have been violated by the arbitration board.” The lawsuits were filed against the Michigan State Highway Department after Gov. Romney appointed a three-man panel to end a four-year fight over a 6.5-mile section of the route through south Oakland County. The section in dispute would go through the cities of Royal Oak, Pleasant Ridge, Huntington Woods, Oak Park, Lathrup Village and Southfield. ‘HE’S GOT BOTH PIECES’ “He’s got both pieces of the puzzle. Each of the other candidates has one piece,” Commented one Negro Michigan delegate who asked not to be named. “All these black delegates who ban actually vote their concience and haven’t been sent here by the United Auto Workers or Secretary of State James Hare will support McGovern because of his position on the cities and the war,” he added. Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson said today that he is studying a statistical report from the Pontiac Police Department Concerning law enforcement throughout the city. The report was prepared on Bronson’s request after Pontiac City Commissioner T. Warren Fowler Sr. last week charged that Pontiac police are afraid to patrol Negro areas. Any club, group or organization may request , a PAUF Speakers Bureau presentation by contacting the PAUF . office at 132 Franklin Blvd. The complete presentation takes approximately 25 minutes and is available starting Sept. 10. This year’s PAUF campaign begins Oct. 15 and runs through Nov. 8. Monies collected support 55 health, welfare and youth agencies in Pontiac and the outlying areas. SIGNED BY 54 pet. The petition was signed by 54 per cent, of the 67 site owners. The project will be assessed on a site basis at $1,029 per site. The first hearing on the project was set for Oct. 28 at 8:30 p.m. In other action the board okayed a new taxi insurance ordinance for the township reducing the coverage required for commercial taxi companies. The new plan calls for basic 5-10-20 coverage which is $5,000 property damage, $10,000 personal injury and $20,000 public liability. The old ordinance called for more than twice that amount of coverage. ; . Copies of the 15-page study were distributed to city commissioners prior to their meeting last night, but because of its length and the litttetime to review it, the report was not discussed publicly. During the meeting, however, Fowler briefly noted that he had met with police department officials Friday concerning his allegations and that he was “satisfied” with the outcome. * Detroit May Close Mayor's Mansion DETROIT (UPI) — Mayor Jerome Cavanagh may have to look for another home if the Common Council carries‘out a threat to close the mayor’s official residence — the Manoogian Mansion. Dem Delegates Rise in Revolt Sen. Philip Hart endorsed McCarthy late yesterday in a caucus on the convention floor. The endorsement came after it was rumored that the Minnesota senator had withdrawn. “I just hope he hasn’t withdrawn,” said Hart, whose wife, Jane, and daughter, Ann* are McCarthy campaign workers. MEET WITH BRONSON Later, he said that he Will accept an invitation from Bronson to outline his accusations. He said that the meeting with Bronson will take place after the prosecutor has had a chance to read the report. The' report has not been made a^lilable to newsmen. Donated tp the city by businessman Alex Manoogian, the mansion has served as the residence only for Cavanagh. Some of the expenses in keeping up the place'have irritated several members of the CQdhcil. Council President Ed Carey yesterday said the deed to the mansion would be examined to see if it could be returned to its former owner. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and pleasant. High 72 to 78 with variable winds six to 12 miles per hour today. Fair and warmer tonight and Thursday. Low tonight 50 to 58. Friday outlook : Partly sunny and warmer. (Continued From Page One) to leave the room more than kids with a substitute teacher. This time, though, the meetings were about a Vietnam plank proposal Which the delegation was to have made from , the floor. It had been under discussion. most of the day at Michigan headquarters in the Lakeshore Drive Holiday Inn. AMENDMENT BAN Introducing the platform discussion, Albert included a provision which would > eliminate amendments, which is what Michigan’s maneuver would have been. He asked twice if there were any objections from the floor to eHminate amendments. Among convention delegates and officials, it was common knowledge that Michigan was planning to submit an amendment to the majority platform report. Michigan floor leaders were busy trying to convince other delegations of the value of their amendment, and talking to TV interviewers. If they were aware of the move to prevent amendments, no one moved to object. <' SUBSTITUTE PROVISION 1969 FAIRLANE — Ford’s new addition to the 1969 Fair- gered shock absorbers, wide-oval tires, competition suspension lane line,, is the performance-oriented Cobra. Available in the and four-speed fully synchronized manual transmission also are fastback design pictured here or the hardtop model, the Cobra available at no extra cost. A functional hood scoop funnels has a 428-cubic-lnch V8 engine as standard equipment. Stag- cool air directly into the Cobra’s carburetor automatically. The Michigan amendment would have substituted a provision for one contained in the majority report concerning the bombing in Vietnam. The sense of the amendment was to stop the bombing immediately in the North but not in. South Vietnam, with the expectation of a response from Hanoi. Such an amendment might yield common ground on the most controversial issue facing the convention, it was felt. Cobra Joins 1969 Ford Fairlane Lineup Unless they can arrange some legal backpedaling to get around the successful move to block amendments, Michigan delegates did a lot of packing for a trip and then missed the train., New to the Ford Fairlane line is the 1969'’Cobra. Available in both hardtop and fastback roof designs, the car has a 428-cubic-inch V8 engine and four-speed manual transmission as standard equipment. Alsq featured are recessed door handles, brushed aluminum instrument dials and wide-oval tires. Other Fairlane series models are the Torino, Torino GT,. Fairlane, Fairlane And 500. Three sedan, station wagon and sports roof models, as well as two convertibles, will be available soon at local dealerships. Fairlene’s Torino GT features a unique plastic grille, ornamental hood scoqp, steel wheels with chrome GT hubs and brited, white sidewall tires. A 302-cubic-inch V8 engine is standard equipment. windshield wipers will also be standard equipment. I ke Reversal Possible •MAGIC DOOR-GATE’ All 1969 Ford station wagons offer the “magic door-gate” which opens either outward or downward. Again tiie basic Fairlane design will be retained. ,, Fairlane styling characteristic of the 1968 models Will be retained while hew, in ffae Pacific northwest, ft will be warmer in the upper Great Lakes region external orientation includes dual head and the tipper and middle Mississippi Valleydod cooler inthe northeastern plateaus. A lamps and a hoizontal, aluminum ^grille-4 Safety features included on all new Ford models include , an energy absorbing instrument panel and steering column. Dual hydraulic brake systems* emergency flashers and tWo-spee£ 4t*£ Convenience options in the Fairlane products are a “rimblow” horn built into the inner side of the steering wheel. Also available is a new power bench seat that is adjustable four ways. Local dealers handling the 1969 Fairlane models are; Harold Turner Ford, 464 S. Woodward* Birmingham; Don Spiker Ford, 130 S. Milford, Milford; John McAuliffe Ford, 630 Oakland, Pontiac; Tri»y Motors, 777 John R, Avon Township; Shuman Ford Sales,' 1111 S. Commerce, Cortunerce Township; Flannery Feud, 5806 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township; and Jack Long Ford,*215 Main, Rochester. \ jy. > ■ *, WASHINGTON (AP) Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s doctors are tempering their most optimistic report with a warning that “this favorable trend is capable of reversing at any time.” Medical bulletins yesterday said the 77-year-old general is still experiencing the irregular extreubeats described as heart irritability. ■ ' No Market Page Today Because the Stock Market is closed todSy. there is no Market Page > in today’s Press. * -\ V • $["* WofllM S&stim WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 B—1 They'll Reach for Stars August through May to dispense information and through “brainstorming” suggest feasible chapter activities. Their area Includes Birmingham, Bloomfield, Waterford Township, Union Lake, Drayton Plains, Milford, Rochester and Walled Lake. Chapters range from 10 to 20 members each. This year, chapter members will continue their work with the Pontiac Creative Arts Center, the Oakland County Children’s Village, the Meadow Brook Festival and the Oakland County Pioneer and Historical Society. * ★ ★ In addition, they will participate in Pontiac’s clean-up campaign and read books on tape for the benefit of the blind. Culturally, they hope to visit either the Cranbrook Institute or the Flint Planetarium and host theatre parties. One of the highlights of each year’s agenda is the commemoration of. Founder’s Day with a dinner in April. Founded by Walter Ross, the sorority membership in 15 countries now exceeds 300,000. The international committee located in Kansas City, Mo., selects the annual yearly theme. M$S. GERALD GUINAN JR. Gerald Guinans to Make Their Home in Turkey Gerald Guinan Jr. and his bride (nee Susan Jean Smith) will make their home in Karamursel, Turkey, where both will teach Air Force personnel children. The couple departed for their year long assignment following recent vows in Second Presbyterian Church, Delhi, N.V. * * ★ Parents of the newlyweds are the senior Gerald Guinans of Birmingham and Dr. Selwyn B. Smith and Mrs. Harry J. DeSilva of Margaretville and Delhi, N.Y., respectively. Attended by her sister, Anne I. Smith, the bride chose a day-length ensemble of linen styled with a mandarin collar and elbow length sleeves. (i ★ ■ 1★ ★ The fate of the Pontiac City Council of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority lies in the stars and, the newly-elected officers are taking no chances on this year's success. Equipped with astrology books and maps, they begin “charting" activities. From left to right are Mrs. John E. Nord, Colrain Drive, vice presi- dent; Mrs. Ronald R. Miller, Red Arrow prive, treasurer; Mrs. Joseph Koren, South Cass Lake Road, recording secretary and Mrs. Robert Schmidt, Steep Hollow Drive, White Lake Township, president. In observing the 1968-69 international theme of Beta Sigma Phi sorority, the Pontiac City Council is “Reaching for the Stars." Coordinators of the 16 chapters in the Pontiac area, the newly-elected officers feel “The sky is the limit.” As past president of the Xi Gamma Alpha chapter and adviser to two other sorority chapters, Mrs. Robert F. Schmidt of Steep Hollow prive, White Lake Township, brings with her a wealth of experience, leadership qualities and ambition to her new position of council president. She has been a sorority member for 15 years. Mrs. John E. Nord of Colrain Drive of the Phi chapter is the new vice-president. Recording secretary Mrs. Joseph Koren of South Cass Lake Road from the Xi Alpha Nu chapter will work ^ith corresponding secretary Mrs. Gerald Crawford of Lotus from the X| Gamma Delta chapter. Mrs. Ronald Miller of Rfed Arrow Drive from the Epsilon Rho chapter will serve as treasurer. • These officers meet monthly from Prois© Is Due Let Them Keep Present Illusions MRS. R. K. CARPENTER Couple Departs for Miami Beach A honeymoon in Miami Beach followed the marriage Saturday of Suzanne Marilyn Froede and Richard Keith Carpenter. For the evening ceremony in Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian ChurCh, the bride selected an A-line skimmer of Candlelight peau d’ange lace with' high-rifle waistline accented with band and bow of silk peau de soie. Her bouffant veil of illusion was capped with self formed rosettes accented with seed pearl and nee petals. A detachable train of silk pfeau de soie completed her ensemble. ' ★ ★ ★ Linda Morse attended the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Froede of Lakewind Drive as ip^id of honor. Bridesmaids Were Catherine Christie, Norma Miller, Debra'Carpenter and Cheryl Wilton. Craig Carpenter stood as best man for his brother. They are the sons of the Richard Carpenters of Rockford, 111. Ushers were Stephen Rossiter, Lary Froede, David Stone and Gerald Ap-. The couple was feted with a reception in the church parlors, pleby. Allen Park Is Setting for Exchange of Vows by John Parrishes Margaret McClellan, formerly of Williams Lake Road, became the bride of John Russell Parrish in a recent ceremony in Bethesda Baptist Church, Allen Park. Parents of the couple, Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. McClellan of Allen Park and Mr. and Mrs. John E. Parrish of Roanoke, Ala., joined the newlyweds at a reception in the church parlors following the evening rite. p.O. Ac. Parrish and his bride will make their home in Norfolk, Va., where be is stationed . James David Madill Is Bom in Germany Spec. 5 and Mrs. David J. Madill (&e Mary Jean, Boardman) announce the birth of a son, James David, bon in Heidelberg, Germany. Spec. 5 Madill is stationed In Mannheim, Germany. \ Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mft. John D. Boardman of Forest Street Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow S. Madill of Litchfield Drive. Busy Pontiac Mother 9 Enthralled by Convention Family, Wife of Medal Winner By ELIZABETH L, POST Dear Mrs. Post: I would like to know just what is proper when someone in the immediate family or a good friend receives the “bronze star”? —Irma * ★ ★ Dear Irma: If the recipient of a medal is still overseas when you hear the news, a note of congratulation to him is in order. In addition a call to his parents and/or wife would be appreciated. If he has arrived home you may offer your congratulations either by telephone or letter, PLANNED ELOPEMENTS Dear Mrs. Post: Our sister said her daughter was getting married this summer and it is a “planned elopement.” We have never heard of this and wondered if you could explain what it means. —Jean ★ ★ ★ Dear Jean: An ordinary elopement is carried out in secret because the couple does not wish anyone to know of the marriage, or wishes to circumvent any efforts which might be made to prevent it. A “planned” elopement is not kept secret from families and close friends and its purpose is simply to avoid the expense or the “fuss” of a wedding and reception. * * ★ The couple simply slips away—sometimes accompanied by their parents and two witnesses—and is married privately with no accompanying- fanfare. By HARRY J. REED Managing Editor, The Pontiac Press CHICAGO — When a woman who works full time and has nine children also takes a powerful interest in politics, you know she’s got to be an interesting person. Rebecca Woods is that. Recovering Tuesday from the previous night’* session which broke up at the International Amphitheatre at 2:45 a.m., Mrs. Woods related her excitement at attending her first national convention. ; ★ * ★ “I’ve been to state sessions, but never anything like this — it’s much more exciting here.” Mrs. Woods is a delegate from the 19th district, and has been politically active for nine years. “Mrs. Otis Lawrence got me started by asking me to come to some meetings, and although I was working with 4-Band PTA work, I wanted to learn something about politics and the way our country is inn. “Last night, on that crowded floor, just a couple of hours seemed more tiring than forking all day,” Mrs. Woods said. FAMILY Mrs. Woods, who is 49 add lives St 90 Henry Clay, works a full day at the F&W Market on- Wessen. How can slta do that, take cue of her husband Japes and children Vanessa, 15: Sadie, 14: dndy 10: Bernadine 9: William, 17, and Jerry 12 and still be politically active? “Well, I get a tot of help from my husband and children, I’ll tell you that. The kids have been taught to pick up, put away, hang up, and keep their own rooms neat and that helps a great deal.” Who does this energetic mother - politician favor as the Democratic presidential nomination? “It’s Hubert Humphrey all the way, he’s got the broadest shoulders to handle the problems. I think he’ll make it on the first ballot, too.” ★ * * Talking of her exciting role as a delegate, which included meeting Mrs. Humphrey and entertainer Jimmy Durante at a tea, Mrs. Woods said “I’d like to see more women take an active role, in the running of our government, get-out and learn what is going on. Why, even my children are now interested in doing party work.” Discussing Pontiac and its problems, Mrs.. Woods says she feels that the current system of nominating city commissioners by district but electing them at large is faulty. She favored a return to nomination and election within the districts. y . ' * * * On the subject of race relations in Pontiac, Mrs. Woods said die would like to see more Negroes hired as city policemen. “However, I know it takes a strong man to do this job. He takes abuse from his own people, too.”:. :. Getting back to the convention and its probleihs, Mrs. Woods says she learned one important thing from the first marathon session. “They kid me about my big purse, but this time I’m going to put sope sandwiches in it. That was a tong nigif!.” > "■ . Children Will Learn Facts of Life By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My wife and I have been divorced for two years. We have two very mature and sophisticated children, a boy, 10, and a girl, 12, who live in New York with their.................... mother. HH I have a very nicef^^H^L beach home in southern California, and T | ladyfriend living me. My ex-wife is of this but my are not. In our settlement, my^H wife agreed to let have the children for ABBY two weeks in the summer. Now she refuses to send them to me because she doesn’t want them to visit a father who is living “in sin" with another woman. ★ ★ ★ I say, “Children should be taught the realities of life, and I don’t intend to put up any phony puritanical front.” My ladyfriend is not a cheap floozie. She’s a fine European woman with sufficient charm and intelligence to hold a man without insisting on mamage, which is more than can be said of most American your “fine European ladyfriend” to get lost for two weeks. ■ * ' * ★ DEAR ABBY: My husband, a former widower, expects me to entertain his first wife’s relatives for indefinite layovers. I have my own private income and I married for companionship, not to do K.P. duty for outsiders. We have no servants. Please advise. LAKE GEORGE DEAR LAKE GEORGE: Since you are obviously irritated by these guests, I advise you to lay it on the line with your husband. He married for companionship, too, no doubt, and I have a feeling you DEAR ABBY: I just read the letter frqm a girl whose boyfriend’s mother tried to force birth control pills on her. Your answer was fine, but you didn't go far enough. ★ * * These pills, and most other drugs, should be obtained from a qualified physician who has examined the patient and is familiar with her previous medical history. Furthermore, to give (or accept) any drugs prescribed for another is a foolish and dangerous practice. Imported Swiss lace highlighted the former Miss Smith’s attire and fashioned her pillbox; ★ ★ * She held white chrysanthemums, roses and Stephanotis. * ★ ★ Rev. James B. Guinan of Tiburon, Calif,, performed best man honors for his brother with Jerry Brown of Plymouth, Harold Doremus and Judson St. John of Chappequa, N.Y. as ushers. Twin Daughters Here Sgt. and Mrs. Frederick C. Anderson of Dover, Del. announce the birth of twin . daughters, Jody Lee and Jeanna Louise. Grandparents are the Douglas Martins of Wenonah Drive and the Kenneth Ander-soni of Royal Oak. were both robbed. an R.N. in Cleveland .... and 3—It’s on Safe! You’ll have daily reason to be glad you chose this famous DAYSTROM dinette. Gleaming pedestals on table and 4 chairs, highlighted by keep-clean table top and upholstered chairs. And, this $279 dinette has been deliberately underpriced at jiist $209 for our sale. A good reason to buy now. 1672 S. Telegraph N. (Between Miracle Mile & Orchard Lid Rd.) OPEN DAILY TUL 9 . . . SUNDAY Till S Phone:334-2124 women. How can I make my ex-wife see it my way? I miss my children. DEPRIVED DEAR DEPRIVED: You probably can’t, which is just as well. I agree with your ex-wife. Your “mature and sophisticated” Children will learn the realities of life soon enough, so allow them their illusions a while longer. And if you really “miss” your children, tell Pontiac's Only Total Dinette Store house of dinettes THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 Four Couples Exchange Vows. MRS. DAVID R. WHEATON Attired in a white cotton voile-over-taffeta skimmer with detachable Watteau train, Sandra Leone Newman spoke vows Saturday with David Robert Wheaton in Central Methodist Church. Rows of Valenciennes lace accented the high neck and short puff sleeve and formed the matching bow which secured the bride’s bubble veil of illusion. She carried a rainbow cascade of carnations. Mrs. Raymond Robinson and Jacklyn Newman attended their sister and matron and maid of honor. They are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Ward S. Newman Jr. of Voorheis Road. MRS. MICHAEL WILLIAMS James Bechtel served as best man for the son of Mrs. Oliver Gould of Romeo and Robert Wheaton of Royal Oak. ★ * * Other members of the wedding party were Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Davis, Mr. and Mrs. William Kriesch, Mrs. Philip Karnoogian, Victoria Fife, Gail Fotenakes, Brenda Newman, Ralph Bergemann, Gerald Kania, William Lovelace, Raymond Robinson, Fred Veldhuis, Teri Kriesch and Michael Saum. The newlyweds were honored at a reception in the Fellowship Hall of the Church, after which they left for a wedding trip to northern Michigan. . Our fitters tickle parents. And toddlers and tykes and tweenagers and tots and every boy and girl in-between. Everybody has a good time with Stride Rite shoes. Kids have.fun in them. Parents are content' because of Stride Rite’s, quality and craftsmanship. And our fitters are happy bee cruse they’re doing what they do best: giving children's feet the best possible Fit. And ,that’s no laughing matter. MRS. DONALD CAYLOR Williams-Rice The Michael George Williams (nee Lara Jane Rice) are honeymooning in the New England states following an exchange of vows Saturday in St. Paul’s Presbyterian Church, Livonia. * ★ , For the afternoon ceremony, the former Miss Rice wore an A-line gown of silk organza trimmed with Alencon lace. A headpiece of matching lace held her elbow length veil. White sweetheart roses and Stephanotis comprised her nosegay. * * ★ Leslie Rice, the bride’s sister, and John Peterson were honor attendants. A. Available in Black and Red colors, and we have a width to fit every foot. | Black comes in infants' 816 to 12 at $11, and Children's 12’/i to 3, at $12 in widths B thru EEE. Also in Growing Girls' Sizes 5-8, widths AA-E at $13. Red is also available but size ranges are slightly limited. B. Available in black grain leather in sizes 10-12 dt $11.50, 1216 to 3 at only $12.50, and 316 to 6 at $13.50. All sizes in widths C-D-E. C. The fairway is available in black and white with a red sole. In sizes 1216 to 3, widths CDE at $ 12.50 and sizes 5 to 8 in widths AA to C at $13.50. GET THEM AT STAFF’S Shoe Store 931 W, Huron Pontiac Shoe Store 418 N. Main St. Rochester For evening hours phone 332-3208 NARCISSUS Another lovely spring flower that can stand the winter outdoors, and come bursting forth in the spring, is the narcissus. According to Creek mythology, there was a handsome youth who fell so in love with his own image, that he spent all day looking at his reflection in a clear pool. He was so entranced that he did not leave the water. There he died and was changed into the flower narcissus. FE 2-0127 PEARCE FLORAL CO. 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Bridesmaids Cynthia Woodward, Karen Waterson and Nadine Bozek were escorted by ushers George Harris, Harry Boyce, Timothy Rice and Steph-Zemke. BUFFET RECEPTION Parents of the newlyWeds, Mr. and Mrs. A1 Rice of Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs. George Williams of Baybrook Drive, joined the couple at a buffet reception at the Western Golf and Country Club. The pair will make their home in Albion where he will be a senior at Albion College. Caylor-Frohberg An exchange of rings followed vows Thursday by Ann Lynn Frohberg and Donald Gordon Caylor during a candlelight ceremony In First Methodist Church, Birmingham. The daughter of the Lyle E. Frohbers of Snowshoe Circle wpre a silk organza gown with accents of reembroidered Alencon lace. Her cathedral veil was secured with a pompon of matching silk organza and she held cascading arrangement of carnations, Stephanotis and ivy. SISTER ATTENDS Marilyn Frohber attended her sister as maid of honor with Edward Peckinpaugh performing best man honors. The usher MRS. LOREN R. ENGL Alfa corps was comprised of James and William Frohberg. Following a reception in the Birmingham Country Club, the son of the Thomas Caylors of Kevil, Ky., and his brfaie departed for a northern Michigan honeymoon. England-Hodges The Loren Ray Englands (nee, Nancy Jane Hodges) are also honeymooning in northern Michigan, after their exchange of vows Saturday in Lake Orion United Methodist Church. Following the candlelight ceremony, the couple was feted! at a reception at Knights of Columbus Hall, Lake Orion. ! SILK ORGANZA The former Miss Hodges, daughter of the senior Jack R. Hodges of Beach Street, Orion Township, chose a gown of silk organzia fashioned with a high jeweled neckline and long sleeves. Lace daisies accented her Camelot styled headpiece, which secured her cathedral veil and she carried white roses with pink carnations. Mrs. Jack ,R: Hodges Jr. and Douglas England were honor attendants. Assisting were Mrs. Charles Gillis, Mrs. William Bigler and Lorna Anderson, bridesmaids, with Gayanne Gillis, flower girl. A ★ ★ On the esquire side, Jack R. Hodges Jr., William Zikewich and Robert L. Dowski were ushers for the son of the Wilbur H. Englands of Lake Orion. Personal Quality n OMEGA Dependable-Lasting The slitn-silhoueUe Seamaster DeVille wind* itself at you wear it, and is perfect for sports or evening wear. The ladies' watch features a facet-edged jewel-crystal. 18K gold dial-markers, fully jeweled uiovements. Other Omega watches -from $65 to over $1000. REDMOND’S Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Free Parking in Rear of Store Towel Is Handy for Busy Cook Always looking for that stray kitchen towel? To help you i up with a towel hand-wiper while you cook, here’s a tip from the National Cotton Couft-dl. , ★ * dr f Sew srlaps on one folded-over end of a cotton terry kitchen or bath towel. Snap the towel onto the oven door handle, and you’ll always have It handy. Wash often, with every machine-load of towels. RICHARD'S. BOYS' A GRIS' WEAR { lor BaeMo-Sehool > THE PONTIAC MALL* Make Your Appointment Now! PERMANENT and; HAIR STYLE I Tinting — Bleaching I Cutting • ' IMPERIAL'S 158 Auburn Park Free FE 4-2S7B Edyth Stanton, Owner ' ^gYTTBTTyimrrr^TnTrrrmTrmTTT>¥Tttlr>> & CONNOLLY'S * • o jiwuiM a CORNER Of HURON AMO SAGINAW STREETS - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FE 2-0294 OF THE WEEK I • S This fancy diamond mokes the - onnhmrsory gift. Twelve whit* bi cut diamonds radiate about the i stone — A beautiful yellow canary. , gem diamond of one carot and thirty-* aight points to create a mass ol brilliance for the fashionable woman who. wonts something different. •flu Credit Mey. Buna [ Baudwin j SALE Michigan Music Camps INTERLOCHEN and BAYVIEW BALDWIN PIANOS from *695 BALDWIN ORGANS from *795 Used only this summer at Michigan Music Camps • Now benches with ovary sale • Rent at Sale Prices ' • Low Monthly Payments beginning October • No Charge for Credit Life Insurance e No extra charge for delivery • Christmas Layaways • New Guarantee • Complimentary Starter Organ Lessons Jpiiley Bros. Pontiac 119 N. Saginaw FE 4-4721 Detroit ► 5510 Woodward TR 3-6800 Birmingham 115 S. Woodward Ml 7-1177 B—16 ■ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28. 1968 QUESTION: Why didn’t America^ Indians have mustaches and beards? •>;y?i'V' !■ ’>' >* ANSWER: American Indians, belonging to the Mongoloid racial group, have less hair on their faces than the heavily* bearded white men. It’s not true, however, that they have no hair at all on their upper lips and chins. The fashion of most Indian tribes was for bare faces, which showed their sharp, rugged features and gave them a more warlike look. It also made it easier to apply war > paint, something very important to an Indian. Most Indians carefuly plucked out the coarse hair on their faces, one hair at a time, often using sharp shells as tweezers. However not all Indian tribes plucked their faces bare. We show men from two tribes which were among the excep-tions to the fashion. A-young man from the Yaqui of Mexico has pushed aside his' ceremonial mask, showing a handsome mustache. Below, right, is a chief of the TUngit tribe living in the Pacific Northwest. His mustache is grayed with age. Elders of this tribe, and young men as well, often wore beards. You con win $10 cp&fc plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior it care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize. Moldtov Memoirs Done; Doubtful MOSCOW (UP!)—'What are probably the world’s most interesting and fascinating historical memoirs have been completed, according to authoritative sources. The writings cover practically everything of significance in the Russian revolutionary movement for six decades and every important secret and public East-West development. WWW But the exhaustive memoirs, worth a fortune both in terms of capital and scholarship, will probably never be published. Or at least not in the foreseeable future. For they were penned by Vyacheslav M. Molotov, the 78-year-old former Soviet premier and foreign minister, Communist party secretary and politburo member but now an “unperson." SURVIVING BOLSHEVIK Molotov is one of the few surviving old Bolsheviks who, as members of the revolutionary committee in Petrograd, played a major role iii the Communist seizure of power in 1917. His memoirs, spanning more than half a century, cover the history of Soviet communism since 1906 when Skryabin (Molotov’s real name), a 16-ycar-old student, joined, the Communist party. „ WWW ‘ Molotov enjoyed the confidence of Soviet founding^ father Vladimir I. Lenin and of his successor, Josef Stalin. With Secret Police Chief Lavrenti Beria (executed in 1953) and former Premier Georgl M. Malenkov (now an electric plant director in far-off Kazakhstan), Molotov formed a power triumvirate after Stalin’s death. WIFE WAS VICTIM One of the three orators at Stalin’s funeral, Molotov wept when the premier's body was buried even though his wife, Paulina Zhemchuzhina was in prison then, a victim of Stalin’s purges. Four years later Molotov was engaged in another power play, with the help of a majority of the party presidium (now politburo), designed to oust Nikita S. Khrushchev as party leader. Apparently still in good health he can often be seen taking his daily walks with his wife, in the neighborhood of the government apartment house near the Kremlin where he has the same dwelling he used during his day^ of glory. Unlike the extrovert Khrushchev, who misses the public exposure he once enjoyed so much, Molotov avoids crowds and is-never seen at art and industrial exhibitions 'or making dramatic appearances at local elections where the foreign press is certain to be. 46 Americans Die in Viet KIASSHNGTON (AP) - Forty-x servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been named in the latest Defense Department casualty list. They included the following 15 from the Midwest: lOW/WPft Lloyd Harms. Mason City. MICtfOWH - Lanca CpI. Huston L. "MINNESOTA — Pfc. John A. Gerdas-melar, Lakeville; Pfc. Devin R. Remer, Bloomington. OH It-Lanca CpI. Michael R. Witt, Cincinnati. SOUTH DAKOTA—Opt. John W. Hutchi-on, Presho. Changed froth missing to dead -hostile: ‘ MICHIGAN — Pfc. Otis L. Hartry, Jatrolt. MISSOURI—Pfc. David R. BOe ^WISCONSIN - WO Byron C. Tucker, g not as a result of hostile action: ARMY _ — < Bruce C. Brogolttl and Spec. 4. Donald D. Hawkins. FAMOUS DuPONT 501 NYLON! NIOMARK CARPETS 2 COMPLETE ROOMS 2 Completely Padded and Installed No Money Hewn Up to S rears to Pay WE MEASURE IT! WE GUT IT! WE DELIVER H! WE NO IT! WE INSTALL IT! WE GUARANTEE IT! INCLUDES: This sensational low price^ includes everything ... no extras! Up to 252 sq. ft. of carpeting, heavy padding and tackless installation. Even the metal strips are included. Everything yew could ask for In a carpet and at a sensational low price, too! This carpet is as attractive as it is durable and with famous DuPont 501 Nylon you're assured of long-life and durability for yean to come. It's crush and stain resistant, moth-proof, mildew-free and non-allergenic. We think it's the> carpeting you'll want in your home. If yog,can't stop by our showroom, call and well come to you with large easy-to-look-at samples. No obligation. * Khrushchev outwitted the majority and had them all ignominously removed from the central, committee as “anti-party" men to assume supreme power for himself. Although Khrushchev, probably out of respect for Molo-tov’s, historic contributions to communism, kept him busy with small assignments, first as ambassador to Mongolia cwtum, oost- and then as representative to the Vienna International Atomic Commission, eventually he expelled him from the Communist party and cast him into limbo. WISCONSIN — PI urg. Missing as a result of hostile action: » "low?jr**1 T-A®*‘e*d# *nd p,c R°y WORLD-FAMOUS‘UNPERSON’ Died not as a result of hostile action: MARINI CORPS ■ MICHIGAN —CpI. SNVW K. Brandenburg, Battla Creak. Changed from missing to dead —nonhostile: By a quirk of fate Khrushchev himself was to suffer practically the same fate seven years later to become the world’s most famous “unperson.” But Khrushchev was never expelled from the party ranks and still considers himself a proper Communist. Molotov’s life, like Khrushchev’s, is one endless period of sulking. ★ ★ ★ He refuses to see anyone but immediate members of. his family, his daughter and grandchildren. He does not answer letters or write anything for publication. SAVE MONEY ON USED . . . AUTO PARTS We're Now Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM Pontiac Scrap (Wo Alto Pick Up Junk Cars) FE 2-0200 135 Branch Drink a keg of beer. Now you can buy Black Label® beer in a keg one man can handle. -Anew 12-ounce reward, made for any time you feel you’ve earned one. We call it the new, improved victory celebration. The simple pleasures arebest... enjoy Van Camp’s Fork and Beans. SAVE 104 on 2 cans of Van Campus Pork and Beans wi to do to at Mr option map void all coupons submitted. Coupons good only tot >rands specified and art non-transferaUa. or llcensa required. Cashredemptlonvaluo 1/20 of leant. KM with cider or yourchoice of beverages from the supermarket. Carry along a few icecubes, tightly foil wrapped to drop in, just preserving. if Van (amp's Mt? H Bean5 ■ Krawnr THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 88, 1968 Custard Serves as Liquid in Almond Topped Cake BY CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor Committee meeting coming up? Your turn to have neighborly get-together Saturday night? Will cake and coffee fill the bill for refreshment? Then you might like to try your hand at turning out a new cake — moist and hearty, with almonds in the batter and in the topping to give interesting texture change. There’s a trick to this cake — you make a custard mixture and use it for the liquid. One caution when you’re doing the mixing — don’t overbeat. If you do, you’ll have “tunnels” in your cake. * Not that a few tunnels ever hurt flavor, but they won’t help you win a blue ribbon for being a perfect cook! Alrhond Cutfard Cake 2ft cups sifted regular flour 1 teaspoon double-acting baking powder ft teaspoon salt ft cup butter or margarine, at room temperature lft cups firmly packed light SHRIMP SALAD INDIENNE - Pink, plump shrimps are combined with crisp vegetables, shell macaroni, and just a bit of chutney. These are mixed with a nippy, curried mayonnaise dressing. The salad should be mixed early in the day and refrigerated for several hours to achieve a perfect mingling of flavors as well as thorough chilling. Side dishes of chutney, sliced kumquats, and salted peanuts make interesting condiments. brown sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 large eggs Custard Mixture Almond Topping % cup sliced natural blanched almonds U.S. Families Face Problem of Nutrition Curry Condiments Go Well in Shrimp Salad NEW YORK, N. American women, though living in the land of plenty, still have to cope with the day-to-day problem of keeping themselves and their families well-nourished. Often, husbands eat too little (or too much) for lunch, teenagers skip breakfast and snack bn calorie-rich but vitamin-poor foods, and women deprive themselves of essenti nutrients trying to stay slim. Grease and flour a square cake pan (9 by » by 1% Inches). On wax paper, sift together the flour, baking powder and salt. In a large mixing bowl, gradually beat the sugar into the butter. Add the vapiOa. Thoroughly beat in the eggs, one at a time. almonds. Turn into the prepared pan. Distribute the Almond'Topping over the batter. Bake to a moderate (350 degrees) oven until a cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean — about 50 minutes; Stir in the sifted dry ingredients to about 4 additions, alternately with the Custard Mixture, only until smooth after each addition. Fold Place pan on wire rack and allow cake to cool for minutes; turn out on rack; turn right side up; cool completely. Note: The amount of baking powder called for (1 teaspoon) la correct; this is a moist, hearty cake with’ a compact texture. We like it sliced rather thin — easy to do when cake is cold — because seems to help the delicate Havin' of the light brown sugar and the almonds to the cake itself to come through. CUSTARD MIXTURE 1 cup mills 2 egg yolks 4 teaspoons' sugar ft teaspoon salt Mi teaspoon nutmeg. Scald milk. In a small mixing bowl, slightly beat the egg yolks with the sugar and salt. Stirring constantly and vigorously, add the hot milk to the yolk mix-) tore. Over low heat cook and stir constantly until slightly thickened — do not boil. Stir in flic nutmeg. Allow to cool, stirring occasionally.. Use ■ a s directed to recipe for Almond Custard Cake. > > ALMOND TOPPING 2 tablespoons butter Add Coconut to Medley of Fresh Fruit Sere’s a simply smashing salad for your next bridge luncheon «- Shrimp Salad Indi-enne. Pretty to look at, delightfully different to flavor, it’s a party dish that can be made ahead and served up while your guests are totaling their scorecards and post-morteming their hands. This is also the kind of salad you could serve to the family when toe temperature soars. It’ cool and refreshing, yet packed with good nutrition. The shrimp will provide the protein your husband and youngsters need to keep them going during all their extraactive summer days. For a family , meal, serve the salad from a big bowl; and, partner it with crisp relishes, crusty bread and milk or iced tea. SHRIMP SALAD INDIENNE ft lb. small shell macaroni ft cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon curry powder 1 tablespoon wine vinegar ft cup sliced radishes ft ciip green pepper, diced -ft cup diced cucumber, seeded ft cup green onions ft cup celery, chopped ft cup parsley, chopped ft cup chutney ft teaspoon salt 1 lb. shrimp, cooked, cleaned and chopped (about 2 cups) Cook macaroni as directed on package and rinse to hot water. Drain. Combine mayonnaise, curry powder and vinegar; toss with warm macaroni. Mix with remaining ingredients and let stand, refrigerated, for 2 or 3 hours. Serve macaroni-shrimp mixture over greet or in avocado halves. Makes to 8 servings. What does “well-nourished’ really mean? What role do vitamins play in sound nutrition?, How can we be sure we get enough of them? These questions, and many others, are answered in a free, up-to-date program kit now available to women’s dubs from the Vitamin Information Bureau. HISTORY Also covered are the history of vitamins and current medical research on these essential substances — “the common denominator without which the body can’t use the other nutrients for energy or build tissues.” The kit includes a chairman’: introduction and suggested talks for three members. In addition, the Vitamin Information Bureau offers 25 free booklets to .be distributed to members. To further enhance t h educational value of toe kit, the film, “Vitamins and You Health,” can be obtained at rental fee of $3.00. fresh fruit, spiked with light rum th< coconut. Send to Vitamin Information Bureau, 575 Lexington Ave. New York City 10022. Ambrosia, the food eaten by the Greek gods to preserve their immortality, is familiarly known to us combination of oranges coconut. A long time favorite dessert in the South, often traditionally served with toe Christmas dinner, ambrosia has gained popularity all over toe country. As with many classic recipes there are variations by the score, although oranges and coconut in one form or another still remain as the base of this which can be served year round. FRESH FRUIT Here are a couple of ambrosias that are perfect for summer dining making use of the fresh and tropical fruit so readily available at this time of year. Tropical Cherry Ambrosia is a heavenly combination of pineapple, papaya,/mnnffft banana with added form of bright red cherries — their delicate mond flavor ft cup orange juice plus %' cup light rum, or 1 cup orange juice 1 cup flaked coconut Combine cherries and fresh fruits in large bowl; pour blended orange juice and rum on top. Mix lightly and chill. Sprinkle coconut on fruit before serving. Makes 8 servings. Note: If papaya and Mango i are unavailable, use 1 small Spanish melon or cantaloupe. CHERRY MELON AMBROSIA 1 jar (8 ounces) red maraschino cherries, drained and halved 3 cups cantaloupe balls (it medium melon) 2 cups sliced fresh peaches 1 large grapefruit, sectioned 1 large orange, sectioned 1 large banana, sliced ft cup grepegruit juice 3 tablespoons honey ft clip flaked coconut, Combine cherries , and fruits in large bowl. 1 Blend grapefruit juice and honey; mix lightly with fruits and chill. Sprinkle coconut on top before serving. Makes 6 Hie second recipe, Cheiry Melon Ambrosia, to a tangy concoction, of plump red maraschino cherries, melon, peaches, grapefruit, orange and banana mixed with grapefruit juice and honey. Just before serving, coconut is sprinkled over toe top. TROPICAL CHERRY AMBROSIA—This heavenly concoction of pineapple, papaya, mango and banana with added dash and flavor in the form of bright red maraschino cherries, is find for the gods—perfect' for hot summer days, too. margarine, at room temperature ‘ ft* cup firmly packed light brown sugar. ft cup sliced natural o r blanched almonds -In a small bowl, with a spoon, heat toMher toe butter and sugar; stiwto the almonds. Use as directed In recipe for Almond Custard Cake. Milan! Foods Inc. 12312 W. Olympic Boulevard Los Angeles,.California 90064 CMiioni Food* tac. IMS Tropical Cherry Ambrosia maraschino cherries, drained and halved 1 medium pineapple, pared and cut into chunks 1 papaya, pared and thinly sliced 1 mango, pared and cut chunks 2 large bananas, sliced Make -Hamburger Into Main Dish Pie Over in merry England, where punting down toe Thames to a grassy tree-shaded bank usually precedes toe opening of a delicious cold lunch, outdoor repasts usually have a different menu. Corriish Pasties and Melton Mowbray pies are the popular foods ... eaten cold and in the hand. The fillings are hearty and flavorful meat and the crust i crunchy and rich in contrast. I USE FOIL PANS | Today’s lightweight alumium pie pans are convenient to use ! for these pies. They don’t need to be returned home. Insulated food hampers have replaced toe old wicker basket and frozen cans of refrigerant keep all foods cool and fresh Try this modern version of an old English picnic. HAMBURGER PICNIC PIE 2 pounds ground beef ' ft cup chopped onion , 1 can (10% ounces) condensed tomato soup 1 tablespoon parsley flakes 2 teaspoons Worcestershire -sauce, 1 teaspoon salt ft teaspoon garlic salt ft teaspoon pepper Pastry for 2 double crust 9-- inch pies (or8” pies) In a skillet, brown beef and cook onion until tender. Pour off fat. Remove from heat and add' remaining Ingredients, except pastry. Pour into 2 pastry lined pie plates. Cover meat with top Crusts, seal edges, slit tops and decorate with scraps of pastry rolled and cut into pretty shapes. Bake at 425 degrees for 30 minutes. v This is delicious eaten cold in toe hand. It may also be served hot. Eight generous servings, N SAVE 10* on 2 cans of Van Camp’s Pork and Beans. This ‘Opel* will really be ths 'apple x of your eye' with Grlnnaldl's Juicy k price of Just $1,688. Yes, this two* ^ door Model 31 Is Just one of six Opel models, which are General Motors lowest priced cars. < .Grimaldi's flne'servlce on all of these great fun cars Is recognized as the very best I In the midwest and Includes G.M/S exclusive two year warranty. So leave the bushel basket at home and bring the | w whole family to Grimaldi today. Wm It's only fair to want you two Opal’s are always better than one. GjumoMi Buipk Opel Inc. . TELEPHONE! 8324101 810 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD Just 2 blocks west of Woodward • D—6 m THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY," AUGUST 28, 1968 CrisisinMichigan Conservation Explored ’ ^ IfW I W''f ■ lij? v4. - I „ -*viV * • . • 9 - i'4£mfae Major Problern^Future Usage Parklands (Third in a series) By NORRIS INGELLS The Lansing State Journal "The banks of the river are so many vast meadows where the freshness of these beautiful streams keeps the grass always green. The neighborhood is so temperate, so fertile and so beautiful that it may Justly be called the earthly paradise of North America,” This is how Antoine de La-mothe Cadillac described the area along the Detroit River*ln 1702. ) • * * . a Today, this same area is one of the largest urban-industrial complexes In the world. The “beautiful streams” are slowly being brought bade from death by pollution, and the grass long since replaced with steel, glass and concrete. A few of the “vast meadows’ still exist so the city-dweller can view trees, flowers and grass if he is lucky enough to get there before the “Sorry, Park Full” sign goes up. BEAUTY THREATENED Man is supposed to profit by his past mistakes. But there is considerable evidence to show that in Michigan man appears determined to let the city invade the “beautiful streams’1 “vast meadows’’ still existing in the outstate areas. .There are also indication Michigan residents, blessed with a vast and resource-rich state, still believe, despite warnings to the contrary, that the supply of wild land and clejan water is inexhaustible. * ;4r ★ 1 They might be compared with the residents of our western states, who in 1850 watched 20 million buffalo roaming free and declared that there were more than man could ever hope to kill off. Thirty-nine years later, the record? show “only 551 buffalo could be'fouQd alive in the U.S.” Michigan residents can be justifiably proud of their natural resources and park system. Norman F. Smith, chief of the Recreation Resources Planning Division of the Conservation Department, reports: “Michigan ■ har a national park, Rational wildlife refuges and over six million acres of state and national forests open to hunting, „ fishing, camping, hiking and other forms of recreation, giving it the second largest public forest area of any of the states east of the Rockies. The state manages 72 state parks with 11,000 camping sites, a larger number than in any other state except California. There are 59 state game and wildlife areas, and over 600 developed water access sites again* more than in any other state. State and national forest campgrounds total over 200. In addition, there are numerous county, township, regional .and Solunar Tables The schedule of . Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from Johq Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that each day has W? otter. municipal parks to provide recreation close to home.” » >-* ★ v Sen. Gordon Rockwell (R*Mt. Morris), chairman of the Senate Conservation and Recreation Committee, says ha makes it a point to talk to people using Michigan parks when he«visits them. 'I ask what we could do to make them better and most of the time they don’t even have an .answer,” he declared. But Rockwell and other state officials agree that more will have to.be done to obtain additional park and recreation land if me demands of the future—or even the present—are to be' met. “By many standards, Michigan is well offr” Smith points out. “But the true measure is not so much a matter of quantity as it is kind and location. With most of its recreation lands in the northern part Of the state, the fact remains that there not enough public land suitable for outdoor recreation, particularly day-use, in the southern Lower Peninsula.” Michigan has l',100 lakes more than 100 acres in size. But the conservation department reports that “less' than one-fourth of these 1,100 lakes have state access sites. Present state lands will provide relatively few new sites.” ★ it' "4 In spite of its record number of campsites, the department re-ports: “Even with continued expansion, thousands of day users and campers are turned away every year. Availability of new areas of State Park caliber rapidly shrinking, particularly in southern Michigan, the region of greatest need.” Department officials estimate that 50,000 to 60,000 vehicles a year are turned away from state facilities because they are filled to capacity. Ahny the QutAcw Last Call forP Fish Other factors indicate that the demand for recreation facilities will be , phenomenal during the next three decades. Michigan population is expected to rise to 13 million by 2000 and this growth alone “could mean a 60 per cent increase in recreation requirements,” department studies show. Time is running oi 1968 Pontiac Press Derby County anglers have noon Sept 3 to top the current leaders in the pike and bass divisions An 8:pound northern heads the pike class Leader in the bass division a six-pound five-ounc largemouth ★ 4 I * Savings bonds of $50 < awarded for the heavie in each class. Only County residents are eligible and the fish must be caught in county waters. All entries must be brought to The Press sports department for weighing. Had this happened witirone bass it might be the new leader Marty Hyde 428 S. Broadway Lake Orion and a Mend were trolling for pike on Orion. Hyde, manager of the K-Mart, Sporting Goods department in the Glendale Plaza landed a 22-inch largemouth. LOST WEIGHT We weighed it on machine scales in the boat” he said 'and it weighed 6ft Later we weighed it at a store, and that’s when -1 found ■i that fish lose weight in hurry “It had lost almost pound. Hyde was using a bucktail and trolling for pike. Coho fishermen drew a blank i the Manistee-Frankfort area last weekend. Strong winds kept even the charter boats off Lake Michigan. Rough water has been a major handicap the last two weeks. .v\ if: ■ *? * Roger St. Agiant who produces the Bayou Special lure spent last week fishing for coho: . “It was so rough that I actually got seasick twief” he said. “And we were using a 26-foot boat with high freeboard. At the end of each day I felt like I had been through the mill. It became work instead oi fun." The boat was equipped with a fish finder and the Pontiac man caught several cohos Using his lure in fluorescent red The fish were in depths of 50 to 120 feet. V WHAT’S THE FUSS ABOUT? — Lisa Hyde, 3, seems to be awed more by the attention a six-pound class largemouth black bass is attracting titan the size of the fish. Her father, Marty, 428 S . Broadway, Lake Orion, caught the 22-inch bass in Lake Orion while trolling for pike with a bucktail. Turkey Hunt Applications Due Sportsmen may start applying! for 1,500 hunting permits covering the Nov. 4.-10 wild turkey season in the 'Mio and Baldwin areas, the Conservation Department announces. Setting the stage for fheir applications is the mailing of 1968 small game licenses'. By early September, these licenses should be available at all local dealers. Few Oakland County dealers have received their supply. v Eligible applicants, t.h 0 s e residents and nonresidents at least 14 years old, may get in the running for free turkey permits by postmarking their entries before midnight, Sept. |fc Their applications, limited to one per hunter and to only one of the two areas, are to bel mailed to the Department's! Lansing office. TWO AREAS In the offing are 500 permits for the Mio hunting area (No. *1) which takes in most of Oscoda and northern Ogemaw counties plus parts of Alcona, Iosco and Montmorency counties. The other choice is the Baldwin area (No. 2) for which 1,000 permits will be issued to hunt turkeys in all of Lake County and portions of Newaygo Oceana and Mason counties. As last year, the procedure for making permit applications is relatively simple. It works this way: On the blank or back side of a 5-cent U.S. Government postcard, the applicant prints the area of his choice (1> or 2), writes down his . 1968 small game license number below that, and then signs his name in ink. (hi the postage side, he pre-idresses the card to himself, typing or printing his name and ddress there. Final step before mailing is to place the filled-out card in an envelope addressed to: Wild Turkey, Michigan Department of Conservation, Lansing, Michigan 48926. If applications outnumber permit quotas for either of the two areas, the department will hold a drawing shortly after the Sept. 23 postmark deadline to randomly determine successful applicants. , See Our Display at the Imported Car Show in The Pontiac Mall J§. Exclusively by The Grimaldis.. All This Week! Bear Creek Remains Open Special Weir Slated to Collect Salmon Engineering details have been worked out by the Conservation Department which will permit Manistee County’s Bear Creek to be left open to coho salmon fishing this fall. Earlier, the stream was scheduled to be closed to fishing because it appeared that a weir could not be installed at the mouth of the creek in time for removing surplus salmon. ★ ★ * Department engineers have developed a feasible weir. I As announced earlier, the! weir site at the mouth of the Bear will be one of 4 pick-up points where the department will trap salmon for routing into commercial marketing channels. 'In addition to this operation, we will release enough fish the weir to provide for a high-quality salmon fishery,” Department trout and specialist Dave Borgeson. PLATTE CLOSED Benzie County’s Platte River will temporarily be shut down to fishing in October so that the department can collect some 10 million salmon eggs there. Unchanged are plans to ban all fishing from the mouth of the Little Manistee River l. about six miles to another weir where surplus salmon will be trapped for commercial marketing. Department workers will pass fish above the weirs to provide fall angling upstream to 18 Mile But there is also evidence that some types of recreation activities are rising at a much faster rate than the population. Sales of outbdard motors, for example, increased five times much as the population during the past 25 years, department statistics show. Studies also bring to light other factors that will affect the recreation needs of the state. Families are likely to have to spend less for food, housing and other necessities in the future, which may cause a greater percentage of income to be spent on recreation. BETTER TRAVELING Capacity to travel is growing more than twice as fast as the population. Citizens are expected to have more leisure time in the future, placing more pressure on recreation facilities. “The trend is for young people to start work later and older people to retire earlier,” the state studies predict. “Conservative projections indicate a 32 to 35 hour work-week by 1980.” * * * Litter and pollution are rendering much land unfit for recreation use. As more add more land is going into private ownership,'the costs of obtaining public land rises. “We have some very good prospects for buying additional lake frontage,” Smith observed, “but we just don’t have the| money available to go ahead. ”i He urged lakefront acquisition projects be “continued and pursued vigorously” ahd called for public support of the program. “Costs of Great Lakes front-1 age, especially lower Lhke Michigan, are a major block in future public plans, even with federal help,” he warned. “But the nature and attraction Great Lakes shores are' such that every opportunity which slips by us now will be revetted and lamented in the years 1980 and 2000, just as we chide selves for those opportunities we should have grabbed in the past.” * ★ * Sen. Rockwell agrees that the state should continue to buy parkland, and “concentrate on land in the southeastern part of the state.” “That where the people are,’ he declared. While many officials agree that vigorous steps must be taken to obtain more public parkland, most of them kfop short of urging condemnation actions. Harry H. Whitely, chairman of the Michigan Conservation Commission, does not agree with those who say the conservation department needs greater condemnation powers to take OVCr privately-owned land for public use, especially prime recreation acreage' along the Great Lakes and major rivers and streams. “I don’t think there is Sliy grave necessity for that now,” he observed, “but there may come a time when it will be needed.” (Next: Need Public Support) ARMSTRONG THE SAFE 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRE . 6.84x13 ____I Blaekwalt Tubeless plus 3141 Fed. Ex. Tax and Old tire BRAND NEW ALL WEATHER IV Any on* of thin Sins OK L8W PRICE 7.75x15 7.75x14 8.25x14 $1095 Blackwall ||i Tuboisss Whitewalls $3 Mora easy credit NO MONEY DOWN FREE MOUNTING FROM THE EXCHANGE AT FAULT-FREE COLLISION PROTECTION! 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